ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

July 18, 2016

Germany: Steep decline in Catholic church attendance

GERMANY
Christian Today

James Macintyre 18 July 2016

Almost 200,000 Catholics left the Church in Germany last year, according to figures which show an ongoing, steady decline in church attendance in that country.

There are 23.7 million Catholics in Germany, comprising 29 per cent of the population of 80 million, making Catholicism the largest religious group. But figures released at the end of last week by the German Bishops’ Conference show that in 2015, a total of 181,925 people left the Church, while 2,685 people became Catholic, and 6,474 reverted to Catholicism.

When compared to the official statistics of 20 years ago, average church attendance is down from 18.6 per cent in 1995 to 10.4 per cent in 2015, while the number of baptisms has declined by more than a third, from almost 260,000 in 1995 to just over 167,000 in 2015.

The decline in marriages is even steeper, with 86,456 couples marrying in church 21 years ago, and almost half that number – 44,298 couples – tying the knot in church last year.

Despite the figures, the head of the conference, Cardinal Reinhard Marx of Munich and Freising described the Church as a continuing “strong force, whose message is heard and accepted”.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Submissions published on institutional responses to child sexual abuse in out-of-home care

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Respones to Child Sexual Abuse

18 July, 2016

The Royal Commission has published 55 submissions received from service providers, peak bodies, advocacy groups, statutory bodies, government agencies and academics in response to its consultation paper on out-of-home care.

The consultation paper, which was released in March this year, sought input into ways to better prevent, report and respond to child sexual abuse in out-of-home care.

Out-of-home care includes children living with foster, relative and kinship carers and in residential care homes.

Royal Commission CEO Philip Reed said that information from over 4,000 private sessions conducted by Commissioners with survivors of child sexual abuse indicated that children who grew up in a care setting, both historical and current, comprised the largest category of institutions identified as places where abuse took place.

“Over 40 per cent of individuals who attended private sessions said they were sexually abused as a child in out-of-home care, such as in former children’s homes and in foster care”, he said.

Mr Reed said that of the 43,000 children currently in out-of-home care across Australia, many have had prior exposure to significant trauma, domestic violence, abuse and neglect and as such, are a particularly vulnerable group.

“Children in care have a right to live in a safe and nurturing environment. We are concerned that the current out-of-home care system does not adequately protect children from sexual abuse, nor consistently respond as well as it should when abuse occurs.”

The paper sought views on the adequacy of screening checks, assessment and training of carers as well as feedback on data collection, information sharing, prevention and support services.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Church protests continue in Hagåtña

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | Post News Staff

Protests continued at the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral Basilica yesterday, July 17 as more than 40 combined members of the Concerned Catholics of Guam (CCOG), Laity Forward Movement (LFM) and Silent No More groups gathered once again on the front steps to show their continued resolve. While each group started with different, but related agendas, developments in the child sex-abuse scandal has led to a unified front with the desire to see Archbishop Anthony Apuron defrocked.

“We are using this public forum as a way to get our message out that we are serious, that we are active and that we are putting words and prayers into action. If you want to know what our issues are, just come out here,” said Vanjie Lujan of CCOG.

Continuing mission

According to group members, as inaction and platitudes continue to be the only things out of the archdiocese, members of the various laity groups have continued in their mission to press for meaningful dialogue and steps toward addressing their concerns. With little power themselves, the groups are using the only outlet available them.

“We are not trying to confuse the issue. I feel like we do it here, at our mother church, because this is the head – the example that should be set for how we should be acting as Christians,” Lujan said.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Message from the Apostolic Administrator, 16th Sunday Ordinary Time, July 17, 2016

GUAM
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Agana

The past Tuesday July 12, I had the privilege to celebrate the 72nd anniversary of the martyrdom of Father Jesus Baza Dueñas at St Joseph’s Church, Inarajan. Before beginning the Holy Eucharist, I paused a moment in front of the picture of this priest, who died heroically at the age of 33 – the age of Our Lord.

My thought went back to the time of the 2nd World War. When the invaders came to Guam, Fr. Dueñas stood up fearlessly to defend the oppressed and spoke up against all sort of abuses inflicted by the ruthless marauders. Later accused of treason against the Japanese imperial regime, he was arrested in Inarajan on July 8, 1944 and brutally tortured, together with his nephew, Eduardo Camacho Dueñas. He could have escaped, but not wanting any eventual punishment by the Japanese soldiers against his family or other innocent people, he decided to stay upfront. It was for the people he cared and loved that he paid a high price of torture and decapitation.

Ever since then, he has become a remarkable figure in Guam history and in that of the Local Church. He was the 2nd Chamorro to be ordained a Catholic Priest and, at the time of his martyrdom, he was the first Chamorro cleric to be appointed as the Ecclesiastical Superior of the Church (Pro-Vicar) on Guam. In those difficult years of turmoil and fear, he was considered a good shepherd. He spread hope by words and deeds, and at the end laid down his life for his sheep.

Fr. Dueñas is an inspiring example for all pastors, priests and Bishops. The love of Christ was his strength and reward. For love, and not hatred, his life was offered to God and to His people.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Archbishop Hon provides Catholics with status updates

GUAM
KUAM

Jul 17, 2016

By Krystal Paco

He’s now been on the job for five weeks as Guam’s interim archbishop and in the latest issue of Umatuna Si Yu’os gives local Catholics a progress report of his work. According to the Catholic newspaper of the Agana Archdiocese, apostolic administrator Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai says his work starts with the clergy, and he is doing so with canonical visitations in the parish and seminaries.

From there, he will extend to all Catholics on the island. “My actions and decision may be far from perfect, but are sure motivated jointly by solidarity, good will, and a profound sense of the unity of the church. I continue to invite you to pray and walk towards the goal of healing, reconciliation, and unity in the archdiocese,” he wrote.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Protesting Catholics question Archbishop Hon’s leadership

GUAM
KUAM

Jul 17, 2016
By Krystal Paco

Dozens of the island’s Catholics are voicing their disappointment with apostolic administrator Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai. On Sunday morning, picketers continued their ongoing protest to have Archbishop Anthony Apuron defrocked…and now they’ve also added signs depicting Hon.

Among the picketers was Terry Untalan from the Santa Barbara parish in Dededo, who said, “We have an apostolic administrator who does not appear to be doing much to be solving these problems. He can order us to just get together and be nice to each other but without exposing the truth and taking care of these problems that are endemic in our society, I don’t think he’s got any hope of unifying us.”

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Plymouth Brethren starts defamation against The Age

AUSTRALIA
The Austrlralian

JULY 18, 2016

Chris Merritt
Legal Affairs Editor
Sydney

After being on the receiving end of almost a decade of adverse coverage by a reporter at The Age, a small Christian Church has launched defamation proceedings and released a letter to Fairfax chairman Nick Falloon that raises questions about the newspaper’s methods.

Plymouth Brethren Christian Church launched the proceedings after Fairfax Media’s Good Weekend magazine published a cover story last month alleging a cover-up of sexual abuse within the church.

The church is suing Fairfax Media Publications Pty Ltd, The Age Company Pty Ltd and The Age’s investigations editor, Michael Bachelard, who has written more than 50 articles about the church as well as a book.

Statements of claim filed last week in the NSW Supreme Court indicate the church is effectively daring Fairfax to prove it engaged in an institutional cover-up of child sexual abuse.

This is where the decentralised structure of the Plymouth Brethren, formerly known as the Exclusive Brethren, could complicate the task confronting Fairfax Media. This church says it has no clergy and consists of autonomous assemblies.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

“CALIFORNIA SENATE-PASSED BILL COULD BECOME NATIONAL MODEL FOR YOUTH TO SUE CHURCH LATER FOR SEX ABUSE,” assert former White House Spokesman Robert Weiner & Senior Religion Policy Analyst Katie Schulze

CALIFORNIA
PRNewswire

Op-ed in The Press-Enterprise, San Bernardino County Sun, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

CHINO, Calif., July 17, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Former White House spokesman Robert Weiner and Katie Schulze, Robert Weiner Associates’ Senior Religion Policy Analyst, have spotlighted a California Senate-passed bill that “could become a national model law” to extend the time youth can sue the Church for sex abuse. They wrote an op-ed titled, “Sen. Leyva’s (D-Chino) bill would protect child victims of sex abuse” published in The Press-Enterprise, San Bernardino County Sun and Inland Valley Daily Bulletin. The article supports the Justice for Victims Act, which would allow child victims of sexual assault to press criminal charges against their perpetrator later in life when they are mature and have the courage to do so. The authors contend that the bill would help end the “Catholic Church’s ongoing cover-up of sexual abuse” and urge Assembly passage and Governor Jerry Brown’s signature.

Weiner and Schulze say that Senator Connie M. Leyva’s (D-Chino) bill, SB 813, has already passed the State Senate and is on track towards becoming law. They urge legislators to prioritize this “important” bill to ensure it “maintains its momentum and is passed by the Assembly in August before its adjournment for the year.”

They go on to explain that despite the admirable bill, the “Catholic Church has lobbied extensively to block extension of the statute of limitations and to ensure the perpetrator is able to go unscathed.” Senator Leyva is cited explaining how her bill “would simply offer victims additional time to come to terms with the horrible crime committed against them.”

The authors criticize Governor Jerry Brown for vetoing a similar piece of legislation in 2013: The Child Victim’s Act. They state “The Catholic Conference, which lobbies on behalf of the Catholic Church, has spent over $2 million on lobbying efforts to kill various versions of a similar Child Victims Act in New York’s Legislature this past decade. If the Justice for Victims Act becomes law, court costs would be ‘devastating for the life of the church,’ stated Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Catholic Church’s archbishop of New York.”

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Church sex attacks revealed by West Mercia Police

UNITED KINGDOM
Shropshire Star

Figures released by West Mercia Police, which covers Shropshire, Herefordshire, and Worcestershire, show that between 2013 and 2015, 10 sexual offences had been reported as having taken place in a church, six in a cemetery or graveyard, three in an abbey, two in a chapel and one in a mosque.

Offences reported included rape, rape of a female aged 13, 14 or 15, rape of a female child under 13, rape of a male aged 13, 14 or 15, sexual activity with a female aged 13, 14 or 15, sexual assault on a female, sexual assault on a male, sexual assault of a female aged 13 or over, sexual assault of a female child under 13, sexual assault on a male child under 13, causing or inciting sexual activity with a male child aged 13, engaging in sexual activity with a girl aged 13 to 15 and exposure.

Michael Davie, church warden at St Michael’s Church in West Felton, labelled the figures – released after a Freedom of Information request – as “disturbing” but said safeguarding was a priority of the Church of England.

He said: “Matters like this have to be taken very seriously.

“The Diocese of Lichfield is the central body which deals with the safeguarding and protection of children and vulnerable adults, and they insist that anyone who takes a service or deals with children must be DBS checked, formerly CRB checks.

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Ex-priest sentenced to 15 years in prison on abuse charges

PUERTO RICO
Crux

Wallice J. de la Vega
July 17, 2016
CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE

MAYAGUEZ, Puerto Rico – A former priest from the Diocese of Mayaguez in Puerto Rico, who originally faced two felony charges of improper sexual behavior, was sentenced on one of those charges July 14.

Then-Father Floyd McCoy Jordan, 65, served as vicar of the Basilica of Our Lady of Montserrat in Hormigueros at the time of the complaint.

“McCoy Jordan was sentenced to 15 years in prison after being unanimously found guilty by a jury last June for committing lewd acts against a 14-year-old minor from 2013-2014 in the municipality of Hormigueros,” read a June 14 press release from the Puerto Rico Department of Justice.

The original second charge, reportedly related to having “improperly touched private parts” of a 19-year-old, was dismissed at the March preliminary hearing.

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July 17, 2016

Irish Catholic Church ‘trying to dump’ sex abuse priests on State

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Two of America’s leading Catholic child protection advocates have strongly opposed suggestions by the church that care of laicised priests convicted of child abuse ought, in certain circumstances, to be a State responsibility.

It follows an interview in which Teresa Devlin, chief executive of the Irish Catholic Church’s child protection watchdog – its National Board for Safeguarding Children – said “once you know he is guilty, then you do have to cut the ties, you cannot continue to pay for someone, and at some stage the State has to take over with pensions.

“We are still talking about those people in their 60s because most of this abuse did happen around the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s, so we’re talking older people,” she said.

Last month new child protection guidance standards were published by the board where it stated: “If the respondent is not the responsibility of the church authority, the church authority must inform the statutory authorities, and the process of involvement (by the church) in relation to safeguarding ends.”

‘Heinous crimes’

US lawyer and former Benedictine monk Patrick Wall said his take on it “is that they are looking to dump all their criminals on the public”.

He said that the church “selected, hired, trained, supervised and turned these perpetrators loose where they committed heinous crimes against children leaving permanent scars that continue to impact survivors and their families. The church ought to reap what they sowed”.

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Celebran reunión anual de Ji Do Kwan

DURANGO (MEXICO)
Milenio [Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico]

July 17, 2016

By Carlos Hernández Castrejón

Read original article

Los trabajos se realizaron de 10:00 a 18:00 horas en el hotel El Fresno de Torreón, donde estuvieron presentes 48 profesores e instructores pertenecientes a esta organización.

Este sábado se llevó a cabo la reunión anual de la Asociación Ji Do Kwan de México, la cual tuvo como sede a esta ciudad, donde se abordaron temas sobre la situación actual del taekwondo y el panorama que se tiene a nivel mundial.

Los trabajos se realizaron de 10:00 a 18:00 horas en el hotel El Fresno, donde estuvieron presentes 48 profesores e instructores pertenecientes a esta organización, la cual preside Francisco González Pinedo, quien es además presidente de la Federación Mexicana de Taekwondo, junto con el profesor Daniel Villavicencio, quien expuso los temas en los que se tomaron en cuenta aspectos de visión y calidad.

“Esta es nuestra reunión anual de maestros asociados de Ji Do Kwan, siempre procuramos que nuestra función haya ponencia sobre temas que son de mucho interés para nosotros y siempre con miras a ser más exigentes para con nosotros mismos en el desempeño de nuestras funciones como maestros, como profesionales de taekwondo”, expuso.

Señaló que las dinámicas se enfocaron al autoanálisis, a retomar lo que se hizo en un año, si se cumplieron los objetivos establecidos el año anterior y si no, corregir.[OBJECT]

”Además nos acompañó el padre Javier Díaz Rivera Rodríguez, quien ha sido pilar fundamental en el desarrollo de Ji Do Kwan, desde que éramos jóvenes y que en aquel tiempo y hasta ahora ha sido nuestro guía y maestro en muchos aspectos, tanto del deporte como de la vida”.

