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 9, 2016

Legio Maria pope denies eloping with married woman

KENYA
SDE

By Kevin Ogutu | Friday, Sep 9th 2016

Pope Romanus Ongombe of the Legion Maria sect has denied allegations from one of the sect’s cardinals that he eloped with a married woman.

Cardinal Samson Arogo, the Head of Administration of the church headquartered at Got Kwer, Migori County, claimed that his pope eloped with three women.

Pope Ongombe denied the allegations, explaining that, “I have moved up the ranks from a padre, to bishop then cardinal, and now I am the pope. Everyone knows that I never engaged in such conducts. I am a pope installed by God.”

He said that the women he is said to have eloped with were brought to Got Kwer by God as well-wishers to help the church finish constructing the tomb of the sect’s founder, Messiah Melkio Ondeto, who died 26 years ago.

“To those peddling such propaganda, be assured that I will not tolerate idle talk next time. You will face God, not me,” warned the ‘pope,’ adding that the said woman will accomplish her mission, because several harambees that were held in the past did not accomplish much, and that there were even allegations of embezzlement.

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.

Some victims may boycott the troubled sex abuse inquiry. What has gone wrong?

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Eric Allison and Simon Hattenstone
Thursday 8 September 2016

Even the fiercest critic of Dame Lowell Goddard must admit she’s got a point. Earlier this week, Goddard revealed why she resigned last month as chair of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse. She sent a 10-page critique of the setup of the inquiry to the home affairs select committee, saying it was too big, took in too many institutions (church, councils, schools, Westminster, Medomsley detention centre – to name but a few of its 13 strands), was too complex, went back too far (60 years), would take too long (possibly 10 years), and was underfunded.

Many commentators have been too busy sniping at the New Zealand judge’s annual financial package of £500,000, her apparent failure to grasp key legal issues, the amount of time she has spent overseas in the past year, and the lack of progress, to acknowledge the one crucial fact: Goddard is right.

It was to widespread approval that Theresa May, then home secretary, announced the launch of the public inquiry in 2014. But what a mess it has been. Its remit was to investigate whether public bodies and other non-state institutions have taken seriously their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse in England and Wales. In other words, pretty much all child sex abuse that has or might have occurred over the past 60 years. It was a remit so broad as to make success impossible.

In her memo this week Goddard wrote: “I have recommended in my report to the home secretary that my departure provides a timely opportunity to undertake a complete review of the inquiry in its present form, with a view to remodelling it and recalibrating its emphasis more towards current events and thus focusing major attention on the present and future protection of children.”

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

Hundreds of alleged abuse victims threaten to boycott Jay inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Thursday 8 September 2016

An independent inquiry into the sexual abuse of children has been dealt another blow after hundreds of alleged victims of abuse threatened to boycott it.

Former inmates at Medomsley detention centre in Consett, County Durham, where abuser Neville Husband preyed on children and young adults over a 15-year period from the late 1960s onwards, have written to their lawyers stating that they want to withdraw from the inquiry after learning that it will not hear evidence from people who were aged 18 or over at the time they were abused.

The inquiry has been beset by problems. This week Dame Lowell Goddard, the third chair to resign, sent a 10-page critique of its setup to the home affairs select committee, calling for a complete review and remodelling to focus it “more towards current events and thus focusing major attention on the present and future protection of children”. She said the scope of the inquiry, including every state and non-state institution, meant that “the terms of reference in their totality cannot be met”.

On Wednesday the inquiry was further undermined when another group of victims, Shirley Oaks Survivors Association, threatened to pull out after suggesting that the independence of the inquiry had been undermined by the fact that the new chair, Prof Alexis Jay, had spent 30 years working in social services.

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

Child abuse inquiry is independent, insists chief

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill, Chief Reporter
September 9 2016
The Times

Almost a quarter of staff of the national child abuse inquiry have been recruited from the Home Office, its chairwoman disclosed yesterday, as she tried to allay fears that the body was not independent of the government.

Alexis Jay said that the 155 staff at the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) were “bound together by a commitment to make this inquiry a success”. She added: “Their duty and loyalty is to the inquiry, not to any government department.”

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.

Nationwide child abuse probe will not be scaled back, promises inquiry’s new chairwoman

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sun

BY PATRICK GYSIN 9th September 2016

THE new head of the nationwide child sex abuse inquiry has said the probe will not be scaled back.

Professor Alexis Jay, 67, admitted it was a “substantial challenge” but added she would not seek to revise nor reduce the terms of reference.

Last month, Dame Lowell Goddard, also 67, became the third chairwoman to quit the inquiry, which has been plagued with problems since it launched in 2014.

The former chairwoman told a judge this week that there should be a “complete review” into the probe, adding there was a problem with its scale and size.

One survivors’ group has said it may pull out of the inquiry because it does not believe it is “truly independent”, citing concerns about the involvement of the Home Office.

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.

Youth minister “groomed” victim for years, prosecutors say

MARYLAND
WUSA

Scott Broom, WUSA September 08, 2016

ROCKVILLE, MD (WUSA9) – The youth minister of a well-known Rockville church spent at least two years grooming a girl for eventual sexual abuse, Montgomery County prosecutors said Thursday.

Brian Patrick Werth, 32, was ordered held on $300,000 bail after his first court appearance in the case.

“There was an extended period of grooming,” said Assistant State’s Attorney Hannah Gleason. “He’s a danger to this juvenile and to the community.”

Werth’s relationship with a 16-year old girl he is accused of sexually abusing goes back to middle school prosecutors said.

Werth is accused of meeting the girl in a private area of the St. Elizabeth’s Catholic Church on Montrose Road in Rockville the night of May 20th during a youth ministry “lock-in” overnight event.

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.

‘Extremely delusional’ North Olmsted youth pastor sentenced for sexual relationship with teen

OHIO
Plain Dealer

By Adam Ferrise, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — A North Olmsted youth pastor will spend a decade in prison for carrying on a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old member of his church.

Brian Mitchell, 31, sat Thursday with his brow furrowed for most of the 90-minute hearing where Cuyahoga County Judge Patrick Corrigan sentenced him to 10 years in prison.

Mitchell — a husband and father of three children under the age of 8— was the youth pastor at Columbia Road Baptist Church in North Olmsted when he met the victim.

He pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual battery.

“I’m so sorry to (the) family,” Mitchell said. “I can’t imagine the work and effort you’ve had to put into fixing your family.”

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.

Ohio church ordered teen to apologize to youth pastor’s wife after he raped her, mom says

OHIO
Raw Story

TRAVIS GETTYS
08 SEP 2016

An Ohio judge sentenced a “delusional” former youth pastor to 10 years in prison for sexually abusing a teenage member of the church where he served as a volunteer.

Brian Mitchell pleaded guilty Thursday to four counts of sexual battery, and a Cuyahoga County judge rejected his attorney’s recommendation for house arrest but did not impose the maximum 20-year prison term, reported the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

The 31-year-old Mitchell, a father of three children under age 8, began sending text messages to the victim, then 16 years old, that quickly turned to complaints about his marriage.

The girl, who told the judge in a letter that she had sought spiritual guidance from Mitchell, said she was afraid to ask the volunteer to stop sending the texts because he was a respected and powerful member of Columbia Road Baptist Church in North Olmsted.

Church leaders heard from a congregant about the texts, which stopped for awhile, but Mitchell eventually resumed his messages and then kissed her after driving the girl home in August 2015.

The next time he drove her home, she said, he began sexually abusing her, and the abuse continued for another month.

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.

A Kilkenny solicitors’ office is looking for victims of abuse at St Mary’s Cathedral to come forward

IRELAND
KCLR

By Mary Ann Vaughan

A local solicitors’ office is looking into claims of sexual abuse at St Mary’s Cathedral in Kilkenny.

Smithwick Solicitors are urging anyone who may have either suffered abuse or have information about abuse there between 1970 and ’74 to contact them.

