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.

June 15, 2016

Former social worker vouches credibility of claims against archbishop

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 15, 2016

By Krystal Paco

Archbishop Anthony Apuron has denied the allegations of sex abuse and instead claims he is a victim of a malicious smear campaign to oust him. But retired social worker Zita Calvo believes the accusers are telling the truth. Calvo was a social worker for 20 years with Child Protective Services.

A part of CPS’s mission is to provide immediate intervention and help to children who are victims of abuse. Additionally, the organization conducts investigations into allegations of child abuse and neglect.

Calvo said she does not know any of Apuron’s alleged victims, adding, “Everything that’s going on – these men wouldn’t have come out if these allegations weren’t true. And I believe every single one of them and their allegations against Apuron. What makes them so credible is they each came out and they were very detailed in what transpired during the time when they were with Apuron.”

Calvo says it’s not unusual for victims to wait so long to share their stories. In this case, she notes the victims were hesitant to tell an adult because Apuron was a man of the cloth and trusted by the community.

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

OUR VIEW: Vatican must resolve Apuron case, keep Guam in loop

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

The Vatican needs to resolve the allegations against Archbishop Anthony Apuron as quickly as it is able, and must ensure it’s completely open with this community about information relating to its investigation and findings.

In recent weeks, Apuron has been accused, by three individuals, of sexually assaulting young boys when he was a priest at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel church in Agat in the 1970s. Apuron has said he is innocent and is the victim of a smear campaign. He hasn’t been charged with any crime.

The Vatican recently appointed Archbishop Savio Tai Fai Hon to oversee Guam’s Catholic church while the allegations are investigated. Apuron remains Guam’s archbishop.

The majority of Guam residents are Catholic, and the accusations are troubling to many, given Apuron’s status in 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.

Another Apuron accuser comes forward with sexual abuse allegations

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News June 15, 2016

Another person came forward Wednesday morning to publicly accuse Guam’s Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron of sexual abuse.

The accuser, Roland Sondia, said Apuron sexually abused him when he was a 15-year-old altar boy during a sleepover at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church rectory in Agat where Apuron was parish priest in the summer of 1977.

“When I was an altar boy almost 39 years ago, at the age of 15, I was molested by Anthony Sablan Apuron. This was a man who I trusted and had a lot of respect for,” Sondia told the media during a press conference outside the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica in Hagåtña.

He is the fourth person to accuse Apuron of sexual abuse of altar boys in recent weeks starting in May.

The archbishop that the Vatican sent to temporarily administer the Archdiocese of Agana, Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, issued a statement to the media hours after Sondia came out.

“The Archdiocese of Agana, taking into serious consideration the allegations presented to the public this morning, will take necessary steps to present the matter to the Holy See, which has final authority in cases related to Bishops,” Archbishop Hon said. “In the mean time, I am earnestly praying for all those concerned in this matter, without prejudice to both the alleged victim and the accused and ask for the prayers and support of the entire Church community.”

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.

Fifth person steps forward, accusing archbishop of molestation

GUAM
KUAM

[with video]

Updated: Jun 15, 2016

By Krystal Paco

Roland Sondia was only 15 years old when he had an unforgettable encounter with then-Father Anthony Apuron. Like the other alleged victims, Sondia was an altar boy at Mount Carmel Church. That brings the count of Apuron’s accusers up to five to date. A press conference was held earlier today at the steps of the Agana Cathedral Pastoral Center detailing the graphic events.

It’s enough pain to bring a grown man to tears. Like the others, Sondia was an altar boy in Agat when he alleges he was molested by Apuron. That summer night in 1977, the boys were sleeping on the rectory living room floor. In the middle of the night, Apuron came to Sondia asking for help, as he recalled, “I didn’t think anything of the situation because we were there to help the priest.

“He then started to say that of all the altar boys, that I was the only one that he could trust. And I was the only one he could rely on the most.”

In the bedroom alone, Apuron allegedly asked Sondia, then a teen, for sex. “He put his right arm around my shoulders and pulled me closer and asked, ‘Do you want to try me?’. Before I could do anything he started rubbing my privates. I loudly asked him, ‘What are you doing?’ I told him to stop, but he didn’t.”

Sondia was able to break free and cried all the way home. “I was in shock. I was confused. Offended. Humiliated. And disappointed that the man I looked up to had just asked me if I wanted to have sex with him,” he shared. “I know there are other boys who were victims of this man. I hope and pray that they also will come forward.”

While decades have passed, Sondia’s wife Frances says today marks the first day of healing for her husband. “I wish that the archdiocese would take this seriously. To take Roy [Quintanilla], Walter [Denton], Doris [Concepcion], and my husband seriously. And I pray that the others will come out,” she announced.

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.

Kincora survivor Richard Kerr brands inquiry ‘unfair’ and stops giving evidence

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Allan Preston
PUBLISHED
15/06/2016

The Kincora whistleblower and abuse survivor Richard Kerr has said he will no longer give evidence to the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry, calling the process “grossly unfair”.

Richard Kerr was among a number of boys abused in the notorious Kincora children’s home in east Belfast after he became a resident in 1974.

The HIA inquiry, led by retired High Court judge Sir Anthony Hart, is investigating long standing claims that a high-ranking paedophile ring preyed on vulnerable boys during the 1970s.

Further claims have been made that UK security services knew about the abuse but did nothing to stop it, instead blackmailing the high profile offenders who were said to include politicians, judges, civil servants and police officers.

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.

Victims network pressuring Pope, new archbishop to take action

GUAM
KUAM

[with video]

Updated: Jun 15, 2016

By Krystal Paco

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests is calling out Pope Francis and Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai to act. In a release from SNAP western regional director Joelle Casteix, she states “Pope Francis has promised quick action to remove and punish clerics – including bishops – who have abused children or covered up abuse. Now is the time.”

SNAP also commends the bravery from each of the victims, most recently with Roland Sondia, who today publicly accused Archbishop Anthony Apuron of molesting him when he was 15 years old.

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.

‘Spotlight’ actor joins advocates to strengthen New York’s child sex abuse law

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Neal Huff was waiting in line at a Westchester post office earlier this year when a clerk recognized him as the actor who played dogged victim advocate Phil Saviano in “Spotlight,” the Academy Award-winning film about The Boston Globe’s investigation into the Catholic Church sex-abuse scandal.

The clerk had a big smile on his face as he announced that he was a survivor of childhood sexual abuse. Huff said that kind of openness is necessary to change laws that prevent victims from seeking justice.

“That is the only hope this issue has, if people talk about it,” the actor said. “Awareness is the tool we need to change these laws, because the laws will not get changed without public outcry. It is mind-boggling to think of how far back New York is on this issue.”

Huff has teamed up with Saviano to ensure the public outcry sparked by “Spotlight” doesn’t wane once the closing credits end.

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

Archbishop Hon addresses newest sex abuse allegation

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Archbishop Savio Tai Fai Hon – in his role as Apostolic Administrator of the Archdiocese of Agana – responded today to the newest accusation of sexual abuse by Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

In a press release, Archbishop Hon said: “This morning Mr. Roland Paul Lizama Sondia, a resident of Guam presented to the public media accusations against the Archbishop of Agana, namely, that when he was an altar boy at Our Lady of Mount Carmel parish in Agat, he was molested by the then Father Anthony Sablan Apuron. The Archdiocese of Agana, taking into serious consideration the allegations presented to the public this morning, will take the necessary steps to present the matter to the Holy See, which has final authority in cases related to Bishops. In the mean time, I am earnestly praying for all those concerned in this matter, without prejudice to both the alleged victim and the accused and ask for the prayers and support of the entire Church community.”

This is Hon’s first public statement addressing a specific allegation of sexual abuse against Apuron.

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.

Pastor Charged With Sex Abuse Of Six-Year-Old

NEW YORK
Western Queens Gazette

By Liz Goff

A Brooklyn pastor is charged with repeatedly molesting a 6-year-old girl his wife was babysitting in an apartment at the Woodside Houses, Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said.
James Lowe, 45, pastor of New Mount Zion Baptist Church in Bushwick, molested the girl in the Woodside apartment on March 7, touching her genitals over her clothing, a criminal complaint alleges.

Lowe repeated the act on June 7, then rubbed his genitals against the girl’s genitals, between their clothing, tried to put his hand under her clothing, exposed himself to the girl and placed her hand on his genitals, Brown said.

Investigators arranged a phone call between the mother and Lowe after the woman reported the abuse to police on June 7, according to the complaint. Low denied the charges.

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

Archbishop speaks to Mount Cashel victims from witness stand

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on June 14, 2016

Archbishop Martin Currie expressed regret on the witness stand in Newfoundland Supreme Court Tuesday for the abuse boys suffered at the hands of Christian Brothers at Mount Cashel several decades ago, but two John Does say he stopped short of an apology.

“You feel the hurt of these young men who were there in trust of the Brothers — men who were there to love and care for them — and they betrayed them,” Currie replied to church lawyer Mark Frederick when asked if he had anything to say to the men he heard give testimony about their experiences at Mount Cashel.

“I am sure their spiritual life was shattered. There was a breach of faith, a breach of trust, so this caused great pain to them.

“I see the sadness and I regret very much this happened and I have great sympathy for the suffering which they have endured at the hands of 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.

Former vicar general still in the pulpit

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

WINONA — The man who abruptly resigned as vicar general and chancellor of the Diocese of Winona continues to say Mass and celebrate the sacraments, despite what the church’s own law says about suspended priests.

The Rev. Msgr. Richard Colletti, 63, tendered his resignation a week ago after the Post-Bulletin discovered he admitted under oath in the early 1990s that he had a sexual relationship with a college freshman whom he was counseling.

The relationship lasted for more than a year, according to court documents obtained by the Post-Bulletin, and included a pregnancy scare.

The vicar general is the second-highest ranking position in the diocese. Colletti also resigned from his position as administrative chaplain for the Winona Newman Center.

Bishop John Quinn said June 1 that “it would have been within my role to (terminate Colletti), but before I even began that discussion, Monsignor informed me that he wished to resign.” The resignation was effective that day.

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.

Another Agat resident claims archbishop sexually molested him

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 14, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

During a press conference held in front of the Archdiocese of Agana’s Pastoral Center this morning, Roland Sondia of Agat alleged he was sexually molested by Archbishop Anthony Apuron. The alleged incident occurred when Sondia was an altar boy at Mt. Carmel Church in Agat where Apuron was a priest at the time.

In the summer of 1977, Sondia said he along with other altar boys were spending the night at the Mount Carmel Rectory. He alleges Fr. Tony (Apuron) walked in, tapped him to wake him up and told him he needed help. He said he brought him into his bedroom and asked him if he wanted to try him. Sondia alleges Fr. Tony then began squeezing his penis. Sondia said he was in shock and asked him what is he doing and left.

Sondia’s attorney David Lujan said two more alleged victims will be coming forward “soon”. Archbishop Apuron has denied allegations of sexual abuse. This is the 5th person to have come forward alleging sexual abuse by Archbishop Apuron when he was a priest.

The other four that have come forward:

1 – John Toves: He alleged his cousin was sexually abused by Apuron. Toves said his cousin was a seminarian at the time. Because his relative never came forward it was not investigated.

2 – Roy Quintanilla: He alleges he was molested by the Archbishop when he was a priest at Mt. Carmel Church in Agat. Quintanilla was an altar boy and was 12-years-old.

3 – Walter Denton: He accused Apuron of raping him when he was 13-years-old. He also was an altar boy and Apuron was a priest at Mt. Carmel

4 – Doris Concepcion: She alleges her son, Joseph “Sonny” Quinata on his death bed told her he was molested by the Archbishop Apuron also when he was a priest in Agat. Quinata was also an altar boy. His ashes were brought to Guam and laid to rest by his family on Tuesday.

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.

June 14, 2016

House Committee To Hear Amendment To Child Abuse Reporting Statute

RHODE ISLAND
Rhode Island Public Radio

By ELISABETH HARRISON

House lawmakers have scheduled a committee hearing Wednesday on a bill that would add schools to Rhode Island’s mandatory child abuse reporting law.

The bill was filed in response to a sexual abuse scandal at St. George’s School in Middletown, after it became clear the school had failed to report numerous allegations of sexual abuse. The incidents span several decades and involve several former faculty members and one current employee.

Although the Rhode Island Attorney General’s Office says state law already requires school to report suspected abuse to the Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF), advocates for survivors of abuse say they want to clarify the law.

The move came after Rhode Island Public Radio reported a different interpretation of the statute at DCYF. The agency says it has never had the authority to investigate claims of sexual abuse in a school or educational setting. If the agency received a call about a school, it would be referred to law enforcement.

The proposed amendment would remedy that by explicitly requiring schools to report abuse suspected of their employees, and requiring DCYF to initiate an investigation. The agency would also be expected to notify law enforcement of the allegations.

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.

Jury trial begins for Iron Range priest accused of criminal sexual conduct

MINNESOTA
Northlands News Center

By Ramona Marozas

Hibbing, MN (NNCNOW.com) — A five-day jury trial of a Hibbing, Minn., priest, who is currently on administrative leave, began on Tuesday.

Jurors were selected for the case in which Brian Lederer faces six charges of criminal sexual conduct, as well as a charge of possession of child pornography.

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Three of the 30-year-old’s alleged victims were under 13, and another was under 16, according to the St. Louis County Attorney’s Office.

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

Vatileaks: Chaouqui gives birth to a son

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Vatican City, June 14 – PR expert Francesca Chaouqui, a defendant in the so-called Vatileaks 2 trial into the leaking of classified Holy See documents, gave birth to a son on Tuesday, her defence lawyer Laura Sgrò said.

“Baby and mother are well,” Sgrò said.

Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi welcomed the birth of Pietro Elijah Antonio in a statement.

“Welcome! Best wishes to him and his parents!” Lombardi 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.

Judgement near in Vatican leaks trial

VATICAN CITY
Times of India

Vatican City, June 14, 2016 (AFP) –
Final hearings in the Vatican’s controversial leaks trial of journalists and others will be held next month in a finale to over nine months of courtroom drama that has embarrassed the Holy See.

Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said Tuesday that final arguments and sentencing requests would be made July 4-6.

A panel of judges will then have to decide if any of the five defendants should face prison sentences for their role in exposing waste and financial mismanagement at the top of the Church based on leaked classified documents.