“Nos acompañaron maestros de todo el país donde Ji Do Kwan tiene presencia, con la salvedad de dos regiones, que por la premura, por tiempos del profesor Raymundo, que son impredecibles ahora, no pudieron asistir. Esto se concretó de última hora, pues luego viene la Olimpiada Nacional y los Juegos Olímpicos de Río”, explicó.

Daniel Villavicencio, señaló que los 48 asistentes fueron entre maestros e instructores, sólo faltaron de Mérida y Cancún por las razones arriba señaladas.

Se abordó el análisis sobre el actuar cotidiano como maestros de taekwondo, se puso énfasis en salir de la zona de confort, que es muy factible caer en esa situación, las posibilidades, el análisis de que el karate entra en Tokio 2020 como deporte olímpico y alguna vez tuvo una influencia importante dentro de las artes marciales.

Tanto que al taekwondo lo confundían con los karatecas, así que “hay que reforzar nuestro quehacer para que esa disciplina no nos haga mella”, subrayó Villavicencio, quien además resaltó la necesidad de adaptarse y trabajar en qué es lo que se va hacer.

Por su parte, el profesor Francisco Raymundo González Pinedo, presidente de la FMTKD, resaltó la importancia de mantenerse actualizados y mejorar en todos los aspectos para el buen desarrollo de esta disciplina.
https://www.milenio.com/deportes/celebran-reunion-anual-ji-do-kwan

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Montclair church takes legal aim Newark archbishop | Di Ionno

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Mark Di Ionno | The Star-Ledger

The small band of protesters was dwarfed by the soaring twin bell towers of the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart.

They didn’t take up much space on the grand and expansive entrance way, graced by Pope John Paul II in 1995.

And they didn’t have much of an audience, either. Sunday Masses at one of North America’s most ornate and imposing cathedrals don’t draw like they used to.

The irony wasn’t lost on the people from Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church (OLMC) in Montclair, who came to the Archdiocese of Newark’s cathedral last Sunday to protest the closing of their little neighborhood church.

“We get more people at Mass than they do,” said Marguerite De Carlo. “Why don’t they shut this down?”

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Fr Fagan was a ‘brilliant thinker’ who was ‘broken’ by Rome, McAleese says

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

The late Fr Seán Fagan had his “heart and spirit” broken by the Vatican in the years before he died, former President of Ireland Mary McAleese has said.

“His long and illustrious priestly career was blighted in latter years by being silenced by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,” she said.

Marist priest and theologian Fr Fagan died at St Vincent’s hospital in Dublin last Friday.

Widely admired and respected as a courageous theologian and compassionate pastor, he had been ill for some time. …

“A brilliant theologian and thinker who brought great distinction to Ireland, his long and illustrious priestly career was blighted in latter years by being silenced by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. His heart and spirit were broken but his fidelity to the Church and quiet acceptance of such an unjust fate won him even more admirers,” she said. “When, thanks to Pope Francis, the CDF finally restored him to good standing in 2014 it was a case of too little too late. A great and good man’s life and his life’s work had been ruined. Anyone wishing to comprehend the collapse of the Catholic intellectual tradition need only examine Seán Fagan’s tragic story.

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Pastor of catholic church speaks out following assistant director’s arrest

ALABAMA
WTVM

[with video]

By Leah Jordan, Reporter

MADISON, AL (WAFF) –
Church members are still in shock after a church employee was arrested on child pornography charges. John Martin has since been fired from his position as Assistant Director for the Parish Religious Education Program.

“It’s a rude awakening. You can never be certain,” Father Phil O’Kennedy, Pastor of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, said.

After Martin’s arrest, an important first step for the church was researching when Martin had been in contact with children.

“You look at most the folks here and they’re grownups. They know the big, bad world as well as I do; they don’t need help from me on how to handle it,” O’Kennedy said. “The worry for all of us is our youth and our children.”

O’Kennedy said Martin had been around youth only a couple of times – one of those times just last week when he was a driver and chaperone for a youth ministry trip to Atlanta.

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Laicos de Osorno irrumpen en misa en honor a Virgen del Carmen dirigida por obispo Barros

CHILE
Bio Bio

[About 30 lay people from Osorno entered a church where a traditional Mass held in celebration of the Virgin Mary because the Mass was led by Juan Barros, the embattled bishops of that diocese. The Mass is attended by various local authorities, including those from the civilian world and the armed forces. Mario Vargas, spokesman for the lay group, said the Mass is to celebrate the patron saint of Child and it is inconceivable that a person like Barros would preside.]

En la Parroquia del Carmen en Osorno se realizó la tradicional misa en celebración en el día de la Virgen que precisamente lleva dicho nombre. A la instancia asistieron diversas autoridades locales, entre el mundo civil y de las Fuerzas de Armadas, misa que fue dirigida por el cuestionado obispo de la diócesis de Osorno, Juan Barros.

Al lugar se dirigieron una treintena de personas, pertenecientes a la agrupación de laicos de Osorno, para manifestar su descontento contra el obispo de la ciudad, y exigiendo que se retire de sus funciones.

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“Vatileaks 2” Trial: Pope Francis’ Folly

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on July 17, 2016 by Betty Clermont

The new pope enacted a law criminalizing leaks of detrimental information to the press. Nevertheless, two books were going to be published exposing pervasive corruption during Pope Francis’ pontificate. The pope had two of his employees arrested and then put on trial along with a third employee and the authors of the two books.

The result was months of free publicity for the books. Additionally, the public came to learn that no crime – not sodomizing children or fraud – is considered as grave as exposing the pope’s secrets. No physical evidence was produced proving the defendants’ guilt during the trial. Nevertheless, the prosecution recommended that the only woman among the five defendants receive the harshest penalty for “instigating” and “conspiring.”

Pope Francis enacted a law on July 13, 2013, criminalizing leaks of Vatican information, “an obvious response” to the 2012 scandal known as “Vatileaks.” Pilfered documents had exposed “petty turf wars, bureaucratic dysfunction and allegations of corruption and homosexual liaisons.” The crime of revealing damaging information had never existed before in the Vatican.

On October 31, 2015, Msgr. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda (54), secretary for the Prefecture of Economic Affairs, and Francesca Chaouqui (33) were summoned to the Vatican for questioning and then arrested with Pope Francis’ “personal approval” regarding “the unauthorized removal and sharing of confidential documents.”

The Spaniard, Vallejo Balda, had been secretary of a temporary commission, already dissolved, established by the pope to recommend changes to the Vatican’s financial administration. Chaouqui, an Italian laywoman formerly employed in the Rome office of Ernst & Young, had been a member of the same commission. Chaouqui was released after a couple of days because “there were no evident reasons to keep her in custody, and also in view of her cooperation with the investigation.” Vallejo Balda was imprisoned in a Vatican jail cell.

Chaouqui’s attorney, Giulia Bongiorno, later pointed out the Vatican’s “alleged violations of Chaouqui’s due process rights by interrogating her without an attorney.”

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Abuse survivor accused of stalking the priest he set out to ‘forgive’

ITALY
Irish Independent

Catherine Deveney
PUBLISHED
17/07/2016

A British man who travelled to Verona in an attempt to forgive the Catholic missionary who sexually abused him at Mirfield seminary in Yorkshire almost 50 years ago, is being prosecuted in the Italian courts on three counts of “trespassing, stalking and interference in private life”.

Mark Murray (60), who filmed his encounter with Fr Romano Nardo at the Verona headquarters of the Comboni missionaries in April last year, said he was “appalled and disgusted” when a letter summoning him for criminal proceedings in Verona on September 14 arrived last week at his home in Wales.

“The Combonis know these ‘crimes’ are not true. They are trying to intimidate me,” he said. “It’s all about power and control. They are trying to send out a message, ‘Don’t dare take us on’.”

In 2014, the Observer reported exclusively on widespread abuse at Mirfield in the 1960s and 70s after a group of 11 British men settled out of court with the missionary order, receiving sums of between £7,000 and £30,000.

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Threat halted release of priests’ files in abuse cases

NEW MEXICO
Albuquerque Journal

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Journal Staff Writer
Published: Sunday, July 17th, 2016

The Diocese of Gallup threatened to withdraw a monetary settlement that included $21 million for victims of clerical sexual abuse if claimants insisted that the church publicly release the personnel files of accused priests, attorneys for the claimants said.

Public disclosure of priest files became a “significant issue” during the final months of the diocese’s 31-month bankruptcy case, said James Stang, a Los Angeles attorney who represented the 57 people who filed claims against the diocese.

“We asked that (the files) be published or be delivered so we could publish them if we wanted to, and they said no,” Stang said. “We were told that it was a package deal.”

Faced with the possibility of losing the financial settlement after more than two years of legal wrangling, a committee representing claimants in the case felt they had little choice but to withdraw their demand for records, he said.

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July 16, 2016

Capturan a cura acusado de violar

OAXACA (MEXICO)
El Siglo de Torreón [Torreón, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico]

July 16, 2016

By EL UNIVERSAL

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Un sacerdote de la Catedral metropolitana de esta ciudad acusado de violar a un joven fue detenido ayer viernes y encarcelado en el Centro de Readaptación Social ubicado en Miahuatlán de Porfirio Díaz. La Fiscalía General de Justicia del Estado confirmó que la aprehensión ocurrió bajo el mandato judicial 274/2016, librado por el Juez Cuarto de lo Penal, en contra del cura identificado con las iniciales CFPM.

Según la denuncia, la víctima fue invitada en octubre del año 2015 por el imputado a laborar en la catedral, ubicada en primer cuadro del Centro Histórico de la capital. En la Semana Santa pasada se incrementó la carga de trabajo en labores de limpieza por lo cual invitó a uno de sus compañeros a ayudarle. El viernes 25 de marzo, fueron invitados por el sacerdote a tomar bebidas alcohólicas, al grado de embriagarse. Cuando el ofendido se retiró a su cuarto, pero entonces llegó el cura a manosearlo.

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En el nombre del Padre

(ARGENTINA)
Boletin enREDando [Santa Fe, Argentina]

July 16, 2016

By Lorena Panzerini

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El abuso sexual en la Iglesia es una problemática de la que poco se habla. La desprotección a las víctimas, el miedo a denunciar, la indiferencia de la sociedad, el encubrimiento de la institución eclesiástica y la inacción de la Justicia: las partes de un credo que perpetúa al dolor.  

Por Lorena Panzerini

“Denuncia por abuso sexual contra el presbítero Luis Brizzio. A quien me pueda escuchar”. Así arranca el primero de una serie de correos electrónicos que Andrés -el nombre fue reemplazado- envió desde Rosario a cuanta dirección del Vaticano encontró en internet, la madrugada del 5 de noviembre de 2014. Más atrás, en 2002, los padres de 35 niños que concurrían al Jardín Nuestra Señora del Camino de Mar del Plata también se expresaron por escrito. “Ojalá, no hubiésemos tenido que escribir esta carta, porque si así fuera, nada de esto hubiera ocurrido”, reza la nota publicada en Indymedia, por aquellos días, junto a la foto del cura acusado de encubrir a un profesor de educación física, por abusos. Similar fue la denuncia de Julieta Añazco, en 2013. “Les escribo para denunciar a un cura”, dice el mensaje de Facebook que envió al diario El Día, de La Plata, el 1 de julio de ese año. Hoy, siente que lo escribió una niña.

Por esos días, Julieta estaba inquieta, ansiosa. Había empezado a recordar aquellos tristes sucesos y necesitaba compartir sus sentimientos, sensaciones y el dolor con otras víctimas que también pudieran descargarse. Animada por su terapeuta, Liliana Rodríguez, mandó los primeros correos para encontrarse con personas que hayan pasado por lo mismo. Quería reunir a todas aquellas víctimas de abuso sexual del clero. Ella fue sometida durante los años ‘80, ‘81 y ‘82. Tenía entre 8 y 10 años. Otras chicas denunciaron al cura Giménez. Habían pasado lo mismo. Una de ellas relató en la Justicia cómo el cura la enjabonaba al bañarse. Julieta recuerda, con lagunas, que se metía en las carpas durante la noche. Si bien muchos de esos casos fueron denunciados en los años 1985 y 1996, el “encubrimiento de la Iglesia evitó que avanzaran”. Algo similar ocurrió con los otros casos que patrocina y acompaña la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Argentina, conformada como réplica local de SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), de Estados Unidos.

El abogado Carlos Lombardi, quien había tenido respuesta favorable en un caso contra el Arzobispado de Mendoza, donde la Corte Suprema de esa provincia falló a favor del denunciante, también fue buscado por Julieta para empezar a tejer esa red de contención. Desde entonces, Julieta, Liliana, Carlos y la abogada Estefanía Gelso, con otros profesionales, conformaron el espacio que acompaña y asesora a todos quienes se acercan por haber sufrido abusos de parte de autoridades de la Iglesia.

Consultados por Enredando, desde la organización aseguraron que no se sostienen con aportes económicos y no tienen una sede fija. Justamente, es una Red porque la componen numerosas personas de Argentina y Latinoamérica (víctimas, familiares y profesionales). “Se sostiene con el trabajo profesional de acompañar y asesorar a las víctimas, haciendo planteos ante las autoridades que correspondan (del estado y la iglesia), gestionando reclamos, haciendo visible el flagelo”, describió el abogado Lombardi, quien trabaja en los casos de Brizzio y Giménez –entre otros-, en la esfera canónica.

El letrado habló desde la experiencia y las leyes: “El abuso eclesiástico tiene las mismas características que cualquier abuso sexual de menores. Es decir, una relación de poder, de subordinación entre el autor (padre de familia, docente, sacerdote) y la víctima que tiene determinados indicadores psicológicos que lo hacen presa de aquellos. La experiencia es lisa y llanamente asqueante por el modus operandi mafioso que aplica la Iglesia en cualquier parte del mundo, aún en la actualidad. Todo es secreto y siguen encubriendo a los abusadores desde el momento en que no han modificado las normas jurídicas que avalan ese proceder”. Todo ello, a pesar de la “tolerancia cero” con los abusadores, predicada por el Papa Francisco.

La psicóloga Rodríguez, también activista feminista y de derechos humanos, señaló que “el proceso terapéutico es un camino que atraviesa momentos de mucho dolor psíquico, angustias, broncas, silencios, huídas. Incluso, a veces van acompañados de otras sintomatologías, de avances y retrocesos; pero también de mucho aprendizaje, desarrollo de estrategias de autocuidado, de búsqueda de vínculos saludables, de recuperación de aspectos de su vida que han estado postergados o adormecidos”. En ese sentido, planteó que “cuando el abusador es un cura, las cuestiones de poder se exacerban y multiplican, porque lo es también la institución Iglesia, que deniega justicia, que es cómplice y retroalimenta mecanismos de protección que aseguren la impunidad del abusador. Desconoce a la víctima y sus derechos. Pone en duda su historia. La salida de las situaciones traumáticas no es de a uno, sino con otros y otras. La terapia no es el todo; aunque sí una parte importante”. Para el equipo de profesionales de la Red, “no hay casos, sino causas de lucha”.

