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.

September 7, 2016

Greg Burke: Pope Francis’ American Point Man

ROME
National Catholic Register

PROFILE: Those who know him well, as an affable Catholic journalist and a man of deep faith, believe the St. Louis native is uniquely equipped to tackle his challenging new responsibilities.

BY JUDY ROBERTS 09/07/2016

ROME — Before he decided to take a job as a Vatican communications adviser, journalist Greg Burke sought some apostolic advice at the tombs of St. Peter and St. Paul.

As he told a reporter in a 2012 interview, he prayed — and prayed some more — about whether to leave the Fox News Channel to accept the offer he had twice declined from the Vatican Secretariat of State.

For Burke, who follows a daily prayer regimen as an Opus Dei numerary (celibate member), the answer came less as a “lightning bolt” and more as a sense that changing course was the right move.

Now, Burke’s professional life has taken yet another turn: succeeding Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi as director of the Vatican Press Office, several months after being named deputy director. Colleagues and associates say his experience on both sides of the lectern makes him well-suited for the post, as does an engaging, sociable personality that wins friends and influences 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.

Abuse Allegation From 30 Years Ago Made Against Dutchess Pastor

NEW YORK
Catholic New York

An allegation of sexual abuse of a minor dating from approximately 30 years ago has been made against Father Anthony Giuliano, the pastor of St. John the Evangelist parish in Pawling and St. Charles Borromeo parish in Dover Plains.

A letter dated Aug. 31, addressed to members of the two parishes in Dutchess County, gave further details of the situation.

The letter, which was written by Auxiliary Bishop Gerald Walsh, the archdiocese’s vicar for clergy, said the allegation against Father Giuliano has been found credible, but it has not yet been substantiated and noted that Father Giuliano has denied it.

Until the matter is resolved, the letter said, Father Giuliano is not permitted to publicly function as a priest, according to the “policy and practice” of the archdiocese as well as the promises made in the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Bishop Walsh said that archdiocesan policy for priests “accused of such impropriety” includes “having the entire matter studied by professionals and our lay review board.” The letter also said the archdiocese has been working with law enforcement officials.

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.

Northumberland County pastor charged with not reporting sexual abuse incident

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By John Beauge | Special to PennLive
on September 07, 2016

PAXINOS — The pastor of a Northumberland County church has been charged with failing to report to authorities an alleged sexual abuse incident.

Gregory L. Clendaniel, 53, of Paxinos, was charged Tuesday, as was the man who is alleged to have committed the abuse.

Clendaniel, as the pastor of the Augustaville Wesleyan Church, is required by law to report sexual abuse incidents, state police said.

The arrest affidavit states Seth S. Sparrer, 22, of Middleburg, was one of the adult chaperons on a July 13 field trip to Knoebels Amusement Resort.

On the return trip from the park, Sparrer is accused of holding the hand of a 14-year-old girl, kissing her and touching her breast over her clothes.

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.

Financial Woes For Riverdale Congregation

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

08/09/16

Gary Rosenblatt
Editor And Publisher

The Riverdale Jewish Center, the Modern Orthodox synagogue that recently parted ways with Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt over his unusual behavior with young men, is in financial crisis.

A message this week from the executive committee of the congregation to the membership said “the undisputable fact is that the operating account is completely depleted.”

It added that “the doors of the RJC remain open only due to the generosity of a few families who have donated approximately $120,000 in new contributions over the last month, allowing us to cover our operating expenses.”

The letter, signed by Tzvi Bar-David, the newly elected president of the congregation, said “we will need $1.2 million in order to reach a net zero in the operating account.”

“Due to circumstances in the last year, the RJC did not actively engage in many of its regular fundraisers,” the letter noted, referring to the controversy over Rabbi Rosenblatt (no relation to this writer), who stepped down this past spring from the pulpit he held for more than three decades after many months of internal debate over whether he should be removed or allowed to stay.

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.

Florida diocese investigating ex-head of St. George’s School

FLORIDA/RHODE ISLAND
Turn to 10

by MICHELLE R. SMITH, Associated PressWednesday, September 7th 2016

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — An Episcopal diocese in Florida says it is investigating a former headmaster at the elite Rhode Island boarding school St. George’s, which is at the center of an abuse scandal.

The Rev. George E. Andrews is accused of failing to report sexual abuse by a teacher to authorities when he led the school in the 1980s. He now runs a consulting firm that places chaplains at Episcopal and other schools. His son-in-law is the Fox News personality Tucker Carlson, and his daughter sits on the St. George’s board.

The Diocese of Southeast Florida opened an investigation into Andrews earlier this year after news broke that dozens of students had been abused at the $58,000-per-year school in Middletown. The church investigation was put on hold while police and independent investigator Martin Murphy looked into St. George’s, according to Bishop Peter Eaton of the Diocese of Southeast Florida.

Police brought no charges, but last week the independent investigator released a 390-page report that detailed decades of abuse by multiple teachers, mostly in the 1970s and 1980s.

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AUDIO: ’20 Jewish Men and 1 Black Kid,’ 911 Caller Says of Shomrim Attack

NEW YORK
DNA Info

By Gwynne Hogan | September 7, 2016

DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN — Two drivers passing by a gang assault linked to Williamsburg’s Shomrim Safety Patrol dialed 911 and described the hectic scene as it unfurled, recordings released in court Tuesday revealed.

“There’s like a bunch of Jewish guys beating up a black kid,” one 911 caller told an emergency dispatcher the night of Dec. 1, when Taj Patterson was beaten to a pulp in an attack that left him blind in one eye.

“There was like 20 Jewish men and one black kid,” the caller says. “He was begging for a ride.”

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.

IAP adjudicator relied on ‘perverse finding of fact’ in case of residential school rape by priest: court

CANADA
APTN

September 7, 2016

Jorge Barrera
APTN National News

Everyone agreed the priest raped the child, the only question was whether it happened before or after the Spanish Boys Indian Residential School, near Spanish, Ont., closed in 1958.

The federal government’s lawyers held documented proof the rape happened before the school closed. The official tasked with determining the legitimacy of the claim and compensation—the Independent Assessment Process (IAP) adjudicator—also possessed a file that referred to the same document.

Yet, the adjudicator rejected the claim in a January 2012 hearing after determining the boy was raped following the school’s closure in a decision based on a “perverse finding of fact.” The decision was upheld twice in successive IAP appeals in rulings based on “myopic logic,” according to an Ontario judge.

The man who filed the claim, identified only as “M.F,” took his case before the Ontario Superior Court after the IAP losses. This past July Justice Paul Perell sided with M.F. in a ruling that eviscerated the reasoning of the officials involved in the multi-tiered IAP adjudication process that rejected M.F.’s claim.

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.

Retired Priest Convicted of Flashing Child

WISCONSIN
WSAU

by Jeff Flynt

GREEN BAY, WI (WTAQ) – A retired priest has been convicted of exposing himself to a minor.

Online court records reveal that Fr. Richard Thomas pled no contest to 2 charges while two other counts against him were dropped.

Back in March, prosecutors say Thomas exposed himself to a 16-year-old boy while the boy was walking to school. Thomas was living in Grellinger Hall, a home for retired priests in Allouez, at the time.

After the report of misconduct, the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay restricted Thomas from performing any public ministry.

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.

Congregational Church of Norwalk to host forum on sexual abuse

CONNECTICUT
The Hour

NORWALK — “After Spotlight: What has Changed?” will be the topic when Voice of the Faithful in the Diocese of Bridgeport meets on Thursday, Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m. at the Congregational Church on the Green in Norwalk. Speaking on the topic will be Gail Howard from SNAP CT and Dan Tepfer from the Connecticut Post. Visit votfbpt.org for more information and directions. All are welcome.

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.

Diocese agrees to 6-figure settlement in sex abuse case involving priest, lawyer says

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Justin Zaremba | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

TRENTON — The Diocese of Trenton has agreed to a six-figure settlement with a man who said he was sexually assaulted by a priest four decades ago, according to the victim’s attorney.

Boston-based attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented hundreds of victims since the clergy sex abuse scandal erupted in 2002, and was portrayed in the movie “Spotlight,” said his client was abused by Father Vincent Inghilterra in 1979 when he was 16. NJ Advance Media agreed to identify the man only as John Doe.

“My client was having personal issues so he was sent to Father Ingelltera for guidance,” Garabedian said. “Instead of giving my client guidance, he sexually abused my client on two occasions. He was a pure predator who took advantage of an innocent child.”

Messages placed with representatives of the Diocese of Trenton Wednesday morning have not yet been returned. The diocese has previously settled several other claims of sexual abuse by other priests — Rev. Terence McAlinden and Rev. Ronald Becker.

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.

Retired priest convicted in flashing case

WISCONSIN
Fox 11

GREEN BAY (WLUK) — A retired priest has pleaded no contest to two charges he exposed himself to a minor.

Two other counts against Fr. Richard Thomas were dropped, according to online court records.

The charges stem from a March incident in which prosecutors said Thomas exposed himself to a 16-year-old boy when the boy was walking to school. At the time, Thomas was living in Grellinger Hall, a home for retired priests in Allouez.

After the report of misconduct, the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay restricted Thomas from performing any public ministry.

According to the criminal complaint, Thomas told investigators at the time of his arrest that “he is already seeking treatment.”

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‘Spotlight’ character to attend Raleigh screening, speak on priest abuse

NORTH CAROLINA
News & Observer

BY JOSH SHAFFER
jshaffer@newsobserver.com

A year ago, the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight” introduced the world to Phil Saviano, a Boston activist abused by a pedophile priest, a whistle-blower with a cardboard box full of evidence.

The film shows his repeated attempts to draw The Boston Globe into the story of widespread abuse covered up and ignored by the Catholic church, reporting that led to Cardinal Bernard Law’s resignation and won the newspaper a Pulitzer Prize.

Before the film’s release, Saviano recalled, he got dismissed as a crank or conspiracy theorist.

“I guess they did think I was a little bit of a kook,” he said.

On Thursday night, Saviano will attend a Raleigh screening of “Spotlight,” speak briefly and then lead a round table discussion on Friday morning. Since the film’s release, he said, attention is easier to come by.

“A lot of people,” Saviano said, “including members of my own family, now they get it. I think they take me a lot more seriously then they did.”

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Former Youth Ministries Director Charged With Sex Offense Against Teen During Church Event

MARYLAND
NBC Washington

A former youth ministries director at a Rockville church is accused of having inappropriate sexual contact with a 16-year-old girl during a youth event at the church.

Brian Patrick Werth, who had worked at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church on Montrose Road, was arrested Wednesday morning at his Montgomery Village home.

Montgomery County Police said Child Protective Services notified them late last month that Werth, 32, had inappropriate sexual contact with a teenage parishioner on or about May 20.

Police also said Werth had been texting the girl since summer 2014, and had sent her graphic sexual messages.

Werth is charged with one count of fourth-degree sexual offense, one count of sexual abuse of a minor, and second-degree assault.

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Police charge Rockville youth minister with sexual abuse of 16-year-old

MARYLAND
Fox 5

ROCKVILLE, Md. – A Rockville youth minister is charged with sexual abuse of a minor after police say he had inappropriate sexual contact with a 16-year-old.

Police say 32 -year-old Brian Patrick Werth had been texting a 16-year-old female parishioner since the summer of 2014, but it was May 20 that Werth had inappropriate sexual contact with the girl.

Werth — a Montgomery Village resident and youth group minister at the St. Elizabeth Catholic Church in Rockville — began sending graphic and sexual texts to the 16-year-old in 2014.

Police say Werth had inappropriate sexual contact with the girl during a youth event at the church in May. Over the last two weeks investigators interviewed the victim, her parents, and gathered other evidence, according to Montgomery County police.

Police arrested Werth on Wednesday morning. He is charged with one count of fourth-degree sexual offense, one count of sexual abuse of a minor and second degree assault.

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Youth minister arrested, charged with sexual offenses involving 16-year-old parishioner

MARYLAND
ABC 7

ROCKVILLE, Md. (ABC7) — A youth minister in Rockville was arrested and charged with sexual offenses involving a minor on Wednesday morning and police in Montgomery County suspect there may be more victims.

According to police, Brian Patrick Werth, 32, allegedly had inappropriate sexual contact with a 16-year-old female parishioner during a youth event at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church on May 20.

