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.

March 31, 2016

Cllr Mannix Flynn demands former Magdalene laundry is preserved as a memorial- ‘Nobody has the private ownership of the history here’

IRELAND
Mirror

BY KATHY ARMSTRONG

Cllr Mannix Flynn said it is important that the history of the Magdalene laundries is preserved for future generations

A former Magdalene Laundry should be snapped up by the state and preserved as a memorial, Cllr Mannix Flynn has said.

The building in Donnybrook, Dublin is up for sale and expected to sell for up to €3 million.

It was formerly run by the Religious Sisters of Charity and was sold by the order in the late 1990s and then run as a private laundry until 2006.

The building, which dates back to the late 18th century, is mostly still intact and contains reminders of it’s dark history, including ledgers, old machinery, religious iconography and some of the dorms.

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.

Victim of abuse at hands of Church Minister ‘told Bishop of Grimsby’ of offences

UNITED KINGDOM
Grimsby Telegraph

The victim of “appalling abuse” at the hands of Church of England minister told the then-Bishop of Grimsby of the offences, a court heard.

Stephen Crabtree carried out the offences in the early 1990s after forming “an inappropriate relationship” with the 15-year-old victim following the breakdown of his marriage.

Crabtree, 59, who now lives in Bradford, West Yorkshire, admitted six charges of indecent assault on dates between 1992 and April 1993. He was jailed for three years and placed on the sex offenders’ register for life.

Lincoln Crown Court heard the victim later told the then-Bishop of Grimsby what happened between them and was advised to report the matter to police.

She then spoke to an officer in the area in which she was then living but decided not to take the matter further.

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.

Seven McLeod County priests credibly accused of sexual abuse, two were in Silver Lake for 28 years

MINNESOTA
Hutchinson Leader

Updated: 10:35 am, Thu Mar 31, 2016.

BY JEREMY JONES jones@hutchinsonleader.com

Nearly half of the 16 priests identified Tuesday by the New Ulm Diocese to have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor served in McLeod County. Six of them were in Winsted.

The names were jointly disclosed by the law firm of Jeff Anderson & and Associates and The Diocese of New Ulm.

Mike Finnegan of Jeff Anderson & Associates said Thursday the information was released as part of the litigation of two lawsuits filed against the diocese by Lori Stoltz and Kim Schmit. Schmit was sexually assaulted by her parish priest in Willmar in 1968.

“Those lawsuits and several others sought the release of these names and the documents of abuse,” Finnegan said. “After some court decisions we had a dialogue with the diocese and came to this. So it came out of litigation and ended up in a discussion.”

The named priests are: Michael Skoblik, Douglas Schleisman, Rudolph Henrich, Louis Heitzer, Charles Stark, Dennis Becker and Robert Clark. Of the seven, Becker and Clark are listed in released documents to be still alive.

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.

Thabiti Anyabwile and C.J. Mahaney: A Twitter Tale of Willful Blindness

UNITED STATES
Watchkeep

Willful blindness: When a leader turns a blind eye

Leaders inhabit a bubble of power, and they are both mentally and physically cut off from the reality most people would recognize. Reality is the obligation to tell the truth, “the reality most people would recognize” is the imperative, if they witness improper or unlawful behaviour, to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

But just because willful blindness is endemic doesn’t mean it’s irresistible. Roy Spence, a Texan advertising executive, refused to work with Enron even as the rest of the world beat a path to its door. How did he see what others missed? He thought a lifetime of seeing through the eyes of the powerless gave him different perspectives. “My sister had cystic fibrosis and I used to push her wheelchair to school every morning. I could see people pitying us, oblivious to the richness of our relationship. It made me ask, then as now: If they’re missing so much about us, what I am missing about them?” That internal dialogue is what Hannah Arendt called thinking.

SNAP: Member of controversial church charged with abuse

A member of a controversial church has been arrested for child sex crimes committed over nearly 11 years when he worked in “children’s ministry.” We hope kids at the church weren’t hurt. And we fear that other church members or staff knew of or suspected the abuse but kept silent. Why? Because that’s the pattern in this troubled denomination.

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.

NY STATE ABUSE BILL NEEDS REVISION

NEW YORK
Catholic League

Bill Donohue is appealing to New York State Senator Brad Hoylman to amend his bill on eliminating the statute of limitations for sexual abuse. Below is the text of his letter; it is being sent to all New York lawmakers:

In your March 30 column in the Daily News, you say, “Until every childhood sexual abuse victim has the opportunity to confront their abuser in court, the headlines will remind us that our business is unfinished.” This is so true. That is why I implore you to amend your bill on this subject to include all childhood victims: Your bill does not address those who have been abused in the public schools.

As you say, your bill would “eliminate the statute of limitations for civil actions for certain sex offenses committed against a minor,” allowing a “one-year ‘look back’ period in which past claims could be resolved.” That is a commendable position, but its application is limited to private institutions.

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.

Plaintes contre Barbarin : où en est-on ?

FRANCE
Europe 1

[Two separate investigations are now aimed the diocese of Lyon. Two priests are charged with sexual assault and church officials are accused of having covered up the abuse.]

Deux enquêtes distinctes visent désormais l’évêché de Lyon : deux prêtres sont poursuivis pour agressions sexuelles et les responsables accusés de les avoir couverts.

Depuis mardi, une cinquième plainte pour non-dénonciation d’agressions sexuelles commises par des prêtres vise le cardinal Barbarin, responsable de l’évêché de Lyon. Un nouvel élément dans le scandale de pédophilie autour du diocèse, qui comporte désormais plusieurs volets judiciaires.

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.

Missbrauchsfall beschäftigt Staatsanwalt und Bistumsbeauftragten

DEUTSCHLAND
kath.net

Der unabhängige Missbrauchsbeauftragte des Bistums Würzburg zeigte sich verwundert über die Verfahrenseinstellung seitens der Kirche.

Würzburg (kath.net/KNA) Nach der Einstellung des kirchlichen Untersuchungsverfahrens wegen eines Missbrauchsvorwurfs gegen einen hochrangigen Würzburger Priester kommt neue Bewegung in den Fall. Am Dienstag leitete die Staatsanwaltschaft laut einem Bericht des Bayerischen Rundfunks Ermittlungen ein. Dabei geht es nach den Worten von Oberstaatsanwalt Boris Raufeisen um mögliche Straftaten und ihre etwaige Verjährung. Der «Spiegel» hatte am Wochenende über den Fall berichtet, der sich im Jahr 1988 im Würzburger Exerzitienhaus Himmelspforten zugetragen haben soll. Betroffen ist ein damals 17-jähriges Mädchen.

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.

Mutmaßliches Opfer spricht Jahrzehnte später über Missbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
Augsburger Allgemeine

[In 1988, a priest sexually abused her, says Alexandra Wolf. She is now making her story public.]

1988 sei sie als Teenager zum Sex gezwungen worden – von einem Priester, sagt Alexandra Wolf. Im Spiegel machte sie ihre Geschichte öffentlich. Nun spricht sie über die Reaktionen. Von Christine Jeske

Ihr Vater bereitete sich in einem Kurs im Exerzitienhaus Himmelspforten gerade auf die Weihe zum Diakon vor. Seine damals 17-jährige Tochter begleitete ihn. Was dann geschehen sein soll, erzählte sie über ein Vierteljahrhundert später dem Spiegel-Redakteur Peter Wensierski.
Er übermittelte dieser Redaktion die Fragen an Alexandra Wolf. Sie antwortete sofort. Peter Wensierski veröffentlichte seinen Artikel unter dem Titel „So ein bisserl liebevoll“. Der Satz stammt aus dem kirchlichen Untersuchungsbericht.

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.

Alexandra Wolf beklagt “zweiten Missbrauch”

DEUTSCHLAND
BR 24

[Alexandra Wolf accused a priest of the diocese of Würzburg of sexual abuse. She laments what she sees as a cover-up by the church.]

Alexandra Wolf beschuldigt einen Geistlichen des Bistums Würzburg, sie 1988 zum Oralsex gezwungen zu haben. Nun äußert sich die mittlerweile 44-Jährige im BR – und beklagt einen “zweiten Missbrauch” durch die Vertuschung.

Von: Barbara Markus

Von Erbrechen bis Panikattacken

Mit ruhiger Stimme sprach die mittlerweile 44-Jährige über die psychischen und körperlichen Folgen dessen, was ihrer Darstellung nach 1988 im Würzburger Exerzitienhaus Himmelspforten geschehen ist: der Missbrauch durch einen hochrangigen Geistlichen, den damaligen Missbrauchsbeauftragten des Bistums:

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.

Bergoglios Schweigen

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutschlandfunk

[Pope Francis and Clergy Sexual Abuse in Argentina – BishopAccountability.org]

[Bergoglio’s silence: The pope has repeatedly promised zero tolerance for clerics who sexual abuse children but critics accused him ove covering-up abuse in Argentina.]

Null Toleranz gegenüber Klerikern, die sich an Kindern vergehen. Das hat Papst Franziskus schon mehrmals versprochen. Kritiker werfen dem Argentinier aber jetzt vor, dass er als Erzbischof in Buenos Aires selbst Missbrauchsfälle verschwiegen habe. Ein aktuelles Gerichtsverfahren erinnert an die Vergangenheit.

Von Victoria Eglau

“Als ich dreizehn war, wurde ich von einem katholischen Geistlichen missbraucht – in der Schule des Marianisten-Ordens in Buenos Aires, die ich damals besuchte. Zehn Jahre lang konnte ich das nicht in Worte fassen, konnte es keinem erzählen.”

Dem Argentinier Sebastián Cuattromo gelang es schließlich doch, über seine traumatische Erfahrung zu sprechen. Aber nicht nur das: Cuattromo, heute 39, zeigte seinen ehemaligen Lehrer, den Ordensbruder Fernando Picciochi, im Jahr 2000 an, gemeinsam mit einem Mitschüler, an dem sich Picciochi ebenfalls sexuell vergangen hatte. Bevor es jedoch zum Prozess kam, floh der katholische Geistliche in die USA, wo sein Opfer ihn selbst aufspürte: Dank Cuattromos Hinweis wurde der Ordensbruder festgenommen und nach Argentinien ausgeliefert. 2012 verurteilte die Justiz Fernando Picchiochi wegen wiederholter sexueller Nötigung Minderjähriger zu zwölf Jahren Gefängnis.

“Das Wichtigste an meiner Geschichte ist, dass der sexuelle Missbrauch, den ich erlitten habe, mehr als zwanzig Jahre später von der Justiz anerkannt wurde. Das hat einen hohen Symbolwert. Denn ein großer Teil der Fälle von Kindesmissbrauch bleibt ungesühnt.” Sebastián Cuattromo brachte seinen Peiniger dank seiner eigenen Hartnäckigkeit vor Gericht. Von der katholischen Kirche erhielt er keine Unterstützung. In Argentinien haben sich in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten etwa 50 katholische Geistliche an Kindern vergangen. Diese Zahl hat die US-amerikanische Internetplattform Bishop Accountability veröffentlicht, die Dunkelziffer liegt vermutlich höher. Ein Teil wurde verurteilt, ein Teil entging der Bestrafung.

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.

Christian Brothers deny dodging sex abuse compensation

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Charlotte King

The Christian Brothers religious order has refuted allegations it is dodging compensation claims from former sex abuse victims.

The order said it had paid over $20 million in compensation through litigation in the last year.

A former student from the St Alipius boys school in Ballarat and his lawyer accused the order of using smoke and mirrors tactics to avoid paying compensation for past abuse.

The survivor, Ron Kochskamper, and his lawyer, Vivian Waller, complained that Christian Brothers were not willing to back a defendant they provided to be sued — Brother Robert Best — with their assets, making it impossible for victims to achieve adequate compensation.

The order has now confirmed that Mr Kochskamper will be provided with a trustee so that legal action can go forward, and this trustee will be financially backed.

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Plaintiff’s residency questioned in defamation verdict against Paul Kendrick of Freeport

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A $14.5 million defamation verdict against a Freeport man who accused the founder of an orphanage in Haiti of being a serial pedophile hinges on where the plaintiff was living when he filed the lawsuit.

Orphanage founder Michael Geilenfeld acknowledged Wednesday in federal court in Portland that he was in Haiti when he filed the lawsuit. But he said he considered Iowa to be his “home base” in the decades when he ran the orphanage, and he testified that he always planned to return to his home state.

“I was called to Haiti,” Geilenfeld said. “I was born in Iowa and have never let go of my Iowa identity.”

But lawyers for Paul Kendrick, who has relentlessly leveled sexual abuse allegations against Geilenfeld, questioned whether the case belonged in federal court at all, since Geilenfeld was living outside the U.S. at the time.

Geilenfeld would not qualify to sue if he was living in Haiti with no specific time frame for returning to the U.S., but the fact that he maintained ties to Iowa and planned to return will have to be weighed by the judge, said Linda Simard, a law professor at Suffolk University Law School in Boston.

She said the judge will have to figure out Geilenfeld’s “subjective intent” by looking at the facts and testimony.

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Pair indicted on 28 counts for sexual exploitation of a child

NEW YORK
WSYR

LIVERPOOL (WSYR-TV)

A Liverpool man and a teacher’s aide at All Saints school have been indicted for sex exploitation crimes against a child.

The 28-count indictment charges Jason Kopp, 40, and Emily Oberst, 23, with various counts of conspiracy to sexually exploit a child, sexual exploitation of a child, distribution of child pornography, and possession of child pornography.

The indictment also charges Kopp, individually, with eight counts of sexual exploitation of children, nine counts of distribution of child pornography, and two counts of possession of child pornography.

Kopp is accused of producing and distributing images depicting a female born in 2014 and a male born in 2013.

As for Oberst, the indictment charges her, individually, with two counts of sexual exploitation of children and four counts of distribution of child pornography. Oberst is accused of producing and distributing images depicting a female born in 2014 and another female born in 2011.

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Yeshiva University High School students whose sexual abuse was covered up by administration want changes to statute of limitations law

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Wednesday, March 30, 2016

They got an apology, but they never got justice.

Thirty-four former students at the prestigious Yeshiva University High School claimed in a bombshell $680 million lawsuit that administrators had covered up abuse for decades.

One victim claimed Rabbi Macy Gordon, his Judaic studies instructor, sprayed the pain remedy Chloraseptic on his genitals in 1980 and then violently shoved a toothbrush in his rectum, according to court papers. Another claimed he was attacked by Gordon, who attempted to give him a “mishey” — pinning a boy down and rubbing toothpaste on his genitals.

A federal judge tossed the lawsuit in 2014 — not because the plaintiffs’ claims against the school in Washington Heights were without merit, but because of a persistent obstacle to justice for child victims of sexual abuse in New York State. The statute of limitations had expired.

“We lost for one reason, and one reason only,” said Barry Singer, one of the plaintiffs in the case. “(The school) disputed none of our allegations and we still lost. The only thing to do now is to change the statute of limitations. The statute of limitations protects institutions; it does not protect children.”

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KENTUCKY ARCHDIOCESE SUED OVER HUNDREDS OF LEWD PHOTOS

KENTUCKY
Church Militant

by Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • March 30, 2016

LOUISVILLE (ChurchMilitant.com) – The scandal of a Kentucky priest accused of accessing child porn is escalating even after the cleric was sentenced for the crimes.

