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.

August 11, 2016

Malta church’s income down in 2015, collections up

MALTA
Malta Today

Two-thirds of the archdiocese’s total expenditure in 2015 went to remuneration for clergy and lay employees, whereas operational costs dropped by 45%, after bad debts were recovered.

Paul Cocks 11 August 2016

The archdiocese of Malta saw its income fall to €6.44 million in 2015 from €7.97m in 2014, while a small drop was also registered in its expenditure, ending with a net surplus of €172,365 for 2015.

The decline in income was registered because an additional dividend received from APS Bank in 2014 was not repeated last year and because of lower interest rates on investments and lower realised capital gains.

On the other hand, collections and donations, and the clergy fund, registered healthy increases, as did income from property.

This was announced by Michael Pace Ross, the archdiocese’s administrative secretary, at a press conference at the Archbishop’s Curia in Floriana, on Thursday.

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.

St. Paul’s School graduate accuses former school chaplain of sex abuse

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Concord Monitor

By ALYSSA DANDREA
Monitor staff
Wednesday, August 10, 2016

A graduate of St. Paul’s School in Concord recently accused a former school chaplain of sexual abuse dating back several decades.

St. Paul’s contacted the Concord Police Department on Thursday about the allegations involving the Rev. Howard “Howdy” White, who worked in the private school’s Sacred Studies Department from fall 1967 to spring 1971.

The sexual abuse allegations are not the first to surface against White. He was fired from St. George’s School, an Episcopal school in Middletown, R.I., in 1974 for admitted sexual misconduct, which was not reported to law enforcement at the time, the Providence Journal reported.

News that St. George’s had hired a private investigator this past January to look into decades-old allegations of sexual abuse raised concern among St. Paul’s administrators, the school’s rector, Michael Hirschfeld, wrote in a letter to alumni Friday. The Rhode Island investigation prompted St. Paul’s to retain its own lawyer, former Massachusetts attorney general Scott Harshbarger, to investigate any misconduct by White during his time in Concord.

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.

Concord police investigating sex assault allegation against former St. Paul’s chaplain

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Union Leader

By MARK HAYWARD
New Hampshire Union Leader

CONCORD — City police confirmed Wednesday that they are investigating an allegation of a decades-old sexual assault at St. Paul’s School after an alumnus recently implicated a former chaplain of the prestigious prep school.

Police Lt. Timothy O’Malley said the Episcopal boarding school informed police of the allegation on Aug. 4, but he could not disclose the name of the suspect.

In January, St. Paul’s informed alumni who attended the school from 1967 to 1971 about allegations against the Rev. Howard “Howdy” White at St. George’s School, a prep school in Middletown, R.I.

White was the chaplain and a teacher of sacred studies at St. Paul’s from 1967 to 1971, acccording to an Aug. 5 letter from rector Michael G. Hirschfeld that the school made available to the New Hampshire Union Leader.

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.

Michael Elliott describes the yellow envelope system

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
11 Aug 2016

THE man in charge of Newcastle Anglican investigations from 2009 has raised the possibility that there were more priest misconduct cases in the diocese beyond the 36 identified in the “brown envelope” system.

Michael Elliott, the director of professional standards since 2009, became the 18th person to give evidence when he took the stand at the start of Thursday’s proceedings, the eighth day of this hearing.

Shortly before the morning tea adjournment, Mr Elliott was taken by the counsel assisting the commission, Naomi Sharp, to some documents including an index of names that referred to a “black book” that Mr Elliott had been unable to find.

“You have only located the yellow envelopes, but you haven’t located the small envelopes referred to in this document?” Ms Sharp asked Mr Elliott.

“No, that’s right, and I also haven’t located any of the files that are listed that were not put into a brown envelope which, I think, totals around 73,” Mr Elliott 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.

The royal commission exposed how Peter Mitchell “sank the boot in” to an alleged child sex victim

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

JOANNE MCCARTHY
11 Aug 2016

A MAN who accused a Hunter Anglican priest of sexually abusing him as a child has rejected an apology from disgraced former diocese registrar Peter Mitchell for “sinking the boot in” after an aborted court case in 2001.

Mitchell, convicted of defrauding the diocese of nearly $200,000 in 2002, told the royal commission on Wednesday that he was sorry for the distress he caused the man, known as CKA, by writing what he conceded were false statements about the case in an Anglican magazine article.

Mitchell wrote in 2001 that “the facts show the Crown did not have evidence to bring any action against” the priest, who the royal commission was told is likely to face fresh child sex abuse charges dating from the 1970s.

“What you wrote there is false, isn’t it?” Justice Peter McClellan put to Mitchell whose Anglican Encounter article included a line that “The reality is the Crown did not have a case against” the priest.

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 Newcastle dean had support in high places

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
11 Aug 2016

THE director of the Newcastle diocese’s professional standards unit has told the commission of threats against him and about the support that the defrocked dean of Newcastle, Graeme Lawrence, received from people in high places.

Asked about what “risk management strategies” the church had put in place in relation to Graeme Lawrence, Greg Goyette and Graeme Sturt, Mr Elliott confirmed that Lawrence and Sturt continued to worship at the Adamstown parish under Reverend Chris Bird, after Lawrence had been deposed from holy orders and Sturt suspended for five years.

Mr Elliott confirmed that Bishop Brian Farran wrote to Reverend Bird on September 17, 2012, about the issue, but that no formal risk management was put in place until November 14, 2014.

He said he made “significant efforts to ensure that there was risk management put in place”. He said Reverend Bird “did not want to co-operate and did not appear to be taking [the issue] seriously”.

At this point, Mr Elliott was asked about his assertion that “a core group of people . . . were linked to, and supporters of, a number of abusers within the 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.

Abuse investigator bullied in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Annette Blackwell – AAP on August 11, 2016

A former policeman working to clean up an Anglican diocese where child abuse was allegedly covered up says he has been harassed and had his home attacked because of his work.

Michael Elliott has been director of the professional standards board in the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle in the Hunter Region of NSW since 2009.

On Thursday he gave evidence at a royal commission investigating the diocese’s response to abuse allegations over three decades.

He said there was a high level of interference in his professional standards work by diocesan hierarchy and moves to curtail the powers of the board when it began investigating complaints about a number of clergy, including the former dean of Newcastle Cathedral, Graeme Lawrence.

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.

Reflections on a difficult week

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Fr Martin Delaney
August 11, 2016

In my 30 years as a priest there have been bleak periods when I have been forced to ask myself questions like: “Why do I want to continue in this way of life?” Some of those bleak periods have come about because of a personal crisis and some have been caused by negative portrayals of the Church and/or priesthood in the media following yet another revelation of some kind or another. August 2016 has been another of those bleak periods.

In the midst of the recent media frenzy about Maynooth and ‘the latest scandal to rock the Catholic Church’ a friend sent me the text of a homily preached at a celebration for the silver jubilee of priesthood. Included in the homily was the following quotation: “In the daily exercise of our pastoral office, we sometimes have to listen, much to our regret, to voices of persons who…can see nothing but prevarication and ruin.

“They say that our era, in comparison with past eras, is getting worse, and they behave as though they had learned nothing from history, which is, none the less, the teacher of life. They behave as though at the time of former Councils everything was a full triumph for the Christian idea and life and for proper religious liberty.

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.

Maynooth controversy described as ‘stumbling block’ to sharing the Gospel

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Greg Daly
August 11, 2016

A senior figure in the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) has said that current high-profile tensions about the national seminary have become a stumbling block for ordinary Catholics.

Anonymous allegations of inappropriate sexual behaviour at St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, have led to Dublin’s Archbishop Diarmuid Martin withdrawing his seminarians from Maynooth to send them to the Irish College in Rome.

Calling for greater leadership on the issue, Cork-based Redemptorist Fr Gerry O’Connor told The Irish Catholic that “every parishioner you speak to is asking ‘what is going on in the Church?’”

Fr O’Connor, who is a member of the ACP leadership team, said this summer should be a prime opportunity for “a Church that is celebrating the Year of Mercy when we have an inspiring Pope and have just had a fantastic World Youth Day” but that stories of alleged scandals and division at the seminary have hijacked the Church’s message.

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 week when Maynooth was the only show in town

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Brendan O’Regan
August 11, 2016

Oh well, that didn’t last long. Last week Catholic euphoria over World Youth Day gave way to Catholic agony over the Maynooth controversy.

Predictably, the few Irish clerics and seminarians involved in that kerfuffle garnered a lot more media attention than the thousands of enthusiastic young Irish Catholics that attended World Youth Day. I suppose a story of sex, religion and conflict was bound to get the airwaves buzzing.

In what I heard two aspects didn’t get enough attention – the question of theological orthodoxy got only a cursory treatment, while the alleged confidentiality agreements for seminarians were largely ignored. Further, the various media debates showed a dismal level of religious illiteracy, with confusion between celibacy and chastity, between homosexual orientation and activity, between Church teaching and discipline and between conservatism and orthodoxy.

The first I heard of the controversy was when Sean O’Rourke, on Monday of last week, referred to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin removing priests from the cemetery in Maynooth! As I did a double-take on that one, pro that he is, he immediately corrected that to ‘seminary’.

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.

Maynooth seminarian dismisses criticisms as unwarranted

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

A seminarian currently attending St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, has dismissed recent reports of “strange goings on”, saying they are in complete contrast to his own experiences.

The man contacted The Irish Times to say he has been “blown away” by some of the things said. He had nothing but praise for the formation staff there, “who have done everything to foster my vocation”.

He had “never felt any culture of fear, never felt any at all. And as for this talk of keeping your head down, I’ve been totally open”.

In terms of staff behaviour, he said he had never “experienced anything inappropriate at all,or even a suggestion of anything inappropriate”.

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 New Hampshire prep school chaplain accused of abuse

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston.com

By MICHAEL CASEY AP

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A former St. Paul’s School student has come forward with an allegation of sexual abuse by a former chaplain after the New Hampshire prep school began an investigation of the man upon learning of a similar allegation at a Rhode Island prep school where he also once worked, a St. Paul’s spokeswoman said Wednesday.

St. Paul’s contacted Concord police, alumni and students about the allegation involving the Rev. Howard “Howdy” White when he was a chaplain and teacher from 1967-1971, spokeswoman Tenley Rooney said in confirming reports that the school was investigating White.

Local police also said they are investigating the former chaplain, who has been accused of abusing children in other states where he’s worked but who hasn’t been charged with a crime.

White, whose last known address was in Pennsylvania, could not be reached for comment. No one answered his home phone Wednesday afternoon.

St. Paul’s Rector Michael G. Hirschfeld said in a letter to students and alumni Aug. 5 that the school started an investigation after learning White left St. George’s School in Rhode Island in 1974. A parent there accused him of inappropriate sexual conduct with a student. The letter was first reported in the Providence Journal on Tuesday.

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Ex-pastor loses appeal on sex crime with girl but gets 2 SD Supreme Court votes

SOUTH DAKOTA
Capital Journal

By Stephen Lee stephen.lee@capjournal.com

A former Brookings pastor convicted in 2015 for sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl in the church lost his appeal in the South Dakota Supreme Court. But two of the five judges agreed with him that he didn’t break the law.

Timothy Bariteau remains in prison serving an eight-year sentence.

The decision, handed down last week, came down to careful parsing of the words of a state statute outlawing certain sexual contact. The state’s top judges disagreed on what’s legal and what’s not.

The five justices considered the appeal using only briefs, without oral arguments, in May and filed their 3-2 decision on Aug. 3, upholding the state circuit court’s conviction of Bariteau.

It’s a telling case because not only did the justices split over what the law means, but also the state’s top prosecutor on the case, Attorney General Marty Jackley, tells the Capital Journal the statute might need some clarification.

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.

Convicted pastor loses appeal to state Supreme Court

SOUTH DAKOTA
Press & Dakotan

Associated Press

PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — A former Brookings pastor convicted of having sexual contact with a child has narrowly lost his appeal to the South Dakota Supreme Court.

The Capital Journal reports (http://bit.ly/2aZ3zTD ) justices recently voted 3-2 to reject the appeal of 39-year-old Timothy Bariteau.

Bariteau was accused of a crime against a child younger than 16 in spring 2014, when he was a pastor at Morningside Community Church in Brookings. He was arrested later that year in California, where he’d been living, and convicted and sentenced last year to eight years in prison.