According to an article in the Kilkenny People, Joe Fitzpatrick from the Smithwick’s office says it was not a member of the clergy and a number of people have already come forward.

However, the article states they’re looking to hear from others that they believe are out there.

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.

How can Catholic church officials sleep at night? (column)

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Jeffrey Blum September 8, 2016

Bishop Ronald Gainer recently submitted a letter to the newspaper stating that his “heart aches” for victims of sexual abuse. He apologizes “for the harm that has been inflicted on them.”

All well and good, Bishop Gainer. However, may we remind you that reconciliation is not as simple as saying you are sorry? It is also promising not to sin again by totally righting the wrong, not just partially.

Do your faithful Catholics contributing to the Sunday collection realize that a significant amount of their donation is taxed by your office and spent to fund the Catholic Conference? The title sounds like an organization dedicated to doing good works: feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, not protecting pedophiles!

Do the faithful realize that dollars were spent on lobbying and lawyers to sway the Senate into stripping House Bill 1947, a bill that had been overwhelmingly passed by the House, to give voice to victims of sexual violation?

Do the faithful realize that this action gives a free pass to the 95 percent of sexual predators who are not members of the clergy? That it enables them to continue to violate a hundred thousand children?

Do they even hear the word “violate” in your toothless apologies? Abuse, rape, molestation are soft words. Shatter. Traumatize. Violate, Destroy. These words all more appropriately describe what happens to an innocent victim of sexual violence.

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.

Ottawa says Ontario judge’s ruling on botched rape case threatens ‘integrity’ of residential school settlement: court document

CANADA
APTN

September 8, 2016

Jorge Barrera
APTN National News

The federal government says an Ontario judge’s ruling which eviscerated the handling of a residential school rape case threatens the multi-billion dollar Indian residential school settlement agreement, according to court documents filed Wednesday.

Ontario Superior court Justice Paul Perell ordered Ottawa this past July to enter into compensation negotiations with a man who was raped as a boy by a priest at the Spanish Boys Indian residential school which was located near Spanish, Ont. Perell ruled the officials tasked with determining the legitimacy of claims and compensation levels under the settlement agreement’s Independent Assessment Process (IAP) botched the case.

Ottawa appealed the decision and in a document filed Wednesday argued Perell’s ruling overreached in its decision to accept the claim and oversee the setting of the compensation level instead of sending it back to the IAP for a rehearing.

“At issue are the finality and integrity of the IAP and IRSSA (Indian residential school settlement agreement),” said Ottawa’s appeal factum, which was filed with the Ontario Court of Appeal by Catherine Coughlan on behalf of the deputy Attorney General of Canada William Pentney.

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

Former Priest Accused of Sexual Abuse

ARKANSAS
Arkansas Matters

LITTLE ROCK,Ark.–According to the Arkansas Times, a letter from Bishop Anthony Taylor said that the diocese found at least two cases of sexual abuse several years ago by a former priest.

Robert “Bob” Torres, was accused by someone who said he had been abused when he was a child.

A family member of the person contacted the Diocese of Little Rock and a report was made to the Department of Human Services.

The following letter was issued to the Diocese of Little Rock about Torres on September 4 by Bishop Anthony Taylor:

“Last month, the Diocesan Review Board and I met with and listened to someone who had been the victim of clergy sexual abuse as a youth in our diocese. We earlier had been contacted by a concerned family member and at that time ensured that a report was made to the Arkansas Department of Human Services, and then began conducting our investigation. In the course of our investigation, we also established a second victim, and we immediately offered assistance to these two known victims and their family members. This abuse occurred over 35 years ago, and at that time both victims were members of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Little Rock.

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.

Bishop acknowledges sexual abuse by former priest in Diocese of Little Rock

ARKANSAS
KATV

LITTLE ROCK (KATV) — A Catholic Bishop has acknowledge that a former priest in the Diocese of Little Rock sexually abused at least two victims more than 35 years ago.

In a letter to the Diocese of Little Rock, Bishop Anthony Taylor revealed that Robert Torres, who is a former priest who served in the Diocese of Little Rock from 1966 to 1994, was found to have sexually abused at least two children. Torres also admitted to sexually abusing “at least two or three other young people.”

In the letter, Taylor said that this happened more than 35 years ago to members of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Little Rock.

Torres’ assignments and/or places of residence included the following: Ashdown and Hope (St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and Our Lady of Good Hope); Little Rock (Cathedral of St. Andrew; Catholic High School; Christ the King; Good Counsel; St. Theresa); Malvern and Arkadelphia (St. John and St. Mary); North Little Rock (St. Mary and Immaculate Conception); and Paragould (St. Mary)

Here is the full letter from Bishop Taylor from www.arkansas-catholic.org:

Last month, the Diocesan Review Board and I met with and listened to someone who had been the victim of clergy sexual abuse as a youth in our diocese. We earlier had been contacted by a concerned family member and at that time ensured that a report was made to the Arkansas Department of Human Services, and then began conducting our investigation. In the course of our investigation, we also established a second victim, and we immediately offered assistance to these two known victims and their family members.

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.

The Royal Commission has heard a litany of “no recollections” during testimony at Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

THE bishops and brothers have had a hard time of it.

At royal commission public hearings in Newcastle over the past month, senior Anglican and Catholic clergymen have struggled with their memories, stumbled over words, made concessions after documents have been produced and, on occasion, been forced to say they’ve not told the truth about their responses to child sexual abuse allegations.

They have “not recalled” a lot.

One of the Australian Anglican Church’s most senior clerics, Perth Archbishop Roger Herft, did not recall receiving serious child sex allegations about the now defrocked former Dean of Newcastle, Graeme Lawrence, in 1995, 1997 and 1999 from three separate sources, including another bishop and a priest, or of speaking to Lawrence on those three occasions and accepting his denials.

“Are you seriously suggesting to the commission that you have no recollection of raising an extraordinarily serious allegation with one of the most senior priests in the diocese?” said counsel assisting the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Naomi Sharp, on August 12, before the archbishop was shown a letter, written by him in 1995 to one of the complainants, confirming the allegation and his subsequent acceptance of Lawrence’s denial.

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.

September 8, 2016

Abuse Inquiry Chair Rejects Call For ‘Complete Review’

UNITED KINGDOM
Sky News

The Chair of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse has insisted its remit can be met, despite criticism from one of her predecessors and a survivors’ group.

Professor Alexis Jay is the fourth person to lead the inquiry after Dame Lowell Goddard quit last month.

It was set up in 2014 amid claims of an establishment cover-up following allegations that a paedophile ring operated in Westminster in the 1980s.

In a memo seen by The Times earlier this week, Dame Lowell said the inquiry was too ambitious, and called for a “complete review”.

The New Zealand High Court judge said there was an “inherent problem” in its “sheer scale and size”.

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

Diocese reports sexual abuse by ex-priest

ARKANSAS
Roman Catholic Diocese of Little Rock

Bishop Anthony B. Taylor issued the following letter, Sept. 4, 2016, to the people of the Diocese of Little Rock about former priest Robert “Bob” Torres.

“Last month, the Diocesan Review Board and I met with and listened to someone who had been the victim of clergy sexual abuse as a youth in our diocese. We earlier had been contacted by a concerned family member and at that time ensured that a report was made to the Arkansas Department of Human Services, and then began conducting our investigation. In the course of our investigation, we also established a second victim, and we immediately offered assistance to these two known victims and their family members. This abuse occurred over 35 years ago, and at that time both victims were members of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Little Rock. The abuser was Robert Torres, a now laicized former priest who served in the Diocese of Little Rock from 1966 to 1994. During that time, his assignments and/or places of residence included the following: Ashdown and Hope (St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and Our Lady of Good Hope); Little Rock (Cathedral of St. Andrew; Catholic High School; Christ the King; Good Counsel; St. Theresa); Malvern and Arkadelphia (St. John and St. Mary); North Little Rock (St. Mary and Immaculate Conception); and Paragould (St. Mary).