Rodríguez agregó: “Siempre debemos tener en cuenta que estos temas impactan necesariamente en los grupos familiares y de amigos, que también son damnificados indirectos, atravesados por el dolor, la impotencia, el no saber cómo ayudar, pero a su vez muchos son motores para la búsqueda de justicia. El hecho social de que el Papa sea argentino, es lo que ha motivado a muchos y muchas a escribirle en un intento de ser escuchados y hacerle saber, lo que en definitiva siempre supo, aún antes de ser Papa, como supo de la dictadura y de los desaparecidos”. Al mismo tiempo, señaló que “para las víctimas es importante que se visibilice el tema, que la gente pueda preguntarse, que tome recaudos con sus niños y niñas, que se rompa la idea de que es imposible que un cura abuse. Cuando de niños o adolescentes no pueden hablar, porque los invade la vergüenza, el temor a represalias, a que no les crean porque creen que solo les pasa a ellos, hay una situación traumática que los acompaña y se manifiesta de distintas formas: con trastornos emocionales o fìsicos, con dificultades de relacionarse socialmente. Hasta que en algún momento, por detonantes diversos, aparecen imágenes, recuerdos, preguntas, que al principio parecen aisladas, y producen angustia, se rechazan, se intenta olvidarlas. Depende de la historia de cada sujeto, pero no importa el tiempo cronológico que le lleve porque también intervienen muchas variables. Pero cuando comienza ese proceso ya no se detiene”.

Entre los casos que asesoran y acompañan, consideran que los tres mencionados más arriba son paradigmáticos en la temática. Los califican como un “descomunal abuso de poder y denegación de justicia”.

Caso por caso

Meses antes de ese pedido de ayuda que Julieta Añazco hizo a través de un mensaje de Facebook, volvieron a su memoria los abusos que sufrió cuando asistía a los campamentos de verano con el padre Héctor Ricardo Giménez. Durante años tuvo bloqueados esos recuerdos. El mensaje comenzó a recibir respuestas de otras víctimas, que conocían al sacerdote. “Es un abusador de menores desde siempre. Estuvo detenido en el año 1997 y cumplió una condena de 8 años. Yo jamás pude hablar, hasta hoy”, seguía el texto desesperado de la mujer que hoy tiene 44 años. “No creo que pueda denunciarlo formalmente; pero sí quisiera un escrache. No por mí, sino por que debe haber muchísimos niños, hoy hombres, que seguro no pudieron hablar, todavía; y por los niños que vendrán…”. En la causa hay unas 20 víctimas afectadas por el mismo cura, pero sólo dos se animaron a reclamar al obispado de La Plata. Aún no hay imputados y el cura no ha sido llamado a declarar. “Logramos que no prescribiera la causa”, recordó Julieta sobre el logro que llegó después de que se tomara la misma decisión en un caso testigo: el del cura Ilarraz, de Paraná, Entre Ríos, acusado de abusar de niños y niñas de por lo menos tres generaciones. Julieta es asesorada también por abogadas de La Ciega y apoyada por Las Azucenas, organización de mujeres de La Plata.

En 2002, los padres de treinta y cinco niños y niñas de entre 3 y 5 años que asistían al Jardín de Infantes del colegio Nuestra Señora del Camino de Mar del Plata, denunciaron al profesor Fernando Melo Pacheco, quien tras ser investigado, terminó absuelto por la Justicia. En su reclamo, los padres apuntaron desde el primer momento al cura párroco Alejandro Martínez, quien era director del colegio; y a la máxima autoridad de la Iglesia de Mar del Plata, monseñor Arancedo –quien luego fue nombrado arzobispo de Santa Fe-. El abogado Lombardi señaló que “Arancedo, actual presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal Argentina, no hizo absolutamente nada, siendo trasladado, luego, a Santa Fe para reemplazar a Edgardo Storni (fallecido), también denunciado e investigado por abusos”.

En tanto, la víctima del cura Brizzio tenía 37 años cuando denunció en el Arzobispado de Santa Fe al presbítero de Esperanza, por hechos de su adolescencia, cuando pertenecía al grupo de jóvenes de la iglesia de la localidad de Gálvez. La noche que envió los primeros correos al Vaticano no lograba dormir. Hacía unos días había googleado el nombre del sacerdote que dirigió el grupo de jóvenes del que participaba y lo vio rodeado de adolescentes en una foto de la localidad de Eperanza. La respuesta llegó tres meses después, desde el Arzobispado de Santa Fe, con la promesa de una investigación canónica que no prosperó: un año después, tras citar a declarar a toda su familia a la ciudad capital, una comisión del Vaticano resolvió que la víctima no era menor de edad en la época que denunció los abusos. “Yo tenía entre 16 y 17 años cuando ocurrió; y así hubiera sido mayor de edad, Brizzio cometió un abuso. La tolerancia cero de la que habla el Papa es una mentira”, dijo el denunciante a Enredando.

Los detalles del relato producen escalofríos: “Mis padres comenzaron a participar de un grupo de encuentros matrimoniales en la Iglesia Católica de Gálvez. Yo me uní al grupo de jóvenes que dirigía Brizzio. Recuerdo que teníamos a cargo grupos de niños, con los que realizábamos campamentos. El sacerdote era alguien cercano, un amigo. Un día me invitó a un pueblo vecino donde daría misa. Tras esto, charlamos de lo que me pasaba. Él parecía atento. En un momento insistió en contenerme. Se paró; me paré, y comencé a notar que se frotaba sobre mi cuerpo. Luego siguieron algunas caricias en los genitales”. Ese fue el primero de tres hechos denunciados por la víctima, quien además acusó a las autoridades eclesiásticas a cargo en aquella época en la provincia, ya que su padre llevó la queja hasta el denunciado exobispo Storni, quien solo gestionó un traslado para Brizzio; y a las actuales autoridades, como el vicario general del Arzobispado de Santa Fe, Javier González Grenón y el propio arzobispo.

A modo de resumen, Lombardi lamentó: “En todos los casos sufrimos el abuso de poder y denegación de justicia por la sola razón de que las víctimas no tienen derecho a defenderse. Todo lo cocinan los curas, en sus oficinas, con sus procedimientos y entre ellos”.

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Diocese: Priest arrested in prostitution sting suspended from ministry

IOWA
Des Moines Register

Morgan Gstalter, mgstalter@dmreg.com July 16, 2016

Roman Catholic officials said the priest arrested during a prostitution sting in Hamburg last week has been suspended from public ministry, pending the outcome of his criminal investigation and legal proceedings.

The Diocese of Des Moines released a news release Monday regarding the arrest of Rev. Dominic Yamoah on July 9. Yamoah was arrested for solicitation in Fremont County during a police prostitution sting after he allegedly tried to persuade an undercover source to perform sexual acts for money.

The diocese said Yamoah is a pastor at three parishes in their diocese: St. Clare in Clarinda, Sacred Heart in Bedford and St. Joseph in Villisca. They are making arrangements for pastoral care during his suspension, the release said.

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Aos 82 anos, morre o padre brasileiro citado em “Spotlight” e condenado por abuso sexual

BRASIL
Imprensa

[José Afonso Dé, a Brazilian priest, who was named at the end of the Spotlight movie, has died at age 82. He was convicted of sexual abuse.]

Citado em uma lista no fim do filme “Spotlight – Segredos Revelados”, que mostrou uma investigação jornalística de como a cúpula da Igreja Católica acobertou casos de pedofilia nos Estados Unidos, o padre brasileiro José Afonso Dé morreu na última quinta-feira (14/7), aos 82 anos.

De acordo com a Folha de S.Paulo, o religioso foi acusado de abusar sexualmente de nove adolescentes coroinhas, entre 2009 e 2010, em Franca (SP). Ele fazia tratamento contra um câncer de próstata e estava internado na Santa Casa da cidade há cerca de 30 dias, com um quadro de pneumonia.

Padre Dé foi oficialmente afastados de suas funções, mas seguia evangelizando ao receber fiéis em sua casa. O velório ocorre na capela do Asilo São Vicente, ao lado do velório central de Franca. Haverá uma missa de corpo presente, às 14h, seguida do sepultamento no cemitério Santo Agostinho.

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Sacerdote acusado de violación es detenido en Oaxaca; se encargaba de la Catedral

MEXICO
Arsenal

[Priest accused of rape was arrested in Oaxaca; He was responsible for the cathedral.]

Rebeca Romero/ADNsureste

Oaxaca.- Un joven de 19 años, quien fungiera como acólito además de prepararse a fin de recibir los sacramentos, denunció al sacerdote C. F. M. P. por el delito de violación equiparada agravada.

De acuerdo a la denuncia penal asentada en el expediente 274/2016, misma que fue realizada el 29 de marzo del presente año, el agraviado narró que los hechos se registraron el 24 de marzo, después de celebrarse la visita de las 7 casas por haber sido Jueves Santo, en la Catedral Metropolitana.

Asentó que junto con un amigo que también es catequista identificado como J. C. estuvieron apoyando en las actividades en este templo, terminando alrededor de las 01:00 horas, por lo que se quedarían a dormir en la casa adjunta ya que temprano se llevarían a cabo otras actividades.

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Alleged victim gives evidence in John Patrick Casey trial

AUSTRALIA
Coffs Coast Advocate

Leah White | 16th Jul 2016

THE first alleged victim in the historical sexual assault trial against Catholic priest John Patrick Casey has given evidence in a closed session of the Lismore District Court.

Casey has been charged with 27 counts of sexual assault, indecent assault and rape of three boys under the age of 16 said to have occurred in the 1980s.

The trial will cover 18 separate incidents.

Due to a change in law when the majority of the alleged offences occurred (from June 10, 1985 to May 30, 1987) a number of the charges have been paired to address the change in law.

The first alleged victim, now in his 40s, was the third witness to be called to provide evidence in the trial on Tuesday.

The court was closed to the public, which included the media and Casey’s 15 supporters, at 12.15pm.

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CATHOLIC FAITHFUL ‘HAPPY’ MIAMI ARCHBISHOP REMOVED PARISH PRIEST

FLORIDA
Church Militant

by Rodney Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • July 15, 2016

MIAMI, Fla. (ChurchMilitant.com) – Faithful Catholics in the archdiocese of Miami are satisfied a parish priest is being removed after evidence showed he was having an improper relationship with a parish maintenance worker.

Christifidelis, a group representing several families at St. Rose of Lima parish in Miami Beach, released a graphic report showing the result of an investigation by a private detective and members of the parish. Father Pedro Corces is shown spending time with a man he hired to be a maintenance worker on parish property.

Records show they frequently went shopping together, went out to eat at expensive restaurants several times a week and even went on vacations together. Photos and receipts from a vacation they took to Puerto Rico show the room the occupied had only one bed. Receipts for items purchased from sex shops and gay musicals were found in Fr. Corces’ garbage.

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Attorney for former Passaic priest convicted of sex charges seeks new trial

NEW JERSEY
The Record

BY KIBRET MARKOS
STAFF WRITER | THE RECORD

The attorney for a former Passaic priest convicted of sex charges two weeks ago asked a judge on Friday for a new trial, arguing that the jury convicted his client without sufficient evidence.

Passaic County prosecutors, however, argued that the trial of Jose Lopez in state Superior Court in Paterson involved no irregularity that warrants a new trial. Judge Sohail Mohammed said he will make a decision next week.

Lopez, 37, was convicted in June 28 of luring, child endangerment and criminal sexual contact after prosecutors argued that he took a 14-year-old girl into his private suite at St. Mary’s Church in Passaic and molested her. The jury found him not guilty of attempted sexual assault.

Lopez, who faces up to 10 years in prison, has since been held without bail at the Passaic County Jail as he awaits sentencing in November.

Defense attorney James Porfido said at a hearing before Mohammed that the panel that convicted Lopez deliberated for only five hours to reach a verdict. He said that period of time could not have been enough to consider all of the evidence in the trial and argued that the jury was ready to convict his client from the start without listening to the case.

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Clergy receive update on sex abuse bill’s status, victim support info

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholic Philly

By Matthew Gambino • Posted July 15, 2016

Archbishop Charles Chaput issued a letter July 14 updating the faithful of the Philadelphia Archdiocese on the status of a bill that proposes to lift the statutes of limitation on civil lawsuits of child sexual abuse in Pennsylvania.

The letter in English and Spanish was dated for this weekend, July 16-17, and sent to all priests and deacons in the archdiocese via email along with several supporting documents showing the long-term effects of child sexual abuse for adult survivors and numerous resources to which abuse victims in Philadelphia, its four suburban counties and statewide may turn for help.

Another document (in English and Spanish) in the package detailed the church’s assistance to victims of clergy sexual abuse, both in implemented policies and financial assistance of some $18 million over recent years.

Also included was information to help the clergymen offer pastoral care to survivors of child sexual abuse in their parish.

The archbishop’s letter describes House Bill 1947’s “potential to devastate our parishes, schools, and charitable ministries” because of civil lawsuits that could be filed against private institutions such as Catholic parishes and dioceses in the state if the bill were to become law. The House bill was approved in April.

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Assembly of First Nations Seeks Investigation of Furlong Abuse Allegations

CANADA
The Tyee

By Bob Mackin
TheTyee.ca

The Assembly of First Nations wants a “thorough and impartial investigation” into allegations former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong abused aboriginal students more than 45 years ago.

Delegates to the assembly’s annual general meeting this week supported a resolution calling for an investigation by the RCMP and the federal government.

The resolution also called on the federal government to meet “the affected members of Lake Babine Band Council, Burns Lake Band Council, and any other affected former students to hear their concerns about the conduct of investigations and to discuss with them acceptable remedies.”

The resolution was moved by Lake Babine Chief Wilf Adam.

The abuse allegations were raised in a Georgia Straight article by Laura Robinson in September 2012. Furlong denied the accusations and attacked Robinson’s reporting practices and credibility.

Furlong claimed vindication last September when B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Wedge ruled that Furlong’s statements were covered by the defence of qualified privilege.

But Cathy Woodgate, one of the former students alleging abuse, says their charges have never been properly investigated.

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Key figures in pope’s financial reform carry some baggage

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Inés San Martín July 16, 2016
VATICAN CORRESPONDENT

ROME – Cardinals who elect a pope are sworn to secrecy, so there are some details about conclaves the world may never know, but after the choice of Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio in March 13 as Pope Francis, many participants were crystal-clear on one point.

They elected him in part because of his profile as a Vatican outsider, who would carry out an ambitious program of reform.