Bariteau argued in his appeal that his actions didn’t meet the definition of sexual contact in state law. The majority of the justices disagreed.

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 sex abuse royal commission: Newcastle Anglican church director ‘harassed, had home attacked’

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

A former police officer brought in to clean up the Anglican church in Newcastle, which had faced years of child sexual abuse allegations, says he has “no doubt” harassing phone calls and attacks on his home were related to his work.

Michael Elliott told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he was appointed the diocese’s professional standards director in 2009.

The commission’s Newcastle case study is examining the way the local Anglican diocese responded to allegations of child sexual abuse made against clergy and lay members of the church.

Mr Elliott told the commission he had not been in the job long when the Bishop at the time, Brian Farran, handed him a bundle of envelopes containing allegations of child sexual abuse.

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Anglican church tried to change rules to keep child sex abuse findings quiet – inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Wednesday 10 August 2016

Attempts were made to change Anglican church rules so that findings of child sex abuse against priests were kept private, a whistleblower has told the royal commission.

Michael Elliott, a former policeman, has been the professional standards director in the diocese of Newcastle, New South Wales, since 2009.

On Thursday he told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse that there was a move within the diocese to undermine the professional standards body as soon as it began investigating allegations against the former dean of Newcastle cathedral, Graeme Lawrence, and four others.

Elliott told the commission he was head of professional standards when a man, referred to in the commission as CKH, reported he had been groomed by a priest, Andrew Duncan, in 1980, when CKH was 14. CKH told the commission he subsequently had sex with Lawrence and a priest, Bruce Hoare, the commission has heard.

CKH gave his evidence on Tuesday and said Lawrence’s long-time partner, Greg Goyette, a teacher, also had sex with him.

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

Church investigator Michael Elliott stands by “tampering” allegation made against former church registrar

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
11 Aug 2016

NEWCASTLE Anglican investigator Michael Elliott has stood by his belief that former registrar Peter Mitchell had “tampered” with one of the yellow envelopes in the church’s abuse files.

Resuming his evidence after lunch, Mr Elliott had a testy exchange with Mr Mitchell’s representative, Maria Gerace, who asked him to withdraw his assertion that Mr Mitchell had tampered with the file.

Ms Gerace said Mr Elliott had given the royal commission a one-sided account of his meeting with Mr Mitchell, saying Mr Mitchell had told Mr Elliott “abhored” child sex abuse.

“You didn’t include that in your statement, did you,” Ms Gerace said.

“No,” Mr Elliott said.

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Newcastle Anglican investigator sets out his seven-year battle

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
11 Aug 2016

A PRIEST who tried to burn six travel bags full of male homosexual pornography eventually smashed the tapes to pieces, filling three wheelie bins in the process, the Royal Commission has heard.

This account of a hoard of pornography kept by disgraced paedophile priest Peter Rushton was given by a former police officer who is now the Newcastle Anglican diocese’s director of professional standards, Michael Elliott.

After a day spent explaining – and then defending – the way he’d investigated child sexual abuse cases in the diocese since being appointed in early 2009, Mr Elliott told of the pornography hoard just before the commission rose at 4.30pm on Thursday.

Mr Elliott said priest David Simpson had told him Rushton had contacted him saying he had a large amount of pornography he needed to get rid of. In previous evidence the commission heard this was in 1998.

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August 10, 2016

LA–New Orleans church must do “outreach,” abuse victims say

LOUISIANA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016

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

A few days ago, a Louisiana minister was been sentenced to 10 years in prison for child sex crimes. We call on his former colleagues and congregants at First Baptist Church of New Orleans to aggressively seek out others who may have information or suspicions about his crimes and beg them to call law enforcement.

[Advocate]

[Times-Picayune]

It’s very possible that there are girls or young women in Louisiana and Mississippi now who are struggling with depression, anxiety, agoraphobia, eating disorders or suicidal thoughts because they too were repeatedly manipulated and exploited by Rev. Jonathan Bailey. It’s crucial that Baptist officials in both states use pulpit announcements, church websites and congregational mailings to search for others who could help police and prosecutors file more charges against this child molester. Regardless of what church officials do or don’t do, current and former members of Bailey’s congregations should also take steps like this to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded.

We urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in churches or institutions to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling law enforcement, get justice by calling attorneys, and be comforted by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Abuse Victims Protest Outside Savannah Diocese

GEORGIA
WSAV

By Andrew Davis
Published: August 10, 2016

Remembering the past and protecting children in the future was the focus of a protest in Savannah Thursday morning.

Members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests stood in front of the Savannah Catholic Diocese, holding up pictures of abused children.

Two Savannah victims, Christopher Templeton and Allan Ranta, were front and center, speaking about the priest who abused them at St James, Father Wayland Brown.

“I was raped at St James, I was raped here in Savannah, GA and i was raped in South Carolina,” said Allan Ranta. “Its very important for the truth to come out, Without the truth what remains is the lies, the lies of the Catholic Church.”

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Sex abuse priest’s victim ‘made to feel like liar’ in previous case

UNITED KINGDOM
The Irish News

Jemma Crew, Press Association
10 August, 2016

A MAN who was sexually abused by a former Catholic priest when he was a teenager said he was left feeling powerless after his abuser was acquitted following two trials.

The victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said he “felt like a liar” when he initially went to give evidence against abuser Philip Temple – a member of a “trusted institution” – who was eventually jailed for abuse against 13 victims at Woolwich Crown Court on Wednesday.

He said his abuser was a “shoulder to lean on” when he was being bullied at school during the 1990s.

Temple, of no fixed abode, admitted 27 counts of non-recent sexual assault and two counts of perjury, and was sentenced to 12 years in jail extended for one year on licence.

Addressing the court on Wednesday, Temple’s victim said: “When the trials took place, I knew I was telling the truth. I knew I was not lying.

“However, to have trusted institutions such as the church and the legal system allow lawyers to try and discredit me – to seed doubt of my character into the jury about how trustworthy I was – has stayed with me and led to a deep rooted mistrust of myself.

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.

Survivors’ group: Diocese should name accused priests

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

The director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests called on Bishop Ronald W. Gainer to publish the names of Harrisburg diocese priests who have been accused of child sexual abuse.

David Clohessy said in a news release that by not doing so, the Diocese of Harrisburg is “putting kids in harm’s way.” Other dioceses have done so, Clohessy said, but “Gainer refuses to take this simple, inexpensive, practical step to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded and expose the truth.”

The Harrisburg diocese did not respond to a request for comment on Clohessy’s statement.

The statement was in response to the York Daily Record’s investigation that showed 15 priests with ties to the Harrisburg diocese have been accused of abuse.

In July, after multiple requests by the Daily Record, the diocese responded to each name on a list provided by the news organization, with some details on where and when they served, and how the diocese responded when the allegations were made.

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Former minister sentenced for sex abuse of teen parishioner

MISSISSIPPI
WBRC

Wednesday, August 10th 2016

JACKSON, MS (Mississippi News Now) –
A former Baptist minister, Reverend Jonathan Bailey, has been sentenced to 10 years in prison after admitting to sexually abusing a 13-year-old in Louisiana and during a retreat in Mississippi.

The child was a member of his church.

According to Nola.com, Bailey pleaded guilty to six counts of molestation, five counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile and one count of obstruction of justice.

He must also register as a sex offender.

According to the indictment, the sexual abuse occurred between July 1, 2014, and Feb. 8, 2015, at locations including the church and during a retreat in Mississippi. Nola.com reports that the victim’s father said Bailey is facing additional charges in Mississippi, which contributed to their eagerness to resolve the case in Louisiana.

The allegations surfaced a month after the victim’s 14th birthday when church officials said they saw surveillance video showing the girl and the youth minister slipping into a closet together during a Feb. 8 church function. The girl’s parents were notified, as well as New Orleans police and Bailey was fired the next day.

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Statement from Alphonsus Cullinan, Bishop of Waterford & Lismore

IRELAND
Munster Express

By Michelle Clancy. Published on Wednesday, August 10th, 2016

The Diocese of Waterford & Lismore currently has one student in Maynooth and we have two other students starting in seminary in September.

There was a third man who has since changed his mind. These things happen. The place of seminary formation is chosen carefully.

The student in Maynooth is getting on very well and we have no plans to move him. The question of moving him did not even arise. I had a meeting with my two vocations directors in early July when we discussed where best to send our new men who are both mature.

This meeting took place long before all this controversy broke and our motive was to place each man in the seminary best for him, taking into consideration all the relevant factors – age, ability, personal conditions, experience, etc.

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Archdiocese of Agana, Apuron not represented by same counsel

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News August 10, 2016

The Archdiocese of Agana has retained the law offices of Cunliffe & Cook to represent it in a $2 million libel and slander lawsuit filed by former altar boys who said the church defamed them after they publicly accused Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron of sexually assaulting them in the 1970s.

Cunliffe & Cook, however, does not represent Apuron. It has been retained as counsel for the Archdiocese of Agana, as administered by Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai. Cunliffe & Cook asked for, and was granted, an extension to file a response to the amended libel and slander complaint, from Aug. 11 to Sept. 11.

Apuron, who has been temporarily stripped by the Vatican of his administrative authority over the local church, is being represented in the lawsuit by the Law Office of Jacqueline T. Terlaje, officials with the law firm stated Wednesday.

The Vatican sent Hon to Guam in early June to temporarily administer the local Catholic church while allegations of sex abuse against Apuron are investigated.

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Church faces a flood of claims once child sex abuse time limit is abolished

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

David Ellery

Hundreds of individual child sex abuse victims with claims totalling tens of millions of dollars may be free to sue the Catholic Church thanks to the abolition of statute of limitations provisions in the ACT, NSW and Victoria a Canberra lawyer has said.

Jason Parkinson of Porters lawyers said even though most of the 1700 victims who had been paid about $43 million [2013 figures] under the Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” program had signed deeds of release waiving their right to sue in the future these were now open to challenge.

The Canberra-based lawyer, who has represented dozens of victims over the past two decades, said in some cases individuals with claims potentially worth hundreds of thousands of dollars had been “brushed off” with as little as $4000.

He said the church had overreached by offering such paltry sums and deeds of release signed as a part of such settlements would likely be dismissed by “a reasonable judge”.

Francis Sullivan, the chief executive of the Catholic Truth, Justice and Healing Council, conceded some of the payments made under Towards Healing in the 1990s had been “meagre and low” but believes the best hope for justice for many victims and survivors would be through the yet to be established independent national redress scheme.

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Judge apologises to victim of ex-priest who abused children

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

10 AUGUST 2016

A judge has made a personal apology to a victim of a former children’s home worker and Catholic priest who sexually abused 12 children dating back to the 1970s, and slipped through the justice system before admitting his crimes.

Philip Temple, 67, sexually assaulted a number of boys and a girl in his care between 1971 and 1977 when he worked for Lambeth and Wandsworth borough councils.

He then changed career to become a priest in 1988 and served at Christ the King Monastery, Vita Et Pax in Cockfosters, where he abused two children including an altar boy.

Temple was tried in the late 1990s but the jury could not decide on a verdict, sparking a retrial which ended in an acquittal, Woolwich Crown Court heard on Wednesday.

The former priest was described by one of his victims as an “extremely skilled liar and manipulator with sociopathic qualities”, and the court heard the effect on his victims’ lives had proved “incalculable”.

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Ex-priest Philip Temple jailed for child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A former social worker and Catholic priest has been jailed for 12 years after admitting historical child sex abuse charges dating back to the 1970s.

Philip Temple, 66, admitted abusing 12 boys and one girl while working in south London care homes and a north London church.

He also admitted lying on oath in the 1990s when he was cleared of child sex abuse charges against a teenage boy.

Judge Christopher Hehir apologised to the victim at Woolwich Crown Court.

He said: “I am sorry justice was not done when you came to court in 1998 and 1999.”

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Catholic priest jailed for 12 years for sexually abusing 13 children

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent
@harrietsherwood
Wednesday 10 August 2016

A Catholic priest and former children’s home worker has been jailed for 12 years after admitting the sexual abuse of 13 children dating back to the 1970s.

Philip Temple, 66, was sentenced at Woolwich crown court after pleading guilty to 20 charges of sexual assault in April and a further seven charges this week.