Following a Tuesday ruling slapping Fr. Stephen Pohl with almost three years in prison, in addition to supervised release and a nearly $8,000 fine, the parents of a young boy are suing the archdiocese of Louisville alleging negligence on their part in reigning in priests accused of sexual misconduct.

In a lawsuit filed with the Jefferson Circuit Court, Richard and Christeena Gallahue claim the priest had taken inappropriate photographs of their son, a student at St. Margaret Mary School, and allege the archdiocese failed to report the misconduct and were careless in their monitoring of Pohl, who had used church computers to view pornography.

The accusations imply a failure on the part of the Louisville church hierarchy to keep a pledge made promising increased efforts to expose abusive priests within the archdiocese. The promise had been made after nearly $26 million was paid out in 2003 to 243 individuals believed to have been molested by diocesan clerics. The suit additionally describes the conduct of Abp. Joseph Kurtz of Louisville — current president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops — as “outrageous and intolerable because it offended generally accepted standards of decency and morality.”

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Archdiocese shares tips for child abuse prevention

KENTUCKY
The Record

Parish bulletins around the Archdiocese of Louisville this month will include tips and reminders about protecting children from abuse. The archdiocese provided the bulletin announcements — in Spanish and English — for the month of April, which is Child Abuse Prevention Month.

In a memo sent to parishes, Dr. Brian B. Reynolds, chancellor of the archdiocese, wrote, “Ensuring that our parishes and schools are safe environments for children and youth requires the commitment of all of us.”

The bulletin announcements note that on Divine Mercy Sunday, April 3, “we celebrate the dignity of every human being as a child of God. This dignity is violated by the crime of sexual abuse, and that is why the church seeks to reach out to victims and survivors of sexual abuse with the healing mercy of God who enfolds all in his loving care.”

The announcements also note, “Every adult has a moral responsibility to report suspected child abuse. In Kentucky, state law requires that any person who knows or has reasonable cause to believe that a child is neglected or abused must immediately report the abuse. Sexual abuse of minors is a pervasive societal problem, and only concerted and sustained efforts by all adults in every segment of society can help to protect children and youth.”

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Principal of Mountain View Christian School in Sequim accused of child rape, molestation

WASHINGTON
Q13 Fox

BY Q13 FOX NEWS STAFF AND JAMIE TOMPKINS

PORT ANGELES, Wash. — Douglas Allison, 55, the principal of Mountain View Christian School in Sequim, has been arrested on charges of child rape and child molestation, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday.

Detectives arrested Allison at his home Tuesday night, the sheriff’s office said in a news release.

“Allison was arrested following an investigation into a disclosure made by a 10-year-old female student at the school that she had been sexually assaulted by Mr. Allison,” the sheriff’s office said.

The victim said Allison had sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions at the school since the beginning of the school year, the release said.

“During the ensuing investigation, detectives discovered a second victim, an 11-year-old female student at the school. The second victim disclosed to Detectives she had been sexually assaulted in similar fashion by Allison,” the release 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.

Spotlight producer and writer discusses journalism’s role in social activism

PENNSYLVANIA
The Daily Pennsylvanian

By ARIA KOVALOVICH

Oscar-winning producer and co-writer of “Spotlight” Josh Singer squinted as he walked up to the podium of Annenberg’s Zellerbach Theater. “I am more used to being in a dark room staring at a screen than public speaking, but I guess this is a dark room,” he said.

The Harvard Law graduate-turned-screenwriter-and-producer returned to his native Philadelphia on Wednesday to speak at Penn’s Levin Family Dean’s Forum in a discussion entitled, “How Hollywood is Spotlighting Social Change.”

Singer was joined by “Spotlight” actor Neal Huff as well as a faculty panel comprised of church and state scholar of law Marci Hamilton, child traumatologist Steven Berkowitz and professor of English and cinema studies Peter Decherney, whose most recent book is a short history of Hollywood.

“Spotlight” tells the story of the Boston Globe team that exposed the Roman Catholic Church’s cover-up of sexual abuse of children by priests. The movie won this year’s Academy Awards for best picture and best original screenplay.

The three scholars on the panel outlined their field’s stake in the national discussion of clergy sexual abuse of children. Each applauded “Spotlight” for being a large impetus for immediate and future positive change for the victims.

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DA says Alabama pastor’s child sex abuse indictment involves family member, not church

ALABAMA
AL.com

By Jonathan Grass | jgrass@al.com

A pastor in Jackson County was arrested on a seven-count grand jury indictment Monday night. Although the sensitive nature of the case prevents prosecutors from divulging much at this point, the district attorney’s office has released what it can.

Jeffrey Allen Elkins, 55, is charged with five counts of sexual abuse of a child less than 12 years old and two counts of enticing a child for immoral purposes. He is a pastor at the Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ in Bridgeport.

Jackson County District Attorney Charlie Rhodes said the charges involve one victim who is a family member of Elkins. He said the alleged crimes do not involve his role at the church.

Rhodes could not say when the alleged incidents occurred because of the investigation and the victim’s privacy.

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.

Evangelicals in Spain denounce “false pastor” accused of sexual abuses

SPAIN
Evangelical Focus

The Evangelical Council in the region of Asturias expresses clear condemnation and “solidarity with those who suffer any type of spiritual abuse.” Prosecutor asks 22 years of jail for the man.

Several media in Spain informed about the case of an alleged evangelical pastor who has been accused of sexually abusing two minor girls. It would have happened in 2012 and the victims informed the police after one of them fell pregnant. The trial will be held in Gijón (region of Asturias) on 21-22 April.

The public prosecutor asks for 22 years of prison for the defendant, who is a Dominican national.

EVANGELICALS CONDEMN SPIRITUAL AND SEXUAL ABUSE

The Evangelical Council of Asturias (CEDPA), the official representative of the evangelical churches in the northern Spanish region, said in a statement: “In the light of such situations, we only can denounce. Our ethical position is clear. We condemn these type of actions, no matter who practices them.”

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Former Stoneham Priest’s Alleged Victim Apart of Boston Archdiocese Settlement

MASSACHUSETTS
Patch

By JOE LIPOVICH (Patch Staff) – March 30, 2016

BOSTON, MA – The Archdiocese of Boston has settled for several hundred thousand dollars and counseling services for seven people who said they were sexually abused by priests, one of whom alleged sexual abuse from a former Stoneham priest, according to multiple reports including the Boston Globe.

A victim of the now-defrocked Rev. Richard Coughlin reached settlement with the Archdiocese, who served in both Stoneham and Lynn from 1953 to 1965. Wicked Local Stoneham reports that Coughlin was affiliated with St. Patrick’s Church in Stoneham at the time of the abuse.

The agreements came with no admission of liability.

“The monetary settlement allows the survivor to validate their claim and heal,” attorney Mitchell Garabedian told Patch. “By coming forward survivors empower themselves and other survivors to make the world a safer place for the children.”

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Brilliant depiction of journalism

UNITED STATES
The Statesman (India)

Cast: Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Live Schreiber
Director: Tom McCarthy
Producer: Blye Pagon Faust, Steve Golin, Nicole Rocklin and Michael Sugar
Spotlight

Based on the investigation of the infamous scandals caused by the cases of widespread and systematic sexual abuse committed by the Catholic archdiocese of Boston, ‘Spotlight’ is a film grounded in reality and painstakingly researched in minute details. It boasts of stellar performances and an intriguing story, throwing light on some of the greatest crimes committed by the Church over the years. It is brilliant in the depiction of analytical journalism and of the deep rot that has permeated and tainted the society created by men who claim to be the messengers of God.

The film follows The Boston Globe’s ‘Spotlight’ team and its investigation into cases of widespread and systemic child sex abuse in the Boston area by numerous Roman Catholic priests. It is based on a series of stories by the actual Spotlight Team that earned The Globe the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. In 2001, The Boston Globe hires a new editor, Marty Baron. Baron comes from Florida and is a complete outsider in the ‘small townish’ Boston. After Baron reads a Globe column about a lawyer, Mitchell Garabedian, accusing Cardinal Law (the Archbishop of Boston) of knowing that a priest was sexually abusing children and doing nothing to stop him, he urges the Spotlight team to investigate. As the team notch their investigations a gear up, we come to know that it is not a case of only one priest but a widespread problem.

We all know what the story is, we all know what happened but what Tom McCarthy does very successfully is that he manages to keep the audience hooked, completely in loop with the journalists themselves. The kind of closed room, stuffy feel which Takayanagi as the cinematographer gives is one of the main reasons for the audience to feel hooked to the story; almost as if they were there. The screenplay by McCarthy and Josh Singer is the real hero in this movie. Devoid of swashbuckling, quotable dialogues and monologues, the screenplay is what defines Spotlight’s reality. Hans Zimmer’s score although good, feels a little too loud or a tad forced in places.

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Church settles sex abuse lawsuits, including against an Orange County priest

CALIFORNIA
The Orange County Register

BY TONY SAAVEDRA / STAFF WRITER

Seven people who leveled sexual abuse allegations against clergy – including one priest who spent time in Orange County – settled lawsuits against the Boston Archdiocese this week for $778,500.

Richard T. Coughlin, a now-defrocked priest who ran the All-American Boys Chorus in Costa Mesa, is among the ex-clergy named in the lawsuits settled this week.

Coughlin came from Boston to the Diocese of Orange in 1965. He was suspended in 1993 after at least six people from Southern California accused him of sexual abuse. Lawsuits against Coughlin have resulted in more than $3 million in settlements.

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Austin Diocese Implicated in Child Abuse Suit

TEXAS
The Austin Chronicle

BY SARAH MARLOFF, FRI., APRIL 1, 2016

On March 10, Father Milton Eggerling became the seventh Austin-based priest to be accused of sexual abuse (according to the Database of Publicly Accused Priests in the United States). Attorney Tahira Khan Mer­ritt filed a civil suit for her client, John Doe 120, who claims he was sexually abused by Eggerling from the ages of 11 to 16.

Due to Eggerling’s death in 2008, and Texas’ statute of limitations – the abuse allegedly happened from 1973 to 1978 at what is now known as St. Louis King of France Catholic Church on Burnet Road – Doe cannot pursue criminal charges. Instead, the civil suit looks to hold the Austin Diocese accountable for placing not only Doe but hundreds of other children in Eggerling’s care. “The lawsuit alleges negligence and gross negligence against the diocese and its bishops because they knew, or should have known, of Eggerling’s propensity to molest boys,” Merritt states in the press release. The suit seeks unspecified damages and monetary relief of more than $1 million.

Doe was just shy of 12, a student and altar boy at St. Louis when he first met Eggerling. Doe served mass to Eggerling, who tipped the boy $5. Coming from a less than ideal home life, Doe embraced Eggerling’s attention, according to Doe’s attorney. “The boy confided in the priest, and rather than helping him, Eggerling used that to manipulate Doe,” Merritt tells the Chronicle. The priest’s attention continued. Soon he was taking Doe on trips to Barton Springs and the movies, claims the suit, all the while talking to the boy about masturbation and attempting to convince him that it was all right to change into (and out of) swim trunks in the priest’s presence.

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I ANSWER ONLY TO GOD

PENNSYLVANIA
Church Militant

The horrific story coming out of central Pennsylvania in the past couple of weeks is almost beyond words — the sexual abuse of hundreds of boys at the hands of priests and religious covered up not just by various bishops and religious superiors, but done actually in collusion with local government authorities.

It’s all spilling out now in not just one, but two grand jury reports, convened to investigate this very issue. The scope of the original investigation was somewhat narrow, but, as happens quite often, one thing led to another, each covered-up fact led to the revelation of many more, and suddenly, you have not only the crime, but the larger cover-up.

We’ll leave the details of the original stories and the growing list of subsequent ones aside for the moment, but they can be read about and viewed here on Church Militant. The focus of this Vortex is how this all came about — and the how really gets down to a who.

His name is George Foster, a 55-year-old advertising man who is a devout Catholic, completely dedicated to the Church and Her teachings — all of them. For years, he had been gathering information on not just the abusers but those covering it all up, the broad, overarching network of cover-up involving bishops, religious superiors and government officials.

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

National activist calls for resignation of Springfield bishop over handling of recent priest abuse case

MASSACHUSETTS
The Republican

By Stephanie Barry | sbarry@repub.com

HUNTINGTON — Olan Horne, a nationally recognized activist for survivors of priest abuse, has been through the resignations of a pope and a cardinal. He is now calling for the resignation of a local bishop in the wake of a recent announcement by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield.

Horne said he and a local deacon ushered the family of the victim of the late Rev. Paul Archambault through a series of meetings with diocesan officials and found the response lacking.

Horne blames retired Bishop Timothy McDonnell for sweeping Archambault’s history under the rug and accuses current Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski of stonewalling the family and resisting transparency. Horne insists Rozanski should step down. The diocese has defended its handling of the Archambault case and said Rozanski will remain.

Horne has accused the local church of a cover-up reminiscent of the Boston priest abuse scandal, albeit on a much smaller scale.

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.

March 30, 2016

Intentan ocultar casos de pederastia

(MEXICO)
El Siglo de Torreón [Torreón, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico]

March 30, 2016

By AGENCIAS

Read original article

LOS PRESBÍTEROS ACUSAN AL ARZOBISPO DE OAXACA DE ENCUBRIMIENTO

El sacerdote Manuel Arias estuvo a punto de perder la vida en octubre de 2014 en un accidente automovilístico. Mientras circulaba por una de las avenidas principales de Oaxaca intentó frenar y perdió el control de su coche. Se impactó contra un camellón y dos vehículos más.

Todo parecía un accidente hasta que los mecánicos determinaron que la causa fue que le habían cortado las mangueras de los frenos y que el accidente fue provocado. Manuel Arias no levantó ninguna denuncia, intuía que se trataba de una amenaza y pensó que si hablaba podía ser más grave.

Este es un ejemplo de las intimidaciones que han recibido sacerdotes de Oaxaca y que atribuyen al arzobispo José Luis Chávez Botello, luego de que en 2009 denunciaron el caso de un párroco pederasta.

Manuel Arias, Apolonio Merino y Ángel Noguera, tres de los 10 sacerdotes que enfrentaron los casos de abuso sexual, han sido objeto de atentados y amenazas. Incluso el arzobispado los ha acusado de “dividir a la Iglesia” y les ha impuesto el calificativo de rebeldes.

En entrevista, los sacerdotes señalaron como responsable al arzobispo de Oaxaca, a quien también acusan por encubrimiento.

“Nuestro objetivo desde un principio, por convicción personal, es que se conozca la verdad, que se aplique la justicia y que si hay responsables y encubridores, se les sancione de acuerdo con las leyes”, manifestó el sacerdote Merino.

“Díganle a Manuel que lo van a matar”

El 8 de noviembre de 2015, después de la misa en la parroquia de la Inmaculada de Juquila, Oaxaca, un hombre quería dar un donativo. Antes de recibirlo, el sacerdote Manuel Arias subió a un cuarto para quitarse la estola y el alba, “como a los 10 minutos gritaron: padre baje que lo pueden matar y ni cuenta se da”.