The Vatican also announced that Spanish monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda, who has been held in a police cell for much of the trial, had been released from custody on Saturday and was now in a state of “semi-liberty.”

Balda admitted earlier in the trial to leaking classified documents to journalists but claimed he did so under pressure from a female former colleague after she made advances to him culminating in a “compromising” encounter in a hotel room.

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.

Goddard Inquiry announces preliminary hearings

UNITED KINGDOM
Lexology

Bolt Burdon Kemp

Marlon Ellis
United Kingdom June 14 2016

Following on from a number of preliminary hearings held in March as part of its investigations into Greville Janner, the Church of England, Lambeth Council and Rochdale, the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse has announced that it will hold a number of further preliminary hearings over the course of July.

On 26 July the Inquiry will hold another preliminary hearing in relation to allegations of sexual abuse involving Greville Janner as well as institutional responses to these allegations. This will be followed by three preliminary hearings on 27 July which will again look at the Church of England, Lambeth Council and sexual abuse in Rochdale. The purpose of these hearings is to consider what progress has been made since the initial hearings in March and to provide further directions for the investigations going forwards.

On 28 July, the Inquiry will hold an initial preliminary hearing as part of its investigation into Child Sexual Abuse within the Catholic Church. The investigation is set to look at numerous case studies starting with a look at the English Benedictine Congregation which has faced numerous reports of child sexual abuse perpetrated by members of the Order and within institutions and schools which it ran. The Inquiry is currently seeking applications for Core Participants for this investigation. Those who wish to apply for Core Participant status will have until 4pm on 24 June to submit their application.

Also on 28 July, the Inquiry will hold a preliminary hearing in relation to the Protection of Children Outside the United Kingdom. This investigation will consider whether institutions and organisations based in England and Wales have taken their responsibility to protect children outside the United Kingdom from sexual abuse seriously. The investigation will look at institutions such as the armed forces and Foreign and Commonwealth Office which have recruited individuals to work abroad who have gone on to abuse children.

Finally, on 29 July the Inquiry will hold a preliminary hearing as part of its investigation into Accountability and Reparations for Victims of Child Sexual Abuse. This promises to be an interesting strand of the inquiry which will examine support services and legal remedies available to victims and survivors of child sexual abuse. The Inquiry has stated that it will look at reports of obstructive insurance companies who are reluctant to pay compensation to survivors of child sexual abuse and whether our current civil justice system delivers genuine reparation.

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.

Concerned Catholics reject Apuron decree

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Johanna Salinas | Post News Staff

On June 14, the Concerned Catholics of Guam wrote a letter to Pope Francis responding to Archbishop Anthony Apuron’s June 5 decree of banning the group. The letter was sent by Tim Rohr, blogger of Jungle Watch, and was addressed to Pope Francis.

Apuron’s decree titled “Concerning the group so-called ‘Concerned Catholics of Guam’” accused the CCOG of various acts against the church. Apuron labeled them “a prohibited society” for the archdiocese because of their protests against the church hierarchy.

In the CCOG’s letter, Rohr defended the group’s protests. “The Catholic faithful are not obliged to preserve communion with an Ordinary who has violated the trust of the Catholic faithful not just by what is enumerated supra, but by his public threats to take legal action against those who have accused him of sexual molestation rather than provide the duty of care already expressly asked for and required by the Church,” Rohr wrote.

In the letter, Rohr also addressed the ongoing sex abuse allegation made against Apuron. “This Ordinary has violated his own archdiocesan sex abuse policy mandating a duty of care to persons claiming to have suffered sex abuse at the hands of clergy, namely the Ordinary himself; and this Ordinary has threatened all Catholics of this archdiocese with legal action should they publicly join their voices in support of those persons accusing this Ordinary of the sexual molestation of minors,” Rohr wrote.

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

Vatican leaks trial to end in July, key defendant gives birth

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

The trial of five people charged over the leak of sensitive Vatican documents was adjourned on Tuesday until early next month, when court officials said it is expected to end.

The case centres on the publication last year of two books based on leaked documents that depict a Vatican plagued by graft in which Pope Francis faces stiff resistance to his agenda.

Lawyers for a key defendant, Francesca Chaouqui, 35, told the court that she had given birth to a boy on Tuesday morning.

The birth was one of the reasons the trial was adjourned until July 4. It is expected to wind up on July 6 after three consecutive sessions, the court said.

Chaouqui, a public relations consultant, is on trial along with Spanish Monsignor Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda, his assistant Nicola Maio, and two Italian journalists, Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi.

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.

It’s a boy! Vatican leak trial takes surreal turn with birth

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By Nicole Winfield | AP June 14

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican’s criminal trial over leaked documents took a complicated but expected turn Tuesday with the birth of a baby named Pietro.

Francesca Chaouqui, a flamboyant public relations expert and member of a papal reform commission, gave birth just as the trial in which she is a defendant resumed.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, announced the birth with a “Benvenuto!” (Welcome!) and sent his best wishes for the arrival of the 3.7-kilo (8.16-pound) baby boy.

The Vatican has accused Chaouqui as well as a Vatican monsignor and his assistant of leaking confidential documents exposing Vatican greed and mismanagement to two journalists. The journalists are also on trial, accused of breaking Vatican law by publishing confidential information.

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 expert confirms there was option for priest to deal with abuse reports

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on June 14, 2016

A parish priest at Mount Cashel in the 1950s would have been aware of an option to deal outside the secrecy of confession with a boy’s report of sexual abuse by a Christian Brother, an expert on canon law agreed in court this morning.

Fr. Francis Morrissey of Ottawa concluded his testimony at the civil trial in Newfoundland Supreme Court before the lunch break.

While being cross-examined by former orphanage residents’ lawyer Geoff Budden, Morrissey confirmed the seal of confession is so strong if someone confessed to poisoning the communion wine, a priest would have no choice but to serve the wine, short of dropping it.

However, when asked about an agreed statement of facts, in which a Mount Cashel boy reported in confession to the parish priest on the orphanage site he had been sexually touched by a Brother, Morrissey agreed there was an option.

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.

Gambling Catholic priest jailed for stealing £96,000

SCOTLAND
BBC News

A Catholic priest has been jailed for 10 months for stealing £96,000 from his parish in North Ayrshire to fund an online gambling habit.

Fr Graeme Bell, 41, embezzled the cash from St Mary’s (Our Lady, Star of the Sea) in Saltcoats between March and May 2015 to play online roulette.

He left the parish in June last year after financial irregularities were reported to police.

Bell, of Kilwinning, was jailed after he admitted a charge of embezzlement.

‘Breach of trust’

Sentencing him at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court, Sheriff Alistair Watson told the priest: “This is a very significant breach of trust and a substantial amount of funds.

“All the difficulties you have did not remove your free will – as an intelligent being you deliberately undertook the actions you undertook.

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Ayrshire priest jailed for stealing £96,000 from church funds

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

RORY CASSIDY
Tuesday 14 June 2016

A priest was jailed for ten months today for stealing nearly £100,000 from church funds to pay for an online ­gambling problem.

Father Graeme Bell, 41, was parish priest at Our Lady Star of the Sea church, in Saltcoats, Ayrshire.

He embezzled the ­money between March and May 2015 and used it to play online ­roulette while “paralysed” by his gambling addiction, ­Kilmarnock Sheriff Court heard.

Last month, Fr Bell pleaded guilty to embezzling £96,000 from the parish and sentence was deferred for him to be assessed by social workers on the most appropriate way of dealing 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.

Owensboro Diocese Suspends Western Ky. Priest Over Sexual Allegation

KENTUCKY
WKMS

By LISA AUTRY

The Catholic Diocese of Owensboro has suspended the pastor of a Union County church. The priest is accused of sexual misconduct decades ago.

The Reverend Freddie Byrd has been suspended as pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church in Morganfield. A complaint issued this month accuses Byrd of inappropriate sexual contact with a 17-year-old juvenile in 1983. According to a statement from the diocese, Byrd was not a priest at the time of the alleged sexual abuse.

The diocese says it is conducting its own investigation and has notified law enforcement. The Messenger-Inquirer reports Byrd’s name was mentioned in a suicide letter left by an Owensboro man who shot himself outside of Blessed Mother Catholic Church in 2008.

The church was led by Byrd at the time of the death. The letter discussed sexual abuse, but never accused the pastor of misconduct.

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Pope greets graduates of Rome course on protecting minors from abuse

ROME
Catholic News Agency

By Ann Schneible

Rome, Italy, Jun 14, 2016 / 11:38 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The first graduates of an international diploma course on safeguarding minors received a special greeting from Pope Francis, who encouraged the students and faculty to be courageous in their work against sexual abuse.

“I want to thank you and all your faculty for this commitment to the prevention of sexual abuse of minors,” the Pope said in a letter to the director of the Centre for Child Protection (CCP), the initiative that spearheaded the diploma course.

“You have undertaken great efforts for the prevention and healing of minors who have been sexually abused,” the Roman Pontiff said.

Addressing the new graduates, who received their diplomas June 14 at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University, Francis wished them “courage and patience; be brave and committed. I assure you that you will receive many signs of gratitude. I pray for you and I ask you to do the same for me.”

The aim of the one-semester diploma course is to educate international student to be experts in preventing sexual abuse of minors.

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

Diocese nears $25 M in abuse settlement

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., May 28, 2016

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP – With the Diocese of Gallup’s Chapter 11 confirmation hearing slated for June 21, the diocese will take a huge step forward to receiving a final confirmation order for its plan of reorganization.

The plan’s monetary provisions will create a fund that is expected to range from more than $21 million to nearly $25 million. Once the professional fees in the case are paid – now listed at over $3.6 million – the balance will go to compensate 57 clergy sex abuse survivors who filed claims in bankruptcy court. Some of those abuse claimants are expected to receive settlements that may approach $300,000. In addition to the monetary settlements, many of the abuse claimants in the case are looking toward the implementation of 17 non-monetary provisions by the diocese. Those provisions — drawn up in negotiations between attorneys for the Gallup Diocese and attorneys and representatives for clergy sex abuse claimants — outline measures to help prevent clergy sexual abuse in the future.

Some of the non-monetary provisions have been the subject of previous articles. For example, Bishop James S. Wall will personally sign letters of apology to all abuse claimants and/or, if requested, to their immediate family members. Wall will also visit and speak at each operating Catholic parish or school in which abuse occurred or where identified abusers served.

New policies

The list of non-monetary provisions also includes the implementation of the following new policies or programs.

* The Gallup Diocese “shall prominently and visibly display a plaque (no smaller than 8.5 inches by 11 inches)” in each of its operating Catholic parishes and schools. The plaques will state: “This Parish (or school) is strongly committed to the emotional, physical, spiritual and moral wellbeing of all of its members. Abuse of any kind will not be tolerated.

* Representatives of the Gallup Diocese must no longer refer to clergy sex abuse claimants as “alleged” claimants, “alleged” victims or “alleged” survivors.

* The diocese will provide counseling “without delay” for all abuse claimants in the bankruptcy case.

* The diocese “will provide a mechanism for survivors to tell his or her story” if requested by the abuse survivor.

* Abuse claimants in the bankruptcy case will be provided a method of viewing their abuser’s personnel file electronically, but will not be allowed to duplicate any document from the file.

* Copies of the personnel files of the abusers, available for viewing by abuse claimants, will be destroyed one year after the effective date of the plan of reorganization.

* The list of non-monetary provisions must be posted on the diocesan website’s homepage for five years.

* The diocese must provide semi-annual reports to the plan’s trustee for two years regarding compliance of these non-monetary provisions. According to court documents, Omni Management Acquisition Corporation will act as trustee.

Continuation of policies

The list of non-monetary provisions also includes the continuation of the following policies the Gallup Diocese has previously had in place:

* The diocese will continue to “require and fund annual mandatory report training” for all its clergy and employees in active ministry.

* The diocese “shall comply with all applicable laws regarding the reporting of abuse” within its territory.

* The diocese shall not only “comply with all policies and procedures regarding child abuse and vulnerable person abuse” prevention, but the diocese must post those policies and procedures on its website. It was not stated if the diocese must post its Code of Ethics policy for clergy, employees and volunteers; the diocesan website used to post that information but no longer does.

* The diocese will publish a statement in its in-house publication, Voice of the Southwest, urging victims of sexual abuse to report their abuse to law enforcement and diocesan officials.

* The diocese will “identify and retain a person responsible for assisting victims of sexual abuse,” and that assistance will be offered in a timely manner. The current person is victims assistance coordinator pro tem Elizabeth Terrill.

* For at least 10 years after the plan’s effective date, the diocese must post on its website a list of credibly accused sexual abusers associated with the Diocese of Gallup. Currently, the diocese’s list of 31 names does not include four priests who worked in Gallup that have been named as credibly accused by other dioceses and religious orders; several clergy members named as abusers by claimants in the bankruptcy case; and several priests accused of sexually assaulting, harassing or propositioning adult victims.

* The diocese “shall continue to comply” with Article 3 of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People that states dioceses shall not require a confidentiality provision in settlement agreements, unless requested by the survivor. Although the charter was approved in 2002, the Diocese of Gallup has since signed an untold number of settlement agreements featuring confidentiality provisions.

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.

Mormon Church faces more abuse suits

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., June 9, 2016

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP – Two more Navajo individuals have filed lawsuits against the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints alleging they were sexually abused as children in the church’s now defunct Indian Student Placement Program.

The two lawsuits were filed recently in Window Rock District Court on the Navajo Nation by attorney William Keeler, of Gallup. Keeler, along with attorney Craig Vernon, of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and Patrick Noaker, of Minneapolis, filed a similar lawsuit in March on behalf of two Navajo siblings, a brother and sister, who said they were both sexually abused in Mormon foster homes in Utah while enrolled in the church-sponsored placement program, also known as the Lamanite Placement Program.

“Religious organizations and programs should be places where children are safe from harm, not places that protect sexual predators,” Noaker said in a news release last week that was followed up with a news conference by Keeler and Vernon in Salt Lake City Tuesday.

Stories of abuse

With these latest filings, three personal injury lawsuits have been filed in Navajo tribal courts against the church on behalf of four plaintiffs, two women and two men.

The third plaintiff, identified in court records only as BN, said she entered the program in the fall of 1964, when she was in the fifth grade. She alleges she was sexually molested and raped the next school year by her foster father in River Heights, Utah. The following school year, she said, she was raped in a church facility during a medical exam by a health care provider hired to examine Native American students in the placement program.