Detectives were notified of the incident in late August by Child Protective Services and following interviews with the victim and her parents, they gathered evidence in order to issue a warrant for Werth’s arrest in the last two weeks.

During the investigation, detectives discovered Werth had been sending graphic and sexually explicit text messages to the victim since summer 2014.

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Rockville church youth minister charged with sexual abuse of teen

MARYLAND
Fox Baltimore

BY ETHAN MCLEOD
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH 2016

ROCKVILLE, Md. (WBFF) – A 32-year-old Montgomery County man was arrested Wednesday for his alleged sexual abuse of a 16-year-old girl at a Rockville church where he served as a youth minister.

Montgomery County police detectives took Brian Patrick Werth, 32, of Montgomery Village, into custody, charging him with fourth-degree sexual offense, sexual abuse of a minor and second-degree assault. Werth worked at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church on Montrose Road in Rockville.

Child Protective Services alerted detectives in August about allegations that Werth had made inappropriate sexual contact with a 16-year-old girl who attended a youth event at the church in May.

According to the Archdiocese of Washington, a pastor at the church who received a sex abuse complaint about Werth alerted the Archdiocese’s Child and Youth Protection Office, which reported the case to police. The Archdiocese said in a statement that it immediately suspended Werth from his duties at the parish and the school at St. Elizabeth’s, and that he has since been fired.

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Russian priest accused of pedophilia to be extradited from Israel soon – investigators

RUSSIA/ISRAEL
RAPSI

MOSCOW, September 7 (RAPSI, Diana Gutsul) – Russian investigators are carrying out extradition of Russian priest Gleb Grozovsky, who stands charged in absentia with sexual abuse of children, from Israel to Russia, a representative of the St. Petersburg Main Investigative Directorate told RAPSI on Tuesday.

“A probe into the criminal case against Gleb Grozovsky, 37, accused in absentia of committing… violent sex crimes is underway. At present the extradition of the charged offender from Israel to Moscow is being carried out; after he is brought to St. Petersburg, he will be subjected to appropriate investigative actions,” the Directorate’s representative said.

According to Russian investigators, Grozovsky committed sex crimes against several minors in 2011 and 2013.

In 2013, he fled to Israel where he applied for citizenship. However, his application was dismissed.

In April 2014, Grozovsky was put on the international wanted list. Israeli police arrested him in September. In January 2015, a court in Jerusalem ruled that the priest should be extradited to Russia pursuant to the European Convention on Extradition.

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Dame Lowell Goddard quit historic child abuse inquiry because she was ‘lonely’

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

Dame Lowell Goddard quit her role as chairwoman of the Inquiry into historic Child Sexual Abuse partly because it was a “lonely existence”, Home Secretary Amber Rudd has said.

Speaking before MPs at the Home Affairs Select Commitee, Rudd said Dame Lowell’s full resignation letter outlined the areas where the New Zealand judge felt she could not deliver.

“I think she went…because she found it too much for her, and although she could contribute to it and there was some good work done in the past year, ultimately she found it too lonely,” Rudd said.

“She was a long way from home and she decided to step down,” the home secretary added.

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Ex-child sex abuse inquiry head ‘found it too much for her’ suggests Amber Rudd

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Press Association

Former head of the independent child sexual abuse inquiry Dame Lowell Goddard resigned “because she found it too much for her”, Home Secretary Amber Rudd has suggested.

A Commons committee also heard that the probe refunded £2.5 million to the Home Office last year – despite Dame Lowell’s claim that its budget does not match its “sheer scale and size”.

Last month the New Zealand high court judge became the third chairwoman to quit the inquiry, which has been beset by problems since it was launched in 2014.

Earlier this week it emerged that following her departure Dame Lowell delivered a critical assessment in a written submission to the Home Affairs committee in which she called for a complete review of the inquiry.

Ms Rudd was questioned about the episode as she appeared at the committee.

Asked why she believed Dame Lowell had stood down, the Home Secretary said: ” I think she went, although it is a matter for her I have to say, that she went because she found it too much for her and a lthough she could contribute to it and there was some good work done in the past year, ultimately she found it too lonely. She was a long way from home and she decided to step down.

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Written evidence submitted by Hon Dame Lowell Goddard QC

UNITED KINGDOM
Parliament

Independent Inquiry into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse

I make this memorandum available to the House of Commons Home Affairs Select Committee in response to Mr Vaz’s letter of 5 August and his and my subsequent exchange of letters of 31 August. I request that this memorandum be placed before the full Committee. In it I have set out for the Committee’s consideration the responses Mr Vaz specifically sought and have also included a brief outline of what I see as various critical issues facing the Inquiry. This I do for the purpose of assisting the Inquiry in the future.

I commence by briefly traversing the history of the Inquiry in its various iterations.
A brief history and the early legacy

As you are aware, the Inquiry was first established in July 2014 as a non- statutory Inquiry. I understand this was in the interests of getting it up and running as quickly as possible. It was however contemplated that the Government could move to have it reconstituted as a statutory Inquiry under the Inquiries Act 2005, if the Chair thought that were necessary.

It is a matter of history that two Chairs were briefly appointed, the first in July 2014 and the second in October 2014. In conjunction with the second appointment, broad ranging terms of reference were promulgated and 8 Panel members appointed, together with Counsel to the Inquiry, Ben Emmerson QC, and an expert adviser.

It is unnecessary now to traverse that early history in any detail, except to note there were reports of difficulties within the Inquiry Panel, as well as conflicting political views over its composition in the wider victim and survivor communities. Of more critical moment is that the absence of leadership during that early period meant the Inquiry could not undertake any fundamental planning or initial scoping of its task nor develop a clear sense of direction.

As is also evident from media reports and commentary at the time, those two false starts served to engender or further fuel negative perceptions about the Inquiry’s overall prospects of success. One example is the article by Andrew Gilligan in the Daily Telegraph of 4 November 2014, entitled “Whether Fiona Woolf heads it or not, the child abuse inquiry will fail.”

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UK inquiry into child sexual abuse ‘will include historical cases’

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Alan Travis
Wednesday 7 September 2016

The focus of the official inquiry into child sexual abuse will not be narrowed to exclude historical cases, the home secretary has made clear, as she also suggested that its former chair, Dame Lowell Goddard, may have quit because she was lonely.

Amber Rudd rejected claims by Goddard, who quit as chair last month, that the inquiry was too ambitious in scale and underfunded for the task it had been set.

The home secretary suggested that Goddard, a New Zealand high court judge and the third chair of the inquiry to depart, had resigned because “it was too much for her” and because she was lonely.

“I think she went … because she found it too much for her, and although she could contribute to it and there was some good work done in the past year, ultimately she found it too lonely,” Rudd said. “She was a long way from home and she decided to step down.”

Rudd confirmed to the Commons home affairs select committee that the child sexual abuse inquiry had repaid the Home Office £2.5m of its budget last year because of underspending, and suggested that Goddard had misrepresented the funding issue.

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Abuse inquiry scope will not change, Amber Rudd says

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The scope of the independent inquiry into child sex abuse in England and Wales will not change, the new home secretary has told MPs.

Amber Rudd told the Home Affairs Select Committee the inquiry must “look at the historic element of these abuses”.

She also said that criticisms from the inquiry’s former chairwoman, who wrote to the committee, were “not correct”.

Justice Lowell Goddard’s letter said the inquiry should focus on current child protection and future changes.

The inquiry was set up in 2014 and announced that 13 initial investigations would look into allegations against local authorities, religious organisations, the armed forces, public and private institutions and people in the public eye.

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Christchurch Cathedral’s governing parish council has been sacked after evidence of “coordinated opposition” to Bishop Greg Thompson

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

JOANNE MCCARTHY
7 Sep 2016

NEWCASTLE Christchurch Cathedral’s parish council has been sacked, and senior Anglicans have been stood down, after the royal commission heard evidence of “coordinated opposition” to Bishop Greg Thompson following public statements that he was sexually abused by a bishop.

In a statement on Wednesday the diocese confirmed Dean of Newcastle Stephen Williams had “stood people down from leadership roles in the liturgy”, and Bishop Peter Stuart, on behalf of Bishop Thompson, had dissolved the cathedral parish council.

The action was taken in consultation with Newcastle Anglican diocesan council.

It came after explosive evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse sitting in Newcastle, where commission chair Justice Peter McClellan accused solicitor and former diocesan lawyer Robert Caddies of leading “coordinated opposition” to Bishop Thompson.

This followed a complaint from a group of senior Anglicans to the royal commission in April, questioning Bishop Thompson’s “unsubstantiated” claim he was groomed and sexually abused by two senior clerics, including the late Bishop Ian Shevill.

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Herft considers future

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Nick Butterly – The West Australian on September 8, 2016

In his first public statement since appearing before the royal commission into child abuse, Perth Anglican Archbishop Roger Herft said he would seek the counsel of colleagues “in coming weeks”.

Archbishop Herft served as the Bishop of Newcastle between 1993 and 2005.

He admitted to the royal commission last month he had been told three times that the defrocked dean of Newcastle Graeme Lawrence had sexually abused children, yet failed to report the information to police.

Archbishop Herft told the commission he gave “incorrect” evidence when he testified previously that no one raised issues of concern with him about Mr Lawrence. In a post on his website, Archbishop Herft said he was conscious of the impact the hearings were having on the survivors of abuse.

“While I remain on long service leave, in coming weeks I will seek the counsel of my colleagues and members of the Diocese of Perth,” he said.

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The Trials and Tribulations of the Vatican’s Finance Chief

VATICAN CITY
Wall Street Journal

By FRANCIS X. ROCCA
Sept. 7, 2016

VATICAN CITY—Late last year, Cardinal George Pell, the pope’s finance chief, hired PricewaterhouseCoopers to undertake a comprehensive audit of the Vatican’s finances.

On a mandate from Pope Francis to clarify the city-state’s muddled accounts, the newly powerful cardinal had been assessing and tweaking the system; already he had found a total of €1.4 billion “tucked away” off the books.

Cardinal Pell wanted PwC to check that the 136 Vatican departments—each of which used its own, often loose accounting standards—were following guidelines aimed at imposing budgetary discipline.

His task was like pushing against the ancient stone walls of a basilica.

Other officials, led by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Secretary of State, known as the pope’s prime minister, let him know the audit wouldn’t fly. In June, the Vatican announced it had been scrapped, and soon many of Cardinal Pell’s wide-ranging powers were handed to others.

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DAILY NEWS GETS DIRTY AGAIN

NEW YORK
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on a story in the New York Daily News:

Up until recently, the Daily News had no record of spewing hatred toward the Catholic Church. That all changed when it was clear that the paper was nearly bankrupt. A decision was obviously made to gin up sales by attacking the Catholic Church.

In today’s edition, there is a story about a priest who has been asked to step down pending an investigation that he molested a teenage boy 30 years ago. The priest says he is innocent.

The news story never bothers to question why three decades passed before the accuser surfaced, but it does take the opportunity to criticize those who opposed bills that would suspend the statute of limitations for such offenses. It blames the Catholic Church for campaigning against this anti-civil libertarian measure, never mentioning the role that Jews and others played in defending the constitutional rights of the accused.

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Local priest removed from two churches after sexual abuse allegation

NEW YORK
Poughkeepsie Journal

Abbott Brant, Poughkeepsie Journal September 7, 2016

A local pastor has been removed from two Dutchess County churches after an allegation that he sexually abused a minor 30 years ago.

Rev. Anthony Giuliano, pastor of Saint John the Evangelist parish in Pawling and Saint Charles Borromeo parish in Dover Plains, has been instructed by the Archdioces of New York to not act as a priest after a man came forward last month and accused Guiliano of sexually abusing him sometime in the mid-1980s.

The letters, written by Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of New York Gerald Walsh, were sent to parishioners of each church on Aug. 31 informing them of Guiliano’s removal while an investigation by law enforcement takes place.

According to the letters, while the allegation has “not yet been substantiated,” it is “found to be credible.” Guiliano is denying the claim, according to the archdioceses.

Bishop Peter Byrne, an auxiliary bishop of the archdiocese and the Vicar for Dutchess County, celebrated a Mass at both St. John and St. Charles on Sunday, according to Joseph Zwilling, director of communications for the Archdiocese of New York.

