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 29, 2016

How child abuse inquiry lurched from ‘catastrophe to catastrophe’ – timeline

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Nadia Khomami and Matthew Weaver
Thursday 29 September 2016

Ben Emmerson QC has been suspended from the the troubled inquiry into institutional child abuse before he was expected to resign over disagreements with the fourth chair, Alexis Jay. His suspension is the latest setback to an investigation that has lurched from “catastrophe to catastrophe”, according to leading campaigner and child abuse survivor Ian MacFadyen.

The former director of public prosecutions, Lord MacDonald, said the inquiry had been “careering out of control since its inception”.

Here is a summary of the inquiry’s brief and beleaguered history:

7 July 2014

Theresa May, then home secretary, announces a public inquiry into child abuse prompted by allegations of a cover-up of the crimes of prominent offenders such as Jimmy Savile and Cyril Smith. She says the inquiry has the remit of investigating whether “state and non-state institutions”, including churches, Westminster, schools, the BBC, hospitals and care homes, have taken seriously their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse within England and Wales. May says:

Our priority must be the prosecution of the people behind these disgusting crimes … Wherever possible – and consistent with the need to prosecute – we will adopt a presumption of maximum transparency. And … where there has been a failure to protect children from abuse, we will expose it and we will learn from it.

Elizabeth Butler-Sloss, the retired senior judge who chaired the Cleveland child abuse inquiry in the late 1980s, is appointed as chairwoman. The former president of the family division of the high court, who coined the phrase “listen to the children” in her Cleveland report, says she is honoured to be asked to carry out “this important work”.

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.

Shambolic child abuse inquiry is failing in its most important role

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Timeline

Sandra Laville
Thursday 29 September 2016

Trust and confidence are the two things stripped away from children who are sexually abused by adults, often for life. As adults themselves, many describe how they struggle and fail to trust anyone, particularly authority figures who wield power in institutions.

The one thing, perhaps the primary requirement, of a national public inquiry into the sexual abuse of tens of thousands of children over decades within England and Wales, was to seek their trust and gain their confidence.

Yet in the last few months the shambolic goings on at the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse (IICSA) – the sudden departure of another chair, the manoeuvrings in secret over its remit, the future of the project to gather the testimonies of victims and the suspension late on Wednesday night of its lead counsel Ben Emmerson – may have dealt a fatal blow to those aims.

Secrecy and a lack of transparency have encroached upon the inquiry, sitting in its Millbank offices looking out over the seat of power. And – according to those with knowledge of the inquiry process – driving in the background throughout has been the silent hand of Home Office apparatchiks, who remain behind the scenes, as the shambles unfolds. When heads fall – three chairs, members of the senior counsel team and now potentially Emmerson – the bureaucrats from the Home Office and government remain in place. No wonder some victims laugh at the idea it is independent.

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.

Court files reveal new details behind St. Paul Archdiocese troubles

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune SEPTEMBER 29, 2016

The Ramsey County attorney’s office released the final mountain of documents from its criminal investigation into the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis this week, providing new details of allegations of sexual advances by former Archbishop John Nienstedt and of the church’s mishandling of convicted sex offender Curtis Wehmeyer.

Nienstedt’s interactions with seminarians drew concern from young men and clergy leaders more recently than had been revealed before, including during his seven-year tenure in St. Paul ending in 2015, according to files. That’s in addition to the previously reported allegations of sexual improprieties with adult men made by former colleagues in the Detroit area dating to the 1970s.

Documents show that former Archbishop Harry Flynn — like Nienstedt — gave special attention to Wehmeyer, a former priest, including overriding a 1996 recommendation by the archdiocese’s vocation office that Wehmeyer not be admitted into seminary.

By 2013, and after multiple episodes of sexual misconduct, Wehmeyer was convicted of sexually abusing two boys in Wehmeyer’s camper when it was parked outside his St. Paul church. He was sentenced to five years in prison.

Documents also indicate that Wehmeyer used that camper to visit the lake home of Joseph Kueppers, the archdiocese’s chancellor for civil affairs, where Wehmeyer would spend some weekends from about 2007 to 2012. According to a deacon with a lake home nearby, Wehmeyer sometimes performed Sunday masses at the lake home. Kueppers, a former parishioner of Wehmeyer, was noted for “not disclosing information” by attorneys investigating Nienstedt.

Nienstedt, who had a social relationship with Wehmeyer, has denied any sexual relationship with him. In files from the St. Paul police investigation also made available this week, Wehmeyer says the same, that he had no sexual relationship with the archbishop. He blames much of his troubles on his drinking.

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Area Priest Placed On Leave

SOUTH DAKOTA
Press and Dakotan

By Randy Dockendorf randy.dockendorf@yankton.ne

A priest serving two Bon Homme County parishes has been placed on administrative leave.

Bishop Paul Swain of the Diocese of Sioux Falls has taken the action following a sex-abuse allegation against the Rev. Joe Forcelle, who serves St. Leo Parish in Tyndall and St. Vincent Parish in Springfield.
Swain addressed the allegation, which Forcelle denies, in a written statement.

“The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis has informed me of an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by Reverend Joseph T. Forcelle when he served in the Archdiocese,” Swain wrote.

“The child sexual abuse allegedly took place in the late-1970s and early-1980s when Father Forcelle was serving as a priest at Saint Mark Parish in Saint Paul, MN. The archdiocese reported this allegation to civil authorities.”

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A Pastoral Statement from Bishop Michael Kennedy, Diocese of Armidale

AUSTRALIA
mn news

I have recently returned from the Public Hearing of the Royal Commission into the response of Catholic Church authorities to allegations of child sexual abuse by John Joseph Farrell. The hearing has not formally concluded but has been adjourned. In due course the Royal Commission will publish a report on their findings and recommendations.

This statement is my personal reflection following my attendance at the Royal Commission Hearing. It is my hope that by reading this you may come to an understanding of my own depth of sorrow and shame for the failings of our Church and Diocese and that you might be informed of the changes that have been taking place in the Diocese to ensure that our parishes are safe places for all the children and vulnerable in our care.

Listening to the victims and survivors

Along with others from the Diocese I sat in the Royal Commission hearing room and listened to the statements and evidence given by the survivors. I was deeply moved by their testimony. It is crucial that the Church truly hear their cry.

I listened to two survivors. I heard of their horror, pain, fear and hurt. I heard of their betrayal, of their inhuman treatment, and of the torment they continue to suffer as a result of the abuse they endured. I heard of the long lasting effects this abuse has had on their lives. Their courage and integrity shone through in their testimony. They are brave and dignified men whom I hold in high esteem. I thank them for their testimony and assure them that I will never forget.

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September 28, 2016

Detienen a sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual

TOLUCA DE LERDO (MEXICO)
El Universal [Mexico City, Mexico]

September 28, 2016

Read original article

[Via vLex] 

CUERNAVACA, Mor., septiembre 28 (EL UNIVERSAL).- Agentes de la Policía de Investigación Criminal aprehendieron al sacerdote Omar Aguilar Vega imputado del delito de violación en agravio de un menor en la entidad.

La Fiscalía General del Estado informó que un juez concedió la orden de aprehensión luego de que el Ministerio Público expuso que en marzo de 2009, Omar Aguilar, cura del Santuario de Jesús de Nazaret, municipio de Tepalcingo, convocó a sus feligreses al aseo de la iglesia, puesto que se aproximaba la fiesta del pueblo.

?Alrededor de las ocho de la noche de ese día, Omar llevó al menor al área del coro donde lo golpeó y abusó sexualmente de él. Tras ello amenazó a la víctima para que no denunciara los hechos; sin embargo, los padres conocieron lo sucedido y procedieron a presentar la denuncia por lo que se inició una Carpeta de Investigación?, sustentó la fiscalía.

?El aseguramiento del imputado ocurrió en la colonia San Gaspar, municipio de Jiutepec, en atención al mandamiento del juez mixto de primera instancia del VII Distrito Judicial, en la causa penal 007/2015?, informó la dependencia.

Desde diciembre pasado la familia de la víctima denunció ante la Policía de Investigación Criminal, de la fiscalía estatal, con sede en el municipio de Jonacatepec, el abuso sexual cometido en contra de su hijo.

Los padres contaron a los agentes investigadores que tardaron tiempo en denunciar el delito porque no estaban enterados del abuso sexual, hasta que en mayo de 2014, alrededor de las 17:35 horas, se encontraban en su domicilio del municipio de Tepalcingo cuando su hijo intentó suicidarse.

Su familia impidió que el menor se colgara y luego de bajarlo lo llevaron al hospital general de Cuautla, relataron a la emisora de radio local Línea Caliente.

Más tarde platicaron con la víctima y finalmente confesó a su padre que el sacerdote Omar Aguilar Vega lo había violado, por lo tanto presentaron la denuncia legal.

Protección divina. El cura Omar Aguilar fue cambiado de la parroquia de Tepalcingo presuntamente por órdenes del obispo de Cuernavaca, Ramón Castro Castro, quien tiene un señalamiento legal por el supuesto encubrimiento de dos sacerdotes acusados de abuso sexual en el estado de Campeche, de cuyo estado también fue obispo Castro Castro.

En agosto pasado trascendió que Castro fue notificado de la demanda, por no haber hecho nada a favor de un adolescente, víctima de abuso sexual, a pesar de que fue avisado directamente por el seminarista.

Copyright Grupo de Diarios Amyeacute;rica-GDA/El Universal/México. Todos los derechos reservados. Prohibido su uso o reproducciyoacute;n en México

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Archbishop rejects claim that abuse victims were ‘fobbed off’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Times

Gerry Moriarty

Victims of historical sexual, physical and emotional child abuse in church and state institutions in Northern Ireland have accused Stormont of failing to face up to the need to provide proper compensation for their suffering.

Two victims who addressed the Northern Assembly’s Executive committee on Wednesday were also critical of the Catholic Primate Archbishop Eamon Martin.

Jon McCourt of Survivors North West and Margaret McGuckian of Survivors and Victims of Institutional Abuse said that when they met Archbishop Martin in July they got the impression that he felt the Catholic church was the victim rather than the survivors.

Mr McCourt said they felt “belittled” at the meeting.

“The church, I think, just literally fobbed us off and in fact there was a point where both Margaret and I were going to get up and leave the meeting because we were more or less told that if the church hadn’t done what it done in the ’50s or ’60s things could have been a lot worse for us,” he said
“In other words, we were made to feel so belittled in that meeting,” added Mr McCourt.

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Sex offenders will have to disclose email addresses, user names under new law

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

SEPT. 28, 2016

Sophia Bollag

Sex offenders will soon have to report their email addresses, user names and other Internet identifiers to police under a bill Governor Jerry Brown signed Wednesday.

It will apply to people convicted on or after Jan. 1, 2017 of Internet-related sex crimes.

Law enforcement can use the information only to investigate a sex crime, kidnapping or human trafficking.

The bill amends parts of California law enacted in 2012 when voters passed Proposition 35, an anti sex-trafficking law.

Proposition 35 passed by statewide ballot with more than 80% of the vote. It increased punishments for human traffickers and expanded the definition of human trafficking to include the creation and distribution of child pornography.

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California, eyeing Cosby, ends statute of limitations for rape

CALIFORNIA
WHBL

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) – California Governor Jerry Brown on Wednesday signed a bill to end the statute of limitations for rape, a measure inspired by accusations against comedian Bill Cosby, some of which surfaced decades after alleged crimes occurred.

Cosby, who built a long career on family friendly comedy, including his long-running NBC sitcom “The Cosby Show,” has steadfastly denied ever assaulting anyone and has insisted that all his sexual encounters were consensual.

He is charged in Pennsylvania with drugging and sexually assaulting a former Temple University employee, Andrea Constand, at his home in 2004. In California, he faces a civil suit by a woman now in her 50s who alleges that Cosby plied her with alcohol and molested her in 1974 at the Playboy Mansion when she was aged 15.

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California governor signs bill dumping rape-reporting limit

CALIFORNIA
Newser

By DON THOMPSON, Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The emotional stories of women who say they were sexually assaulted more than a decade ago by comedian Bill Cosby prompted California state lawmakers to approve a bill to eliminate the state’s 10-year limit on filing rape and related charges.

On Wednesday, Gov. Jerry Brown announced that he has approved the legislation to revoke that limitation.

Beginning next year, the bill will end the statute of limitations in certain rape and child molestation cases. It will also end the time limit on older cases in which the statute of limitations has not yet expired.

The new law, SB813, will not, however, help women who made allegations against Cosby dating back more than 10 years, including some from the 1960s.

Cosby has repeatedly denied the sex abuse allegations made by dozens of women nationwide. He is facing just one criminal case stemming from sex abuse. A trial is set to begin in June in Pennsylvania.

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Child sex abuse inquiry lawyer Ben Emmerson suspended

UNITED KINGDOM
Yorkshire Post Radio

The most senior lawyer on the national probe into child sexual abuse has been suspended from duty.

It comes after the independent inquiry became “very concerned” about aspects of QC Ben Emmerson’s leadership, a spokeswoman said.

She said Mr Emmerson, who is counsel to the inquiry, has been “suspended from duty so that these can be properly investigated”.

The spokeswoman added: “Suggestions in the press that Mr Emerson was considering resigning after raising disagreements over the future direction of the inquiry are untrue.

“They are not a matter on which he has advised the chair of the inquiry or the panel.”

It had been reported that Mr Emmerson was preparing to quit after clashing with the investigation’s new head Alexis Jay.