Temple twice stood trial in the late 1990s. In the first case the jury was unable to reach a verdict and Temple was acquitted in a retrial.

Before passing sentence on Wednesday, the judge, Christopher Hehir, apologised to one of Temple’s victims that “justice was not done when you came to court in 1998 and 1999”.

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State must investigate Harrisburg diocese (editorial)

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Editorial

A list of accused priests reported by YDR might represent just the steeple of a massive cathedral of child exploitation.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane was on trial this week, defending herself against charges she says were trumped up by the old boys’ network in our state’s judicial system. So she might have been too distracted to read YDR’s story about priests accused of sexual abuse in the Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg, which includes York County.

But someone in her office must look into questions YDR’s report raises about how forthcoming and proactive the diocese (a different sort of old boys’ network) has been with priest abuse cases in our region.

Someone with subpoena power.

Reporter Brandie Kessler identified 15 priests with ties to the Harrisburg diocese who’d been accused of sexually abusing children – including a priest who served in Dallastown.

In response to the reporting, the diocese grudgingly acknowledged those cases, even issuing a statement to parishioners (printed in at least one local church bulletin) warning them that the YDR story would include previously reported abuse cases but also some that “had a lower profile.”

A lower profile.

In other words, cases that had been essentially buried in the church’s massive bureaucracy – publicly unacknowledged, unaccounted for, possibly unatoned for.

If we’ve learned anything from priest abuse scandals in other regions, not to mention the Jerry Sandusky case, it’s that where there is smoke there is fire. And burying that fire doesn’t douse the flame. It eventually becomes a raging inferno.

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Victorian school principals raise concerns over legal document promising protection from child abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Tim Lamacraft

All Catholic, independent and government schools in Victoria have until the end of September to confirm they are compliant with a new code of conduct that is designed to prevent child abuse.

To prove their compliance, school principals and school council presidents must sign a statutory declaration, something that a group of principals have told the ABC they were opposed to.

“I suppose why principals are objecting is because it’s the first time ever we’ve been asked to sign a legal document attesting to our compliance, or at least our intent to be compliant,” Anne Gawith, principal of Dimboola Memorial Secondary College, told PM.

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Brazilian priest accused of abuse commits suicide in prison

BRAZIL
Catholic Philly

By Lise Alves • Catholic News Service • Posted August 9, 2016

RIO DE JANEIRO (CNS) — A Brazilian priest, Father Bonifacio Buzzi, accused of molesting children in Minas Gerais state, committed suicide Aug. 7 in his cell, said Brazilian authorities.

Local authorities said Father Buzzi hanged himself with bed sheets in his cell a day after being arrested.

In 1995, he was found guilty of abusing several youngsters in a mental hospital and sentenced to four years of house arrest. In 2004, he was found guilty of molesting an 11-year-old boy but fled before authorities could detain him. He was arrested in 2007 and imprisoned until 2015.

Father Buzzi, 57, was arrested again in early August in the southern state of Santa Catarina and was taken back to Minas Gerais, where he had been charged with molesting another youth.

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Yeshivah slammed over response to victims slur

AUSTRALIA
Australian Jewish News

YESHIVAH leaders have sparked fury by vehemently defending a rabbi who came under fire in an email exchange but not victims of child sexual abuse.

On Friday, a member of the Yeshivah community, Moshe Elkman, was highly critical of Yeshivah’s Rabbi Chaim Tzvi Groner in a message sent to more than 50 people regarding a planned meeting concerning proposed changes to the Yeshivah Centre management structure. Claiming the rabbi had failed to inform him when the meeting would be, Elkman expressed his disappointment in harsh terms and threatened to go to the media if Rabbi Groner wasn’t forthcoming.

Within hours Yeshivah’s director of adult education Rabbi Yonason Johnson said he was in “shock and dismay” because the “slander of Rabbi Groner is unacceptable both halachically and morally”.

He went on to say that “this would be true if said about anyone, let alone a Rov (Rabbi) and the Rebbe’s Head Shaliach in Melbourne”.

Rabbi Johnson urged everyone on the email chain to “maintain civility and respect at all times”.

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Judge apologises to victim of former priest who abused 12 children

UNITED KINGDOM
Breaking News

A judge in England has made a personal apology to a victim of a former children’s home worker and Catholic priest who sexually abused 12 children dating back to the 1970s, and slipped through the British justice system before admitting his crimes.

Philip Temple, 67, sexually assaulted a number of boys and a girl in his care between 1971 and 1977 when he worked for Lambeth and Wandsworth borough councils.

He then changed career to become a priest in 1988 and served at Christ the King Monastery, Vita Et Pax in Cockfosters, where he abused two children including an altar boy.

Temple was tried in the late 1990s but the jury could not decide on a verdict, sparking a retrial which ended in an acquittal, Woolwich Crown Court heard on Wednesday.

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There Are No Warnings when Sex Offenders Move From Israel but We Can Fix That

UNITED STATES
Frum Follies

Sex offenders, like smugglers, take advantage of borders to avoid paying for their crimes. Sometimes they hop borders one step ahead of the cops. Israel, unfortunately is a popular destination for our miscreants.

But there is also a reverse flow where Israel’s flotsam washes up on America’s shores. Local communities are often clueless. This is true, even if there was a conviction in Israel because Israel does not have a public sex offender registry.

Let’s say Shlomo Shimon Ben-David gets convicted for molesting a neighbor’s child in Israel. He serves his time and then heads off to the United States. For good measure he starts using his middle name, Shimon, or perhaps, Simon, and becomes an accepted member of his new community and volunteers with a youth group. No one is the wiser about his past history.

Don’t start saying there ought to be a law to deal with the problem. There is a law: the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA). If offenders move, start work, or start school in a new state they have to register within three days or can be sentenced to a year. SORNA’s regulations also apply to foreign convictions (IV-B).

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Ex-priest Philip Temple, who sexually abused children in Shirley Oaks and Wandsworth care homes, fabricated ‘malicious allegations’ against victims to cover up crimes

UNITED KINGDOM
This is Local London

A former care home worker and Catholic priest who sexually assaulted vulnerable children in his care made “malicious and false” allegations about his victims to cover up his own horrific abuse, a court heard.

Philip Temple, 67, sexually abused 12 young people over a 25-year period beginning in 1971 while he was employed at children’s homes in Croydon and Wandsworth, and later as a priest in north London.

Between 1971 and 1977 Temple, of no fixed address, worked first at Woking Close children’s home in Barnes, then at nearby Hartfield House, before moving to Shirley Oaks Children’s Home, where he worked as a senior housefather at Rowan House.

Over those six years he “used his position of authority for his own pleasure” to abuse nine boys and one girl, Woolwich Crown Court heard today.

After carrying out his horrific assaults, which made one victim want to “cry out in pain”, the “extremely skilled liar” sometimes even entered false allegations of sexual activity between children in social services records to cover up his own crimes, prosecutor Jonathon Polnay said.

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MEDIA RELEASE – AUGUST 10, 2016

NEW JERSEY
Road to Recovery

Lawsuit filed by childhood clergy sexual abuse victim in Essex County, NJ Superior Court against Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters; the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey; its former Archbishop, Cardinal Theodore Mc Carrick; and St. John Nepomucene Parish, Guttenberg, NJ

Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters is a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark who is accused of sexual abuse of “John Doe” when he was a child at St. John Nepomucene Parish, Guttenberg, NJ, (Hudson County) from approximately 1994-1995

“John Doe,” a childhood sexual abuse victim/survivor of Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters at St. John Nepomucene Parish in Guttenberg, NJ, seeks justice through the civil courts of New Jersey. He is one of six known childhood sexual abuse victim/survivors of Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters

What
A press conference announcing the filing of a civil lawsuit in Essex County, NJ, Superior Court by “John Doe,” a childhood sexual abuse victim, against Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, who sexually abused “John Doe” at St. John Nepomucene Parish in Guttenberg, NJ, from approximately 1994-1995.

When
Wednesday, August 10, 2016 at 12:30 PM

Where
On the public sidewalk across the street from the headquarters of the Archdiocese of Newark, 171 Clifton Avenue, Newark, NJ 07104

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

Why
On Father’s Day weekend, 2015, David Ohlmuller, a brave victim/survivor of sexual abuse by Fr. Michael “Mitch Walters at St. Cassian’s Parish, Upper Montclair, NJ, in the 1980s, came forward to report that he had been sexually abused by Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters. Subsequently, a woman, Danielle Polemeni, reported that she had been sexually abused by Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters at St. Cassian’s Parish, Upper Montclair, NJ and at other locations from approximately 1982-1983. Four other sexual abuse victim/survivors of Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters have also come forward, and one of those victim/survivors, “John Doe,” from St. John Nepomucene Parish in Guttenberg, NJ, has filed a lawsuit against Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters, the Archdiocese of Newark, NJ, and then Archbishop, now Cardinal Theodore Mc Carrick. From approximately 1994-1995, Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters sexually abused John Doe on numerous occasions when he was a parishioner of St. John Nepomucene Parish in Guttenberg, NJ, and Fr. Michael “Mitch” Walters was assigned to that parish. Demonstrators will announce their support of “John Doe” and demand that the Archdiocese of Newark help “John Doe” heal by validating his claim with a fair and just settlement.

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

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Missbrauch: Verurteilter Priester muss vor Vatikan-Justiz

CHILE
religion@orf

[The Irish priest John O’Reilly, who was convicted in Chile for abusing a 7-year-old girl, now faces a Vatican canonical trial.]

Der irische Priester John O’Reilly, der in Chile wegen jahrelangen Missbrauchs eines damals siebenjährigen Mädchens zu vier Jahren Schutzaufsicht verurteilt worden war, muss sich nun auch im Vatikan einem Verfahren stellen.

Das teilte der ultrakonservative katholische Orden Legionäre Christi am Montag mit. Wann der Prozess vor der Vatikan-Justiz beginnen soll und welche Höchststrafe droht, war zunächst unklar. O’Reilly vom Orden Legionäre Christi war im November 2014 schuldig gesprochen worden, ein Mädchen von 2010 bis 2012 missbraucht zu haben.

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Priester begeht Selbstmord

BRASILIEN
Katholisch

[A priest who was accused of abuse killed himself in a Brazilian prison.]

Ein wegen sexueller Belästigung angeklagter Priester hat sich am Sonntag in einem brasilianischen Gefängnis erhängt. Laut dem Londoner Portal “Christian Today” ist dieser seit Freitag wiederholt in Haft. Der Geistliche war bereits von 2007 bis 2015 wegen Belästigung eines 10-Jährigen und von 1995 bis 1999 wegen Missbrauchs von mehren Jugendlichen inhaftiert.

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Ehemaliger Präfekt muss für sieben Jahre ins Gefängnis

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[A 46-year-old former religion teacher and prefect at the Kloster Ettal boarding school has been sentenced to seven years in prison. He was accused of sexual abuse of children.]

By: Elmar Voltz and Joseph Röhmel

Im Prozess gegen einen 46-jährigen, ehemaligen Religionslehrer und Präfekten am Klosterinternat Ettal hat das Gericht am Nachmittag das Urteil gesprochen. Der Angeklagte muss unter anderem wegen des schweren sexuellen Missbrauchs von Kindern und des sexuellen Missbrauchs von Schutzbefohlenen sieben Jahre ins Gefängnis.

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Ex-Priester muss wegen Missbrauchs ins Gefängnis

SCHWIEZ
cath.ch

[A former Catholic priest was sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in a prison in the cantonal court of Lugan0, Switzerland, after being found guilty of abusing a 13-year-old girl and of abusing students. The Lugano diocese expressed deep regret over the incidents.]

Lugano, 9.8.16 (kath.ch) Ein ehemaliger katholischer Priester ist am Montag vom kantonalen Strafgericht in Lugano wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs zu einer Gefängnisstrafe von achteinhalb Jahren verurteilt worden. Dies berichteten Tessiner Medien am Montagabend, 8. August. Der 65-Jährige hatte ein Mädchen 13 Jahre lang missbraucht und sexuelle Handlungen an Schülern begangen. Die Diözese Lugano äusserte in einem Communiqué ihr tiefes Bedauern über die Vorkommnisse.