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Concerned Catholics: Church finance council members should resign

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News September 7, 2016

A group that’s been calling for the resignation of Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron said four of the five members in the local Catholic church’s finance council should resign because of a clear or potential conflict of interest due to other posts they are holding.

David Sablan, president of the Concerned Catholics of Guam Inc., said the only member of the council with no clear or potential conflict of interest and with a solid financial management background is Sonny Ada of Ada’s Trust & Investment.

“Our goal is to clean up all the problems of the Apuron administration and install trust and confidence in the leadership of the church,” Sablan told Pacific Daily News. “If the council members have a conflict of interest and do not have the requisite background, even if they are appointed by the archbishop, they should resign or recuse themselves. Let us follow the canon law.”

Sablan said those with a clear conflict of interest are Archdiocesan Finance Council members Monsignor David C. Quitugua, Deacon Dominic Kim, and Danny Quichocho.

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California lawyers may represent Archbishop Hon in slander, libel case

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Jasmine Stole, jstole@guampdn.com
September 7, 2016

The Vatican-appointed apostolic administrator retained the legal services of two California-based lawyers in a $2 million libel and slander case filed by four people who publicly accused Archbishop Anthony Apuron of sexual assault.

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, apostolic administrator for the Archdiocese of Agana, retained attorneys Britt Evangelist and Mary McNamara, who both work for the law firm Swanson & McNamara LLP in San Francisco, California.

Evangelist and McNamara filed applications on Aug. 30 to practice as lawyers in Guam temporarily for the case against the archbishop, according to court documents. In their applications, McNamara and Evangelist state they have been retained by Archbishop Hon.

Roy T. Quintanilla, Walter G. Denton, Roland P. L. Sondia and Edith Doris Concepcion, mother of Joseph Quinata, filed a libel and slander lawsuit in July against Apuron and the Archdiocese of Agana, seeking a total of $2 million in damages, according to Pacific Daily News files.

The four are represented by attorney David J. Lujan.

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Man abused by priest says he forgives him

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Andi Yu – AAP on September 7, 2016

A man who was sexually abused by a Maronite priest when he was a teenager has looked his abuser in the eye and told him he forgives him.

The priest, 40, was accused of indecently assaulting the victim in 2005 and pleaded not guilty, but was found guilty by a jury earlier this year.

At the end of an emotional victim impact statement at the Parramatta District Court on Thursday, the victim, now 26, asked a defence lawyer to move aside so he could look directly at the offender.

“I swear to God, I forgive you,” he said.

The court heard the priest gave the victim, then 15, a lift home in his car at the parents’ request and on the way he fell asleep.

He awoke to the priest holding his penis.

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Man accused of Shefford orphanage abuse taken ill

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A 79-year-old man due to stand trial on charges of abuse against children at an orphanage was taken to hospital after becoming ill.

James McCann, of Suffield Court, Swaffham, Norfolk, worked at St Francis Boys Home in Shefford, Bedfordshire, during the 1960s and 1970s.

He was taken ill ahead of a trial at the Old Bailey.

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Research reveals new insights on children’s views of safety

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

7 September, 2016

A survey of over 1,000 children and young people reveals that over 40 percent would feel uncomfortable talking to an adult at school if they were in a situation where an adult or other young person made them feel uncomfortable.

Children and young people were most likely to report that they would tell a friend or parent if they found themselves in an unsafe situation with just over a quarter reporting that they would tell a teacher.

Further, one in 10 children and young people surveyed believed adults at their school would not know what to do if they sought help from them about an unsafe situation. More than a quarter of males and almost one-fifth of females said they would deal with the situation alone.

These findings are just some of many published in a new research report examining children’s views of safety commissioned by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse released today.

Our safety counts: Children and young people’s perceptions of safety and institutional responses to their safety concerns is the second report from the Children’s Views of Safety project, commissioned by the Royal Commission and prepared by the Institute of Child Protection Studies at the Australian Catholic University.

The research surveyed 1,142 children aged 10 to 18 recruited from schools, youth organisations and on line through electronic marketing.

Royal Commission Acting CEO Marianne Christmann said understanding how children perceive safety and institutions’ response to safety concerns is vital to develop strategies to support children and young people, and to protect them from harm.

“The report provides new insights into ways children prefer to seek help, and in particular the important role that friends and families play in preventing, identifying and responding to child sexual abuse – including grooming behaviours,” she said.

The report also identifies barriers to children and young people seeking help.

It notes the most significant barrier to seeking support at school was feeling uncomfortable talking to adults about sensitive issues. The report states that children and young people were also concerned that things would get worse if they told an adult about their situation.

“We know that children and young people are frequently denied information or the opportunity to have a say about their safety for fear that talking about safety will distress them,” Ms Christmann said.

“But this desire to protect children may in fact make them more vulnerable.”

This research highlights the importance of including children in discussions about safety which will be the theme of an upcoming research symposium in October.

The research will help inform the Royal Commission’s recommendations which will be finalised in a report and handed to government in December next year.

Some key findings

* Most children and young people reported that they felt safe at school, in sporting teams, at holiday camps and at church.

* Adults paying attention when children and young people raise concerns or worries, and caring about children and young people, were associated with increases in perceptions of safety.

* Around 10 percent of young people over 14 were sceptical about whether adults know children well enough, or talk to children about the things that they are worried about.

* 10 percent reported that they wouldn’t tell anyone if they encountered an adult who made them uncomfortable, and 20 percent reported they wouldn’t tell anyone if they encountered an unsafe peer.

* Participants’ unwillingness to tell someone about their concerns increased with age, with more than a quarter of those aged over 16 reporting that it was unlikely they would talk to someone if they encountered an unsafe adult or peer.

* Almost 50 percent felt that adults at their school would only know that a child was unsafe if the child told them. Young women also reported that they were often unprepared for dealing with unsafe situations, and had not learned about what they should do in class.

* Two-thirds of participants said that they would turn to a peer if they encountered an unsafe situation, while 55 percent said they would turn to their mother and 35 percent to their father.

* More than half of participants believed that their school was doing enough to prevent children and young people from being unsafe, while a third thought they could be doing more.

Read Our safety counts: Children and young people’s perceptions of safety and institutional responses to their safety concerns by Dr Tim Moore, Professor Morag McArthur, Jessica Heerde and Steven Roche at the Institute of Child Protection Studies at the Australian Catholic University.

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Priest who demanded homosexuals have a ‘celibate life’ suspended after being accused of molesting 15-year-old boy in the Bronx

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
ROCCO PARASCANDOLA
GRAHAM RAYMAN
THOMAS TRACY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Tuesday, September 6, 2016

A priest who once said homosexuals had to live a “celibate life” to be good Catholics has been accused of molesting a 15-year-old boy at a Bronx church about 30 years ago.

But without a change to the statute of limitations on child sex abuse in New York, the alleged crimes committed by the man of the cloth will forever go unpunished.

Father Anthony Giuliano was running two parishes in Dutchess County — about 85 miles from Manhattan — on Aug. 16 when a 43-year-old man told police the priest had molested him in the late 1980s.

The Archdiocese of New York immediately removed him from the two parishes as the NYPD launched an investigation.

“The allegation has been found to be credible,” Reverend Gerald Walsh, the Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of New York, to parishioners at St. John the Evangelist and St. Charles Borromeo churches, located in Pawling and Dover Plains.

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Government to investigate alleged comments by abuse victim official

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Stephen Naysmith

AN INVESTIGATION has been launched into a civil servant’s alleged conduct towards victims involved in the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry.

Jessica McPherson, who works in the Scottish Government’s In-Care Survivor Support Fund, has been the subject of complaints from a group representing abuse victims and from a leading charity, Falkirk-based Open Secret.

It has been alleged that Ms McPherson said it was “OK” for abuse victims to die if their demise resulted in greater support in future cases where there was a risk of suicide.

A spokesman for the Scottish Government said a fresh investigation into Ms McPherson’s conduct had been launched after further information came to light.

He said: “Whenever serious issues, such as this, are raised with us, we examine them. We did this when these matters were first raised.

“Further information was provided direct to the Deputy First Minister last week. As a result of this further information coming to light, an investigation has been launched into these concerns.”

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Child abuse inquiry will not be scaled down

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill, Richard Ford
September 7 2016
The Times

The public inquiry into child abuse will not be scaled back despite mounting criticism of the ambitious scope, rising costs and lengthening delays, its new chairwoman said last night.

Alexis Jay said that she had ordered a review of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse’s “ways of working” but rejected claims by her predecessor that the task facing the inquiry was unmanageable.

Amber Rudd, the home secretary, will be questioned by MPs today about the inquiry but has ruled out intervening in the running of the investigation.

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Audrey Nash tells of her Catholic betrayal to the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
6 Sep 2016

A 90-year-old grandmother has told the Royal Commission about the night her 13-year-old son killed himself in 1974, probably after abuse by Marist Brothers religious at Hamilton.

Audrey Nash spoke about how the Catholic church she had loved and served all her life had turned its back on her and how a senior figure in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese excused the behaviour of its paedophile priests and religious by saying “it had been going on forever”.

Mrs Nash said that a few years ago she spoke with a diocese figure after a Sunday mass about Andrew, and he said: “Look, Aud, it’s been going on forever. The Romans had their little boys, the Greeks had their little boys and the English Aristocrats had their little boys.”

“I said: ‘And that makes it all right does it?’ I have not spoken to him since.”

Mrs Nash began her evidence by saying she had no hesitation in enrolling Andrew at Marist Brothers at Hamilton even though an older son, CQT, had told her about the violence of the school and about the brothers putting their hands in pupils’ pants, because it was where most of the Catholic boys in the area went.

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Family tells of being abandoned by Catholic Church after their son committed suicide

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

MARK COLVIN: This story from the child abuse royal commission contains details you may find disturbing.

The mother and brother of a 13 year old boy who killed himself say the Catholic Church abandoned them and gave them no support after his tragic death.

The boy, Andrew Nash, is believed to have been sexually abused by a notorious paedophile, Francis Cable – better known as Brother Romuald.

Members of the family have told the royal commission that Brother Romuald came to their house soon after they found the body and wanted to know if he’d left a note.

Michael Edwards has this report.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: The Nashs are a devoutly Catholic Family from the Newcastle area.

Their father Herbert worked on the ships. Their mother Audrey worked part-time cleaning the house of the local priests.

They had five children – three girls and two boys.

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Students don’t trust schools to protect them from abusers

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Henrietta Cook

An alarming number of Australian students don’t trust schools to keep them safe.

That’s the key finding of a new report that will serve as a wake up call for schools which are trying to stamp out abuse in the wake of damning revelations aired at the Royal Commission.

While many schools are rolling out programs to encourage students to report sexual abuse, bullying and harassment, only one quarter of surveyed students said they would turn to a teacher for help.

The Australian Catholic University report, which was conducted for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and released on Wednesday, found that one in 10 students believed that adults at their schools would not know what to do if they reached out for help.

In a surprise finding, students said they felt safer at church, sporting institutions and camps than they did at school. Just 57 per cent of young people said they felt safe most of the time at school, compared to 67.4 per cent at church.

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Oldham man sentenced 30 years for child sex trafficking role

KENTUCKY
The Pioneer News

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

LOUISVILLE – United States Attorney John E. Kuhn, Jr. today announced the 30-year sentence, of an Oldham County, Kentucky, man by Chief District Judge Joseph H. McKinley Jr., in United States District Court, for aiding and abetting the sex trafficking of a minor. There is no parole in the federal prison system.

“Howard Chambers subjected this young girl to repeated sexual abuse,” stated U.S. Attorney John Kuhn. “Acting with unfathomable selfishness, he chose to traumatize a child in favor of his own self-gratification. The goal of my office was to obtain the maximum sentence of incarceration that insured Chambers would never touch another child. I do want to thank the law enforcement officers and our prosecutor who worked tirelessly together in the investigation of these crimes. I want the public to know we are doing everything in our power to protect the most vulnerable members of our community.”