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‘Arrogant’ top lawyer suspended from child sex abuse inquiry in latest crisis to hit £100m investigation

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Robert Mendick, chief reporter
28 SEPTEMBER 2016

The senior lawyer to the national child abuse inquiry has been suspended from his £400,000-a-year post, plunging the investigation into its worst crisis yet.

Ben Emmerson QC was removed over concerns about his leadership, the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) said in a statement.

He had earlier been reported to be on the verge of resigning as counsel to the inquiry following an alleged clash with its new chairman, Professor Alexis Jay.

Insiders loyal to Prof Jay had described Mr Emmerson as “arrogant” ahead of the announcement.

This will be very distressing to many survivors for the inquiry to have suffered another setback
Gabrielle Shaw, NAPAC

In its statement, IICSA said: “The inquiry has recently become very concerned about aspects of Mr Emmerson’s leadership of the counsel team. He has therefore been suspended from duty so that these can be properly investigated.

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Child abuse inquiry counsel Ben Emmerson QC suspended

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The most senior lawyer working for the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse in England and Wales has been suspended from duty.

The inquiry said it had “become very concerned about aspects” of Ben Emmerson QC’s leadership of his team.

Mr Emmerson said he was “unable” to comment at this time.

The inquiry said press suggestions Mr Emmerson was considering resigning after raising disagreements over its future direction were untrue.

In a statement, it said: “They are not a matter on which he has advised the chair or panel.”
It said he had been suspended so matters “can be properly investigated”.

The inquiry was set up in 2014 to examine whether public bodies including the police have failed in their duty to protect children from sexual abuse. It will also examine claims of abuse involving “well-known people”.

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Counsel to child sexual abuse inquiry sacked amid ‘concerns over leadership’

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sandra Laville and Owen Bowcott
Wednesday 28 September 2016

The most senior lawyer on the public inquiry into institutional child abuse in England and Wales was suddenly suspended on Wednesday over what the inquiry said were concerns over aspects of his leadership.

Ben Emmerson QC had been expected to resign in the coming days, apparently over disagreements over the remit of the inquiry under its fourth chair, Alexis Jay. But in a move that surprised those close to the discussions, the inquiry announced late on Wednesday that Emmerson, a respected human rights lawyer, was to be suspended and put under investigation.

“The inquiry has recently become very concerned about aspects of Mr Emmerson’s leadership of the counsel team,” the statement from the independent inquiry said.

“He has therefore been suspended from duty so that these can be properly investigated. Suggestions in the press that Mr Emmerson was considering resigning after raising disagreements over the future direction of the inquiry are untrue. They are not a matter on which he has advised the chair or panel.”

Whatever the reasons behind Emmerson’s suspension, the apparent secrecy surrounding events is the latest issue to cause concern among victims’ groups.

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Governor Brown Signs “Justice for Victims Act”

CALIFORNIA
Senator Connie M. Leyva

SB 813 Eliminates Statute of Limitations for Rape in California

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

SACRAMENTO – After earning unanimous bipartisan support in both the Senate and Assembly, Governor Jerry Brown today signed SB 813 authored by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) that will eliminate the statute of limitations for rape and related crimes in California.

Co-sponsored by San Bernardino County District Attorney Michael Ramos and the California Women’s Law Center (CWLC), SB 813 will ensure justice for victims and survivors of felony sexual offenses by allowing the indefinite criminal prosecution of rape, sodomy, lewd or lascivious acts, continuous sexual abuse of a child, oral copulation, and sexual penetration. Existing California law presently generally limits the prosecution of a felony sexual offense to only 10 years after the offense is committed, unless DNA evidence is found which then offers a victim additional time. According to the United States Department of Justice, only two in 100 rapists will be convicted of a felony and spend any time in prison. The other 98 percent will never be punished for their crime.

“Governor Jerry Brown’s signature of SB 813 tells every rape and sexual assault victim in California that they matter and that, regardless of when they are ready to come forward, they will always have an opportunity to seek justice in a court of law,” Senator Leyva said. “Rapists should never be able to evade legal consequences simply because an arbitrary time limit has expired. There must never be an expiration date on justice! Today’s approval of SB 813 is a testament to the hard work and commitment by a broad coalition of sponsors, supporters and advocates that have testified, written editorials, spoken with legislators, written to the Governor and kept the fight alive for the countless rape victims that have already spoken up and also those that have yet to come forward. I would like to specifically thank San Bernardino County District Attorney Michael Ramos, California Women’s Law Center Executive Director Betsy Butler, women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred and the many End Rape SOL members for fighting to make sure that all rape victims regain their voice and legal rights not just in public, but also in the courtroom.”

Before proceeding to the Governor, principal coauthors Senator Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills), Assemblymember Autumn R. Burke (D-Inglewood), Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) and Assemblymember Das Williams (D-Carpinteria)—as well as coauthors Senator Joel Anderson (R-Alpine), Senator Jim Beall (D-San Jose), Senator Tom Berryhill (R-Twain Harte), Senator Marty Block (D-San Diego), Senator Anthony Cannella (R-Ceres), Senator Jean Fuller (R-Bakersfield), Senator Holly J. Mitchell (D-Los Angeles), Senator John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa), Senator Jim Nielsen (R-Gerber), Senator Richard D. Roth (D-Riverside), Assemblymember Rocky J. Chávez (R-Oceanside) and Assemblymember Tom Lackey (R-Palmdale)—had signed on in support of SB 813.

The “Justice for Victims Act” is supported by Attorney General Kamala D. Harris, Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley, Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey, San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis, Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeffrey Rosen, California Police Chiefs Association, Crime Victims United of California, End Rape SOL, Peace Officers Research Association of California, as well as many other law enforcement, women’s rights, public safety, labor, victim’s rights and community organizations.

SB 813 takes effect on January 1, 2017.

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BREAKING: Gov. Brown signs bill that eliminates SOL for rape!

CALIFORNIA
The Worthy Adversary

September 28, 2016 Joelle Casteix

In what can be called the “pleasant surprise of the decade,” I just got word that CA Governor Jerry Brown just signed SB 813 into law, which eliminates the statute of limitations for rape.

From Senator Connie Leyva’s press release:

Co-sponsored by San Bernardino County District Attorney Michael Ramos and the California Women’s Law Center (CWLC), SB 813 will ensure justice for victims and survivors of felony sexual offenses by allowing the indefinite criminal prosecution of rape, sodomy, lewd or lascivious acts, continuous sexual abuse of a child, oral copulation, and sexual penetration. Existing California law presently generally limits the prosecution of a felony sexual offense to only 10 years after the offense is committed, unless DNA evidence is found which then offers a victim additional time.

After Brown’s utter failure with his veto of SB 131, this is welcome news.

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Bristol Evangelical church attempted to cover up pastor’s sexual abuse of 14-year-old bo

UNITED KINGDOM
Bristol Post

By Emma Grimshaw | Posted: September 28, 2016

An Evangelical church left a ‘significant delay’ in reporting one of its pastors had sexually abused a 14-year-old and a senior leader tried to persuade the boy’s family to drop the allegations an inquiry concluded.

Bristol Community Church, based in Kingswood, has been blasted for a series of errors which amounted to serious misconduct and failure to protect its young and vulnerable member.

The results for the long-awaited inquiry into the church, which last year changed its name to Bourne Christian Centre, were published on Friday.

In 2012 the church’s pastor James Hennah, who also worked as a magistrate and a Bristol Grammar School counsellor, pleaded guilty to abusing a boy after befriending him and his family at a church group he ran.

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Government has shied away from compensation for abuse victims, campaigners say

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

The government has been accused of dragging its feet over compensation for victims of historical child abuse.

Campaigners claim political leaders have “shied away” from the issue of financial redress and reiterated appeals for urgent action.

Margaret McGuckin said: “We are asking and pleading to our government, please come off the fence, stop these excuses and get something sorted.

“How many more of us are going to be dead and gone?”

The plea was made as members of an expert panel examining potential compensation schemes briefed MLAs on the Executive scrutiny committee at Stormont.

Ms McGuckin, a high-profile member of the panel, added: ” What people want is to be compensated so that for the remainder of their life they can live in some sort of peace and tranquillity, and to afford some comfort.

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Abuse survivors felt ‘belittled’ during meeting with head of Catholic Church in Ireland

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

By Gareth Gordon
BBC News NI Political Correspondent

Child abuse survivors have said they felt so “belittled” during a meeting with the leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland they almost walked out.

They told a Stormont committee that Archbishop Eamon Martin had given the impression that he felt the church was now the victim.

Jon McCourt and Margaret McGuckian also claimed the Executive Office had let victims down by failing to establish a compensation scheme following the end of the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA).
And they claimed ministers had ignored repeated requests for meetings over a nine-month period.

But they reserved their strongest criticism for the Catholic Church, claiming that during a meeting with Archbishop Martin in Armagh in July he seemed to believe it was turning from an issue of concern about the abuse of children into a financial argument about compensation.

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Former altar boy coordinator accused of rape, assault from 1980s & 90s

MASSACHUSETTS
Fox 25

[From the BishopAccountability.org datbase: Walsh was ordained for the Grand Rapids MI diocese in 6/02; he was placed on leave in 7/02 after the Grand Rapids diocese learned of allegations of sexual abuse of two children while he was a lay person 40 years previously in another (unspecified) diocese. Walsh was 65 and a former Air Force Sergeant at time of his ordination. Walsh is a native of Boston MA.]Grand Rapids, MI Source:

DORCHESTER – A former altar boy coordinator is facing two counts of rape of a child and three counts of indecent assault from an incident that happened in the late 1980s and early 1990s, said the district attorney.

Michael Walsh, 79, was an altar boy coordinator at Dorchester’s St. Brendan’s on Rita Road. when the assaults occurred, said the Suffolk County. He later became a priest but was relieved of his priesthood duties in 2002.

According to 2002 Grand Rapids Press story, Walsh was removed from the priesthood when an attorney for two alleged victims called the Grand Rapids diocese’s attorney about assault incidents years before. Walsh was serving the Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids, Michigan at the time.

Court paperwork says that Walsh used his position as an altar boy coordinator as well as his job as a Cedar Grove Baseball coach to “gain access, groom, and ultimately sexually abuse the alleged victim, when he was in fourth, fifth and sixth grades.”

Walsh was never a priest of the Archdiocese of Boston. In a statement, the Archdiocese said they wouldn’t comment on the legal proceedings.

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Former Altar Boy Coordinator At Dorchester Church Charged With Sexual Abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
CBS Boston

BOSTON (CBS) – A former altar boy coordinator at a Dorchester church was arraigned Wednesday on charges that he sexually abused a child in the 1980s.

Prosecutors say Michael Walsh, who was altar boy coordinator at St. Brendan’s Church in Dorchester, sexually abused a child over the course of three years starting in 1988.

The victim, now 38 years old, just came forward to police this year.

Walsh pleaded not guilty Wednesday to charges of child rape and indecent assault and battery. The crimes allegedly occurred between 1988 and 1991 when the victim was in fourth through sixth grades.

Prosecutors say Walsh used his position as an altar boy coordinator and as a coach with Cedar Grove baseball to gain access and sexually abuse the victim.

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Former priest accused of raping child appears in court

MASSACHUSETTS
WHDH

DORCHESTER, MA (WHDH) – A former priest appeared in court Wednesday on rape and assault charges.

Michael Walsh, 80, also served as an altar boy coordinator in Dorchester.

Walsh was accused of raping a child in the late 1980s and 1990s when he served at St. Brendan’s School.

The victim, now 38 years old, came forward and reported the abuse to law enforcement this past summer.

Prosecutors said the statute of limitations has not expired because Walsh has lived out of state for more than a decade, which puts the statute on hold.

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Grand jury indicts former altar boy coordinator Michael Walsh on sex abuse charges

MASSACHUSETTS
MassLive

By Gintautas Dumcius | gdumcius@masslive.com

BOSTON – Michael Walsh, who once served as an altar boy coordinator at St. Brendan’s Church in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood, was arraigned Wednesday on charges of raping a child and indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of 14.

Just days away from turning 80 years old, Walsh pleaded not guilty to the charges in Suffolk Superior Court.

The clerk magistrate, Anne Kaczmarek, imposed conditions that included GPS monitoring, staying away from the victim and witnesses, no unsupervised contact with children under the age of 16, and surrendering his passport and remaining in Massachusetts.

A Suffolk County grand jury indicted Walsh on Sept. 16.

In a statement filed by prosecutors on Wednesday, Walsh allegedly used his position as an altar boy coordinator, as well as a coach with Cedar Grove Baseball, from Sept. 1988 through June 1991 to “gain access to, groom, and ultimately sexually abuse the alleged victim” when the victim was in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades.

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Detienen en Morelos a un sacerdote acusado de violación

TOLUCA DE LERDO (MEXICO)
El Financiero [Mexico City, Mexico]

September 28, 2016

By Corresponsal Jesús Castillo

Read original article

En marzo del 2009, cuando la víctima tenía 12 años, el padre llevó al menor al área del coro donde lo golpeó, y abusó sexualmente de él, además de amenazarlo para que no le dijera a nadie.

JIUTEPEC, MOR.- Un sacerdote fue aprehendido por la Policía Ministerial acusado de violar a un menor de edad en el interior de la iglesia de Tepalcingo hace siete años, informó la Fiscalía General del Estado. 

Se trata de Omar Aguilar Vega, quien fue detenido en este municipio donde se escondía de la justicia tras enterarse de que había una orden de aprehensión en su contra. 

