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 15, 2016

Priest gets more time to pay back money he took to feed gambling habit

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Clifford Ward
Chicago Tribune

The Roman Catholic priest convicted of stealing his parish’s money to support a gambling addiction no longer faces an April hearing to revoke his probation.

The Rev. John Regan had been scheduled for the probation revocation hearing in April because he has yet to repay the full amount — almost $300,000 — he stole from St. Walter Catholic Church in Roselle, where he served as the pastor until his arrest in 2009.

His attorney, Jack Donahue, told Judge John Kinsella at a Monday court hearing in DuPage County that he met with prosecutors last week and they agreed to cancel the hearing. In return, Regan will have a final reporting date in 2019, his attorney said.

Regan had been sentenced to a mix of probation, some jail time and work-release after pleading guilty to theft in 2011. The judge also had ordered Regan to work at a menial job to begin making restitution for the money he stole.

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.

Father Milton Eggerling, former St. James Society Member

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Pilot

3/7/2008, BY FATHER ROBERT M. O’GRADY

Bishop Robert Hennessey was the principal celebrant and homilist at the funeral of his longtime friend and fellow member of the St. James Society, Father Milton Eggerling. Father Eggerling died at Massachusetts General Hospital on Feb. 29 following complications from intestinal surgery.

A native of Orient, S.D., Father Eggerling came from a large family — he once commented that his family comprised 5 percent of the small town’s population. As you read about his various ministerial assignments it will be obvious he was genuinely a citizen of the world and no one diocese could contain him or his enthusiasm.

His parents Milton and Josephine (Ritter) raised the family just outside of Aberdeen, S.D., in the Sioux Falls Diocese. Father Eggerling was born in Orient March 18, 1921. Following education in local schools he attended a small local college and left to enter the Army, serving in World War II from 1940-1945. He returned to Creighton University in Omaha and completed college at the University of San Francisco. He entered St. Patrick, the San Francisco archdiocesan seminary, and Archbishop John Mitty ordained him to the priesthood for his home diocese, Sioux Falls on June 11, 1954 at the “city by the bay’s” St. Mary Cathedral.

He returned to the Midwest and began a series of varied assignments: St. Mary, Marion; and St. Joseph Cathedral, Sioux Falls, both in South Dakota; Corpus Christi, St. Paul, Minn.; Little Flower, Minot, N.D. then to the Newman Center at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, then back to Sioux Falls and Aberdeen. In 1976 he was incardinated as a priest of the Oakland diocese across the bay from San Francisco, he served at St. Felicitas, San Leandro and Corpus Christi, Piedmont.

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.

Gun-loving church youth mentor accused of creating horrifying ‘sex attic’ to abuse young boys<

SOUTH CAROLINA
Raw Story

BETHANIA PALMA MARKUS
15 MAR 2016

A former church youth mentor is being accused of sexually abusing two young boys, according to the Charlotte Observer.

Julio Andres “Andy” Castillo, 34, of South Carolina, is being accused of multiple counts of sexually abusing the two boys while they were under the age of 16. Castillo has been jailed without bond since February 29. Castillo met the boys at church, Episcopal Church of Our Saviour and also York Place, a place where troubled children received counseling. York Place closed in November.

According to prosecutors, Castillo had a very close relationship with the boys’ family, which include keys to their home and free access to the children.

The abuse went to such an extent that Castillo built a secret room in his attic especially to molest the children. The room included a bed with rings for rope, so he could tie them up, according to the Observer. The room was accessible only with a ladder.

“Sometimes (Castillo) would tie up his (the older boy) arms and legs during sexual abuse,” prosecutor Erin Joyner said. She also described Castillo as a “gun lover” with a weapons cache, and told the paper he carried a pistol on him.

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

Criminal charges against clergy mark an ‘heroic event’ in clergy sex abuse scandal

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

Stephen Baker was a Franciscan Friar, a follower of the first order that followed Francis of Assisi and his devotion to helping the poor.

He was also a known predator, a monster who molested upwards of hundreds of children. His supervisors knew about the horrific crimes and not only concealed it from police and school administrators, they continued to assign him to posts — including in schools — that would put him in direct contact with children, a grand jury determined.

On Tuesday morning Baker’s supervisors were charged with criminal conspiracy and child endangerment.