Howard Key Chambers, 65, and co-defendant Christopher Kosicki helped each other to carry out the sex trafficking of a child. Chambers, a former youth choir leader at an Oldham County church, admitted to travelling to Kosicki’s home in Louisville, to engage in sexual activity with a 10-year-old turned 11-year-old child, between six and eight times, from 2013 until August 2014. The two helped each other entice, harbor, provide, obtain, and maintain a person that had not attained the age of 14 years who was caused to engage in commercial sex acts. Commercial sex acts include any sex act, on account of which anything of value is given to or received by any person. On several occasions, Chambers gave Kosicki money after engaging in sexual activity with the child (age 10 and then 11). On at least one occasion, Chambers admitted to giving money directly to the child after engaging in sexual activity with her. Additionally, on one occasion, Kosicki photographed Chambers engaging in sexual activity with the child.

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Former music minister sentenced for child sex

KENTUCKY
Courier-Journal

Andrew Wolfson, @adwolfson September 6, 2016

Ending a child sex case called a “pit of horror,” a former Oldham County minister was sentenced Tuesday to 30 years in prison, the maximum he could have gotten under a plea agreement.

Howard Key Chambers, who advertised online that he wanted to fulfill a “granddaddy babysitter fantasy,” admitted that he had allowed a 10-year-old girl to perform oral sex on him seven or eight times as the man who trafficked her looked on and took pictures.

“Howard Chambers subjected this young girl to repeated sexual abuse,” stated U.S. Attorney John Kuhn. “Acting with unfathomable selfishness, he chose to traumatize a child in favor of his own self-gratification. The goal of my office was to obtain the maximum sentence of incarceration that insured Chambers would never touch another child.”

Rob Eggert, one of Chambers’ lawyers, said he was disappointed by the sentence. Chief U.S. District Judge Joseph H. McKinley Jr. could have sentenced him to as little as 15 years.

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Minister in bread ‘penance’ case allegedly had role in other cases

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston Globe

By Jenn Abelson GLOBE STAFF SEPTEMBER 07, 2016

Years before the school minister at Phillips Exeter Academy encouraged a student to bake bread as an act of penance for allegedly groping another student, the Rev. Robert H. Thompson played a questionable role in two other sexual assault cases at the New Hampshire boarding school, according to a former student and a former faculty member.

Thompson wrote a favorable review in 1993 for an advisee who had molested another student at Exeter and “misused his authority as the faculty advisor and school minister” to delay the student from getting kicked off campus, according to a letter written at the time by former assistant school minister Carl Lindemann to school leaders.

Less than two years later, Thompson and his wife, Nadine, who worked as Exeter’s dean of multicultural affairs, allowed a boy who had confessed to sexually assaulting five students within a few hours to stay the night in their faculty apartment and the school didn’t call police until two days later, according to a February 1995 article in The Exeter News-Letter. One victim, Julia Callahan, told the Globe that Nadine Thompson asked her the night of the attack to accept an apology from the troubled teenager who was visiting from New York.

Now, two decades later, in the wake of a Spotlight Team report, Phillips Exeter placed Thompson on administrative leave and prohibited him from talking to the media after disclosures in July on a 2015 sexual assault case, according to Nadine Thompson, who no longer works at the school. The minister came under scrutiny for brokering a deal in which the alleged victim received weekly bread deliveries from the student athlete who allegedly groped her in the church basement.

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Scott Hallett’s harrowing tale of abuse by Vince Ryan

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
7 Sep 2016

A VICTIM of serial paedophile Vince Ryan has given shocking evidence to the Royal Commission about Ryan’s repeated sexual predations against him and other altar boys while at primary school.

Scott Marcus Hallett 51, told of his upbringing as the adopted child of a 14-year-old mother, and his education at St Joseph’s primary school at The Junction.

Frequently breaking down in tears and having to stop to compose himself, Mr Hallett told of how Ryan began abusing him as an altar boy, and how it began as masturbation and moved soon to anal sex in a group with various boys.

He was just nine years old.

“At the time I didn’t know what Father Ryan was doing was wrong,” Mr Hallett said.

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PRIEST IN DUTCHESS COUNTY REMOVED FROM TWO CHURCHES AFTER SEXUAL ABUSE CLAIM

NEW YORK
WABC

DOVER PLAINS, New York (WABC) — A Dutchess County priest was removed from the two churches he runs on Tuesday after he was accused of sexually abusing a boy 30 years ago.

Father Anthony Giuliano was removed by the Archdiocese of New York from the Saint John the Evangelist parish in Pawling and the Saint Charles Borromeo parish in Dover Plains.

An initial investigation by law enforcement officials found the claim to be credible, but Father Giuliano has denied the allegation.

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Former Marist Brothers head ‘naive’ to have believed Brother Romuald

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Ian Kirkwood

A former provincial of the Marist Brothers, Michael Hill, has told the Royal Commission on Wednesday about an evolution in his thinking about “potentially inappropriate behaviour” by members of his order.

Brother Michael said he was of the belief that abuse was widespread in the order and not just a “temporary hiccup” by about 1997.

He said he was now embarrassed that in 1999 he had taken the subsequently disgraced Brother Romuald – Francis William Cable – at his word when he said he had been wrongly accused.

He said he had been “naive” to have believed Brother Romuald.

Counsel assisting the commission, Stephen Free, said to Brother Michael: “So you simply took him at his word, is that . . . ”

Brother Hill: “That’s right.”

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Brother put Jaws 2 line in child sex email

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

SEPTEMBER 7, 2016

By Rebekah Ison
Australian Associated Press

When a senior Marist Brother emailed a lawyer about complaints of child sexual abuse in 2001, he started the message with a tagline from Jaws 2.

“As the famous movie line said: just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water…!,” Brother Michael Hill said in an email shown to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Wednesday.

“After a fairly mild couple of months all hell has broken loose over the past couple of weeks on the abuse front.”

The message from Brother Hill, who was the then-provincial for parts of the country’s east, was sent after a Brisbane student made a complaint about a man known as Brother Patrick touching his groin.

A public hearing has heard boys were groped in classrooms, abused in the chapel and raped in an office of the Newcastle Marist Brothers High School where Brother Patrick taught alongside fellow pedophiles Brother Romuald and Brother Dominic in the 1970s.

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School principal says paedophile teacher in Newcastle admitted abuse 40 years ago

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By David Marchese

The former principal of a Marist Brothers high school in Newcastle has told the child abuse royal commission a notorious paedophile admitted to him he had abused children 40 years before he was charged.

After a week of evidence, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing into the Hunter region’s Catholic Church is now examining the response of the Marist Brothers to allegations of child sexual abuse.

Former principal of the Marist Brothers’ Hamilton school, Christopher Wade, admitted he should have done more to follow up child sexual abuse allegations levelled at teacher Francis Cable, known as Brother Romuald.

Brother Romuald was sentenced to 16 years’ jail last year after being convicted of dozens of child abuse charges.

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September 6, 2016

Supporters urge governor to sign bill ending statute of limitations for prosecuting rape

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

REPORTING FROM SACRAMENTO
Sophia Bollag

Flanked by alleged sexual assault victims and their supporters, state Sen. Connie Leyva (D-Chino) urged Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday to end California’s statute of limitations for rape.

The Legislature sent Leyva’s bill, SB 813, to Brown last week. He has until Sept 30 to sign the bill, which would end the time limit in California for prosecuting rape, child sexual abuse and other felony sex crimes.

“This bill does not abolish the very high burden-of-proof standard,” Leyva said at a state Capitol news conference. “[SB] 813 simply ensures that the door does not slam in the face of victims.”

Several of those who spoke in support of the bill said they were sexually assaulted. They were joined by attorney Gloria Allred, who said she met with representatives from the governor’s office Tuesday morning. Allred is representing more than 30 women who say comedian Bill Cosby sexually assaulted them.

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Youngstown Diocese joins national child abuse prevention program

OHIO
WKBN

By Molly Reed
Published: September 6, 2016

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – The Catholic Diocese of Youngstown is joining other diocese across the country in implementing new programs to prevent child abuse.

VIRTUS is a nationally recognized group of programs that promote “rightdoing” within religious organizations.

In 1994, the Youngstown Diocese started using the policy “Treasures Gift from God” to protect children. Now that it’s moving toward VIRTUS, the protection it wants to provide for kids who may victims of abuse will be enhanced.

Former Youngstown Police Det. Delphine Baldwin-Casey is joining forces with the Youngstown Diocese and Monseigneur John Zuraw to bring in VIRTUS. As the Victim Assistance Coordinator, Baldwin-Casey is the first point of contact for people who claim to have been sexually abused by clergy, religious or church personnel, or volunteers.

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Statement of acknowledgement and apology from Bill Wright, Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
MN News Today

In my five years as Bishop of the Diocese, this is the second commission of inquiry before which I have appeared. There is a very considerable difference in scope between the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (‘Royal Commission’) and the Special Commission of Inquiry into matters relating to the police investigation of certain child sexual abuse allegations in the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle.

BISHOP BILL WRIGHT PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 07, 2016

Nevertheless there are haunting similarities for me, inasmuch as I am once again called upon to bear witness to a terrible and shameful chapter in the history of this Diocese. I am called to account for how the Diocese meets its obligations to provide support to those who remain affected today by their abuse, and called to demonstrate how we are committed to ensuring that what happened in the past cannot happen again today.

To bear witness to this sad and terrible history I must first acknowledge the facts as I know them. I acknowledge that:

* Ryan is a priest incardinated to the Diocese who committed multiple acts of sexual abuse against innocent boys beginning as early as 1972;

* Ryan was a sexual predator who used his status as a priest and the power that gave him to gain access to boys, to convince their parents and other responsible adults that he was safe, and to conceal his abuse;

* As early as 1974 deceased priest Mons. Cotter was told something of Ryan’s abusing and he abjectly failed to do anything meaningful to protect the children who should have been his primary concern;

* In 1975, Mons. Cotter responded to a further report and promptly removed Ryan from ministry and sent him for treatment, but these acts were vitiated by subsequent failures to monitor or check whether Ryan had received any meaningful treatment;

* There is some evidence that deceased priest Vincent Casey was told something of Ryan’s prior abusing. There is also evidence suggesting that Bishop Leo Clarke may have known of Ryan’s abuse. Before his death, Bishop Clarke denied knowledge of Ryan’s history, but if he were aware of what had occurred, then he failed to make further enquiries and subsequently placed Ryan in positions of responsibility, with access to children, across the Diocese for a further two decades;

* Some of those men who were harmed as boys have managed to live stable and fulfilling lives, others have struggled to simply remain alive and continue to battle their demons on a daily basis. We also acknowledge that some of those who were abused have also taken their own lives;

* The attitudes held by some in the Diocese put the perceived good of the Church before the safety of a child and this was fundamental to Ryan’s being able to continue to abuse for over 20 years; and

* The harm inflicted by Ryan may have been aggravated by the Diocese when certain victims sought redress for their harm through a contested court process.

As Bishop I humbly offer an unreserved apology on behalf of the Diocese to all those men who have suffered and continue to suffer as a consequence of Ryan’s abuse and the actions and omissions of members of the Diocese. Through those failures and omissions, the Diocese failed to act according to the Gospel. I apologise to the parents and siblings of those boys whose innocence was stolen by an evil presence who was allowed to remain amongst us by flawed and failed leaders. I apologise to the spouses and children of those men for any shadows that reach out from the past to affect your lives together today.

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Deathbed revelation triggers clergy sex abuse lawsuit

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

ANDREW DUFFY, OTTAWA CITIZEN

The estate of a late Ottawa man has launched a $2-million lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Ottawa for sexual abuse he allegedly suffered as a child in the 1960s.

The unusual statement of claim was filed last month on behalf of the man, whom the Citizen will identify only as John Doe. He died at the age of 63 in November 2014.

According to the claim, Doe was a victim of Rev. Jean Gravel, a Catholic priest at Ottawa’s Saint-Rémi Parish.

Gravel pleaded guilty in September 1967 to charges of gross indecency involving two teenaged boys and resisting arrest.

The new court document contends that Doe was one of those teenaged victims.

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Jury selection underway in sexual abuse case against former teacher

KENTUCKY
WLKY

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —Jury selection got underway Tuesday afternoon in one of three sexual abuse cases against a former Catholic school teacher.

A former St. Raphael Catholic School teacher and Trinity football coach is now facing sex abuse charges.

According to court records, Philip Dale Anderson had sex with a teenager between 1981 and 1983.

Police said the victim was between 11 and 14 years old.

He was a teacher at St. Raphael School at the time.