Finally, BN alleges, she was repeatedly raped during her senior year of high school by her foster brother in a home in Orem, Utah. BN said she reported those sexual assaults to her foster parents and to LDS church officials.

The fourth plaintiff, LK, is a Navajo man living in Utah. According to LK’s lawsuit, he was baptized into the LDS Church in 1976, at the age of 9, in order to enroll in the placement program. He attended school during fifth and sixth grade in the program without incident. During his seventh-grade year, LK alleges, his foster father in Roy, Utah, repeatedly sexually molested him.

Although LK said he reported the abuse to his placement program caseworker over the Christmas break, LK was not removed from the home. During that school year, LK alleges, he was also subjected to “physical, emotional and cultural abuse” by his foster mother and father, including “being pushed down stairs, being struck in the face, having his face slammed into a countertop, being whipped with a belt, and being pushed into wooden shelves.”

In addition to seeking monetary damages, the lawsuits seek a change in church policy regarding the reporting of abuse allegations and the implementation of measures to bring healing to Navajo people harmed in the placement program.

Jurisdiction dispute

Within days of BN’s lawsuit being filed, attorneys for the church filed an amended motion for a temporary restraining order in U.S. District Court in Utah.

One of the church’s attorneys, David J. Jordan, of Salt Lake City, a former U.S. Attorney for the District of Utah, argued, “These claims far exceed the well-established jurisdictional limits of tribal courts. Simply put, because the claims involve nonmember activity outside the reservation, the tribal court has no jurisdiction.”

Because of that, Jordan also asserted the church “will suffer irreparable harm if forced to litigate” in Navajo Nation courts.

Jordan also emphasized that placement decisions took place in Utah – not the reservation – and students participated in the program “voluntarily with the agreement of their families.”

In a phone interview Tuesday, Keeler said attorneys for the alleged abuse survivors disagree with Jordan’s views about jurisdiction. Keeler, who along with Noaker filed three clergy abuse lawsuits against the Diocese of Gallup in tribal courts, cited decisions by the Navajo Nation Supreme Court as laying out the criteria for such suits.

“Under that case, we believe the court does have jurisdiction,” Keeler said.

In the news conference Tuesday, Vernon said the lawsuits were not filed in Utah because of the state’s statute of limitations.

“We would file it,” he said, “and it would be thrown out of court before the ink even got dry.”

Vernon said all the plaintiffs were recruited to the placement program while living as children on the Navajo Nation, and some of the abuse disclosures were made to LDS placement caseworkers on the reservation.

Church’s response

When contacted Wednesday , the church’s media office released a lengthy statement, attributed to church spokesman Eric Hawkins, that is being distributed to the media in response to questions about the Navajo lawsuits.

Promising to “examine the allegations and respond appropriately,” the statement’s first sentence – “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has zero tolerance for abuse of any kind and works actively to prevent abuse” – and first paragraph were almost identical to the statement the church released when the first lawsuit was filed in March.

Church officials did not answer specific questions regarding whether the church had background checks to screen families who volunteered to host children in the Indian Student Placement Program, if the program had a system to investigate complaints, and when the church implemented a policy to respond to sexual abuse allegations.

Church officials also did not say if the church has made settlement agreements in the past with Native Americans who have claimed they were sexually abused in the placement program.

Officials pointed to a statement from its Newsroom resource page: “When the Church has faced claims of child abuse at the courthouse, the great majority of these claims occurred decades ago, when society and the Church understood far less about abuse. The Church has always been concerned for the welfare of children: and as awareness of the scourge of child abuse has grown in society, the Church has been at the forefront of efforts to combat it.”

David Clohessy, the director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, also attended the news conference Tuesday. Clohessy offered his support to Native American abuse survivors and also offered his perspective of the Indian Student Placement Program.

“Quite frankly,” he said, “the program, while no doubt well-intentioned, would have to be considered a pedophile’s dream.”

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.

Editorial: Bishop Wall must apologize to all parishioners

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., May 28, 2016

As part of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy settlement that is reaching a conclusion between the Diocese of Gallup and clergy sex abuse claimants, Bishop James S. Wall will have to do something officials have refused to do in the past — apologize.

Under non-monetary provisions of the settlement being proposed, Wall would have to send a letter of apology to all the abuse claimants in the bankruptcy case and/or, if requested, to immediate family members unless the claimant requests that no letter be sent.

Wall would also have to personally visit each Catholic parish or school in which “abuse is alleged to have occurred or where identified abusers served.” He would also be required to publicize the visit and invite those who have been abused and be available to address questions and comments.

Our suspicion is that if these non-monetary provisions make it to the final settlement agreement, Wall will find these requirements even more onerous than any money the diocese will have to pay the claimants and their attorneys.

Wall has not shown himself to be someone comfortable with apologies. He is also not a leader who keeps his word. When Wall first took over this diocese, he promised to be open and transparent about sexual misconduct and abuse that has occurred here. He has not lived up to that promise.

In recent years, we have seen an awakening within the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church at the Vatican to encourage bishops to be open and transparent to regain the trust of members of the church. The Gallup bishop apparently didn’t get that memo. He has been as secretive as any of the bishops of old, giving out information only when it seems he has no other choice.

But if there was any time in the history of the Gallup Diocese that we need to see a change in the attitude of the bishop, it is now. And the key to this may be in the way of bringing harmony of K’e back to the people of the Navajo Nation. Under Navajo tradition, things can’t be made whole until the party who has done wrong admits wrongdoing and apologizes for his or her action. This sets the stage for those who have been injured to put the incident behind them and move forward in their life. This tradition shares some basic reconciliation principles with Christianity.

Perhaps Pope Francis realized the importance of this principle when, during a tour of South America in July, he apologized to the people of North and South America for the crimes the church committed against Native Americans.

Pope Francis apologized for what he called grave sins that were committed in the name of the Catholic Church during the colonization period. His apology was sincere and genuine and it resolved many of the negative feelings that native people have had toward the church.

Wall needs to do this within the Gallup Diocese. Native and non-native residents in Arizona and New Mexico must feel that the crimes of clergy sexual abuse have been recognized by the diocese and that church leaders are sincerely sorry for the suffering that has been experienced here, not only by abuse victims and their families but by everyone living in communities across this large, rural diocese.

If Pope Francis has the humility to apologize for misdeeds and crimes done in the name of the Catholic Church, so should the bishops who serve under the pope. And it should start with Wall.

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

Diocese Suspends Pastor After Sexual Abuse Allegations

KENTUCKY
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OWENSBORO, Ky. — Jun 14, 2016

The Catholic Diocese of Owensboro has suspended a pastor after allegations that he sexually abused a juvenile in the 1980s.

The Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer ( http://bit.ly/1topael ) reports that the diocese suspended the Rev. Freddie Byrd after being notified of the allegation June 2. The Diocesan Review Board reviewed the complaint and recommended the suspension.

The diocese said in a statement Monday that the complaint accused Byrd of engaging in inappropriate conduct with a then-17-year-old in 1983. Byrd was not a priest at the time. Diocese spokeswoman Tina Kasey says the diocese has no connection with the alleged incident.

The diocese added that it is conducting its own investigation and has alerted law enforcement about the allegations.

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Brescia, sacerdote arrestato per abusi su 12enne. Il vescovo: «E’ stato sospeso»

ITALIA
Il Messaggero

Il parroco di una parrocchia di Darfo, in Valle Camonica, nel Bresciano è stato raggiunto da un’ordinanza di custodia cautelare si trova ora agli arresti domiciliari. È accusato di violenza sessuale. La vittima sarebbe un ragazzino del quale il sacerdote avrebbe abusato per due anni, dai 12 ai 14 anni. L’inchiesta della procura, coordinata dal pubblico ministero Ambrogio Cassiani, è stata condotta dai carabinieri che in mattinata hanno arrestato il sacerdote.

È don Angelo Blanchetti, parroco della parrocchia di Corna di Darfo, nel Bresciano, il sacerdote agli arresti domiciliari con l’accusa di violenza sessuale su un ragazzino. I fatti sarebbero relativi a quando il minore aveva 12 anni e le violenze sarebbero proseguite per due anni.

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Priest arrested for sexually abusing minor

ITALY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Brescia, June 14 – A northern Italian priest was arrested Tuesday for allegedly sexually abusing a minor.

Father Angelo Blanchetti of the parish of Corna di Darfo near Brescia was arrested for allegedly abusing a boy from when he was 12 until he was 14.

Father Blanchetti has been suspended.

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Questions for the USCCB

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Jun. 14, 2016

As the bishops of the United States gather this week for their annual spring meeting and retreat, I invite them to ask themselves some questions that pertain to their place in the public square. I hope they will be honest with themselves about the answers to these questions because some of us believe that our country and our culture desperately need the voice of the church, and especially the insights of her social doctrine, at this moment in history, and that hope is endangered by the bishops’ inability or unwillingness to consider honestly if their public stance is effective and if it is true to the fullness of the Gospel. In other words, I pose these questions not as someone who hates the church, but someone who is worried that her leaders have gone down a wrong side street in many ways, been pulled further to the right than they seem to realize themselves, and are less and less relevant to the culture they are called to evangelize. After each set of questions, I shall offer a brief lesson.

Religious liberty

Since you formed an Ad Hoc Committee on Religious Liberty, have your actions furthered that cause or harmed it? Has the Fortnight for Freedom achieved anything tangible or has it been a colossal waste of funds? Who has made money from all those expenditures? Which consultants and which PR companies? Were the promises for success or goals for your various religious freedom campaigns, those coming from your own staff, were these born out by the facts? When the Republican Governor of Georgia vetoes a religious liberty bill, do you think that marks the success of your efforts or not?

Do you think that the video prepared by the Knights of Columbus and highlighted on the USCCB website is well done? Do you think the decision to highlight former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in that video, for no apparent reason, will make it more likely or less likely that you will be able to get a fair hearing from her should she be elected next November? Do you think the contraception mandate is really like the beheading of Christians in the Mideas, or do you think the equation of the two qualifies as emotional blackmail?

Will you denounce Donald Trump’s anti-Muslim statements and proposals with the same vehemence with which you denounced the Obama administration’s contraception mandate? Or do you think the requirement of filing a form to register your objection to the mandate is an equal or greater infringement of religious liberty than being barred entry to the country in the first place? Have you participated in a public event with Muslim leaders to highlight their concerns?

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Victim of abuse at Kincora home withdraws from inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Times

Amanda Ferguson

A man who was physically and sexually abused at Kincora Boys’ Home in Belfast has withdrawn as a participant in the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry in Banbridge as he does not have access to a range of documents.

Richard Kerr said he had agreed to be involved in the inquiry despite having reservations about taking part on the grounds that the inquiry did not have powers to compel witnesses and because he felt it did not have sufficient powers to investigate allegations of British state collusion.

His decision to participate was on the basis that his legal representatives would be given a proper opportunity to represent him and his interests at the inquiry but as he feels this has not happened he has no confidence in proceedings and will no longer take part.

Mr Kerr, who is based in the US, was invited to be a core participant at the inquiry after being advised by the chairman Sir Anthony Hart that his participation in the investigations would be of assistance.

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Former ‘singing’ priest who claimed ‘we are all victims’ is convicted of abusing boy five times

IRELAND
Breaking News

14/06/2016

Former “singing” priest Tony Walsh has been convicted of sexually abusing a young boy.

Anthony Walsh (aged 62), currently serving a sentence for sexual offences against a number of other children, denied ever knowing the boy and said he had never assaulted him.

During cross examination by the prosecution in the current trial, Walsh had said: “I think we are all victims”, when he was asked who he thought the victim was in this case.

“If I knew him I would have pleaded guilty years ago,” Walsh told the court as he gave evidence on his own behalf.

Walsh, who was a member of the All Priests Show, was asked by his counsel how he felt towards the children he had assaulted.

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Vatican religious congregation contacting about 15 orders of US sisters for ‘serene’ dialogue

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jun. 14, 2016

VATICAN CITY
The Vatican’s congregation for religious life is contacting about 15 U.S. orders of Catholic sisters to clarify “some points” following the controversial six-year investigation of American communities of women religious, the head of the congregation said in a brief interview Tuesday.

Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, the prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, said the conversations involve “listening to what they say in a transparent way, without fear, without judging.”

“What I have liked most is that the climate of this dialogue is very serene,” Braz de Aviz said. “There is listening on both sides. There is a rapport.”

The cardinal spoke to NCR after his congregation requested that the leaders of the Kentucky-based Sisters of Loretto, one of the major orders of U.S. Catholic women religious, come to Rome in October.

As Global Sisters Report first reported, Loretto president Sr. Pearl McGivney has been asked to explain “ambiguity” in the order’s adherence to church teaching and its way of living religious life.

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Former ‘singing priest’ convicted of sexually abusing boy

IRELAND
Irish Times

Former “singing” priest Tony Walsh has been convicted of sexually abusing a young boy.

Walsh (62), currently serving a sentence for sexual offences against a number of other children, denied ever knowing the boy and said he had never assaulted him.

“If I knew him I would have pleaded guilty years ago,” Walsh told the court as he gave evidence on his own behalf.

Walsh, who was a member of the All Priests Show, was asked by his counsel how he felt towards the children he had assaulted. “I am sorry it happened. It should never have happened. It was as near to illness as you can have without being sick,” he replied.

Walsh, formerly of North Circular Road, Dublin 7, had pleaded not guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to five counts of indecently assaulting the boy on dates between January 1980 and December 1982.

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A priest tried to molest me as a child: Bobby Brown

UNITED STATES
Business Standard

Press Trust of India | New York
June 14, 2016

Bobby Brown was afraid to tell his mother a priest attempted to molest him as a child, because he was afraid of how she would react.

The former “New Edition” star was temporarily placed in child services after his mother was arrested. The social service agency was run by a Catholic charity and one of the priests tried to molest him while he was at the facility.

However, he punched the clergyman and ran off.

The 47-year-old doesn’t reveal when he finally opened up to his mother about the incident, but he explains he told his brother first.

“It took a minute because I felt I was supposed to be at a place where they were supposed to take care of me and I was supposed to trust these people,” he said during a US chat show “The View”.

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Apostolic administrator asks Guam for patience

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 14, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

The Apostolic Administrator appointed by the Pope to temporarily manage the local archdiocese asks for patience. A media release issued this afternoon, states that in the past seven days since arriving to Guam Archbishop Savio Hon Tai-Fai has met with various Archdiocesan Councils and has met individually with priests.