Arias, un hombre de estatura media, cabello cano, con estudios en Roma y Alemania y que ha trabajado en comunidades triquis y mixtecas bajó de la casa parroquial, el hombre del “donativo” salió corriendo de la iglesia y se subió a una camioneta con vidrios polarizados.

“La sacristana me dijo que el agresor le había confesado que él no quería hacerlo pero lo estaban obligando y de no cumplir el objetivo, asesinarían a su familia”, relata.

Eso sólo fue un aviso, el objetivo era entregar un mensaje: “dígale al tal Manuel que lo van a matar”.

Sentados en las bancas de la parroquia de Juquila, el sacerdote Manuel Arias confiesa: Cuando denuncié los casos de pederastia que cometió el padre Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, me señalaron como el instigador principal de un grupo opositor con celo de poder.

Sostiene que las intimidaciones vienen del arzobispado y son consecuencia de las denuncias que hizo por abuso sexual hace siete años. En este tiempo ha sido el sacerdote que más amenazas ha tenido: pintas y destrozos al interior de la iglesia y llamadas con “mentadas de madre”, entre otras agresiones.

El último hecho se dio el pasado 3 de marzo, cuando un grupo de policías armados y autoridades eclesiásticas violó los candados de la iglesia; entraron asegurando que el padre Manuel estaba enfermo y traían a su auxiliar.

En ese momento en el inmueble estaban una decena de personas e impidieron que se llevaran al padre. Desde entonces todos los días los feligreses montan una guardia nocturna para proteger al sacerdote y a su iglesia.

 ‘NOS SUSPENDIERON POR DENUNCIAR’ 

Ángel Noguera y Apolonio Merino fueron los primeros sacerdotes en conocer más de 40 casos de abuso sexual por parte del padre Gerardo. Sólo esos abusos se habían dado en una comunidad, antes de que al presunto pederasta lo re ubicaran en siete iglesias distintas de la Sierra Norte de Oaxaca.

“El padre llevaba a lugares solitarios a los adolescentes, los emborrachaba, y ya sucedían los actos”, declara Apolonio.

“Busqué al arzobispo y mi sorpresa fue que me regañó, porque no era mi misión de atender esos casos de pederastia, por eso me suspenden, por haber denunciado y escuchado esos abusos”, asegura.

Tras su suspensión, Apolonio ha recibido llamadas, “me dicen: bájale de huevos o te va a cargar. Una voz masculina me habla y asegura que tienen ubicados a mis familiares y cortan la llamada”.

– Sí, sí siento miedo porque quieren acabar conmigo.

Ángel Noguera también fue suspendido en julio de 2009, las amenazas en su contra son pocas pero, afirma, todas vienen del arzobispo de Oaxaca.

Noguera sabe que pudo haber callado, pero no se arrepiente de denunciar “el dolor de los niños”, alza la voz y cuenta que a la fecha no ha encontrado trabajo. “El derecho canónico dice que no debe haber clérigos vagos y yo soy uno de ellos por haber hablado, por la injusticia, por haber defendido a los niños”, precisa.

Los tres sacerdotes piden al arzobispo José Luis Chávez Botello que se arrepienta del encubrimiento.

“Que pida perdón, que reconozca que se equivocó, que busque resarcir los daños a los niños y familiares. Si ya suspendió a los sacerdotes, yo le pediría que me dejara en paz”, exige Manuel.

En 2013, familiares de una de las víctimas interpusieron una demanda con lo que lograron la detención del presunto párroco pederasta, Gerardo Silvestre Hernández; aun cuando fue encarcelado en la prisión de Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, no ha recibido sentencia.

A pesar de que existe una sola denuncia, los sacerdotes estiman que hay cerca de 100 víctimas en la Sierra Norte de Oaxaca, zona de indígenas zapotecas. Los familiares nunca denunciaron por miedo. El propio Silvestre Hernández, antes de ser apresado, les decía que serían “castigados por Dios” y sobre ellos caería “una maldición”.

Las amenazas orillaron a los menores y a sus familiares a callar. El miedo a ser castigados por Dios y criticados por los habitantes de sus comunidades los alejó de las autoridades de justicia.

En 2009 el padre Manuel Arias logró videograbar el testimonio de tres víctimas que relatan cómo el padre Gerardo Silvestre Hernández los emborrachaba y les tocaba el pene.

Se consiguió una copia de estas declaraciones, pero a petición de las víctimas reservaremos su identidad y el lugar exacto en donde se cometieron los abusos. Para identificar a los jóvenes de la Sierra Norte de Oaxaca los llamaremos por otro nombre.

 ‘NOS ACARICIABA’

Víctor y Pedro son dos jóvenes zapotecas que estuvieron en distintas reuniones con el padre Gerardo. Igual que Jorge, se muestran nerviosos ante la cámara de video del padre Manuel que está registrando sus testimonios.

Todos los niños que ayudaban al sacerdote mientras él oficiaba la misa eran invitados a un cuarto de la iglesia. Les compraba cervezas y les ponía películas pornográficas. De acuerdo con los testimonios, uno por uno de los niños eran abusados sexualmente por el cura.

“En las películas aparecían dos hombres y el cura nos bailaba, después nos acariciaba, a mis compañeros les baja el cierre y les chupaba el pene”, recuerdan los jóvenes que ahora son mayores de edad.

Los recuerdos bombardean la mente de los jóvenes, entre ellos se cruzan las historias. Mientras Víctor cuenta que el padre aseguraba tener siete novios, Pedro revela que le dio un “puñetazo” en la espalda cuando quiso “chupar” su pene, “¡No que usted es padre y está haciendo estas chin…!”, le gritó.

Ellos jamás denunciaron, ¿qué iban a decir sus padres?, ¿cómo los verían sus amigos?, ¿quién creería en lo que vivieron?, se preguntaban a cada momento.

 LA SENTENCIA QUE NUNCA LLEGA 

Gerardo Silvestre Hernández fue detenido en 2013 por corrupción de menores, pero no ha recibido sentencia. De acuerdo con el Foro Oaxaqueño de la Niñez (Foni), una organización conformada por 18 asociaciones civiles, las autoridades pretenden que el caso se olvide.

“Ha sido difícil con este caso de abuso sexual de pederastia clerical debido a que se ha obstaculizado, se le ha dado largas. La pregunta sería: ¿cuál es la finalidad de alargar un proceso? Que quede en el olvido, que la gente no le dé seguimiento y pueda salir con una sentencia mínima o que ni siquiera se le sentencie”, se cuestiona Felipe Sánchez, vocero del Foni.

Lamenta que ni las autoridades de justicia ni quienes se encargan de defender los derechos humanos en el país, han brindado apoyo a las víctimas ni se han comprometido para garantizar la no repetición de este tipo de abusos.

“Para nosotros es totalmente grave por las consecuencias que este tipo de abusos sexuales dejan en la vida de un ser humano. Los daños son fuertísimos, físicos y psicológicos. Cuando queda impune un delito la consecuencia es que se vuelva a repetir, no se ve que haya justicia y eso es grave”, explica.

Los sacerdotes acosados interpusieron una denuncia contra quien resulte responsable de las amenazas e intimidaciones.

Desde el pasado 15 de marzo se solicitó una entrevista con el arzobispo de Oaxaca, José Luis Chávez Botello; hasta la fecha no ha se recibido una respuesta.

Decide hablar 

Con una voz entrecortada, Jorge mira a la cámara, sus ojos van de un lado a otro tratando de recordar los hechos. Suspira, entrelaza sus manos, guarda silencio hasta que se decide a hablar.

“Fue en un día festivo, hubo una misa que terminó muy tarde, como a las doce y media de la noche. El padre Gerardo me ofreció dormir en la iglesia, yo acepté y nos quedamos en un cuarto con dos camas, él se acostó en una y yo en otra. Después de un rato el padre ya tenía unas intenciones sobre mí y se me encimó. Yo creo que quería que lo penetrara. Yo no sabía qué hacer pero afortunadamente no me pasó nada porque yo estaba con mi calzoncito”.

Vuelve a guardar silencio, aprieta sus labios, baja su mirada y sus piernas comienzan a temblar; después de unos segundos asegura que el sacerdote no le hizo nada y que sólo pasó una vez.

“No sé si hay más víctimas pero muchos compañeros acólitos se acercaban al padre, yo creo que en alguna ocasión les habrá pasado lo mismo que a mí o chance hasta peor”, cuenta.

Después de estos hechos Jorge acudió a la iglesia un par de ocasiones más. “Yo no hablaba por temor a que me criticara”, dice con una voz muy tenue.

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Another clergy sex abuse victim says Archdiocese is denying therapy

MASSACHUSETTS
WCVB

[with video]

BOSTON —Yet another survivor of clergy sex abuse has come forward saying the Archdiocese of Boston is breaking its promise to pay for the counseling needed to try to repair the damage from being molested.

“I was told for the rest of my life, if I needed help, if I needed therapy, they would provide it,” the victim told 5 Investigates’ Mike Beaudet.

But it was an empty promise from the Archdiocese of Boston, according to the survivor, who settled his abuse claim with the church in 2006. He spoke on the condition he not be identified.

“To this day I still haven’t gotten any help from them, and it’s beyond repair. I’ll never ask them for anything,” he said.

He suffered years of abuse at the hands of Father William Cummings at St. Catherine of Genoa Church in Somerville starting when he was 11 years old.

He says he needs intensive inpatient treatment but it was denied by the Archdiocese. His longtime therapist tells 5 Investigates “…(my patient) was so devastated by this outcome that within a number of weeks he had attempted suicide.”

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Take part in a new survey regarding access to support services

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

31 March 2016

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has commissioned the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS) to investigate how survivors of child sexual abuse in institutions and their families access support services.

AIFS invites all victim/survivors of institutional or non-familial child sexual abuse to take part in an online survey about their views and experiences of accessing support services.

Parents and carers of victim/survivors are also invited to participate.

For more information and for the link to the survey, please see www.aifs.gov.au/survey-victims-survivors-and-parents-carers.

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Former Ottawa priest convicted of molesting altar boys in 1969-74

CANADA
Ottawa Sun

BY TOM SPEARS
FIRST POSTED: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 2016

They were altar boys mostly aged nine to 11, given a gold star each time they attended mass, and sometimes invited to see Rev. Jacques Faucher in private.

Let’s practise a prayer, he’d say to one. Let’s watch a hockey game, he said to another. To a third: Let’s look at my stamp collection.

Then he would sit them on his knee and start touching them.

Faucher, 79, was convicted Wednesday of six counts of indecent assault and gross indecency, all involving young boys from the former Notre-Dame-des-Anges parish near Tunney’s Pasture. The charges date from 1969 to 1974, when Faucher was a priest there.

He was convicted of molesting three of five boys who testified against him. Judge Pierre Roger acquitted him on charges involving two other boys, not discounting their stories but saying there was a reasonable doubt.

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Lawsuit claims Navajo children were abused by Mormons

NEW MEXICO
The Freethinker

Spencer W Kimball, pictured above, was a Mormon “prophet” who masterminded a programme that placed thousands of young Native Americans in the homes of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints between 1947 and 2000.

The Indian Student Placement Programme that drew in some 40,000 children stemmed from the Mormon belief that America’s indigenous people had fled from Israel in the year 600 BCE and had split up into two groups: the Nephites, a righteous and civilised people; and the Lamanites, an “idle, savage and bloodthirsty” people who, after hardening their hearts, were cursed by God with a “skin of blackness” and thus became “loathsome.”

Kimball, raised in southeastern Arizona, was called as an apostle – or one of the top leaders – of the Mormon Church in 1943. Then-president George Albert Smith gave Kimball a special assignment to:

Watch after the Indians in all the world.

Kimball served as the 12th President of the Church from 1973 until his death in 1985.

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Former Stoneham priest named in settlement

MASSACHUSETTS
Wicked Local Stoneham

By Rich Tenorio
rtenorio@wickedlocal.com

Posted Mar. 30, 2016

STONEHAM

A man who alleged he was sexually abused by a former Stoneham priest was one of seven people who was part of a settlement with the Archdiocese of Boston.

“The world is a safer place for children,” said attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who announced the settlement between the archdiocese and individuals who said they were sexually abused by priests.

In the 10 total settlements and a combined amount of $778,500, reported on Monday, the archdiocese agreed to provide money and counseling for the seven individuals, one of whom said that now-defrocked Rev. Richard T. Coughlin abused him over a five-year period, from 1957 to 1962.

The individual is a male who is approximately 68 years old.

At the time of the alleged abuse, Father Coughlin was affiliated with St. Patrick’s Church in Stoneham and belonged to the Archdiocese of Boston.

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Defense: Convicted priest has paid $70K for fines, victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) – A suspended Pennsylvania priest convicted of sexually assaulting poor street children during missionary trips to Honduras has paid $70,000 in fines and restitution, his attorneys said in a court filing.

The filing was in response to a motion by federal prosecutors on Friday seeking to freeze the assets of the Rev. Joseph Maurizio.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Haines said the 71-year-old priest had transferred 42 acres of land and his home for $1 to his niece in November, after he was convicted, and has continued trying to transfer money from his financial accounts to her since his March 2 sentencing. Haines cited a recorded phone call Maurizio made from jail to his niece on March 8 that involved draining his bank accounts, according to her motion.

But defense attorney Thomas Farrell told The Associated Press last week that Maurizio’s niece was his power of attorney and was making the asset transfers only so she could pay a $50,000 fine and $20,000 restitution on the priest’s behalf.

U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson gave Maurizio’s attorneys until April 1 to respond to Haines’ allegations and they did that Tuesday, complete with a copy of two checks dated Saturday, for the fine and restitution.

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Defense: Convicted priest has paid $70K for fines, victims

PENNSYLVANIA
WTAE

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. —A suspended Pennsylvania priest convicted of sexually assaulting poor street children during missionary trips to Honduras has paid $70,000 in fines and restitution, his attorneys said in a court filing.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Haines said the 71-year-old priest had transferred 42 acres of land and his home for $1 to his niece in November, after he was convicted, and has continued trying to transfer money from his financial accounts to her since his March 2 sentencing. Haines cited a recorded phone call Maurizio made from jail to his niece on March 8 that involved draining his bank accounts, according to her motion.

But defense attorney Thomas Farrell told The Associated Press last week that Maurizio’s niece was his power of attorney and was making the asset transfers only so she could pay a $50,000 fine and $20,000 restitution on the priest’s behalf.

U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson gave Maurizio’s attorneys until April 1 to respond to Haines’ allegations and they did that Tuesday, complete with a copy of two checks dated Saturday, for the fine and restitution.

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Diocese seeks to defrock priest after sex-abuse allegations

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

By JoAnne Viviano
The Columbus Dispatch • Wednesday March 30, 2016

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus is seeking to defrock a priest in the wake of an allegation that he sexually abused a minor in the 1970s when he served at a Catholic high school and two churches.

The Rev. Ronald Atwood was placed on administrative leave by Bishop Frederick Campbell in July 2013, a day after the diocese received a complaint that he had abused someone while assigned to Bishop Ready High School on the West Side, St. Stephen the Martyr Church on the Southwest Side and St. Peter Church on the Northwest Side from 1976 to 1979.

About a week later, a diocesan board determined that the allegation appeared to be credible, the diocese said in a statement released on Tuesday. Following efforts to determine whether anyone else wanted to come forward, the diocese determined that Atwood should be defrocked.