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Uno por uno, los 9 curas que ya fueron condenados por abusar de menores en Argentina

NUEVE DE JULIO PARTIDO (ARGENTINA)
Clarín [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

September 6, 2017

By REDACCIÓN CLARÍN

Read original article

Todos fueron acusados de crímenes aberrantes. Las sentencias van de 4 a 25 años de prisión. 

Con la reciente sentencia al párroco de Entre Ríos Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria ya suman nueve curas condenados por abusos sexuales a menores en Argentina. Estos son los casos

Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria

Le dieron una pena de 25 años de prisión, la más alta hasta ahora. De origen colombiano, estuvo por 11 años en la Parroquia San Lucas Evangelista de Lucas González, una localidad de 4.500 habitantes situada en el departamento Nogoyá, en la región central de Entre Ríos. Fue acusado de corrupción de menores contra al menos cuatro chicos.

Héctor Pared

Fue condenado en marzo de 2003 a 24 años de prisión por abuso sexual agravado y corrupción de menores en un hogar de la localidad bonaerense de Florencio Varela.

El cura sólo cumplió pocos meses de la sentencia, ya que en septiembre de ese año murió y fue entonces cuando sus víctimas se enteraron que tenía VIH, un dato que había sido ocultado por el cura y el servicio penitenciario.

Mario Napoleón Sasso

Sentenciado en 2007 a 17 años de prisión por haber abusado sexualmente de cinco niñas en 2002 y 2003, cuando era párroco de la capilla San Manuel en Pilar, Buenos Aires.

En el juicio probaron el encubrimiento de dos sacerdotes colegas de Sasso, que fueron procesados.

Julio César Grassi

Su caso fue bisagra en las investigaciones por abusos en clero argentino. Condenado en 2009 a 15 años de prisión por abusar de un menor que vivía en la Fundación Felices los Niños, que él dirigía.

La Corte Suprema confirmó la sentencia en marzo último. En abril, el Tribunal Oral en lo Criminal 1 de Morón lo benefició con el 2×1 y le redujo dos años y medio la pena. La medida será apelada por los abogados querellantes.

José Mercau

Recibió una pena de 14 años de prisión por delitos de abuso sexual y corrupción de menores en 2011. Fue imputado por cuatro casos.

Trabajaba en el Hogar San Juan Diego de la parroquia Juan Bosco en el Talar de Pacheco, donde se alojaban niños, sobre todo varones, con problemas familiares y pocos recursos.

El Papa Francisco lo expulsó del sacerdocio. Fue excarcelado el 18 de marzo de 2014.

Fernando Enrique Picciochi

Fue condenado en 2012 a 12 años de cárcel por abusar sexualmente de al menos cinco niños.

Sebastián Cuattromo, quien iba al colegio Marianista de Caballito, Buenos Aires, lo denunció en 2000. Está en libertad por el beneficio del 2×1 desde principios de 2016.

Isaac Gómez

Fue sentenciado a 11 años de prisión por el Tribunal Oral y Criminal N° 4 de Mercedes, Buenos Aires, por el abuso sexual agravado de un menor.

Este hecho había sido denunciado en el año 2007, por un caso ocurrido en el Colegio Marianista San Agustín de 9 de Julio.

Luis Eduardo Sierra

Lo condenaron a ocho años de prisión en 2004 por abusar en 2000 y 2001 de tres monaguillos de entre 12 y 14 años del colegio Ave María de la Obra Don Orione, de la localidad bonaerense de Claypole. No se sabe si cumplió la condena. Se fue a Paraguay, donde también lo acusaron de abusos.

Ladislao Chomín

Fue condenado en 2012 a cuatro años de prisión acusado de abusar de una nena. El hecho ocurrió en 2003 en el Instituto San Josafat de la localidad de Apóstoles. Se transformó en 2012 en el primer religioso de la historia de Misiones en ser condenado por un delito del tipo sexual.

Fuente: Télam

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Police: Rockledge priest facing fraud lived above means

FLORIDA
Florida Today

J.D. Gallop, FLORIDA TODAY September 6, 2016

Police say a Rockledge priest took widow’s money, spent thousands on everything from car payments to gourmet chocolate

It began with a simple question from a widow about her bank account and ended with Rockledge detectives and Orlando Diocese accountants poring over financial statements, looking into the spending habits of a longtime priest, 73-year-old Father Nicholas King.

What detectives say they uncovered, according to court documents, was a priest who funneled money into his own private account with expenses that ranged from several hundred dollars in restaurant meals, a $9,000 down payment on a car, $6,000 to his sister, and $700 in spending at a gourmet chocolate shop.

Last week, Father King of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Rockledge, was arrested on charges of grand theft from a person older than 65 years of age in excess of $50,000 and organized fraud involving funds over $50,000, records show. No court date has been set.

Rockledge police began investigating the case August 24 after a 79-year-old widow notified church authorities that her money market account set aside for assisting the church was overdrawn, records show. Police said King was “surprised” by the investigation and denied any wrongdoing.

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Insurer fights order to pay Connecticut diocese in sex abuse cases

CONNECTICUT
New Haven Register

By The Associated Press
POSTED: 09/06/16

NEW HAVEN >> An insurance company has appealed an order by a federal judge in Connecticut to reimburse the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Hartford $945,000 for payments church officials made to settle sexual misconduct cases involving priests.

Judge Janet Bond Arterton in New Haven ruled in July that Chicago-based Interstate Fire & Casualty breached a contract when it refused to reimburse the archdiocese for more than $1 million in payments made in four abuse cases involving minors.

The company had reimbursed the archdiocese for previous settlements in priest abuse cases, but joined other insurers across the country that have balked at paying legal settlements in such cases.

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No official complaints about Herft

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Nick Butterly – The West Australian on September 7, 2016

The peak body of the Anglican Church says another bishop would have to make a complaint to force Perth Archbishop Roger Herft from his job.

But the Church’s special internal tribunal is yet to get an official complaint about the Archbishop.

The details come amid expectations in some parts of the Church that Archbishop Herft is preparing to stand down after admitting to a royal commission that he let down survivors of child sexual abuse.

Should he resign, Archbishop Herft would be the highest ranking casualty of the long-running Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

A spokesman for Melbourne Archbishop Philip Freier, who is the head of the Anglican Church in Australia, toldThe West Australian that any administrative action against Archbishop Herft would have to be brought on by another senior Church figure.

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EXCLUSIVE: Priest who used to work in the Bronx suspended amid child sexual abuse charges

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

GRAHAM RAYMAN
THOMAS TRACY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, September 6, 2016

The Archdiocese of New York has suspended a Catholic priest, who once worked in the Bronx, from performing his religious duties after allegations surfaced that he molested a 15-year-old parishioner about 30 years ago — a crime that may forever go unpunished, the Daily News has learned.

Father Anthony Giuliano was serving as a pastor in a Dutchess County parish about 85 miles from Manhattan when the accusation was made on Aug. 16, decades after the incident allegedly occurred, police sources said.

As the investigation continues, Father Giuliano has been removed from the parish and “is not permitted to function as a priest until the matter is resolved,” according to the Most Reverend Gerald Walsh, the Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of New York.

The victim, now 43, told police that he worked in a church rectory in the Bronx neighborhood of Baychester between 1987 and 1988 when Giuliano befriended him.

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Abuse inquiry to continue despite calls for overhaul

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The independent inquiry into child sex abuse will continue, but there will be an internal review of it, its new chairwoman Alexis Jay has said.

It comes after ex-chairwoman Dame Lowell Goddard said in a memo to MPs that the inquiry was too big and needed overhauling.

Ex-top prosecutor Lord Macdonald said there was a “real danger” of it “taking years to confirm what we already know”.

But Prime Minister Theresa May said she remained “committed” to the inquiry.

Last month, Dame Lowell became the third chief to quit the inquiry – which was set up to investigate allegations made against local authorities, religious organisations, the armed forces and public and private institutions in England and Wales, as well as people in the public eye – since it was launched in 2014.

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Abuse Databases and Religious Culture: A Catholic perspective on addressing abuse in the Church

UNITED STATES
Our Stories Untold

by TERRY MCKIERNAN on Sep 6, 2016

This is the third and last post in OSU’s current blog series on SNAP Mennonite’s MAP List (Mennonite Abuse Prevention List) and the broader issue of naming church workers (lay or ordained) who are credibly accused* of perpetrating sexualized violence. Today’s post is offered by Terry McKiernan, President of BishopAccountability.org, an organization focused on preserving a public record of sexual abuse and its cover up in the Catholic Church. He speaks from years of experience and offers the gift of wisdom that comes with a sustained commitment to doing what is needed to offer a voice to survivors and protect the vulnerable. The fact that this is the last post in our series does not mean that the conversation is over. The whole point of a series is to start conversation. If you have a story or perspective or question on the topic that you would like to share, don’t hesitate to be in touch.
— Hilary

***

There is interdenominational precedent and momentum for religious communities to name publicly all church workers, living or dead, who are credibly accused of perpetrating sexual violence. I want to offer, in this piece, some background that sheds light on how Catholics and others have come to the same conclusion that SNAP Mennonite has landed upon, that a public list of the credibly accused must be maintained if church culture is going to change and start making progress toward rooting abuse out of their communities.

THE EXAMPLE OF BERGEN CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL

KobutsuVenerable Kobutsu Malone is a Zen Buddhist priest. He’s worked as a chaplain at Sing Sing Prison in New York, and he’s served as a spiritual advisor for men on death row. He’s also a patent-holding mechanical engineer who’s developed adaptive electronic equipment for handicapped people. And Kobutsu is a survivor of clergy abuse.

Back in 2002, when the Boston Globe broke the Catholic abuse story, Kobutsu was moved to come forward about the sexual abuse that he suffered as 14-year-old Kevin Malone at Bergen Catholic High School in Oradell, New Jersey.

The searing document that he produced about that experience became the portal to a remarkable website, bergencatholicabuse.com. Other students at the school, which is run and staffed by the Irish Christian Brothers, contacted Kobutsu about their experiences, and he began to name and list the accused on his site, providing photographs of the brothers, documents, articles, and testimony from dozens of victims.

Last week it was revealed that the Christian Brothers of Bergen Catholic had paid Kobutsu’s list the ultimate compliment. He had been the first survivor from the school to come forward, and his website had been the catalyst for many other survivors. Now Bergen Catholic offered to include Kobutsu in a $1.9 million group settlement with 21 survivors, but asked that he take his website down. Kobutsu refused.

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Walk to End SOL PA to NJ, Sunday, September 18, 2016

NEW JERSEY
Road to Recovery

Starting Location: Morrisville Shopping Center Parking Lot
1 East Trenton Avenue
Morrisville, PA 19067

Meeting in the parking lot at 11:00 AM

Begin Walking at 12:00 Noon

· Left out of the parking lot, at the corner of East Trenton Avenue and Pennsylvania Avenue, traveling North on North Pennsylvania Avenue sidewalk towards East Bridge Street.

· Left onto East Bridge Street to the Lower Trenton Bridge.

· Cross the Lower Trenton Bridge via the walkway into Trenton, NJ

· Follow Bridge Street to merge onto South Warren Street

· Continue on South Warren Street to Front Street

· Left onto Front Street to Barrack Street

· Right onto Barrack Street

· Left onto State Street, arriving at the State House 411 State Street, Trenton, NJ

Gathering on the sidewalk in front of the State House for a rally.

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Call for submissions about various institutions

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

6 September, 2016

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will be holding public hearings in December 2016 into the current policies and procedures of each institution named below in relation to child protection and child-safe standards, including responding to allegations of child sexual abuse.

These hearings will also examine the response of each named institution to the case study report in which its conduct was considered.

The Royal Commission invites submissions from individuals and organisations concerning these matters, that is, the current policies and procedures in place and the response of the institution to the relevant case study reports.

The Royal Commission may invite selected individuals or organisations to speak to their submissions, however, it is not proposed that leave to appear will be granted.

Those institutions are:

* Scouts New South Wales (Case Study 1 held in September 2013);
* YMCA New South Wales (Case Study 2 held in October 2013);
* The Salvation Army (Case Studies 5, 10 and 33 held in January/February 2014, March/April 2014 and October 2015);
* the Australian Christian Churches and affiliated Pentecostal churches (Case Study 18 held in October 2014).