He says that in all of his encounters he’s found the priests, deacons, religious, and lay faithful to be very collaborative and helpful in promoting the good of the diocese. Archbishop Hon asks for the people’s trust as they continue the process of consulting, reflecting and promoting the unity, harmony, and stability of the Church in Guam.

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TRIAL OF HIBBING PRIEST ACCUSED OF SEXUAL MISCONDUCT GETS UNDERWAY

MINNESOTA
Mesabi Daily News

HIBBING — The Hibbing priest charged with sexual misconduct and possession of child pornography is slated for trial this week before Judge David E. Ackerson in St. Louis County District Court in Hibbing.

A pretrial hearing was held for Brian M. Lederer, 30, Monday. Jury selection is expected to get under way today.

Lederer is charged with four counts of criminal sexual conduct in the second degree, two counts of criminal sexual conduct in the fourth degree and possession of pornographic work. All are felony level charges.

Lederer was arrested and charged in May 2015. The criminal complaint was amended in August 2015 when a charge of possession of pornography and another charge of criminal sexual conduct were added.

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Ex-priest to face WA sex offence trial

AUSTRALIA
Hitz 939

A former Anglican priest aged in his 80s will fight five historical sex offence charges at a trial in Perth later this year.

A former Anglican priest charged with five sex offences, including one dating back to 1963, will face trial in Perth.

Raymond Sydney Cheek was 83 last November when he pleaded not guilty to four charges, including two counts of indecent dealings with a child under 14.

Police say the abuse took place while he was a priest at a town in WA’s South West region in 1985.

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Another Voice: Legislation will help prevent child sexual abuse

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

By Melanie Blow

New York cannot both protect children and those who sexually abuse them. That’s why a fifth of New York’s children are sexually abused while only one in 10 abusers ever see a day behind bars.

There is no effective way to prosecute child sexual abuse while abusers are protected by a statute of limitations on the crime. Research proves survivors need an average of 21 years before they can talk about their abuse. Child sexual abuse is usually committed by someone the victim knows and trusts. That relationship allows the abuser to manipulate the child into years or decades of silence.

Child sexual abuse cases are often hard to prosecute, meaning justice in civil court is as important. Successful lawsuits create documents that can block sex offenders from working with children. They ignite conversations within families, where half of child sexual abuse happens. The threat of lawsuits ensures institutions working with children adopt best practices that protect them.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates the cost of surviving child abuse at $210,000 per victim. Child sexual abuse is a stressor so intense it changes the way a child’s brain, endocrine system and DNA develop, making abuse survivors more likely to develop cancer, diabetes and heart disease later in life, along with a host of mental illnesses. Currently, taxpayers shoulder most of this burden. Transferring the cost to guilty parties makes sense.

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Local youth pastor charged in sex abuse case changes plea

CALIFORNIA
Santa Maria Times

April Charlton acharlton@leecentralcoastnews.com

A Santa Maria youth pastor and aspiring Christian rapper charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl numerous times pleaded guilty Monday and will be sentenced to eight years in state prison for his crimes.

Daniel James Moreno, 25, pleaded guilty to a single count of continuous sexual abuse of a child and a count of lewd and lascivious acts with a child, according to prosecuting attorney Brandon Jebens.

Moreno must serve 85 percent of his sentence before he’s eligible for parole. Both counts also are “strikes,” meaning if he ever were to commit another serious felony and be convicted of a “strikeable” offense, he would automatically face life in prison without parole.

He was arrested at his home in the early hours of March 28 on suspicion of the continual sexual abuse and booked into Santa Barbara County Jail, where he remains in custody. Prosecutors believe Moreno started having sex with the 14-year-old girl in September 2015.

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Childhood friend of Sonny Quinata remembers his late friend

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 13, 2016

By Krystal Paco

“I’m glad he’s home,” said Greg Babauta. “Now I’ve got a place to come and visit him.” Choking back tears, Babauta remembers his childhood best friend, Joseph Anthony Quinata, better known as “Sonny” or “Chico.” Babauta recalled, “Sonny was always a jokester. Growing up we were constantly together. We hung out together. We grew up in Agat. If there’s one thing that can describe Sonny, he was a jokester. Anything and everything to make people laugh, and that was his big thing.”

Sonny is one of the alleged victims of Archbishop Anthony Apuron. On his deathbed back in 2005, he told his mother, Doris Concepcion, he was molested by then-Father Anthony Apuron. Concepcion kept her son’s secret until most recently when she came forward and joined other Apuron accusers. In recent weeks, Roy Quintanilla came forward alleging he too was molested, and Walter Denton who alleges he was raped. Each of the boys were altar boys in Agat, and so was Babauta, although he was not targeted by Apuron.

Babauta says he never knew his best friend’s secret, adding, “It’s hard. We served together. I was also an altar boy. But growing up we weren’t aware of those situations. The boys actually kept it locked away and now that all these allegations are coming out, it’s kind of hard for us to hear our friends talk about it. And for me, I support them. Because for me personally, there’s no other reason why they would say or make these accusations other than the truth.”

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George Pell is staying on at the Vatican? Whatever, he is now irrelevant to Australians

AUSTRALIA/VATICAN CITY
The Guardian

Kristina Keneally

Cardinal George Pell turned 75 last Wednesday. Usually I don’t mark the birthdays of princes of the church. I’m sure they’ve got enough people around them – fellow cardinals, under-secretaries, Curia officials, Opus Dei acolytes, housekeepers – to organise a cake for morning tea. Besides, there’s nothing I could get for the man who already has everything he ever wanted: a little red hat, a gold ring and the pope’s ear.

But this particular birthday is one in which I thought I might take more than a passing interest. After all, church practice asks cardinals to tender their resignation to the pope at age 75. Kind of like a reverse gift from the birthday boy back to the church.

Before we all get carried away with anticipation that Pell is about to lose his privileged position, allow me to explain: in the Vatican, just because a resignation is offered doesn’t mean it is accepted. This isn’t Australian politics. The pope can pretty much do what he wants with said resignation, including rejecting it outright or filing it in a bottom drawer for when it’s really needed.

Pope Francis is not accepting Pell’s resignation.

Never mind that the Australian government’s royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse has twice has twice preferred the evidence of others over Pell’s recollection. Never mind that the cardinal’s third appearance before the commission a few months ago was a public relations disaster. Never mind Pell’s farcical evidence that he knew nothing about rampant sexual abuse in Ballarat because there was a conspiracy to keep him in the dark. Never mind that staff from the Melbourne Catholic Education Office contradicted Pell’s testimony.

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Pope Francis to 1st graduates of Safeguarding Minors Diploma

ROME
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has commended the Pontifical Gregorian University’s recently created Centre for Child Protection (CCP) and expressed his hope that new graduates will be “brave and committed” to the prevention of sexual abuse of minors. On Tuesday, 14 June, the first 19 students of the Centre’s new Diploma of Advanced Studies, “Safeguarding Minors” received their degree in a graduation ceremony in Rome.

In a personal letter to the president of the Centre for Child Protection, Fr. Hans Zollner sj, Pope Francis expressed his gratitude to the professors and graduates of the course: “First of all I want to thank you and your entire faculty for this commitment to the prevention of sexual abuse of minors. You have undertaken great efforts for the prevention and healing of minors who have been sexually abused. I extend my greetings to those who complete the programme. I wish you courage and patience; be brave and committed. I assure you that you will receive many signs of gratitude. I pray for you and I ask you to do the same for me.”

A University statement explains that the one term qualification programme educates international students as prevention experts to counteract sexual abuse of minors. This unique worldwide initiative was started as a part of the proactive prevention strategy of the Catholic Church in February 2016.

The CCP of the Pontifical Gregorian University awards the diploma. Instituted in 2012, the CCP is an institution of the Catholic Church advocating safeguarding measures and protection for minors and people in need around the world.

Cardinal Filoni, Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, also commends the initiative of the CCP: “The prevention of sexual abuse of minors is a priority for the entire Church. In a special way we want to put our efforts into the young Churches, in order that everything possible is being done to counter this sad phenomenon in schools, kindergartens, universities and parishes. For this reason the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples is very pleased to support the educational and scientific efforts of the Centre for Child Protection.”

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Experts debate constitutionality of Rozzi child sex abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

HARRISBURG — Several attorneys and scholars, including Pennsylvania’s top legal officer, told a state Senate panel Monday that reviving now-expired child sexual abuse lawsuits would run afoul of the state Constitution.

Supporters of the plan countered that it passes legal muster and accused opponents of questioning its constitutionality in a last-ditch effort to derail the proposal.

The hearing, before the Senate Judiciary Committee and a standing-room-only crowd, came on the heels of several weeks of fierce public debate, which has abuse victims and their advocates at odds with the Catholic Church and business groups.

The bid to revive expired cases is part of a larger measure designed to give abuse victims more time to take their abusers and those who shield them to court.

State Solicitor General Bruce L. Castor Jr. was among the speakers to call the retroactive part of the plan unconstitutional. His opinion was echoed by three legal scholars, two of them representing the plan’s opponents.

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Diocese of Brooklyn to publish names of pedophile priests on website

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Monday, June 13, 2016

The Diocese of Brooklyn plans to publish a list of its sexual predator priests.

Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio will post the names of clergy members who have been accused of sexual abuse on the Diocese of Brooklyn’s website, a diocesan official said, calling it an attempt to be more transparent in the wake of the pedophile priest scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church for nearly two decades.

But the diocese has offered no details about its perv priest list and victim advocates say they fear the announcement is more about public relations than protecting children from predators or helping long-suffering sex abuse victims heal.

“We suspect this won’t be a complete list,” said David Clohessy, the national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

Gov. Cuomo leaves Child Victims Act off legislative outline
“We suspect it will contain only the names of predator priests who have already been outed through civil lawsuits, criminal prosecution, media exposés or admissions by the perpetrators themselves.”

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June 13, 2016

Policeman concerned he was never told about St Albans boys’ home archives

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Giselle Wakatama

The retired Hunter Valley policeman who raised concerns about missing boys’ home documents says he is relieved records have been found, but alarmed he was not told about them.

Greg Harding, who pursued convicted paedophile and ex-St Albans board member James Michael Brown, on Friday said his investigations had showed decades of documents from St Albans boys’ home were either missing or destroyed.

However, later that day, a Newcastle University archivist responded to the concerns, saying documents did exist and were stored in the university archives.

The St Albans boys’ home is expected to be part of a Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse case study looking at abuse allegations in Newcastle’s Anglican diocese.

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Kathleen Kane’s handpicked No. 2 contradicts her once again

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Wallace McKelvey | WMckelvey@pennlive.com

In one of her few recent public appearances, Attorney General Kathleen Kane pleaded with lawmakers Monday to lift the statute of limitations on child sex-abuse charges and expand victims’ ability to file civil lawsuits.

“I’m begging you to pass that bill immediately,” Kane told a Senate panel considering House Bill 1947.

But Kane’s advocacy came with an important asterisk.

“I’m not here to give a legal opinion as to the constitutionality of the bill,” she said, as preface to her testimony. With her law license suspended in the wake of criminal charges stemming from the grand jury leak investigation, the attorney general is barred from practicing law.

That set up the latest public conflict between Kane and her office.

Bruce L. Castor Jr., a longtime prosecutor and Kane’s handpicked second-in-command, deflated Kane’s impassioned testimony with his own reading of state law. The bill’s civil litigation element is unconstitutional, he said.

“Without doubt, House Bill 1947 represents a laudable attempt to provide a remedy for a well-identified social problem,” the former Montgomery County district attorney testified. “However righteous the policy goals behind (the bill), the General Assembly in its zeal cannot overrule a state constitutional right.”

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Extending the Statute of Limitations

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Pa.

Pennsylvania Senators discussed the legality of extending the statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases on Monday.

It would give victims a longer time to come forward with their claims.

House Bill 1947 passed the Pennsylvania House in April.

One of the biggest proponents, Representative Mark Rozzi says that the chair of the Senate Judiciary committee, Senator Stewart Greenleaf, is trying to kill the bill.

Today senators heard testimony about the constitutionality of the bill.

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Statute of limitations on child sex abuse argued in Pa. Senate hearing

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 27

By Dennis Owens
Published: June 13, 2016

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) – Attorney General Kathleen Kane was the first to testify at a Senate hearing on House Bill 1947, which extends the statute of limitations for victims of child sexual abuse.

“I am here to speak on behalf of all of the children and all of the survivors of Pennsylvania,” Kane said and urged senators to vote for HB 1947.

But in a strange moment, Kane’s hand-picked Solicitor General Bruce Castor was next to testify and said that 1947 is, in part, unconstitutional. There is a provision that would let victims sue abusers and institutions even though their statute of limitations has expired. He said lawmakers do not have the power to grant such retroactivity.

“However righteous the policy goal is behind House Bill 1947, the General Assembly, in its zeal, cannot overrule a state constitutional right,” Castor said with conviction.

Basically, in layman’s terms, he’s arguing that the rules of the game cannot be changed after the game has been played. Several of the testifiers before the committee made the same case.

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Arguments on constitutionality: The main points out of Senate hearing on statute of limitations reform bill

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

In a three-hour long hearing steeped in references to Pennsylvania case law, the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday heard expert testimony on the validity and viability of proposed legislation that would change how child sexual predators are prosecuted.

The hearing, which tipped markedly in favor of opponents of House Bill 1947, was held in a hearing room packed with victims advocates as well as past victims of sexual abuse. Many of them wiped away tears as a cadre of expert witnesses – with the exception of one – argued how the Pennsylvania Constitution prohibits the General Assembly from retroactively altering expired statutes of limitations.

The hearing, which featured five expert witnesses, only one testifying in support of the bill, focused on the constitutionality of the bill, which would impose lookback measures for past victims of abuse, including those molested by priests as children.

Much of the testimony centered around the state’s constitutional remedies clause, which ostensibly bars the General Assembly from retroactively altering expired statutes of limitations.

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Kathleen Kane reverses field on key child sex abuse reform

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

In the continuum of bizarre episodes involving state Attorney General Kathleen Kane, her double-cross Monday of child sex abuse victims probably ranks pretty low. She has set a remarkably high standard for weirdness.

Still, Monday’s shocking turnabout — from powerful advocate to weaselly waffler — left a lot of people scratching their heads. “It’s very confusing to me,” said John Salveson, president of the Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse.