“Unfortunately, by Mr. Torres’s own admission and from the information we have been able to gather, it is evident that he likely sexually abused at least two or three other young people, whose names Mr. Torres no longer remembers and whom we have been unable to identify or locate. As best we can tell, the most recent of these acts would have been committed over 35 years ago, but I also know that his victims continue to suffer the damaging effects of his actions. Moreover, although we have received no substantiated allegations of offenses by any priests that were committed in recent years, I am deeply concerned for other possible victims of clergy sexual abuse from the decades prior to the 2002 Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People and the implementation of our Safe Environment policies shortly thereafter — victims to whom we need to offer whatever assistance we can provide. Accordingly, if you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual abuse by a priest or deacon, please know that you are not alone and that the Diocese of Little Rock stands ready to offer assistance. Please contact our victim assistance coordinators at (501) 766-6001 or Deacon Matthew Glover, chancellor for canonical affairs, at (501) 664-0340. Other than making any required reports to the civil authorities, your identity can remain confidential.”

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.

Little Rock Catholic diocese reports sexual abuse by former priest

ARKANSAS
Arkansas Online

By Brandon Riddle

CLARIFICATION
An earlier version of this article incorrectly described former priest Robert “Bob” Torres’ withdrawal from the Catholic church. According to terminology used in the church, Torres was laicized, or removed from status as a member of the clergy.

A now laicized former Catholic priest sexually abused at least two victims decades ago while in his role, the Diocese of Little Rock said in a statement released this week.

Bishop Anthony B. Taylor, who issued a letter Sunday to members of the diocese, said the abuse occurred more than 35 years ago involving Robert “Bob” Torres and members of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Little Rock.

Information was not released regarding the victims’ ages at the time, though one was described as a youth.

That letter was distributed Tuesday through the diocese’s newspaper, Arkansas Catholic, detailing that an investigation began after the diocese was contacted by a concerned family member. A report was made to the Arkansas Department of Human Services, and the Diocesan Review Board met last month with the victim.

Taylor said in the letter that over the course of the investigation, the diocese found evidence of a second victim, immediately offering assistance to both victims and their families.

“Unfortunately, by Mr. Torres’s own admission and from the information we have been able to gather, it is evident that he likely sexually abused at least two or three other young people, whose names Mr. Torres no longer remembers and whom we have been unable to identify or locate,” Taylor wrote.

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

Former Canaan Youth Pastor Enters Plea in Child Sex Abuse Case

MAINE
WABI

SEP 8, 2016

CATHERINE PEGRAM

A former youth pastor in Canaan accused of sexually abusing a young girl has pleaded not guilty.

27-year-old Lucas Savage, formerly of Clinton, is charged with unlawful sexual contact.

Savage was the director of ministries for the Youth Haven Ministry when he was arrested in March.

According to court documents, the abuse took place at his home, sometimes with his wife in the house.

Savage was indicted in July after the District Attorney says he rejected a plea deal.

Savage is free on bail.

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.

Irish priest: Sex abuse victims lost to suicide ‘could have been saved’

IRELAND
National Catholic Reporter

Sarah Mac Donald | Sep. 8, 2016

One of Ireland’s best known priests, who is one of six clerics in the Irish church censured by the Vatican in recent years, claimed that a number of women who were sexually abused by notorious pedophile Norbertine Fr. Brendan Smyth, later committed suicide because of their ordeal.

In an interview with the Irish magazine, Hot Press, popular BBC radio presenter Passionist Fr. Brian D’Arcy, says he personally knew “young women, who took their own lives because of what Brendan Smyth did to them.”

Criticizing the mentality of protecting the institution which dominated the church’s approach to child abuse in the past, D’Arcy suggested these women “could have been saved, if it [the abuse by Smyth] had been reported earlier.”

“They could have been saved from abuse, which often leads to suicide. Abuse is an entirely evil concept, with consequences,” he told the magazine. “The church was one major part of society that did not do what it should have done to prevent abuse. Society and the church are both learning, but we should never take anything for granted — abusers will find a way around the system to continue their evil ways.”

He was highly critical of Cardinal Sean Brady, the retired Primate of All Ireland, over his role as a 35-year-old priest in a canonical investigation into allegations of child abuse made by two teenage boys against Smyth in 1975.

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.

Joliet Priest Accused of Sexual Abuse Dead at 83

ILLINOIS
Patch

JOLIET, IL — A former Joliet priest accused of sexual abuse in 2010 has died.

Father Francis Lee Ryan passed away Friday, Sept. 2. He was a resident at Watseka at the time of his death, according to his obituary. He was 83.

The alleged sexual abuse began in the 1970s when the then 14-year-old boy was a student at Providence Catholic High School, according to a Chicago Tribune article. The abuse lasted more than a year.

When news of the abuse broke in 2010, Joliet Diocese Bishop Daniel Conlon originally removed Ryan from ministry. Two years later, Conlon reversed his decision to allow Ryan to do “limited religious work by ministering to homebound parishioners in Watseka and Crescent City.” Conlon again reversed this decision a week later.

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.

Ex-pope Benedict says he struggled to take decisions at Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Isla Binnie | VATICAN CITY

Former Pope Benedict has acknowledged he was a better professor than a leader, revealing in a new book that he sometimes struggled to take decisions during his time in charge of the scandal-plagued Vatican.

However, in a book-long interview, the German-born Benedict, who is now 89, said he did not regard his eight-year stint as head of the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics as a failure.

Benedict stepped down as pope in 2013, becoming the first pontiff in 600 years to resign, leaving behind a Church tainted with scandals and snarled by mismanagement.

In excerpts of the new book published on Thursday by Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, Benedict said he had not been comfortable in a leadership role. …

Benedict described difficult moments including scandals around child sex abuse by priests, which he was accused of not doing enough to stop, and over his lifting the excommunication of a Holocaust-denying bishop.

He also mentioned the “Vatileaks” case in which his butler leaked documents alleging corruption at the Vatican, but said overall there had been a “positive movement” during his papacy. …

A more unexpected anecdote emerged on Thursday when Seewald told German magazine Die Zeit that Benedict, found “serious” romance when he was a “good-looking young man”.

“One of his fellow students told me that he had an effect on women, and vice versa. The decision in favor of celibacy was not easy for him,” Seewald said.

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

Retired pope says governance wasn’t his gift, but Francis is good at it

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service
9.8.2016

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — While retired Pope Benedict XVI said organization and governance are not his strong suits, he also said, “I am unable to see myself as a failure.”

In a book-length interview with the German author Peter Seewald, Pope Benedict said that when he resigned he had the “peace of someone who had overcome difficulty” and “could tranquilly pass the helm to the one who came next.”

The new book, “Last Testament,” will be released in English by Bloomsbury in November. The German and Italian editions were set for release Sept. 9, but some excerpts were published Sept. 8 by the Italian daily newspaper Corriere della Sera.

Pope Benedict insisted once again that he was not pressured by anyone or any event to resign and he did not feel he was running away from any problem. …

Seewald also asked Pope Benedict about reports that during his pontificate there was a so-called “gay lobby” in the Curia and the group protected certain priests by threatening to blackmail others.

The retired pope replied that a commission of three cardinals he had named to investigate a major leak of reserved documents and conduct an administrative review of Vatican offices and procedures identified “a small group of four, perhaps five persons,” which a few Vatican officials and the media later would refer to as the “gay lobby.”

“We dissolved it,” Pope Benedict said.

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YDR priest abuse stories hurt the church (column)

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Anne Rohrbaugh September 8, 2016

What is the motivation of the York Daily Record in publishing these articles?

Being forewarned by one of the Catholic priests in York regarding the York Sunday News’ printing the articles concerning the “shadowed history” of the handling of the abuse by Catholic priests in the Harrisburg diocese, I read that article and the articles that followed it.