The Royal Commission is tasked with investigating how different institutions currently respond to allegations of child sexual abuse.

The identity of anyone that provides information will be protected and will be kept confidential.

Submissions should be made by 23 September 2016 in writing to GPO Box 5283, Sydney, NSW, 2001 or via email to solicitor@childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au. Submissions can be anonymous.

If individuals have participated in a private session and would like their session to be recognised as a formal, confidential submission, please contact the Royal Commission at solicitor@childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au.

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Abuse inquiry concerns need urgent investigation

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Editorial

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has had a rocky history. With a huge remit, by June this year it had run up costs of £1.8 million, yet had still to hear from the vast majority of witnesses.

With key appointments concluded last October, by July it had lost two out of its three key panel members. The acrimonious resignation of the Chair Susan O’Brien QC followed within a week that of one of her deputies.

Separately, the Scottish Government has yet to legislate, as it has promised to do, to resolve legal issues that prevent many victims from pursuing civil claims against their abusers.

Despite claims of consultation, there is widespread unhappiness about the Survivor Scotland model being proposed for supporting people who may be traumatised by memories re-awoken during the inquiry process.

The inquiry has to satisfy diverse groups representing adult victims of abuse, many of whom have lasting difficulties as a result of what happened to them at children. It is fair to say that confidence in its ability to do so is at an all time low.

So the revelation that a key official at the heart of arrangements for the inquiry appears to have lost the confidence of many of those due to take part in the inquiry is a major problem. Jennifer McPherson is alleged to have made disparaging comments to some historic abuse victims, and been dismissive of their concerns.

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Child abuse inquiry out of control, warns judge

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Richard Ford, Home Correspondent
September 6 2016
The Times

The national public inquiry into child sex abuse is too big, unwieldy and under-funded to succeed, and must be overhauled, according to the judge who quit as its chief last month.

Dame Lowell Goddard urged Amber Rudd, the home secretary, to carry out a full review of the inquiry that stretches back more than 60 years and spans institutions including the church, councils, schools and Westminster. It is expected to run for at least a decade at a cost of £100 million.

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Child abuse inquiry ‘too unwieldy to work’ says ex-chief Dame Lowell Goddard

By Brendan Cole
UNITED KINGDOM
International Business Times

September 6, 2016

The former chief who quit the national public inquiry into child sex abuse has criticised it as too big to succeed. Dame Lowell Goddard left under controversial circumstances after nearly a year in charge of the probe in which not a word of evidence was heard.

But the New Zealand judge said the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse needs to be “remodelled” as it is too unwieldy and under-funded to succeed.

According to a memo seen by the Times, Goddard has urged home secretary Amber Rudd to review the inquiry which stretches back six decades, is expected to take a 10 years and will cost around £100m.

She said that it should be scaled back to focus on the present and future protection of children and also criticised the inquiry’s staff for being inexperienced.

She wrote: “With the benefit of hindsight, or more realistically the benefit of experience, it is clear there is an inherent problem in the sheer scale and size of the inquiry (which its budget does not match) and therefore in its manageability.

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Government’s child sex abuse inquiry is TOO BIG to uncover the truth, former chair warns

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By JAMES TAPSFIELD, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE

The government’s child sex abuse inquiry is too big to uncover the truth, its former chairman has warned.

Dame Lowell Goddard, who resigned last month, delivered a damning assessment of the probe’s prospect of success.

The New Zealand high court judge is the third chief to quit the inquiry – which was set up amid claims of an establishment cover-up following allegations that a paedophile ring operated in Westminster in the 1980s.

The wide-ranging review was launched in by Theresa May 2014.

Baroness Butler-Sloss and Dame Fiona Woolf had previously stepped aside from the job.

In a letter to the Home Affairs Select Committee, Dame Lowell said: ‘With the benefit of hindsight, or more realistically the benefit of experience, it is clear there is an inherent problem in the sheer scale and size of the inquiry (which its budget does not match) and therefore in its manageability.’

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Child Abuse Inquiry Too Big To Succeed, Says Judge Who Quit

UNITED KINGDOM
Sky News

The judge who resigned as head of the inquiry into child sex abuse says it is too unwieldy and needs to be completely overhauled.

Dame Lowell Goddard became the third inquiry chief to resign when she quit last month.

She is pressing Home Secretary Amber Rudd to put more focus on current issues and the protection of children in the future.

At the moment its brief stretches back 60 years and covers institutions including the church, schools, councils and Westminster.

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Missbrauchs-Vorwürfe: Priester aus Lohne beurlaubt

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

[A priest accused of showing pornographic images to minors has been placed on leave.]

Das Bischöflich Münstersche Offizialat in Vechta hat einen katholischen Priester aus Lohne (Landkreis Vechta) beurlaubt, nachdem Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen ihn bekannt geworden waren. Nach Angaben des Sprechers des Offizialats, Lutger Heuer, ermittelt die Staatsanwaltschaft Oldenburg gegen den 73-Jährigen, weil er “einigen auswärtigen Kindern und Jugendlichen, die in seinem Haus übernachtet haben, nicht jugendfreies Bildmaterial” gezeigt haben soll.

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Priester soll Kindern pornografische Bilder gezeigt haben

DEUTSCHLAND
NWZ

[A 73-year-old priest from the Lohne district of Vechta is suspected of having shown pornographic images to two minors.]

Der Verdacht richtet sich gegen einen 73-Jährigen aus der Stadt Lohne. Die Staatsanwaltschaft Oldenburg ermittelt.

LOHNE Ein 73 Jahre alter Priester aus der Stadt Lohne im Landkreis Vechta steht im Verdacht, zwei Kindern und Jugendlichen pornografische Bilder gezeigt zu haben. Die Staatsanwaltschaft Oldenburg ermittelt wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs, teilte Staatsanwalt Torben Tölle am Montag mit.

Das Bischöflich Münstersche Offizialat in Vechta bestätigte den Vorwurf und gab in einer Pressemitteilung an, unmittelbar nach Bekanntwerden des Vorfalls die Staatsanwaltschaft und die Kriminalpolizei informiert und den Beschuldigten bis auf weiteres beurlaubt zu haben. „Eine Bewertung des Sachverhaltes ist erst möglich, wenn die Kriminalpolizei ihre Ermittlungen abgeschlossen hat“, so Offizialatssprecher Dr. Ludger Heuer. Wann dies der Fall sein wird, ist unklar. Dem Offizialat habe die Polizei mitgeteilt, so Heuer im Gespräch mit der NWZ , dass die Beamten aktuell sehr viel mit anderen Fällen zu tun hätten und es somit unklar sei, wann diese Ermittlungen abgeschlossen werden könnte.

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Vorwürfe gegen Pfarrer sind verjährt

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

[A priest who for any years was active in a parish in the Bad Kissingen area does not need fear prosecution because the alleged incidents of abuse are time-barred, according to the prosecutor in Schweinfurt.]

Siegfried Farkas
05. September 2016

Ein viele Jahre lang in einer Pfarrei im Raum Bad Kissingen tätiger katholischer Priester braucht nicht zu befürchten, dass er sich wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs einer jungen Frau vor Gericht verantworten muss. Wie Ursula Haderlein, die Leiterin der Staatsanwaltschaft Schweinfurt, am Montag auf Anfrage bestätigte, sind die Ermittlungen gegen den Ruhestandspfarrer eingestellt.

Nach Einschätzung der Staatsanwaltschaft sind die mutmaßlichen Taten, die bereits mehr als vier Jahrzehnte zurückliegen, verjährt. Sie sollen sich zwischen Oktober 1968 und Frühjahr 1973 in Polen zugetragen haben, wo der vor einigen Jahren in den Ruhestand verabschiedete Pfarrer damals noch wirkte.

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154 accused offenders named to commission

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A list of 154 Marist Brothers who are accused of or proven to have abused children over 25 years, has been handed to the Royal Commission in Newcastle.

The organisation’s former professional standards director, Brother Alexis Turton, noted he was aware that 10 of the people on the list, which was generated from data spanning from 1980 to 2015, had admitted to offences.

He also said he talked to 52 of them over a period of about 17 years as a provincial from 1989 to 2005 and in his professional standards role from 2002 to 2012.

‘There were a few cases of excessive physical abuse,’ he told the Royal Commission into Instiutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Tuesday.

‘But the great majority were sexual abuse.’

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Marist Brothers looked for abuse evidence after teen’s death, royal commission told

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By David Marchese

The mother of a Newcastle teenager who killed himself more than 40 years ago has told the child abuse royal commission she believes a group of Marist Brothers were “looking for evidence” at her home after the death.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing into the Hunter region’s Catholic Church has shifted its focus to the Marist Brothers this week, hearing stories of abuse carried out over decades.

Audrey Nash has given evidence to the commission, describing her son Andrew as a “compliant” boy who initially enjoyed going to school at the Marist Brothers high school in Hamilton.

But in early 1974, Mrs Nash said Andrew’s behaviour changed after he returned from school late one night.

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Abuse victims benefit from bishop’s estate

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Helen Velissaris and Luke Costin – AAP on September 6, 2016

The multi-million dollar estate of a former bishop who was blamed for allowing pedophile priests to operate in Victoria will be used to help victims of abuse.

Former Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who died in April, left $2.1 million to be used by the current Roman Catholic bishop of Ballarat for the benefit of the diocese “at his absolute discretion”, the Herald Sun reported.

Ballarat Bishop Paul Bird decided the funds will go to help victims.

“Whatever the diocese of Ballarat receives from Bishop Mulkearns’ estate, I intend to set aside for assistance to victims of abuse,” Bishop Bird said in a statement on Tuesday.

“This will continue the support that the diocese has given to abuse victims over many years.”

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Home secretary to face MPs over future of child sexual abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Alan Travis Home affairs editor
Tuesday 6 September 2016

The home secretary, Amber Rudd, is to be questioned about the future of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse after the outgoing chair said its scale and aspirations were impossible to manage in its current form.

Dame Lowell Goddard sent a 10-page critique of the setup of the inquiry to the home affairs select committee, calling for a complete review and remodelling to focus it “more towards current events and thus focusing major attention on the present and future protection of children”.

However, Goddard has declined a request to appear before the committee on Wednesday to discuss her resignation. The New Zealand judge told the MPs she was unavailable, leaving Rudd to answer their questions.

Goddard resigned from the child sexual abuse inquiry on 4 August. Rudd promptly replaced her with Prof Alexis Jay, a distinguished social worker and inquiry member. The home secretary wrote to the committee saying that she could not delay the appointment because it was essential to maintain the confidence of the alleged victims and survivors of abuse.

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Abuse victims to benefit from estate of former Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Real estate and cash left to the Catholic Church by a bishop blamed for the sexual abuse of hundreds of children in Ballarat, north-west of Melbourne, will be given to victims of abuse.

Ronald Mulkearns left nearly all of his estate, including a Fairhaven property valued at more than $2 million, to the Catholic diocese of Ballarat after his death his April.

He was accused of not properly handling complaints about abuse in his diocese, which he apologised for while testifying before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

In testimony he said he was not sure if he knew child abuse was a crime when he was in charge of the Ballarat diocese but he knew it was wrong.

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Disgraced Catholic bishop’s estate to go to victims of abuse

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

The family of a Catholic bishop blamed for allowing the sexual abuse of hundreds of children say they support his decision to leave $2.1m to the church.

Bishop Rodney Mulkearns died in April aged 85 and left almost his entire estate to the Catholic diocese of Ballarat, including a $2m house in Fairhaven.

The Catholic church today confirmed the proceeds of the estate would go to the victims of child sexual abuse.

Bishop Mulkearns’ nephew Paul Mulkearns said the family was happy with his uncle’s decision to pass the estate to the church.

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Abuse survivors to get profits from Catholic estate

AUSTRALIA
Premier (UK)

Tue 06 Sep 2016
By Hannah Tooley

Survivors of abuse at the hands of church leaders in Ballarat, in Victoria, Australia, will be given the profits from an estate formally used by a bishop who has been blamed for allowing paedophile priests to operate in the region.

Ronald Mulkearns used the £1.2 million ($2.1m Australian) estate, however, now the money from the sale will now be used to help victims of abuse, according to the diocese.

The bishop died in April and Paul Bird took over.