Der Prozess gegen den heute 65-jährigen ehemaligen Priester begann am 27. Juli. Dem Mann wurden wiederholte sexuelle Nötigung, Vergewaltigung und sexuelle Handlungen mit Kindern vorgeworfen. Vor Gericht gab er die Taten zu. Opfer waren ein Mädchen, das der Mann zwischen 2001 und 2014 immer wieder missbrauchte, sowie vier Schüler, die bei dem Priester den Religionsunterricht besuchten. Das Mädchen war zu Beginn der Übergriffe zwölf Jahre alt.

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The Heron’s Nest: Shining a ‘Spotlight’ on newspaper woes

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

By Phil Heron, Delaware County Daily Times

POSTED: 08/10/16

I get asked all the time to explain the problems facing the newspaper industry.

It struck me again as I sat near tears in a movie theater watching the Oscar-winning move “Spotlight,” which detailed the investigative team from the Boston Glove and their work in uncovering the massive problem with predator priests abusing children in the Boston Archdiocese.

The sadness for me was two-fold: First, as a Catholic, the move could not possibly have painted the church in a worse light, one by the way I believe was richly deserved. Much like what took place here in Philadelphia, the church’s reaction and policies concerning child sexual abuse by priests was abhorrent.

But I felt another sadness as well, one that stems from more than four decades in the newspaper business.

The move clearly showed what we are in danger of losing in this racket, our mission of being a watchdog on what is going on in our towns and schools.

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GA–Victim of pedophile priest speaks for first time

GEORGIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

GA–Victim of pedophile priest speaks for first time
Last month, man reached $4.5 million settlement
The convicted child molester now lives in Maryland
But he spent years in Georgia working in five towns
Group wants Savannah bishop to “do aggressive outreach”
“With some effort, pedophile might be locked up again,” SNAP says

WHAT

Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, a Georgia man who was repeatedly molested as a boy by the state’s most notorious pedophile priest will speak publicly for the first time about his experiences and his sizeable settlement last month with Savannah Catholic officials. He’ll be joined by his attorney.

And clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will

–blast Catholic officials in four states for their handling of the priest,

–urge them to “do aggressive outreach” so he might be prosecuted again, and

–beg anyone who “saw, suspected or suffered his crimes” to call police or prosecutors immediately.

WHEN

Wednesday, August 10 at 11:00 a.m. in Savannah GA

WHERE

On the sidewalk outside Savannah Catholic diocesan headquarters, 2170 East Victory Drive in Savannah

WHO

Three-four individuals who belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including

–the victim in the recent settlement,

–another victim of that predator priest,

–a Georgia attorney, and

–a Missouri woman who is the organization’s long time outreach director

WHY

For the first time, a Georgia man, Chris Templeton, who was molested by an infamous, still-living predator priest will speak publicly about his pain and the $4.5 million settlement he reached last month with Savannah Catholic officials. http://wsav.com/2016/07/06/catholic-diocese-settles-sex-abuse-lawsuit-for-4-5-million/

He will prod others with information or suspicions about the pedophile priest to call law enforcement. Since South Carolina has no criminal statute of limitations on child sex crimes, and since the priest spent time in several states, Templeton and SNAP believe he might face criminal prosecution again.

Fr. Wayland Yoder Brown is one of the most notorious child molesting clerics in the US, SNAP says. Even while he was a seminarian, then-Bishop Raymond Lessard was warned about Brown (yet ordained him anyway). In his very first assignment, in 1969, Fr. Brown’s bosses heard reports of his abuse. Yet for decades, they continued to hide his crimes and quietly transfer him to unsuspecting parishes where he kept on assaulting kids, SNAP charges.

In the 1980s, he was secretly sent for treatment at St. Luke’s, a church-run center in Maryland. In 2002, he pled guilty to abusing two boys in 1974 in Washington DC. Fr. Brown was sentenced to ten years in prison in Maryland and was released in 2008.

In a July, SNAP blasted Savannah Bishop Gregory Hartmayer for a news release in which he made no mention of the possibility that there are others who were molested by Fr. Brown are still suffering in shame, silence and self-blame. Shame on Bishop Hartmayer. “He’s acting more like a cold-hearted CEO than a caring shepherd,” the group maintains.

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Archdiocese Wins Partial Reimbursement on Sex Abuse Claims

CONNECTICUT
Connecticut Law Tribune

MEGAN SPICER, The Connecticut Law Tribune
August 5, 2016

The Hartford Archdiocese was issued a victory when a federal judge ordered its insurance company to reimburse the church for the money paid as part of sex abuse settlements.

U.S. District Judge Janet Arterton found July 28 that Interstate Fire and Casualty Co., the church’s insurer, breached its contract. She ordered the insurer to pay $945,000, which includes damages as well as interest.

The church paid out more than $2 million across four settlements between 2010 and 2012. The victims had claimed they were abused by Fathers Robert Ladamus, Stephen Crowley and Ivan Ferguson between 1977 and 1984 or 1985.

The archdiocese sued Interstate in 2012, saying it had reached out numerous times on the claims and heard little back in terms of reimbursement. The insurance company had previously reimbursed the archdiocese for other settlements similar in nature, the suit alleged.

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CCOG elects new officers, outlines objectives

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | Post News Staff

The Concerned Catholics of Guam elected new officers at a recent meeting. David Sablan, who previously held the position of vice president, was elected to the post of president. He replaces the previous president, Greg Perez, who had held the office since CCOG’s establishment in December 2014. Andrew Camacho was elected vice president to fill the vacancy created by Sablan’s move. Evangeline Lujan and Gerald Taitano continued as secretary and treasurer respectively.

“We, as Christian faithful, using our knowledge and our influence, have the right and duty to express our opinions on matters pertaining to the affairs of our archdiocese for the good of our church,” Sablan stated in a press release. “This is the legal provision of church law that drives our membership to demand changes from the hierarchy of the Archdiocese of Agana for the good of the church on Guam.”

CCOG is one of the groups responsible for the weekly protests outside the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral Basilica in Hagåtña on Sundays that call for, among other things, the defrocking of Archbishop Anthony Apuron. The group numbers in the thousands, according to the release.

In the press release, Sablan lamented the current state of the Catholic Church of Guam. “Our local church has been damaged by poor leadership for decades emanating from the chancery of the Archdiocese of Agana.”

Widespread concerns

According to the release, CCOG was founded to address widespread concerns among the Catholic laity. Specifically, CCOG was organized to help the archdiocese with its financial affairs; work to clear the names and restore Monsignor James Benevente and Rev. Paul Gofigan to their respective parishes; and help send young men of Guam to seminaries on the U.S. mainland to be formed for the priesthood and return to Guam.

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Attorney says more victims were abused by clergy

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Aug 10, 2016

By Krystal Paco

Allegations of molestation made against Archbishop Anthony Apuron may have been only the tip of the iceberg. Last week, 73-year-old Leo Tudela testified before lawmakers alleging he was a victim of child sex abuse by three members of the church, one of whom was Father Louis Brouillard. In a phone interview with KUAM News last Friday, Father Brouillard admitted he had molested young boys while on Guam.

Although he couldn’t recall the number of boys, he did say why he did it. “Hard to say…I guess mostly it pleased the boys. I thought they were happy,” he stated last week.

KUAM News spoke with Attorney David Lujan today, who alleges there are more victims, and more priests who stand to be accused. Lujan represents other alleged victims who shared their stories earlier this year: Roy Quintanilla, Walter Denton, Roland Sondia, and Doris Concepcion on behalf of her late son, Joseph “Sonny” Quinata.

In Tudela’s case, he had moved to Guam from Saipan to attend Catholic school. While an altar boy at Santa Teresita Church, he alleges Father Brouillard touched him in his sleep. He shared his story last week in an effort to compel lawmakers to pass Bill 326 – legislation that would lift the statute of limitations on child sex crimes.

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Justice Goddard’s resignation will not stop us lifting the lid on sexual abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Chris Tuck

Hearing the news of the resignation of Justice Lowell Goddard as chair of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse must be upsetting and worrying for many victims and survivors who know about or have engaged with the inquiry to date. As a victim of abuse and campaigner on this issue, I am personally sad that Goddard has resigned, but feel confident that the inquiry will move forward and do the job that it has set out to do. It is important to remember that the inquiry is not just about Goddard; there are many other people involved and a new chair will be appointed in due course.

The inquiry was established in 2014 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. It is a once in a lifetime opportunity for victims and survivors to have their voices heard and for whistleblowers to share their knowledge and experiences of what went on – and in some cases continues to happen – within institutions that have failed children. The inquiry has statutory powers to compel witnesses to come forward, and now the infrastructure is in place it is progressing with its investigation. It wants to hear from victims and survivors if they were sexually abused while in an institution; or if they were failed by an institution, such as the police, social services or their school, after reporting the incident or incidences only for the appropriate action not to be taken.

I joined the victims and survivors’ consultative panel in July 2015. Since then, we have been working with all the different teams within the inquiry to put systems and processes in place, recruit and train staff, and set up offices to undertake “truth project” sessions. In these sessions, victims and survivors are able to share their experiences of child sexual abuse with a facilitator, who will record what they are told. Alternatively, they can make written submissions to the inquiry.

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Meet the only GOP state Senate hopeful endorsed by PAC fighting to help child sex abuse victims

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT

DAILY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF Wednesday, August 10, 2016, 4:00 AM
COHOES, N.Y. — This one was personal.

The founder of a political action committee pushing for a law to help child sex abuse victims Tuesday returned to the city where he himself was attacked as a kid to endorse a Republican state Senate candidate who supports the bill.

The candidate, Christopher Davis, called it unconscionable that his party in the Senate blocked a Democratic effort to bring a bill to the floor for a vote during the legislative session that concluded in June.

“This is a moral issue,” Davis said. “This is something that should not be partisan. It should not go down party lines. You murder the souls of these kids who are attacked and change the course of their lives.”

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Catholic church should embrace gay priests, Senator says

IRELAND
Irish Times

Olivia Kelleher

The Catholic church needs to open itself up to the possibility of having gay priests, according to the leader of the Seanad, Senator Jerry Buttimer.

Mr Buttimer trained for five years in the Maynooth seminary before deciding against the clerical life.

He was also the first openly gay Fine Gael TD and campaigned for the passing of the marriage referendum last year.

He said the recent controversy surrounding gay seminarians at Maynooth brought to the fore the need for the Irish church hierarchy to embrace LGBT people of faith and make them part of the church.

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Independent investigation needed at Maynooth

IRELAND
Mayo News

Fr Kevin Hegarty

IMAGINE if the director of the Bank of Ireland declared that he had no confidence in the financial procedures of the company. There would be a mass withdrawal of funds. It might even lead to the closure of the bank.

As a less dramatic level, something like that happened in the Catholic Church in Ireland last week.

The Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Diarmuid Martin, is the second ranking cleric in the Irish Catholic establishment and a trustee of St Patrick’s College in Maynooth. He announced that he was unhappy with seminary formation in the college and was sending Dublin student priests to the Irish College in Rome. Has he sounded the death knell for an institution that was once the biggest Catholic seminary in the world and the place where the vast majority of Irish priests have been trained since 1795. What is happening at Maynooth?

So far the complaints have been general and vague. Dr Martin stated that he is somewhat unhappy about an atmosphere which was growing in Maynooth. You’d learn about it through anonymous accusations made through anonymous letters and blogs, accusing people of misconduct or accusing the faculty of Maynooth of not treating allegations correctly.”

He went on to cite that “one of the allegations is that there is a homosexual, a gay culture and that students have been using an app called Grinder which is a gay dating app which would be inappropriate for seminarians.” The college authorities responded by saying that they shared the archbishop’s concern about the poisonous atmosphere created by anonymous allegations. They deny that a gay subculture exists in the seminary. They assert that students “with specific concerns are encouraged to report them appropriately.” Several bishops including the Archbishop of Armagh, Dr Eamon Martin, have rallied to the defence of Maynooth. In the happy event of having student priests, they will continue to send them to the college. So far no bishop has come out in support of Dr Diarmuid Martin, contributing to the impression that he is a kind of lone ranger amongst his colleagues.