As his first move, Francis created a study commission which recommended a series of changes to the Vatican’s scandal-plagued finances, and which itself became engulfed in controversy when a former official and former member were both charged and convicted in a Vatican trial of leaking its secret documents to journalists.

As it turns out, that’s hardly the only complication that has beset Francis’s reform effort.

Based on the commission’s recommendations, Francis created three new financial bodies in the Vatican in 2014.

* A Council for the Economy, composed of both cardinals and laity, to set policy.
* A Secretariat for the Economy, headed by Australian Cardinal George Pell, to implement those policies.
* An independent Auditor General, to provide a system of checks and balances.

An internal tug-of-war broke out to define the scope of the authority of those new entities, especially Pell’s department. Early on it seemed the secretariat would take over direct administration of most Vatican finances, but on July 9, Francis issued a decree giving most of those powers back to the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (ASPSA.)

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Believe Me, Arch-Bish, the Church Largely Covers Up Pedophile Priests

GHANA
Ghana Web

By Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., Ph.D.
Garden City, New York
July 1, 2016
E-Mail: okoampaahoofe@optimum.net

Archbishop Emeritus Peter Akwasi Sarpong must know by now that the very notion of a celibate Roman-Catholic priesthood is decidedly a jaded phenomenon that is nowadays accepted or believed to be practicable or normal by only the most naïve of parishioners or congregants. Indeed, so ridiculed has this institutional practice been subjected that it has become a veritable joke among even the global Catholic prelate itself. Which may well explain why the retired Oxbridge-educated Bishop of Kumasi would seek to relatively downplay this most immoral of moral misdeeds (See “Sexual Acts Involving Catholic Priests Not Worst of Sins – Archbishop” Ultimatefmonline.com / Ghanaweb.com 7/1/16).

At its worst, sexcapades among the celibate priesthood has taken the patently criminal form of pedophilia, the wanton abuse of children, the most vulnerable and defenseless of the human species. And the irony here is that it has taken the sinister guise of priests as mentors and role-models of these largely innocent humans. It well appears that minors have been made the prime targets of pedophile priests because so blindly trusting are their adult parents that in a legion of instances, it has taken decades for the parents of the victims to come to a woefully belated realization of the lethal harm that has been done to their now-adult sons and daughters.

For an institution that is so morbidly homophobic, it is curious to note that most of the instances of clerical pedophilia, especially in the West, have been between Catholic priests and male underage children well below the age of consent or discretion. In the Third World, particularly in Africa, these illicit sexual encounters have largely taken place between philandering priests and young women. And to be certain, there have been quite a remarkable number of cases in which such encounters have ended in the deaths of these women who, faced with unwanted pregnancies by priests who were either not emotionally and psychologically mature enough and/or responsible enough to accept parental responsibilities, sought to abort these pregnancies.

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Aussie bishop asks, ‘Are we missing the opportunity of Francis?’

AUSTRALIA
Crux

Christopher WhiteJuly 16, 2016
CRUX CONTRIBUTOR

[Editor’s Note: Part one of Crux contributor Christopher White’s interview with Archbishop Anthony Fisher appeared on Friday, July 15. This is the second part of their conversation.]

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA – This past Christmas, Archbishop Anthony Fisher – barely a year into his new post as Archbishop of Sydney in Australia – contracted Guillain-Barré Syndrome, a rare autoimmune disease, resulting in temporary paralysis.

After four months of rehabilitation, he’s back at work-both catching up on past projects, but also plowing ahead to new ones.

Arguably one of the sharpest minds of the Church’s hierarchy (not to mention one of the youngest), he’s currenty at work on a forthcoming volume on bioethics. (Full disclosure: I am working with Fisher as a research assistant on the volume). And while medical ethics has been a significant part of his educational training, his thinking on these issues has been given a newly personal dimension due to his recent illness.

As he settles back into his demanding schedule, I sat down with Fisher to discuss his hopes and the challenges ahead for the Australian Church.

Among other things, Fisher said the popularity of Pope Francis is enticing many people who’ve been distant from the Church to give it another look, and that he doesn’t want future generations to look back and say, “What an opportunity you missed!”

White: Australia’s Royal Commission is looking into institutional responses to sexual abuse. How do you think the Church will fare in comparison to other institutions?

Fisher: I think the Catholic Church will probably be the most criticized of all institutions in our country in this matter. I’m not sure whether history will judge that we have been the worst offender, but we’re certainly the first to have been forced to face this head on and we are deeply ashamed and humiliated by what has been revealed by the behavior of some of our clergy and religious and by the failures of some of our Church leaders.

I think the fact that the spotlight has been turned first on us has forced us to try to deal with the fallout for victims, helping them in every way that we can to help them achieve justice and some measure of healing. We’re the first to have to look at what sort of systems we can put in place for the discernment of vocations and the support of people in the priesthood and religious life and Church workers in the future, and putting much better child protection protocols in place right across our institutions.

In all sorts of ways, we’ve had to face this first, which means we have not had templates from anywhere else to guide us. We’ve made mistakes, sometimes terrible mistakes. I hope that that experience will mean that others can learn from us as they face the same sort of questions, and that if we’ve been through the humiliation of this first, we might come through the other end a better Church.
It may be a humbled and ashamed Church in many ways, but I hope a more compassionate and more respectful Church-a Church where people will really feel safe having their children and young people involved with into the future.

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July 15, 2016

Detienen a sacerdote de Oaxaca acusado de violación

OAXACA (MEXICO)
El Siglo de Torreón [Torreón, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico]

July 15, 2016

By EL UNIVERSAL

Read original article

Un sacerdote de la catedral metropolitana de Oaxaca, acusado de haber violado a un joven, fue detenido ayer jueves y encarcelado en el Centro de Readaptación Social en Miahuatlán de Porfirio Díaz, de jurisdicción estatal.

La Fiscalía General de Justicia del Estado confirmó que la aprehensión ocurrió bajo el mandato judicial 274/2016, librado por el Juez Cuarto de lo Penal, en contra del cura identificado con las iniciales C.F.P.M.

Según la denuncia, un joven fue invitado en octubre de 2015 por el imputado a laborar en la Catedral, ubicada en el primer cuadro del Centro Histórico de la capital.

En la Semana Santa pasada, se incrementó la carga de trabajo en labores de limpieza por lo cual invitó a uno de sus compañeros a ayudarle.

El viernes 25 de marzo, tras concluir su jornada en las primeras horas de la madrugada, fueron invitados por el sacerdote a tomar bebidas alcohólicas; tras un primer rechazo, aceptaron al grado de embriagarse.

Cuando el ofendido se sintió mareado, se retiró a su cuarto pero entonces llegó el cura a manosearlo; debido a su estado etílico, el joven no pudo impedirlo, de acuerdo con la denuncia.

Al despertarse, notó que no tenía su ropa interior, más tarde acudió a un médico y a exámenes de laboratorio, donde le corroboraron que había sido violado, por lo cual decidió denunciar los hechos.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

1-888-538-8541

PENNSYLVANIA
Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse – FACSA

Last April, the PA Attorney General’s Office established a toll-free phone number for survivors of child sex abuse (who were PA residents, or were abused by someone in PA) to call if they wanted to file a report of being sexually abused or molested as a child under 18 no matter how long ago the abuse happened or no matter who committed the abuse.

The AG’s office is asking victims from all the places/institutions and all the alleged criminals that have literally gotten away with soul murder. Hopefully, the AG’s office will be able to take further steps to expose the criminals and the criminal institutions that aided and abetted the perps.

1-888-538-8541

While your specific abuse may have happened so long ago that there is no criminal or civil charges you can file, by your identifying perps and complicit institutions now, other victims may gain the courage to come forward once they realize they were not the only one abused by their perp. Additionally, we anticipate there are many institutions over the years that have hidden cases of child sex abuse when it happened and with the children they were supposed to be protecting. The perps and the institutions need to be held accountable for the damage that happened.

1-888-538-8541

Please call this number. Leave a message. Someone will call you back.

Your story could be of help to other victims.

And then SHARE, SHARE, SHARE this email/post!

PS: If you lived in the Allentown Diocese when you were abused, please also contact Rep. Mark Rozzi.
On Facebook: Private Message Rep. Rozzi at https://www.facebook.com/VoteRozzi
Via Email: MRozzi@pahouse.net

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PENNSYLVANIA
Foundation to Abolish Child Sexual Abuse – FACSA

All are welcome to join us Monday afternoon in Philly!

WHAT: Rep. Mark Rozzi to address church leaders callous disregard for victims at Monday news conference

WHEN: Monday, July 18, 2016, 1:30 PM

WHERE: Outside front entrance, Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul, 1723 Race St, Philadelphia, PA 19103

DirectionsNearby Parking

CONTACT: Charlie Vaihinger
House Democratic Communications Office
Phone: 717-787-7895
Email: Cvaihinger@pahouse.net

HARRISBURG, July 15, 2016 – State Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks, announced today that he will be joining with victims and advocates for a news conference next week to discuss the callous disregard and disrespect church leaders have recently shown to victims of child sex abuse.

The news conference, which will be held at 1:30 p.m. on Monday, July 18 at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul in Philadelphia, will focus on the recent death of victim Brian Gergely and the cancellation of a scheduled meeting between victim John-Michael Delaney and Archbishop Charles Chaput.

Participating in the news conference will include:

• Marci Hamilton, University of Pennsylvania Fox Distinguished Scholar
• John-Michael Delaney, victim of notorious Rev. James Brzyski
• Patrick Conlin, whose meeting request with the bishop of the Diocese of Allentown was denied.
• Victims featured in You Have the Power video; and
• Advocates and community leaders supporting Statute of Limitation reform for child sex abuse

Additionally, Rozzi said he intends to discuss the status of House Bill 1947, a statute of limitation reform bill from which the Senate stripped his retroactive amendment, which was overwhelming approved by the House in April.

CONTACT: Charlie Vaihinger
House Democratic Communications Office
Phone: 717-787-7895
Email: Cvaihinger@pahouse.net

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Troubled Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry costs rise to £1.8m

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

ANGUS HOWARTH
Saturday 16 July 2016

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has cost £1.8 million since launching last year, ­latest figures reveal.

At present the inquiry awaits the appointment of a new chair and panel member. The inquiry into the historical abuse of children in care is expected to last four years.

Independent expert Professor Michael Lamb, a professor of psychology at Cambridge University, resigned from his position claiming the inquiry is “doomed” due to Scottish Government interference.

And Susan O’Brien QC quit as chair earlier this month, saying the government had “sought to micro-manage and control the inquiry,” and had threatened to sack her when she resisted.

A statement posted on the inquiry website along with the lastest figures said: “Scottish Ministers are in the process of appointing a new chair and panel member for the Inquiry. Meanwhile, the important work of the inquiry continues as it seeks to fulfil the requirements outlined in its terms of reference.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Irregularity

UNITED STATES
Questions from a Ewe

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Last week Philadelphia’s Archbishop Chaput said remarried divorced Catholics shouldn’t receive Communion unless they abstain from sex…likewise for same sex couples. Furthermore, he said those same people shouldn’t be allowed to serve on parish councils, instruct the faithful, serve as lectors or dispense Communion. (I think they can still operate heavy machinery and definitely can contribute financially.) He feels such people are in “irregular” relationships that offer “a serious counter-witness to Catholic belief, which can only produce moral confusion in the community.”

Coincidentally, that same week, a priest confessed to me that he is sexually active. This places him in the worldwide majority of priests, since according to psychologists who study priests’ sexuality, 50% of U.S. priests and a higher percentage of priests from other global regions are sexually active. By the way, this priest felt his sexual activity was “sinful” but seemed prepared to suffer this sin repeatedly in the future.

Regardless of one’s opinion about the sinfulness of priests’ sexual relationships, aside from converted married former Anglican priests, any sexual activity Roman Catholic priests have is categorically dishonest and unhealthy because it is secretive.

This guy, like other sexually active priests, which means the majority of priests, not only receives communion, he consecrates the host. I guess Chaput is ok with sexually active priests receiving and consecrating the host because it’s not “irregular.” It’s become so regular that it is the majority of priests who have secret, dishonest, unhealthy sexual relationships.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

IL–Notorious Belleville predator priest dies

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, June 27

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

Local Catholic officials have kept hidden the passing of Robert Vonnahmen, one of the area’s most notorious pedophile priests. He died in a nursing home in Highland, Illinois on, or near, May 9 and his Catholic funeral was apparently held on May 12 in Elizabethtown, Illinois where he was buried.

At least three bishops and dozens of Catholic officials ignored and enabled Vonnahmen’s crimes for decades. He was one of Illinois’ most egregious predators. As recently as 2013, St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson let Vonnahmen run ads in the Archdiocesan newspaper for the San Damiano Shrine in southern Illinois which the defrocked child molester operated even though the Vatican defrocked Vonnahmen seven years earlier.

We call on Belleville Bishop Braxton to spread the word of Vonnahmen’s death through church bulletins, parish websites and pulpit announcements and beg others who saw, suspected or suffered his crimes to come forward.

And we call on Carlson to apologize for and explain his reckless support of this serial predator. How does he justify encouraging local Catholics, through the St. Louis Review newspaper, to visit and donate to a facility run by a proven predator?

Once again, Catholic officials stay silent about a predator. Once again, the feelings of his victims are disregarded while the comfort of his bishop is protected. The people Vonnahmen violated deserve to know that he can no longer hurt anyone. We hope his passing will bring some comfort to those he assaulted and betrayed.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

MO–Church & non-profit must act now on child sex charges

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, July 13

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003 cell, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

A Kansas City area pastor who is also a homeless shelter staffer faces child sex charges. It’s now the duty of both institutions – church and shelter – to aggressively seek out others with information or suspicions about his crimes, so that law enforcement can successfully prosecute the pastor.

[Republic]

Rev. Preston heads My Father’s House and has also been pastor at Grace Revolution Church of the Nazarene in Miami County Kansas. But Preston’s charity has sites across six counties. We firmly believe he has molested others. And those who gave Rev. Preston positions, prestige and power to help find those wounded individuals.

According to one newspaper “The shelter’s website currently features a link to a GoFundMe web page. . .asking for funds to help Preston take a sabbatical.” We urge Preston’s employers to return those donations and explain why.

No matter what charity or church officials do or don’t do, we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in charities, churches or institutions to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling law enforcement, get justice by calling attorneys, and be comforted by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Twin Cities archdiocese sells off more propert

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Martin Moylan Jul 15, 2016

A federal judge has granted the bankrupt Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis permission to sell two more properties.

The archdiocese will get $900,000 for the buildings at 244 and 250 Dayton Ave., near the Cathedral of St. Paul.

One lot is vacant; the other contains an office building.