I am a Catholic woman and a survivor of sexual abuse as child – not by a priest but by more than one adult man in my family. I agree that this “sin” is one that leaves a person in much pain – emotionally, physically and spiritually. I also agree that it needs to be addressed and punished.

I wonder, though, what is the motivation of the York Daily Record in publishing these articles and giving so much space to them in your newspapers? I see the motivation as two-fold: The first and most important, in my estimation, is for you to sell newspapers. The second is for you to embarrass and try to bring down the Catholic Church.

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.

OUR VIEW: Pass bill to abolish time limit in child sex abuse cases

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

A presentation Thursday highlighted Guam residents’ support for a bill that would help child sexual abuse victims.

Sen. Frank Blas Jr. received petitions containing more than 3,000 signatures in favor of his bill that would lift civil statutes of limitations in child sexual abuse cases.

Members of Silent No More, the Concerned Catholics of Guam and the Laity Forward Movement attended the presentation of petitions for Bill No. 326-33 (COR) at the Guam Legislature in Hagåtña. Family members of people who alleged clergy sexual abuse also attended.

The bill was authored in May and was later strengthened to help victims sue individuals and institutions.

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3,000 signatures on petition to lift statute of limitations for child sex abuse

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Sep 08, 2016

By Krystal Paco

Members of the group Silent No More presented their petition to lawmakers on Thursday. According to founder Joseph Santos, the group collected 3,000 signatures in support of lifting the statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases, which is mirrored in Bill 326.

The bill was introduced amid allegations of molestation against Archbishop Anthony Apuron, as well as other members of clergy.

One of the alleged victims to come forward was Roland Sondia, who said, “For me and the other victims, we were traumatized for almost forty years by this darkness. We’ve kept a secret. I’m just glad that groups like the Concerned Catholics [of Guam], Silent No More, the Laity Forward Movement, that they were here to support us.

“And without them, I don’t think we would have had the courage to come out and share our stories.”

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

Retired pope offers final reflections on papacy, Francis

VATICAN CITY
News-Herald

KIRSTEN GRIESHABER and NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Retired Pope Benedict XVI has acknowledged that governing the church wasn’t his strong suit but says he doesn’t see his papacy as a failure and that he succeeded at least in breaking up the Vatican’s so-called “gay lobby.”

In a first-ever book by a retired pope reflecting on his papacy, Benedict also says he was shocked, and initially uncertain, about the election of Pope Francis as his successor. But he said he immediately realized the significance of electing a Latin American pope and has been very happy with Francis’ papacy.

Excerpts of the book, titled “The Last Conversations,” were published Thursday in Italian daily Corriere della Sera and German weekly Die Zeit and daily Bild. The book was prepared as a long interview with German journalist Peter Seewald, who has conducted several interviews with Benedict from the time he was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. …

In the excerpts, Benedict acknowledges the “difficult moments” of his papacy — the sex abuse scandal which reignited in 2010, the scandal over his exoneration of a Holocaust-denying bishop, and finally the leaks of his personal papers by his own butler.

“Practical governance is not a strong point, and this certainly is a weakness,” Benedict told Seewald. “But I don’t see myself as a failure. For eight years I did my service” and many people found a new path to their faith, he said.

One governance success was the dissolution of the so-called “gay lobby” in the Vatican, Benedict said.

The existence of this group of gay prelates — who purportedly used blackmail to promote and preserve their interests — has been mythologized in Italian media, particularly after Benedict named a commission of three cardinals to investigate the leaks of his papers in 2012.

Seewald asked if such a clique existed.

“Indeed a group was pointed out to me, in the meantime we have dissolved it,” Benedict said. “This was mentioned in the report by the commission (of three cardinals), who were able to nail down a small group of four or five people maybe, which we dissolved. I don’t know whether something new will form again. In any case, it’s not like there are things like this all over the place.”

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“Imagínese, un hombre de Dios, uno le tenía la confianza, abusó de los menores”

REPUBLICA DOMINICANA
Acento

[The father child allegedly raped by a Polish priest Alberto Gil in Juncalito recounted the anguish experienced by the families of the victims.]

Por Máximo Laureano. 7 de septiembre de 2016

Padre niño violado por sacerdote polaco en Juncalito narra la angustia que viven las familias de las víctimas y reclaman la compensación prometida por autoridades de Polonia

SANTIAGO, República Dominicana.-Ramón Arcadio Rodríguez, padre de uno de los niños abusados por el sacerdote de nacionalidad polaca, Wojciech Waldemar (padre Alberto Gil), denunció que aún están a la espera de la indemnización, para siete de los afectados, en el distrito municipal de Juncalito, comunidad de la Cordillera Central, en la provincia de Santiago.

El padre de un adolescente que fue víctima de los abusos del párroco de la comunidad, explicó que están en una situación que no saben que hacer, porque no tiene la orientación de las autoridades.

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Sacerdote pederasta encarcelado en la CDMX

MEXICO
La Opinion

[Priest Carlos Lopez Valdes is charged with sexual abuse and his trial is underway.]

POR: GARDENIA MENDOZA
07 SEPTIEMBRE 2016

MÉXICO – Después de 22 años del primer abuso sexual, Jesús Romero logró ver a su agresor tras las rejas: el sacerdote católico Carlos López Valdés, quien durante más de cuatro décadas alterno las misas, las palabras de Cristo y las escuchas de confesiones con presuntos ataques contra menores de edad.

Pero Jesús aún no está conforme: “El juicio apenas comienza”.

Y un proceso judicial frente a las autoridades judiciales mexicanas no es cualquier cosa: la mayoría de las veces es una revictimización. Bien lo sabe cualquier ciudadano y mucho más los abogados del Grupo de Acción por los Derechos Humanos y la Justicia Social, quienes llevaron el caso.

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PÉDOPHILIE: CINQ ANS DE PRISON REQUIS CONTRE UN PRÊTRE JÉSUITE ADEPTE DES “MASSAGES SENSUELS”

FRANCE
France Soir

[The prosecution at Grenoble requested Wednesday five years in prison for a Jesuit priest accused of child sexual abuse.]

Cinq ans de prison, dont deux ferme, ont été requis mercredi 7 à l’encontre du Père Dominique Peccoud, 70 ans, jugé en appel à Grenoble pour atteintes sexuelles sur mineurs, mais qui n’a reconnu que des “massages sensuels”. La cour a mis sa décision en délibéré au 19 octobre.

“Je n’ai jamais voulu avoir de contacts sexuels avec ces enfants. Ils me mettaient sur un piédestal, ils n’arrivaient plus à m’aborder avec la moindre simplicité. J’attendais (de ces massages) qu’on puisse avoir des relations plus simples”, a déclaré à la barre le jésuite, ancien conseiller du directeur général du Bureau International du Travail (BIT) de 1996 à 2007.

Après de premières accusations contre lui, le religieux avait été contraint de se dénoncer, sur pression de sa hiérarchie, dans une lettre adressée au parquet en avril 2008. Il a été condamné à deux ans de prison avec sursis par le tribunal correctionnel de Grenoble, en avril 2015, pour des atteintes sexuelles sur trois mineurs. Le parquet, qui avait déjà requis cinq ans de prison dont deux ans ferme, a fait appel.

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Pédophilie : le silence collectif dans l’Église au cœur d’un livre

FRANCE
Paroissients Progressiste

[Pedophilia: The collective silence in the church at the heart of a book.]

“Pendant 25 ans, nous avons tous préféré nous taire” : dans le premier livre sur l’affaire de pédophilie qui a ébranlé le diocèse de Lyon et l’Église de France, Isabelle de Gaulmyn tente de comprendre les raisons du silence de “toute une communauté” comme nous le montre LeParisien.fr le mardi 6 septembre 2016. L’auteure d'”Histoire d’un silence”, qui paraît jeudi au Seuil, a un point de vue avisé sur l’affaire Bernard Preynat, ce prêtre qui, de 1972 à 1991, est soupçonné d’avoir abusé de jeunes scouts entre huit et 12 ans, “faisant entre 65 et 100 victimes”, estime-t-elle.