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TRUSTEES OF IRELAND’S NATIONAL SEMINARY TO MEET OVER GAY SCANDALS

IRELAND
Church Militant

by Aaron Maxwell • ChurchMilitant.com • August 9, 2016

MAYNOOTH, Ireland (ChurchMilitant.com) – The Primate of All Ireland is announcing a meeting of the trustees of scandal-ridden St Patrick’s College in Maynooth, Ireland to discuss its future.

Archbishop Eamon Martin made the announcement Monday on Ireland’s RTE, saying trustees are to meet within the next five weeks to discuss the solution to the current controversy at Ireland’s national seminary, allegedly run by a homosexual network. The announcement came hours after Dublin’s archbishop Diarmuid Martin — who last week pulled his three seminarians from St. Patrick’s — commented that he was surprised a trustees’ meeting had not yet been called to resolve the current crisis.

He and Abp. Eamon Martin have since spoken, and along with Maynooth president Msgr. Hugh Connolly have agreed that a meeting is needed before the academic year.

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A ‘culture of secrecy and fear’ at Maynooth seminary

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Two former seminarians have said they were told to sign a confidentiality agreement binding them to secrecy about Maynooth in their first weeks in the seminary.

The first former seminarian, who contacted The Irish Times, was 21 when he entered St Patrick’s College in September 2005. He was “not streetwise, and this was my first time moving out from home”, he said.

Students at Maynooth are normally invited to sign the college register on their first day. “This happens in front of the student’s class and some, if not all, of the seminary council,” he said.

Following this, however, the seminarians were presented with another document pledging not to “sue the seminary trustees for anything that happened within” Maynooth.

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Holy See maintains tactical silence on Maynooth ‘goings-on’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew in Rome

A week has passed since the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin went public over his concerns about the national seminary in Maynooth.

He told this newspaper on Monday of last week that he “wasn’t happy with Maynooth” because of the “atmosphere of strange goings-on”. He has since repeated his concerns about allegations of a homosexual subculture and of sexual activity in the college, inappropriate for an institution preparing men for a celibate priesthood.

So how is this playing out in Rome? First of all, there no official Holy See position. Informally, the Vatican line is that an issue like this is one for the local church, the Irish Bishops’ Conference and the Maynooth trustees to handle.

When it suits, the Holy See can closely follow the “subsidiarity” principle, namely that issues – controversial or otherwise – are best handled by the smallest, least centralised competent authority.

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Victims rally for NY bill to extend statute of limitations for child sex crimes

NEW YORK
CBS 6

BY ANNE MCCLOY TUESDAY, AUGUST 9TH 2016

COHOES–Gary Greenberg says he was sexually abused by a hospital worker in Cohoes when he was just 7-years-old.

“My life changed in one second because I faced a brutal scumbag who took so much from me,” Greenberg said.

Greenberg is the co-owner of Vernon Downs Casino and Founder of the Fighting for Children PAC. He’s in support of New York’s Child Victim’s Act, which if passed, would allow people who are sexually abused as children, to get justice against their attackers as adults, years after the abuse took place, by extending the statute of limitations for child sex abuse. He’s says he’s putting up 100,000 dollars to defeat state senators who’ve voted against the legislation in the past.

Judy Russo drove from New Jersey, to help support the proposed New York legislation. Russo says she was sexually abused as a child. Years later she says, her own child was abused too.

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Sexual predator who made ‘lifestyle’ of being pedophile sentenced to ‘die in jail’

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Mel Buttigieg – Yahoo7 News on August 10, 2016

An 84-year-old former Hunter Valley Sunday school church teacher described as a “predator” has been sentenced to 21 years jail for a string of historical sexual offences dating back to the 1940s.

Donald Victor Greenaway, a former volunteer scripture teacher at the Newcastle Baptist Church, was charged with sexually assaulting 21 boys, most of whom he met at the former Woodlands Boys’ Home.

The Newcastle court on Wednesday heard the retired accountant preyed on children as young as five when he worked at the home before its 1981 closure, the Daily Telegraph reported.

Greenaway also lured children who met through junior sport, to his homes in Newcastle and Lake Macquarie to show them hardcore pornography and videos depicting bestiality. He then sexually abused them.

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Local TD welcomes news that abuse survivors case will be heard

IRELAND
inTallaght

Dublin South West TD Seán Crowe says he is glad to hear that Bethany Homes survivor Derek Leister’s case to the European Court of Human Rights has been accepted.

The Irish Government’s failure and refusal to include the Protestant Church run Bethany Children’s Homes in its redress scheme has led the chairman of the survivors group to take the case.

Crowe said that the Government’s decision not to include the homes at that time was based purely on a monetary one and had absolutely nothing to do with justice or about what was the right thing for the State to do.

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US pastor who raped Malawian boys jailed for 25 years

MALAWI
Malawi 24

Lindiwe Sambalikagwa

An American pastor, Gerald Campbell who raped orphaned boys was sentenced on Tuesday in federal court to 25 years in prison for sexually abusing children in his care at an orphanage in Malawi.

Campbell, 66, raped eight orphans, including one who infected with HIV, at the Victory Christian Children’s Home in Malawi between 1997 and 2009.

A Reuters report states that Campbell pleaded guilty in May, could have faced up to life in prison, according to papers filed in federal court in Texas.

Campbell reached a plea agreement and admitted to engaging in sexual acts with eight minors, all of whom were orphans living at the Victory Christian Children’s Home in Malawi between 1997 and 2009, U.S. prosecutors said.

“Campbell admitted that he knew that what he was doing was wrong and that he thought nobody would believe the minors if they reported the abuse,” they said in a statement.

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The Pope’s child sex protection expert Father Hans Zollner on battling ‘evil’

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

SHANE COWLISHAW
August 10 2016

By his own admission, Father Hans Zollner’s job is “dark, bleak and heavy”.

Often described as the Pope’s expert in the fight against child abuse, he has heard countless tales from those who have suffered at the hands of priests.

Zollner, a German, is president of the Centre for Child Protection at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University.

He is also a member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, set up by Pope Francis in 2014 with the single purpose of developing initiatives that could prevent future abuse within the church.

Since the late 1980s, when the first allegations of improper behaviour within the church began to surface, thousands of people have come forward claiming they were abused by priests and nuns.

Zollner has travelled all over the world in his role, arriving in New Zealand for the first time last week.

During that time he held a full-day safeguarding training day in Wellington for 85 people from all areas of the church, including Cardinal John Dew, the papal envoy and bishops.

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Lismore jury considers verdict in trial of Catholic priest on child sexual abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Bruce MacKenzie

A jury in Lismore has retired to consider its verdict in the trial of a Catholic priest accused of child sexual abuse offences.

John Patrick Casey had been a police chaplain for two decades before he was arrested in July last year and charged with 27 counts relating to 18 allegations of child sexual abuse.

The 68-year-old is accused of molesting three boys on four separate occasions when each was staying with him at the Mallanganee Presbytery, west of Casino in northern New South Wales, in the mid 1980s.

He has pleaded not guilty to all charges in the Lismore District Court.

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Royal Commission revisits “child porn” found in Anglican priest’s belongings

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
10 Aug 2016

A FORMER employee of Farragher’s removalist’s firm has told of finding a pornographic video with a boy of about 12 on the cover when packing up possessions of disgraced Anglican priest Peter Rushton in 1998.

Rushton’s pornographic hoard at the Maitland rectory was discussed in evidence in the first week of the Anglican hearings of the Royal Commission in Newcastle.

On Wednesday morning, the removalist, Gary Askie, told how he was made to sign a statement promising not to say anything to anyone about the incident.

“The church knew he [Rushton] was gay and I wasn’t allowed to say anything to anyone about it,” Mr Askie told the royal commission.

He said he was about 28 years old at the time and was shocked and horrified at what he saw. Most of the videos he saw had naked adult males on the covers but one definitely had a boy, who he said was naked and aged about 12.

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Removalist uncovered child pornography at priest’s Newcastle home, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

A former removalist has told the child sexual abuse royal commission he felt sick when he found child pornography while packing the belongings of a Hunter Valley priest.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the ways the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle responded to allegations by clergy and lay members of the church.

Gary Askie worked for Farragher Removalists in 1998 when he was asked to move the possessions of Anglican priest Peter Rushton.

The commission has heard Rushton worked across the Newcastle diocese from 1963, but allegations of sexual abuse involving him only came to light after his death in 2007.

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Australia: Church bishop ‘in tears’ over decision to defrock sex abuse priest

AUSTRALIA
Christian Today

Carey Lodge CHRISTIAN TODAY JOURNALIST 10 August 2016

An Australian bishop was reduced to tears over having to defrock a priest accused of sexual abuse because he was worried about the “effect it would have on the parishioners”, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is currently hearing evidence from an abuse survivor identified only as CKH. He described his abuse as “a gross abuse of trust, selfish and thoughtless.”

He told the committee hearing that after a church body investigated his allegations against a number of clergy, including the former Dean of Newcastle Graeme Lawrence, it was recommended that Lawrence and two others, church deacon Andrew Duncan and priests Bruce Hoare, be defrocked.

However, CKH said then Bishop Brian Farran visited him in 2012 and cried over the situation.

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August 9, 2016

Ex-priest pleads guilty to 27 counts of sexual assault against children

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Press Association
Tuesday 9 August 2016

A former children’s home worker and Catholic priest has pleaded guilty to sexual assaults against children in the 1970s. Philip Temple, 66, admitted 27 counts of non-recent sexual assault committed against children in his care and two counts of perjury, according to the Metropolitan police.

The force said Temple, of no fixed address, appeared at Woolwich crown court in south-east London on Tuesday where he pleaded guilty to seven counts of non-recent sexual assault. He also appeared at Croydon crown court on Wednesday 6 April, where he pleaded guilty to 20 counts of non-recent sexual assault and two counts of perjury.

Police added that he pleaded not guilty to five counts of indecent assault. He is due to be sentenced on Wednesday at Woolwich.

Scotland Yard said Temple was employed by Wandsworth borough council where he worked at Woking Close and Hertfield House between 1972 and 1974. He was also employed by Lambeth borough council between 1974 and 1977 where he worked at Rowan House in Shirley Oaks, Croydon.

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Re-trial puts landmark Catholic sex abuse conviction in doubt

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholic News Agency

Philadelphia, Pa., Aug 9, 2016 / 04:45 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- There will be drama in Philadelphia.

A landmark case involving Catholic officials’ response to sex abuse is planned for retrial May 1 of next year. The accused is a monsignor who was the first Catholic official convicted for his supervisory actions regarding a priest accused of abusing children.

But claims of new exonerating evidence and a court’s decision to throw out the monsignor’s previous sentence make the situation more complex.

Monsignor William J. Lynn, 65, was released from Pennsylvania state prison Aug. 2 on $250,000 bail. He had served 33 months in prison on a conviction that was overturned in late 2015.

The monsignor was sentenced to three to six years in prison after a 2012 trial.

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New Allegations of Sexual Abuse at Fordham Prep Remind Us That Men Can Be Victims, Too

NEW YORK
Slate

By Nora Caplan-Bricker

Fordham Preparatory School, a prestigious Jesuit boys’ school in the Bronx, has deemed a former student’s allegations that a teacher sexually abused him in 1984 “credible,” the New York Times reported Monday.

The assault took place shortly after graduation according to the former student, Michael Meenan, who says that he decided to spend the night at a house where he’d been celebrating with peers and awoke to find religious studies teacher Fernand Beck performing oral sex on him while he slept. Meenan says he reported the assault not long after it occurred with no apparent effect.

He was inspired to do so again, at least in part, by some of the real-life people behind the Academy Award-winning movie Spotlight—and by the conversation about sexual abuse that the movie, about the Boston Globe’s early 2000s exposé of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests, has helped create. One of Meenan’s former Fordham classmates, the actor Neal Huff, played victim’s advocate Phil Saviano in the film. Huff put Meenan in touch with the actual Mitchell Garabedian, the take-no-prisoners victims’ attorney portrayed in the movie by Stanley Tucci, and Garabedian contacted Fordham in March on Meenan’s behalf, according to the Times. Now, Fordham says Beck is no longer on its faculty, though it won’t specify whether he was fired or resigned.