Documentation seeking the defrocking has been sent to the Vatican and Atwood, who has been a priest in the diocese since 1969 and remains on leave.

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Sex abuse allegations ‘credible’ against deceased Northampton priest Paul Archambault

MASSACHUSETTS
Daily Hampshire Gazette

By MICHAEL MAJCHROWICZ
@mjmajchrowicz
Tuesday, March 29, 2016

NORTHAMPTON — Allegations that a deceased Northampton priest had abused a teenage boy were credible, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield said Tuesday in announcing an end to a lawsuit brought in 2013.

The diocese announced that it had reached an undisclosed settlement with a man who said the Rev. Paul J. Archambault sexually abused him beginning when he was 13 and that the priest’s name had been added to an official list— which is maintained by the diocese — of clergy who face credible abuse allegations.

The man who accused Archambault was 20 years old when he asserted in the lawsuit that the priest had sexually assaulted him more than four dozen times in locations such as St. Patrick’s Church in South Hadley, at a spiritual retreat they attended together in Vermont, and at Archambault’s Northampton home, according to court documents. The man said the alleged assaults continued for four years.

The Gazette generally does not release the names of victims of sexual assault.

According to the diocese, Archambault was first assigned to St. Theresa Church in South Hadley in 2005. After a year and a half, he relocated to Baystate Medical Center in 2007 where he was a chaplain. He made his final relocation to St. Mary’s Church in Hampden in 2008.

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The French Catholic church and its pedophilia scandal

FRANCE
Affairs Today

Again the Catholic Church gets tangled up in various scandals of pedophilia. However this new controversy seems to have reached the top of the hierarchy,the person in question: Cardinal Barbarin, Archbishop of Lyon.

A controversy which seems to tell us more about a social division in France rather than a criminal case. ‘Most of the cases, thanks God!, are time barred.’ said the Cardinal Barbarin interviewed about the recent scandals of pedophilia. Even though the Cardinal will apologise later on for those terrible words, his statements represent a certain mindset within the French Catholic Church and its supporters. The facts of pedophilia against young scouts go back to the late 1980s. Father Bernard Preynat admitted the charges against him in January 2015, however, he was removed from office in August 2015. Another case of pedophile abuse committed by a priest was revealed in an interview published by the conservative newspaper Le Figaro, with events dating back to the 1990s. The controversy has focused on the person of Cardinal Barbarin. Some victims of the pedophile priests have decided to lodge charges against him, mainly for not revealing the facts which he certainly knew since 2007. The Preynat father told the police that the facts he is accused of were known by the high clergy in 1991. In addition, a communication error of the Cardinal himself led him to admit that he knew the facts since 2007 while his diocese had officially stated that he had been made aware of the cases in 2014.

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#PÉDOPHILIE Philippe Barbarin, archevêque de Lyon, est visé par une cinquième plainte

FRANCE
L’Obs

[A fifth complaint was formally filed Tuesday against Philippe Barbarin, archbishop of Lyon, according to “Le Parisien”.]

Une cinquième plainte a été formellement déposée mardi à l’encontre de Philippe Barbarin, archevêque de Lyon, selon “Le Parisien”.

Pierre, cadre dans un ministère, reproche à Barbarin d’avoir maintenu dans ses fonctions le prêtre Jérôme Billioud qui avait abusé de lui alors qu’il était adolescent, dans les années 1990.

Quatre autres plaintes pour non dénonciation d’actes pédophiles commis par le père Bernard Preynat ont déjà été déposées.

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Canadian Journalism Foundation honours Boston Globe Spotlight Team with Special Citation

CANADA
CNW

TORONTO, March 30, 2016 /CNW/ – Boston Globe Spotlight Team reporters Sacha Pfeiffer, Michael Rezendes and Walter Robinson will be honoured at the CJF Awards in Toronto on June 16 with a Canadian Journalism Foundation Special Citation for exemplary journalism.

The reporting team won a Pulitzer Prize in 2003 for its investigative series exposing widespread child abuse by numerous priests and the systemic cover-up by the Catholic Church in Boston. The Spotlight Team’s courageous journalism was portrayed in the movie Spotlight, which won best picture and best original screenplay at this year’s Academy Awards.

“At the CJF, we believe that exceptional journalism needs to be honoured,” says John Cruickshank, chair of the CJF and outgoing publisher of the Toronto Star. “The work of the Boston Globe reporters highlights the painstaking time and effort that goes into investigative journalism and the profound impact it can have on people’s lives. Their work is an inspiration and serves as a reminder of why rigorous journalism is necessary.”

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Former Gatineau priest Jacques Faucher found guilty of sexually assaulting 3 boys

CANADA
CBC News

Former Roman Catholic priest Jacques Faucher, of Gatineau, Que., has been found guilty of sexually molesting three choir boys in the 1970s.

Faucher was retired in 2013 when Ottawa police laid 14 charges of indecent assault and gross indecency against him. The offences were alleged to have involved five victims and occurred between 1969 and 1974.

On Wednesday, in an Ottawa courtroom, Justice Pierre Roger found Faucher guilty on six of the 14 charges involving three of the five victims.

One of the three victims, who cannot be named due to a publication ban, was in court for the verdict.

‘I wasn’t alone for these 40 years’

“It’s mixed feelings today. I feel good because Faucher was found guilty of the accusations [involving] me, but also a little empty because two of the five of us who went forward, he was found not guilty for them,” the man said.

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French diocese offices searched in paedophile priest case: source

FRANCE
Yahoo! News

Lyon (AFP) – French investigators searched the offices of the diocese of Lyon on Wednesday over the alleged cover-up of a paedophile priest, a source close to the probe said.

The diocese said in a statement that the Archbishop of Lyon, Philippe Barbarin, who is under fire over his handling of the affair, “has said repeatedly that he is prepared to cooperate openly with the investigation”.

The search of the offices is linked to the prosecution of Bernard Preynat, a priest who has admitted sexually abusing scouts that he was supervising in the Lyon area of central France more than 25 years ago.

Preynat’s victims have filed a formal complaint against Barbarin and other leading clergy, accusing them of failing to inform the police of the priest’s acts when he became aware of them in 2008.

“As part of the preliminary investigation opened by the Lyon prosecutor, the diocese of Lyon has today handed over to investigators material which could shed light on these tragic events,” the diocese said in a statement.

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Retired Ottawa priest found guilty of sex crimes against children

CANADA
CFRA

A retired Ottawa priest has been convicted of sex crimes against children.

Back in 2013, Jacques Faucher was charged with six counts each of gross indecency and indecent assault in relation to several victims, including a seven-year-old boy, who were attacked between 1969 and 1974, while Faucher was working as a Catholic priest.

Ottawa Archbishop Terrence Prendergast says he suspended Faucher and prohibited him from representing himself as a Catholic priest when he was charged by police and given the outcome of the trial, that suspension and prohibition will be in force indefinitely.

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N.J. diocese settles decades-old church sex abuse claims

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Greg Adomaitis | For NJ.com

CAMDEN — A Boston-based lawyer announced Monday that settlements have been reached with the the Diocese of Camden regarding two sexual assault claims dating back decades.

Allegations against Rev. Joseph Brennan, who was assigned to the St. Maurice Church in Brooklawn, and Rev. Phillip Matthews, who served at the Mount Carmel Church in Berlin, were among the 16 men named Monday in lawyer Mitchell Garabedian’s updated list of the accused.

Garabedian was portrayed by actor Stanley Tucci in the 2015 film “Spotlight” that detailed the sex abuse scandal within the Boston Archdiocese.

According to bishop-accountabilty.org, Brennan allegedly abused a child at a Brooklawn parish between 1957 and 1959. Matthews was accused of abusing a child in 1966. Neither men — both of whom have since died — had been previously identified as being accused of sexual misconduct prior to Monday’s announcement.

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IL–Another Chicago predator cleric case settles

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, president and founder of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (312-399-4747)

Once again, Chicago area Catholic officials have paid a settlement to a victim of a child molesting cleric but told no one about it.

The painful, slow “drip, drip, drip” of clergy sex abuse and cover up cases continues, in Chicago and across the US. But we learn about the most recent case not from Catholic officials – who persist in their selfish and seemingly endless secrecy – but from a brave victim and his attorney.

Officials at the Darien-based Carmelites (630-971-0724, 630-971-0050, provincialoffice@carmelnet.org) have resolved a child sex abuse case involving Brother Damien “Patrick” Chong, who was associate pastor of St. Gelasius Church on Chicago’s south side from 1991 to 1997.

[Boston Globe]

In 2013, Br. Chong was deemed “credibly accused” of child sex crimes by Catholic officials in California

[BishopAccountability.org]

But neither the Carmelites, nor Chicago archdiocesan officials, did outreach to find others who might have been able to criminally charge Br. Chong.

[SNAP]

Instead, the Chicago Carmelites quietly moved him to Massachusetts and let him stay on the job until well into 2014 at a mall chapel.

[BishopAccountability.org]

These facts confirm the distressing reality that we in SNAP keep exposing and that few in society realize: little has changed in the Catholic hierarchy when it comes to clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

What should happen now? Catholics and citizens should ask the Carmelites and Chicago Archbishop Blasé Cupich:

–“How many other cases have you secretly settled or know about involving Chicago clerics?”

–“Are credibly accused child molesting clerics from elsewhere being allowed to work now in the Chicago archdiocese?”

–“Why, despite decades of pledges of ‘openness,’ did you choose to say nothing about this new settlement? Why

is the settlement being announced by the victim and his attorney and not by the Carmelities or archdiocesan staff?”

Now, Carmelites and Cupich should aggressively seek out others he has hurt. Specifically, Cupich should also go to every place where Br. Chong worked, and beg anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered his crimes to call police. Br. Chong is deceased and can’t be prosecuted. But we believe it’s possible that other church officials might still be criminally charged for ignoring or concealing his child sex crimes. This won’t happen as long as the Carmelites and Archbishop Cupich and his colleagues continue to say and do as little as possible.

The first US predator priest attracted national headlines a full 30 years ago. All US bishops promised to be “transparent” about clergy sex crimes a full 14 years ago. It’s appalling that even now, Catholic officials are breaking their pledges and being secretive even after an abuse report is deemed credible and a settlement has been paid. And it’s appalling that deeply wounded child sex abuse victims must publicly prod Catholic officials to do what the Gospel parable of the lost sheep mandates that they do – leave the rest of the flock, go out into the dark and the cold, seeking the one wounded individual who was assaulted as a child by a priest and is still suffering as an adult.

We hope this settlement will provide some comfort to Br. Chong’s victim. We also hope it will encourage others who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes to come forward, expose predators, protect kids, deter cover ups and start healing.

Remember this settlements – and who disclosed it, the victim and his attorney – the next time someone claims that Catholic officials are “open” and “transparent” about clergy sex crimes and cover ups these days. It’s just not true.

Catholics and citizens must continue to rely on courageous victims, determined journalists and our secular justice system to warn parents, police, prosecutors, parishioners and the public about known, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics.

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

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Enquête préliminaire : le diocèse a remis des documents à la justice

FRANCE
lyon.catholique.fr

[Cardinal Philippe Barbarin said the Lyon diocese has turned over records to justice.]

Dans le cadre de l’enquête préliminaire ouverte par le parquet de Lyon, le diocèse de Lyon a été amené à remettre aujourd’hui aux enquêteurs venus effectuer une perquisition les éléments dont la Justice souhaitait disposer pour faire la lumière sur ces événements douloureux.

Le cardinal Philippe Barbarin a exprimé à de nombreuses reprises sa volonté de coopérer en toute transparence avec la justice : il se tient à sa disposition avec confiance. Il renouvelle le vœu que la Justice puisse agir dans la sérénité indispensable à la manifestation de la vérité et à l’apaisement de la souffrance des victimes.

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Perquisitions à l’évêché de Lyon dans une enquête pour pédophilie

FRANCE
RTS

Une perquisition a eu lieu mercredi dans les locaux de l’évêché de Lyon dans le cadre d’une enquête contre des responsables du diocèse pour non-dénonciation d’agressions sexuelles.

“Dans le cadre de l’enquête préliminaire ouverte par le parquet de Lyon, le diocèse de Lyon a été amené à remettre aujourd’hui aux enquêteurs venus effectuer une perquisition les éléments dont la justice souhaitait disposer pour faire la lumière sur ces événements douloureux”, a confirmé le diocèse dans un communiqué.

Plaintes de victimes

Cette enquête a été ouverte parallèlement à l’inculpation fin janvier d’un prêtre pour des agressions sexuelles commises il y a plus de 25 ans sur des scouts qu’il encadrait dans la banlieue de Lyon. Des victimes ont porté plainte contre des responsables religieux, dont le cardinal Philippe Barbarin.

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Prêtre pédophile : les enquêteurs ont perquisitionné à l’évêché de Lyon

FRANCE
Le Parisien

30 Mars 2016

Une perquisition a eu lieu ce mercredi matin dans les locaux de l’évêché à Lyon (Rhône) dans le cadre d’une enquête ouverte pour non-dénonciation d’agressions sexuelles à l’encontre de responsables du diocèse, dont le cardinal Barbarin.

Cette enquête a été ouverte parallèlement à la mise en examen, fin janvier, du père Bernard Preynat, pour des agressions sexuelles commises il y a plus de 25 ans sur des scouts qu’il encadrait dans la banlieue de Lyon. Des victimes ont porté plainte contre des responsables religieux, dont l’archevêque de Lyon, qu’ils accusent de ne pas avoir informé la justice des agissements passés de ce prêtre lorsqu’il en a pris connaissance en 2007-2008, selon ses propres dires.

«Dans le cadre de l’enquête préliminaire ouverte par le parquet de Lyon, le diocèse de Lyon a été amené à remettre aujourd’hui aux enquêteurs, venus effectuer une perquisition, les éléments dont la justice souhaitait disposer pour faire la lumière sur ces événements douloureux», a confirmé le diocèse dans un communiqué. «Le cardinal Philippe Barbarin a exprimé à de nombreuses reprises sa volonté de coopérer en toute transparence avec la justice : il se tient à sa disposition avec confiance», a ajouté le diocèse.

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Police Search Lyon Diocese in Sex Abuse Cover-up Probe

FRANCE
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS — Mar 30, 2016

French investigators have searched Catholic church offices in Lyon amid allegations that a renowned cardinal and others had covered up a priest’s sexual abuse of boy scouts.

The office of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin says in a statement Wednesday that the headquarters of the Lyon diocese were searched as part of a preliminary investigation into the case, and that church officials have handed over documents “to shed light on these painful events.”

Barbarin’s spokesman Pierre Durieux says the search is over but would not elaborate.

Barbarin is among six church officials targeted in a case prompted by allegations that a priest had molested boy scouts in the 1980s. Barbarin, who wasn’t a cardinal at the time, says he never concealed abuse by priests.

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BBC, CATHOLIC CHURCH, AND SEXUAL ABUSE

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue has written an in-depth analysis of sexual abuse at the BBC, and the BBC’s coverage of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. He explains the similarities and dissimilarities, focusing on why the scandals occurred and how the top brass in each institution reacted. He concludes that while the BBC got off easy in a recent report on its problems, its coverage of the Church’s problems was patently unfair. To read his article, click here.