In a press conference at the University of Pittsburgh Johnstown, Attorney General Kathleen Kane announced the charges against Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61. All are members of the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception, which is based in Hollidaysburg, Blair County. …

During the press conference, one lone victims’ advocate stood outside in the rain with his homemade placards. Robert Hoatson, a former priest turned advocate who has worked with some of Baker’s victims, was overjoyed to hear that Kane had brought down criminal charges against the three friars.

“This is a heroic event in the history of clergy sex abuse,” Hoatson said. “We know that officials of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, the Franciscan Friars in Hollidaysburg, and many, many other religious leaders knew about this for many decades.”

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.

Note on hearing in trial for dissemination of reserved information and documents, 15.03.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 15 March 2016 – The director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J., informed accredited journalists late yesterday afternoon on the hearing that took place in the Vatican at 3.30 p.m., as part of the trial for dissemination of reserved information and documents. It was attended by the College of judges (Professors Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Piero Antonio Bonnet, Paolo Papanti-Pellettier and Venerando Marano) and the Promoter of Justice (Professors Gian Piero Milano and Roberto Zannotti), and the defendants Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, Nicola Maio and Emiliano Fittipaldi with their respective lawyers, whereas the defendant Gianluigi Nuzzi was absent, and his legal representative Roberto Palombi filed for “legitimate impediment”, since he is required to appear today before the criminal court in Milan in another trial. The Court rejected the claim, considering that the order for yesterday’s hearing was served on 7 March, declaring Mr. Nuzzi in contumacy and ordering the continuation of the proceedings. The Court has also acquired on record a letter to the Pope from Ms. Chaouqui in which she requested dispensation from pontifical secrecy, but it was not authorised in the absence of a response from the recipient.

The hearing continued for around three hours, with the cross-examination of the defendant Msgr. Vallejo Balda by the President, the Promoter of Justice and the counsel for the defence. The trial will resume tomorrow, Tuesday, from 10.30 a.m., and will continue in the afternoon.

Further hearings are scheduled for the cross-examination of the defendants on Friday 17 March in the afternoon, Monday 21 in the morning and Tuesday 22.

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

Church of England ‘will change’ after abuse report

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The Church of England has promised to change the way it handles sexual abuse claims after a report into alleged abuse of a young man by clergymen.

The abuse allegedly took place 40 years ago, and the man’s repeated attempts to get help from the Church resulted in “frustration and failure”, child protection expert Ian Elliott said.

His report said “very senior” church figures were reportedly told of abuse.

The Church accepted the recommendations of the “deeply uncomfortable” report.

The man has already received an “unreserved apology” and a “financial settlement”, the Church added.

Only a summary, conclusions and recommendations have been published, but the BBC has seen a copy of the full report.

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

Church of England figures ignored ‘sadistic’ abuse of 15-year-old boy by senior priest for 40 years, report says

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Caroline Mortimer @cjmortimer

Senior figures in the Church of England ignored the “sadistic” assault of a 15-year-old boy by a leading London vicar for 40 years, a new report has revealed.

The Church has said it will introduce a raft of changes in the way it handles sex abuse allegations against its clergy after the “deeply uncomfortable” independent report revealed the abuse of a teenage boy at the hands of Garth Moore in 1976.

Moore, who died in 1990, was a leading figure in the Church at the time and later became the chancellor of three dioceses and vicar of St Mary’s Abchurch in the City of London.

It has emerged the victim, identified as Survivor B, had disclosed “a tragic catalogue of exploitation and harm” to figures both inside and outside the Church over the years – but no firm action was taken.

Survivor B said when he told Michael Fisher – the leader of the Society of St Francis and suffragan bishop of St Germans in Cornwall who died in 2003 – he initiated an intense romantic friendship with the then 18-year-old which involved kissing but no penetrative sex.

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

Archbishop of Canterbury’s office criticised for ‘ignoring’ abuse complaints

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Martin Evans, Crime Correspondent 15 Mar 2016

A Church of England sex abuse victim was repeatedly snubbed when he attempted to raise the matter with the Archbishop of Canterbury’s office, a damning report has found.

The man, who was abused by two senior members of the clergy more than 30-years ago, attempted to alert Justin Welby on at least 18 occasions, both in writing and by telephone, but was persistently ignored, causing further pain and trauma.

An independent review into his case concluded there had been a string of “deeply disturbing” failures by senior Church of England figures to take his concerns seriously.