De acuerdo a la averiguación previa JA/UIDD-A/357/2014 en marzo del 2009, cuando la víctima tenía 12 años, el padre llevó al menor al área del coro donde lo golpeó, y abusó sexualmente de él, además de amenazarlo para que no le dijera a nadie. 

En el 2014, el ahora joven intentó suicidarse colgándose de un árbol pero sus padres alcanzaron a evitarlo. Terminó confesando el motivo de su sufrimiento y los familiares iniciaron la denuncia en el Ministerio Público de Jantetelco. 

Fue hasta el pasado martes cuando el clérigo fue detenido cuando caminaba por el poblado de San Gaspar, en el municipio de Jiutepec, que fue capturado y llevado ante un Juez para que sea juzgado por el delito de violación. 

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Sieben bis acht Millionen Betroffene in Deutschland

DEUTSCHALND
Deutschland Radio

[Today the Independent Abuse Commission starts hearing from victims of sexual abuse. Former Canisius College student Matthias Katsch warns that sexual abuse of minors is not a phenomenon of the past and members should look at the issue in the “here and now.” He believes there are seven to eight million abuse survivors in Germany.]

Matthias Katsch, former student at Canisius College, calls by the Independent Commission Abuse uncovering social and institutional structures that facilitate the abuse.

One should not stop there, to hear examples of stories of abuse and perceive, but it needs to be talked about responsibilities at all levels, warns Katsch. “In environments where the institution and in society, so that these acts are actually less in the future.”

Heute beginnt die Unabhängige Missbrauchskommission mit Opferanhörungen. Der ehemalige Canisius-Schüler Matthias Katsch warnt davor, sexuelle Gewalt gegen Minderjährige als Erscheinung der Vergangenheit zu betrachten. Es geschehe auch “hier und heute”.

Matthias Katsch, ehemaliger Schüler am Canisius-Kolleg, fordert von der Unabhängigen Missbrauchskommission die Aufdeckung gesellschaftlicher und institutioneller Strukturen, die Missbrauch begünstigen.

Man dürfe nicht dabei stehen bleiben, Beispiele für Missbrauchsgeschichten zu hören und wahrzunehmen, sondern es müsse auch über Verantwortlichkeiten auf allen Ebenen gesprochen werden, mahnt Katsch. “Im Umfeld, in der Institution und in der Gesellschaft, damit diese Taten tatsächlich in der Zukunft weniger werden”.

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Bistum schließt Untersuchung ab – jetzt entscheidet der Vatikan

DEUTSCHLAND
Westfalische Nachricten

[The Munster diocese has closed an investigation into abuse allegations made against a priest but now it is up to the Vatican to decide.]

Horstmar/Münster –
Abgeschlossen ist die Voruntersuchung des Bistums Münster gegen einen zuletzt in Horstmar tätigen Priester wegen der sexuell intendierte Handlungen an einem Kind. Die Glaubenskongregation im Vatikan wird entscheiden, welche Konsequenzen der Fall für den Geistlichen hat.

Abgeschlossen ist jetzt die kirchenrechtliche Voruntersuchung des Bistums Münster gegen einen zuletzt in Horstmar tätigen Priester, der sexuell intendierte Handlungen an einem Kind vorgenommen haben soll. Das Ergebnis der Voruntersuchung geht nun an die Glaubenskongregation im Vatikan. Sie wird entscheiden, welche kirchenrechtlichen Konsequenzen der Fall für den Geistlichen hat.

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Pastor kills himself after mistakenly sending his nude photos intended for his mistress to church members instead

SOUTH AFRICA
Christian Today

Hazel Torres 26 September 2016

It was a case of a shameful “wrong send” that resulted in the tragic death of a pastor.

Pastor Letsego of Christ Embassy in Limpopo, South Africa reportedly hanged himself in shame after he mistakenly sent photos of his genitals to members of his church using the WhatsApp texting service in mobile phones.

According to the online news source Live Monitor, the married pastor intended to send the pictures to his mistress who, it is said, is a member of the same church.

Worse, the news source said the pastor sent a message that reads “Wife is away, it’s all yours tonight” along with the photos.

To his utter dismay, he reportedly realised his mistake right after pressing the send button of his mobile phone.

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Pastor who sent penis pics to church members kills himself

SOUTH AFRICA
The Freethinker

Pastor Letsego of Christ Embassy in Limpopo, South Africa reportedly hanged himself after he accidentally sent photos of his genitals to members of his church using the WhatsApp mobile phone texting app.

According to this report, the married pastor intended to send the pictures to his mistress, a member of the same church.

The message that accompanied the photos read:

Wife is away, it’s all yours tonight.

He reportedly realised his mistake right after pressing the send button of his phone.

Members of the WhatsApp church group who received the photos and message were shocked and outraged. They tried to call up the pastor, who wouldn’t answer. The pastor then left the group.

The following day, he was found hanging in his rented church house.

Said one of Pastor Letsego’s congregants who declined to be named:

Pastor’s antics have always been a cause for concern. He was always seen in the company of one of the deacons named Miriam and we suspected there was more to their friendship than meets the eye.

Quizzed by his wife and congregants, he would shrug off the allegations and say as a pastor he was a father to everyone and Miriam was his favourite daughter.

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Former layman faces sexual abuse charges

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By John R. Ellement GLOBE STAFF SEPTEMBER 28, 2016

A 79-year-old former Roman Catholic priest who supervised altar boys as a laymen in a Dorchester parish is now facing rape and indecent assault charges in Suffolk Superior Court in Boston Wednesday.

Michael Walsh is scheduled to be arraigned on two counts of rape of a child and three counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of 14, according to Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley’s office, which is prosecuting the case.

While a layman, Walsh served as the volunteer “altar boy coordinator’’ at St. Brendan’s Church in Dorchester from 1988 to 1991 and is alleged to have assaulted a boy during those years, prosecutors said.

Walsh also served as a layman in the same capacity at Saint Francis de Sales Church in Charlestown in the mid to late 1950s, prosecutors said.

Walsh retired, moved to Florida where he later entered a Maryland seminary and was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in Grand Rapids, Mich. in 2002 when he was in his mid-60s, prosecutors said. That same year, two adult survivors alleged that Walsh abused them while he was working at the Dorchester parish, leading church leaders to revoke his ministry, prosecutors said.

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Former priest accused of raping boy decades ago to appear in court

MASSACHUSETTS
WCVB

BOSTON —A former priest accused of child rape and assaults he allegedly committed while he was an altar boy coordinator at a Dorchester church is scheduled to face charges Wednesday.

Michael Walsh, 79, is expected to be arraigned Suffolk Superior Court on two counts of rape of a child and three counts of indecent assault and battery on a child.

Officials said Walsh allegedly committed the assaults against one boy during the late 1980s and early 1990s while at St Brendan’s. Previously, Walsh was a layman at St. Francis de Sales Church in Charlestown.

Walsh later became a priest, but was relieved of those duties in 2002.

Suffolk prosecutors were able to bring the charges in part because Walsh spent many years in Florida and Michigan, tolling the statute of limitations.

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Pa. investigating six Catholic dioceses for handling of sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
PhillyVoice

BY DANIEL CRAIG
PhillyVoice Staff

A Pennsylvania bishop has acknowledged a statewide investigation into six Catholic dioceses for their handling of sexual abuse claims.

Allentown Bishop John O. Barres said in a letter to parishioners Sunday the diocese has cooperated fully with the state attorney general’s office during the probe.

“The Diocese of Allentown is committed to the protection and safety of the children and young people entrusted to its care,” Barres said in the letter.

“Abuse of minors is a grave sin and crime. The Diocese of Allentown has zero tolerance for offenders and, as noted above, reports allegations of abuse to the appropriate authorities.”

Earlier this month, it was reported that six Pennsylvania dioceses were under investigation: Erie, Greensburg, Pittsburgh, Scranton, Harrisburg and Allentown. Barres is the last bishop out of those heading the six dioceses to publicly confirm the investigation, according to the Morning Call.

State Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks, said he testified before a grand jury in August and claimed people would be “shocked” by the results of the probe into the Diocese of Allentown.

Rozzi was sexually abused by a priest in the Diocese of Allentown as a child and is in the midst of a legislative battle to push a bill that would extend the statute of limitations for sex abuse victims. Several Catholic organizations, including the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, have fought against that legislation, saying it treats public and private institutions with different standards.

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Window for sex-abuse claims could open after all

PENNSYLVANIA
Sharon Herald

By JOHN FINNERTY CNHI Harrisburg Correspondent

HARRISBURG – A push to allow victims of clergy sex abuse the right to sue for damages in old cases is barreling toward a vote, with support from key state officials.

The House last spring opened a window allowing victims of old sex crimes to sue for damages. The window was snapped closed by the Senate, which voted only to extend the statute of limitations on those cases moving forward.

Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks County, who has pushed to allow victims to seek justice against their molesters and church leaders who’ve covered up the crimes, said he believes House lawmakers will revive the retroactivity clause, giving the Senate another chance to pass it this fall.

“This is not just a Catholic clergy problem,” Rozzi said at a Capitol press conference Tuesday. “But the church has become the face of institutional wrongdoing.”

The effort is being renewed about six months after a grand jury examining the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese revealed sex abuse allegations involving more than 50 priests from the 1940s through the 1990s, with a concerted effort by church leaders to shield the priests from prosecution.

Former Attorney General Kathleen Kane called for a rewrite of the statute of limitations law based on the Altoona-Johnstown revelations.

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Victims of pedophile priest fight to keep him from being released

MICHIGAN
Click on Detroit

By Kevin Dietz – Reporter, Derick Hutchinson
September 27, 2016

DETROIT – A Michigan prosecutor is teaming up with a group of men who were sexually abused as boys by their priest to try to keep the pedophile from being released on parole.

The incidents happened over 30 years ago, but they’re coming forward now as the priest is up for parole in Oklahoma.

Only new charges can keep the priest behind bars.

Abused by the priest as children, the victims say its time to speak up so that it never happens again.

“He knelt beside the bed I was in,” John Wood said. “He held my hand … said the Lord’s Prayer … and then climbed in bed with me … and had his way with me.”

The men are being called heroes in a horrific case of abuse.

“For me, I was a sophomore,” Chuck Smitchler said. “I was 15 at the time. It started on the wrestling team. He was the wrestling coach. It was the first time I ever wrestled.” …

Father James Rapp was a priest and wrestling coach at Michigan’s Jackson Lumen Christi High School from 1980 to 1986. He had moved around the country over the years, living in Philadelphia, New York, Illinois and Utah. In Oklahoma, he picked up a molestation charge that sent him to prison.

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Priest convicted of sexually assaulting teen boys denied full parole

CANADA
CBC News

By Holly Moore, Katie Nicholson, CBC News Posted: Sep 28, 2016

Catholic priest Ron Léger, who’s serving time for sexually assaulting teen boys he met a drop-in centre, will not be granted full parole. A federal parole board determined he is an “undue risk.” Instead, the board voted to grant him day parole for six months.

The board determined Léger had a one-in-five chance of reoffending and he scored “just over the low threshold” as a moderate risk to reoffend sexually. They denied his application for full parole in a Sept. 15, 2016 decision.

Léger, 78, is serving a two-year sentence for sexually assaulting three male victims. Two were teens when they were assaulted in the 1980s. They met Leger at a drop-in centre he founded in St. Vital. The other teen was a family friend and parishioner in the early 2000s.

Léger plans to live at a “community correctional centre/community residential facility (halfway house)” during day parole, according to the documents.

He expressed remorse for his behaviour, apologized and recognized that it was wrong. But the decision also describes substantial support for Léger from the community.

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Santos retires Silent No More sign

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

By Neil Pang | Post News Staff

During a sobering ceremony at the Guam Veterans Cemetery in Piti yesterday, Silent No More founder Joe Santos retired the sign he had been displaying on the back of his pickup truck since June. Together with Sens. Frank Blas Jr. and Frank Aguon Jr., Santos removed the iconic sign from the bed of his pickup at the foot of the grave of the late Joseph “Sonny” Quinata.

The sign has become something of an itinerant landmark – the stark black on white “Silent No More Stop Child Sex Abuse” is easily seen and announces the likely presence of a protest nearby.

Santos said he had originally erected the sign as a silent promise made to Doris Concepcion during the internment of her son Joseph “Sonny” Quinata’s remains.

“I watched his mother slide his ashes into his final resting place,” Santos said to the gathered crowd. “I saw the pain of a mother – the pain of a parent who wished, I think, that she had done some things differently.”

On that day, June 14, Santos vowed he was going to display the sign until the bill was passed.

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Counsel to child sexual abuse inquiry believed to be close to resigning

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Ben Quinn
Tuesday 27 September 2016

Fresh doubts about the future of the beleaguered independent inquiry into child sexual abuse have arisen amid concerns that its most senior lawyer is about to quit.

Ben Emmeron QC, who is counsel to the inquiry, is believed to be preparing to resign against the backdrop of differences with the body’s chair, Alexis Jay, who took up her position following the resignation of Dame Lowell Goddard last month.

The question marks over Emmeron’s continued involvement could not have come at a worse time for the inquiry, which was plunged into uncertainty following the resignation of Goddard, a New Zealand judge, who was the third person to have been named as inquiry chair.

Jay, a child protection expert with more than 30 years’ experience, led the official inquiry into the Rotherham scandal, which found that at least 1,400 children were sexually exploited in the town between 1997 and 2013.