Donohue holds a Ph.D. in sociology from New York University and is the author of several books on civil liberties, social issues, and Catholicism.

Excerpt:

Overview
The Dame Janet Smith Review Report on BBC serial rapist Jimmy Savile has many strengths and weaknesses. Her greatest strength is her ability to understand the sociological underpinnings of Savile’s predatory behavior and the reasons why his conduct was not taken seriously at work. What makes this particularly commendable is that her training is in law, not social science: she is a former judge.

Smith’s greatest weakness is her readiness to exculpate the BBC hierarchy: she wants us to believe that no one in a senior management position ever knew anything about Savile’s sexual offenses. What makes this so remarkable is Savile’s long history of abuse: he worked at the organization for more than 25 years—molesting some of his victims on the premises of the BBC — and he bragged about his exploits in public.

To come to this conclusion, Smith sets the evidentiary bar quite high. A less legalistic examination would not have been so forgiving.

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Vatican official in Seattle discusses WA sex abuse

WASHINGTON
KING

Michael Konopasek, KING March 30, 2016

SEATTLE — – A Vatican official visiting Seattle is speaking out about the sex abuse crisis in the Roman Catholic Church and the crucial role Pope Francis played in restoring diplomatic relations between the United States and Cuba.

Papal spokesperson Rev. Thomas Rosica talked about the crisis in the Seattle area. It’s the first-of-its-kind response since the Archdiocese of Seattle spent $9 million in a settlement with abuse victims earlier this year.

Rosica is the English language spokesperson at the Holy See Press Office. He splits his time between Toronto and Vatican City, working to spread the message of Pope Francis around the world.

“He’s a wonderful Pope, and he’s doing things that haven’t been done for a long time,” said Rosica. “Francis came along and said we must acknowledge what has gone wrong. We must put everything in place that [sexual assault] doesn’t happen again. There’s now a Pontifical commission that’s established, headed by American Cardinal Sean O’Malley, which deals with [the sex abuse crisis] on a world level. This is not just an American problem as some would like to think. This is a worldwide problem.”

The Archdiocese of Seattle earlier this year accused 77 members of its clergy of sexually assaulting children.

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Operation Midland: Harvey Proctor criticises child abuse inquiry for ruining life

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A former MP, cleared of being part of an alleged VIP Westminster paedophile ring, said the Metropolitan Police’s inquiry “irreparably ruined my life”.

Harvey Proctor, 69, had his home raided and was questioned as part of Operation Midland, which closed last week with no charges brought.

He said the Met had enabled him to be “wrongly depicted as a paedophile, child abuser and child murderer”.

The Met has said it was “absolutely right” to investigate the claims.

The Home Office said decisions on investigating allegations were a matter for police forces. …

Peter Saunders, founder of the charity National Association for People Abused in Childhood (NAPAC), said Mr Proctor’s anger was understandable, but it was “not helpful to attack the police”.

“I don’t think what’s happened with Harvey Proctor has been entirely helpful to the whole process, but I hope it doesn’t in any way deter victims and survivors – or complainants as Mr Proctor would call them – from coming forward where there are serious allegations,” he said.

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Top Funders Target ‘Uneven’ Anti-Abuse Policies

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

[Jewish Funders Network program]

03/29/16

Steve Lipman
Staff Writer

A Los Angeles-based Jewish think tank will unveil an innovative approach next week to help reduce the problem of sexual abuse in the Jewish community, The Jewish Week has learned.

Jumpstart, a “philanthropic research & design lab” launched eight years ago, will announce on Sunday a Funders Pledge that will commit at least a dozen influential philanthropists to support only those Jewish schools and camps that take specific steps “to prevent, report, and investigate sexual abuse of minors.”

The announcement, to be made at the Jewish Funders Network annual conference in La Jolla, Calif., follows a study conducted over the past year about policies and procedures of Jewish day schools and camps to prevent sexual abuse.

According to the survey’s preliminary findings, directors of day schools and overnight camps “report an uneven patchwork of policies and procedures to prevent and respond to incidents of child sexual abuse.”

The Jumpstart study was conducted by sociologist Steven M. Cohen and abuse expert Shira Berkovits in consultation with the Foundation for Jewish Camp (FJC) and the RAVSAK network of community Jewish day schools. It did not seek to measure the extent of sexual abuse in those Jewish institutions, but rather asked about their awareness of the problem and acts they have taken to combat it.

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Sex abuse claim filed by Navajo siblings

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., March 25, 2016

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

GALLUP – Attorneys representing two adult siblings from the Navajo Nation filed a childhood sexual abuse lawsuit against the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Navajo Nation’s Window Rock District Court Tuesday.

The brother and sister, referred to in the complaint as RJ and MM, allege they were sexually abused in several Mormon foster homes in Utah while participating in the church-sponsored Lamanite Placement Program, also known as the Indian Placement Program, between 1976 and 1983. Their attorneys are Bill Keeler, of Gallup, along with co-counsel Leander “Lee” James and Craig Vernon, of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and Patrick Noaker, of Minneapolis.

“We want justice, and we want other kids not to be abused,” MM said during a news conference at Keeler’s law office Thursday.

MM and her brother were accompanied by Keeler and Vernon. In addition to seeking monetary damages, the lawsuit is seeking a change in LDS Church policy regarding the reporting of abuse allegations and the implementation of measures to bring healing to Navajo people harmed by the placement program.

Vernon said the lawsuit was filed in the Navajo courts because RJ and MM were recruited for the placement program while they were children on the Navajo Nation, and RJ alleges he repeatedly disclosed the abuse to LDS Church representatives on the reservation.

‘Curse doctrine’

Keeler and Noaker previously filed three clergy sex abuse lawsuits in tribal court against the Diocese of Gallup and two Franciscan provinces on behalf of three Navajo men who alleged they had been sexually abused as minors by a Franciscan priest.

Although all three plaintiffs eventually settled their cases, the first plaintiff saw a legal victory when the Navajo Nation Supreme Court reversed a lower court’s dismissal and remanded the case back to district court. In its decision, the Navajo Nation Supreme Court stated, “Our courts have a duty, in parens patriae, to ensure allegations of harm to our children are fully heard and not dismissed on mere technicalities.”

Keeler said that decision “kind of set the parameters” for this new case against the LDS Church.

Vernon, a former Mormon, said the Lamanite Placement Program, which operated from 1947 to the mid-1990s, was rooted in church doctrine in the Book of Mormon. According to Mormon belief, he said, Native Americans are the descendants of Lamanites, people who fled Israel 600 years before Christ and hardened their hearts to God, causing them to be cursed with dark skin.

“That is really at the core of this Lamanite Placement Program,” Vernon said. In the church, he explained, native children were taught they had dark skin because of this “curse doctrine,” and they could “literally break the curse” by becoming Mormon and assimilating into a Mormon Gospel centered life.

Difficult circumstances

The lawsuit details RJ and MM’s allegations of abuse. RJ, who entered the program at age 10, alleges he was sexually abused in his first Mormon foster family. After reporting the abuse to a couple who had served as missionaries on the Navajo Nation, RJ was removed from that home. He alleges, however, he was repeatedly abused in subsequent foster homes. RJ claims he disclosed the sexual abuse to his LDS placement program caseworker on the Navajo Nation each summer.

In MM’s case, she alleges she was 11 years old when she was raped by an adult man, a friend of her foster family, during her first placement. From sixth grade to 10th grade, MM did not experience any further sexual abuse. However, during her junior and senior years she was placed with her brother in a home where she claims their foster father sexually molested her.

In Thursday’s news conference, RJ said he didn’t think he was believed as a child when he disclosed the abuse. He said he also had to deal with Navajo reluctance to discuss sexual abuse.

“In the Navajo culture, we consider it taboo,” he said. “You’re not supposed to talk about it. You’re supposed to leave it hush-hush.”

RJ and MM agreed the circumstances of their large family posed further difficulties. Their father was an alcoholic, RJ said, and their “desperately poor” mother put at least five of her 12 children in the placement program with the hope that they would get a good education and have a good life. According to RJ and MM, four of the children were abused in the program.

Change in policies

“I believe this is really the tip of the iceberg in this program,” Vernon said of RJ and MM’s allegations of being “circulated from one bad family to another bad family.”

With the lawsuit, the plaintiffs and their attorneys are advocating for a change in LDS Church policies regarding the reporting of suspected child sexual abuse.

Citing published church policies, Vernon said LDS Church leaders are instructed to contact their Mormon bishop with reports of abuse rather than contact law enforcement, and Mormon bishops are instructed to call a church helpline to learn about local reporting requirements and securing legal advice. According to Vernon, the church’s written policy discourages Mormon officials from contacting law enforcement.

“Where is calling the police?” he said.

The lawsuit also calls for the LDS Church to acknowledge and address the “social and cultural harm” caused by the Lamanite Placement Program. The lawsuit seeks letters of apology to the plaintiffs and the Navajo Nation from church officials, and it calls for the LDS Church to establish and fund a task force to work with the Navajo Nation to encourage people who were harmed by the program to come forward and receive help.

Vernon said the lawsuit has yet to be served on the LDS Church. However, he said, church officials are aware of the allegations and have already interviewed RJ and MM.

According to Utah news reports, Kristen Howey, an LDS spokeswoman, released the following statement Thursday: “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has zero tolerance for abuse of any kind and works actively to prevent abuse. This lawsuit was filed earlier today. The Church will examine the allegations and respond appropriately.”

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Lawsuit Shines “Spotlight” on Sexual Abuse of Navajo Children within the Lamanite Placement Program

NEW MEXICO
Noaker Law

(March 23, 2016 – Gallup, New Mexico). Two enrolled members of the Navajo Nation filed suit against LDS Family Services and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, commonly known as the “Mormon” or “LDS” Church, stemming from child sexual abuse that occurred during the Church’s “Lamanite Placement Program” in the 1970’s and early 1980’s.

Click Here for File-stamped Copy of Complaint For Personal Injury filed in Navajo Nation District Court, Window Rock District, Case No. WR-CV-36-16. . . .

The specific quote from the Book of Mormon (that the Mormon Church teaches was translated by its founder, Joseph Smith) reads: And he had caused the cursing to come upon them, yea, even a sore cursing, because of their iniquity. For behold, they had hardened their hearts against him, that they had become like unto a flint; wherefore, as they were white, and exceedingly fair and delightsome, that they might not be enticing unto my people, the Lord God did cause a skin of blackness to come upon them. (2 Nephi 5:21, Book of Mormon).

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Bishops condemn exposing children to pornography

AUSTRALIA
The Catholic Leader

March 30, 2016

AUSTRALIA’S Catholic bishops have called pornography exposure among children “a form of abuse” in a submission published by a Senate inquiry last week.

The Bishops’ Commission for Family, Youth and Life of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference made a submission to a Senate inquiry into the harm done to children through online pornography.
The submission said children “have a right to be children” away from harms “inflicted on them by being exposed to pornography”.

BCFYL acting chair Bishop Peter Comensoli said the inquiry was important because “it focuses on the harm done to some of the most vulnerable people in our community”.

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AFFAIRE PREYNAT : BARBARIN RENCONTRE LES VICTIMES

FRANCE
Tonic Radio

[Case Preynat: Cardinal Barbarin is meeting with the victims.]

C’est probablement la première conséquence des conseils donnés par Guillaume Didier et son agence de communication de crise, Vae Solis Corporate.

Le cardinal Barbarin a d’abord demandé pardon aux victimes présumées du père Preynat mercredi dernier. On apprend dans le Parisien que l’archevêque de Lyon a également débuté des rencontres avec les familles de ces victimes. Des rendez-vous que certains attendaient en vain, visiblement depuis des mois, parfois des années.

Pas de quoi apaiser les familles qui n’avaient que faire d’explications ou d’un pardon. “On lui demande de reconnaître qu’il n’avait pas pris la mesure du problème et qu’il a commis une faute”, a expliqué à nos confrères un couple, parents d’anciens scouts de Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon.

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Im Kinderheim Gleink sollen Buben missbraucht worden sein

OSTERREICH
Nachrichten

[Boys were allegedly abuse at the Austrian Cleink children’s home.]

STEYR. Mahnwache ehemaliger Klosterzöglinge brachte neue Vorwürfe ans Tageslicht: Erzieher sollen Kinder nicht nur verprügelt, sondern zu sexuellen Handlungen gezwungen haben.

Seine helle Knabenstimme im Chorgesang hätte die Aufmerksamkeit von Pater L. auf ihn gezogen, erinnert sich Herbert P., der von 1973 bis 1976 im Kinderheim in Steyr-Gleink untergebracht war. Mindestens einmal, meistens aber an zwei Tagen in der Woche habe er die Stiege hinauf in die Gemächer des Priesters der Herz-Jesu-Missionare gehen müssen zum “Probesingen”, wie der Mann über fünfzig den sexuellen Missbrauch von damals bitter nennt, den er dem Ordensgeistlichen vorwirft. “Ich habe meine Kinder großgezogen”, sagte der Familienvater im Rückblick, “nur eines haben sie beklagt, dass ich sie nie richtig herzlich umarmt habe.” Denn bei Berührungen auch gegenüber seinen eigenen Kindern sei er zeitlebens gehemmt gewesen nach den leidvollen Erfahrungen in Gleink, begründet Herbert P.

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Speedskater Bridie Farrell, ‘molested’ by Olympian Andy Gabel, says N.Y. law ‘doesn’t protect children’

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE, CHRISTIAN RED NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Andy Gabel had already won dozens of medals in international speed skating competitions, including a silver at the 1994 Olympics, when he moved to upstate Saratoga Springs to prepare for the 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan.

Bridie Farrell was a star-struck 15-year-old with Olympic aspirations when Gabel arrived in her hometown — and she was thrilled when one of speed skating’s biggest stars took her under his wing.

But Farrell says that what began as a series of generous acts by Gabel — picking Farrell up at 5 a.m. every day for practice, offering her advice on such things as how to properly align her skates — culminated in an uncomfortable encounter on a dead-end street. Gabel, seated beside her in his parked car, asked Farrell if he could kiss her, she says.

She says the speed skating star, then in his 30s, repeatedly molested her in 1997 and 1998, sexual abuse that would leave her feeling lost and depressed years later.

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New York’s outdated statute of limitations robbing child sex abuse victims of justice

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY BRAD HOYLMAN SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Wednesday, March 30, 2016

The story that a Long Island foster parent allegedly got away with abusing children for two decades should make our blood boil. The question remains: Is Albany going to do anything about it?

Tragically, reports of child sexual abuse are familiar New York headlines. At the Horace Mann School in the Bronx, a recent report identified more than 60 former students abused by more than 22 employees since the 1960s. At Poly Prep Country Day School in Brooklyn, famed football coach Philip Foglietta was accused of abusing more than 10 students during his 40-year tenure.

In each case, the abuse tragically continued unabated for decades, in part because authorities don’t trust kids or regard them as reliable witnesses.

By the time many of these survivors came forward as adults to report the crimes, it was too late. New York’s antiquated statute of limitations robs them of their chance at justice. They have to file their cases by their 23rd birthday.

Such Draconian laws place New York State among the worst states in the nation for statutes of limitation. Justice cries out for us to fix this. Under the Child Victims Act, child sex abuse survivors would get just that.