I’ve been writing about House Bill 1947, which easily passed the House in April and would eliminate the statute of limitations for criminal cases of child sexual abuse and extend the statute for civil cases until the victim reaches age 50, retroactively, from the present age 30. The state Senate Judiciary Committee, which is considering the bill, held a hearing Monday to consider the constitutionality of retroactively changing the age for civil suits.

There are strong legal opinions on each side of that issue, and we heard both at Monday’s hearing, albeit much more heavily weighted toward those — some of whom were in the employ of chief opponents the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference and the Pennsylvania Insurance Federation — who think it would be ruled unconstitutional under Pennsylvania law. The only expert testifying that what they called the “revival” portion of HB 1947 is constitutional was constitutional lawyer and longtime statute of limitations reform advocate Marci Hamilton, the go-to expert on this subject around the country and even the world.

She was critical of committee Chair Stewart Greenleaf, R-Montgomery, for the lack of balance in the testimony, but she more than held her own. I learned afterward that a law firm representing abuse survivors in Delaware is saying Greenleaf should recuse himself because representatives of his law firm argued against similar legislation in Delaware. Greenleaf, who made no mention of his apparent conflict, said afterward that the Senate parliamentarian has ruled he needn’t recuse himself.

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BROOKLYN ABP. ACCUSED OF BRIBERY

NEW YORK
Church Militant

by Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • June 13, 2016

Assemblywoman argues Bp. Nicolas DiMarzio offered her $5K to drop abuse statute reform support
BROOKLYN (ChurchMilitant.com) – The bishop of Brooklyn is being accused of bribing an elected official.

In a speech in Brooklyn last week, Democrat assemblywoman Margaret Markey claimed Bp. Nicholas DiMarzio offered her $5,000 in hush money in exchange for withdrawing her support for proposed reforms to state law concerning the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases. Markey has been a vocal proponent of the reforms for nearly a decade.

“I’m not a billionaire, but I don’t need $5,000 to buy me off,” she told the Daily News, adding the alleged offer from Bp. DiMarzio came in 2007 ahead of 2008’s New York State Assembly elections. The money was offered as a payoff and not as a campaign donation, she added.

A spokesman for the assmeblywoman claimed the bishop had suggested the money could be used for therapy for a member of her family who was a victim of child sex abuse. …

DiMarzio himself, who has led the Brooklyn diocese since 2003, personally responded to Markey’s allegations in a two-page letter, stating his “character has been impugned and [his] name slandered as the bishop of the diocese of Brooklyn.”

“I am writing this letter to refresh your memory as to our conversation nine years ago and to demand your immediate retraction of your defamatory statements,” DiMarzio wrote. The bishop highlighted the fact that Markey had initially claimed the meeting took place in 2010 and later corrected the year to 2007 as proving his point that the elimination of the statute of limitations is dangerous.

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Statute of limitations bill for child sex abuse victims unconstitutional, top state lawyer says

PENNSYLVANIA
Fox 43

[with video]

JUNE 13, 2016, BY MATT MAISEL

HARRISBURG, Pa. –State Representative Mark Rozzi walked onto the Capitol steps after a three-hour Senate hearing, incredulous to what he had just heard.

“That whole hearing reeked of being set up,” he said.

On Monday, nearly two months since the state House passed HB1947 by a bi-partisan 180-15 vote, the Senate Judiciary Committee took up the bill which would reform Pennsylvania’s child sex abuse laws. House Bill 1947 would eliminate the statute of limitations for future child sex crimes and allow victims to retroactively seek lawsuits against their abusers.

However, after the hearing, Rozzi cried foul play, claiming the witness list was stacked heavily in favor of those advocating against the constitutionality of the bill.

“Two of the people who testified today, one represented the (Pennsylvania) Catholic Conference and the other represented the insurance federation. We were set up!” Rozzi shouted.

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Senators eye raising age limits in child sex abuse lawsuits

PENNSYLVANIA
The Sentinel

Marc Levy
Associated Press

The state’s top legal office told lawmakers Monday that it is unconstitutional to change state law to retroactively give victims of child sexual abuse more time to sue, although some lawmakers said they remain willing to support it.

A packed three-hour Senate Judiciary Committee hearing came against the backdrop of Roman Catholic Church scandals and a renewed push in Pennsylvania and other states to relax laws that prevent some child sexual abuse victims from suing for damages.

With victims of child sexual abuse looking on, Solicitor General Bruce L. Castor Jr. told senators that case law renders such a retroactive provision unconstitutional in Pennsylvania.

Castor was speaking for the state attorney general’s office after Attorney General Kathleen Kane, whose law license was suspended by the state Supreme Court last year, urged the panel in her seven-minute testimony to “get it right.”

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Lawmakers consider raising age limits in child sex abuse lawsuits

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY KODY LEIBOWITZ MONDAY, JUNE 13TH 2016

HARRISBURG, Pa. – Is retroactivity for civil lawsuits constitutional?

It’s a question state senators answered over the battle of the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases.

The house previously passed a bill in April making civil suits retroactive. The bill came out after the grand jury investigation for the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

The hearing lasted three hours Monday morning inside a packed Senate committee room.

And the entire hearing was trying to answer one question: will passing a bill that allows civil lawsuits to be retroactive hold up legally?

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FFRF condemns Catholic Church’s ‘vote shaming’ on child sex-abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Freedom from Religion Foundation

News Release

June 13, 2016

The Freedom From Religion Foundation condemns the Catholic Church targeting Pennsylvania legislators who have shown support for stronger child sex-abuse laws.

Of 195 members of the Pennsylvania House, 180 recently voted in favor of a bill designed to prevent those accused of sexually abusing children from claiming legal immunity due to the existing statute of limitations. Church leaders have singled out specific legislators and publicly humiliated them for backing the bill.

The archdiocese recently printed church bulletins and had its priests call out legislators by name from the pulpit in order to stir up opposition against the bill. As the bill moves forward to the Senate Judiciary Committee, the message is clear: oppose this child sex-abuse bill or face the wrath of the church.

“It’s outrageous that the church would go to such lengths to kill this bill,” says FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. “The Catholic Church has systematically protected sexual predators from legal authorities for decades while claiming to have children’s interests at heart. If the church were really concerned about victims of sexual abuse, it would be doing everything in its power to support this bill.”

Under the proposed House Bill 1947, victims would have until they are 50 years old, rather than 30, to seek legal redress. Considering the severe psychological trauma that can result from childhood sexual assault and the extreme power that the Catholic Church holds over many communities, this legislation is desperately needed.

“This is not some free ticket to target churches for money,” notes FFRF Legislative Analyst Sam Grover. “These victims still have the burden of proof and still must find and submit evidence. The longer they wait, the more difficult that becomes. This new bill simply gives them the chance to try.”

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Barry Soper: Catholic Church has itself to blame

NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand Herald

Growing up in New Zealand in the 1950s and 60s, things were nothing like they are today.

There was no television or, for that matter, very much else to stimulate the senses. A new music sheet for the piano in our household was seen as something of a highlight. The other high point of the week was on Monday nights when Life with Dexter, a long running family serial was broadcast, which saw the family gathered around the valve radio.

Church on Sundays was obligatory, not to go was seen as a venial sin, which had to be confessed to at the monthly confessional with the priest behind a curtain at St Marys. It seemed strange because you always knew who the priest was anyway, but it was presumably to hide the blushes as you fessed up to things like taking the name of the Lord thy God in vain, or even worse still, disobeying your parents.

Life was, well pretty dull.

You were taught respect though, to elevate those in positions or power to another level. If you were one of our teachers, a Sister of Mercy, who had to show a fair amount of it to teach me, you were on a pedestal just as you were if you were a priest, who in our innocent mind’s eye, was even closer to The Almighty.

So for those of us who were educated in such an era, some would say indoctrinated, it’s with horror that we’ve come to realise that in some quarters all was not what it seemed to be, not helped by the ignorance of the Vatican that as youngsters we were taught was as close to Heaven on earth as you could get to.

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Pennsylvania Grapples With Constitutionalilty Of Sex Abuse Bill

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

June 13, 2016 By Tony Romeo

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — A state Senate committee Monday tackled the question of whether a bill that would allow retroactive lawsuits by adults who were sexually abused as children would hold up under the Pennsylvania constitution.

The Senate is considering a House-passed bill that would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations in future cases, and would give victims of child sex abuse more time to bring civil cases. One provision would allow victims to bring civil suits even in cases where the statute of limitations has already expired.

Bruce Castor, now second-in-command to Attorney General Kathleen Kane, told the Senate Judiciary Committee that provision would violate the Pennsylvania constitution.

“The General Assembly, in its zeal, cannot overrule a state constitutional right,” Castor said.

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Canon law expert testifies for church at Mount Cashel civil trial

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on June 13, 2016

An expert on canon law testifying for the RC Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s says historical Vatican documentation backs up the Christian Brothers’ autonomy.

Fr. Francis Morrissey, noted for being a canon law professor at St. Paul University, Ottawa, is on the witness stand today in the Mount Cashel civil trial at Newfoundland Supreme Court.

Reviewing documents tracing back to the late 19th and early 20th century, he said the archbishop could not visit and intervene in the internal affairs of the lay order Christian Brothers.

The Brothers, said Morrissey, were granted a special exemption as they spread out beyond Ireland to places that included Newfoundland and the U.S.

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Long Awaited Justice Closer to Fruition on Change in New York State Child Sexual Abuse Laws

NEW YORK
Digital Journal

Parker Waichman LLP, a national law firm dedicated to protecting the rights of victims of sexual abuse comments that sexual abuse legislation has led to various bills being proposed in the New York State Assembly and the Senate. The firm applauds the efforts of Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (Democrat-Queens, New York), Senator Brad Hoylman (Democrat-Manhattan) and other advocates pushing for an expanded Child Victims Act (CVD) that would amend the Statutes of Limitations for child sex abuse. New York has one of the shortest windows in the country for seeking justice against alleged child molesters. Under the current law, sexual abuse victims only have until they are 23 years of age to bring either criminal charges or to file a civil lawsuit against alleged sex abusers.

The firm supports advocates looking to change these outdated laws. One bill in the New York State Assembly and another in the Senate are looking to revise the Statute of Limitations for child sex abuse. The goal is to allow victims more time to file a lawsuit against their attackers. Advocates point out that sexual abuse is a traumatic event that often takes many years, even decades, to surface; the current law simply places too short of a deadline on victims.

Parker Waichman comments that the bill has been proposed and is expected to pass the Assembly, given the majority support; the Senate bill still needs a majority sponsor. Additionally, committee meetings are required for a joint bill to be presented to the Governor. The Senate bill includes all claims, including those against government entities. The Assembly bill allows a short, six-month window for victims to file a claim, no matter the age of the claim—nor the age of the alleged victim—and is only for claims against private entities. With hope, a joint bill will be passed that allows victims to seek justice.

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Castor says sex-abuse bill would violate Pa. constitution

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Maria Panaritis and Angela Couloumbis, STAFF WRITERS

HARRISBURG – The top aide to Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane testified Monday that portions of a bill that could open the door to a new wave of lawsuits by child sex-abuse victims are unconstitutional.

Bruce L. Castor Jr., who Kane hired this year as her solicitor general, told a Senate committee that retroactively extending the statute of limitations for victims to file civil suits over decades-old abuse would violate the state constitution’s so-called remedies clause.

“However righteous the policy goals behind (the bill), the General Assembly in its zeal, cannot overrule a state constitutional right,” said Castor.

Kane appeared before the panel as well, but steered clear from giving her opinion on the legislation’s constitutionality.

Their testimony came during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing that allowed for the Senate’s first public airing of the measure, which would give child sex abuse victims until age 50 to sue their attackers or the institutions that supervised them.

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Bischof untersagt Pfarrer alle priesterlichen Dienste

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

Per Dekret hat Bischof Friedhelm Hofmann dem Ruhestandspfarrer Heinrich M. die Ausübung der priesterlichen Dienste untersagt. Laut Pressemitteilung des Ordinariats Würzburg muss der Geistliche, dem eine Frau sexuellen Missbrauch vorwirft, zudem das von ihm bewohnte Pfarrhaus im Landkreis Bad Kissingen räumen und darf sich nicht mehr in den Pfarreien des Dekanats Bad Kissingen aufhalten.

In dem im März veröffentlichten Bericht des Missbrauchsbeauftragten der Diözese Würzburg wird dieser Vorwurf aufgelistet. Auf Nachfrage bestätigte Professor Klaus Laubenthal damals, dass er im März 2015 von den Beschuldigungen erfahren habe. Demnach soll die Frau von zwischen 1968 und 1973 von dem Priester sexuell missbraucht worden sein. Die Vorfälle hätten sich in einer polnischen Gemeinde im Kreis Oppeln ereignet. Die Frau sei damals „zum Teil minderjährig“ gewesen, so Laubenthal.

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Bischof untersagt Ruhestandspfarrer Priestertätigkeit

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[Würzburg Bishop Friedhelm Hofmann has suspended a priest in Bad Kissingen district and the priest is prohibited from exercise of all priestly services. He has been ordered to vacate the recory. The priest is said to have abused a minor in Poland more than 40 years ago.]

Würzburgs Bischof Friedhelm Hofmann hat einem Ruhestandspfarrer im Landkreis Bad Kissingen die Ausübung aller priesterlichen Dienste untersagt. Außerdem muss der Geistliche das von ihm bewohnte Pfarrhaus räumen. Der Mann soll vor über 40 Jahren in Polen eine Minderjährige missbraucht haben.

Bischof Hofmann hat den Geistlichen aufgefordert, das Dekanat Bad Kissingen zu verlassen. Gegen den Ruhestandspfarrer läuft seit November 2015 eine kirchenrechtliche Voruntersuchung. Ihm wird vorgeworfen, vor mehr als 40 Jahren während seines Wirkens in Polen eine Minderjährige über mehrere Jahre hinweg sexuell missbraucht zu haben.

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Bistum Münster: Wegen frommer SMS und Whatsapps muss Pfarrer gehen

DEUTSCHLAND
kath.net

Bistumssprecher Kronenburg: Der 52-jährige Priester habe einzelne Jugendliche mit häufigen Handynachrichten für Wallfahrten, Besinnungstage oder andere geistliche Angebote gewinnen wollen.