A spokesperson for the inquiry said on Tuesday that Emmerson, a founding member of Matrix Chambers and a specialist in international and domestic human rights, had not resigned. However, they declined to comment on whether there was a disagreement between the chair and the inquiry’s counsel.

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Abuse inquiry in crisis after top lawyer threatens to quit

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill, Chief Reporter
September 28 2016
The Times

The most senior lawyer at the national child abuse inquiry is poised to resign in a move that could deal the £100 million investigation a fatal blow.

Ben Emmerson, QC, counsel to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), is understood to disagree fundamentally with the new chairwoman, Alexis Jay, about its future. He is thought to favour a restructuring to reduce the inquiry’s workload while Professor Jay, along with the home secretary and No 10, is determined that it should stick to the original terms of reference.

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Child sex abuse inquiry: Top lawyer ‘considering quitting’

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The most senior lawyer working for the inquiry into child sexual abuse in England and Wales is considering resigning, the BBC understands.

Ben Emmerson QC is believed to disagree with its new chairwoman, Professor Alexis Jay, over its future.

The Times reports that he wants to reduce the inquiry’s workload, but Prof Jay and the home secretary have both said its scope will not be changed.

Prof Jay is the fourth person appointed to lead the inquiry.

An inquiry spokesman said Mr Emmerson had not resigned as counsel to the inquiry, while Mr Emmerson told the BBC he was not in a position to comment.

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Fresh blow to national child abuse inquiry as most senior lawyer ‘considers quitting’

UNITED KINGDOM
Manchester Evening News

BY SIMON SMITH

Ben Emmerson is said to disagree with the new chairwoman over the future of the investigation

The national inquiry into child sexual abuse could be facing another serious blow after reports its most senior lawyer is considering standing down.

Ben Emmerson QC, who is counsel to the inquiry, is said to disagree with its chairwoman Alexis Jay about its future.

His departure would represent a fresh setback for the probe, which has been beset by problems since it was launched by then Home Secretary Theresa May in 2014.

A spokeswoman for the inquiry said Mr Emmerson has not resigned.

He is thought to favour a restructuring to reduce the inquiry’s workload, according to The Times.

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Child sex abuse inquiry lawyer ‘threatens to quit in row with new chairwoman’ in fresh setback

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Danny Boyle

28 SEPTEMBER 2016

The most senior lawyer at the national inquiry into child sexual abuse is reportedly considering resigning in a dispute with the new chairwoman.

Ben Emmerson QC is said to disagree “fundamentally” with Professor Alexis Jay over the future of the investigation in a row that could bring another serious setback for the probe.

He is believed to want the inquiry to be restructured to reduce its workload, but Prof Jay and Home Secretary Amber Rudd have said the scope will not be changed.

Earlier this month, Prof Jay defended the inquiry and insisted it will not be scaled back – despite her predecessor Dame Lowell Goddard saying there was an “inherent problem” in its “sheer scale and size” as she called for a “complete review”.

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Guam abuse victims warned of Catholic Church’s motives

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

An advocate for abuse survivors is urging victims to think twice before notifying Guam’s Catholic Church of abuse.

The Church has issued a statement encouraging people with knowledge of sexual abuse by clergy members to contact its abuse response co-ordinator.

This is after the passing of a bill lifting the statute of limitations for lawsuits against child sex abusers and private institutions that may have protected them.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests spokesperson, Joelle Casteix, said the law would give victims accountability.

But she said they should be wary of the church as it won’t want abuse exposed.

“Anytime anyone is abused do not call the Church, call law enforcement, because the Church will always try to protect themselves. Call the police, call a support group such as SNAP, call a lawyer. Don’t rely on the Church to do the right thing because they haven’t.”

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PA House To Stand Its Ground On Child Sex Abuse Legislation

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

September 27, 2016 By Tony Romeo

HARRISBURG (CBS) — It appears a standoff may be taking shape between the state House and Senate over legislation to give adult victims of child sex abuse more time to seek justice.

The bill would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases. In civil cases, the measure would also eliminate the statute of limitations for most individual defendants, and lengthen the time a victim would have to sue an organization. As it stands now, those provisions would only apply going forward.

The House passed a bill that allowed for retroactive lawsuits. But the Senate, citing constitutionality concerns, removed it. Now House leaders have indicated retroactivity will likely be put back into the bill.

Jennifer Kocher is a spokeswoman for leaders of the Republican Senate majority and said many things are being lost.

“All of these good provisions of the bill are being lost in the firestorm of controversy being swept up over one provision.”

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Bishops Still Behaving Badly on Sex Abuse as Pope Francis Sets the Example

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on September 28, 2016 by Betty Clermont

The clerical sex abuse scandal has revealed the core of corruption in the institutional Catholic Church. There have already been hundreds of thousands of victims around the world.

Since the systemic sexual abuse of children made national headlines in 2002, survivors (young people who had experienced child sexual abuse had a suicide rate that was 10.7 to 13.0 times the national rates) and their advocates have demanded essential reforms necessary to protect children in the future.

One is that the pope require that all criminal acts be immediately reported to the police. This is still optional according to Pope Francis. Another is that the pontiff hold bishops accountable. Pope Francis has never disciplined anyone for protecting child sex abusers, obstructing justice for the survivors or impeding measures to keep children safe because that’s what he does. So the scandals go on and on and on …..

On Sept. 21, 2016, Fr. Octavio Munoz appeared in a Chicago court on child pornography charges after police arrested him at a Maryland treatment center.

Last summer, Chicago Archbishop Blasé Cupich transferred Munoz from his assignment as a recruiter of young men for the priesthood to pastor at St. Pancratius Parish. When Fr. Kevin Hays, Munoz’ replacement, together with an archdiocese employee, went to inspect Munoz’ former living quarters on July 7, 2015, they found “a black Sony laptop … there was displayed a moving image on the screen that appeared to be running from a web cam. The image was of a young boy (engaged in a sexual act).”

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Historic child sex abuse inquiry on the brink of collapse after judge threatens to resign

UNITED KINGDOM
Express

By CHARLIE BAYLISS
Wed, Sep 28, 2016

Ben Emmerson QC is thought to have fundamental differences of opinion with the new chairwoman, Alexis Jay, about the future of the independent inquiry into child sex abuse.

Emerson wants to reduce the workload of Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse’s (IICSA), while Professor Jay wants to push ahead with the original plans for the project, it is believed.

The inquiry is examining historic sex abuse claims dating back more than six decades – with Westminster, the Church, schools and the armed forces all under the spotlight.

The inquiry was originally scheduled to span at least 10 years – but the continuous delays could push that back further.

Mr Emmerson is thought to be “actively considering” his position after being appointed by Theresa May two years ago when she was Home Secretary.

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Government’s child abuse inquiry in crisis after ‘top lawyer threatens to quit over way the investigation is run’

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By ALEXANDER WARD FOR DAILY MAIL

A lawyer helping to lead the Government’s child abuse inquiry is poised to quit, it was claimed last night.

Ben Emmerson QC, currently counsel to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, is responsible for probing claims of historical abuse at organisations from Westminster to the Church.

Mr Emmerson is understood to fundamentally disagree with the inquiry’s fourth chairwoman, Alexis Jay, over the way the inquiry is set to run, the Times reported.

He is believed to be in favour of restructuring the inquiry while Professor Jay, with the backing of the Home Office and the Prime Minister, insists it should stay within its original remit.

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Church minister jailed for raping daughter

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Wed 28 Sep 2016
By Hannah Tooley

A church minister has been jailed after assaulting his own daughter twice.

Woolwich Crown Court was told Mark Anderson, 54, abused his status as a minister to hide the abuse.

22-year-old Rebekah Anderson has waived her right to anonymity to try to encourage other survivors of sexual violence to come forward.

Mr Anderson has been jailed for 19 years after being convicted of two charges of rape at Woolwich Crown Court.

He has been convicted of one assault by penetration and one assault occasioning actual bodily harm when she was aged 12 and 14 respectively.

Rebekah told The Times newspaper: “I couldn’t take it anymore, it was too much of a build-up, it was holding me back and I couldn’t take it.”

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Pastor jailed last month must wait another day to learn bond

GEORGIA
News4Jax

By Elizabeth Campbell – Reporter , News4Jax.com Staff
September 27, 2016

BRUNSWICK, Ga. – After hearing from friends of Pastor Ken Adkins, as well listening to recordings of phone calls of Adkins talking about the child molestation charges against him, a Glynn County judge said he would rule Wednesday on bond on charges of aggravated child molestation.

Adkins, 56, pastor of the Greater Dimensions Christian Fellowship, has been in the Glynn County Jail since Aug. 26, when he surrendered on charges resulting from allegations he molested a teenage boy in 2010.

The young man told the Georgia Bureau of Investigation that Adkins molested him when he was a member of Adkins’ church as a boy under the age of 16.

After hearing from four pastors who know Adkins and said he poses no risk to the community and hearing portions of the audio recordings, Superior Court Judge E.M. Wilkes said he wasn’t trying the hear the case, only decide on bond.

Prosecutors recounted Adkins’ previous criminal history, including four convictions on charges for theft, grand theft and passing bad checks, adding that Adkins presents a significant risk to intimidate witnesses. The state requested that Adkins be denied bond, or at least receive a bond of $1 million or more.

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Pastor charged for sexual abuse, harboring a runaway

IOWA
KCCI

DES MOINES, Iowa —A Des Moines man is back behind bars after being sentenced Tuesday to 10 years in prison for third-degree sexual abuse and harboring a runaway.

Police said Damion Rutues, 37, hid a 15-year-old runaway girl in a small sleeping area inside a church on Forest Avenue.

Court documents show the 15-year-old girl ran away from home with her girlfriend.

Rutues let them stay inside Learning of the Lord Revival Center because the girls said they were homeless and had nowhere else to go.

“He was familiar with the family,” Des Moines Police Sgt. Paul Parizek said. “He was lying to her parents that she, in fact, was there, and while she was there he was having sexual intercourse with her.”

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Former Agape Bible Church members come forward, say they’re abuse victims

COLORADO
KDVR

[with video]

THORNTON, Colo. – Several former members of Agape Bible Church are coming forward claiming they have also been victims of sexual assault because of the church.

The Problem Solvers first reported last week that associate pastor Robert “Bob” Wyatt turned himself into police. He is accused of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl at church over a period of two years.

After police documents were released, the Problem Solvers reported that Agape’s head pastor Darrell Ferguson may have known about Wyatt’s alleged crime and did not report it to police.

Ferguson tells FOX31 under Colorado law he was not legally obligated to report the suspected crime since the information was divulged during a confidential counseling session.

Now former church members tell the Problem Solvers they believe Agape and Ferguson have a history of abuse and a history of covering it up.

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Archdiocese reports allegation of priest serving in SD

MINNESOTA
The Catholic Spirit

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced Sept. 20 that it received an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor and reported it to law enforcement.

The alleged sexual abuse involves Father Joseph Thomas Forcelle and is from the late 1970s and early 1980s when he was serving as a priest at St. Mark in St. Paul. Father Forcelle has been serving in the Diocese of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, since 1984. The archdiocese said it notified the Sioux Falls diocese.

Father Forcelle, 63, was ordained for the archdiocese in 1980. In addition to St. Mark, he served at St. Olaf in Minneapolis. In 1984 he became the director of the Office of Youth Ministry for the Diocese of Sioux Falls and was incardinated into that diocese in 1988.

According to a press release from the archdiocese, the St. Paul Police Department on Sept. 19 advised that there would not be a criminal investigation and gave the archdiocese permission to make the disclosure.

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Rozzi still pushing for overhaul of child sex abuse law

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

HARRISBURG – State House leaders plan to take steps next month to revive a proposal that would enable some people sexually abused as children to sue even if their window to do so has already closed.

House officials said Tuesday the plan is to add a retroactive provision back into a bill that would overhaul time limits for victims to take legal action.

“That’s where the members are and we’ll see how it goes,” said Stephen A. Miskin, a spokesman for the House’s Republican leadership.

At a Capitol press conference, state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Muhlenberg Township Democrat and the measure’s chief proponent, vowed to continue his push for protections aiding victims abused in the past to be included in the bill.

“We cannot choose to help one group of victims and ignore another,” said Rozzi, a victim of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of a priest. “We must do the right thing by all of them.”

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Priest Permanently Removed From Duties After Sex Abuse Allegations

NEW YORK
CBS New York

[with video]

PEARL RIVER, N.Y. (CBSNewYork) — A former Pearl River priest accused of sexual abuse has been permanently removed by the Archdiocese of New York.

As WCBS 880’s Monsignor John O’Keefe will never again function as a priest. A church official said the former president of Archbishop Stepinac High School will not be returning to his ministry.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan suspended O’Keefe from his duties at St. Margaret of Antioch in Pearl River in December after allegations of sexual abuse more than three decades ago surfaced.

The archdiocese declined to comment while the case and its findings were still referred to the Vatican.

When he was a teacher in the Bronx in the 1980s, O’Keefe allegedly abused a student in a Virginia hotel room and an upstate retreat house. He claims he is innocent.

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Irish priest in New York to be defrocked over 30-year-old sex abuse allegations

NEW YORK
Irish Central

Kate Hickey @KateHickey_ September 28, 2016

The Archdiocese of New York has confirmed that priest who has been accused of the sexual abuse of a minor on two occasions in New York and Virginia, over three decades ago, will never function as a priest again.