It revealed that he had repeatedly sought to bring the details to the attention of the Archbishop in 2015, but had been left “angry and frustrated” by the lack of response.

The review concluded: “The Archbishop of Canterbury, as head of the Church of England, is not in a position where he could be expected to reply personally to each safeguarding concern that is received by his office, no matter how deserving they may be.

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.

FACHTAG KINDESMISSBRAUCH

DEUTSCHLAND
Unabhangiger Beauftragter

15.03.2016

„Was muss geschehen, damit nichts geschieht?“

15. März 2016

Fachtagung UBSKM gemeinsam mit DJI 12–17 Uhr
UBSKM -Jahresempfang 19–22 Uhr

Bärensaal im Alten Stadthaus, Jüdenstraße 42, 10178 Berlin

Die Prävention vor sexualisierter Gewalt an Kindern und Jugendlichen in Deutschland hat sich in den vergangenen Jahren vielfach verbessert. Dennoch müssen wir das Wissen über verbesserte Schutzmöglichkeiten in noch konsequenteres Handeln umsetzen. Der „Fachtag Kindesmissbrauch“ am 15. März 2016 bietet einen guten Rahmen für Gespräche und Diskussionen.

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.

Pädophilie-Skandal erschüttert französische Kirche

FRANKREICH
religion.org

[Pedophile scandal in the French Catholic Church.]

Die katholische Kirche in Frankreich wird von einem neuen Pädophilie-Skandal erschüttert. Der Lyoner Kardinal Philippe Barbarin soll Kindesmissbrauch durch Priester verheimlicht haben.

Premierminister Manuel Valls rief Barbarin am Dienstag dazu auf, „seiner Verantwortung gerecht zu werden“. „Ich erwarte nicht nur Worte, sondern auch Taten“, sagte der Sozialist im Sender RMC. Dem Kardinal und der Diözese der ostfranzösischen Großstadt wird vorgeworfen, Fälle von Kindesmissbrauch durch Priester nicht gemeldet zu haben. Ausgangspunkt des Skandals ist der Fall eines Priesters, der zwischen 1986 und 1991 Pfadfinder sexuell missbraucht haben soll, aber erst Ende August 2015 seines Amtes enthoben wurde. Im Jänner wurde ein Ermittlungsverfahren gegen den geständigen Geistlichen eröffnet.

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Molestation investigation of former Warren JFK friar brings charges

PENNSYLVANIA
WFMJ

HARRISBURG, Pa. –
Three religious leaders face criminal charges for taking part in an alleged conspiracy that allowed more than 80 victims to be sexually abused by Franciscan friar who once served as an athletic trainer, head baseball coach, and a religious teacher at Warren John F. Kennedy High School.

The allegations outlined in a Pennsylvania Grand Jury report issued Tuesday are linked to Brother Stephen Baker’s assignments in Pennsylvania. However the grand jury reports that during his 33 year service with the Franciscans, he was assigned to Warren JFK from 1977 to 1978 and again from 1982 to 1992.

In 2013, Baker was living in a Pennsylvania monastery when used a knife to take his own life.

That same year it was revealed that 11 students who attended JFK High School between 1986 and 1990, had received the financial settlements for crimes committed against them as children, allegedly by Brother Baker.

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Newcastle Anglican Bishop Greg Thompson has welcomed a royal commission inquiry into the Hunter

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE MCCARTHY
March 15, 2016

THE Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will hold a two-week public hearing into Newcastle Anglican diocese in June to expose how more than 30 child sex offenders preyed on children for decades, and whether they formed a possible network with offenders from outside the church.

Newcastle Anglican Bishop Greg Thompson said he welcomed the hearing, from June 20, and hoped it would be held 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.

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

The hearing comes after a tumultuous six years in which the diocese has named a number of former priests and a former “boy bishop” as sexual abusers, has defrocked others after hearings into sexual abuse allegations, has seen a number of youth and church workers convicted of offences, and has issued a number of formal apologies for the diocese’s “shameful” past.

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.

In ‘groundbreaking’ case, Franciscan friars charged with allowing abuse of at least 80 kids

PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Post

By Julie Zauzmer March 15

In a first-of-its-kind case, prosecutors in Pennsylvania announced charges on Tuesday against three Franciscan friars who they say facilitated the abuse of dozens of children.