He told the Herald Sun: “Whatever the diocese of Ballarat receives from Bishop Mulkearns’ estate, I intend to set aside for assistance to victims of abuse.

“This will continue the support that the diocese has given to abuse victims over many years.”

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Bishop’s estate to help the healing

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Olivia Shying

Ballarat diocese will cement itself as a national leader when it sets aside former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns’ estate to help survivors of sexual abuse.

Survivors of clergy abuse at the hands of Catholic priests in Ballarat have heralded Bishop Paul Bird’s announcement that the rumoured $2.1 million estate left to the church will be set aside for assistance to victims of abuse as an “example that other dioceses in Australia can look up to”.

In March, Cardinal George Pell made an impassioned promise to work with a group of survivors and agencies, especially the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors – whose leader, Father Hans Zollner, came to Ballarat just months ago.

Cardinal Pell’s Rome vision of making Ballarat a healing centre has yet to be realised.

Bishop Bird’s lauded announcement is a continuation of the diocese’s ongoing work with survivors to ensure their welfare is considered after the Royal Commission.

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Marist Brothers Hamilton abusing boys in the 1970s: Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
6 Sep 2016

A BROTHER of a boy who hung himself at the age of 13 has given a bleak account of physical and sexual abuse at Marist Brothers Hamilton in the 1970s.

CQT said he started at Sacred Heart Primary School in 1962 and went to Marist Brothers, Hamilton, from 1969.

He had been an altar boy from the age of 10 in 1967.

He said some of the Sisters at the Sacred Heart were commonly referred to as the sisters without mercy, who would hit with their fists, with rulers and with canes.

“I would describe several of the brothers and lay teachers at the school as vicious and sadistic thugs,” he said.

He described one teacher, Brother Cassian, kicking a stray cat so hard that it died.

“I saw him hold kids up, punch them and let them drop to the floor,” CQT said.

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Disgraced bishop Ronald Mulkearns leaves his estate to the Ballarat diocese

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

RONALD Mulkearns was known as the “keeper of secrets”.

The disgraced bishop was blamed for allowing paedophile priests in Victoria to move around the state and continue working, turning a blind eye to their actions and the victims of their abuse.

Bishop Mulkearns died in April and now it has been revealed his $2.1 million estate has been given to the Ballarat Diocese, which has become a controversial area due to the traumatic abuse that took place there. There have been more than 100 claims of child abuse within the diocese since 1980.

The Herald Sun reports Bishop Mulkearns said the money he left when he died was to be used by the current bishop of Ballarat for the benefit of the diocese “at his absolute discretion”.

Ballarat child abuse victims believe Bishop Mulkearns’ dying wish is a slap in the face.

“His assets should be distributed to victims whose lives have been destroyed and damaged by his actions,” Ballarat abuse survivor Andrew Collins told the Herald Sun.

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Pedophile priest turned up at house after NSW teen commits suicide asking if he left a note

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

After 13-year-old Andrew Nash took his own life, a now-notorious pedophile Marist brother turned up to his house and asked his mother whether the boy had left a note.

More than four decades later, the Newcastle boy’s 90-year-old mother believes the brother had been sexually abusing her son, a royal commission has heard.

Audrey Nash on Tuesday recalled pulling over a taxi driver and telling him to get an ambulance and a priest after finding her son hanging in his bedroom in October, 1974.

Three priests and three Marist brothers, including Andrew’s class master Brother Romuald, turned up, she said.

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September 5, 2016

Concerned Catholics call for Quichocho resignation

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | Post News Staff

The Concerned Catholics of Guam have called for the resignation of Danny Quichocho from the Archdiocesan Finance Council.

In a statement released to the media yesterday, CCOG stated that Quichocho’s conflict of interest with his positions as an officer and board member of the Redemptoris Mater Serminary corporation make him untenable as a member of the finance council.

Quichocho is currently the treasurer of the RMS Board of Directors and was appointed to the AFC by Archbishop Anthony Apuron after Apuron fired the previous council on grounds that their terms had expired.

“He cannot serve two masters,” said Dave Sablan, president of CCOG.

Sablan referred to a media interview in which Quichocho was seen effectively endorsing claims made by Rev. Pius Sammut, then-secretary of RMS and the Blessed Diego Theological Institute.

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Prosecutors: Md. priest deposited $76K for donations into personal account

MARYLAND
WTOP

By Jack Moore
September 5, 2016

WASHINGTON — A former St. Mary’s County priest has been indicted on bank fraud charges after authorities say he deposited $76,000 worth of checks that had been donated to the church’s “poor box” into his personal bank account and used the funds to pad his retirement account.

Last week, a federal grand jury indicted John S. Mattingly — a 70-year-old of Charlotte Hall, Maryland — on 20 counts of bank fraud. The indictment was unsealed Sept. 1.

Prosecutors said Mattingly, who served as the pastor of St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Leonardtown, Maryland, fraudulently deposited more than 500 checks totaling $76,000 between 2006 and 2010. The checks were intended to be donations to the church or to the St. Vincent de Paul Society charity, according to the indictment.

Prosecutors also said Mattlingly wrote unauthorized checks from the church’s bank account to himself to deposit into his individual retirement account.

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Un cura acusado de abuso sexual quedó en libertad, luego de estar 15 meses detenido

SANTIAGO DEL ESTERO (ARGENTINA)
Diario La Capital [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

September 5, 2016

Read original article

Se trata de Julián Ruiz, que había sido detenido en Santiago del Estero. La Cámara de Apelaciones confirmó el delito de ciber acoso sexual informático, pero no pudo probar la supuesta violación a un menor de 17 años.

El sacerdote Julián Ruiz, acusado de abuso sexual de un menor de 17 años, fue liberado, tras permanecer detenido 15 meses.Ruiz había sido detenido el 20 de mayo del 2015 en la localidad de Pampa de Los Guanacos, Santiago del Estero.

Los investigadores afirman que el religioso intercambiaba fotos de sus partes íntimas con el denunciante por Facebook. No obstante, no se encontraron pruebas que aseguren que haya existido acercamiento carnal o violación.Su abogado defensor, Eduardo Font, comentó que “la Cámara de Apelaciones y Control hizo caso a la apelación que presentamos respecto al auto de procesamiento que pesaba sobre el padre Ruiz, por lo que quedó en libertad”.”Lo que la Cámara dictó es la falta de mérito respecto al abuso sexual agravado y declaró la nulidad de las demás imputaciones”, añadió.Asimismo, precisó: “Se lo imputó en base a declaraciones testimoniales y a esta clase de delitos de instancia privada no se les puede dar curso con declaración testimonial”.No obstante, la Cámara confirmó el delito de ciber acoso sexual informático, que el abogado defensor negó.

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EXCLUSIVE: Man sexually abused as teen in 1972 files suit against camp that employed counselor who abused him and others: ‘Nobody stopped it’

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

REUVEN BLAU MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Thursday, September 1, 2016

He has held the secret of that summer for more than 40 years.

He was a 13-year-old in 1972, away at Camp Ramah in the foothills of the Taconic Mountains when, he says, a counselor lured him into the woods and forced him to perform oral sex.

The self-loathing smoldered inside, worsening each time a memory came flashing back.

Then earlier this year, the victim — a Westchester businessman and now a John Doe in legal papers — was fishing on the internet. What he found took his breath away.

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Youth pastor Jordan Baird, mentored by Joe Jonas, arrested for allegedly exposing himself to a teen inside his father’s church

VIRGINIA
Christian Today

Czarina Ong 05 September 2016

Youth pastor Jordan Baird, 25, was arrested by the police last week after he allegedly exposed himself to a teenager while inside his father’s church.

Baird, who was mentored by singer Joe Jonas in the CW competition “The Next” back in 2012, is the husband of former Hillsong United singer and songwriter Michelle Fragar. He is the son of senior pastors David and Jo Ann Baird of The Life Church in Virginia, according to The Christian Post.

He was charged with three counts of indecent liberties by the church’s custodian for exposing himself to a teenager back in 2015 while inside his father’s church, which is located in Manassas. It was only this July 7 when detectives from the Special Victims Unit of the Prince William County Police Department in Virginia responded to investigate the inappropriate contact that was carried out by Baird.

The youth involved is a 16-year-old female juvenile, who reportedly received salacious text messages from Baird who also allegedly touched her inappropriately on several ocassions sometime between January and September 2015. Following their investigation, the detectives immediately obtained a warrant on Aug.17 and Baird was “arrested without incident at a residence in Fauquier County later that evening.”

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Abuse Mulkearns leaves estate to church

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

The late bishop, Ronald Mulkearns, who was blamed for allowing pedophile priests to continue to operate in Victoria, has reportedly left his $2.1 million estate to the Catholic Church.

The Herald-Sun says Bishop Mulkearns, who died in April, said the money was to be used by the current bishop of Ballarat for the benefit of the diocese “at his absolute discretion”.

“His assets should be distributed to victims whose lives have been destroyed and damaged by his actions,” Ballarat abuse survivor Andrew Collins told the Herald-Sun.

The child abuse royal commission heard Bishop Mulkearns knew pedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale and others were sexually abusing children and moved them between parishes, and he also destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file.

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SURVIVORS tell of Catholic before Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
5 Sep 2016

BROTHER Romuald stood up, dropped his towel and turned around.

He stood there with a wry smile on his face, or an expression that suggested: “Well boys, have a good look at this.”

As CNV one of two brothers abused at Marist Brothers Hamilton told the Royal Commission on Monday: “Just a normal day.”

CNV’s brother, CNS, gave evidence to the commission before the morning adjournment, and CNV continued with his memories of those times, when the brothers at Catholic high schools were allowed to act and operate with impunity.

“What is really upsetting to me is that i know Andrew Nash committed suicide in 1974,” CNV said.

“A lot of people believe Andrew was sexually abused by Brother Romuald, which led to Andrew’s death. If that is true, I would be disgusted. I know that my brother and my father told the Marist Brothers about Brother Romuald in 1972 and 1973. Action should have been taken against Brother Romuald then. It is devastating to think they did nothing and Brother Romuald went on to abuse other boys because they did nothing. I also feel very, very angry because I, and other kids, were knowingly put in harm’s way.”

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Give Bishop Ronald Mulkearns’ cash to child sexual abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Editorial

September 5, 2016

THE pain suffered by the victims of child sexual abuse while Bishop Ronald Mulkearns was in charge of the Catholic diocese of Ballarat has reached out from beyond the grave, as reported in today’s Herald Sun.

But, this time, the Catholic Church has the opportunity to at least alleviate some of the pain caused by the will of the late Bishop, who has left a rich estate to the church to do with as it pleases.

There were years of silence before Bishop Mulkearns admitted that he shuffled paedophile priests around his parishes, in spite of knowing about their crimes against the most vulnerable members of their flocks.

The bishop, who died in April, left a property estimated at $2.1 million and about $40,000 in cash to be used by current Bishop Paul Bird “for the benefit of the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat at his absolute discretion’’.

The Herald Sun has asked Bishop Bird what he intends to do with the money. We believe it should at the very least be put towards the compensation fund to give some financial recognition of the abuse they have suffered. We are yet to receive a response.

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Former Catholic bishop Ronald Mulkearns leaves most of $2.1m estate to church

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Shannon Deery, Herald Sun
September 5, 2016

THE Catholic bishop blamed over the sexual abuse of hundreds of children has left the church most of his $2.1 million estate.

Former bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who died in April, left nearly all his estate, which includes a Fairhaven property valued at $2.1 million and about $40,000 cash, to the Ballarat diocese he once ran.

Mulkearns said the money was to be used by current bishop Paul Bird “for the benefit of the Catholic diocese of Ballarat at his absolute discretion”.

The Herald Sun contacted the church for comment Monday afternoon. By late Monday night, the church had not replied.

From 1971 to 1997, while Mulkearns was bishop of Ballarat, hundreds of local children were molested by a nest of paedophile clerics. Victims of clerical abuse have now called for his money to be used for compensation and for support programs for those who suffered at paedophile priests’ hands.

Ballarat abuse survivor Andrew Collins said: “Mulkearns moved around clergy who he knew had sexually abused children. By doing so he effectively facilitated the rape of children in the church.

“His assets should be distributed to victims whose lives have been destroyed and damaged by his actions,” Mr Collins said.