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The Rev. Howard White, ex-St. George’s assistant chaplain, accused of sex abuse at N.H. prep school

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Providence Journal

By Karen Lee Ziner
Journal Staff Writer

Posted Aug. 9, 2016

CONCORD, N.H. — An alumnus of St. Paul’s School in Concord, New Hampshire, has accused the Rev. Howard W. “Howdy” White Jr. of sexually abusing him during White’s time there between 1967 through 1971, the school confirmed Tuesday. White served as a chaplain and teacher at the prestigious Episcopal boarding institution.

White, who subsequently became assistant chaplain at St. George’s School in Middletown, is one of a half-dozen former staff members who figured in a sex-abuse scandal at St. George’s. A Rhode Island State Police investigation, concluded in June, found no prosecutable criminal misconduct against any of the alleged perpetrators, or the school, in part due to statutes of limitations.

St. George’s announced a confidential settlement last week between the elite Episcopal prep school and up to 30 alumni whose abuse claims reach back to the 1970s. Those sex-abuse claims include allegations against White, whom the school fired in 1974 for admitted sexual misconduct but never reported to authorities.

In Concord, St. Paul’s rector Michael G. Hirschfeld wrote to alumni Aug. 5 of the recent allegation against White. Hirschfeld said the school had hired former Massachusetts attorney general Scott Harshbarger “to lead our investigative efforts and pursue any complaints” following the St. George’s allegations.

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Youth Protection Announcement

PENNSYLVANIA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg

AUGUST 9, 2016

The scandal of sexual abuse in the Church has been painful. What we know now is that sexual abuse impacts every aspect of society and every profession. Some of you may have been impacted personally by this crime; we pray that the light of Christ will aid in your healing.

If anyone in this Parish has been or is being hurt by the sexual misconduct of any priest, deacon, religious brother or sister, seminarian, employee or volunteer of the Catholic Church, the Diocese of Harrisburg would like to know about such abuse, so that we can help the victim in his or her healing process and, if necessary, remove the offender from all public ministry.

To make such a report, the person should call the toll-free Pennsylvania Childline at 1-800-932-0313. To contact the Diocese for assistance in healing, the person should also call the Diocesan toll-free Hotline at 1-800-626-1608 or email ReportAbuse@hbgdiocese.org .

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Report puts spotlight on child sex abuse involving Harrisburg Diocese clergy

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg on Tuesday was in the news amid a report regarding child sex abuse within its ranks.

A report by The York Daily Record indicated that the diocese named 15 priests who have been accused of sexually abusing children and who had worked in the 15-county diocese.

The YDR report specifically names the Rev. Raymond Prybis, who once served at St. Joseph’s in Dallastown. Prybis was accused of abuse during his time at a Boston-area parish before he was transferred to York County. The report cites a personnel file released by the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis in January 2015. Prybis did not have a credible allegation of abuse against him while at St. Joseph’s, the YDR reported.

Many of the clergy members’ names cited in the YDR report have appeared in reports by PennLive and The Patriot-News, both of which have over the years published reports regarding allegations of sexual abuse against priests from the diocese – as well as the respective response from the diocese to those allegations.

Those reports include accounts involving:

* Guy Marsico, a former priest assigned to St. Leo the Great Catholic Church in Rohrerstown, Lancaster County. (No criminal charges were ever leveled against Marsico).

* The 2004 report from the diocese confirming it had received credible reports of sexual abuse of 64 minors by 22 priests since 1950 and had spent $1.9 million in settlements, legal fees and counseling. None of the 22 priests were in active ministry at the time.

* In April 2002 the diocese received a “credible allegation” of sexual misconduct with a minor against John Allen, senior pastor at St. Margaret Mary Alacoque Church in Penbrook. The allegation stemmed from an incident more than 20 years earlier. Allen resigned from the priesthood within 12 hours. Prosecution was not possible because the statute of limitations had expired.

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PA–Victims blast “reckless secrecy” of Harrisburg bishop

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2016

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

Harrisburg Bishop Ronald Gainer and his staff are putting kids in harm’s way by continuing to hide the names and whereabouts of predator priests. Shame on them.

After decades of pledges by Catholic officials to be “open” about clergy sex abuse and cover up cases, they still being secretive. As a result, who knows how many unsuspecting families live near or individuals work with predator priests?

About 30 US dioceses post names of proven, admitted and credibly accused predator priests on their websites. Gainer, however, refuses to take this simple, inexpensive, practical step to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded and expose the truth. Shame on his employees who are complicit in this reckless secrecy: Joseph Aponick, Msgr. William King and other current and former church staff.

We urge Harrisburg Catholics to donate elsewhere until their church officials stop hiding child molesting clerics.

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The Silent Treatment

NEW YORK
The Paper

Fordham Offers “No Comment” To Allegations of 1960’s Clergy Abuse

by Peter Mullin
Co-Sports Editor
with Bill Donahue
Co-Editor-in-Chief

In April of 1994 an 18-year-old freshman walked into the office of the Dean of Fordham College at Rose Hill, a place that, according to the University’s mission statement, concerns itself with fostering an “environment that celebrates and protects the dignity of the human person.” Inside the confines of that office the young woman started the process of protecting that dignity. She told the Dean a story of how, after a night of drinking in the city, her philosophy professor took advantage of her in his office. By the end of the semester, her professor had resigned.

Ten years later that scene would come to national attention in an article by Joseph Feuerherd published in the National Catholic Reporter. The story detailed the alleged 1994 sexual misconduct of Deal W. Hudson, a top advisor to George W. Bush’s 2004 re-election campaign, while he was a tenured professor of philosophy at Fordham.

That July, Fordham spokeswoman Elizabeth Schmalz issued a statement to NCR saying, “Sexual Harassment is not tolerated at Fordham University.” It continued, “Fordham followed its policy rigorously in this case and initiated an investigation into the matter upon receipt of the student’s complaint.”

The Dean in the NCR article, described as “sympathetic” and giving “every indication that he believed [the girl’s] story,” was Father Joseph M. McShane, S.J., Fordham University’s current president. In 1994, it appears that he listened intently to the aggrieved student and quickly iniated actions to remove Mr. Hudson from his position. And in 2004, Father McShane presided over the University when it publicly and explicitly denounced sexual harassment after the allegations against Mr. Hudson surfaced in the media.

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Ex-Catholic priest admits seven charges of child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A former children’s home worker and Catholic priest has pleaded guilty to a string of historical child sex abuse charges.

Philip Temple, 66, admitted seven charges committed in the 1970s when he appeared at Woolwich Crown Court.

He pleaded to 20 similar charges and two of perjury at Croydon Crown Court in April.

In all, he admitted abusing 12 boys and one girl while working in south London care homes and a north London church.

He also admitted lying on oath in the 1990s when he was cleared of child sex abuse charges following accusations by a teenage boy from his church.

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Letter about Brandie Kessler’s Articles in the York Daily Record

HARRISBURG (PA)
Diocese of Harrisburg

By Very Rev. Robert M. Gillelan, Jr.
Secretary for Clergy and Consecrated Life

[This letter from a diocesan official was posted on the website of St. Joseph’s parish in York PA. It refers to articles by reporter Brandie Kessler that appeared in the York Daily Record:
15 priests accused of abuse had ties to Harrisburg diocese
List: Accused priests with ties to Harrisburg diocese

See also our overview of diocesan and religious order lists of accused.]

I am writing to alert you to a newspaper article that we expect will be published in the York Daily Record soon. It will address several specific cases of sexual abuse by clergy in the Diocese of Harrisburg. Some cases were well publicized previously, so they may be familiar to you already; others had a lower profile. We made the decision to confirm the cases presented by the reporter in the interest of accuracy and transparency.

There are many viewpoints concerning the disclosure of information about instances of abuse, particularly of deceased clergy who cannot now defend themselves. This is one of the reasons it has been the longstanding policy of the Diocese not to publish names. However, the names to appear in the article were obtained independently and are to be published with or without our cooperation. Therefore the Diocese decided to provide accurate information in the interest of transparency and healing.

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Children’s worker employed in Wandsworth and Croydon homes pleads guilty to historical sexual offences

UNITED KINGDOM
This is Local London

A former children’s home worker and Catholic priest has admitted 27 counts of historical sexual assault committed against children in his care and two counts of perjury.

Philip Temple, 66, of no fixed address, appeared at Woolwich Crown Court today, August 9, where he pleaded guilty to seven counts of non-recent sexual assault.

He previously admitted 20 other counts of sexual assault and perjury at Croydon Crown Court on August 6.

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Cathedral deans express grief over clergy-led abuse

AUSTRALIA
Anglican Communion News Service

[ACNS, by Gavin Drake] The deans of Australia’s cathedrals have expressed grief at hurt and trauma caused by clergy and church workers after hearing reports about the country’s Royal Commission on Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and the newly established Royal Commission into the Child Protection and Youth Detention Systems of the Northern Territory.

The deans had gathered at St James’ Cathedral in Townsville, North Queensland, for their annual conference. In a statement, issued at the end of their gathering, the deans strongly condemned any form of abuse. The statement said that the deans – the senior clergy person in charge of a cathedral – had “reported on safeguarding measures in their own cathedrals, affirmed the importance of public acknowledgement and repentance for past wrongs, and the need for transparency and openness of conversation to enable a process of healing and the prevention of future abuse.

“Our national Church needs to do more and move quickly on issues of redress for victims, recognising that we are one Body of Christ and therefore together are responsible,” the Dean of Darwin, the Very Revd Keith Joseph, said. “We give thanks for the work of the national Royal Commission and commend the newly appointed Royal Commission looking into issues in the Northern Territory.”

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Bishop’s regular sex abuse meetings took no action

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX
Crime reporterSydney
@DanBox10

Roger Herft, now Anglican Archbishop of Perth, regularly met church officials to discuss “brown envelopes” containing details of priests’ child abuse allegations, yet the group often decided to do nothing, a royal commission has heard.

At the time Archbishop Herft was bishop of Newcastle, in NSW, one of those in the meetings was the dean of the city’s cath­edral, Graeme Lawrence — later defrocked for having group sex with a teenage boy — the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard.

A former trustee of the diocese, Keith Allen, told the commission yesterday he also took part in twice-yearly meetings, before Archbishop Herft moved to Perth in 2005.

About 27 “brown envelopes” detailed claims of child abuse, Mr Allen told the commission: “My memory is either (former diocese registrar) Mr Mitchell brought them in or maybe Bishop Herft brought them in.”

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Watch: Clergy abuse and the Harrisburg diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Mark Totaro, victim assistance coordinator for the Diocese of Harrisburg, says the Catholic Church will do its best to take care of clergy abuse victims, though “they might never have closure.” Chris Dunn, York Daily Record

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Survivor tells of five years of teenage sex with four priests

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
9 Aug 2016

A MAN whose complaints against the former dean of Newcastle Graeme Lawrence and three other priests led to their expulsion or suspension from the clergy told his story to the Royal Commission on Tuesday afternoon.

Given the psuedonym CKH, the 51-year old recounted a tale of grooming by priests that began in 1980 when a priest, Andrew Duncan, performed oral sex on him at the age of 14.

As well as Duncan and Lawrence, he would go on to have sex with Lawrence’s partner, teacher Greg Goyette, and two other priests, Bruce Hoare and Graeme Sturt.

The commission heard of his encounters with these men until 1985, when he began to reassess the situation and made him believe he had been “duped” and that experiences he had originally believed he was in control of were “in the nature of abuse”.

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Yeshivah leaders call it ‘halachically and morally unacceptable’ to bad-mouth their own and demand apology, but publicly attacking victims and victim advocates is not as bad

AUSTRALIA
Manny Waks

-​​Since its appearance before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse one and a half years ago, the Yeshivah leadership has tried to manufacture an image that things have changed. The reality is that very little seems to have changed. Some of the same leaders whose conduct was exposed at the Royal Commission, remain in positions of authority at Yeshivah. Despite the representations made by Yeshivah to the Royal Commission, attacks on Yeshivah’s victims and advocates continue unabated and with the implicit support of the Yeshivah leadership. Unsurprisingly, some of the attacks have come from the family members of paedophiles and those who helped protect them.

Last Friday (5 August), an e-mail from a frustrated member of the Yeshivah community was sent to around 100 other community members, complaining of the behaviour of Rabbi Chaim Tzvi Groner, the son of the late Rabbi Yitzchok Dovid Groner (the founder and director of the Yeshivah Centre during much of the period of the abuse and cover-ups there). Rabbi Groner was one of the trustees of Yeshivah who essentially led it to the Royal Commission. Despite the promise that all trustees would resign their leadership of Yeshivah following the Royal Commission, Rabbi Groner was recently appointed by the Trustees (i.e. including himself) to the Board of Yeshivah for life as part of the ‘new’ Yeshivah governance structure.