Rédactrice en chef adjointe de La Croix, cette spécialiste des questions religieuses a grandi à Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, fréquentant pendant quatre ans le groupe Saint-Luc, la troupe scoute du père Preynat, éloigné de cette paroisse en 1991 mais enchaînant les postes jusqu’en 2015. Elle sait la singularité d’un territoire où “l’Église compte”, l’aura que pouvait y avoir un prêtre dynamique et autoritaire.

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Bistümer zahlen unterschiedlich viel Entschädigung

DEUTSCHLAND
Hessenschau

[Dioceses pay different amounts of compensation. Nearly 100 victims of abuse in Hesse have not received compensation from the Catholic Church.]

Von Meliha Verderber

Manfred Kopp betritt seit Jahren keine Kirche mehr. “Ich kann das nicht mehr”, sagt der 61-Jährige aus Wiesbaden. Der Grund: Er war ein Heimkind im katholischen St. Antoniusheim in Wiesbaden und wurde dort über mehrere Jahre hinweg von einem Pfarrer sexuell missbraucht. Dieser war dorthin strafversetzt worden, weil er zuvor in Augsburg straffällig geworden war. Auch dort hatte er sich an Kindern vergangen.

Kopps Leidensgeschichte ist kein Einzelfall. Bereits vor zehn Jahren hatte sich der heutige Frührentner an eine Hilfsstelle in Berlin gewandt und als einer der ersten ehemaligen Heimkinder seinen Missbrauch publik gemacht. “Damals hatte das allerdings keinen interessiert. Die Resonanz ging gen null”, erinnert er sich.

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Pédophilie: une journaliste raconte avoir prévenu le cardinal Barbarin

FRANCE
L’Express

[Isabelle Gaulmyn, also deputy editor at The Cross (La Croix), a Catholic publication, attended for four years the Scout troop that included priest Bernard Preynat. She said she tried to alert the diocese since 2005 that he had abused youngsters.].

Isabelle de Gaulmyn, par ailleurs rédactrice en chef adjointe à La Croix, a fréquenté pendant quatre ans la troupe scoute du père Preynat. Elle dit avoir essayé d’alerter le diocèse dès 2005.

“L’incroyable impunité dont a bénéficié le père Preynat est le fait des évêques. Mais le silence est celui de toute une communauté”. Dans le premier livre sur l’affaire de pédophilie qui a ébranlé le diocèse de Lyon et l’Eglise de France, Isabelle de Gaulmyn tente de comprendre les raisons de ce silence. “Pendant 25 ans, nous avons tous préféré nous taire”, avoue-t-elle.

L’auteure d’Histoire d’un silence, qui paraît jeudi au Seuil, a un point de vue avisé sur l’affaire Bernard Preynat, ce prêtre qui, de 1972 à 1991, est soupçonné d’avoir abusé de jeunes scouts entre huit et 12 ans, “faisant entre 65 et 100 victimes”, estime-t-elle.

Rédactrice en chef adjointe de La Croix, cette spécialiste des questions religieuses a grandi à Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon où elle a fréquenté pendant quatre ans le groupe Saint-Luc, la troupe scoute du père Preynat.

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MEDIA RELEASE – SEPTEMBER 7, 2016

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

“The Fordhams” (Prep and University) resume academic years under clouds of sexual abuse allegations from former students and complete strangers against Jesuit priests and lay teachers

Reports of childhood sexual abuse by Fordham University and Fordham Prep Jesuit priests and lay teacher, including Neal E. Gumpel’s credible claim of sexual abuse by Fr. Roy Alan Drake, S.J., continue to surface in the aftermath of the recent announcement by Fordham Prep alumnus, Michael Meenan, that religion teacher, Fernand Beck, sexually abused him in 1984

Neal E. Gumpel was a high school student from Westchester County, NY, who was sexually abused by as a minor child by Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, deceased Fordham University and Fordham Prep professor and teacher, who was teaching at Maine Maritime Academy in Castine, Maine, while Neal E. Gumpel was visiting his brother, a student at Maine Maritime Academy. Jesuit leaders thus far have refused to help Neal E. Gumpel heal by validating and reasonably settling his claim which they have found to be credible

What
A demonstration and leafleting alerting the media, Fordham Prep and University students, parents, alumni and the general public about the growing number of reports of sexual abuse against Fordham University and Fordham Prep faculty and staff members, and focusing attention on the credible claim of Neal E. Gumpel

When
Thursday, September 8, 2016 from 11:00 AM until 1:30 PM

Who

Neal E. Gumpel; his wife, Helen Gumpel; victim/survivor Kevin Waldrip; and Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families

Where
On the public sidewalk outside the main gates of Fordham University, 400 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, NY

Why
Neal E. Gumpel’s account of having been sexually abused by Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, has been found credible by the Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), but the Jesuit leaders have yet to reasonably settle Neal E. Gumpel’s claim. Recently, in a media report, the Jesuits expressed their willingness to help victims of childhood sexual abuse heal. It is time for the Jesuit Priests and Brothers of the Northeast Province to reasonably settle the childhood sexual abuse claim of Neal E. Gumpel.

Contact
Robert M. Hoatson, Fordham University Ph.D., 1988 – 862-368-2800 – roberthoatson@gmail.com

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Submissions published on best practice when responding to complaints of institutional child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

8 September, 2016

The Royal Commission has published 35 submissions received from a range of organisations and individuals in response to its consultation paper: Best practice principles in responding to complaints of child sexual abuse in institutional contexts.

The Commission received submissions from sector peak bodies, government agencies, survivor advocacy and support groups, religious institutions and other interested parties.

The consultation paper, which was released in March this year, sought input into which matters should be canvassed in a complaint handling policy and how those matters might be addressed, as well as the Royal Commission’s suggested best practice principles.

Royal Commission Acting CEO, Marianne Christmann, said that child sexual abuse should never happen, however when it does, complaints should be dealt with in a manner that protects the child, provides justice to the victim and holds perpetrators to account.

“The Royal Commission is striving to ensure that all complaints of institutional child sexual abuse are dealt with in an appropriate, timely and responsible manner, no matter the scenario or institution,” she said.

Most of the submissions received supported the Royal Commission’s best practice principles and its guidance to institutions on responding to child sexual abuse complaints. Many submissions also made valuable suggestions for improving and streamlining the Commission’s work in this area.

Ms Christmann said all of the submissions would be considered, alongside information from relevant case studies, private sessions and the Royal Commission’s broader policy and research work.

Together, this material will inform recommendations the Royal Commission may make in order to better respond to complaints of child sexual abuse.

Most of the submissions the Royal Commission received in response to the Consultation Paper are published on our website.

However, submissions were not published if:

* the author expressly requested that their submission not be published
* the Royal Commission made the decision not to publish a submission to ensure fairness.

The Royal Commission’s terms of reference require it to consider how institutions identify, report and investigate allegations of child sexual abuse in institutions.

Read the submissions.

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Child pornographer molested newborn baby, had 7 more victims, prosecutor says

NEW YORK
Syracuse.com

By John O’Brien | jobrien@syracuse.com

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A Liverpool child pornographer molested a newborn baby and sexually exploited or abused seven other children, according to a federal prosecutor.

The total of eight victims is six more than Jason Kopp admitted to sexually exploiting when he pleaded guilty in May, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Fletcher wrote in court papers.

The victims ranged in age from 6 days to 17 years old, Fletcher said in a sentencing memorandum.

Kopp, 40, of Liverpool, is scheduled to be sentenced next week in federal court.

He pleaded guilty in May to to taking sexually explicit photos of two children with help from an aide at All Saints Elementary School in Syracuse. Neither of those victims was a student at the school.

Oberst is accused of exploiting those two victims, plus a third who was a student at the school, photographed naked in a bathroom, sources have told Syracuse.com.