The buyer is a subsidiary of The Cathedral Heritage Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving, restoring and enhancing the Cathedral of Saint Paul.

The archdiocese has now raised about $9 million by selling church real estate, including the Summit Avenue chancery that housed offices and the archbishop’s residence.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Troubled child abuse inquiry has cost £1.8m

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Stephen Naysmith

The troubled Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has cost £1,800,000 since launching last year, latest figures reveal. The shocking statistic comes as the inquiry awaits the appointment of a new chair and panel member.

QC Susan O’Brien quit as chair earlier this month, days after fellow panel member Professor Michael Lamb, with both citing excessive government interference in the inquiry’s work.

The inquiry released the updated figures, along with a statement insisting the inquiry was continuing its work to investigate the abuse of children in care settings, despite the loss of two of its three person panel.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Former Canaan youth pastor rejects plea deal

MAINE
CentralMaine.com

BY RACHEL OHM STAFF WRITER
rohm@centralmaine.com | @rachel_ohm | 207-612-2368

The former co-director of a youth ministry program in Canaan accused of sexually abusing a child rejected a plea deal in the case Thursday, according to the Kennebec County district attorney, and will have to be indicted by a grand jury if the case is to go to trial.

Lucas Savage, 37, of Clinton, is charged with class B unlawful sexual contact and rejected the plea deal Thursday at the Capital Judicial Center in Augusta.

Savage was a co-director of Youth Haven Ministry at the time of his arrest in March. He has not entered a plea to the charge.

“We made an offer today and it was rejected, so we have not settled the case,” said Somerset County District Attorney Maeghan Maloney. If the case is to continue, a grand jury will have indict Savage, she said.

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Former Canaan Youth Pastor Accused of Sexual Abuse of Girl Rejects Plea Deal

MAINE
WABI

JUL 15, 2016

CATHERINE PEGRAM
LOCAL NEWS

The case is moving forward against a former youth pastor in Canaan accused of sexually abusing a young girl.

The Somerset County District Attorney says 37-year-old Lucas Savage of Clinton Thursday rejected a plea deal.

He’s charged with unlawful sexual contact.

Savage would have to be indicted by a grand jury now before he could enter a plea and go to trial.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Catholic-Themed News: Nienstedt at Napa, Chaput and Amoris Laetitia, Joe Paterno and What He Knew, Violence of Catholic Teaching about LGBTQ People

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Brother Body can be a real ass sometimes, can’t he? I’m dealing with some health things right now, and finding it hard to concentrate on blogging. Please forgive the “lightness” of this posting, which is more or less a list of Catholic-themed news items or commentary I’d like to report to you, as I work on encouraging Brother Body to stop being so much of a donkey to me.

1. As many of you who have followed this blog for any length of time will know, I’ve posted repeatedly here about the former archbishop of St. Paul-Minneapolis, John Nienstedt, who resigned in June 2015. Click his name in the labels below, and you’ll find my previous postings about him.

I’ve also blogged about the big right-wing Catholic shindig that occurs each year out in California, the Napa Institute, at which right-wing Catholics pretend they’re being persecuted and celebrate Latin-rite Masses in pretend catacombs (otherwise known as wine cellars), before convening for lavish banquets at which expensive wine flows, where they listen to lectures about how persecuted “real” Catholics are in America today. One of my Napa Institute postings notes that in 2013, Nienstedt told the Napa crowd that the gay rights movement is linked to the devil.

Guess whom Napa Institute just invited back to officiate at several Napa sessions? Here’s Tim Lennon of SNAP on Nienstedt’s attendance at this year’s Napa Institute:

Archbishop John Nienstedt, the former head of the St. Paul/Minneapolis archdiocese, is at the Napa Institute for the next few days. Several sources have told us he works there permanently now. He’s accused of sexually exploiting and/or propositioning between five and ten young seminarians. In civil litigation and repeated media exposes (especially by Minnesota Public Radio), he’s been shown to have ignored or concealed child sex crimes by priests. And the archdiocese he ran for years faces pending criminal charges for refusing to report suspected abuse by clerics.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Hamilton Catholic Diocese helped in arrest of London priest

CANADA
AM 640

Police say the Hamilton Catholic Diocese has helped in the arrest of a priest in London.

He’s been charged with fraud in the alleged theft of more than $500,000 meant for refugees.

Police say 51-year-old Amer Saka obtained the money from over 20 people under the guise of a sponsorship program to bring refugee families into Canada.

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Santa anarchia, quante correnti vogliono controllare il Vaticano

ROMA
L’Espresso

[Anarchy at the Vatican. How many groups want to control the Vatican?]

Il processo ai giornalisti sul vatiLeaks si è rivelato un autogol per la Chiesa. Ed ha anche messo in mostra le divisioni e le spaccature tra i Cardinali. Di cui Papa Francesco non sembra volersi occupare. Ecco da chi sono composte le varie cordate

DI EMILIANO FITTIPALDI
14 luglio 2016

I danni enormi causati dal processo Vatileaks, gli scontri continui tra i vertici della curia romana, le strategie per la sostituzione del presidente dello Ior, i litigi dei cardinali sulla trasparenza dei bilanci della Santa Sede.

“L’Espresso” in edicola domani dedica la copertina alla “Santa Anarchia” che sta caratterizzando gli ultimi mesi del pontificato di Francesco, che sembra aver scelto per la guida politica della curia uno stile di governo molto diverso sia da quello di Benedetto XVI e di Giovanni Paolo II.

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Uzalo perv has priests hot under the collar

SOUTH AFRICA
IOL

There’s no sign of great vengeance, but there certainly has been furious anger after the Uzalo sex pest priest episode aired.

Real life pastors are apparently up in arms after an episode of the popular drama series, in which a priest groped a worshipper and helped himself to church funds.

Making their disgust heard on a variety of platforms, the church leaders claimed that the series has damaged the reputation of the church.

“The Pastor Nkosi storyline is painting the wrong picture of Christian pastors and Christianity as a whole,” raged Pastor Caleb Mbokazi of Inheritor’s Foundation Church of Christ.

“I know the show is funded with a budget of millions but it’s clear those millions are used to painting us as bad people.”

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Former Alexandria-Cornwall priest goes to trial next year

CANADA
Cornwall Standard-Freeholder

By Greg Peerenboom, Cornwall Standard-Freeholder
Thursday, July 14, 2016

A former Alexandria-Cornwall diocese priest will go to trial to defend against sexual assault charges next year.

Denis Vaillancourt was the parish pastor for several churches during the last few decades.

His trial is scheduled for June 13-15, 2017. He was charged in connection to an alleged incident last fall at a South Glengarry home.

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Absuelto el exdirector de Salesianos en Cádiz de abusos a menores

ESPANA
El Pais

[The former director of the Salesian school of Cadiz – Francisco Javier López Luna – was acquitted of two counts of continuous sexual abuse and 11 against moral integrity against him. That is the decision of the Third Section of the Provincial Court of Cadiz which became known today. The trial against the priest was held in May.]

JESÚS A. CAÑAS
Cádiz 14 JUL 2016

El exdirector del colegio Salesianos de Cádiz Francisco Javier López Luna ha sido absuelto de dos delitos de abusos sexuales continuados y 11 contra la integridad moral que se le imputaban. Ese es el fallo de la Sección Tercera de la Audiencia Provincial de Cádiz que se ha conocido hoy, tras el juicio contra el sacerdote que se celebró entre el pasado 5 y 19 del pasado mayo. Dos de los tres magistrados que componían el tribunal sí consideran que existen vejaciones leves en algunos hechos juzgados, aunque sin ánimo libidinoso de abuso sexual y no será condenado por ello por un cambio en la ley. Tampoco se han considerado probadas las 15 faltas continuadas de lesiones o de malos tratos que se le imputan. Ante ello, tan solo se le condena, como responsable civil directo, a indemnizar en concepto de daños morales a la cantidad de 500 euros a 12 menores.

La imputación más controvertida, que incluso mantuvo al sacerdote durante días en prisión, es la de abusos sexuales. Ahora, la sentencia considera probado que López Luna practicaba juegos como ‘el abrazo del oso’ (por el que abrazaba con fuerza a los menores, los elevaba y los tiraba al suelo), el ‘goldfish’ (golpear con la mano los genitales por encima de la ropa) o incluso arrancar vello púbico. Los jueces hablan de “tocamientos sorpresivos, breves y por encima de la ropa del sexo de los menores, en el contexto de un juego aceptado de contrario, a veces precedido de una clara provocación por parte del menor”.

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Who watches the watchmen?

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Greg Daly
July 14, 2016

Last month saw the publication of the final tranche of reports from the first phase of reviews by the Irish Church’s safeguarding board, and the overall picture, according to board head Teresa Devlin, is one of steady progress.

“You really need to look at the detail of the reports to see that some orders took a while to get the culture of safeguarding embedded,” she explains, continuing, “the Church has had guidance in place since 1996 and the first set of National Board standards were in 2008, and it probably wasn’t until 2012 that some of them started to put proper standards around their practices and report sharply to the Guards and the HSE. Others of course hit the ground running much longer before that.”

Observing that “for most of them it was steady progress”, she stresses that “For all of them, obviously, they’re now reporting sharply to the Guards and to Tusla – they are now following the standards and policies.”

The modern Irish Church is a safe place for children, she maintains. “It’s not for me to talk about other bodies, but I think the Church since I think about 2008 recognised that they need to do something very quickly. They put in place the national board and the standards, and it is definitely much, much better,” she says.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

After Hasidic Suicide, Israel Looks in the Mirror

ISRAEL
New York Times

Shmuel Rosner JULY 14, 2016

TEL AVIV — In death, Esti Weinstein has started a national conversation. A 50-year-old mother of eight, Ms. Weinstein disappeared on June 21 and was found dead in her car six days later in an apparent suicide. She left behind a note and a manuscript of a memoir. She also left a long list of questions that have rekindled animosity between Israel’s secular majority and its ultra-Orthodox minority.

Ms. Weinstein had been a member of the Hasidic sect known as Gur, Israel’s largest, and she came from a distinguished family within the community. She was married at age 17 by arrangement and thrown into a relationship that she ultimately decided she could not endure. She left her family and the closed-off community eight years ago to lead a secular life.

Her book — copies of which have been distributed by mail and social media throughout Israel — chronicles in detail some of the esoteric habits of the sect from which she escaped. (After I submitted this article, Kinneret-Zmora-Dvir Publishing, by which I am employed, acquired rights to the book.) The Gur sect is rigid in its approach to marriage and modesty, with the aim of reaching a higher level of “kedushah,” or holiness. As researchers have documented, and as newspaper reporters have further detailed, Gur Hasidim “have sexual intercourse only once a month” during which they aim “to minimize physical contact.” A Gur Hasidic man will not use his wife’s name and he will reportedly sometimes get prescriptions for antidepressants to suppress his sex drive.

Peeping into the bedrooms of the ultra-Orthodox, or Haredim, and mocking their habits — real or imaginary — has long been something of an Israeli national pastime. In Ms. Weinstein’s suicide story, the news media found a gold mine. But the issues go beyond mere voyeurism.

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George Pell, Danny Casey and the Vatican’s books

ROME
The Australian

JULY 15, 2016

Leo Shanahan
Reporter
Sydney

When business managers complain about having to reform “ancient” institutions, not many are speaking literally. But as chief adviser to Cardinal George Pell — the Vatican’s top financial official — for the past 2½ years, Danny Casey has faced challenges more than 2000 years in the making.

Casey, who leads the project management office in the Secretariat for the Economy, says Cardinal Pell’s decisions have to be based on business rather than religious grounds.

“One of the lines is that we need to be businesslike, recognising that we aren’t a business … that’s really the theme of what we have been asked to do at the Vatican,” Casey tells The Deal on a recent visit home.

“We’re not a business, we’re sovereign and quite different. But that’s no excuse for not being businesslike, that’s no excuse for not having benchmarks, for being sloppy, for having lazy assets on the balance sheet that could be put to greater work.”

Pell’s time in Rome has been dominated by the royal commission into child sex abuse and his decision to give evidence via video link rather than return to Australia. But despite his image as the archetypal conservative, within Vatican ranks Pell is considered a radical in his efforts to overhaul the church’s finances.

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‘VatiLeaks’: A foolish and embarrassing case

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Jul. 14, 2016

Although the court’s final decision was at least half right, the “VatiLeaks” case was a terrible mistake from the very beginning. It made the Vatican look vindictive and foolish. It was an embarrassment to the Vatican and the church.

The story starts back in November 2015 with the publication of Avarice by Emiliano Fittipaldi and Merchants in the Temple by Gianluigi Nuzzi, which were based on Vatican documents leaked to the Italian journalists. They were charged with violating Vatican law by soliciting the documents and pressuring Vatican officials to give them secret documents.

“Stealing documents is a crime,” Pope Francis said after the books were published. “It is a deplorable act that does not help.”

A new law had been approved by Francis that made taking, distributing, and publishing secret Vatican documents a crime in the Vatican City State. This law was in response to earlier leaks by the pope’s butler and others during the papacy of Benedict XVI.

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Sen. Leyva’s bill would protect child victims of sex abuse: Guest commentary

CALIFORNIA
Daily Bulletin

By Robert Weiner and Katie Schulze
POSTED: 07/14/16

The Justice for Victims Act, which has gained traction by passing the state Senate before the summer recess and is ready to be voted on by the Assembly, gives California the chance to take a strong stance against the Catholic Church’s ongoing cover-up of child sexual abuse.

Minnesota has passed a similar bill, but California’s enactment would not only protect children here but send shock waves across the country.

It is important the bill sponsored by Sen. Connie Leyva, D-Chino, maintains its momentum and is passed by the Assembly in August before its adjournment for the year.

The bill, SB 813, would end the statute of limitations for sexual assault crimes and allow indefinite criminal prosecution of perpetrators. Sen. Leyva assures critics the bill “would in no way change the burden of proof, though it would simply offer victims additional time to come to terms with the horrible crime committed against them.” The Church has lobbied extensively to block extension of the statute of limitations and ensure the perpetrator is able to go unscathed.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Phillips Exeter alumni vow to withhold donations over mishandled abuse complaints

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston Globe

By Jonathan Saltzman and Todd Wallack GLOBE STAFF JULY 14, 2016

Nearly 700 alumni of Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire have signed a petition vowing to withhold donations to the elite boarding school until leaders crack down on sexual abuse of students.

The alumni signed a letter to the board of trustees saying they have lost confidence in the school administration over the issue.

“Listen, Exeter cares about two things above and beyond anything else, based on what we’ve seen recently,’’ said one of the signers, Michael Whitfield Jones, a 1975 graduate who works in finance and digital marketing in New York City. “They care about money, and they care about public opinion, which is a sad thing.’’