Monsignor John O’Keefe (71), formerly of Pearl River, NY and once president of a Westchester County Catholic high school, has been permanently removed from his ministry according to the lawyer for this alleged victim, Mitchell Garabedian. On Sunday afternoon a joint press release was issued by New-Jersey-based nonprofit Road to Recovery Inc, which helps victims of sexual abuse, and Garabedian. The Boston lawyer said he had been informed of this decision in August.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York said they would not make any public statements until the process is completed. This would include bringing the matter to the Holy See, in the Vatican. The process of defrocking a Catholic priest can take years, but a church official confirmed with The Journal News “that O’Keefe will never be permitted to function again as a priest.”

Due to the statute of limitations O’Keefe has not been charged with any crimes. Garabedian said his client was abused between 1981 and 1983 while studying at Cardinal Hayes High School in The Bronx. O’Keefe was a teacher and guidance counselor at the school.

It is alleged that the abuse happened in a Virginia hotel room during a school trip to Washington, DC and at the Irish Christian Brothers’ retreat house in Esopus, NY during a weekend leadership training program.

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Allentown bishop addresses grand jury probe

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Steve Esack and Matt AssadContact Reporters
Of The Morning Call

Bishop: “The state attorney general’s office has subpoenaed our records on all possible abusers.”

A week after declining to address the question, Allentown Bishop John O. Barres acknowledged what his counterparts in five other Catholic episcopates already had: The diocese is being investigated by a statewide grand jury examining how church leaders handled decades of child sex abuse allegations.

In a letter to parishioners last weekend, Allentown Bishop John O. Barres confirmed that his diocese had been subpoenaed and is cooperating with the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office.

“As your bishop, I wanted to let you know that the Diocese of Allentown is cooperating with a statewide investigation being conducted by the office of the state attorney general looking at how six Pennsylvania dioceses handled allegations of abuse,” Barres wrote in a letter delivered to parishioners during Saturday and Sunday Mass and printed in the diocese newspaper, the AD Times.

The letter reminded parishioners that Barres’ predecessor, Bishop Edward P. Cullen, in 2002 allowed prosecutors from the diocese’s five-county territory to review personnel files detailing old sex abuse allegations against 23 priests. Since then, Barres said, the diocese has notified the counties’ district attorneys of new abuse claims. Now, state authorities want records, he wrote.

“The state attorney general’s office has subpoenaed our records on all possible abusers, and we are in the process of turning over that material,” the letter states. “The Diocese of Allentown is committed to the protection and safety of the children and young people entrusted to its care. To this end, it is the policy of the Diocese of Allentown to cooperate with law enforcement. We will cooperate with the attorney general’s office just as we have cooperated with the district attorneys. Abuse of minors is a grave sin and crime.”

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Documents reveal dismissed criminal case against Archdiocese

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

By: Tom Lyden
POSTED:SEP 27 2016

(KMSP) – One thousand pages of documents released by the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office and St. Paul Police detail the criminal investigation into the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis.

Those documents focus heavily on the conduct of former Archbishop John Nienstedt, who resigned 16 months ago.

Criminal charges in the case were dismissed in July as part of broad civil settlement with the Archdiocese.

The documents include a history of former priest Curtis Wehmeyer, who cruised bookstores and parks for gay sex before he was convicted of sexually assaulting two boys.

Concerns about Wehmeyer’s sexual compulsivity were raised before he even became a priest, when he was still in seminary. According to the documents, Nienstedt “was fond” of Wehmeyer, who even believed Nienstedt was “grooming” him for a sexual encounter.

In an August 2014 interview, Nienstedt dismissed the association.

“Three dinners in three years, it’s not something I wouldn’t have done with any other priest,” Nienstedt said.

The documents, which in some cases are heavily redacted, also include confidential memos that refer to an internal church investigation into the conduct of Nienstedt, carried out by an outside law firm, Greene-Espel.

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September 27, 2016

Local priest accused of sexual abuse permanently removed from ministry

NEW YORK
Fios 1 News

The alleged victims of a former Pearl River priest and Westchester Catholic school leader accused of sexual abuse are resting a little easier today, knowing he has been permanently removed from his ministry

The allegations against Monsignor John O’Keefe’s go back for more than 30 years ago. He was suspended last year for allegedly sexually abusing a student on class trips in Virginia and Ulster County.

Two other male victims have come forward since then and their allegations were found credible…

“…To the point where the review board of the Archdiocese of New York was unanimous in its recommendation to Cardinal Dolan that Monsignor O’Keefe be removed permanently,” said Dr. Robert Hoatson, President of Road to Recovery.

Others say O’keefe’s alleged abuse started even earlier, when he was a guidance counselor at Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx.

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Iglesia condena a pena canonica a sacerdote por abuso sexual a menor

CHILE
El Rangcaguino

[The Bishop of Rancagua has announced the dismissal from the clerical state of diocesan priest Carlos Manriquez, who served as pastor of La Merced in the town of Zuniga. In January 2015 the Catholic Church initiated a canonical investigation that convicted former priest who was accused to abusing a minor.]

El Obispado de Rancagua ha dado a conocer la dimisión del estado clerical de presbítero diocesano, Carlos Manriquez, quien se desempeñó como Párroco de la Parroquia La Merced, en la localidad de Zúñiga. En enero del año 2015 la Iglesia Católica inició una investigación canónica que encontró culpable al ex sacerdote.

Común era ver al Padre Carlos Manriquez, como uno más del pueblo de Zúñiga, comuna de San Vicente de Tagua Tagua. No había fiesta costumbrista o fiesta de la vendimia en la que no participara, ya que tras la respectiva misa a la chilena, se colocaba su traje a la usanza campesina para bailar cueca y ser uno más de las actividades.

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Pearl River priest removed from ministry over alleged sex abuse

NEW YORK
News 12

[with video]

YONKERS – The archbishop of New York permanently removed a Pearl River priest from his ministry Tuesday because of sex abuse allegations.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan removed Monsignor John O’Keefe because of sex abuse allegations from 30 years ago when he was on the faculty of Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx during the 1980s. O’Keefe has been stationed as pastor of Saint Margaret of Antioch Parish in Pearl River since 2003, but was first removed in December.

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Pa. House to take up sex-abuse law to expand victims’ rights

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Maria Panaritis, STAFF WRITER

HARRISBURG – With only days remaining in the legislative session, officials said Tuesday the Pennsylvania House intends to rewrite and send back to the Senate a contested child sex abuse bill that would give victims the right to sue for decades-old abuses.

Sometime next month, lawmakers plan to restore controversial language that the Senate removed from House Bill 1947 – a provision that had been strongly opposed by the Catholic Church and the insurance industry for potentially exposing private institutions to enormous financial liability.

Rep. Mark Rozzi (D., Berks) announced the chamber’s plans at an hourlong Capitol news conference attended by Republican attorney general nominee Sen. John Rafferty Jr. (R-Mongtomery), other state lawmakers, and leaders of organizations that work with child sexual-abuse victims.

Rozzi said House leadership had pledged to reject the Senate’s amended version and try a second time to change Pennsylvania law so that Rozzi and other former clergy abuse victims will have the right to sue attackers and institutions for incidents that occurred in the 1960s, ’70s, and ’80s.

“It’s our plan to run this legislation and send it back to the Senate,” Stephen Miskin, spokesman for House Majority Leader Dave Reed (R., Indiana), said after Rozzi’s announcement.

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Jewish campaigner against sexual violence up for award

UNITED STATES
Jewish News

BY STEPHEN ORYSZCZUK September 26, 2016

harity support worker for Jewish victims of sexual abuse has been nominated for the first national award for independent sexual violence advisors (ISVAs).

Yehudis Goldsobel, who works for the charity Migdal Emunah and who has exposed problems in the Jewish community, has been shortlisted for the LimeLight Award for Outstanding Achievement.

The advisors help victims understand the criminal justice process, explain what happens when reporting an offence to the police, and stress the importance and process of forensic DNA retrieval. Cultural sensitivities are crucial, and Yehudis is the only qualified Jewish IVSA in the UK and works across the entire religious spectrum of the Jewish community.

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Survivors, legislators push to revive statute of limitations bill

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY KODY LEIBOWITZ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27TH 2016

HARRISBURG – Survivors, families and legislators took to the Capitol Tuesday to push forward changes in child abuse statute of limitations with the hope of again adding language some deem controversial others said is necessary.

A rally to revive the statute of limitations bill.

Rep. Mark Rozzi, along with colleagues and survivors of child sex abuse, stood inside the Capitol strongly urging the lawmakers to pass the statute of limitations months after it was introduced.

The bill would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations and extend civil statutes to age 50.

The bill currently sits in the House Rules committee, but Rozzi said he expects the bill will be voted out and voted on by house members, with retroactivity back in the bill.

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Berks lawmaker seeks stronger child sex abuse lawsuits bill

PENNSYLVANIA
WFMZ

HARRISBURG, Pa. – A Pennsylvania lawmaker who has told of his victimization as a child by a Roman Catholic priest in the Diocese of Allentown said he’ll keep fighting for legislation to allow onetime-child sexual abuse victims to sue for damages. “I hear my story with every story told to me,” said Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Berks County Democrat.

“We, our families and friends, have been gravely wronged by these predators and those institutions that will do anything to protect their reputations and coffers.” Rozzi said Tuesday that he isn’t dissuaded by the Senate’s rejection of the provision. The House approved the provision overwhelmingly in April. It would revive the ability of people to sue for damages if they’re now older than the current legal age limit of 30 to sue.

“When I ran for this office, I was on a personal mission to shake open the log jam that I faced when looking for justice,” Rozzi said. “I didn’t realize the magnitude of this epidemic until, as a state representative, my office started receiving letters, emails, phone calls and personal visits from victims from every corner of the state and beyond.”

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Why “Nones” Are Leaving the Church

UNITED STATES
Commonweal

Michael Peppard
September 23, 2016

The most significant demographic trend in American religion today is the rapidly growing numbers of “unaffiliated” or “nones.” The data has spoken clearly for years, with a rise from about 5% in 1972 to about 25% in 2016. More importantly, almost 40% of those between the ages of 18 and 29 are religiously unaffiliated. This is no mere life-cycle effect, as has been so common in the past. If you find yourself gazing at empty pews this weekend and thinking, They’ll come back when they have kids of their own, you’re in denial.

To the contrary, this is an epochal societal shift disguised as a life-cycle effect, and it remains foolish to avoid the numbers. Recent books by Kaya Oakes and Elizabeth Drescher, among others, have given voices to these numbers. Queries about what the nones do after they leave their religious communities—how they live out their days as spiritual not religious, or multi-religious, or anti-religious—will continue to occupy more and more of our bookshelves. But the prior question of why they leave in the first place is also still being asked.

Yesterday the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI), an increasingly indispensable organization for the study of religion, released a report about why they leave. The report, based on August 2016 phone surveys, might be thought of as a compilation of anonymous exit interviews: real people offering real reasons, with nothing to hide or prove. Not all the answers are surprising, but some of them should be required reading for pastors, catechists, and parents.

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Parish priest from Dallas named bishop for West Texas diocese

TEXAS
KTXS

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) – Pope Francis has named a parish priest from Dallas as the next bishop of the Lubbock Diocese.

The Vatican on Tuesday announced the appointment of Monsignor Robert Coerver. The 62-year-old Coerver is currently a priest at St. Rita Parish in Dallas.

Coerver is a Dallas native who was ordained in 1980.

He’ll take over Bishop Placido Rodríguez, who’s led the diocese in Lubbock since 1994 but is retiring at age 75.

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Texas firm makes inquiry over ex-priest and alleged rapist John Sutton

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News September 27, 2016

A Dallas, Texas-based law firm is reaching out to anyone who has information about a Catholic priest who worked on Guam from 1971 to 1974 and who last year was accused by a man of raping him repeatedly when he was a student in Texas.

Attorney Tahira Khan Merritt said the priest, John H. Sutton, worked on Guam in the early 1970s and moved to Texas in 1984 to work as a chaplain and teacher at Wichita Falls’ Notre Dame Middle-High School, a diocesan institution of the Fort Worth Diocese.

Merritt said that’s where Sutton and his friend, school Principal Ronald M. Staley allegedly abused her client, identified in court documents only as “John Doe 117.”

Sutton worked on Guam from 1971-1974 at Father Duenas Memorial School in Mangilao, a Catholic high school for boys. He also worked at Duenas Memorial Minor Seminary. He taught U.S. and world history while on Guam. But after that, his whereabouts were uncertain, Merritt said.

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Former Pearl River Priest Removed from Ministry over Sex Abuse Allegations

NEW YORK
Patch

By Lanning Taliaferro (Patch Staff) – September 27, 2016

PEARL RIVER, NY — Timothy Cardinal Dolan has permanently removed Monsignor John O’Keefe, who had been the priest at St. Margaret of Antioch, from the ministry, the New York Daily News reports.

However, the lawyer for O’Keefe’s alleged victim told the paper that he was concerned that the archdiocese has not shared its findings with the public because it could put more children at risk.

The lawyer is Mitchell Garabedian, whose work on behalf of the victims of priest sex abuse was portrayed in the award-winning movie “Spotlight.” Garabedian told the Daily News that the archdiocese let him know in August that O’Keefe had been permanently removed from his duties.

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Rozzi vows to get retroactivity clause back in abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
WITF

Written by Rachel McDevitt/Radio PA | Sep 27, 2016

(Harrisburg) — In April, the state House passed a bill to extend the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases, which also would have given past victims of abuse more time to file a civil suit.

The Senate sent it back without the retroactive clause.