This legislation I sponsor in the state Senate would eliminate the statute of limitations for civil actions for certain sex offenses committed against a minor. For survivors, the bill would also create a one-year “look back” period in which past claims could be revived.

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Parents file lawsuit against Roman Catholic Bishop of Louisville related to Stephen Pohl case

KENTUCKY
WDRB

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The parents of children who attended St. Margaret Mary School have filed a lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Bishop of Louisville, fighting to keep roughly 200 pictures of children and other evidence from being destroyed and alleging that the church was grossly negligent and displayed “outrageous conduct” when it hired and retained a priest who would later plead guilty to a child pornography charge.

The investigation began after a child told his mother Pohl took pictures of him that made him feel “weird.” When the child’s parents confronted Pohl, they say they saw similar pictures of another child and reported that to police.

Father Stephen Pohl, who pleaded guilty to a child pornography charge, was sentenced to two years and nine months in prison, plus supervised release and a $7,500 fine in criminal court Tuesday afternoon.

The lawsuit was also filed Tuesday.

“We trusted them. We placed our trust in them and that our children would be safe under their care,” said plaintiff Christeena Gallahue.

According to the lawsuit, Gallahue went to St. Margaret Mary School in August 2014 to pick up her children, when she saw her 7-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter sitting on the steps being photographed by Stephen Pohl, who used to be the pastor there. The lawsuit states that Pohl, “acted very nervous and startled, all of which was out of character for Pohl.” He allegedly told the mother that he would send her the pictures that he took, but he never did. The following month, the 7-year-old began “acting defiantly,” according to the lawsuit.

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Parents of St. Margaret Mary student file lawsuit against Archdiocese of Lou.

KENTUCKY
WHAS

[with video]

LOUISVILLE (WHAS11) – On the same day as Pastor Stephen Pohl’s sentencing two parents came forward with a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Louisville.

Richard and Christina Gallahue said their son was one of the children Pohl took pictures of and the Archdiocese did not report Pohl even though they knew that it was happening.

“We trusted the leaders of the church to protect our children. They took a pledge to protect them, we thought they’d be safe and we expected that when they were under their care,” Christeena Gallahue said.

“There is not any policy or procedure in place to deal with the issue of pornography, accessing pornography through wifi equipment owned and operated by the archdioceses. Hopefully if nothing else, this lawsuit will accomplish that,” William McMurry, an attorney for the Gallahue family, said.

The Gallahues said they think there should be some type of system in place that helps prevent this from happening again to someone else’s child. They’re also asking that all of the pictures and evidence not be destroyed so they can see how long this has been happening and the types of pictures that were taken.

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Parents to have option of viewing photos ex-pastor took of their children

KENTUCKY
WAVE

[with video]

By Joey Brown, Digital Content Manager

LOUISVILLE, KY (WAVE) – Parents of St. Margaret Mary students whose children can be identified in photos found on Fr. Stephen Pohl’s digital devices will be offered the option of viewing the pictures within the next few weeks, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Pohl was sentenced in U.S. District Court on Tuesday for accessing child pornography while pastor at St. Margaret Mary parish in St. Matthews. Judge David J. Hale sentenced him to 33 months in prison, a $7,500 fine, and a lifetime of supervised release. The prison sentence is four-months shorter than had been recommended. There is no parole in the federal criminal justice system.

Prosecutors stressed that although no pornographic pictures of children who attend St. Margaret Mary were located on Pohl’s digital devices, parents remain concerned about the content of the photos and identities of the students who are depicted in them. For that reason, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI are in the process of identifying students in photos that were recovered from Pohl’s seized devices. They will contact the parents of identifiable students soon by mail. A general list will not be published or distributed.

As a mother to two students at St. Margaret Mary School, Jill Higginbotham said there will be some build-up as parents wait to see if their children were photographed, including her own.

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Willmar women speak out as New Ulm Diocese priests accused of sexual abuse are named

MINNESOTA
West Central Tribune

By Shelby Lindrud on Mar 29, 2016

WILLMAR — The names of 16 former priests of the New Ulm Diocese, who have been identified as being credibly accused of sexually abusing minors, were released Tuesday by the diocese and the law firm of Jeff Anderson & Associates. The New Ulm Diocese was the last diocese in the state of Minnesota to release the names of priests accused of sexual abuse.

“We recognize the knowledge and release of the names helps the victims and survivors in the healing process,” said Monsignor Douglas Grams in an interview with the Tribune. Grams is the vicar general of the New Ulm Diocese, and was speaking on behalf of Bishop John LeVoir and the diocese.

“Bishop LeVoir and I, on behalf of the church, apologize to all the victims and survivors of abuse by priests,” Grams said.

The men on the list are Cletus Altermatt, Dennis Becker, Gordon Buckley, Robert Clark, J. Vincent Fitzgerald, John Gleason, Joseph Heitzer, Rudolph Henrich, Harry Majerus, Francis Markey, William Marks, John Murphy, David Roney, Douglas Schleisman, Michael Skoblik and Charles Stark.

All but three of the priests on the list are deceased, according to the diocese, and none of those living continue in ministry. Becker was removed from ministry in 2015, Clark was removed in 2002 and Schleisman was laicized in 1994.

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UPDATE: Support group for people abused by clergy members

IOWA
KTIV

[with video]

SIOUX CITY (KTIV) –
A support group for men and women abused by clergy will offer a way for victims to talk about their experiences.

SNAP, or “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests,” will hold a confidential support meeting, Tuesday night, at El Fredo’s Pizza, in Sioux City, starting at 7:00 p.m.

Organizers say victims, family members and supporters are encouraged to attend.

SNAP member Tim Lennon will be there. Lennon says he was abused by Father Peter Murphy, of Sioux City’s Blessed Sacrament Parish, in 1959 and 1960.

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Newcastle Anglican diocese public hearing put back to August so it can be held in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE MCCARTHY
March 29, 2016

THE Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has confirmed a two-week public hearing into Newcastle Anglican diocese will be held in the city of Newcastle itself.

The hearing will now start on August 1, and not the originally planned June 20, after the commission was unable to make appropriate arrangements for a hearing in Newcastle at the earlier date.

In a short statement on Tuesday the commission said the hearing would run from August 1 – 12, with further details closer to the hearing date.

In a Newcastle Herald article on March 15 announcing the public hearing, Newcastle Anglican Bishop Greg Thompson said he hoped the royal commission would sit in Newcastle so that “the wider community can understand what’s gone on”.

“I welcome the opportunity for Newcastle to have this important inquiry into the church’s life and into serious matters that have been raised over many years concerning the abuse that took place,” Bishop Thompson said.

“It provides the opportunity to understand the culture and conduct that allowed perpetrators to work in our church.”

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Lawmaker expects Assembly to vote on bill allowing sexually abused children to bring lawsuits as adults

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, March 29, 2016

ALBANY — The sponsor of a bill that would make it easier for sexually abused children to bring lawsuits as adults believes the Assembly will take up the measure this year — the first time since 2008.

Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Queens) said she is hopeful her bill will come to the floor for a vote before the legislative session ends in June.

Markey’s bill would also open up a one-year window for people abused as kids to bring civil lawsuits in cases where the current statute of limitations had already expired — a measure opposed by the Senate Republicans, the Catholic Church and even some Democrats in her own chamber.

Markey’s bill is sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan). Hoylman said he’s using the Daily News’ Tuesday front page — part of a series highlighting New York’s worst-in-the-nation law that requires victims of child sexual abuse to come forward by the age of 23 or lose legal recourse — to urge his colleagues to co-sponsor the bill.

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Equal justice for all kids on sexual abuse

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

With cases of sexual abuse of minors involving institutions and individuals of all backgrounds — public, private and sectarian schools; foster-care agencies and foster parents; teachers; priests; rabbis; football coaches, and on and on — a reform of New York’s antiquated and nationally out-of-step statutes of limitations on sex crimes against minors must be sweeping and fair:

• Laws must be consistent for all offenses, in criminal and civil courts alike.

Allowing a victim to press criminal charges or to file a civil suit forever for some crimes but limiting them from going to court for other, very similar sex offenses is nonsensically unjust.

To cite one example, there is no statute of limitations if a predator repeatedly penetrates a child with an object and causes injury — meaning that such a victim could go to court or seek criminal charges at any point in his or her adult life. But if the same predator inflicts the same repeated penetration but does so without physical injury, the victim must seek action by the age of 23.

• Since child sex abuse victims can need decades to come to terms with their victimization, equalized statutes of limitations must be extended, if not forever, then at least into a reasonable period of adulthood.

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Evidence mounts of missed red flags in case of former Tokyo teacher facing U.S. child

JAPAN
The Japan Times

BY SIMON SCOTT
MAR 30, 2016

When James France heard the news of the recent arrest of Frank Selas, his former scoutmaster at St. Mary’s International School in Tokyo, on child sex abuse charges in the U.S., he was not shocked. Instead, he felt a mix of regret and curiosity.

“I found myself wanting to know exactly what he had done. What did he actually do to the kids?” he says. “I wanted to know because we were in close proximity to this person, and I think I wanted to know how potentially bad it could have been. It’s like knowing that you were just diving in the proximity of a great white without realizing it.”

Selas, aka Frank Szeles, who was a fourth-grade teacher at the Catholic boys’ school from 1970 until 1972, had been on the run for 37 years when he was finally taken into custody at his home in Bonita, California, on Jan. 25.

Warrants for his arrest were issued in 1979 for two counts of obscene behavior with a juvenile. The alleged abuse took place on a camping trip for boys in Louisiana hosted by Selas, and one boy was reportedly hospitalized. A grand jury indictment in the southern U.S. state last month saw additional charges leveled against Selas — two counts of aggravated rape, three counts of sexual battery and eight counts of felony indecent behavior with juveniles — meaning that police believe there were at least eight victims in total across the state of Louisiana.

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Priests accused of abusing kids named

MINNESOTA
The Journal

March 30, 2016
By Clay Schuldt – Staff Writer , The Journal

ST. PAUL – After months of dialogue, the law firm of Jeff Anderson & Associates and the Diocese of New Ulm jointly disclosed on Tuesday the names of 16 former priests who were mutually identified as being credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor while they were assigned as priests.

The list includes these priests – Cletus Altermatt, Dennis Becker, Gordon Buckley, Robert Clark, J. Vincent Fitzgerald, John Gleason, Joseph Louis Heitzer, Rudolph Henrich, Harry Majerus, Francis Markey, William Marks, John Murphy, David Roney, Douglas Schleisman, Michael Skoblik and Charles Stark.

Thirteen of the accused have died, and all but one was previously named in media reports. Fitzgerald, Heitzer, Henrich and Majerus had credible accusations made against them while working in another diocese, but had no credible accusations made against them while serving in the New Ulm Diocese.

In conjunction with release of the list, attorney Jeff Anderson & Associates held a press conference in St. Paul on Tuesday morning. During the event two women, Kim Schmit and Lori Stoltz, spoke on the abuse they experienced from Roney.

Schmit said that as a youth in 1968 Roney forced her into a corner and abused her after school. She reported the incident to her parents who then complained to the diocese. Schmit’s family was informed actions would be taken against Roney; however, the diocese simply relocated him to another parish where he continued to abuse other victims. Schmit later became friends with Stoltz, and both were horrified to learn they had been abused by the same priest despite diocese promises.

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Abuse Complaints ‘Credible’ Against Former St. Clair Shores Priest

MICHIGAN
Patch

BETH DALBEY (Patch Staff) – March 29, 2016

ST. CLAIR SHORES, MI – Sexual abuse allegations against a former Catholic priest who served parishes in Farmington, Royal Oak, St. Clair Shores have been “found to be credible” after an internal review of complaints against him, the Archdiocese of Detroit said in a statement Tuesday.

Richard Lauinger, 85, left the priesthood in 1975, the diocese said. He was ordained in 1956.

During his 19 years as a priest, he served as an associate pastor at Our Lady of Sorrows in Farmington, Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, and Christ the King and St. Eugene in Detroit; and as co-pastor of St. Margaret of Scotland, St. Clair Shores.

Diocese spokesman Ned McGrath told WWJ the complaints were turned over to the Wayne and Oakland county prosecutor’s offices for review. He declined to release details about when the alleged abuse took place, how many allege victims stepped forward or the age of the alleged victims.

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Special Report: Symbols of Suffering

MAINE
WHDH

[with video]

Reported by Kelli O’Hara

KENNEBUNK, Maine (WHDH) –
Sex abuse victims said they were forced to relive their trauma after learning their church was honoring the priest who they said abused them.

At Saint Martha’s in Kennebunk, Maine, a plaque on the wall thanks dozens of people for their donations. One of the names on the plaque is Father James Vallely.

Vallely, who was a priest at the Maine Archdiocese starting in 1952, was accused of sexually abusing at least nine children before he died in 1997. Despite the accusations, he was never prosecuted or defrocked. The church listed him on the plaque for donating money for its stained glass windows.

“It goes to show the lack of compassion,” said Jim Tremble, a former altar boy. Tremble said he was 13 years old when Vallely raped him in the backseat of his car. “I was threatened after it was over and I never said a word.”

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian is representing Tremble and others who are suing the Archdiocese, saying Vallely abused them. He said he wants to know why Vallely’s name was allowed to remain on the wall until recently.

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Diocese of Pittsburgh settles in priest sex-abuse case

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Peter Smith
Of The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Diocese of Pittsburgh last year reached a “five-figure” settlement with a man over his claim that he was sexually abused as a youth in the 1980s by a priest whom then-Bishop Anthony Bevilacqua brought into the diocese despite knowing his past sexual predatory behavior and risk of repeating it.

The out-of-court settlement, reached in October, was announced this week by Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian, who said his client was assaulted by the Rev. John P. Connor, a New Jersey priest who worked in the North Hills section of Pittsburgh in the 1980s.

Allegations of Connor’s serial attacks on youths before and after his Pittsburgh tenure were documented in a 2005 grand jury report on the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, where the late Cardinal Bevilacqua later brought Connor.

But this settlement provides the first allegation that Connor also used his time in the Diocese of Pittsburgh to groom and sexually assault at least one youth.

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New details emerge about abusive priest’s history with Springfield Catholic diocese

MASSACHUSETTS
The Republican

By Stephanie Barry | sbarry@repub.com
on March 29, 2016

SPRINGFIELD — The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield on Tuesday night released new details about the disciplinary history of the late Rev. Paul Archmbault, subject of a recent civil settlement who committed suicide in 2011 when confronted about the abuse of a teenage boy, officials have said.

Archambault fatally shot himself with one of his own guns at Our Lady of Hope rectory. He did not leave a note, according to police. But, diocesan officials on Tuesday conceded the suicide was likely prompted by a confrontation over the abuse. It has not been publicly disclosed who reportedly confronted the priest.

The 42-year-old Archambault had been ordained just six years earlier. A lawsuit filed in 2013, when the victim was 20, states that he began sexually assaulting the victim, “John Doe,” when the boy was 13; the molestation continued for about four years. The complaint alleges the abuse took place at a Chicopee parish, a shrine to the Virgin Mary in Vermont and at Archambault’s father’s home in Northampton.

The victim is a Chesterfield native but has not been named in court records or by the diocese. As a policy, The Republican typically does not name victims of sexual abuse.