Exeter has been rocked by sexual misconduct scandals this year, including a report in the Globe this week that the school minister tried to resolve one student’s allegations of sexual assault by asking the alleged abuser to bake bread for her.

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Accused clergy homeless in Dublin

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

Several priests who have been accused of child sexual abuse are thought to be homeless in Dublin, the head of the Church safeguarding board has warned.

Contrasting how diocesan clergy faced with accusations can lack the supports priests from religious orders have, NBSCCCI chief Teresa Devlin told The Irish Catholic that she is frequently told that “it’s easier for religious order priests because they still are a brother, they still have somewhere to live, they still are cared for – a diocesan priest may be cast out to the wolves”.

She has heard reports in this context, she said, of how there are “some diocesan priests from various parts of Ireland who are living rough in Dublin”.

Emphasising that dioceses must strike a careful balance in this area, Ms Devlin cautioned that such a situation could pose dangers for children.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Clergy Discipline Measure can cause ‘further hurt’ to victims of abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

THE use of the Clergy Discipline Measure (CDM) to handle cases of clerical abuse has been questioned by a leading diocesan chancellor, Canon Rupert Bursell QC.

Writing in the July issue of Crucible, the journal of Christian social ethics, Canon Bursell, Chancellor of Durham diocese since 1989, welcomes this year’s changes to the original CDM, framed in 2003 before safeguarding was treated as seriously as today. He questions, none the less, the process of making a formal complaint, which, “unless very sensitively handled, can engender misunderstanding and further hurt to the complainant”.

Canon Bursell writes of “a very real psychological obstacle” to the necessity under the 2003 Measure of making a complaint about a priest to the diocesan bishop. “This is particularly so in the light of the manner in which clerical abuse has in the past frequently been swept under the carpet.”

Among his critique of the Measure, as now amended, Canon Bursell welcomes the relaxation of the one-year limitation period in which complaints of sexual abuse must be reported. He laments the lack of reporting on the number of cases. He advises that clergy and their spouses are precluded from holding the post of diocesan safeguarding adviser.

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July 14, 2016

Condenan en Puerto Rico a 15 años a sacerdote por actos lascivos

PUERTO RICO
Univision

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico. – El sacerdote Floyd McCoy Jordan fue sentenciado hoy a cumplir 15 años de cárcel tras ser encontrado culpable por un jurado el pasado mes de junio por cometer actos lascivos contra un menor de 14 años durante los años 2013 y 2014 en el municipio puertorriqueño de Hormigueros.

El Departamento de Justicia de Puerto Rico informó a través de un comunicado de que la jueza Aixa Rosado Pietri, del Tribunal de Mayagüez, presidió la vista en donde la defensa había impugnado el informe previo a la sentencia y había solicitado que se le impusieran atenuantes al acusado.

Sin embargo, la magistrada declaró la petición no ha lugar y le impuso la pena de 15 años en prisión.

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Investor and Child Victims Act proponent donates $100G to his newly formed Fighting for Children PAC

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

KENNETH LOVETT
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Tuesday, July 12, 2016

ALBANY — An upstate investor has put his money where his mouth is when it comes to pushing legislation to make it easier for child sex abuse victims to seek justice.

Gary Greenberg, who is also a sexual abuse survivor, donated $100,000 of his own money, as promised, to a political action committee he recently created to help with the effort, a financial disclosure filing to be made public later this week will show.

Since its creation in late May, Greenberg’s Fighting for Children PAC has raised a modest $1,635.

The PAC has already donated a combined $77,000 to the seven Democratic candidates it has endorsed in an effort to shift control of the Senate to the Dems.

“The PAC is off and running with a terrific start,” Greenberg told the Daily News in an email. “If I was a Republican senator targeted by the Fighting For Children PAC, I would be worried.”

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Child abuse victims group endorses Haber for Senate

NEW YORK
The Island Now

Thu Jul 14, 2016

By Joe Nikic

A political action committee formed by a child sex abuse victim last week backed Democrat Adam Haber in the state Senate Seventh District race to succeed state Sen. Jack Martins.

Haber said that passing the Child Victims Act, legislation that would eliminate the statute of limitations for reporting child sex abuse, would be one of his main goals if elected.

“Sponsoring and passing the Child Victims Act will be a top priority of mine as a state senator so that the victims of child abuse are able to get the justice that they deserve,” he said.

A New York businessman, Gary Greenberg, formed the Fighting for Children PAC two months ago to support state legislators who would vote in favor of the Child Victims Act.

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Newspaper: Student accused of assault baked bread as penance

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Salon

EXETER, N.H. (AP) — A spokeswoman for a New Hampshire prep school says officials have “grave concern” about a sex-assault case that was resolved with a male student baking bread for his accuser as “penance.”

The 17-year-old Phillips Exeter Academy student had accused the classmate of groping her. The Boston Globe reported Wednesday that she told two deans about it in the fall, and then later met with a campus minister and the male student.

The Rev. Robert Thompson suggested the boy do “penance” by baking her bread and bringing it to her weekly, rather than going to police. The Globe reported the girl felt additional stress by seeing him every week, and went to police in May.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests has called for Thompson to be fired. He didn’t immediately return a phone message.

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Priest charged with stealing $500K meant to bring refugees to Canada

CANADA
CBC News

London police have charged a priest with defrauding more than $500,000 intended to sponsor Syrian refugees coming to Hamilton.

Amer Saka of London, a 51-year-old Chaldean priest, is charged with fraud exceeding $5,000 and possessing proceeds of crime. The investigation started in February.

Police allege Saka got money from more than 20 victims who thought they were sponsoring refugee families.

Saka is a priest at St. Joseph’s Chaldean Catholic Church. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Hamilton said in March that it worried the money was gambled from a reserve for a private sponsorship program that has already brought 11 refugees to the city. It was supposed to help settle as many as 40 more.

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Ex-priest in Puerto Rico sentenced to 15 years in prison

PUERTO RICO
Metro

By: Staff The Associated Press
Published on Thu Jul 14 2016

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A former Roman Catholic priest in Puerto Rico has been sentenced to 15 years in prison after being found guilty of lewd acts.

Floyd McCoy Jordan was accused in part of harassing a 14-year-old with calls and text messages from 2013 to 2014. McCoy had been a priest in the Monserrate Sanctuary in the western town of Hormigueros.

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Clergy sex-abuse victim: Archdiocese canceled my meeting with Chaput

PENNSYLVANIA
PhillyVoice

NY BRIAN HICKEY
PhillyVoice Staff

The meeting is off.

On Tuesday morning, PhillyVoice reported that John-Michael Delaney – an outspoken clergy-sex abuse victim – would meet with Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput after years of not taking the archdiocese up on its offer.

Well, Delaney said that by lunchtime the same day, he’d gotten a message from archdiocesan officials asking him to return their call. After leaving six messages, he said he finally got in touch with someone.

Their reason for the call: To tell him the meeting was canceled because they now felt as if it was a “media ambush,” according to Delaney.

It was payback “because I went public,” he maintained, referring to comments in the story from archdiocese officials saying it’s a matter of practice for these sessions to go unreported.

The archdiocese, however, told PhillyVoice on Thursday afternoon that “the Archbishop has not reversed course on any commitments. If a victim has been promised a meeting, it will take place in due time and provided all parameters are respected,” according to spokesman Ken Gavin.

“Now, I’m pissed,” Delaney told PhillyVoice on Thursday morning. “I’m feeling victimized again. For years, I couldn’t do it. I was afraid of being in a room with a priest, and now they’re saying he won’t meet until there’s no legislation pending in Harrisburg. I don’t regret anything, but I kind of knew it was coming (after the article); I couldn’t wait to hear their excuse.”

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Abuse victim: Chaput cancelled face-to-face meeting after media attention

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

Updated: JULY 14, 2016

by Maria Panaritis, STAFF WRITER

A onetime “altar boy of the year” who was raped by one of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s most notorious abuser priests said Archbishop Charles Chaput this week cancelled a face-to-face meeting with him because he told the media about it.

John Delaney, 45, said it would have been his first meeting with any top bishop, decades after first being raped at age 11 at St. Cecilia Parish in Northeast Philadelphia.

He said had planned to tell Chaput he was unhappy that the prelate helped defeat a measure that would have loosened the state statute of limitations on abuse cases, a change that victims had sought. Under pressure from church and insurance industry lobbyists, the Pennsylvania Senate late last month squelched the proposal.

“If [Chaput is] a guy who can stop a bill that can decide my fate,” Delaney said, “he should be able to sit in a room with me and be man enough to talk about it.”

He said he had expected to meet with Chaput Monday, July 18.

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Police’s call to exonerate MI5 over Kincora abuse scandal without further ado disturbing

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Last week the inquiry into historical institutional abuse in Northern Ireland finished taking evidence and over the next six months Sir Anthony Hart and his two colleagues will write their report.

They started taking evidence in January 2014 and over the past two years they have heard much harrowing evidence of the physical, mental and sexual abuse that was suffered over many years at 20 residential homes and other institutions.

The 15th and final module of the inquiry started on May 31 — day 204 of the inquiry — and ended on July 8.

That final module dealt with the Bawnmore Children’s Home in Newtownabbey and the infamous Kincora Boys’ Home in east Belfast, but the focus was particularly on Kincora.

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Pedophile priest denied legal aid to appeal Nunavut convictions

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

THOMAS ROHNER

Notorious Nunavut pedophile Eric Dejaeger may have to find money in his own bank account to appeal some of the dozens of sex crimes against Inuit children of which he has been convicted.

His application for legal aid in Nunavut has been turned down.

That’s what Justice Neil Sharkey heard at the Nunavut Court of Appeal in Iqaluit July 13.

“You’re funding application at this time has been denied,” Lana Walker, a defence lawyer with the Baffin region’s legal aid office said in court.

“You have the right to appeal directly to the [Legal Services] Board of Directors… within 30 days,” Walker told Dejaeger, who appeared via videoconference from an Ontario detention centre.

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Missbrauchsvorwürfe in Freisen: Hat Bistum weggehört?

DEUTSCHLAND
Saarbruecker Zeitung

Von Matthias Zimmermann, 14. Juli 2016

Lange hat es in Freisen rumort. Der Verdacht, ein Pfarrer könne sich an Kindern vergriffen haben, kam auch Geistlichen im Dekanat St. Wendel zu Ohren. Daraufhin wollen sie Bischof Stephan Ackermann informiert haben.

Neue Vorwürfe im Fall des mutmaßlichen Kindesmissbrauchs durch einen ehemaligen Freisener Pfarrer: Demnach soll das Trierer Bistum von Geistlichen selbst schon vor Jahren auf die Verdächtigungen aufmerksam gemacht worden sein. Das berichtet jetzt ein Priester der Saarbrücker Zeitung. Damals sei aber nichts geschehen. Die Diözese soll sich nicht darum bemüht haben, mit dem betreffenden Pastor Kontakt aufzunehmen, um die Angelegenheit zu klären, geschweige denn Anzeige erstattet haben.

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Burying bad news: Church released child abuse report on same day Theresa May made PM

UNITED KINGDOM
Express

By ALIX CULBERTSON
Thu, Jul 14, 2016

The independent review yesterday revealed how it became standard practice for girls at Kendall House children’s home in Gravesend Kent to be drugged, raped and physically abused for almost 20 years between 1967 and 1986.

Critics hit out at the Church for not delaying its publication, considering what happened at Westminster took over the world’s news agenda.

The review, ordered by the Bishop of Rochester, the Rt Rev James Longstaff, revealed how girls as young as 11 were habitually plied with strong anti-depressants, anti-psychotic drugs and sedatives, mostly without any medical assessment.

Any girl who resisted or did not react to the effects of the drugs were punished, which included being emotionally abused or locked in solitary confinement for days.

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Church of England accused of ‘burying bad news’ over timing of abuse report

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Martin Evans, crime correspondent
14 JULY 2016

The Church of England has been accused of attempting to “bury bad news” after publishing a damning report into abuse at a children’s home on the same day the new Prime Minister was appointed.

An independent review into activities in Kendall House in Gravesend, Kent described how vulnerable girls were regularly drugged, raped and physically abused for almost 20-years between 1967 and 1986.

But critics said the publication of the findings should have been delayed until after the momentous events as Westminster had calmed down.

The review, which was ordered by the Bishop of Rochester, the Rt Rev James Langstaff, disclosed how girls as young as 11 were routinely, and often without medical assessment, given powerful anti-depressants, sedatives and anti-psychotic drugs.

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Other Pontifical Acts, 13.07.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bollettino

Vatican City, 13 July 2016 – The Holy Father appointed: …

– the following Members of the Secretariat for Communication: Cardinal Béchara Boutros Raï, Patriarch of Antioch of the Maronites, Lebanon; Cardinal John Njue, archbishop of Nairobi, Kenya; Cardinal Chibly Langlios, bishop of Les Cayes, Haiti; Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, archbishop of Yangon, Myanmar; Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches; Cardinal Beniamino Stella, prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy; Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin, Ireland; Archbishop Gintaras Grušas of Vilnius, Lithuania; Bishop Marcello Semeraro of Albano, Italy; Bishop Stanislas Lalanne of Pontoise, France; Bishop Pierre Nguyên Văn Kham of My Tho, Vietnam; Bishop Ginés Ramón García Beltrán of Guadix, Spain; Bishop Nuno Brás da Silva Martins, auxiliary of Lisbon, Portugal; Dr. Kim Daniels, advisor to the Episcopal Conference of the United States of America for the ad hoc Commission on religious freedom; Dr. Markus Schächter, professor of ethics of mass media and in society in the Jesuit faculty of philosophy in Munich, Germany; and Dr. Leticia Soberón Mainero, psychologist and expert in communication, formerly advisor to the Pontifical Council for Social Communications (Mexico and Spain).

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Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin appointed to new 16-member Vatican group

VATICAN CITY
Dublin Live

14 JUL 2016
BY BARRY ARNOLD

Pope Francis has appointed Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin as one of 16 Members of the newly-established Vatican Secretariat for Communications.

The body consists of six cardinals, seven bishops and three laypersons.

Its aim is to oversee the coordination and streamlining the Holy See’s multiple communications outlets.

When Pope Francis began his reform of the Roman Curia in 2013 with the help of an advisory council of nine cardinals, one of the areas that received immediate attention was the Vatican communications operation.

Pope Francis commissioned a study and recommendations from the global management-consulting firm McKinsey & Co.

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Huntsville mother, neighbor of John Martin reacts to arrest

ALABAMA
WBRC

[with video]

By Leah Jordan, Reporter

MADISON, AL (WAFF) –
“How are we supposed to know to protect our children?” That’s the question neighbors of John Martin are asking following his arrest for possession and dissemination of child pornography.