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Exhibition of Carmine Galasso’s Work

NEW JERSEY
Road to Recovery

ROAD TO RECOVERY, INC. IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE AN EXHIBITION OF THE PHOTOGRAPHS AND STORIES OF CLERGY SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIM/SURVIVORS BY PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER AND WRITER CARMINE GALASSO AS PORTRAYED IN HIS BOOK CROSSES

Thursday, September 15, 2016 at 7:00 PM

On the campus of BLAIR ACADEMY
Romano Gallery – Armstrong – Hipkins Center for the Arts
2 Park Street
Blairstown, New Jersey 07825 – 0600
908 – 362 – 6121

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Survivors’ group ‘loses faith’ in child sex abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC Newsnight

By Jake Morris
BBC Newsnight

A 600-strong survivors’ group has lost faith in the independent inquiry into historical child sexual abuse, its leaders have said.

Shirley Oaks Survivors Association told the BBC it would recommend withdrawing from the Lambeth strand of the inquiry because it was not “truly independent”.

Ex-inquiry chair Justice Lowell Goddard has said she was prevented from picking her own staff, and that civil servants were prioritised by the Home Office.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd denied this.

The treatment of children in care in Lambeth, south London, during the second half of the 20th Century is one of 13 areas that the inquiry is looking at.

But the Shirley Oaks group said the Home Office was one of the institutions that had failed children in care in Lambeth in the past – and that the scale of its presence in the inquiry staff represented a conflict of interest.

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Child abuse victims to pull out of inquiry they say is not ‘truly independent’

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Aine Fox

A survivors’ group has said it may pull out of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse because it does not believe it is “truly independent”.

The probe, launched two years ago and described as the most ambitious public inquiry ever in England and Wales, has been beset by problems and is now working under its fourth chairwoman.

Raymond Stevenson, from the Shirley Oaks Survivors Association, told BBC Newsnight the inquiry had failed to meet group members when asked to in recent weeks.

Mr Stevens, representing survivors of the Lambeth-run Shirley Oaks home in Croydon, said: “We have to recommend at this moment in time that we pull out. We have given the inquiry an opportunity to meet us. We contacted them two weeks ago and we are still waiting for a meeting.”

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Officials, lack of kit to blame for ‘critical delays’ in sex abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Register

Dame Lowell Goddard, the former chairwoman of the UK’s high-profile inquiry into historic child sexual abuse, has blamed “bureaucratic” officials and a lack of adequate systems for “critical delays” in the investigation.

In written evidence to Parliament’s Home Affairs Select Committee, which was published this week, Goddard said it became evident in July that the inquiry was not able to deliver on its commitment to hold public hearings in 2016.

Goddard, a New Zealand high court judge, became the third chair to step down from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) last month. The inquiry was set up in 2014, and was officially under way last year.

“The delays in proceeding to hold any substantive public hearings have regrettably resulted from the inquiry’s inability to obtain in any timely way the vital infrastructure necessary to prepare for and conduct public hearings,” wrote Goddard.

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Principal who failed to report Francis ‘Romuald’ Cable to police labelled ‘coward and liar’

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

Christopher Knaus and Ian Kirkwood

A Marist Brothers principal who failed to report now-notorious paedophile Francis “Romuald” Cable to police has been labelled a “coward” and a “liar” after claiming he could not remember visiting the home of a student who had hung himself.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is currently examining the response of the Marist Brothers to abuse reports against three brothers, including Brother Romuald, working in the Hunter.

Brother Romuald’s case is closely linked to Canberra.

He arrived in the ACT to teach at St Edmund’s College from 1979 to 1989, after committing heinous and cruel acts of abuse against at least 19 victims in Marist Brothers schools in Sydney and Newcastle.

Brother ‘Romuald’ among three Marist brothers alleged to have abused children in Newcastle
He came to St Edmund’s despite being the subject of complaints to two principals during his time with the Marist Brothers.

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Marist Brothers acknowledge Newcastle teenager probably sexually abused before suicide

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press

Thursday 8 September 2016

The leader of the Marist Brothers in Australia has publicly acknowledged a 13-year-old Newcastle boy was probably sexually abused before his suicide more than 40 years ago.

Andrew Nash went to Marist Brothers high school at Hamilton where, the royal commission has heard, boys were groped in class, abused in a chapel and raped in an office.

The boy, who died in 1974, was in the daily care of two since-convicted paedophiles known as Brother Romuald and Brother Dominic, the royal commission has been told.

“I want to acknowledge today in public that I accept on behalf of the Marist Brothers that all the evidence points to Andrew having been sexually abused,” Australian Provincial Brother Peter Carroll told the sex abuse royal commission on Thursday.

“I express admiration for the way they [Andrew’s] family have summoned the courage to give evidence this week.”

Andrew’s 90-year-old mother, Audrey Nash, has testified she thinks Andrew was abused by Brother Romuald, whose real name is Francis Cable.

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Marist Brother called ‘a coward and a liar’ at child sex abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By David Marchese

A fiery exchange at the child sex abuse royal commission has seen the former principal of a Marist Brothers high school in Newcastle labelled a “coward and a liar”, after saying he cannot remember the circumstances surrounding a boy’s suicide.

Christopher Wade was questioned for a second day at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing into the Hunter region’s Catholic Church.

Brother Christopher was principal of the Marist Brothers’ Hamilton school during the 1970s, when 13-year-old student Andrew Nash killed himself after he was sexually abused by a teacher.

Brother Christopher told the commission today he “could not remember” going to the Nash family home the night of the death, when Andrew’s mother Audrey recalled paedophile Francis Cable, known as Brother Romuald, asked her if her son “left a note” or “said anything”.

Mrs Nash’s barrister, Hilbert Chiu, became heated during his questioning of Brother Christopher:

Mr Chiu: You were relieved that Andrew told nobody before he died.
Brother Christopher: That’s not true.
Mr Chiu: You were relieved because in your mind the problem had gone away.
Brother Christopher: That’s not true.
Mr Chiu: And when Brother Romuald moved schools two months later you were even more relieved because he was no longer your problem.
Brother Christopher: That’s not true.

Mr Chiu ended his grilling of Brother Christopher with an accusation.

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Royal Commission will investigate the “why” question

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
8 Sep 2016

THE chairman of the Royal Commisison, Justice Peter McClellan, says one of his inquiry’s final case studies will look at “why this has happened” in the Catholic Church and elsewhere.

Justice McClellan was questioning the current head of the Marist Brothers in Australia, Brother Peter Carroll.

Justice McClellan said: “You may not know, but one of the final hearings of the commission will look at the question of ‘why’, in an endeavour to understand in the Australian context why this has happened, and not just in the Catholic Church, we hasten to add, but in other parts of societ, which of course the commission has discussed in its various case studies.”

The pre-lunch session of this final day of Maitland-Newcastle Catholic hearings began with Brother Peter reading a prepared statement apologising to the family of Andrew Nash, who took his own life at the age of 13 in 1974

Brother Peter said “all the evidence indicates” that Andrew Nash was sexually abused, and that this evidence also pointed to him taking his own life.

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Pope Benedict speaks: ‘I do not see myself as a failure’

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Sep. 8, 2016

ROME Retired Pope Benedict XVI has said the work of governing the global Catholic church was not his “strong point” and that he had a weakness of “little resolve” before the difficult decisions he faced.

But in his first substantial comments since his renunciation of the papacy in 2013, to be published in a new book-length interview Friday, the retired pope also says that while there were difficult moments in his reign it was “also a period in which many people found a new life in the faith.”

“A weak point of mine was maybe little resolve in governing and making decisions,” admits the ex-pontiff in the book, titled Ultimi Conversazioni (“Last Conversations”), and excerpted Thursday in Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper. …

Speaking to his 2005-13 reign as pontiff, Benedict admits there were “difficult moments,” citing specifically three scandals that occurred during his papacy: Continued questioning of the church’s handling of sexual abuse; his decision to lift the excommunication of traditionalist Bishop Richard Williamson, who denies aspects of the Holocaust; and the so-called Vatileaks trial at which his butler was found guilty of publishing secret documents.