Rheine/Münster (kath.net/KNA) Weil er Jugendlichen zu viele fromme SMS und Whatsapps schickte, ist ein katholischer Geistlicher aus Rheine vom Dienst entpflichtet worden. Bei den elektronischen Nachrichten sei es nicht um sexuelle Inhalte oder strafrechtlich relevante Dinge gegangen, sagte der Sprecher des für den Fall zuständigen Bistums Münster, Stephan Kronenburg, am Montag auf Anfrage. Der 52-jährige Priester habe einzelne Jugendliche mit häufigen Handynachrichten für Wallfahrten, Besinnungstage oder andere geistliche Angebote gewinnen wollen. Die jungen Menschen hätten sich damit «unwohl» gefühlt.

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“Unangemessene Nachrichten”: Beese als Priester des Amtes enthoben

DEUTSCHLAND
Soester Anzeiger

Lippetal/Rheine – Pastor Gereon Beese, der 2015 von Lippetal nach Rheine gewechselt war, musste sein Amt als Seelsorger niederlegen. Wie die bischöfliche Pressestelle in Münster in einer Pressemitteilung erklärte, hat Bischof Felix Genn Beese wegen „völlig unangemessenen“ Verhaltens, seines Amtes enthoben.

Beese (52), der seit Sommer 2015 in Rheine tätig war, hatte dem Bistum zufolge mit Jugendlichen Handynummern ausgetauscht und ihnen elektronische Nachrichten geschickt. Diese Mitteilungen seien in Inhalt und Form „völlig unangemessen und unklug für einen Geistlichen“. Darin seien sich die Verantwortlichen im Bistum Münster und in der Kirchengemeinde in Rheine einig. Beese soll nun zur Fortführung und Vollendung einer Therapie in ein Kloster gehen. Das Bistum betonte in seiner Pressemitteilung aber auch, dass es zu keinem Zeitpunkt Erkenntnisse „über etwaige sexuelle Übergriffe“ oder sonstige Vorkommnisse von strafrechtlicher Relevanz gegeben habe.

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Pastor schickte „völlig unangemessene“ Nachrichten an Jugendliche

DEUTSCHLAND
Westfalische Nachrichten

[After less than a year in Rheine, Pastor Gereon Beese is relieved of his duties. The Catholic priest is said to have sent youngsters “inappropriate messages”.]

Münster/Rheine –
(Aktualisiert) Nach nicht einmal einem Jahr in Rheine wird Pastor Gereon Beese von seiner Aufgabe entbunden. Der katholische Geistliche soll Jugendlichen „unangemessene Nachrichten“ geschickt haben.

Pastor Gereon Beese, der seit Herbst 2015 in Rheine tätig war, wird mit Wirkung zum 15. Juni von Bischof Felix Genn von seiner Aufgabe entpflichtet. Das wurde am Wochenende in den Gottesdiensten in Rheine bekanntgegeben. Laut Mitteilung der Bischöflichen Pressestelle des Bistums Münster hatte Beese mit Jugendlichen „Handynummern ausgetauscht und ihnen elektronische Nachrichten geschickt, bei denen sich die Verantwortlichen im Bistum Münster und in Rheine einig sind, dass sie in Inhalt und Form völlig unangemessen und unklug für einen Geistlichen sind“, wie es in der Mitteilung heißt. Wegen desselben Verhaltens habe Pastor Beese bereits im April vergangenen Jahres die Pfarrei in Lippetal verlassen müssen. ­Beese soll nun zur „Fortführung und Vollendung seiner Therapie“ in ein Kloster gehen.

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MARKEY ISN’T ONLY VICTIMS’ LOBBY LIAR

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the victims’ lobby:

The plight of those who have been sexually abused, especially minors, is a condition eminently worthy of our compassion. Unfortunately, many of those who have professionally taken up the cause of these victims are dishonest activists who are not above lying to advance their interests.

Last week, NY Assemblywoman Margaret Markey lied about Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, accusing him of bribery.

In 2012, the director of SNAP, David Clohessy, admitted under oath that he has lied to the press.

In 2011, Terence McKiernan, founder of BishopAccountability, lied when he told a conference that Cardinal Timothy Dolan was protecting 55 priests.

Jeffrey—”I’m suing the s*** out of [the] Catholic Church” Anderson—has lied repeatedly about “smoking guns” that never seem to fire, trying to implicate the Vatican in U.S. abuse cases.

Last month, Yeshiva University lawyer Marci Hamilton lied to the press when she said the bishops pay my salary. She knows full well that the Catholic League is not funded by the bishops.

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Child sex crime bill would violate Pa. constitution, state official says

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

The state’s second highest ranking law official on Monday told members of the state Senate that a proposed bill that would reform the state’s statute of limitations was unconstitutional.

Solicitor General Bruce Castor, in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, said House Bill 1947 would violate the remedies clause in the Pennsylvania Constitution.

“House Bill 1947, if enacted into law in its current form and without amendment will, in our opinion, violate the Remedies Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution,” Castor said. “Potential defendants, who have had the statute of limitations pass without their being subjected to suit, will rightly claim a vested right in the applicable statute of limitations. Such operates as a total block to liability which the General Assembly, despite surely the very best of intentions, cannot retroactively cure. Without doubt, House Bill 1947 represents a laudable attempt to provide a remedy for a well identified social problem. However righteous the policy goals behind HB 1947, the General Assembly in its zeal, cannot overrule a state constitutional right.”

Attorney General Kathleen Kane testified before a Senate committee on changes to Pennsylvania ‘s state of limitations.

In replying to questions from members of the panel, Castor noted that he thought that the state’s remedies clause was, in his opinion, “no longer needed.” He said the U.S. Constitution provided adequate protection.

In March the Attorney General’s Office released the report of a grand jury investigation into sexual abuse of children by priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese. That grand jury recommended lifting the statute of limitations for sexual offenses against minors and urged the Legislature to suspend the civil statute of limitations on sexual abuse claims.

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ABUSE CASE AGAINST LYON PRIEST CAN GO AHEAD, APPEALS COURT RULES

FRANCE
The Tablet (UK)

13 June 2016 | by Tom Heneghan

Cardinal Philippe Barbarin’s decision not to report him to the authorities should play a central role

The appeals court in Lyon has ruled that sexual abuse allegations against a French priest are not covered by the statute of limitations, making it likely the case of Father Bernard Preynat could go to a trial at which Cardinal Philippe Barbarin’s decision not to report him to the authorities should play a central role.

Preynat is under judicial investigation for abusing four boy scouts between 1986 and 1991. He has admitted guilt and said his superiors knew of his activity.

Barbarin, archbishop of Lyon since 2002, was questioned for 10 hours by the police family protection brigade last week about his failure to report Preynat and his decision to remove him from ministry only last year, despite knowing of his case for some time.

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Statement on Judiciary Committee Hearing for HB 1947

PENNSYLVANIA
Pennsylvania Catholic Conference

June 13, 2016

The Senate Judiciary Committee today was scheduled to hear from several witnesses on whether House Bill 1947 violates Pennsylvania’s Constitution, which prohibits the General Assembly from retroactively altering statutes of limitations to revive causes of action that have expired.

“I applaud this Committee for its care in developing legislation to protect victims of childhood sexual abuse and striving to do so in a manner that is consistent with the Pennsylvania Constitution,” said attorney Cary Silverman. “Based on my examination of Pennsylvania law, it is my opinion that H.B. 1947, to the extent it would revive time-barred civil claims, violates the Remedies Clause.”

Silverman, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP law firm and an adjunct professor at George Washington University Law School, previously testified before state legislatures on bills that would retroactively eliminate or extend a statute of limitations. He was asked by the Insurance Federation of Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference to closely examine the issue.

“My conclusion is that over 150 years of Pennsylvania law is consistent and unequivocal on this point: reviving a civil claim for which the statute of limitations has run impermissibly interferes with a vested right and violates the Remedies Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution,” Silverman wrote.

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Pa. Senate panel sets hearing on statute of limitations for crimes of child sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Newsworks

The Pennsylvania Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled a public hearing Monday morning on the constitutionality of House Bill 1947, which passed that chamber with an overwhelming majority.

The bill would abolish the criminal statute of limitations for all future crimes of child sexual abuse. It would also give future victims more time to file civil cases by raising the maximum age to do so from 30 to 50.

The bill was introduced after the attorney general’s office released a report in March detailing the cover-up of sexual abuse by more than 50 priests and religious leaders in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese over several decades.

The committee has not released a list of witnesses to testify at the hearing, but it is clear the bill faces opposition from Catholic organizations around the state, including the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference. Their ire has mainly been drawn by an amendment to the bill from state Rep. Mark Rozzi that would make the change in civil statute retroactive, meaning people now between the ages of 30 and 50 could file suits over childhood abuse.

In an emailed statement, the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference called that measure “blatantly unfair.” It said, due to state law, that it will be easier for people to sue private institutions, such as churches, than public ones.

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Make law victim centered, not predator centered: Advocates rally ahead of hearing on reform bill

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

Armed with posters bearing photos of their children – many of whom have taken their lives – advocates for child sex abuse victims on Monday rallied on the steps of the Capitol to call on lawmakers to push through a bill that would reform child sex crime laws.

Leading the rally, Marci Hamilton, a constitutional law expert and statute of limitations expert, said the effort to reform the law was about the victims.

“This is just about the civil rights of children,” Hamilton said, about an hour before the Senate Judiciary Committee was slated to hold a hearing on the legal aspects of House Bill 1947, which would amend the statute of limitations.

Advocates know that in order for the law to change the bill must survive the scrutiny of the judiciary committee.

John Salveson, president of the Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse, said his attendance at the rally – and the hearing – was a culmination of a lifetime effort to bring justice on the priest who abused him as a child.

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Church reviews Apuron’s ban on ‘prohibited society’

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Gaynor Dumat-ol Daleno, gdumat-ol@guampdn.com June 13, 2016

Guam’s Catholic church leadership is now reconsidering whether the “Concerned Catholics of Guam” is a prohibited group, as stated earlier this month in a decree by Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

The interim leadership at the Archdiocese of Agana has removed from its website Apuron’s June 5th decree banning the Concerned Catholics of Guam and forbidding island Catholics from associating with the whistleblower group.

That decree has been placed under review, according to a statement released Monday from Father Tadeusz Jan Nowak, who is assisting Archbishop Savio Tai Fai Hon in the temporary administration of the Archdiocese of Agana, while Apuron is on leave.

Apuron stated his decree would take effect on June 14, but the archdiocesan leadership has placed it under review.

Apuron issued the decree on June 5, the eve of the Vatican’s announcement that Apuron’s administrative authority has been suspended following recent public accusations that he sexually abused young altar boys when he was a parish priest in Agat village.

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John Salveson’s Prepared Remarks for the SOL Reform/Revival Rally, Harrisburg Capitol Steps.

PENNSYLVANIA
Foundation to Abolish Child Sexual Abuse

For Immediate Release

June 13, 2016

Contact: John Salveson at 215-870-0680 salveson@abolishsexabuse.org

BRYN MAWR, PA – John Salveson, President of FACSA (Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse) made the following statement at the SOL Reform/Revival Rally on June 13, 2016 on the steps of the Pennsylvania State Capitol.

“My name is John Salveson. I am a clergy sex abuse survivor and the President of the Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse.

I am here this morning to send a very simple message. It is a message I first sent in February of 1980 in a letter to the Bishop of Rockville Centre, John McGann telling him of my abuse at the hands of a priest and alerting him to the presence of a sexual predator in his diocese. I told Bishop McGann I was contacting him for one reason – to protect other children from sexual abuse. That letter began a nine year battle to have Father Robert Huneke removed from contact with children in parishes and schools.

During those nine years the bishop ignored me, scolded me, manipulated me and lied to me – all while continuing to move Father Huneke from parish to parish and school to school.

Here I stand, 36 years later, among my fellow survivors and advocates.

The playbook of the Catholic Church hasn’t changed much. We continue to be ignored, scolded, manipulated and lied to. And Grand Jury Reports tell us that the Catholic Church continues to protect predators and child rapists, moving them from parish to parish and school to school, where they find new children to prey upon.

We all know that the problem of child sex abuse is not entirely a problem of the Roman Catholic Church. Kids are abused mostly by family members and family friends, as well as by teachers, coaches, scout leaders and anyone else who holds a position of trust in their lives.

But the reason I am speaking about the Catholic Church, as represented by the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference and the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, is because they are the ones hell bent on killing HB 1947 and denying child sex abuse survivors a modicum of justice. They are cranking out misinformation 24/7 about constitutionality, sovereign immunity, bankruptcy, parish closings and anything else they can think of.

They have spent over $2 million on their campaign by some reports. They are shameless, cowardly, delusional people who think they can convince their parishioners that they are the true victims, that they are being unfairly singled out and that they shouldn’t be held accountable for their decades of criminal, calculated, immoral behavior.

Our elected representatives in the House saw though this charade and voted overwhelmingly to approve HB 1947.

Now the fight goes to the Senate. We will soon learn if our Senate Leaders have the courage to stand up for children and the judgement to see through the insulting, misleading, manipulative campaign being under taken by those who oppose HB 1947.

We are watching them and hoping with all of our hearts that they choose victims over predators, the truth over lies and integrity over fear. We are not going away, and we will never give up until every survivor of child sex abuse has a chance for justice and healing.”

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Catholics take removal message to new apostolic administrator

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 13, 2016

By Krystal Paco

While Archbishop Anthony Apuron has been placed on leave, he’s been appointed by the Vatican to run the show. Guam’s interim archbishop has his first run-in with church protestors over the weekend.

They weren’t dressed in their Sunday best – instead, dozens of the island’s faithful came to church to protest for Archbishop Anthony Apuron to resign.

“Pray for us…pray for us…pray for us,” was the chant emanating from scores of islands Catholics. Among them, one of Apuron’s most recent accusers: Walter Denton. Denton alleges he was an altar boy at Mount Carmel Church in Agat when he was raped by then-Father Anthony Apuron. Denton is the fourth individual to publicly accuse Apuron.

He joins Roy Quintanilla and Doris Concepcion whose son, Joseph “Sonny” Quinata, was on his deathbed when he alleged Apuron molested him. Two years ago, John Toves also came forward alleging Apuron molested his cousin. Because the victim never surfaced, the archdiocese never investigated.