Now, a state lawmaker from Berks County is vowing to get the retroactivity back in the proposal.

Six of Pennsylvania’s eight Catholic dioceses, including the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg, are now under investigation by the state Attorney General’s office for possible clergy sex abuse.

The new probes are spurring advocates like Democratic Representative Mark Rozzi of Berks County to push harder for passage of legislation to allow past victims to sue.

He says he believes the House will stand united, as it did earlier this year.

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Do you know of sexual abuse within our Church?

GUAM
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Agana

The Archdiocese of Agana cares deeply about the protection of minors and all people entrusted to its care. Sexual abuse is a matter of the gravest concern, as Our Lord calls us to protect the most innocent and vulnerable among us – our children. We take the protection of children very seriously.

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, SDB, the Apostolic Administrator of Agana has appointed Deacon Leonard Stohr to be the Sexual Abuse Response Coordinator (SARC) for the Church on Guam.

We encourage all persons who have knowledge of sexual abuse by clergy or others in our Archdiocese, today or in the past, to contact Deacon Len at this hotline number: 727-7373. You may also e-mail him at deaconlen1@gmail.com

Our Archdiocese pledges to correct the wrongs and mistakes of the past. We are strengthening our sexual abuse and sexual misconduct policy so that all people – most especially our young and most vulnerable – may be confident of being in a safe environment fully protected from any harm.

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Catholic church reaches out to anyone with knowledge of clergy sex abuse

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News September 27, 2016

The island’s Catholic church has issued a new statement, encouraging anyone who knows about sexual abuse by clergy or others in the Archdiocese of Agana “today or in the past” to contact the church’s sexual abuse response coordinator.

The call comes shortly after Gov. Eddie Calvo signed into law a bill that would allow victims of child sex abuse to sue their abusers and the institutions with which they are associated, at any time.

Public Law 33-187 makes the Catholic church on Guam open to lawsuits by those who, in recent months, have publicly accused priests, including Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron, of raping or molesting them. The Vatican placed Apuron on temporary leave over sex abuse allegations, but he has not been charged with any crime.

“Do you know of sexual abuse within our Church?” the Archdiocese of Agana’s statement reads.

The statement says the Archdiocese of Agana cares deeply about the protection of minors and all people entrusted to its care.

“Sexual abuse is a matter of the gravest concern, as Our Lord calls us to protect the most innocent and vulnerable among us – our children. We take the protection of children very seriously,” it adds.

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Holy See ratification of UN Convention against Corruption dismissed as “window dressing”

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Tue, 27 Sep 2016

Holy See ratification of UN Convention against Corruption dismissed as “window dressing”

The Holy See’s ratification of the United Nations Convention against Corruption has been dismissed as mere “window dressing” by the National Secular Society.

Senior Vatican officials said the move would help ensure good governance not just internationally but of the city state itself. The Vatican has been rocked by numerous scandals including a far-reaching clergy sex abuse crisis, money laundering and corruption at the Vatican Bank.

Vatican Radio reported that Holy See had ratified the Convention with two reservations and three interpretative declarations. One of these reservations states that the Holy See reserves the right not to participate in any “appropriate mechanism or body to assist in the effective implementation of the Convention”.
The National Secular Society, which has been active at the UN in holding the Catholic church to account over its failure to address child abuse within its ranks, said the Holy See’s caveats meant the ratification amounted to “mere window dressing”.

NSS executive director, Keith Porteous Wood, said: “The Vatican is among the most corrupt states in the world and is close to being ungovernable, as is evident from Gianluigi Nuzzi’s book Merchants in the Temple, which reveals the shocking extent of corruption within the Vatican.

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Chicago-based religious order sued for docs on allegations

ILLINOIS
Beatrice Daily Sun

By MICHAEL TARM

CHICAGO (AP) — A 51-year-old Colorado man who says he was sexually abused when he was around 7 years old by a teenager who later became a prominent Roman Catholic priest — one known for his work with at-risk kids — on Monday sued the Chicago-based religious order to which the priest belongs, seeking the release of all records related to allegations of abuse by any of its priests.

Eric Johnson’s lawsuit names the Claretians Missionaries, a 165-year-old order that has around 3,000 priests and brothers in about 60 countries, as the defendant. The suit filed in Cook County Circuit Court says that Father Bruce Wellems was around 15 when the abuse occurred in the early 1970s. Johnson says the abuse occurred over about a year.

Several phone messages left for Wellems on a private phone and at the Claretians headquarters were not returned Monday. He has previously acknowledged inappropriately touching of a minor when he himself was under 18, but he has also said he never again abused a child, including never as an adult and never as a priest. Messages seeking comment from the Claretians also weren’t returned.

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Victims of paedophile Bill Kenneally call for a parish priest to resign as chair of a primary school board of management

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

27 SEP 2016
BY SAOIRSE MCGARRIGLE

Monsignor John Shine is an uncle of Bill Kenneally and heads up the Holy Cross National School in Tramore

Victims of paedophile Bill Kenneally are calling for a parish priest to resign as chair of a primary school board of management.

Monsignor John Shine is an uncle of Bill Kenneally and heads up the Holy Cross National School in Tramore, Co Waterford.

The Sunday Independent reported a Waterford woman told Bill Kenneally’s cousin – former TD Brendan – her son had been abused in 2002 but he called the priest instead of reporting it to gardai.

Sports coach Bill Kenneally, 66, was jailed in February for 14 years for abusing boys in the 1980s – and now his victims want the cleric to be removed from his position.

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Diocese cooperating in investigation into abuse, ‘a grave sin and crime’

PENNSYLVANIA
Lehigh Valley Live

By Kurt Bresswein | For lehighvalleylive.com

The Diocese of Allentown this week affirmed its commitment to helping bring to justice those within its ranks who abuse minors.

Bishop John O. Barres issued a statement Sunday saying the division of the Roman Catholic church is cooperating in a new Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office inquiry into handling of allegations of abuse.

Diocese of Allentown spokesman Matt Kerr would not previously confirm the diocese’s involvement in the grand jury investigation, or say if the diocese was subpoenaed.

Six Pennsylvania dioceses are under investigation, Barres wrote in the letter to parishioners, posted on the diocesan website. The inquiry follows the Allentown Diocese’s cooperation in 2002 with district attorneys from the five counties that make up the diocese, during which records were shared of priests against whom allegations of abuse of minors had been leveled.

“Since then, we have notified the relevant district attorneys of claims of abuse,” Barres wrote. “The state attorney general’s office has subpoenaed our records on all possible abusers, and we are in the process of turning over that material. …

“The Diocese of Allentown is committed to the protection and safety of the children and young people entrusted to its care. To this end, it is the policy of the Diocese of Allentown to cooperate with law enforcement. We will cooperate with the attorney general’s office just as we have cooperated with the district attorneys.”

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Korean American Pastors Glean Advice on Handling Abuse Situations in Ministry

UNITED STATES
Christianity Today

RACHAEL LEE SEP 26, 2016

About 50 Korean American pastors gathered at Cerritos Mission Church earlier this month for a ‘Crisis Management Seminar’ hosted by Dr. Benjamin Shin, the director of the Asian American Doctor of Ministry cohort at Biola University’s Talbot School of Theology.

The seminar was split into two parts, the first which featured Dave Carder, a counselor who has dealt with hundreds of cases of extra-marital affairs, sexual abuse, and other related incidents. Shin spoke during the second portion, sharing updates on an incident that occurred in July in a mission team sent by the college ministry Korean American Campus Mission (KCM), an incident which Shin said triggered this seminar.

“We wanted to provide this time to provide resources for Korean American pastors, especially since they don’t go over this in most seminaries,” said Shin, who shared a list of counselors, lawyers, and police officers who could help in similar situations.

For many involved in the KCM incident, which involved allegations that a pastor engaged in inappropriate conduct during the mission trip, this was their first such experience dealing with moral failure among ministry leaders. For Shin, who helped KCM’s leaders throughout the handling of the incident, it was his seventh time.

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IS THE RISE OF “NONES” ACTUALLY THE DECLINE OF CATHOLICS?

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

BY PATRICIA MILLER
SEPTEMBER 26, 2016

The Public Religion Research Institute is out with another fascinating report on one of the most significant religious trends of our time: the dramatic rise in disaffiliation, or, as some call them, the “nones.”

PPRI found that a fully a quarter of all Americans, and a whopping 39% of young adults, now say they have no religious affiliation, making the unaffiliated the largest “religious” group in a country long known for its high levels of religiosity.

And while the rise of the “nones” will continue to make headlines and shape culture for a long time to come, there is another largely unnoticed trend lurking in the numbers: just how much the growth in the nones has been fueled by the disaffiliation of Roman Catholics. According to PPRI:

While non-white Protestants and non-Christian religious groups have remained fairly stable, white Protestants and Catholics have all experienced declines, with Catholics suffering the largest decline among major religious groups: a 10-percentage point loss overall. Nearly one-third (31%) of Americans report being raised in a Catholic household, but only about one in five (21%) Americans identify as Catholic currently.

The Catholic rate of disaffiliation dwarfs the rate for any other faith tradition; the next biggest “loser” in terms of disaffiliation are the mainline Protestant denominations, which saw a 4.5-point loss, while white evangelical denominations saw a net drop of only 2.2 points, largely because they have both a lower rate of disaffiliation and a fairly robust rate of new adherents.

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Church pastor sends statement to congregation after Problem Solvers story

COLORADO
KDVR

SEPTEMBER 26, 2016, BY ASHLEY MICHELS

THORNTON, Colo. – Agape Bible Church canceled all church services this past weekend following a Problem Solvers investigation into whether their head pastor tried to cover up an alleged sexual abuse case within the church.

A week ago, Agape’s former associate pastor Robert “Bob” Wyatt turned himself into police. He is accused of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl who went to that church.

Police documents and former congregation members allege that Agape’s head pastor Darrell Ferguson knew about the allegations in July and refused to go to police.

A 16-page arrest affidavit describes evidence that Ferguson knew about the allegations by July 21st, 2016 when Wyatt reportedly confessed the crime to the girl’s parents.

“Ultimately Darrell and [the girl’s parent] agreed to not report the sexual assault to the police or social services because they were concerned with what would happen to Bob,” the affidavit alleges.

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Residential-school rulings raise concerns about denied compensation claims

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

GLORIA GALLOWAY
OTTAWA — The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Sep. 26, 2016

Three recent court rulings have overturned adjudicators’ decisions to deny compensation to people who were abused at Indian residential schools, raising questions about how many other former students have been unfairly refused redress.

As the process created by the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement to provide compensation for the abuse nears the end of its work, the court rulings – two in Ontario and one in Manitoba – suggest that problems with decisions made by adjudicators are not always caught in the reviews and re-reviews to which applicants are entitled.

Bill Erasmus, the regional chief of the Northwest Territories for the Assembly of First Nations, who is responsible for the AFN’s residential schools file, said many people who were abused at the schools are intimidated by the complexity of the Independent Assessment Process (IAP) and distraught at reliving the memories. For those reasons, he said, they often do not pursue claims that were unfairly denied.

“Many people didn’t get the money that they ought to have,” Mr. Erasmus said, “and they just give up.”

In July, Justice Paul Perell of the Ontario Superior Court determined that an adjudicator made a “glaring and crucial error” when she relied on her own knowledge of how the Catholic church operates to deny compensation to a claimant who said a priest raped him at a residential school in Spanish, Ont. Her assumptions, which incorrectly led her to conclude the assault must have happened after the school was closed, should not have influenced her findings, the judge said, but neither the review nor the re-review corrected the error. He ordered that the man be compensated.

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Cardinal Dolan ousted priest for sex abuse claim, but accuser’s lawyer says children still at risk

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Monday, September 26, 2016

Timothy Cardinal Dolan has removed a Rockland County priest accused of sexual abuse — but children may still be at risk, said a lawyer for the clergyman’s alleged victim.

Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian said the Archdiocese of New York told him in August that Monsignor John J. O’Keefe — most recently the pastor of St. Margaret of Antioch in Pearl River — had been permanently removed from his duties following an investigation into allegations he had sexually abused his client in the 1980s.

But the archdiocese has not shared its findings with the public, which Garabedian argued puts kids at risk. The archdiocese continues to provide O’Keefe with a place to live, although it would not comment on where the disgraced priest has been living.

“Children must immediately be made safe from predators like Monsignor O’Keefe,” Garabedian said. “The archdiocese failed miserably in its supervision of O’Keefe, and now it is playing more children in potential jeopardy.”

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September 26, 2016

Chicago-based religious order sued for docs on allegations

ILLINOIS
Associated Press

By MICHAEL TARM
Sep. 26, 2016

CHICAGO (AP) — A 51-year-old Colorado man who says he was sexually abused when he was around 7 years old by a teenager who later became a prominent Roman Catholic priest — one known for his work with at-risk kids — on Monday sued the Chicago-based religious order to which the priest belongs, seeking the release of all records related to allegations of abuse by any of its priests.

Eric Johnson’s lawsuit names the Claretians Missionaries, a 165-year-old order that has around 3,000 priests and brothers in about 60 countries, as the defendant. The suit filed in Cook County Circuit Court says that Father Bruce Wellems was around 15 when the abuse occurred in the early 1970s. Johnson says the abuse occurred over about a year.

Several phone messages left for Wellems on a private phone and at the Claretians headquarters were not returned Monday. He has previously acknowledged inappropriately touching of a minor when he himself was under 18, but he has also said he never again abused a child, including never as an adult and never as a priest. Messages seeking comment from the Claretians also weren’t returned.