Setting aside the scandals, he states, “it was also a period in which many people found a new life in the faith and there was also a great positive movement.” …

The retired pontiff bluntly rebuts those who have claimed he resigned the papacy due to threats of blackmail or some other malfeasance.

“No one tried to blackmail me,” he states. “If someone had tried to blackmail me I would not have left because you cannot leave when you are under pressure.”

“It is also not true that I was embittered,” he continues. “In fact, thanks to God, I was in a peaceful state of soul, of one who has overcome the difficulty — the state of soul in which you can tranquilly pass the helm to who comes next.”

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Superintendent made aware pastor failed to report abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
The Daily Item

By Francis Scarcella The Daily Item

PAXINOS — The superintendent of the Penn Jersey District of the Wesleyan Church said he was made aware one of the church’s pastors was charged with failing to report alleged sexual abuse after reports began to surface Tuesday.

Gregory Clendaniel, pastor of the Augustaville Wesleyan Church, in Paxinos, was charged by Stonington state troopers Tuesday with failing to report an alleged indecent assault that occurred on July 13 after troopers say Seth Sparrer, 22, of Middleburg, fondled a 14-year-old girl on a trip home from a Valley amusement park, according to court documents.

Sparrer was also charged in the alleged incident, according to troopers.

District Superintendent Dr. Karl D. Eastlack said on Wednesday he did not receive a message seeking his comments to the charges and that a wrong number may have been used by the media when trying to contact him Tuesday.

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Mobile pastor arrested on child rape, sodomy charges

ALABAMA
WTVM

By Mike Brantley, Digital Content Producer

MOBILE, AL (WALA) –
Alvin Norman McNeil, 54, of Prichard, was in Mobile County Metro Jail Wednesday night on child sexual abuse and first-degree rape and sodomy charges, according to jail records.

McNeil was arrested earlier Wednesday evening on grand jury indictments.

McNeil’s Facebook page states that he has been a pastor at Open Door True Worship Apostolic Church in Mobile. FOX10 News was unable to immediately ascertain McNeil’s current status with the church.

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Former Las Vegas pastor sentenced to 60 years to life in prison for sexual assault

NEVADA
Las Vegas Review-Journal

By DAVID FERRARA
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

One young woman told a Clark County judge of “the man I hate the most” and the “foul, repulsive” things her pastor did to her. She recalled weeping on the floor of her shower, “afraid of everything.”

That man, Otis Holland, “damaged our family,” the woman’s mother said Wednesday.

Another told the judge he “robbed me of my innocence and my free will.”

The 59-year-old Holland, who prosecutors said created a church as an outlet to rape several minor girls, maintained his innocence.

Earlier this year, a jury convicted him on 15 counts, related to three young girls, including sexual assault of a minor and lewdness with a child.

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Convicted pastor Otis Holland sentenced to life in prison with possibility of parole

NEVADA
KSNV

BY JAMI SEYMORE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH 2016

LAS VEGAS (KSNV News3LV) — Otis Holland, the former pastor convicted of raping young girls in his congregation, was sentenced in a Las Vegas courtroom this afternoon.

Just before 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Judge Stefany Miley sentenced Holland to life in prison with the possibility of parole on multiple charges of sexual assault and lewdness with minors.

Holland was sentenced to life in prison with eligibility for parole after 25 years for 14 counts of sexual assault with a minor under 16 years of age. Counts 1-10 will run concurrently with each other, count 11 will run consecutively with counts 1-10, and counts 12-14 will run concurrently with the previous counts. He was sentenced to life in prison with eligibility for parole after 10 years served for one count of lewdness with a child under the age of 14, which will run consecutively with the previous counts.

Sentences for both charges — sexual assault and lewdness — were combined for a total of life with eligibility for parole after a minimum of 60 years served.

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Diocese of Youngstown appoints two to Safe Environment Program

OHIO
WFMJ

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio –
The Diocese of Youngstown is expanding a program to ensure that children are safe in Catholic facilities.

The Diocese says they’ll expand on their safe environment program in three ways: implementing the VIRTUS program, appointing a Victim Assistance Coordinator and appointing a Coordinator of Safe Environment Program.

VIRTUS is an internationally recognized program to protect children and vulnerable adults, according to the Diocese.

Retired Youngstown Police Department Detective Sergeant Delphine Baldwin-Casey was appointed as the Victim Assistance Coordinator.

As Victim Assistance Coordinator, Baldwin-Casey is the first point of contact for those who claim to have been sexually abused by clergy, religious, church personnel or volunteers.

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Archdiocese of Washington Statement Regarding Former Parish Youth Ministries Director at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church in Rockville

WASHINGTON (DC)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Recently, the pastor of St. Elizabeth’s parish in Rockville received a complaint regarding a case of alleged child sex abuse by Mr. Brian P. Werth, the parish’s youth minister. The pastor immediately contacted the Archdiocese of Washington’s Child and Youth Protection Office, which reported the case to Montgomery County law enforcement.

Additionally, in compliance with the Archdiocese of Washington’s Child Protection Policy, Mr. Werth was immediately suspended from his duties at the parish and school; his employment has since been terminated. After an investigation, law enforcement authorities charged Mr. Werth and he was arrested this morning.

Meetings have been scheduled with parish and school staff, and letters are being sent to the parish and school families to brief them on this matter. All have been asked that if anyone has relevant information regarding this matter to please contact the Montgomery County Department of Police Special Victims Investigation Division at 240-773-5400.

The Archdiocese of Washington takes seriously its responsibility to the children entrusted to its care. The Child Protection Policy of the Archdiocese of Washington mandates criminal background checks, applications and education for all employees and volunteers who work with young people. Mr. Werth had cleared the background check and accompanying requirements. The policy also mandates immediate reporting of suspected abuse to the authorities and an employee’s/volunteer’s immediate removal from work or ministry following a credible allegation. This requirement was also met in Mr. Werth’s case.

If at any time you become aware of improper conduct by a person involved in archdiocesan ministry, please contact the director of the archdiocese’s Office of Child and Youth Protection, Courtney Chase, at 301-853-5302.

The archdiocese’s Child Protection Policy, which has been in place since 1986, is publicly available online at www.adw.org.

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Rockville youth minister charged after ‘sexual contact’ with 16-year-old girl

MARYLAND
Washington Post

By Justin Wm. Moyer September 7

A Rockville youth minister was arrested and charged with sex offenses and assault Wednesday after allegedly having inappropriate sexual contact with a 16-year-old girl, police said.

On May 20, 32-year-old Brian Patrick Werth of Montgomery Village, a youth minister at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church in Rockville, had inappropriate sexual contact with the girl during a youth event at the church, Montgomery County Police said in a statement. Werth had sent the girl graphic sexual texts since the summer of 2014, the statement said.

Charging documents said Werth had known the girl since middle school and allegedly forced himself on her at an overnight event in May. The girl said she “did not want to engage in this sexual activity,” but “felt she had no choice” because Werth “had helped her with so many things up to that point,” according to the documents.

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

In a statement, the Archdiocese of Washington said Werth had cleared a background check. Werth’s alleged conduct was reported to the church pastor who contacted the diocese which reported the case to Montgomery County law enforcement, the diocese said in a statement. Werth has been terminated from his job, according to the diocesan statement.

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Survivors still picking up the pieces decades after abuse at hands of paedophile priest Vincent Ryan

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

Rohan Smith
news.com.au
@ro_smith

WARNING: Disturbing content.

A NOTORIOUS paedophile priest laughed while he watched boys as young as six years old have sex with one another.

One of those boys, Scott Hallett, says he is scarred by what he was forced to do by NSW priest Vincent Ryan but, at the time, he did not realise he was being abused.

“At the time I didn’t know what Father Ryan was doing was wrong,” Mr Hallett, 51, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse this week.