Prosecutors say that all three men knew about sexual abuse allegations against Brother Stephen Baker dating back to the 1980s but that the three friars continued to place Baker in jobs that gave him access to children, up until 2010.

Confronted with a lawsuit that made the accusations public, Baker killed himself in 2013, at age 62, in the monastery where he lived. On Monday, state prosecutors announced that three men who supervised him — Brothers Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Giles A. Schinelli, 73 — are each charged with one count of endangering the welfare of children and one count of criminal conspiracy.

“These men knew there was a child predator in their organization. Yet they continued to put him in positions where he had countless opportunities to prey upon children,” Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane said in a statement. “Their silence resulted in immeasurable pain and suffering for so many victims. These men turned a blind eye to the innocent children they were trusted to protect.”

Kane’s office also conducted an investigation into the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese in Pennsylvania and produced a damning grand jury report earlier this month. That report chronicled alleged abuses committed by 35 priests, dating to the 1950s, in wrenching detail. But it did not recommend charges against anyone. Most of the priests named in the report have died, and the statute of limitations has expired in some cases.

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Pennsylvania religious leaders charged with allowing sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Mail (UK)

By Barbara Goldberg

March 15 (Reuters) – Three members of a Franciscan religious order were criminally charged with conspiracy on Tuesday for letting a friar who was a known predator hold jobs in which he sexually abused more than 80 children, Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane said.

A grand jury found that the leaders knew of abuse allegations against Brother Stephen Baker as early as 1988, yet gave him Catholic high school jobs that allowed him contact with children, Kane said.

Baker, 62, committed suicide in 2013 by stabbing himself in the heart.

Three of his supervisors at the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception, were charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of children and criminal conspiracy. They are Giles Schinelli, 73, Robert D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony Criscitelli, 61, each of whom served as a minister provincial at the order, based in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania.

“These men turned a blind eye to the innocent children they were trusted to protect,” Kane said. “They were more concerned with protecting the image of the order.”

The charges were bought weeks after the same grand jury found that over four decades, 50 Roman Catholic priests abused hundreds of children while bishops covered up their actions. No criminal charges, however, were filed in that case, in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, because the alleged incidents were too old to be prosecuted, Kane said.

In the Franciscan case, the grand jury found the three ministers provincial had “exclusive and total control over the assignment of personnel,” including Baker, Kane said. Despite a 1988 sex abuse allegation against Baker, they allowed him to be assigned in 1992 to Bishop McCort Catholic High School in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, without warning school officials.

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Sex abuse survivors continue evidence at royal commission hearing

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Survivors of child sexual abuse will continue their evidence at a royal commission examining what happens in criminal trials where an accused faces multiple charges allegedly committed against a number of children.

It’s the second day of the hearing which has already heard one survivor witness say that in a trial where he was the sole witness he was made to feel as if he was the guilty one.

The man referred to as CDR was a witness in one of six trials in 2003 and 2004 which saw Marist brother John Maguire defend multiple allegations of sexually molesting young boarders at St Joseph’s College in Sydney.

Each complaint was tried separately and juries were not informed of the other cases. Maguire was found not guilty in all trials.

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Sadistic sexual assaults ignored by Church of England – report

UNITED KINGDOM
RT

Senior figures in the Church of England failed to act after hearing about a sadistic assault, prompting the church to make sweeping reforms in the way sex abuse cases are dealt with.

An independent review, commissioned by the church, found “deeply disturbing” failures by those in positions of power who failed to act after hearing reports of sexual assault.

Over a period of four decades, senior members of the clergy ignored a survivor’s repeated disclosures of a sexual assault, the report alleges. It also criticizes the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby for failing to acknowledge the case.

The church said the report is “embarrassing and uncomfortable.”

Among the report’s conclusions is the need for training for those who receive disclosures of abuse so they can be properly recorded and appropriate action taken.

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Church of England reviews anti-abuse rules

UNITED KINGDOM
GlobalPost

Agence France-Presse on Mar 15, 2016

The Church of England on Tuesday said it would change the way it handled sexual abuse allegations in response to an independent review of a case that found “a tragic catalogue of exploitation and harm”.

“We should have been swifter to listen, to believe and to act. This report is deeply uncomfortable for the Church of England,” Bishop of Crediton Sarah Mullally said in the Church’s official statement.