Speaking at a news conference at his lawyer’s Chicago office, Johnson said he decided to sue because the Claretians did not follow through on pledges the order made to Johnson earlier to closely monitor Wellems and to not allow him access to children unless another adult was present.

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Life Story for Paul Likoudis

NEW YORK
Vedder and Scott Funeral Home

Paul Augustine Likoudis, age 61 of Caywood, NY, passed away due to complications in his fight against cancer on September 22, 2016. He was surrounded by loved ones at the time of his passing. The son of James and Ruth Likoudis of Montour Falls, Paul is survived by his brother Mark, and sisters Therese Williams, Celine Schanzer, Cathy Kader, and Margaret Byerley. Paul recently celebrated his 35th Wedding Anniversary with his loving wife Paulette, and sons Peter (Sarafina), Gabriel, and Vincent, and daughters Genevieve (Rick) Bitter, Kateri, and Irene (Matthew) DeMarco. He had 6 grandchildren, and numerous nieces and nephews.

Paul was born in Buffalo, NY, blessed by Bishop James McNulty in St. Joseph’s New Cathedral, and grew up in St. Mary of the Lake parish in Watkins Glen, NY, where he served as an altar boy. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in American History and European Literature from Eisenhower College in 1975.

He worked as an artist/illustrator for the Catholic News Service, as assistant editor of the Catholic Commentator in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where he met his wife Paulette, and then became “special projects editor” for the Canadian Catholic Register. In 1990, after 8 years as editor and photographer for Rocket Publications, he became news editor for The Wanderer. For over two decades, he reported on the state of the Catholic Church in the United States; his range of writings included little known aspects of American Catholic history, as well as lucid commentaries on just war ethics, social justice principles, and the theological and political abuse of the findings of psychology and sociology.

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PAUL LIKOUDIS: REST IN PEACE

NEW YORK
Church Militant

by Bradley Eli, M.Div., Ma.Th. • ChurchMilitant.com • September 26, 2016

One of the giants upon whose shoulders we at Church Militant stand

A faithful son of Holy Mother Church, Paul A. Likoudis went before Our Lord on September 22 as a result of his three-year battle with cancer. A brief obituary can be read here.

His body will be buried September 28 near his hometown of Caywood, New York, but his legacy of defending the Catholic faith, oftentimes against enemies from within the Church Herself, will live on in the many thousands he inspired by his writings and talks.

In praying for the repose of Likoudis’ soul, Michael Voris remarked that Paul was “truly a good man” and “a greatly beloved defender of the Faith.” Voris pointed out the influence that Likoudis had on his own apostolate. “He was very involved in the initial resistance to the rebellion in the Church, and is one of the giants upon whose shoulders we consider ourselves here at Church Militant standing.” …

He deserves praise for exposing Church corruption in the years prior to 2002, when the clergy sex abuse scandal exploded in the secular mainstream media.”

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Former Pearl River priest removed from ministry

NEW YORK
The Journal News

Colleen Wilson, cwilson2@lohud.com September 26, 2016

“This claim is another example of why the statute of limitations has to be amended so that victims of sexual abuse can try to heal,” said Mitchell Garabedian, lawyer for the accuser.

A former Pearl River priest and Westchester Catholic school leader accused of sexual abuse has been permanently removed from his ministry by the Archdiocese of New York, according to a lawyer for his alleged victim.

Monsignor John O’Keefe, who served for more than a decade as president at Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, had been suspended last year from St. Margaret of Antioch Parish in Pearl River after he was accused of sexually abusing a minor on two occasions — in New York and Virginia — more than three decades ago.

The announcement of O’Keefe’s status was made Sunday afternoon by New Jersey-based nonprofit Road to Recovery Inc., which helps victims of sexual abuse. It issued a joint press release with Mitchell Garabedian, the lawyer for the accuser, who said he had been informed of the action by a church official.

Joseph Zwilling, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York, said the archdiocese would not make public statements on the case until the process is completed, which includes bringing the matter to the Holy See, the headquarters of the Catholic Church in Vatican City.

But a church official confirmed to The Journal News that O’Keefe will never be permitted to function again as a priest.

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Child sex abuse bill opponent responds to new law

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | Post News Staff

As Catholic lay protestors hail the signing of Bill 326-33 into Public Law 33-187 as a moral victory, others in the community have not been so quick to embrace the new law.

Dr. Ricardo Eusebio, president of the lay organization “I Familan Mangatoliku Siha Pari Si Apuron,” or “Catholic Families for Apuron,” told the Post that members of the organization were disappointed at the enactment of the bill because it fails to fully address the injustice perpetrated against victims of child sex abuse.

The new law lifts the statute of limitations on civil lawsuits involving child sex abuse.

“You cannot repair an injustice by creating another injustice,” he said. “It specifically discriminates against private institutions and gives the government a free pass.”

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Opinion: Stronger accountability makes the church safer

UNITED STATES
Mennonite World Review

Sep 26, 2016 by Sylvia E. Shirk

A Mennonite conference took action this summer to make the church a safer space by enhancing the accountability of its credentialed leaders.

Atlantic Coast Conference of Mennonite Church USA, which includes 33 congregations in Pennsylvania and several other states, sent a letter to all its credentialed leaders informing them that each one needed to renew their ministry credential.

The letter stated: “Because the Credentialed Leaders Covenant and the Child Safety Affirmation Statement help ACC fulfill its legal obligation under Pennsylvania’s Child Protective Services Law, those out of compliance with this policy will have their credentials suspended effective July 9.”

The required forms included the Sexual Misconduct Policy, MC USA-ACC Code of Ethics and either the Credentialed Leaders Covenant or Child Safety Affirmation Statement.

In the end, all but four of the 75 credentialed leaders met the July 8 deadline. Of those whose credential was suspended, two have since completed the forms and reinstated their credential. Of the remaining two, one has not been active in ACC and the other has left the conference and would face the credentialing contractual requirements of any new network or conference.

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Ezzati defendió decisión del Vaticano de negar antecedentes sobre obispo Barros

CHILE
ADN 91.7

[Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati defended the Vatican’s decision to deny background information on Bishop Juan Barros that was requested by secular court authorities in Chile. He is accused of witnessing abuse of minors by priest Fernando Karadima but did nothing about it.]

El cardenal Ricardo Ezzati defendió la decisión del Vaticano de negar los antecedentes del obispo de Osorno, Juan Barros. Dichos antecedentes permitieron exculpar al religioso como encubridor de los abusos cometidos por Fernando Karadima.

“La Santa Sede contestó el segundo exhorto y en ese segundo exhorto presentaba algunas objeciones, entre ellas, la fundamentación del exhorto y de acuerdo a la legislación internacional y de la legislación del Vaticano la Santa Sede comunicó en un comunicado verbal el día primero de abril de este año que eso no tenía curso”, dijo Ezzati.

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Mending Fences

UNITED STATES
The Good Men Project

I’ve always been intrigued by the different choices people make, while working to restore good boundaries in their life after an experience of abuse. Whether it’s re-establishing the broken boundary with the abusive person, or finding a safe way to relate to others, the memory of betrayed trust can complicate decisions about how to maintain safety.

When I think about my own relationship to personal boundaries, I’m often reminded of the iconic phrase, “good fences make good neighbors.” I learned the line from Robert Frost’s poem Mending Wall, first published 100 years ago, in 1914. The poem describes an annual spring ritual of two neighbors, together restoring the winter damage to an ancient stone wall between their abutting properties.

The narrator complains of the tedious, hard work involved every year, and notes that neither of them even has livestock that would require a solid fence line. His neighbor just patiently repeats the phrase, ‘’Good fences make good neighbors.”

My own healing process and my work with abused kids and violent adults inclines me to see a lot of wisdom in the neighbor’s approach. Without engaging in an argument or accusing the narrator of bad intention or being a potential “trespasser,” he respectfully insists on the firm limit he wants to live by. He does it even using the same sentence, setting a goal of being good neighbors!

But what’s a good fence?

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MEDIA RELEASE – SEPTEMBER 25, 2016

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

MONSIGNOR JOHN J. O’KEEFE PERMANENTLY REMOVED FROM MINISTRY IN THE ARCHDIOCESE OF NEW YORK BECAUSE OF CREDIBLE CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE CLAIMS

Monsignor John J. O’Keefe, suspended Pastor of St. Margaret of Antioch Parish in Pearl River, New York, former Principal of Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, New York, former teacher and guidance counselor at Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx, New York, and former parish priest of Christ the King Parish in the Bronx, New York, has been removed permanently from serving as a priest by Cardinal Timothy Dolan because of credible childhood sexual abuse claims

One childhood sexual abuse victim of Monsignor John J. O’Keefe was sexually abused in two locations on separate occasions:

1) In a hotel room in Virginia during a Cardinal Hayes High School trip to Washington, DC, to visit with a Hispanic Congressman and tour the nation’s Capital, in the 1980s; and,

2) At the Irish Christian Brothers’ novitiate retreat house, Santa Maria, in Esopus (West Park), New York, during a “Cardinal’s Leadership Program” training weekend for Hispanic youth when he was a student at Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx, New York, in the 1980s

Why has Cardinal Timothy Dolan NOT announced that Monsignor John J. O’Keefe has been removed permanently from ministry as a priest of the Archdiocese of New York, and why has Cardinal Dolan not announced that the sexual abuse case against Monsignor John J. O’Keefe has or has not been sent to the Vatican for Monsignor O’Keefe’s removal from the priesthood?

What
A press conference announcing the permanent removal from priestly ministry of Monsignor John J. O’Keefe, a well-known priest of the Archdiocese of New York, who has spent decades in ministry to children in schools and parishes, and as Director of the “Cardinal’s Leadership Program” for Hispanic youth

When
Monday, September 26, 2016 at Noon

Where
On the public sidewalk in front of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Fifth Avenue and East 50th Street, Manhattan

Who
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families

Why
“John Doe” met then Father John J. O’Keefe at Christ the King Parish in the Bronx in approximately 1975 when he was a minor child and a parishioner of Christ the King Parish. He did simple jobs in the rectory and was an altar boy. Father John J. O’Keefe then became a teacher and guidance counselor at a nearby Bronx high school, Cardinal Hayes High School, where “John Doe” attended high school. When “John Doe” was approximately 15-17 years old and a student at Cardinal Hayes High School, he was sexually abused by Father John J. O’Keefe during two school-sponsored events. “John Doe” was invited to accompany Monsignor John J. O’Keefe and a group of Cardinal Hayes High School students on a school trip to the Washington, DC area, where Monsignor John J. O’Keefe sexually abused “John Doe” in a hotel room in Virginia. Sometime later, as Director of the “Cardinal’s Leadership Program” for Hispanic youth, Father John J. O’Keefe, who was rewarded with the title “Monsignor” by the Cardinal Archbishop of New York, sexually abused “John Doe” during a leadership training weekend at the novitiate retreat house of the Irish Christian Brothers, Santa Maria, in Ulster County, New York. “John Doe” suffered significant damages as a result of the sexual abuse by Monsignor John J. O’Keefe, including dropping out of Fordham University, because of the effects of the sexual abuse.

It will be demanded on behalf of “John Doe” and the other childhood sexual abuse victims of Monsignor John J. O’Keefe that Cardinal Timothy Dolan:

1) Investigate the “Cardinal’s Leadership Program” for Hispanic youth, reach out to those Hispanic young men who were part of that program and may have been sexually abused, and provide the necessary resources to help those men heal;

2) Announce publicly that Monsignor John J. O’Keefe has been removed from priestly ministry permanently and that he will be monitored on a full-time basis; and,

3) Confirm that the Vatican has received the sexual abuse file of Monsignor John J. O’Keefe so he may be removed from the priesthood.

“The secrecy of the Archdiocese of New York surrounding the sexual abuse of an innocent child by Monsignor John J. O’Keefe is another example of why statute of limitations laws must be changed to help sexual abuse victims heal and to protect innocent children.” – Attorney Mitchell Garabedian

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D. – Road to Recovery, Inc., 862-368-2800 – roberthoatson@gmail.com
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian – Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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Catholic church needs better way to select bishops

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Robert Mickens | Sep. 26, 2016 A Roman Observer

Pope Francis really believes there is a serious lack of quality among priests and bishops in the Catholic church. Otherwise, he would not talk so often about the negative traits of certain men in ordained ministry, as he’s done again several times in recent days.

“The world is tired of lying charmers and — allow me say — of ‘fashionable’ priests or ‘fashionable’ bishops,” the pope said on Sept. 16 to a group of 94 bishops consecrated in the last two years for dioceses in mission territories.

“The people ‘scent’ — the People of God have God’s ‘scent’ — the people can ‘scent’ and they withdraw when they recognize narcissists, manipulators, defenders of personal causes and standard bearers of worthless crusades,” the pope warned the so-called “baby bishops,” who were in Rome for a training seminar.

He also cautioned them about too easily accepting seminarians or incardinating already ordained priests into their dioceses.

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Reminder to register for private sessions by 30 September

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

26 September, 2016

Survivors of institutional child sexual abuse are reminded that they must register with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse by Friday 30 September 2016 if they wish to have a private session.

Private sessions give survivors of child sexual abuse in an institution the ability to share their story directly with a Commissioner in a private setting.

The Royal Commission has now held almost 6,000 private sessions and it expects to have held more than 7000 private sessions by the time it completes its work at the end of next year.