The diocese deemed the allegations against Archambault “credible” and settled with the victim for an as-yet undisclosed money judgment in late January. The settlement was announced earlier on Tuesday. Church officials have made a point to note that Archambault knew the victim and his family long before the priest was ordained.

Plaintiff’s lawyer John Connor argued the diocese ignored previous “red flags” raised by parishioners about Archambault’s behavior around children.

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Former priest, 85, accused of sexually abusing minors decades ago in Detroit area

MICHIGAN
The Oakland Press

POSTED: 03/29/16

The Archdiocese of Detroit says it has received complaints of sexual abuse of minors by a former priest. The allegations stem from the time the priest was in ministry.

Allegations against Richard Lauinger, 85, have been brought forward to the Archdiocesan Board of Review and are found to be credible, a statement by the organization said.

Lauinger was ordained in 1956 but he left the priesthood in 1975 and all ties with the diocese were severed.

Lauinger served as an associate pastor at Our Lady of Sorrows, Farmington; Christ the King, Detroit; Shrine of the Little Flower, Royal Oak; St. Eugene, Detroit; and as co-pastor of St. Margaret of Scotland; St. Clair Shores.

Ned McGrath, Director of Communications for the diocese, said the organization started receiving complaints against Lauinger in January.

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March 29, 2016

La Corte Suprema ratificó los abusos de un cura en el Colegio Marianista

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Clarín [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

March 29, 2016

By REDACCIÓN CLARÍN

Read original article

El máximo tribunal dio por probados los abusos cometidos por Fernando Picchiochi en el Colegio Marianista. 

Inadmisible. No necesitaron más que una palabra los jueces de la Corte Suprema para desestimar un recurso de queja de la defensa de Fernando Enrique Picciochi, el cura condenado a 12 años de prisión efectiva por “corrupción de menores calificada y reiterada”. Así, tras 26 años de haber sufrido los abusos, y a 16 de haber iniciado la dura lucha judicial, Sebastián Cuattromo puede sonreir al saber que finalmente quedó ratificada la ejemplar condena del ex miembro de la congregación marianista: “Estoy feliz, la lucha sirvió”.

Sebastián fue abusado por Picciochi cuando estaba en el viaje de egresados de séptimo grado, que cursaba en el Colegio Marianista de Caballito. El cura se le metía en la cama, y también en el micro. Y los abusos siguieron en el secundario, en rincones oscuros del colegio religioso. Como suele ocurrir ante este delito, Sebastián no pudo poner en palabras las aberraciones hasta diez años después. Era el 2000 y fue solo, devastado y quebrado, a hacer la denuncia a Tribunales. Hoy, 16 años después, está rodeado de afecto. Sus compañeros de lucha lo abrazan, lo felicitan. Ya no está solo porque de a poco el delito de los curas abusadores sale a la luz, y el silencio y el olvido le están dando paso a la verdad y la Justicia. “Haber logrado la condena en el juicio oral (fue en 2012) y ver que hoy la Corte Suprema dé otra vez por probado todos los abusos es muy reparador”, dice Sebastián a Clarín. 

“El Poder Judicial todavía tiene mucho que cambiar, aún se maltrata y se revictimiza a las víctimas, eso no puede seguir ocurriendo. La mentalidad de la sociedad también tiene que cambiar, ojalá lo logremos, en eso estoy dejando mi vida”, dice Sebastián, que hace ya un par de años coordina la organización Adultos por los derechos de la infancia, que se reune todos los sábados en Flores.

El abuso es quizás el delito más impune, ya que las víctimas muchas veces no logran hablar, o lo hacen muchos años después. Por eso desde el año pasado el abuso es un delito que no prescribe. Además, es un delito que suele ser silenciado por quienes rodean a los abusadores y también a las víctimas, y en este ocultamiento no hay reparación posible. Sebastián hoy lo logró. La defensa del cura abusador pretendió que se revirtiera todo el proceso judicial para que el cura quedara como inocente. Pero el máximo tribunal, con la firma de los jueces Ricardo Lorenzetti, Elena Highton de Nolasco y Juan Carlos Maqueda, ratificó todos los hechos. Hoy se hizo Justicia. 

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Former Deerfield pastor charged with sex abuse may avoid trial

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Karen Berkowitz
Pioneer Press

A former Deerfield pastor charged with the sexual abuse of a 16-year-old girl will be undergoing an evaluation, and it’s likely his criminal case will be resolved without a trial, a Lake County prosecutor said Tuesday.

Assistant State’s Attorney Jason Grindel provided the update to Lake County Circuit Court Judge Victoria Rossetti during a status hearing for Samuel Kee, who is charged with criminal sexual abuse of a minor.

Kee, 39, was pastor of teaching and discipleship at the North Suburban Evangelical Free Church in Deerfield on Oct. 14, 2015, when he voluntarily walked into the Deerfield police station to confess to an inappropriate relationship with a 16-year-old girl in the summer of 2014. Kee was charged Oct. 15, 2015, and pleaded not guilty during a court appearance.

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Solicitation charge dismissed against former EMU VP

VIRGINIA
Mennonite World Review

Mar 29, 2016 by Tim Huber, Mennonite World Review

A judge dismissed a charge of solicitation of prostitution against former Eastern Mennonite University vice president of enrollment Luke A. Hartman on March 29, roughly a week after a Harrisonburg, Va., congregation acknowledged its pastors knew of an alleged “abusive relationship” involving him about a year and half before he resigned from his position in January.
Hartman was arrested Jan. 8 on a misdemeanor charge. Rockingham County Judge William Eldridge said there wasn’t enough evidence to show “a specific act that was elicited.”

Hartman has been a speaker at several Mennonite Church USA youth conventions.

A March 20 letter from Lindale Mennonite Church pastors and elders to congregants says an “abusive relationship” was brought to the staff’s attention in August 2014 and that “the victim . . . has been deeply traumatized by Luke Hartman. . . . We are grateful that the victim had the courage to step forward despite her overwhelming fear.”

The letter says lead pastor Duane Yoder and associate pastor Dawn Monger have been “walking with the victim” and “attempting to hold [Hartman] accountable for his actions.” The letter does not indicate what Hartman is alleged to have done. It states pastors have worked “to keep the victim safe” and that “professional counseling was provided.”

The letter does not indicate this information was shared with EMU.

In response to questions, EMU released a statement to MWR on March 29:

“In August 2014, Lindale (Va.) Mennonite Church leaders alerted Eastern Mennonite University institutional leaders about a situation concerning an inappropriate sexual relationship between Luke Hartman and a church member. The relationship had taken place some years prior to Luke Hartman’s employment as vice president for enrollment at EMU.

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Diocese of Pittsburgh settles sex abuse case for undisclosed ‘five-figure’ sum

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY MATTHEW SANTONI | Tuesday, March 29, 2016

The Diocese of Pittsburgh reached an undisclosed “five-figure” out-of-court settlement late last year with an alleged victim of a sexually abusive priest who served in Allegheny County from 1985-88, his attorney announced this week.

Boston-based attorney Mitchell Garabedian said the settlement was reached in October over his client’s alleged sexual assault by John Connor, who was a chaplain at Sewickley Valley Hospital and then a priest at St. Alphonsus Church in Pine. His client, now in his 40s, was 12 to 14 years old when the abuse took place between 1985 and 1986 in Connor’s car, a Pittsburgh movie theater and on a Bradford Woods basketball court, Garabedian said.

The statute of limitations for criminal charges has expired, Garabedian said, but he was publicizing the civil settlement and others to urge the Catholic Church toward greater transparency. “My client should be proud of himself for having the courage to report sexual abuse,” said Garabedian, whose work representing victims of abusive priests was portrayed in the movie “Spotlight.”

“In doing so, my client has empowered himself, other clergy sex-abuse victims and children everywhere,” he said. “It’s time to end the secrecy surrounding clergy sexual abuse, and the only way to do that is reporting the known perpetrators.”

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Abuse settlement reached in case of priest who committed suicide

MASSACHUSETTS
WWLP

Mark Wiernasz
Published: March 29, 2016

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) – The Springfield Roman Catholic Diocese has reached a settlement concerning an abuse allegation of a minor by the late Father Paul Archambault. According to a statement from the Diocese of Springfield, Fr. Archambault committed suicide in 2011 apparently after being confronted with the abuse allegations.

A native of Northampton, Fr. Archambault had been assigned or did ministry work in Holy Name of Jesus in Chicopee, St. Mary in Hampden, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Northampton, St. Theresa in South Hadley, and Our Lady of Sacred Heart in Springfield. He had also served as a hospital chaplain. The Diocese did not say whether the victim was male or female, but had known Fr. Archambault for many years prior to his ordination as a priest.

In the statement, Bishop Mitchell Rozanski said, “I want to extend to all victims my sincere apology for what they had to endure. I want to assure them and the entire community of my fervent resolve to continue to address this terrible plague upon our Church through our ongoing screening, education and awareness efforts. We must never let our guard down; rather we must all remain vigilant.”

The diocese has now added Fr. Archambault’s name to the official list of clergy with credible claims of abuse. Reports of abuse by clergy or someone working for the Catholic Church should be reported to local law enforcement, as well as the Office of Child and Youth Protection at 413-452-0624 or the confidential line at 1-800-842-9055.

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Attorneys file documents idicating convicted Somerset County priest’s family paid $70K in fines, restitution

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY PAUL PEIRCE | Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Attorneys for a Somerset County priest convicted of molesting boys in a Honduran orphanage filed documents Tuesday in federal court in Pittsburgh indicating that his family has paid $70,000 in court-ordered fines, costs and restitution, effectively ending a dispute with the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Last week, U.S. Attorney David Hickton’s office had asked a judge to freeze $1.2 million in assets held by the Rev. Joseph Maurizio for 60 days, alleging he was quietly transferring money and other property to relatives since March 1, when he was sentenced to nearly 17 years in prison.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Haines alleged in a motion that Maurizio, 70, had made no attempt to pay the fines, costs and restitution stemming from his conviction, despite Judge Kim Gibson’s order to begin making payments within 10 days of his sentencing.

Maurizio’s attorneys, Steven P. Passarello of Altoona and Thomas Farrell of Pittsburgh, in their court filing provided copies of bank drafts of $70,000 that relatives withdrew from the priest’s accounts Friday and forwarded via certified mail to the federal clerk’s office in Pittsburgh.

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“Schade, dass erst jetzt so aufgeklärt wird”

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutschlandradio Kultur

[In recent years, numerous cases of abuse in the famous chorus of the Regensburger Domspatzen have become known. However, many of those responsible are struggling today to find a reasonable deal, but others seek enlightenment on what happened.]

Von Lisa Weiß

In den letzten Jahren sind zahlreiche Missbrauchsfälle im berühmten Chor der Regensburger Domspatzen bekannt geworden. Doch viele der Verantwortlichen tun sich bis heute schwer, einen angemessenen Umgang zu finden, andere aber bemühen sich um Aufklärung.

Chorprobe bei den Domspatzen. Knapp 80 Jungen stehen oder sitzen im großen Chorsaal, die kleinen vorne, die großen hinten. Domkapellmeister Roland Büchner ist am Klavier, gibt eine Stelle vor – die Schüler singen nach.

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Staatsanwaltschaft ermittelt nach Missbrauchsvorwurf

DEUTSCHLAND
BR 24

[The public prosecutor’s office is now investigating an allegation that a priest, who later became abuse officer for the Wurtzburg diocese, sexually abused a teenage girl.]

Von: Barbara Markus
Stand: 29.03.2016

Das Ermittlungsverfahren wegen sexueller Nötigung hat der Würzburger Oberstaatsanwalt Boris Raufeisen dem BR bestätigt. Auslöser war ein Bericht des “Spiegel” über Vorwürfe einer heute 44-Jährigen. Ihrer Aussage zufolge soll sich der Kleriker im Jahr 1988 an ihr vergangen habe. Der Missbrauch an der damals 17-Jährigen soll sich bei einem Treffen im Würzburger Exerzitienhaus Himmelspforten im Rahmen der Diakonatsausbildung des Vaters ereignet haben.

Mögliche Verjährung wird überprüft

Zur Person des Beschuldigten liegen Erkenntnisse des Missbrauchsbeauftragten des Bistums vor, so Oberstaatsanwalt Raufeisen.

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MA–Another MA predator priest case settles

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 29

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

Catholic officials are disclosing that a clergy sex abuse and cover up case has settled. We hope that this resolution will prod others with information or suspicions about child sex crimes by Fr. Paul J. Archambault to come forward and get help from independent sources.

[MassLive]

He is the 48th publicly accused child molesting cleric in the relatively small Springfield diocese. (BishopAccountability.org)

We are grateful that Bishop Mitchell Rozanski took the initiative to announce the settlement. His colleague – Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley – often refuses to do this, and refused to do so yesterday in several cases.

[SNAP]

At the same time, however, we’re disappointed that Bishop Rozanski lists so few proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics on his website. And we’re disappointed the bishop uses lines and language designed to distance himself from this predator and that reveal more about the victim than he should (like disclosing that “Fr. Archambault knew the victim’s family personally for many years before ordination”). There’s nothing to be gained, save a little public relations advantage, by revealing such information.

We hope this settlement will bring some comfort and closure to the brave young man who had the wisdom to understand he’d been hurt, the courage to speak up, and the strength to seek justice in the courts. We commend him for his bravery and are confident he has done the right thing and will inspire others who are suffering to come forward.

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

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Attorney: Columbus Catholic Diocese reaches settlement with alleged abuse victim

OHIO
10TV

COLUMBUS, Ohio – An attorney tells 10TV the Catholic Diocese of Columbus has reached a settlement with a man who says he was sexually abused by a priest in the 1970s.

Father Ronald Atwood was removed from the church in July 2013, one day after the dioceses received a complaint that he had abused a minor.

The man who filed the lawsuit claims the abuse happened between 1975 and 1980 in Atwood’s office at Bishop Ready High School in west Columbus.

Tonight, SNAP, or Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is calling on the Catholic Diocese to reveal when victims come forward.

An attorney for Atwood’s accuser, who is now in his mid-50’s, told 10TV his client didn’t want to talk about the case.

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MI–Detroit priest is accused of abuse

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 29

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

In an extraordinarily vague and short announcement, Detroit Catholic officials admit that a priest is a credibly accused child molester. But they refuse to disclose his whereabouts or aggressively seek out others he has hurt. Shame on them.

[Detroit Free Press]

We hope that others with information or suspicions about Fr. Ronald Lauinger will come forward and seek help from independent sources.

Archbishop Allen Vigneron and Ned McGrath, one of his public relations officials, won’t say whether Lauinger hurt boys or girls, when or where the crimes happened or disclose any real helpful information. They won’t say when church officials first received a report of these crimes or how long it took church officials to substantiate them. They are doing the absolute bare minimum while leaving other kids in harm’s way by being so secretive.

We urge Vigneron, McGrath and other Detroit church staff to change their minds and disclose Lauinger’s whereabouts so that parents can be warned and families can be protected.

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

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New Ulm Diocese names 16 priests credibly accused of child sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Tim Nelson Mar 29, 2016

The Diocese of New Ulm has released a list of 16 priests it says have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children in and out of the diocese.