“This report has published a series of important recommendations. The Archbishop of Canterbury has seen these recommendations and will ensure they are implemented as quickly as possible,” she said.

The review was commissioned by the Church of England in September 2015 following allegations made by a man named only as “Survivor B” against a cleric, “Rev A”.

The recommendations made in the report by the Elliott Review stressed the need for training of people who might receive abuse complaints, the importance of a written record of allegations and of not giving priority to financial considerations.

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There Will Always Be A Reason To Not Speak Up About Abuse

UNITED STATES
Hevria

BY ASHER LOVY • MARCH 15, 2016

Recently, Newsweek published an article detailing the ongoing abuse of children, both physically and sexually, at various Chabad schools, most notably, Oholei Torah, in Crown Heights. The article was devastating, both in subject and in scope, chronicling decades of abuse, cover-ups, and threats against victims. You’d think that anyone with a soul reading that would be horrified, that their thoughts would immediately be with the survivors and their wellbeing. You’d be wrong.

The outrage was immediate. Newsweek is an antisemitic source. They got some facts wrong about how Chassidus works. They made us sound uneducated. Or the worst ones were actually, we agree with your cause but not with your methods—in other words, we acknowledge the problem, but we’re not going to do anything about it because you published the story in Newsweek. A friend sent me a link to a COLLive.om article which basically summed up all of those points, which I found utterly devestating.

Here’s what makes me so mad about these responses.

For all the outrage mustered in response to all of these articles, you’ll never see outrage directed at the fact that the religious media refuses to cover abuse. You’ll never see this level of communal outrage at the fact that religious institutions knowingly cover up physical and sexual abuse. You’ll never see this level of condemnation leveled against the people who bully and threaten victims of abuse into shutting up, lest they lose their jobs, homes, families, shidduch prospects, or any future standing within the community.

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‘They owed a duty of care’: 3 Franciscan friars charged with allowing child sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Christian Alexandersen | calexandersen@pennlive.com

JOHNSTOWN —Brother Stephen Baker molested over 100 children at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown. And when victims came forward and allegations were made, Baker’s fellow Franciscan friars allegedly protected him.

Attorney General Kathleen Kane announced charges Tuesday against three former friars with endangering the welfare of children and conspiracy. With the help of three friars, Kane said Baker was able to continue molesting children.

The former friars being charged include Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61. At one time, they were all members of the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception.

Baker committed suicide in 2013. The three friars being charged are retired and live outside of Pennsylvania.

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Bishop embarrassed by report into CofE’s handling of abuse allegation

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Tue 15 Mar 2016
By Antony Bushfield

The Church of England’s been told to change the way it deals with allegations of abuse after a damming report found its response to one case was “simply not acceptable”.

The Elliott Review was commissioned in September 2015 to look into alleged sexual abuse committed against a man during the 1970s.

His claims were made to a number of different people on separate occasions through the intervening years, both within and outside the Church, but no action was taken.

The survivor said he had “not received a response which he felt adequately addressed his needs”.

Senior members of clergy questioned said they did not remember the allegations being made, something, the report says, is “hard to accept”.

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Church of England to change abuse allegations process

UNITED KINGDOM
BT

The Church of England is to introduce a raft of changes on how it handles sex abuse allegations following a critical independent review into a historical case.

A senior Anglican figure said the church was “horrified” to read the “deeply uncomfortable” report into the abuse suffered decades ago by the victim when he was young.

It emerged the victim, identified as Survivor B, had disclosed “a tragic catalogue of exploitation and harm” to figures both inside and outside of the church over the years but no firm action was taken.

He felt ignored, had lost his faith and harboured feelings of frustration and failure following the many bids he made to gain help from the church, the review noted.

Survivor B has since been offered an unreserved apology and a settlement amid further efforts by the church to repair the damage caused to him.

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Lawyer Alex Lewenberg could be struck off after telling sex abuse victim not to point finger at a fellow Jew

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 15, 2016

Tom Cowie

He’s a pugnacious solicitor who has made a living representing some of Melbourne’s most notorious underworld figures.

Now Alex Lewenberg faces possible disbarment over allegedly telling a child sex abuse victim to stay quiet.

The colourful criminal lawyer has survived being bashed, shot at and stabbed with a sword from a suit of armour during a home invasion.