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Gli scandali nella Diocesi di Cagliari: pedofilia e lettere anonime

ITALIA
Casteddu Online

[The scandals in the Diocese of Cagliari: Pedophilia and anonymous letters]

Autore: Redazione Casteddu Online il 01/09/2016

Negli scandali che hanno sconvolto, di recente, la Diocesi di Cagliari ormai il “menù” quotidiano propone di tutto: indagini canoniche, procedimenti giudiziari (don Luca Pretta, ex parroco di Gesico), avvisi di garanzia (don Marco Lai, parroco di sant’Eulalia), arresti (don Pascal Manca, ex parroco di Villamar, oggi in libertà e in attesa dell’udienza preliminare dopo la chiusura delle indagini), appartenenza alla massoneria (don Giancarlo Dessì, ex parroco di Villamar e Mandas), rinvio a giudizio (don Massimiliano Pusceddu, ex parroco di Decimoputzu) e così via. Una lunga Via Crucis dove anche il Cireneo avrebbe seri problemi a portare la croce, vista l’entità delle accuse mosse nei confronti di alcuni sacerdoti della Diocesi cagliaritana. Nell’elenco delle stazioni della via dolorosa è importante soffermarsi su una in particolare: il ruolo delle lettere anonime e dei corvi nella vicenda della pedofilia.

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Rimosso vescovo di Albenga. “Ma gli abusi ci sono ancora”

ITALIA
Radio Popolare

[The bishop of the diocese of Imperia and Albenga – Mario Oliveri – was removed from office by the pope.]

di Alessandro Principe
Giovedì 01 settembre 2016

Il vescovo della diocesi di Imperia e Albenga Mario Oliveri è stato rimosso dal suo incarico dal papa. Formalmente, Bergoglio ha accettato oggi, con una bolla papale, le dimissioni presentate dallo stesso Oliveri. Ma si tratta di una procedura che, nella sostanza, prende atto e ratifica le accuse rivolte al monsignore. In particolare, quella di aver coperto, accogliendoli nella propria diocesi, preti accusati e, in alcuni casi, condannati, per pedofilia. La scelta di papa Francesco era arrivata dopo le segnalazioni di numerosi episodi controversi e scandali, tutti raccolti in un dossier che il nunzio apostolico Adriano Bernardini consegnò a papa Francesco dopo una visita alla diocesi di Imperia e Albenga, guidata da Oliveri dal 1990.

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Warum wir als Kinder Gewalt in kirchlichen Einrichtungen so grausam empfanden

DEUTSCHLAND
Regensburg Digital

Gastautor Alfred Gassner reagiert auf unseren Bericht über den prügelnden Prälaten Paul Mai. Gassner, Jahrgang 1939, war ein Kind mit vielen Kriegs- und Fluchterfahrungen, als er 1950 als Seminarschüler im Studienseminar St. Augustin in Weiden wurde.

Gastbeitrag von Alfred Gassner

Aus einigen meiner sorgsam aufbewahrten Kindheitserinnerungen habe ich nach dem Lesen des Berichtes von Robert Werner eine vergilbte Broschüre ausgegraben, die deutlich macht, wie weit Anspruch und Handlungsweise in der Seminarerziehung der römisch-katholischen Kirche in den 60er Jahren auseinanderfielen.

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Die Verfehlungen des Monsignore Mai

DEUTSCHLAND
Regensburg Digital

[The failings of Monsignor May]

Von Robert Werner in Nachrichten, Überregional

Abseits von den Domspatzen spielen die Übergriffe in anderen Einrichtungen der Diözese Regensburg offiziell keine Rolle. Doch tatsächlich lässt das Bischöfliche Ordinariat seit Jahren wegen körperverletzender Übergriffe in Bischöflichen Knabenseminaren recherchieren. Einer der Täter soll der hoch angesehene Prälat Paul Mai sein. Betroffene schildern ihn als hemmungslosen Schläger.

Obwohl sich seit Frühjahr 2010 viele körperlich misshandelte ehemalige Zöglinge diverser Einrichtungen des Bistums Regensburg beim Ordinariat meldeten, blieben sie lange gänzlich unbeachtet. Das Leid, das sie erfahren haben und die oftmals lebenslangen Folgen von körperverletzenden Strafen und sadistischen Übergriffen wurden schnell als bedauerliche Vorfälle, aber zeitbedingte Erscheinungen abgetan. Anfangs sprach man von „pädagogischen Übergriffen“.

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Criminal justice consultation paper released

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

5 September, 2016

The Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse has released a consultation paper on criminal justice issues in child sexual abuse cases.

Royal Commission CEO Philip Reed said it was hoped that the consultation paper, and submissions to it, would identify areas where reform may be necessary to ensure justice is better served in child sexual abuse cases.

“The aim of our policy work in this area is to understand the contemporary response of the criminal justice system to institutional child sexual abuse and to identify ways it can be made more effective,” Mr Reed said.

“Criminal justice responses need to be available to all victims and survivors who are able to seek them. Additionally, survivors need to be properly supported in this process.

“A criminal justice response enables the community to condemn the abuse and punish the perpetrator. The criminal justice system needs to be fair for the complainant, as well as being fair to the accused.”

Mr Reed said survivors should be encouraged to seek a criminal justice response as an important way of increasing the knowledge and awareness in the community at large that such abuse happens, and the circumstances in which it happens.

“A criminal justice response is important to survivors not only in relation to seeking justice on a personal level, but also to encourage reporting of child sexual abuse and prevent child sexual abuse in the future.”

The criminal justice consultation paper draws from the Royal Commission’s Case Study 38 public hearing on criminal justice. During this hearing, participants considered issues such as when a joint trial may be held to determine charges against an accused made by multiple complainants of child sexual abuse, or when other evidence of an accused’s “bad character” should be admissible in court.

The Royal Commission also published a significant study on these issues, after examining how mock juries reason when deliberating on multiple counts of child sexual abuse.

Mr Reed said based on this work by the Royal Commission and other materials it has considered, the Commissioners were now reasonably satisfied that current laws needed reform to allow more cross-admissibility and the Royal Commission remained open to submissions on the issue.

The consultation paper also seeks submissions on matters such as police communication and their response to reporting of child sexual abuse; child sexual abuse offences and third-party offences; prosecution responses and delays; how victims can give evidence in court; and sentencing.

Read the consultation paper here.

All interested parties are encouraged to make written submissions responding to the paper. Written submissions should be made by Monday, 17 October 2016 and can be submitted electronically to criminaljustice@childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au

Interested parties are welcome to make submissions responding to only one or a few issues, or to make submissions responding to all issues.

Feedback on the issues outlined in the consultation paper will help inform recommendations the Royal Commission may make in order to provide better support for survivors of child sexual abuse going through the criminal justice system.

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Brother ‘Romuald’ among three Marist brothers alleged to have abused children in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

Daniel Burdon

A man has told an inquiry how he was sexually abused by three Marist brothers, including a brother who later taught at St Edmund’s in Canberra, over years at a Newcastle school.

The man, known as CNQ, told the inquiry his principal at the Newcastle school put his hands up and said “there’s nothing I can do” when he reported being touched.

The witness said he was first abused by Brother Dominic, whose real name is Darcy O’Sullivan, within a month of starting at Marist Brothers High School at Hamilton in 1977.

The royal commission is examining how Maitland-Newcastle Catholic authorities dealt with allegations levelled at Brother Dominic, Brother Patrick and Brother Romuald, whose real name is Francis Cable.

Cable, who was understood to have molested up to 11 children in Newcastle, later taught at St Edmund’s in Canberra between 1979 and 1989.

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Man abused by three NSW Marist Brothers, royal commission told

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

A man who told an inquiry how he was sexually abused by three Marist brothers over years at a Newcastle school says his principal put his hands up and said “there’s nothing I can do” when he reported being touched.

The man, known as CNQ, told the inquiry he was first abused by Brother Dominic, whose real name is Darcy O’Sullivan, within a month of starting at Marist Brothers High School at Hamilton in 1977.

He told the royal commission another brother put his hands in his pyjamas the following year, before Brother Patrick began committing sickening abuse in a classroom and chapel in 1980.

The royal commission heard CNQ punched Brother Patrick in the head on one occasion after being touched in class and later had a meeting with his mother and the school principal, Brother John.

“I told Brother John about Brother Patrick … putting his hand on my crotch and leg,” he told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday.

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Abused student punched paedophile Marist Brother in head, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By David Marchese

A child abuse survivor has told a royal commission he punched a Marist Brother “hard in the head” after being subjected to horrific abuse at his Catholic high school.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing into the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese has resumed for its second week.

The hearing is also probing the response of the Marist Brothers to allegations of child sexual abuse made against several Brothers over decades.

Abuse survivor CNQ described traumatic and sustained abuse at the hands of several Brothers while he attended a Marist Brothers high school in the Newcastle suburb of Hamilton in the early 1970s.

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Church protesters: ‘It’s not over yet’

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | Post News Staff

More than 80 individuals gathered outside the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica in Hagåtña yesterday, Sept. 4. The gathered crowd comprised members of the Concerned Catholics of Guam (CCOG), Laity Forward Movement (LFM) and Silent No More.

Members of the three organizations routinely gather to hold protests airing their grievances with church authority – primarily in calling for the defrocking of Archbishop Anthony Apuron, who has been accused of child sex abuse during his time as pastor of the Agana parish in the 1970s.

Lou Klitzke, a member of LFM, told the Post that protester turnout has been steadily increasing over the past few weeks.

“Everybody keeps coming out,” she said. “We have a very dedicated group of people.”

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Archdiocese creates task force to protect minors

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Sep 05, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

Amid allegations that Archbishop Anthony Apuron molested children, the Archdiocese of Agana has created a special task force for the protection of minors. The group will help in strengthening the local catholic church’s sexual abuse policy, which has been referred to as flaw.

It’s the latest announcement out of the archdiocese as it works to restore unity and peace.

During a conference held this past weekend by the archdiocese, recently-appointed sexual abuse response coordinator Deacon Len Stohr announced the creation of a new task force for the protection of minors. “We were looking at the current policy,” he summarized. “We were looking at a way to reach out to make it a broader guidance, and what was missing was the lay involvement.”

The task force is comprised of retired deputy attorney general and Guam’s first-ever public guardian Attorney John Weisenberger, former Archdiocesan Review Board member Vince Pereda (a clinical social worker and licensed therapist who’s been practicing for over 30 years), retired police officers Ray and Josephine Fernandez (who combined have over 60 years of experience in law enforcement). Serving as chairperson of the task force is Sarah Thomas Nededog, who is a longtime social worker of 40 years.

“When the archbishop (Hon) spoke with us, I want you to know that we walked away from that interaction feeling very inspired and very supported in this work that we’re going to do. There is a very strong recognition that the archbishop and the archdiocese want to make a very big push toward the protection of our children the most vulnerable people in our community,” said Nededog.

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Students abused during maths class

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A NSW survivor of child sexual abuse has recalled wearing a tight belt to school so his maths teacher couldn’t get his hands down his pants, an inquiry has heard.

The survivor, known as CNS, was abused by Brother Patrick, whose real name is Thomas Butler, during maths classes at Marist Brothers High School at Hamilton, near Newcastle, in 1971.

‘Brother Patrick sexually abused me on numerous occasions during that year,’ CNS told the a Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday.

‘But I always wore a tight belt so he was never able to get his hand right down inside my pants and onto my genitals.’

The royal commission is examining how Maitlaind-Newcastle Catholic authorities dealt with allegations of abuse against Brother Patrick, as well as men who were known as a Brother Romuald and Brother Dominic.

– See more at: http://www.skynews.com.au/news/national/nsw/2016/09/05/students-abused-during-maths-class.html#sthash.0vFf23o9.dpuf

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Men describe horrific abuse at hands of Marist Brothers in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

[with audio]

Michael Edwards reported this story on Monday, September 5, 2016

A group of men have described the sexual abuse they received at the hands of Marist Brothers while at a high school run by the order in the New South Wales city of Newcastle.

Several of the abusers have since been jailed but the survivors say the scars of the abuse have stayed with them throughout their lives.

One of the boys thought to have been abused, committed suicide at the age of 14 … the Royal Commission heard a local priest admit that he had described this as a ‘prank gone wrong’.

FEATURED:
Father William Burston – priest

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