The email in question referred to stonewalling by Rabbi Groner and communications which the author had with various media outlets. Now, I know from personal experience, that people rarely involve the media without first trying to resolve things internally. Before I went public with my story of abuse through The Age, I repeatedly tried to engage with the Yeshivah leadership (Rabbi Groner senior) but they refused, leaving me with no alternative. Even after the initial media coverage, I repeatedly tried to engage with the Yeshivah leadership, but again they refused. Had I not gone to the media, the huge strides forward in child protection that have occurred in recent years in the Jewish community – in Australia and beyond – would not have happened. It goes without saying that the only people that really fear media exposure are those with something to hide.

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Ex-Marist brothers John William Chute and Gregory Joseph Sutto

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

Megan Gorrey

Two former Marist College Canberra teachers have been committed to stand trial in the ACT Supreme Court for allegedly sexually abusing boys at the school in the 1980s.

Ex-Marist brothers John William Chute, 84, and Gregory Joseph Sutton, 65, were among four men police charged with fresh offences as part of an ongoing investigation into historical child sexual abuse in ACT schools.

Chute, also known as Brother Kostka, is facing six charges of indecent assault and two acts of indecency for offences allegedly committed against two students over several years from 1980.

He taught at numerous Marist Brothers high schools and colleges before he moved to the Pearce college in 1976, according to a police statement of facts tendered in court.

The documents said the abuse against one of the alleged victims began when Chute touched the boy’s genitals from behind as the child patted the teacher’s labrador at school one day in 1980.

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Teacher Out at Fordham Prep After School Says ’84 Sexual Abuse Claim Is Credible

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

By Colin Moynihan
August 8, 2016

[Note: See the letter discussed in this article. Fr. Eugene J. O’Brien, S.J., Mr. Beck’s superior for many years at Fordham Prep, has also been accused of sexual abuse, as has another Jesuit, Fr. Roy A. Drake, S.J., who taught at the Prep during Beck and O’Brien’s tenure.]

The gathering, in June 1984, was like many others involving recent graduates of Fordham Preparatory School, a Jesuit all-boys secondary school in the Bronx. It took place at a home in Westchester County, where many of Fordham’s students lived. Most of those at the party drank and several ended up spending the night, according to a former Fordham Prep student, Michael Meenan.

That night, Mr. Meenan said, a Fordham Prep teacher who had driven him to the party performed oral sex on him while he slept in a room along with others. When he woke up and pulled away, sliding beneath a coffee table, Mr. Meenan said, the teacher grabbed his leg and tried to drag him back.

Mr. Meenan said that he had told the school’s headmaster about the episode not long after it happened, but that it appeared no action was taken. The teacher remained on the faculty.

Now, 32 years after the episode, Fordham Prep has acknowledged Mr. Meenan’s account of abuse as credible and said the teacher he accused would not return to the school.

“We received an allegation from a Fordham Prep alumnus of the class of 1984 that religious studies teacher, Mr. Fernand Beck, sexually molested him shortly after he graduated,” the school’s president, the Rev. Christopher J. Devron. wrote in a letter dated Aug. 5. “While Mr. Beck has denied this allegation, an investigation led by an independent counsel retained by Fordham Prep determined that the allegation is credible.”

Mr. Beck could not be reached for comment on Monday. Although Father Devron did not identify the person who had lodged the complaint, Mr. Meenan said that it was him and that he had also recently reported the 1984 episode to the Westchester County district attorney’s office. (This reporter also attended Fordham Prep during the same period but did not then know Mr. Meenan or have classes with Mr. Beck.)

“What Beck did was criminal,” Mr. Meenan said during a recent telephone interview. “The school should have fired him long ago and he should have gone to prison.”

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Is this the most toxic job description in public life?

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

By Clive Coleman
Legal correspondent, BBC News

Wanted: highly respected chairman or chairwoman, available for up to 10 years, robust in the face of press scrutiny, and with no ties to the British establishment – it is becoming the most toxic job description in public life. Finding the right person to chair this vast, complex and crucial public inquiry is proving all but impossible.

The departure of Dame Lowell Goddard has plunged the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) into crisis.

And what makes that so bitterly ironic is that she was precisely the person appointed to be the steadying hand on an inquiry that many felt had lost its way before it had even started.

The first chairwoman, Baroness Butler-Sloss, a hugely experienced retired judge, stood down after a week because of concerns relating to the fact she was the sister of the late Lord Havers. He was attorney general at the time of some of the abuse that was to be examined.

Why that had not been considered, or thought to be important, before her appointment remains a mystery.

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El Vaticano ordena juicio canónico contra John O’Reilly por abusos sexuales

CHILE
Publimetro

[The Vatican orders canonical trial against John O’Reilly for sexual abuse.]

El sacerdote fue condenado a cuatros años y un día de libertad vigilada por abuso sexual contra una menor.

La Congregación de los Legionarios de Cristo de Chile informó que el Vaticano, específicamente la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, instruyó un juicio canónico en contra del padre John O`Reilly.

Este juicio, según detalla un comunicado publicado por al congregación, se da a partir de “acusaciones presentadas en sede eclesiástica” contra el religioso. El juicio tendrá competencia y determinación exclusiva del Tribunal Eclesiástico en Roma.

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Fordham Prep teacher out over ‘credible’ molestation claims

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

By Michael Gartland
August 8, 2016

A popular religious studies teacher at a private all-boys school in The Bronx won’t be returning next semester after an investigation found accusations of sexual molestation three decades ago “credible,” officials said Monday.

Fernand Beck, who taught at the Fordham Prep for 47 years, is departing just months after a former student leveled the accusation near the end of the 2015-16 school year.

“We received an allegation from a Fordham Prep alumnus of the class of 1984 that religious studies teacher Mr. Fernand Beck sexually molested him shortly after he graduated,” said a letter that the school sent to parents and alumni last Friday.

“While Mr. Beck has denied this allegation, an investigation led by an independent counsel retained by Fordham Prep determined that the allegation is credible.”

The letter — signed by school president Christopher Devron and principal Joseph Petriello — said the school immediately reported the allegations to law enforcement, the archdiocese and the school’s board.

Devron acknowledged Monday that the allegations aren’t being investigating by law enforcement “since the statute of limitations had long expired.”

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New officers elected for Concerned Catholics of Guam

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Aug 09, 2016

By Krystal Paco

They were established two years ago amid the growing division in the local Catholic Church. The Concerned Catholics of Guam organization recently elected new officers and announced their work plan moving forward.

Under the leadership of their president-elect David Sablan and vice president Andrew Camacho, the group will prioritize the removal of Archbishop Anthony Apuron, the restoration of Monsignor James Benavente and Father Paul Gofigan back to their parishes by a chancery decree, prioritize assistance for alleged victims of sexual abuse by church clergy, support and assist fellow church groups, promote financial transparency, and return the Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Yona back to the Archdiocese of Agana by legal means.

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Church faces more serious matters than media scrum over Maynooth

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Fr Seán McDonagh
PUBLISHED
09/08/2016

In recent times, I have been writing about climate change and how Ireland is not living up to its obligations. The situation is very serious. Scientists are telling us that 2015 was the hottest year on record and that 2016 is expected to be even warmer.

The issue will lead to the death and displacement of millions of people, but unfortunately our media and politicians have been slow to grapple with it in an effective and competent way. It is only very recently that the leadership of the Catholic Church has begun to take the environmental degradation of the planet seriously.

In June 2015, Pope Francis published an extraordinary encyclical on the care of creation, entitled ‘Laudato Si: On Care For Our Common Home’.

So could it be that Ireland and the Catholic Church might finally be discussing this document in August 2016? Alas, no.

But in the social and economic sphere, we also face other serious challenges today. Research by Oxfam Ireland has pointed out that the share of income going to workers has fallen as the size of the global economy more than doubled over the past three decades.

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Anna Nolan: ‘I knew nuns and priests who loved to meet for a snog – and some light petting’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Anna Nolan
PUBLISHED
09/08/2016

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin is not happy with how the Maynooth seminary is being run, so he has decided to send his trainee priests to the Irish College in Rome. Other bishops don’t seem too

By the sound of things, there seems to be a few shenanigans going on in Maynooth. Not only is there alleged use of dating sites, you naughty boys, but they’re all ratting on each other through anonymous letters and blogs.

“Dear Vocations Director, I was doing my weekly wash in the laundry room when out of the corner of my I saw Brother Whatsisname swipe right. No, he wasn’t swatting a fly, he was on dating site Grindr.

“I would like to bring this to your attention because, if Bro-ther Whatsisname is on Grindr, why can’t the rest of us? Yours sincerely, Brother Anonymous.”

OK, I’ll be serious for a moment. From the age of 19 to 22 I trained with the Loreto sisters. In my first year as a postulant, I trained in Mount Argus with about 12 other trainee nuns and priests. We had people from Mercy, Daughters of Charity, Franciscan orders. Young men and women. All there to learn the ropes. We were a sweet, young, innocent group who were filled with enthusiasm and vocation.

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‘Sauna Rabbi’ Emerges as Spiritual Counselor in Westchester

NEW YORK
Forward

Josefin Dolsten
August 8, 2016

A rabbi who made headlines for taking young male congregants on sauna trips has found a new job as a spiritual advisor in a health center in Westchester, New York.

Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt is providing spiritual and psychological counseling at Scarsdale Integrative Medicine, a medical center that combines traditional Western medicine with alternative treatment according to its website.

The health center lists Rosenblatt as a counselor and makes no mention of his controversial past, but states he has a wide range of counseling experience.

“Rabbi Rosenblatt has deep experience across a broad spectrum of challenges: coping with serious illness and bereavement, stressful family relationships, parenting challenges, life transitions, loss of a sense of meaning and direction, workplace conflicts,” reads Rosenblatt’s biography on the Scarsdale Integrative Medicine.

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15 priests accused of abuse had ties to Harrisburg diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

List: Accused priests with ties to Harrisburg diocese

Watch: Clergy abuse victim wants priests publicly named

Watch: Clergy abuse and the Harrisburg diocese

FOR THE FIRST TIME, DETAILS EMERGE ABOUT 15 PRIESTS WITH TIES TO THE HARRISBURG DIOCESE WHO HAVE BEEN ACCUSED OF SEXUALLY ABUSING CHILDREN.

Brandie Kessler, bkessler@ydr.com

The Diocese of Harrisburg has acknowledged by name 15 priests who have been accused of sexually abusing children and who at one time worked in the diocese — including one who served in Dallastown in 1989-90.

The Rev. Raymond Prybis was accused of abuse during his time at a Boston-area parish before he was transferred to York County, according to a personnel file released by the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis in January 2015. The Harrisburg diocese said he did not have a credible allegation of abuse while at St. Joseph’s.

A list of 15 priests, compiled by the York Daily Record, was provided to the diocese on June 14. On July 21, after multiple requests by the Daily Record, the diocese responded to each name on the list. It is believed to be the first time the Harrisburg diocese has confirmed a list of accused priests, including details on where and when they served, and how the diocese responded when the allegations were made.

In 2007, the diocese said publicly that it had received allegations against 24 priests since 1950, but it did not name them. As of Aug. 8, it had not responded to a request for information on all accused priests with ties to the Harrisburg diocese.

The Daily Record’s investigation was spurred by grand jury findings in the neighboring Altoona-Johnstown diocese. That report revealed more than 50 accused priests and hundreds of victims. The YDR’s effort to account for the scope of clergy abuse in the Harrisburg diocese has resulted in findings that include:

* Fifteen priests identified as having been accused of abusing children, including eight never named publicly through the diocese or media.

* In some cases, the Harrisburg diocese’s response to the list of 15 did not say whether an accusation was credible, even if it said action was taken against a priest. The diocese did not provide details in response to follow-up questions from the York Daily Record.

* The diocese continues to hear from – and offer help to – survivors of priest abuse. The effort includes an office within the diocese that has a limitless budget earmarked for survivors.