All but three of the priests have died, the diocese said, and all but one have already been identified in media reports.

The list was released in conjunction with a St. Paul law firm, where two women spoke about their own experiences.

Kim Schmit said she was a school girl in 1968 when she was a victim of abuse at her church in Willmar.

“I was standing there waiting for my taxi after release classes when the priest approached me, backed me into the corner, into the dark,” she said. “It only happened once for me, and I went home and told my mom. And my parents went and confronted, and they promised something would have been done. But nothing was done.”

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‘Credible’ Abuse Claim Against Ex-Royal Oak Priest: Church

MICHIGAN
Patch

By BETH DALBEY (Patch Staff) – March 29, 2016

ROYAL OAK, MI – Sexual abuse allegations against a former Catholic priest who served parishes in Farmington, Royal Oak, St. Clair Shores have been “found to be credible” after an internal review of complaints against him, the Archdiocese of Detroit said in a statement Tuesday.

Richard Lauinger, 85, left the priesthood in 1975, the diocese said. He was ordained in 1956.

During his 19 years as a priest, he served as an associate pastor at Our Lady of Sorrows in Farmington, Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, and Christ the King and St. Eugene in Detroit; and as co-pastor of St. Margaret of Scotland, St. Clair Shores.

Diocese spokesman Ned McGrath told WWJ the complaints were turned over to the Wayne and Oakland county prosecutor’s offices for review. He declined to release details about when the alleged abuse took place, how many allege victims stepped forward or the age of the alleged victims.

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Springfield Diocese Adds Priest Who Committed Suicide To List Of ‘Credibly Accused Clergy’

MASSACHUSETTS
New England Public Radio

by: Sam Hudzik
MARCH 29, 2016

The Catholic Diocese of Springfield has settled a lawsuit over child sexual abuse by a priest who committed suicide in 2011.

The diocese says it appears that Father Paul Archambault killed himself shortly after he was confronted about the abuse. Those allegations came out in lawsuit in 2013, two years after the priest’s death.

In a statement, the diocese says it “now recognizes this victim’s allegation as credible.”

“[The abuse] took place at a time when it was really the height of the clergy abuse scandal — being in the press and becoming public, which was extraordinary from our point of view that this was happening at that very same time where supposedly there was such heightened awareness of the issue,” said John Connor, a lawyer for the victim.

The diocese has added Archambault’s name to its public list of “credibly accused clergy.” That list includes the names of 17 priests and former priests from the Springfield diocese, which includes the four western Massachusetts counties.

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Diocese identifies priest who was accused of sexual abuse worked in St. Peter

MINNESOTA
St. Peter Herald

By NANCY MADSEN nmadsen@stpeterherald.com

The Diocese of New Ulm and a St. Paul law firm identified one priest who served in St. Peter among 16 who were credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor while they were assigned as priests.

Father Harry Majerus, who was pastor of Church of the Immaculate Conception in St. Peter, had a credible accusation during his time with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, which was reported in the media in 2014. There are no credible accusations against him during his time in the Diocese of New Ulm, including while at the St. Peter church, a March 29 news release from the diocese and Jeff Anderson and Associates said.

Majerus was the last pastor of Church of the Immaculate Conception, as it merged with the Church of St. Peter in 1991. Majerus, who was ordained in 1942 and worked in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of New Ulm until 1987, died in 1995.

“It is important that we recognize the credible accusations made against these men and acknowledge the terrible harm done by abuse in Church ministry,” said Bishop John LeVoir of the diocese in the news release. “On behalf of the Church, I apologize for the grave offenses committed against the vulnerable by those who were ordained to serve our communities. We are grateful to the survivors who have come forward already and encourage those who have not yet come forward to do so.”

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In Cuba and Argentina: Pres. Obama 2, Pope Francis 0

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on March 29, 2016 by Betty Clermont

President Barack Obama traveled to Cuba and Argentina last week.

In Cuba, Obama met with 13 Cuban dissidents at the US Embassy in Havana. They gave him the names of political prisoners the day after Cuban President Raul Castro said there were none in his island nation. Obama said the US continues to have “deep differences” with the Cuban government in the area of human rights and democracy. “My hope is that by listening and hearing from [the dissidents] that we can continue to refine our policy in such a way that ultimately the Cuban people are able to live freely and prosperously.”

In an earlier speech, Obama stated that equality under the law, the right to criticize the government, to protest peacefully, to practice faith peacefully and publicly, and to choose governments in free and democratic elections, are universal “rights of the American people, the Cuban people, and people around the world.”

Pope Francis visited Cuba September 19-22, 2015. He refused to meet with dissidents and kept silent about political prisoners and other victims of the Castro regime. His only mention of “freedom” was in regards to that of his Church.

Obama honored the victims of the 1976-1983 Dirty War in Argentina on March 24, the 40th anniversary of the military coup.

Pope Francis has not returned to his native land although he has made four trips to Latin America. His two predecessors had quickly returned to Poland and Germany, respectively, to massive acclaim by their compatriots. But when asked by a reporter on Feb. 18, “Holy Father, when are you going to go to Argentina?” – Pope Francis avoided the subject.

The Dirty War

A brutal junta initiated the Dirty War resulting in the “disappearance” of approximately 30,000 Argentines. Even those only suspected of being a dissident were kidnapped, tortured and murdered. The kidnappings – or disappearances – were preferred by the dictators to open bloodshed on their own populace for the practical effect of subduing outright civil war because the friends and families of the disappeared worked and hoped for the release of their loved ones. Because the barbarity was largely hidden, this was called the Dirty War.

Shortly before Obama’s arrival in Buenos Aires, his administration announced that US government documents relating to this period would be declassified. The Nixon/Ford Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger supported the coup. Perhaps the newly unclassified documents will show a more direct US involvement in Argentina similar to the role we played in the 1973 military coup ousting the democratically-elected Chilean Pres. Salvador Allende by Gen. Augusto Pinochet.

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Former St. Margaret Mary Pastor and Priest sentenced on child porn charges

KENTUCY
WDRB

[with video]

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — Priest, Father Stephen Pohll, who pleaded guilty to child pornography charges was sentenced today.

Ted Shouse, Pohl’s Attorney says, “He’s relieved this has come to an conclusion.”

Pohl spoke to the court saying he apologizes to the St. Margaret Mary Parish, the Archbishop, his family and friends and the public. He said he deeply regrets the sadness caused by this.

He went on to say, “I pray forr God’s mercy and forgiveness” and that his actions “may have God’s healing and peace.”

Shouse says, “I think it was sincere. It was honest and it comes from Father Pohl’s heart.”

20 people also wrote letters in support of Pohl for the judge to read before sentencing. Some asked the judge to have mercy on Pohl.

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Priest sentenced to prison on child porn charges

KENTUCKY
Courier-Journal

Matthew Glowicki, @MattGlo

March 29, 2016

Former pastor of St. Margaret Mary Parish Stephen Pohl has been sentenced to 33 months in federal prison for viewing child pornography.

U. S. District Court Judge David Hale sentenced Pohl, 57, at a sentencing hearing Tuesday afternoon.

Pohl, a first-time offender, poses a low risk for repeating his crime and is undergoing sex offender treatment, said his attorneys Ted Shouse, Annie O’Connell and John H. Harralson in a court filing last week.

In January 2016, the Roman Catholic priest admitted to accessing the pornographic images of nude underage boys on computers at the church rectory and office between January and August 2015.

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Fmr. St. Margaret Mary pastor sentenced to 33 months in prison on child porn charge

KENTUCKY
WHAS

WHAS11.com staff , Associated Press and Bethanni Williams, WHAS
March 29, 2016

LOUISVILLE (WHAS11) — A former pastor at St. Margaret Mary was sentenced to 33 months in prison on March 29.

In January, Stephen Pohl pleaded guilty to to one count of accessing child pornography with the intent to view. Pohl admitted to looking at explicit images on computers in his work and living areas at St. Margaret Mary.

Since the judge accepted a plea deal in this case Pohl will also have to register as a sex offender.

Police seized Pohl’s computer during an investigation that started after a student told his parents he felt “weird” about some photos that Pohl had taken.

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Boy’s parents sue archdiocese over priest

KENTUCKY
Courier-Journal

Andrew Wolfson, @adwolfson March 29, 2016

The parents of a boy photographed by the Rev. Stephen Pohl at St. Margaret Mary Catholic Church has sued the Archdiocese of Louisville, saying that for decades he engaged in the bizarre practice of taking pictures of clothed children in sexual poses and that the church should have put a stop to it.

The suit, filed Tuesday in Jefferson Circuit Court, also says Pohl’s misconduct shows the archdiocese broke the promises it made to ferret out abusive priests when it paid $25.7 million in 2003 to 243 men and women who were molested as children at Catholic schools and churches.

“Such promises are proven by the conduct of Father Stephen Pohl to be hollow assurances,” attorney William F. McMurry says in the complaint filed on behalf of Christeena and Richard Gallahue Jr. “Sadly, these past lawsuits have done nothing to change the leadership culture, and the children of the church remain at serious risk of sexual abuse and exploitation by priests.”

McMurry was co-lead counsel in the priest abuse settlement, which at the time was the largest paid by an archdiocese out of its own pocket.

The suit was filed as Pohl was sentenced Tuesday in U.S. District Court to 33 months in federal prison for accessing child porn from computers at the rectory and office of St. Margaret Mary, where he was a pastor.

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Springfield diocese names late priest to list of abusers

MASSACHUSETTS
The Eagle

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) — The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield has reached a settlement with a man who said a priest sexually abused him as a minor.

The diocese announced Tuesday that it has added the name of the late Rev. Paul Archambault to its list of clergy with credible claims of abuse. The list is posted on the diocesan website.

The diocese says according to legal filings in the case, it appears that Archambault took his own life after being confronted with the allegations in 2011.

The diocese is asking parishes where Archambault served to alert those communities. Those include: Holy Name of Jesus, in Chicopee; St. Mary’s Church, in Hampden; St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, in Northampton; St. Theresa, in South Hadley; and Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, in Springfield.

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Late priest named to list of abusers

MASSACHUSETTS
WCVB

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. —The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield has reached a settlement with a man who said a priest sexually abused him as a minor.

The diocese announced Tuesday that it has added the name of the late Rev. Paul Archambault to its list of clergy with credible claims of abuse. The list is posted on the diocesan website.

The diocese says according to legal filings in the case, it appears that Archambault took his own life after being confronted with the allegations in 2011.

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Archdiocese of Detroit: Child sex allegations ‘credible’

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free Press

AP

The Archdiocese of Detroit says child sexual abuse allegations against a former priest have been found to be credible.

The Catholic administrative body for southeastern Michigan made the announcement Tuesday after an internal board reviewed allegations against Richard Lauinger. The 85-year-old was ordained in 1956 and left the priesthood in 1975.

Diocese spokesman Ned McGrath said Lauinger hasn’t lived in Michigan since 1985 but declined to say where he is now. The Associated Press called two phone numbers assigned to someone with the same name and age and left messages.

McGrath said the complaints were turned over to the Wayne and Oakland county prosecutor’s offices.

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Names of 16 Priests Accused Of Abuse Released By New Ulm Diocese

MINNESOTA
KEYC

By Kelsey Barchenger

The names of multiple priests accused of sexually abusing children while working for the New Ulm Diocese has just been released.

Just within the last hour the New Ulm Diocese has released the names of 16 of its priests accused of sexually abusing children from the 1940s through the ’90’s. Of these 16 men, 13 are deceased.

New Ulm is the last of the state’s six dioceses to release such a list.

This morning, two of the victims of abuse along with their attorneys spoke out at a press conference on the matter, saying this is not only a big first step in their over two year court battle to get these names released, but it’s also a chance for other victims to come forward.

Mike Finnegan said, “It’s extremely important to them–number one for child protection that there’s no more secrets around sex abuse in the Diocese of New Ulm and number two to reach out to all the survivors that are out there suffering secrecy, silence and shame that they know they can get help and they can come forward confidentially but time is running out.”

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Diocese of New Ulm releases names of priests credibly accused of sex abuse

MINNESOTA
Mankato Free Press

By Leah Buletti lbuletti@mankatofreepress.com

NEW ULM — After a lengthy legal battle, the Diocese of New Ulm and a St. Paul law firm have jointly released the names of 16 priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse while assigned as priests.

Of the 16 men, 13 are deceased and all but one — Cletus Altermatt — have been named in prior media reports.

The names were released at a news conference Tuesday morning held by the law firm Jeff Anderson and Associates, during which two victims shared their stories.

“In order for kids to be safe, the names of the credibly accused need to be out there,” attorney Mike Finnegan said after the conference.

The release of names is also important so survivors know it’s safe to come forward, Finnegan said. More priests are expected to be added to the list now that it’s public, something that has happened after other dioceses in the state have released lists.

The Diocese of New Ulm was the last one in the state to release its list of names.

For several years, attorney Jeff Anderson and his firm have been filing lawsuits in several Minnesota district courts, including in Brown County, on behalf of victims claiming they were sexually abused by priests. Many lawsuits included requests to have the lists released to the public and similar lists created by dioceses in Minneapolis and St. Paul, St. Cloud, Winona, Duluth and Crookston have been released either voluntarily or through court order.

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Disclosures of Names of Priests Credibly Accused of Sexual Abuse of a Minor

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Diocese of New Ulm

In March 2016, the Diocese of New Ulm, working in close cooperation with the law firm of Jeff Anderson & Associates, disclosed the names of 16 men they mutually identified as being credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor while they were assigned as priests.

The disclosure of names is the result of discussions and sharing of information between the Diocese of New Ulm and Jeff Anderson & Associates, which both recognize that the disclosure of names is an important part of the healing process for many victims and survivors of abuse.

Of these 16 men, 13 are deceased and all but one has been previously named in media reports.

Four of the 16 men, J. Vincent Fitzgerald, Joseph (Louis) Heitzer, Rudolph Henrich and Harry Majerus, do not have credible accusations against them stemming from incidents reported to have occurred in the Diocese of New Ulm. However, the four men have been credibly accused of abuse in other dioceses and all four men worked at some point in what is now the Diocese of New Ulm.

The Diocese of New Ulm and Jeff Anderson & Associates will continue to work closely together to promote healing for victims and survivors and protect children and young people.

To find out more, please see the joint statement released on March 29, 2016.

These men have been identified as having credible accusations of abuse against them.
You may see a man’s assignment history by clicking on his name in the list below.

* Fr. Cletus Altermatt – deceased 1978
* Fr. Dennis Becker – removed from ministry in 2015
* Fr. Gordon Buckley – deceased 1985
* Fr. Robert Clark – removed from ministry in 2002
* Fr. J. Vincent Fitzgerald – deceased 2009
* Fr. John Gleason – deceased 1998
* Fr. Joseph (Louis) Heitzer – deceased 1969
* Fr. Rudolph Henrich – deceased 1992
* Fr. Harry Majerus – deceased 1995
* Fr. Francis Markey – deceased 2012
* Fr. William Marks – deceased 1979
* Fr. John Murphy – deceased 2001
* Fr. David Roney – deceased 2003
* Douglas Schleisman – laicized 1994
* Fr. Michael Skoblik – deceased 1989
* Fr. Charles Stark – deceased 1991

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