In April this year, the Royal Commission announced it would close registrations for private sessions on 30 September due to the strong demand from survivors to share their story, which resulted in a queue of people waiting to meet with a Commissioner.

The Hon Justice Peter McClellan AM, Chair of the Royal Commission, said that unless applications were closed off well before the final report was completed, many people seeking a private session would be disappointed.

He said that it would be ‘intolerable for a survivor to be accepted for a private session only to find we could not meet with them.’

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Lev Tahor sect in Guatemala resettles, claiming harassment

GUATEMALA
Times of Israel

A community of ultra-Orthodox Jews living outside Guatemala’s capital moved out Sunday, claiming persecution because of their faith.

The 500-strong group hails from the United States, Israel, Canada, several European countries, Mexico and El Salvador.

The leader of the Lev Tahor community, the US rabbi Uriel Goldman, said his people are moving to a village in eastern Guatemala because of harassment including a raid of the group’s buildings on September 13 on the outskirts of the capital.

Guatemalan authorities said that search was carried out at the request of Israeli authorities to search for a girl who was barred from leaving Israel.

The raid was also aimed at investigating allegations of child abuse, the Guatemalan authorities said. The community includes some 150 minors.

“We cannot take any more,” said Goldman. “We are going to start over.”

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El enojo de los osorninos tras la posible visita del Papa a Chile

CHILE
El Vaca Nudo

[There is not a lot of joy in Osorno after announcement that Pope Francis possibly will visit Chile next year as part of a tour of several South American country. This is because all still remember how the pope supported Bishop Juan Barros after he was accused to covering up the sexual offensesof priest Fernando Keradima. Recall that in the video that was widely disseminated, the pope himself said that the people of Osorno are “silly” in not believing Barros who has denied the allegation against him.]

Alegría es lo menos que hay en Osorno luego del anuncio del Papa Francisco que dijo que posiblemente visitará Chile el próximo año en el marco de una gira por algunos países sudamericanos.

Esto, porque todos aún recuerdan cómo el Sumo Pontífice apoyó al obispo Juan Barros luego de que éste fuese acusado de encubrir los delitos sexuales de Fernando Karadima.

Precisamente el día miércoles, cuando se anunció su posible visita, El Vaticano se negó a entregar antecedentes sobre la defensa que hizo Francisco I.

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Victims celebrate passage of Bill 326, but say they’re far from done

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Sep 26, 2016

By Krystal Paco

It’s a law that opposers have said could potentially bankrupt the local Catholic Church. While others say it’s a step toward healing for victims of child sexual abuse. Late Friday afternoon, Governor Eddie Calvo put pen to paper and signed the highly-controversial Bill 326 into law. While the church braces for doomsday, survivors celebrate.

Survivors of child sexual abuse, the time is now. “We want justice,” stated Roland Sondia, adding, “and we think this is the opportunity now.” Sondia and others who have publicly accused clergy men of child molestation can finally get their day in court. “I’m very happy that the governor signed it. By doing that that, he just made the island a much safer place for our children,” he shared.

Governor Eddie Calvo shared the same sentiment in his weekly address, in which he said, “I hope that we can now move forward and begin the process of healing. I ask everyone to pray for our island’s victims – of this most heinous crime, most especially the vulnerable of our community, our children.”

The Archdiocese of Agana meanwhile is preparing for the new law’s potentially crippling consequences, including bankruptcy, school closures, and an end to the church’s community services for the less fortunate. Days before Calvo took action on the legislation, the church circulated a petition to block the bill. Over 4,500 signatures were submitted to the Governor’s Office to veto the measure. The church offered assurance that a trust fund was being established for victims of sex abuse by church clergy.

Delegate to the administrator Father Jeff San Nicolas said, “Our archdiocese did not want to cause division and we are thankful for those who spoke up and expressed themselves and we will work cooperatively and fully with the process that justice is served and we want to meet the needs of whatever we can as a church to help that process of justice take place. And thank for all those who have made this bill, made the will of the people very clear and we’re cooperative with that.”

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September 25, 2016

Protesting Catholics call Archbishop Hon “a failure”

GUAM
KUAM

By Jason Salas

Members of the Concerned Catholics of Guam and the Laity Forward Movement continue to their weekly picket line on the steps for the Hagatna Cathedral Sunday morning. Messages on their signs have changed slightly — now calling Apostolic Administrator Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai a failure and demanding he go home to Rome.

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Opinion: It’s time for Guam’s second great awakening

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Steven Castro McManus September 24, 2016

The long and arduous “mumon linahyan” that has engulfed Guam’s community for a number of years is echoing schisms of another era in history – 1517 to be exact and seems to be resulting in the same kind of reformation that followed. Pope Leo X’s corruption that exploited the faithful seem to have been reborn today in the person of one Archbishop Anthony Apuron. Unfortunately, the people of Guam have been suffering at the hands of this kind of colonial screw balling since Magellan “discovered” Guam in March 1521 and perhaps the passage of Bill 326 is the beginning of a new era.

Leo’s pattern of abuse served only to alienate indigenous peoples and drive them into the arms of another genus of Christianity. The radical ideas of Martin Luther was not just spiritual; it was nationalist in nature. German sentiment against the powerful Italian Medici was fertile soil for a reformation that would give them their own Christianity – thus the Lutheran Church was born. The Scots would get their Presbyterian Church, the English, their Anglican Church and the American colonists their Methodist and Baptist churches. And in each case, better systems of governments ensued.

Is it a coincidence that Guam’s religious rumblings are occurring simultaneously with the islands growing movement toward decolonization? Massachusetts outcast and Rhode Island founder Roger Williams probably wouldn’t think so. His Christian zeal for a better church in 1636 also fashioned a more democratic state that would inform the ideals of the U.S. Constitution more than a hundred years later.

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Church protest grows

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | Post News Staff

About 150 Catholic activists – the most so far – turned out yesterday morning for the weekly protests held outside the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica in Hagåtña. Stretching to the driveways on both ends of the walkway in front of the cathedral, protestors were stalled at multiple segments of the picket line as they adjusted to the unprecedented turnout.

The reason

Taking part were members of Silent No More, Concerned Catholics of Guam and the Laity Forward Movement – the three lay organizations that have organized the major protests concerning the allegations of child sex abuse against members of the clergy, the property dispute over the Redemptoris Mater Seminary and the call for the laicization of Archbishop Anthony Apuron. In addition, yesterday’s picket line included parishioners from the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Toto.

Picket organizers said the Toto parishioners took part as a show of support for their pastor, Rev. Mike Crisostomo. Crisostomo had recently been reprimanded by Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, the apostolic administrator to the Archdiocese of Agana.

“We stand in solidarity behind our parish priest,” said John Taitano, member of the Toto parish council. “We are here to support him.”

According to sources, Crisostomo attended a meeting of the Presbyteral Council of the Archdiocese where Hon is said to have singled him out and accused him of disobedience in the presence of other council members.

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An einem verfluchten Ort

AUSTRALIEN
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[In the Australian city of Ballarat. abused priests and teachers abused children for years. To this day, many people refuse to see the truth in the eye.]

on TILL FÄHNDERS, BALLARAT

Das australische Städtchen Ballarat ist auf Gold gebaut. Abenteurer, die auf der Suche nach schnellem Reichtum gekommen waren, hatten die Ortschaft Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts gegründet. Die gewaltigen Vorkommen im Buschland nördlich von Melbourne führten damals zu einem fiebrigen Goldrausch. Bis heute zeugen die verschnörkelten Fassaden aus der Zeit der britischen Königin Viktoria von diesem Reichtum. Ein bewaffneter Aufstand in Ballarat im Jahr 1854, mit dem Goldsucher sich mehr Rechte sichern wollten, wird sogar als Ursprung der australischen Demokratie gesehen. Man ist hier stolz auf diese Geschichte.

Jedoch liegt ein anderer Teil ihrer Vergangenheit wie ein dunkler Schatten über der ehemaligen Goldgräbersiedlung im Bundesstaat Victoria. In Ballarat fand einer der schlimmsten sexuellen Missbrauchsskandale in der Geschichte Australiens und der katholischen Kirche statt. Über Jahre hinweg hatten sich Priester, Mönche, Ordensleute, Lehrer und von der Kirche beschäftigte Laien an Minderjährigen vergangen.

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PERUGIA: “Don Lucio Gatti ha abusato di me. Avevo 13 anni”

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[A 20-year-old man has gone to police and accused priest Lucio Gatti of abusing her when he was age 13.]

E l’agghiacciante racconto di un ragazzo oggi 20enne, ai carabinieri, ai quali racconta le presunte violenze psicologiche e sessuali che avrebbe subito da don Lucio Gatti quando aveva 13 anni, quando i servizi sociali lo portarono via di casa per affidarlo ad una delle comunità gestite da don Lucio, il centro Caritas di San Fatucchio.

La querela risale allo scorso aprile quando il ragazzo che stavamo da tempo seguendo ha trovato il coraggio di denunciare i presunti abusi.

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Esplora il significato del termine: «Don Angelo mi ha violentato a 9 anni», nuovo testimone contro il parroco bresciano«Don Angelo mi ha violentato a 9 anni», nuovo testimone contro il parroco bresciano

ITALIAS
Corriere della Sera

“Don Angelo raped me in nine years,” said a new witness against priest Angelo Blanchetti from Brescia.]

di Mara Rodella

Impresse nero su bianco sulla pagina virtuale. Chiare, inequivocabili. E riconducibili a un nome e un cognome. Digitate d’impeto – ma non per questo senza sofferenza o dopo una riflessione attenta sulle conseguenze – davanti all’ennesima «difesa» di chi, di quel sacerdote, si è sempre fidato. E che alle accuse non ci crede.

Ma «io sono ancora in cura, da anni. Ne avevo nove quando ho subito gli abusi da lui, adesso ne ho 35». Lo ha scritto su Facebook un giovane camuno, mettendoci la faccia. O meglio, il suo profilo. Quello vero. E «lui» è don Angelo Blanchetti, 55 anni, parroco di Corna di Darfo e di Bessimo, agli arresti domiciliari da martedì con l’accusa di violenza sessuale su minore: un ragazzino che ha compiuto 14 anni in aprile ha trovato il coraggio di confidare a un pastore milanese prima e agli inquirenti coordinati dal pm Ambrogio Cassiani poi, gli abusi che avrebbe subito per circa due anni

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Mgr di Falco de nouveau assigné au civil pour un viol prescrit

FRANCE
Liberation

Par Bernadette Sauvaget — 23 septembre 2016

Mgr di Falco de nouveau assigné au civil pour un viol prescrit

Quatorze ans après avoir été classée sans suite à cause de la prescription des faits, l’affaire mettant en cause Mgr Jean-Michel di Falco, l’actuel évêque de Gap, ressurgit. Accusant le prélat de l’avoir violé et abusé sexuellement au début des années 70, «Marc» (un prénom d’emprunt), la victime présumée, a entamé selon son avocat Jean-Baptiste Moquet une procédure au civil pour obtenir réparation du préjudice subi et réclamer des dommages et intérêts. Une démarche courante dans les pays anglo-saxons. «Nous avons épuisé toutes les autres procédures judiciaires», explique, à Libération l’avocat de Marc. Personnalité très médiatique, Mgr di Falco, un proche de Bernadette Chirac et de l’homme d’affaires François Pinault, a toujours nié les faits. En 2003, le prélat, promis à un brillant avenir, avait été nommé dans un petit diocèse peu prestigieux, celui de Gap (Hautes-Alpes). Di Falco est récemment revenu sur le devant de la scène grâce au succès du groupe de chanteurs qu’il a créé, les Prêtres.

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NDR-Missbrauchskampagne gegen die Kirche – 2015 wie 2010 – medienethisches Versagen ARD (10)

DEUTSCHLAND
katholisches

In einer beispiellosen Kampagne im Sinne von Schwarmjournalismus hatten die Medien im Frühjahr 2010 die Kirche wegen Missbrauchsvorfällen an den Pranger gestellt. Damit verbreiteten sie in der Bevölkerung die absurd irrige Meinung, Kindesmissbrauch sei unter Priestern in der katholischen Kirche weit verbreitet. So lautete damals der Vorhalt des Allensbach-Instituts, dem 47 Prozent der Befragten zustimmte. Fünf Jahre nach dem rufschädigenden Kampagnen-Journalismus, an dem sich auch der NDR beteiligte, schlägt der Sender mit einem neuen Filmbericht in die gleiche Kerbe.

Ein Gastbeitrag von Hubert Hecker.

Im Jahre 2011 hatte das Kriminologische Forschungsinstitut Niedersachsen in einer repräsentativen Studie 11.428 Personen zwischen 16 und 40 Jahren nach Missbrauchserfahrungen befragt. Daraus ergab sich, dass 683 Personen (knapp sechs Prozent der Befragten) vor dem 16. Lebensjahr mindestens einmal Opfer von Missbrauch geworden waren. Bei mehr als drei Viertel der den Opfern „bekannten“ Missbrauchstätern mit Körperkontakt (473 Betroffene) handelt es sich um männliche Täter aus dem engen Familienkreis oder aus dem Umfeld der Eltern. Zugeordnet nach gesellschaftlichen Bereichen kamen fast einhundert Missbrauchstäter bezüglich aller Sexualdelikte aus dem Schulbereich, jeweils um die vierzig aus dem Freizeit/Sportbereich sowie dem Heim- und Pflegekontext. Von den elftausend Befragten gab eine Person an, von einem katholischen Priester missbraucht worden zu sein.

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