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Missionary doctor’s secret sins: Decades of alleged abuse and cover-up

MICHIGAN
WOOD

Ken Kolker and 24 Hour News 8 web staff
Published: August 8, 2016

WYOMING, Mich. (WOOD) — Kim James said she was a 12-year-old missionary kid — an MK, as they were called — when the sexual abuse started at a Baptist mission camp in Bangladesh.

“I am out to tell the world after all these years,” James told Target 8, speaking publicly about the allegations for the first time. “The truth must be known.”

Her alleged molester, Dr. Donn Ketcham, came from a church in the city of Wyoming. Then 58, he was a surgeon, family doctor and religious leader at the mission compound in a Bangladesh jungle.

He has admitted to “perverted sin” with her.

James was the first woman to come forward with allegations of sexual assault against the missionary doctor in 1989. Twenty-two more women would follow her example. Many of them call James a hero.

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Defrocked Dean of Newcastle abused me as a child, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

A man has told a royal commission’s public hearings he was 15 years old when he was first sexually abused by the defrocked former Dean of Newcastle, Graeme Lawrence.

The man, who can only be identified as CKH, has given evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

It is examining the ways the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle responded to child sexual abuse allegations by clergy and lay members of the church.

The man said he became a member of St Alban’s Anglican Church at Griffith around 1979, and was 14 years old when church deacon Andrew Duncan had sex with him during a family holiday on a houseboat in 1980.

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Pray your sins away? Guam priest who molested 20 boys told to say Hail Mary

GUAM
RT

When the Catholic Church learned that a priest working at the US island territory of Guam abused some 20 children, the only suitable response it found was to advise him to pray, the cleric, now based in Minnesota, has revealed in an interview.

Reverend Louis Brouillard, 95, admitted to repeatedly molesting boys while serving and teaching at Guam from the 1940s to the 1970s. Guam is an island in the Pacific known for housing a US Naval base.

After confessing his crimes to a local priest, Brouillard was not specifically told to stop, he told the AP. In fact, Brouillard was simply advised by other Church members to “do better” and repeat Hail Mary prayers.

When Brouillard was pressed on about how many boys he abused, he replied: “I have no idea. Maybe 20.”

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Kosovo: British former priest accused of abuse should not be extradited – court

KOSOVO
Christian Today

James Macintyre 09 August 2016

A British former Catholic priest wanted on historic child sex abuse charges should not be extradited to the UK because the crimes were committed too long ago, a court in Kosovo ruled on Monday.

Laurence Soper was detained in the western town of Peja – where he had lived for abour five years under the name Andrew Charles Kingston – in May on an international arrest warrant. He is accused of sex offences while he was a teacher in Britain. Soper allegedly committed the offences at St Benedict’s School in Ealing, where he was a teacher in the 1970s and 1980s.

The former abbot, now in his 70s, reportedly jumped bail in 2011 and a European arrest warrant was issued in 2012.

“British citizen Andrew Charles Kingston Soper should not be extradited because offences he has been charged with exceeded the statute of limitations,” a spokeswoman at the Basic Court, the first instance court in Peja, said.

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Bishop reluctant to defrock priest

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

AUGUST 9, 2016

By Annette Blackwell
AAP

An Anglican bishop baulked at having to defrock an influential senior cleric for sexual misconduct even though a church hearing had recommended he do so, a royal commission has been told.

The commission has been hearing complex and startling evidence on how the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle allegedly took a “do nothing” approach for decades to allegations of widespread child sex abuse by its clergy.

On Tuesday, abuse survivor CKH told how Bishop Brian Farran met him in 2012 and cried over the difficult decision he faced – whether to defrock the former dean of Newcastle Cathedral, Graeme Lawrence.

Bishop Farran was in charge of the dioceses from 2005 to 2012 and will give evidence at this hearing.

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List: Accused priests with ties to Harrisburg diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Watch: Clergy abuse victim wants priests publicly named – video

Brandie Kessler, bkessler@ydr.com August 9, 2016

A five-month investigation by the York Daily Record found evidence of allegations of sexual abuse against 15 priests with ties to the Harrisburg diocese.

Their names were provided through news reports, court documents, information from the Harrisburg diocese, interviews with attorneys and others, or from www.BishopAccountability.org, a website that tracks reporting and public documents about accused clergy.

The Harrisburg diocese said survivors of clergy abuse should report the abuse to law enforcement, the state ChildLine number at 1-800-932-0313, and to the diocese at 1-800-626-1608.

Here are details about each of the priests identified by the York Daily Record’s investigation:

* In April 2002, John G. Allen was “confronted by the Diocese with a credible accusation” from an incident 23 years earlier, the diocese said. Allen was pastor at St. Margaret Mary Parish in Harrisburg at the time of the accusation, and he resigned. He was removed from all active ministry, the diocese said, and is now laicized, a term that means he made a request to be removed from the priesthood. According to “The Official Catholic Directory,” Allen was the director of Catholic Youth Activities for the Harrisburg diocese from 1976 to 1977 and from 1979 to 1980.

* Alleged abuse by John Bostwick III took place during 1980 to 1982 and was reported to the diocese in 1996, the diocese said. By then, it said, Bostwick had been reassigned to the Diocese of Richmond, which was notified, and Bostwick was removed from ministry. The Harrisburg diocese said Bostwick had been assigned to Mount St. Mary’s College by the Richmond diocese and helped on weekends with Masses at St. Catherine Laboure Parish in Harrisburg. The Rev. John R. Bostwick III is listed as a contact for Coventry at Horseshoe Mountain in Roseland, Virginia, on the Nelson County, Virginia website. Bostwick could not be reached for comment.

* Gerald Bugge was assigned to St. Anthony of Padua in Lancaster from Aug. 19, 1986, until April 19, 1988, according to the Harrisburg diocese. Bugge was named on a list of priests issued by the Archdiocese of Baltimore in September 2002. The list included priests who had served in the archdiocese and who had been accused, in their lifetimes, of child sexual abuse. The archdiocese posted on its website that, “In 1985, Father Gerald Bugge admitted to engaging in inappropriate sexual activities with a minor in 1985. These allegations were reported to the Redemptorists, and Father Bugge’s faculties were removed.” The Harrisburg diocese said there is no record of a credible allegation against Bugge while he was assigned to the diocese. Bugge is dead.

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BRAZILIAN PRIEST ACCUSED OF ABUSE COMMITS SUICIDE IN PRISON

BRAZIL
The Tablet

09 August 2016 | by Catholic News Service

A Brazilian priest mentioned in the credits of the Oscar-winning film Spotlight about historic sex abuse in the US committed suicide in a prison cell after being arrested again for suspected child sex abuse, authorities in Minas Gerais state, just north of Rio, said today.

Local authorities said that Father Bonifacio Buzzi hanged himself with bed sheets in his prison cell on Sunday a day after he was re-arrested.

In 1995 he was found guilty of abusing several youngsters in a psychiatric hospital and sentenced to four years of house arrest. In 2004, he was found guilty of molesting an 11-year-old boy but fled before authorities could detain him. He was arrested in 2007 and imprisoned until 2015.

Buzzi, 57, was arrested again in early August in the southern state of Santa Catarina and was taken back to Minas Gerais, where he had been charged with molesting another youth.

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Attorney: Former priest photographed 50 altar boys and their private parts

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News August 9, 2016

A former priest who admitted to sexually abusing altar boys in Guam decades ago took photographs of about 50 boys and their private parts in the 1950s, according to a lawyer representing alleged victims of clergy abuse.

The Rev. Louis Brouillard, now 95, said he’s seeking forgiveness from former altar boys he sexually abused in Guam, where he was a priest from the late 1940s to 1981.

Other alleged victims of Brouillard, now in their 70s, have come forward to talk about the photographs, said attorney David Lujan, who represents several people who have accused local clergy, including Archbishop Anthony Apuron, of sexual abuse and rape.

Brouillard, who now lives in Minnesota, said he does not remember the names of the boys, including Leo Tudela, who publicly accused Brouillard as one of three church members who abused him as an altar boy in Guam, starting in 1956.

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August 8, 2016

Surely allegations and revelations from Maynooth could have been better handled?

IRELAND
Irish Times

John Weafer

Thousands of Irishmen have entered through the gates of Maynooth College with the intention of becoming diocesan priests, and while most of them subsequently decided against priesthood or left following ordination, most of them entered the seminary as idealistic young men, believing they were responding to God’s call. By the time they left the seminary, many had become disillusioned and critical of the seminary system.

For example, priests who were students before Vatican II criticise the seminary because of its regimented nature and ‘pernickety’ rules, which reflected the strictly hierarchical Church and cultic priesthood that prevailed in Irish society at the time.

While the seminary became less restrictive following Vatican II, and the servant-leader model of priesthood had effectively replaced the cultic model, nevertheless, many priests ordained following Vatican II believe that the seminary did not prepare them for the priesthood or life as an adult. Ironically, in recent years, the seminary has been criticised by younger students who perceive that it has become too liberal and that it lacks an ‘authentic faith base’.

Seminary life can be difficult at the best of times, and especially if you are a young man, struggling with your sexuality, be it heterosexual, homosexual or bisexual, and you feel that you are part of a ‘soap opera/reality show’, where people get to comment on your life and judge you without knowing you or understanding your life.

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Maynooth trustees to discuss crisis at national seminary

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

The trustees of St Patrick’s College Maynooth are to meet before the end of August to address the crisis at the seminary.

It is understood the Catholic primate Archbishop Eamon Martin, who is away, has been in contact with Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin and St Patrick’s College president Msgr Hugh Connolly.

The college has been at the centre of controversy for more than a week since it emerged Archbishop Martin was no longer going to send Dublin seminarians to it because of the “poisonous” atmosphere.

He said students were accessing gay dating apps and anonymous letters were being circulated accusing seminarians of misconduct.

The college trustees are the four Catholic Archbishops in Ireland and 13 diocesan bishops.

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Chief Rabbi Lau’s Statement about Child Abuse

ISRAEL
Frum Follies

Israel’s Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi, David Lau issued a public statement about child abuse. As far as I know it is his first to date.

Below is a translation of its flowery language gracefully executed by *Danny Wool. An image of the original in Hebrew is at the end of the article.

It is addressed to religious educators. I suspect it was written in response the arrests of yeshiva teachers last week. See, 6 Alleged Offenders, 22 Children (Ages 2-10), Over 11 Years in Tel Aviv Belz School.

It is interesting that he managed not to make public statements about other sex abuse scandals involving prestigious religious teachers such as Motti Elon, Ezra Sheinberg, Naftali Maklev, Meir Pogrow, Elimelech Meisels, Eliezer Berland, Ben Tzion Sobel, and Matis Weinberg. Lau doubtlessly knows of many others who escaped public exposure, criminal prosecution, or any sort of consequences.

But he has finally spoken, so let’s read it and then evaluate it.

Tammuz 29, 5776

August 4, 2016

To All Who Work Educating the Children of Israel in Good Faith

Greetings,

Re: Awareness of Injuries Caused to Students

Much to my regret, terrible incidents occurring in our courtyards and domains have recently been made public. Cases in which boys and girls alike have been hurt in their homes or educational institutions have taken place recently, shocking anyone with a heart. How painful it is to hear that those very places, which should be a support, a stronghold, and a source of succor for our children and youth have turned into a nightmare and source of terror for them.

At this time, it is incumbent on parents, educators both male and female, family members, and anyone else involved in the sacred work of education to open their eyes and assist anyone who needs help insofar as possible. Turning away is not an answer to these difficult and painful issues, and everyone must know that they bear responsibility, even if the matter does not affect them directly.

I do not want to go into detail about matters for which modesty is preferable, and I am disgusted by the very fact that we must refer to them at all. Nevertheless, it has become a necessity for which there is no shame. All of you in particular for whom pure education is your greatest priority, and that is where you have turned, have been laden with the great burden of opening your eyes and paying maximum attention so that you can identify phenomena that might harm the delicate souls of our young.

Under no circumstances should these matters be swept under the rug, nor should people avoid dealing with these harsh phenomena, which, if not stopped, could lead many more people to be hurt. Heaven forbid that we stand by in silence. Instead we must increase awareness and continue teaching in the way of modesty, in the way of the Torah, toward values deeply rooted in the ways of Israel’s ancestors.

May you be strengthened in your teaching out of love,

David Lau
Chief Rabbi of Israel

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