It was 1975 and Ryan was routinely abusing alter boys at a primary school in East Gregford, near Dungog, two hours north of Sydney.

The former Catholic priest previously spent 14 years in jail for abusing dozens of boys aged between six and 14 during the 1970s, ‘80s and ‘90s.

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Insurer doesn’t want to pay Church to cover sex abuse costs

CONNECTICUT
Crux

Associated Press

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

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

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

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Armidale Catholic priest John Joseph Farrell charged with child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Andy Park

Former Armidale Catholic priest John Joseph Farrell has been charged with nine counts of child sexual abuse.

The charges relate to alleged assaults against two boys, one at Gunnedah in 1975, about 85 kilometres west of Tamworth in northern New South Wales, and the other at Narrabri in 1983, about 175 kilometres north-west of Tamworth.

Farrell, 62, was charged with four counts of sexual intercourse without consent, four counts of indecent assault, and buggery.

Some of the ex-officio indictments were first laid 28 years ago, but the judge dismissed the account of one of the alleged victims, Damian Jurd, in favour of Farrell at a committal hearing.

Mr Jurd later took his own life.

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Former Catholic priest charged with nine additional offences – Strike Force Glenroe

AUSTRALIA
New South Wales Police Force

Thursday, 08 September 2016

Additional charges have been laid against a former Catholic priest over alleged historical child sex assaults in Northern NSW.

Strike Force Glenroe was established in July 2012 and comprises detectives from the Sex Crimes Squad and the New England and Barwon Local Area Commands to investigate alleged historical child sexual assault offences committed by a former Catholic Priest.

Following ongoing inquiries by Strike Force Glenroe detectives, a further nine charges have been laid against a 62-year-old man relating to child sex assaults in the 1970s and 1980s.

He was charged with four counts of sexual intercourse without consent, four counts of indecent assault, and buggery.

The charges relate to alleged assaults against two boys, one at Gunnedah in 1975, and the other at Narrabri in 1983.

The ex officio indictment was filed with the court last Friday (2 September 2016), with all matters set down for trial from Monday 10 April 2017 at Sydney District Court.

Investigations are ongoing.

State Crime Command’s Sex Crimes Squad is comprised of experienced detectives dedicated to investigating crimes of a sexual nature, regardless of the passage of time. Any person who has been a victim of sexual abuse, no matter how long ago the incident occurred, is encouraged to make a report at their local police station.

Anyone with information about sexual abuse should call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or use the Crime Stoppers online reporting page: https://www1.police.nsw.gov.au/. Information you provide will be treated in the strictest of confidence. We remind people they should not report crime information via our Facebook and Twitter pages.

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Former Catholic priest charged over alleged historical child sexual abuse of NSW boys

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A former Catholic priest has been charged over alleged sex assault of two underage boys from northern New South Wales in the 1970s and early 1980s.

The 62-year-old was charged as a result of investigation by Strike Force Glenroe, established in 2012 to investigate the alleged offences.

The charges – four counts of sexual intercourse without consent, four counts of indecent assault and one count of buggery – relate to one boy in Gunnedah in 1975, and another boy at Narrabri in 1983.

An ex officio indictment was filed with the court on Friday, and all matters have been set down for trial at Sydney District Court in April next year.

Investigations are continuing.

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September 7, 2016

Israel ‘extradites’ priest accused of child abuse to Russia

ISRAEL/RUSSIA
BBC News

Israel has reportedly begun the extradition of a Russian priest accused of sexually abusing young girls, nearly three years after Russia asked for it.

Gleb Grozovsky was handed over to the Russian prison service and Interpol officers for the flight to Moscow, Russian prosecutors say.

He denies corrupting two girls aged nine and 12 at a Russian Orthodox summer camp in Greece in June 2013.

Prosecutors accuse him of similar attacks in Russia itself in 2011.

Russia first asked for the priest’s extradition in November 2013, when he was in Israel on Church business.

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Greg Burke: Pope Francis’ American Point Man

ROME
National Catholic Register

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

BY JUDY ROBERTS 09/07/2016

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

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

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

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

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Abuse Allegation From 30 Years Ago Made Against Dutchess Pastor

NEW YORK
Catholic New York

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

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

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

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

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

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Northumberland County pastor charged with not reporting sexual abuse incident

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Financial Woes For Riverdale Congregation

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

08/09/16

Gary Rosenblatt
Editor And Publisher

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

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

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

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

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

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

FLORIDA/RHODE ISLAND
Turn to 10

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

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

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

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

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

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

NEW YORK
DNA Info

By Gwynne Hogan | September 7, 2016

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

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

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

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

CANADA
APTN

September 7, 2016

Jorge Barrera
APTN National News

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

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

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

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

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Retired Priest Convicted of Flashing Child

WISCONSIN
WSAU

by Jeff Flynt

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

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

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

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

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Congregational Church of Norwalk to host forum on sexual abuse

CONNECTICUT
The Hour

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

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

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Justin Zaremba | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

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

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

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

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

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Retired priest convicted in flashing case

WISCONSIN
Fox 11

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

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

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

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

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

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

NORTH CAROLINA
News & Observer

BY JOSH SHAFFER
jshaffer@newsobserver.com

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

MARYLAND
NBC Washington

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

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

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

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

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

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

MARYLAND
Fox 5

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

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

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

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

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

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

MARYLAND
ABC 7

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

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

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

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

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Rockville church youth minister charged with sexual abuse of teen

MARYLAND
Fox Baltimore

BY ETHAN MCLEOD
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH 2016

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

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

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

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

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

RUSSIA/ISRAEL
RAPSI

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

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

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

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

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

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

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

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

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

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

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

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

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Press Association

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Written evidence submitted by Hon Dame Lowell Goddard QC

UNITED KINGDOM
Parliament

Independent Inquiry into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Alan Travis
Wednesday 7 September 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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Abuse inquiry scope will not change, Amber Rudd says

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

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

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

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

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

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

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

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

JOANNE MCCARTHY
7 Sep 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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Herft considers future

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Nick Butterly – The West Australian on September 8, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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The Trials and Tribulations of the Vatican’s Finance Chief

VATICAN CITY
Wall Street Journal

By FRANCIS X. ROCCA
Sept. 7, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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DAILY NEWS GETS DIRTY AGAIN

NEW YORK
Catholic League

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

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

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

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

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Local priest removed from two churches after sexual abuse allegation

NEW YORK
Poughkeepsie Journal

Abbott Brant, Poughkeepsie Journal September 7, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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Concerned Catholics: Church finance council members should resign

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News September 7, 2016

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

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

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

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

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California lawyers may represent Archbishop Hon in slander, libel case

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

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

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

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

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

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

The four are represented by attorney David J. Lujan.

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Man abused by priest says he forgives him

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Andi Yu – AAP on September 7, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

He awoke to the priest holding his penis.

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Man accused of Shefford orphanage abuse taken ill

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

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

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

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

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Research reveals new insights on children’s views of safety

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

7 September, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Some key findings

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Government to investigate alleged comments by abuse victim official

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Stephen Naysmith

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Child abuse inquiry will not be scaled down

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

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

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

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

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

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Audrey Nash tells of her Catholic betrayal to the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
6 Sep 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

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

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

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

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

Michael Edwards has this report.

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

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

They had five children – three girls and two boys.

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Students don’t trust schools to protect them from abusers

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Henrietta Cook

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

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

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

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

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

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Oldham man sentenced 30 years for child sex trafficking role

KENTUCKY
The Pioneer News

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

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

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

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

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Former music minister sentenced for child sex

KENTUCKY
Courier-Journal

Andrew Wolfson, @adwolfson September 6, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston Globe

By Jenn Abelson GLOBE STAFF SEPTEMBER 07, 2016

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

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

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

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

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Scott Hallett’s harrowing tale of abuse by Vince Ryan

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
7 Sep 2016

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

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

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

He was just nine years old.

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

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

NEW YORK
WABC

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

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

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

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