Amid the recent allegations, the Vatican placed Apuron on leave last week and appointed apostolic administrator Archbishop Savio Hon Tai-Fai to carry out archdiocese business. Hon addressed the protestors and invited them in to celebrate mass. One protestor announced, “We want to welcome you archbishop – you are sent from Rome and we trust your presence here.” Hon replied, saying, “We all here are doing the will of God. We are His instruments. All of you, including myself.” The protestor maintained, “We hope you also listen to us and hear our message.”

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Apuron’s imposed deadline on Tuesday

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 13, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

Tomorrow is the deadline imposed by Archbishop Anthony Apuron for local Catholics to cease any contact with the Concerned Catholics of Guam group. Just prior to the Pope’s appointment of Archbishop Savio Hon Tai-Fai as the Apostolic Administrator, Apuron issued a decree proclaiming the group a prohibited society and accused the CCOG of promoting, instigating and soliciting malicious allegations against him. Fr. Nowak confirms the decree has since been removed from the Archdiocese website and is under review.

Meanwhile, since last week KUAM has been requesting for an interview with the Apostolic Administrator, Fr. Nowak responded saying Archbishop Hon is not prepared to give interviews at this time. He needs time as he continues to gather information on the current situation of the Archdiocese.

Archbishop Hon asks for understanding and will address the media in due time.

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‘I feel stronger today’: clergy abuse survivor

AUSTRALIA
Daily Examiner

Tim Howard | 13th Jun 2016

A WOMAN who was sexually abused by a former Bishop of Grafton for 40 years, says an official apology from the Diocese has left her feeling stronger and able to manage her pain.

Beth Heinrich, sat in the congregation at Christ Church Anglican Cathedral on Sunday morning to hear the Bishop of Grafton, the Very Reverend Sarah Macneil apologise for the “reprehensible” conduct of her predecessor Donald Shearman.

Shearman was defrocked in 2004 when a church inquiry and tribunal uncovered a sex scandal involving him and Ms Heinrich going back to the mid-1950s.

Those same findings also led to the resignation of the Governor-General of Australia, Peter Hollingworth, for his efforts in attempting to cover up the scandal.

Ms Heinrich hoped her example would encourage others to seek justice.

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Migrants from UK urged to give evidence to child abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sandra Laville
Sunday 12 June 2016

Men and women transported to Australia and Canada in the child migrant programme are being encouraged to give evidence about the sexual abuse they suffered to Britain’s public inquiry into historic and ongoing child abuse.

The Goddard inquiry, set up in 2014 to examine the abuse of children in public and private institutions, is urging those who may have been victims before and after being removed from the country to come forward as a priority.

Judge Lowell Goddard is fast-tracking her investigation into the sexual abuse of child migrants from the UK because of the advanced age and possible ill-health of those who are still alive. A preliminary hearing will take place in July.

They were part of a programme that saw up to 150,000 children aged three and over taken from their families and transported to Australia, Canada and other Commonwealth countries between 1920 and 1970. A parliamentary report in 1998 said the abuse suffered by some of those in Australia was widespread, systematic and exceptionally depraved.

Frances Swaine, a lawyer from Leigh Day, who has worked with child migrants for many years, said: “It is hugely important that the Goddard inquiry is looking at this. Thousands of child migrants suffered sexual abuse. They have never had their voices heard in a judicial setting in the UK.”

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Bill to change sex crime law could set precedent

PENNSYLVANIA
Pocono Record

By Iain Oldman
PublicSource

Posted Jun. 12, 2016

When the Pennsylvania Senate Judiciary Committee meets later this month to consider a bill that would extend the statute of limitations on some child sex abuse crimes, a portion of the Pennsylvania business community will be there to lobby against it.

Six of Pennsylvania’s largest business organizations are opposing House Bill 1947 for the precedent it sets in making changes to the statute of limitations, particularly on civil cases.

According to a PennLive story, the organizations lobbying against the bill are the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania; the Insurance Federation of Pennsylvania; the Pennsylvania Business Council; the Pennsylvania National Federation of Independent Businesses; the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association; and the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry.

In a joint letter to House lawmakers in March, the business coalition wrote: “Retroactively extending the statute of limitations is a dangerous precedent for any business that manufactures, sells, stores or transports any kind of product, as well as for any institution that is an insurer or creditor of any such business.”

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Advocates for Child Abuse Act trash proposed N.Y. State Assembly bill

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

KENNETH LOVETT
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, June 12, 2016

ALBANY — Advocate opposition to an Assembly bill making it easier for child sex abuse survivors to seek justice may be the final nail in the coffin on the issue this year, legislative insiders say.

Assembly Democrats introduced a bill last week they believe holds the most promise of passing the chamber. The bill would extend the statute of limitations to bring a case to a victim’s 28th birthday, up from 23.

It would also open a six-month window to revive old cases and treat public and private institutions equally when it comes to dealing with sex abuse cases.

But advocates were quick to trash the bill for not going far enough. They want the statute of limitations eliminated or greatly extended.

That could spell doom since it’s unlikely the Senate Republicans would accept a bill that goes further than the Assembly proposal.

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A now or never moment for advocates of child sex crime law reform

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

Advocates of child sex abuse victims are calling it their now-or-never moment.

On Monday, a bill they say would widely tip the scale of justice in favor of victims of sexual abuse and away from predators goes before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

At stake is the future of House Bill 1947, which would amend the civil statute of limitations and eliminate all criminal statutes on future child sex crimes. The bill would also give past victims of sex abuse the opportunity to file civil claims against predators.

Monday’s hearing before the judiciary committee, the first since the bill’s passage in the House in April, is slated to focus on arguments of the bill’s constitutionality.

“We have a moment when the survivors need to make a point – that this is all about survivors from all categories,” said Marci Hamilton, a constitutional law expert and a leading expert on statute of limitations reform. “It’s really time for Pennsylvania to do the right thing.”

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Catholic Church tries to kill child abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

State Rep. Nick Miccarelli said he’s developed a thick skin as a lawmaker.

But the Delaware County Republican said that didn’t prepare him for what he saw last week in the weekly bulletin of the church where he faithfully attends Mass and confesses his sins.

The blurb was amid routine notices: “State Representative Miccarelli voted in favor of House Bill 1947 which states that private institutions can be sued as far as 40 years ago for millions of dollars, while public institutions may not be sued for any crimes committed in the past.”

“I was baffled at first,” Miccarelli said. “And then I was upset.”

In addition to giving an overly simplified (and factually inaccurate) account of the bill he backed to support victims of child sexual abuse, he said, the notice came without warning. He said he heard similar stories from other Catholic lawmakers who had supported the measure.

In a lengthy Facebook post, Miccarelli fired back.

“To explain to the citizens of my district that I bear no ill will toward the Church I belong to, is something that I never thought I would have to do,” he wrote. “Frankly, I would much rather be chastised from the altar, than to be damned for not allowing justice to be done.”

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Unrest in Guam archdiocese goes back several years

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

http://datadana.com/timelinearch/ – Divided Archdiocese

Questions about the leadership of Guam’s Catholic church reached a tipping point June 6, when Pope Francis appointed Archbishop Savio Tai Fai Hon to temporarily run the local archdiocese. While the move comes shortly after Archbishop Anthony Apuron was accused of sexually abusing altar boys in the 1970s, the local church and Apuron have been battling public dissent for many years. Here are some of the key events:

October 2009: Vice Speaker Benjamin Cruz states he was repeatedly sexually assaulted by a priest in California when he was 13, and said he knows of “pedophile priests” in the Guam archdiocese. Cruz stated the allegations publicly after Archbishop Apuron lobbied against Cruz’s bill to allow for same-sex marriage. Cruz called Apuron’s opposition “hypocritical.” Apuron stated, “Unfortunately, sins committed by individuals from every walk of life bear consequences that are painful and should be prevented.”

February 2011: The Archdiocese of Agana tries to stop a proposed law that would eliminate the statute of limitations and open a two-year window for those who were sexually assaulted as children to sue their attackers. The archdiocese, which argues the bill targets the church, asks the governor to veto the bill, and Archbishop Apuron speaks to the governor and several lawmakers about his opposition. The bill becomes law.

July 2013: Archbishop Apuron removes the Rev. Paul Gofigan as pastor of Santa Barbara Church in Dededo, stating Gofigan failed to terminate the employment of a known sex offender. Gofigan, in January 2014, threatens to file a defamation suit, saying Apuron slandered him.

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Senate panel reviews time limits on filing criminal, civil complaints over child sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

The battle over legislation to give child sex-abuse victims more time to pursue claims in court is reaching a boiling point.

A key Senate committee is scheduled to review the measure today.

Child abuse survivors and their advocates have fought for years to extend time limits for criminal charges and lawsuits against abusers and those who shield them. The legislation has gained traction in Harrisburg for the first time in a decade, passing the state House with overwhelming bipartisan support in April.

But state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Muhlenberg Township Democrat, said Friday that he fears the Senate will block or water down the measure amid fierce opposition and intense lobbying from the Catholic Church.

Rozzi, who was sexually abused by a priest when he was a child, has led the effort to extend the statutes of limitation.

After the measure cleared the state House, Catholic Church leaders launched a full-court press aimed at defeating the bill.

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Capitol showdown over child sex-abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Steve Esack
Contact Reporter

HARRISBURG — From the pulpits of Catholic churches to the platforms of social media, emotions are running high over a bill that would make it harder for some child sex abusers — and employers who protect them — to escape criminal and civil penalties.

During Sunday Masses in the Philadelphia Archdiocese and elsewhere Catholic priests, at the behest of their bishops, have denounced the bill and the state lawmakers who supported it.

The bill’s supporters, including legislators who have felt the clerics’ wrath, have accused the church of spreading falsehoods that the bill would financially cripple the church while leaving public institutions unscathed if they protect and harbor child molesters.

On Monday, the two sides will face off in the state Capitol. Child sex-abuse advocates are planning a rally before a 10 a.m. Senate hearing on the bill in which Attorney General Kathleen Kane and her solicitor general, Bruce Castor, are to speak and testify.

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Senator’s firm once disputed sex-abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Maria Panaritis, Staff Writer

As he prepares to convene a hearing Monday that could shape the fate of a controversial measure to let Pennsylvania child-sex abuse victims sue over decades-old attacks, Sen. Stewart Greenleaf (R., Montgomery) has declined to publicly take a position on the bill.

But the law firm that bears his name has not always been so reserved.

In 2008, records show, lawyers for the firm, Elliott Greenleaf, were among advocates who unsuccessfully argued that a similar proposal under consideration in Delaware was unconstitutional. Firm lawyers at the time represented Norbertine Fathers Inc., a Catholic order sued by abuse victims.

Greenleaf didn’t personally handle the suit – his namesake firm has about 50 lawyers in Pennsylvania and Delaware – and there’s no record indicating the extent of his role.

But the case adds another subtext as the Senate Judiciary Committee chaired by Greenleaf gathers Monday to weigh the constitutionality of the similar bill in Pennsylvania, one staunchly opposed by the Catholic church. Supporters of the measure, approved in the House by a wide margin in April, have predicted that the Senate will use the constitutionality question to dilute or defeat the bill.

Among the expected witnesses is Solicitor General Bruce L. Castor Jr., a former partner at Greenleaf’s firm, who Capitol sources say plans to testify that the legislation would be unconstitutional.

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June 12, 2016

Royal Commission into abuse at Bathurst

AUSTRALIA
Wellington Times

ANYONE affected by child sexual abuse at schools, churches or sporting groups is urged to attend Tuesday’s Royal Commission public forum (SUBS-TUES) in Bathurst.

This will be the only public forum in the region for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The forum is open to individuals, community groups and service providers and will give people the chance to find out more about the commission’s work or register to share their story with a Royal Commission officer.

“The issue of child sexual abuse may be a confronting topic for many people,” Relationships Australia Bathurst branch manager Leona Bishop said.

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Apuron resignation pushed

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Louella Losinio | Post News Staff

Just before the 9:30 a.m. Mass yesterday, protesters converged in front of the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica in Hagåtña calling for the resignation of Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

The group – while holding signs welcoming the new apostolic administrator – also urged Apuron to step down. The protest was peaceful and the protesters just prayed and sang religious hymns.

Lou Klitzkie, a member of the Laity Forward Movement, said: “We are here today because we want Archbishop Apuron to resign.”

In the past, the movement had organized several silent protests outside the cathedral, one of which took place Jan. 31. The group had publicly opposed decisions made by Apuron. Klitzkie reiterated the concerns made by the group.

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BG, McCort take stand on two diocese leaders

PENNSYLVANIA
The Altoona Mirror

June 12, 2016

By Russ O’Reilly ( roreilly@altoonamirror.com) ,The Altoona Mirror

Two religious leaders with roles in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese’s landmark school consolidation set for this fall are banned from high schools where they formerly served.

Sister Donna Marie Leiden, the diocese’s education director, is not welcome at Bishop McCort Catholic High School, where she served as principal during the same time as two child molesters.

“The Bishop McCort Board of Trustees conveyed to the diocese that Sister Donna is not welcome at Bishop McCort,” Bishop McCort Principal Tom Fleming confirmed.

Leiden on Wednesday declined an invitation for an interview with the Mirror regarding her status with McCort and the misbehavior of employees during her tenure as principal from 1997 to 2006.

In addition, the recent social media activity of the Rev. Brian Saylor – pastor of the diocese’s new middle school set to serve all of the diocese’s middle school children in the Altoona area this fall – was investigated by Altoona police this spring upon the request of Bishop Guilfoyle Catholic High School administrators.

The diocese has given no indication that his role has changed as pastor, but he is not allowed at BG.

Saylor has declined to comment until he gets permission from the diocese, and diocese spokesman Tony DeGol refused to discuss Saylor’s status.

“I have nothing to say,” DeGol said.

Leiden was principal when Brother Stephen Baker preyed on McCort students and another teacher and deacon absconded to Canada with a female student.

Allegations of Baker’s abuse during Leiden’s tenure as principal surfaced in 2013 and were followed by the diocese’s $8 million settlement with 88 victims from McCort.

Last summer, Bishop Mark L. Bartchak cited money problems for parishes in the diocese. With Leiden as his education director, he planned a sweeping consolidation of parochial schools.

Simultaneously, the Office of the Attorney General investigators, spurred by allegations against Baker, obtained a warrant to take records from the diocesan offices.

The final report revealed Bartchak’s predecessor, Bishop Joseph Adamec, had been paying victims of priests. Victims appeared before the diocese’s Allegation Review Board without attorneys, the report said.