Madison County deputies arrested Martin early Tuesday morning. They confiscated a desktop computer with images and videos of sexual abuse of children at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church where he worked. Investigators also searched his Huntsville home on Barcody Road.

“I’m shaking a little bit,” said neighbor Kate McNeil. “I walk my kid through this neighborhood, like what if he approached me or followed me home?”

WAFF 48 ran a statewide background check and found Martin had no criminal record in Alabama up until this arrest, which further concerns McNeil.

“We don’t want to go around being super paranoid and looking at everybody crossly,” said McNeil. “But at the same point, that’s incredibly scary.”

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Church of England defends its handling of Bishop George Bell abuse case

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

Ruth Gledhill CHRISTIAN TODAY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR 13 July 2016

The Church of England today defended its approach to the case of Bishop George Bell, who was accused of being a paedophile 37 years after his death.

Despite demands to publish the evidence against him, the Church cannot do this because of a “moral duty” to safeguard the victim, it says.

Supporters of Bishop Bell, who achieved international recognition for his opposition to the Nazis and his work on behalf of the Jews during the war, have protested repeatedly at the damage caused to his reputation by allegations that have not been proven in court.

The Chichester diocese paid compensation to the complainant, Carol, in September 2015. The Bishop of Chichester Martin Warner also formally apologised to her.

Bell’s condemnation as a paedophile was then challenged by a group of lawyers, academics, politicians and senior Church figures. They wrote to the Archbishop of Canterbury earlier this year, and also circulated a document in defence of Bell to members of the General Synod meeting in York last weekend.

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Cruelty was normalised at Church of England children’s home, says report

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Thu, 14 Jul 2016

Cruelty was normalised at Church of England children’s home, says report

An independent review into Kendall house, a children’s home run by the Church of England, has reported “harrowing” findings where girls were sedated and abused.

Children as young as 11 were given powerful drugs, without any medical need and the report found “disclosures of unlawful sexual intercourse, to sexual assault and in a small number of cases, rape.”
David Greenwood, the solicitor who represented 15 survivors of abuse at Kendall House, said: “I have been truly shocked at the way in which staff at Kendall House handed our heavy doses of drugs designed to treat schizophrenia to young teenaged girls. Many of the ladies I have represented have suffered poor quality lives as a result of this treatment. Many have been sexually assaulted and most were physically abused. It was only when the Home Office inspectors advised the church to alter the way they deal with drugs that this treatment was brought to an end.”

In 2015 Teresa Cooper, an abuse survivor who pushed for the Church of England to launch an investigation, said that the health problems her own children have suffered can all be traced back to the drugs forcibly administered to her at Kendall house.

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Sexual abuse victim’s call for ex-bishop case inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Joel Adams, Reporter / Argus_JoelA

POLICE should investigate the actions of the former Archbishop of Canterbury, according to a survivor of sexual abuse.

Graham Sawyer, who was subjected to sexual assault by the former Bishop of Lewes Peter Ball in the 1980s, made the call following revelations that information regarding Ball’s offending was not passed to police.

Newly unearthed documents indicate that Lambeth Palace, the office of the Archbishop of Canterbury, received six letters following Ball’s caution in 1992 revealing Ball encouraged victims to pray naked, perform sex acts in front of him, and share his bed.

Mr Sawyer told The Argus: “I hope the police are looking into the possibility of opening an investigation regarding Lord Carey as to whether he might be guilty of misconduct in a public office.”

Mr Sawyer said he was not surprised by these further revelations, saying they represented further evidence of a cover up at Lambeth Palace.

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Victim of Peter Ball sex abuse calls on police to investigate Lord Carey over alleged ‘cover up’

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

James Macintyre 14 July 2016

A victim of sexual abuse in 1980s by the former Bishop of Lewes Peter Ball has raised the prospect of police investigating the former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey after new documents suggested that Lambeth Palace knew about abuse allegations.

The documents, unearthed by the Mail on Sunday, show that Lambeth Palace received six letters after Ball was cautioned in 1992 revealing that he encouraged victims to pray naked, perform sex acts in front of him and share his bed.

Graham Sawyer told The Argus in Brighton and Hove Albion: “I hope the police are looking into the possibility of opening an investigation regarding Lord Carey as to whether he might be guilty of misconduct in a public office.”

Lord Carey, who was Archbishop between 1992 and 2002, has denied any cover-up. At the weekend he told the Mail on Sunday he could not comment further because the current Archbishop, Justin Welby, had ordered another investigation by the Church, and the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, led by Judge Lowell Goddard, was also examining the case.

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Ex-priest Eric Dejaeger denied Nunavut legal aid in appeal of child sex convictions

CANADA
CBC News

By Nick Murray, CBC News Posted: Jul 14, 2016

Former Roman Catholic priest Eric Dejaeger has been denied funding by the Nunavut Legal Services board for a lawyer in his appeal of 24 convictions for sex crimes against children.

Dejaeger was sentenced to 19 years in prison in February 2015 for crimes committed in Igloolik between 1978 and 1982.

Dejaeger appeared Wednesday in an Iqaluit courtroom via video conference. He’s being held at Warkworth Institution, a medium-security federal prison in Campbellford, Ont.

It’s not yet clear on what grounds he’s appealing his convictions.

The 69-year-old has 30 days to appeal the Nunavut Legal Services board’s decision to deny him funding for a lawyer.

Last year, Dejaeger was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to charges relating to the sexual abuse of three children in Edmonton between 1975 and 1978 when he was studying at Newman Theological College. That sentence is to be served at the same time as the sentence for his Igloolik charges.

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Orders should cut ties with abusive clergy, safeguarding chief says

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Greg Daly
July 14, 2016

Religious bodies should cease financial and other support for members who have been found guilty of child sexual abuse, the head of the Church’s child protection board has said.

Speaking to The Irish Catholic, Teresa Devlin, CEO of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland, said “at some stage, once you know [a priest or brother] is guilty, then you do have to cut the ties, you cannot continue to pay for someone and at some stage the State has to take over with pensions”.

Ms Devlin acknowledged that there are difficult balances to be struck in this area, but said that while it is important to be compassionate and merciful it is also important not to send the wrong message to survivors of abuse.

She cited the example of a complainant who had recently told her of an alleged abuser whose accommodation is provided for the Church, saying “nobody is paying for mine”.

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July 13, 2016

Bronx pastor convicted of sexual abuse

NEW YORK
News 12

THE BRONX – A Bronx pastor was found guilty Wednesday on charges he inappropriately touched a female member of his congregation in 2014.

Franklin Porterfield, of Faith Love Community Church, says he was hoping the court would vindicate him and left disappointed.

“I don’t feel good about what happened,” he told News 12.

A Bronx judge handed down a split decision finding Porterfield guilty of attempted forcible touching and third-degree sexual abuse, but not guilty of harassment.

“I was found guilty of one thing and not guilty of another,” Porter said.

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NH–Victims want minister fired from NH private school

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003 cell, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

A minister should be immediately fired and others should be harshly disciplined at a New Hampshire private school where sexual violence has been hidden and law enforcement has been ignored.

[Boston Globe]

Phillips Exeter Academy’s Rev. Robert Thompson made an arrogant, self-serving and perhaps illegal decision to stay silent about a sexual assault (by Chukwudi “Chudi” Ikpeazu) and take it upon himself to fashion a ridiculous agreement that minimized the horror experienced by Michaella – a purported “act of penance” that involved her assailant “baking bread for the teen for the remainder of the school year,” virtually guaranteeing that she’d be forced to see her assailant every week. Shame on Rev. Thompson.

[Union Leader]

This is a common but disturbing pattern by clergy: keeping quiet about sexual violence, assuming that they know best and usurping the role of police and prosecutor in favor of unhealthy and coercive “forgiveness” and “reconciliation.”

We are glad that, according to the Globe, “Police are also investigating Exeter itself for its handling of Michaella’s case and other instances of sexual misconduct by both students and faculty,” but outraged that “weeks after the October encounter, outside authorities knew nothing of the case — school officials didn’t contact them.”

We hope law enforcement will charge Exeter officials with obstruction of justice, destruction of evidence, tampering with witnesses or similar offenses. We hope Exeter officials are found guilty and face the most severe punishment possible. And we hope staff at other schools get the message: when you know of or suspect sex crimes, call 911.

Regardless of what the justice system does, we hope Exeter’s board fires or at least demotes other administrators and teachers who put the school’s reputation and their careers ahead of the safety of students and staff.

No matter what happens next, we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in schools, churches or institutions – especially at private entities – to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling law enforcement, get justice by calling attorneys, and be comforted by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Opinion: Hon falls short of expectations

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

John Charles Ada Toves July 13, 2016

With all due respect, Archbishop Hon, a job’s performance is based on whether an individual “does not meet expectations,” “meets expectations,” and “exceeds expectations.” Your eminence, I must say sadly you are not meeting expectations.

You have said “we are in a hurry.” Of course we are! We have been on a gurney wounded and crying for over 30 years with all the maltreatment given by our previous shepherd. As we continue to lie in pain, of course our voices will cry louder and louder. At this point, yes, we are impatient. Wouldn’t you be?

Your excellency, you are not reinventing the wheel. Our situation is not rocket science. The words are so simple, yet you refuse to utter them. Why?

Why cannot these (alleged) victims of sexual abuse perpetrated by (Anthony) Apuron be acknowledged for their pain? Why then does the church say it has a zero tolerance of these heinous acts?

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AL church officials busted for child sex crimes — bringing state total to 9 in 4 months

ALABAMA
Raw Story

DAVID FERGUSON
13 JUL 2016

This week, two Alabama church officials were arrested and charged with possession and dissemination of child pornography and child sex abuse.

According to Huntsville’s WAAY Channel 31, the arrests of John Lindbergh Ellard Martin of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Madison County and pastor Jeffery Allen Elkins of the Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ in Bridgeport brings the number of high-profile arrests for child sex crimes in Alabama to nine in the last four months.

“Nine officials have been arrested for crimes against children in the past four months alone, from church and school officials to lawyers and doctors,” wrote WAAY’s Megan Wiebold. “According to a national organization to end child sex abuse, Darkness2Light, 90 percent of children who are the victim of sex abuse know their offender.”

Officials from St. John the Baptist held a press conference Tuesday to discuss the allegations against Martin, who is accused of using computers at the church and in his home to procure and disseminate images and videos depicting the sexual exploitation of minor children.

“Since John Martin came to work for us at St. John’s in our Adult Education Department, we have seen nothing that would lead us to believe the charges being made against him. We are stunned by the accusations,” said Pastor Phil O’Kennedy. “Of course we will continue to work with the authorities. We encourage any parishioner who may have any information about the accusation to come forward. And we will continue to pray for Mr. Martin and his family.”

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Phillips Exeter under fire again for handling of sex misconduct allegations

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston Globe

By Jenn Abelson
GLOBE STAFF JULY 13, 2016

Michaella Henry was nervous about returning to the church at Phillips Exeter Academy where she said her classmate, a towering star athlete, had slipped his hands inside her shirt and squeezed her backside as she said “no” over and over again.

For two months last fall, the ugly encounter in the basement of the Phillips Church on the Exeter, N.H., campus had kept the 17-year-old awake at night and triggered sudden panic attacks.

But instead of going to the police with her allegation of sexual assault, Michaella agreed to the school minister’s proposal to meet in the church with the athlete, Chukwudi “Chudi” Ikpeazu, to work out their differences.

Michaella avoided making eye contact with Chudi that December evening as she read a statement she had written on her cellphone. …

At the minister’s urging, the young man also agreed to an “act of penance”: baking bread and delivering it to Michaella for the rest of the year. The Rev. Robert Thompson praised Michaella for accepting the arrangement, later writing, “You did a great service for Chudi, because you gave him an opportunity to express his regret and to take responsibility for what he had done.”

Chudi, through his attorney, declined to comment.

But the bread diplomacy backfired, laying bare a string of choices that made Michaella and her family question the commitment at one of America’s premier private schools to protecting students from abuse.

Instead of improving things, the weekly bread deliveries made Michaella feel increasingly stressed, forcing her to confront her alleged abuser again and again.

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Phillips Exeter Academy student charged with sexual assault; school minister had him bake bread for victim

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Union Leader

By JASON SCHREIBER
Union Leader Correspondent

EXETER – A student at Phillips Exeter Academy is due in court next month to face a sexual assault charge alleging he fondled a female student in the latest case of sexual misconduct that reportedly was brought to the attention of police only recently.

Chukwudi Ikpeazu, 18, of Parkland, Fla., is charged with misdemeanor sexual assault and is free on $5,000 personal recognizance bail following his arrest in early June.

The student track athlete is accused of fondling a then-17-year-old student’s breasts against her will in the basement of the prep school’s church known as Phillips Church on Front Street. …

The Boston Globe reported Wednesday that the alleged victim initially didn’t report the incident to police and instead agreed to a proposal by the school’s minister, the Rev. Robert Thompson, to meet with Ikpeazu at the church to resolve the allegation.

According to a story published in Wednesday’s Globe, the minister urged Ikpeazu to agree to an “act of penance” that involved baking bread for the teen for the remainder of the school year. – See more at: http://www.unionleader.com/crime/phillips-exeter-academy-student-charged-with-sexual-assault-school-minister-had-him-bake-bread-for-victim-20160713#sthash.TYxTl60b.dpuf

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Putting the ‘Spotlight’ on Boston Clergy Abuse: Q&A with Walter V. Robinson

UNITED STATES
America

Sean Salai, S.J. | Jul 13 2016

Walter V. “Robby” Robinson is editor-at-large of the Boston Globe. Raised Catholic, Mr. Robinson attended Boston College High School and Northeastern University. In 2001-02, he led the Spotlight Team’s investigation that uncovered the extent of clergy sex abuse and cover-ups in the Archdiocese of Boston, winning a Pulitzer Prize for these stories which led to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law and triggered a wider awareness of sexual abuse in addition to multiple class action lawsuits against Catholic dioceses around the nation. His team’s investigation of clergy sex abuse in Boston was depicted in the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight” (2015), in which actor Michael Keaton played him.

Mr. Robinson has earned a number of journalism awards and honorary degrees. He previously served the Globe as a city editor, metro editor, White House correspondent and foreign correspondent. On July 3, I interviewed him by email about his coverage of the clergy abuse scandal in the Catholic Church.

It is now 15 years since your Spotlight team at the Boston Globe began investigating clergy sex abuse, leading to a Pulitzer-winning series of stories that shook the Catholic Church. From your perspective, how has the impact of this series evolved over that time?