The grand jury report issued March 1 details the abuse of dozens of priests over decades. It makes no direct mention of Leiden, but she was principal of Bishop McCort under Adamec’s tenure, when Baker and another teacher, Tom Lemmon, had inappropriate contact with McCort students.

Both men allegedly openly groomed victims at McCort, according to grand jury documents and attorneys of victims.

Adamec prohibited a former McCort principal, William Rushin, from firing Lemmon – who was studying to be a deacon, the grand jury report states.

Rushin “had observed Lemmon having contact with female students that seemed unprofessional,” the report states.

Rushin resigned in 1997 and was succeeded by Leiden. Lemmon went to Canada with a female student and committed suicide in 2003 during Leiden’s tenure at McCort.

It’s not clear whether Leiden saw Lemmon’s fraternizing with female students as plainly as Rushin saw it. The report includes no testimony from Leiden about Lemmon or Baker.

Baker, a McCort teacher and athletic trainer, allegedly displayed inappropriate behavior openly in the years Leiden was principal.

Baker took his own life in 2013 amid allegations.

Attorney Richard Serbin, representing victims of Baker, said he was “shocked” at the grand jury report.

“Frankly, I was surprised grand jury did not find culpable conduct on part of school officials – simply by fact it was well known Baker was engaging in inappropriate conduct,” he said. “Many of the young people I represented said it was not unusual for Baker to be massaging students in class, openly.”

He added, “Obviously this was inappropriate conduct and part of the grooming process.”

Serbin said all of his clients were at Bishop McCort during Leiden’s tenure as principal.

The attorney general’s investigators found no “conclusive evidence that Bishop McCort administrators were aware of Baker’s history or his sexually assaultive conduct,” according to the grand jury report.

At Bishop Guilfoyle, President Joe Adams requested police investigate the social media activity of Saylor, a trustee at the school and former teacher.

Though Altoona police found no criminal element in Saylor’s social media activity, he is not welcome at BG.

“When we talk about making students feel safe,” Adams said, “We (Guilfoyle board) aren’t blowing smoke.”

Saylor, however, remains a member of the school’s board of trustees and is involved with the diocese’s youth summer camp.

Parents have been waiting for weeks for Bartchak to make a statement about Saylor’s status, said John Swope, a parent of a student in the diocese’s parochial school system.

“If there is nothing to it, then let’s not have a problem. The diocese should come out and put a stop to it. Don’t let this guy hang, twisting in the wind,” Swope said.

But if there is something to it, then Bartchak’s silence is worse, Swope said.

“As a parent, you are concerned for your kids,” Swope said. “I know nothing of Father Saylor. He seems like a nice enough guy.”

Speaking generally, Adams said adults of the school may set up a professional social media account to communicate with students, but adults affiliated with the school are prohibited from contacting students on a personal social media account that may include interests from their personal lives.

“We have a social media policy in place that teachers and priests are expected to follow,” Adams said.

The schools that banned Leiden and Saylor are currently independent of the diocese and its bishop.

However, Bartchak is a member of the board of trustees for both schools, and as a trustee, Bartchak was party to the decision to ban Saylor, Adams said.

Bartchak’s silence about Saylor and his keeping Leiden as diocese education director disturbs Catholic businessman George Foster of Hollidaysburg, an outspoken critic of the diocese.

Foster said he has met with Bartchak and has written a follow-up letter to Bartchak asking him to remove Leiden.

“Why would you have a director of education who is not welcome in our own high schools?” his letter states.

Regarding Saylor, Foster wrote: “In light of all that has transpired in this diocese, Saylor’s incident seems minor, but he is the pastor of the new school system and often the priest at the kids’ summer camp. The high school took immediate action for the safety of our kids. But we have no assurances from your office.”

Foster added in his letter to Bartchak: “Your silence is deafening.”

Mirror Staff Writer Russ O’Reilly is at 946-7435.

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Faith leaders want child sexual abuse victims to have day in court

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

LINDA CROCKETT | SPECIAL TO LNP

On June 2, a letter signed by nearly 100 Christian religious leaders from various traditions was delivered to members of the Pennsylvania Senate Judiciary Committee.

The letter called for the reform of our civil and criminal statutes of limitation in child sexual abuse cases and specifically for passage of state House Bill 1947.

In my work with Samaritan SafeChurch, I connect with leaders of faith communities across the state. Many are troubled that the public narrative has been that “the church” opposes reform.

While the Roman Catholic Church has indeed poured significant resources into blocking reform in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, it does not represent the full spectrum of churches, which includes various denominations, affiliations and theological understandings.

SafeChurch — along with the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape and other organizations — encouraged religious leaders to use the opportunity presented by the letter to counter this narrative.

I am moved by the numerous clergy from Lancaster County who stood up for justice for survivors, for protection of children and for accountability for not just those who harm but for the institutions that cover up sexual abuse.

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Despite Guam’s Catholic church controversy, beliefs remain strong

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Jojo Santo Tomas, jsantotoma@guampdn.com June 13, 2016

Some of Guam’s churchgoers say their faith remains unchanged despite recent controversies surrounding Guam’s Catholic church.

Archbishop Anthony Apuron faces accusations of rape and molestation in the 1970s, recently made public by multiple accusers now in their 50s.

Apuron has said that he is innocent, and is the victim of a smear campaign. He has not been charged with any crime.

Pope Francis recently appointed another archbishop, Savio Tai Fai Hon, to oversee Guam’s Catholic church while the allegations are investigated. Apuron currently remains Guam’s archbishop.

For the morning Masses, Hagåtña traffic and parking was as normal as any Sunday except from about 8:30 to 10 a.m. at the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica. Parishioners attending the 9 a.m. services were greeted by about 50 protesters calling for Apuron’s resignation. The protesters held signs and softly sang before they dispersed right after Hon acknowledged them at the front of the Cathedral steps. Protesters murmured their thanks at his arrival, and one man went to kiss Hon’s hand.

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Philly Archdiocese’s push against abuse bill reminds councilman of ‘Spotlight’

PENNSYLVANIA
PhillyVoice

BY DANIEL CRAIG
PhillyVoice Staff

A Philadelphia city councilman of the Catholic faith made it a point to comment on the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s efforts to push back against a piece of legislation meant to extend legal rights to child victims of sexual abuse.

On Thursday, Councilman-At-Large Bill Greenlee said a recent report about some Catholic state legislators being called out by their local parishes for supporting the bill made “the few hairs still on my head stand up.”

House Bill 1947 would allow people who claim they were sexually abused as kids to bring civil lawsuits until they turn 50, up from the current age limit of 30, and would prevent institutions from claiming immunity if they are found to have acted in gross negligence. It passed the House by a vote of 180-15 in April and now awaits Senate action.

This week, the Associated Press reported that several state representatives were essentially shamed by their churches because of their vote. Some say they were called out directly by their priests or in their church bulletins.

Greenlee said the report reminded him of the 2015 movie “Spotlight,” a film about The Boston Globe’s coverage of rampant child sex abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston.

More specifically, Greenlee said the story reminded him of the scene in the film where Mark Ruffalo, portraying journalist Michael Rezendes, says the abuse could have happened to any of his colleagues who grew up as members of the church.

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Archbishop Hon discusses child sex abuse issues during prayer service

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 11, 2016

By Krystal Paco

A Vigil Prayer Service for Unity was held at the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica on Saturday night. For the first time since his arrival on Wednesday, Guam’s newly appointed Apostolic Administrator Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai addressed issues in the local Catholic Church involving child sex abuse. Archbishop Hon acknowledged there may be those suffering as a result of the accusations and asks the church to approach the issues in a climate of serenity and pray for unity.

He also made mention of Pope Francis’ announcement over the weekend that lays down the law when it comes to Catholic bishops who turn a blind eye to child sex abuse allegations. The apostolic letter, in the form of a Motu Propiu, affirms that the Church, like a loving mother, loves all her children, but treats and protects with special affection the smallest and most helpless.

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Concerned Catholics Protest Outside Cathedral

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 11, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

The Pope may have appointed an Apostolic Administrator to temporarily oversee the Archdiocese of Agana, but concerned Catholics continue to push for the removal of Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai was appointed Monday night to oversee the local diocese amid sex abuse allegations against Apuron and other issues involving the local church.

Dozens of concerned Catholics stood and marched outside the Cathedral in Hagatna this morning including Walter Denton and John Toves. Denton accused Archbishop Apuron of raping him when he was 13-years-old. Denton was an altar boy at the time at Mt. Carmel church in Agat where Apuron was a priest. In August 2015 Denton lodged an official complaint with the Vatican. Toves in 2014 alleged his cousin, when he was a seminarian several years ago, was sexually abused by the Archbishop. His cousin however never came forward and the Archdiocese therefore did not investigate the claim.

In recent weeks two other people came forward making sex abuse allegations against Apuron which he has vehemently denied. Archbishop Apuron has responded that he is the victim of a malicious smear campaign because he had uncovered financial discrepancies within the Archdiocese and was cleaning up the Church.

Concerned Catholics protesting outside the Cathedral this morning say that although they accept Archbishop Savio’s call to restore peace, harmony and unity they still want Archbishop Apuron to resign or be removed. The Pope appointed Archbishop Savio “sede plena” which means that Archbishop Apuron keeps his title but must fully comply with the Apostolic Administration. In a media release the concerned Catholics believe that because Apuron continues to cling to his title he may continue to “wield some kind of influence on the lives of us Catholics here”.

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Christine Flowers: Why proposed Pa. sex-abuse law is wrong

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

I’m a lawyer, as the words at the end of this column signal to the eagle-eyed reader. I’m proud of my profession, of its capacity to craft some semblance of justice for victims, and of its overriding goal of order and equity. One of my favorite quotes is spoken by Thomas More in “A Man For All Seasons” when he tries to explain to an incredulous man named Roper why laws are necessary, even when they end up protecting the guilty: “When the last law was down, and the Devil turned ‘round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man’s laws not God’s. And if you cut them down, and you’re just the man to do it, do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I’d give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake.”

I’m beginning to think that the Pennsylvania Legislature is taking its lead from Roper, the man who wanted to abolish those evil laws that, in some unfortunate but necessary instances, protect the criminals among us. Of course, the members don’t feel that way at all. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Last month, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives passed, by a very wide margin, House Bill 1947, which is ostensibly designed to make it easier for the victims of sexual abuse to obtain justice. The exact parameters of that justice are translated into both penal and monetary terms, with provisions that eliminate the statute of limitations for prosecuting abusers at the criminal end, and that extend the window in which victims can sue for money damages at the civil end. Like Roper in “A Man For All Seasons,” the representatives seem to believe that statutes of limitations are bad things, legal obstacles to a true and tangible justice that can be deposited in a bank account.

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Retracing the footsteps of a paedophile

MALAYSIA
Straits Times

Shannon Teoh Malaysia Bureau Chief In Kuala Lumpur

The rows of longhouses where the crimes took place are located near Taman Tun Dr Ismail, an upscale suburb less than 15km from downtown Kuala Lumpur.

It was in one of these dwellings that Briton Richard Huckle lived for over a year, separated by thin wooden walls from his victims who ranged in age from just six months to 13 years old.

The longhouses are provided by the Kuala Lumpur city council for blue-collar families, with each longhouse consisting of several family homes. It is a far cry from the neat bungalows and posh condos at Taman Tun Dr Ismail but, then again, in Malaysia as in much of the Third World, the rich and the poor often live side by side.

Huckle, 30, sexually abused 23 Malaysian children repeatedly, with British investigators saying there could have been up to 200 child victims during the nine years he spent around Kuala Lumpur’s suburbs.

Since news of his crimes broke last week, revulsion and deep anger have gripped many Malaysians.

Sky News reported on Huckle’s blog hidden on the dark Web – an encrypted part of the Internet often used for illegal activities.

“It’s not often in child porn that you can compare the bodies of a five-year-old and a 12-year-old that are the same girl,” he wrote.

“I’m sure I’ll have plenty more sex with (her) in the future… I hope, from the images you have seen, (you) enjoyed watching her grow.”

According to investigation papers seen by The Sunday Times, Huckle targeted vulnerable communities which were “extremely trustworthy, naive, close-knit, religious and poorly educated”.

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Rapes, Daily Beatings, and No Escape: Christian School Was Hell For These Boys

WEST VIRGINIA
The Daily Beast

Brandy Zadrozny

Blue Creek Academy was an abusive hell on earth, former students say—and the principal who ran it is now heading up a new Bible school in another state.

Jacob* dressed himself in a camouflage jacket and a matching beanie on the summer morning he ran away into the West Virginia hills. At 14 years old, he was one of the youngest, smallest, and longest-attending students at Blue Creek Academy, a religious reform school for boys from which he was desperate to escape.

Blue Creek Academy was made up of an old schoolhouse and several cabins situated on a remote campground in central West Virginia. A mission of the nearby Independent Fundamental Baptist church, pastor James Waldeck advertised Blue Creek as an “alternative to today’s degenerate, secular culture and education methods,” and took in boys who had been in trouble at home—both locally and from as far away as Texas—to be reformed. Its principal, 35-year-old JR Thompson, had reopened the church’s campgrounds in 2010, renamed it Blue Creek Academy, and marketed the boarding school, which he ran with his wife, Hannah, as a godly answer for “at-risk” teens with emotional and behavioral disabilities and Christian parents with $1,000 a month to spend on their salvation.

“We can’t wait to watch God move as he helps us snatch troubled souls out of Satan’s hand,” Thompson wrote on the school’s now-defunct website.

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Editorial | Senate’s turn to pass abuse statute of limitations bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

The pope’s approval of procedures for ousting bishops who fail to take steps to protect children from abusive priests is a delayed reaction to a crisis – but a step we welcome nevertheless.

Now the pope’s archbishops and the state Senate should join Francis in taking the fate of children more seriously.

A bill that would eliminate the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse has passed the state House and awaits a vote in the Senate. The bill would treat future child sexual abuse cases like murder cases – that there is no deadline for when criminal charges may be filed.

The bill would also extend the deadline for filing civil action from age 30 to age 50 for victims who could have been violated decades before.

The legislation was sparked by outrage over the report in February that said more than 50 priests and religious leaders in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown had sexually abused hundreds of children over many years – and that two bishops, the late James Hogan and the retired Joseph Adamec – had moved the offenders from parish to parish and even paid off families to keep the abuse quiet.

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