Our stories, which focused mostly on the Boston archdiocese, have reverberated throughout the United States and around the world, and have prompted the church to begin to account for what had gone on for decades; and to begin to take steps to end the abuse, put protections for children in place, and institute a healing process within the church. Since the debut of the film “Spotlight,’’ there has been an uptick of new claims of abuse in many countries.

What have been some highlights for you in covering this story?

The principal highlight has been the satisfaction of knowing that our reporting helped give voice to the voiceless, countless victims who had lived with their pain in the shadows, very often for decades; and knowing that investigative reporting can help bring about meaningful change.

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70-year-old convicted sex offender met newest victim at church

FLORIDA
WEAR

BY ANTHONY PURA TUESDAY, JULY 12TH 2016

PENSACOLA, Fla. (WEAR) — A 70-year-old Milton man is accused of molesting a 7-year-old girl and police say he gained access to the victim by volunteering at his church.

Milton police arrested John Kelley Sr. last week.

Detective Stephen Mistovich said Kelley volunteered for the pantry at New Testament Church of Milton and it played a part in the crime.

“I believe that had a lot to do with it,” Mistovich said. “There was a lot of trust.”

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AL–Catholic official arrested for child porn; Victims respond

ALABAMA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790,314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

An Alabama Catholic official has been charged with child pornography. Now, Birmingham diocesan staff, including the bishop himself, must aggressively seek out others who may have seen, suspected or suffered child sex crimes by

John Lindbergh Ellard Martin of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church.

[WHNT]

It’s not enough for church employees to claim they’re “cooperating with authorities.” (In our experience, that usually means they’re doing the bare minimum to avoid being charged with obstruction of justice.) Catholic officials gave Martin a title, a leadership role and access to a computer. So they owe it to parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public to use their vast resources to actively help law enforcement solve this case and to find and help others who may have been hurt by Martin.

Specifically, we call on Bishop Robert Baker to personally visit St. John’s parish this weekend (and any other church where Martin may have worked or helped) begging victims, witnesses or whistleblowers to call police. He should also put announcements in church bulletins, parish websites and other diocesan publications and outlets.

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Paola homeless shelter director arrested for indecent liberties with a child

KANSAS
Miami County Republic

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Jay L. Preston, the director of My Father’s House homeless shelter in Paola, was booked into Miami County Jail on Saturday for aggravated indecent liberties with a child.

On Monday, Miami County Attorney Elizabeth Sweeney-Reeder officially charged Preston, 57, with aggravated indecent liberties with a child, with the offender being older than 18 and the victim being younger than 14.

The charge is an off-grid person felony, and Preston is being held on $500,000 bond.

The charge stems from an incident that allegedly occurred in rural Miami County on or about July 7 through July 8, and the charge is the result of an investigation by the Miami County Sheriff’s Office, Sweeney-Reeder said.

Preston was not yet represented by legal counsel as of Monday, and a court date had not yet been set.

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Church of England apologises for abuses at Kent children’s home

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Caroline Davies
Wednesday 13 July 2016

The Church of England has offered a “whole-hearted apology” to hundreds of emotionally disturbed adolescent girls placed at a church-run children’s home where residents were drugged, locked up and physically and sexually abused over a 20-year period.

A review published on Wednesday presented “harrowing” findings about Kendall House, in Gravesend. It found vulnerable teenagers were over-medicated on psychotropic drugs and tranquillisers to control them, locked in isolation rooms sometimes for days, and in some cases raped, during the 1960s, 70s and 80s.

Evidence showed the home was “on the whole, toxic and destructive to the girls placed there”, the report concluded.

Warnings about behaviour at the home, run by the dioceses of Rochester and Canterbury, went unheeded for decades, and the church’s initial response was “woeful and inadequate”, said Prof Sue Proctor, who led the review and wrote the report.

The Rt Rev James Langstaff, Bishop of Rochester, who commissioned the review, said he was “appalled and saddened” to learn of the pain suffered by those at the home, which cared for 325 teenage girls from the 1960s until its closure in 1986.

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Israeli Military Chief Stands by Choice of Top Rabbi Who Implied Rape Is Permitted at Wartime

ISRAEL
Haaretz

Gili Cohen Jul 13, 2016

Israel Defense Forces chief Gadi Eisenkot said Wednesday he was standing by his controversial decision to make Rabbi Eyal Karim the IDF’s next chief rabbi, even if remarks Karim made as a civilian did not represent the military’s values.

The rabbi’s appointment, which still needs the approval of Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, has been harshly criticized because of his remarks on women, gay people and non-Jews.

Karim has implied that it is permissible to rape gentile women during wartime, that women should not fill combat roles, and that women cannot testify in court because their “sentimental” nature does not allow it. He has also said that it is permitted to kill wounded suicide bombers and that gay people should be treated as people “sick or disabled.”

In a statement, the IDF said Eisenkot had discussed the controversial issues at length with Karim. Karim promised that under his leadership, the military rabbinate would respect all people regardless of their religion, race and sexual orientation, and that he “sees the army as the people’s army that accepts all recruits, whoever they might be.”

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IDF chief of staff sticks with Karim, despite controversy

ISRAEL
YNet News

IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot announced on Wednesday that, despite the public controversy, Rabbi Col. Eyal Karim will be appointed as the chief rabbi as the IDF. Eisenkot made the announcement after holding a meeting with Karim following the recent publication of controversial statements the rabbi had made concerning women, gay people, and refusing orders.

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The statement released by the chief of staff’s office said, “Col. Karim made clarified during the conversation on all the matters that have come up in recent days, and he clarified beyond any doubt that he and all IDF soldiers are completely subject to IDF orders and the IDF Code of Ethics.

“The rabbi promised that he personally and the rabbinate headed by him will respect every single person, regardless of religion, sex and sexual preference, and because he sees the IDF as an army of the people absorbing of its recruits, no matter who they are. The chief of staff spoke with Col. Karim about the chief rabbinate’s tasks and how he envisages the rabbinate under his command, and he felt that he and the rabbi see eye to eye on these issues.”

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New IDF Chief Rabbi Says Soldiers Can Rape Arab Women During Wartime to Boost Morale

ISRAEL
Free Thought Project

Matt Agorist July 12, 2016

Outgoing chief rabbi, Brig. Gen. Rafi Peretz, of the Israeili Defense Forces, who is stepping down after six years in the position is being replaced. And, his successor, Rabbi Col. Eyal Karim’s appointment is being met with backlash — as he is outspoken for allowing soldiers to rape women during wartime.

Karim, who was announced on Monday as the intended new IDF chief rabbi, has provoked controversy with previous misogynistic statements, such as opposing female conscription and implying that rape was permissible in times of war.

According to Ynet News, Karim has been serving as the head of the Rabbinate Department in the Military Rabbinate. He is an alumnus of the Bnei Akiva Nachalim and the Ateret Cohanim yeshivas, and he served previously as a combat paratrooper, eventually commanding their elite reconnaissance unit, before taking a break from the military and eventually returning to its rabbinate.

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Kendall House review reveals “harrowing regime” of abuse at Church of England children’s home

UNITED KINGDOM
Kent News

A report into a former Church of England children’s home in Gravesend has revealed years of historic abuse which included sedating children and putting them in straitjackets.

Last Autumn, a review began to investigate a series of allegations about practices that took place at Kendall House in Gravesend.

The report published today (Wednesday) reviewed the home between 1967 and 1986, when it was closed.

During that time over 300 girls between 10 and 16-years-old were referred for placements.

These girls may have been placed in the home by a court order, through social services or by mental health services.

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Kendall House: Girls drugged and abused at church-run home

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Girls at a church-run children’s home were routinely drugged, locked up and physically, emotionally and sexually abused, a review has found.

Hundreds of girls were sent to Kendall house in Gravesend in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, before it closed in 1986.

The independent review set up by the Bishop of Rochester said the home was a place where cruelty was normalised.

The Church of England has apologised to girls who were heavily sedated and placed in straitjackets.

‘Cruelty normalised’

In a report the inquiry team said: “The findings are harrowing.”

The home was “a place where control, containment and sometimes cruelty were normalised.”

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KENDALL HOUSE REVIEW REPORT

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Diocese of Rochester

The Rt Rev James Langstaff, Bishop of Rochester hosted a press conference this morning to share the findings of the Kendall House Review panel report with members of the media.

In his opening statement, Bishop James said, “It was in 2014 that I determined the need for some kind of review in relation to Kendall House, and I made my intentions public in early in 2015.

The number of former residents making serious allegations about their treatment during their time at Kendall House was steadily increasing, and it was clear that no other body was going to initiate any review or enquiry.

It took longer than I might have wished both to find the right people to undertake the review and to clarify the terms of reference for the review with them. However, I am convinced that Professor Sue Proctor and her colleagues Samantha Cohen and Ray Galloway were the right people to undertake this work on behalf of the diocese of Canterbury and Rochester. I believe that the depth, detail and outcome of their work vindicate this decision and on behalf of the diocese of Canterbury and Rochester, I thank them for their dedication to what has been a challenging piece of work.

I would now like to invite Professor Proctor to speak about the review and its findings.”

Professor Sue Proctor who chaired the conference then introduced the findings of the review panel. She said, “Before sharing the findings of this review, we would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge the important contribution of all those who spoke with us as part of the process. In particular, we wish to thank all the former residents and their families who took part, for their candour and courage in coming forward and recounting sometimes painful and emotional experiences about their time at Kendall House. The consistency in their accounts is striking and paints a compelling picture of life at the home. We are also grateful to those former staff who spoke with us.

Kendall House was a private children’s home for girls, based in Gravesend, Kent. It was run and funded by the Church of England, overseen by a body called the Joint Council for Social Responsibility for the Dioceses of Rochester and Canterbury. It closed in December 1986.

In December 2015, the current Bishop of Rochester commissioned an independent panel to review events at Kendall House from 1967 until its closure. Whilst it was running, and in the years since its closure, a number of allegations of abusive and inappropriate practice there had been made by former residents. These included inappropriate and over-use of medication, and accounts of emotional, physical and sexual abuse.

The scope of the review was as follows:

• To hear and consider the accounts of former residents of Kendall House, and other relevant witnesses, including complaints about the use of drugs as a means of behavioural control and allegations of emotional, physical and sexual abuse;

• To consider relevant materials relating to Kendall House; and

• To review the relevant actions of those who worked at Kendall House, or who were associated with its service provision during the above time frame.

We have considered hundreds of written documents, including the records of 44 residents, many associated reports, records of meetings and other correspondence. We have also heard recollections and descriptions of life at Kendall House from 20 former residents, a number of their friends and relatives, and 15 former staff and others who had an association with the home. These recollections refer to periods in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.

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Statement on Kendall House review

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

13 July 2016

Statement on Kendall House review from Bishop Paul Butler, lead bishop on safeguarding for the Church of England

“The findings of the independent review into Kendall House describe the harrowing regime experienced by numerous girls and young teenagers who were placed into the care of this Church of England home. The appalling standards of care and treatment should never have been allowed and on behalf of the national church I apologise unreservedly to all the former residents whose lives were and continue to be affected by their damaging experiences at Kendall House.

The considerations for the national Church contained in the report will be examined carefully and there is full commitment to ensuring that this leads to the best possible implementation. The report will be shared with senior staff, including all diocesan bishops, across the whole Church.

There are serious lessons to be learnt from this Review both at diocesan and national level to ensure that this never happens again.”

Read the full report of the Kendall House Review

Rochester Diocese: Press Conference and Statements

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Girls drugged and abused at Church of England children’s home, says report

UNITED KINGDOM
BT

Vulnerable girls at a “toxic and destructive” Church of England children’s home were drugged and sexually and physically abused over nearly 20 years, a report has revealed.

Revelations of sexual abuse, ill-treatment and physical abuse at Kendall House in Gravesend, Kent, between 1967 and 1986 were outlined in an independent review.

It disclosed how girls as young as 11 were routinely, and often without medical assessment, given powerful anti-depressants, sedatives and anti-psychotic drugs.

Those that resisted, challenged or overcame the drugs’ effects faced sanctions, including being locked alone in a room for days on end or emotionally abused.

Others told how they were raped after being imprisoned in an isolation room and locked in alone overnight. And for some, the trauma of living at Kendall House lasts to this day, the review said.

The review said: “The findings are harrowing. They reveal an institution which had weak governance and oversight, a place where control, containment and sometimes cruelty were normalised.

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Geen wetenschappelijk onderzoek naar misbruik katholieke kerk

NEDERLAND
Historici

[The archives of the Deetman Commission, which investigated abuse of minors in the Catholic Church of the Netherlands, should be transferred to the National Archives but the commission wants to keep control over who can see the archives.]

Op 6 juli kopte NRC Next dat het archief van de Commissie-Deetman, die in 2010 en 2011 onderzoek verrichtte naar het seksueel misbruik van minderjarigen binnen de katholieke kerk, nu op slot gaat. Het archief zou worden overgebracht naar het Nationaal Archief, maar de wens van de commissie zelf zeggenschap te houden over wie het archief mag inzien, heeft daar een streep door gezet.

De Commissie-Deetman werd in 2010 in opdracht van Bisschoppenconferentie en de Konferentie Nederlandse Religieuzen ingesteld om de aanhoudende geruchten van seksueel misbruik door priesters en andere geestelijken te onderzoeken. Het eindrapport dat de commissie op 16 december 2011 uitbracht loog er niet om. Niet alleen bleken er in de periode 1845-1981 tussen de 10.000 en 20.000 kinderen misbruikt te zijn, de ordes en bisdommen waren van het overgrote deel van deze zaken op de hoogte. Bij de interne afhandeling ervan was echter maar zelden aandacht geweest voor de slachtoffers . Het belang van de daders werd vooropgesteld zodat zij niet justitieel vervolgd zouden worden. De commissie identificeerde ongeveer 800 daders.

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Missbrauchsopfer klagt auf Entschädigungsrente

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

[Abuse victim in Germany sues for compensation pension.]

Vor dem Sozialgericht Hannover wird heute der Fall eines Missbrauchsopfers der katholischen Kirche verhandelt. Kläger Mario Baltes wuchs als Kind in einem Kinderheim in Eschweiler in Nordrhein-Westfalen auf und wurde dort nach seiner Aussage geschlagen, erniedrigt und sexuell missbraucht. Außerdem sei er zu sexuellen Handlungen bei anderen Kindern gezwungen worden. Begonnen hätte der Missbrauch als Baltes fünf Jahre alt war. Das war in den 60iger-Jahren. Zehn Jahre dauerte sein Martyrium. Die katholische Kirche hatte ihn für seine erlittenen Qualen mit einer Zahlung in Höhe von 8.000 Euro entschädigt und sich schriftlich bei ihm entschuldigt. Doch das reicht Baltes nicht. Er will vor Gericht eine Rentenzahlung erstreiten.

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