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Ex-Wilson youth pastor pleads guilty to statutory rape

TENNESSEE
Tennessean

Andy Humbles, ahumbles@tennessean.com March 14, 2016

A former Lebanon youth pastor pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of statutory rape by an authority figure.

Christopher Douglas Ross, 44, was sentenced to six years — three years on each count to run consecutively — and was taken into custody after his plea in a Wilson County courtroom with the victim and her parents present.

Ross was initially charged with 10 counts of statutory rape by an authority figure in January 2015 while a pastor at Fairview Church, where he oversaw a youth group in Lebanon.

The Tennessean generally does not name victims of sexual assault. But in this case, the victim approached The Tennessean through the district attorney’s office about her willingness to speak out about her case.

Courtney Greene, now 20, was 14 when Ross began making advances that included a kiss on church property, according to the state’s evidence against him. Sexual contact began when the she was 15 and Ross was 39, according to the state’s evidence.

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Former youth pastor pleads guilty to statutory rape

TENNESSEE
The Eagle

Associated Press

LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — A former Lebanon youth pastor has been sentenced to spend six years behind bars after pleading guilty to two counts of statutory rape by an authority figure.

The Tennessean (http://tnne.ws/1RLHV0j ) reports that 44-year-old Christopher Douglas Ross of Mt. Juliet was sentenced to three years on each of the two counts Monday in a Wilson County courtroom.

Ross, who oversaw a youth group while a pastor at Fairview Church, had been initially charged with 10 counts of statutory rape by an authority figure in January 2015.

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Pennsylvania Prosecutors File Charges Against Three Retired Priests

PENNSYLVANIA
Wall Street Journal

By SCOTT CALVERT and KRIS MAHER
March 15, 2016

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane announced felony criminal charges Tuesday against three now-retired leaders of a Franciscan order in central Pennsylvania, saying they conspired to cover up a serial predator’s sexual abuse of dozens of students at a Catholic high school in Johnstown, Pa.

Special agents and prosecutors on Monday filed criminal charges against the three men—Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61—for allegedly taking part in a conspiracy to endanger the welfare of children, Ms. Kane said Tuesday.

Each of the three men is charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of children and criminal conspiracy. The charges focus on assaults at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown by the late Brother Stephen Baker, from 1992 to 2010.

The attorney general’s office said it spent two years investigating the allegations surrounding Mr. Baker, whose death in 2013 was ruled a suicide. Investigators took the matter to a statewide investigating grand jury in 2014. The grand jury heard witness testimony and reviewed more than 200 exhibits, the attorney general’s office said.

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French PM urges cardinal to act on child sex abuse scandal

FRANCE
France 24

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls on Tuesday urged a cardinal, accused of covering up the sexual abuse of young boys by a priest, to “take responsibility” in a case which has deeply embarrassed the French Church.

Cardinal Philippe Barbarin hit back, insisting at a press conference: “I have never covered up paedophilia.”

The latest abuse scandal to hit the Catholic Church erupted when priest Bernard Preynat was charged in January, after victims came forward with claims he had sexually abused Scouts between 1986 and 1991.

Prosecutors say he has admitted the charges.

The victims have filed complaints against several senior officials in the Lyon diocese in eastern France, including Lyon archbishop Barbarin, accusing them of being aware of the abuse but failing to report the priest.

Valls told BFM TV that without seeking to take the place of the Church or judges looking at the case, “The only message I have… is that (Barbarin) must take responsibility, speak and act.”

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The Latest: Franciscan order ‘deeply saddened’ by charges

PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Post

By Associated Press March 15

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. — The Latest on charges against leaders of a Franciscan religious order over an abusive friar.(all times local):

11 a.m.

A Franciscan religious order in Pennsylvania says it is “deeply saddened” to learn of criminal charges against three leaders who are accused of allowing a friar who was a known sexual predator to have access to children.

Charges against the three, including child endangerment, were announced Tuesday by the state attorney general following a nearly two-year grand jury investigation.

The three were the successive leaders of a Franciscan order near Hollidaysburg from 1986 to 2010. All now live outside Pennsylvania.

The order issued a statement saying it cooperated with the investigation. It says it “extends its most sincere apologies to the victims and to the communities who have been harmed.”

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Renowned Latino theologian accused of abuse dies

TEXAS
Religion News Service

David Gibson | March 15, 2016

(RNS) The Rev. Virgilio Elizondo, a Mexican-American Catholic priest described as “the father of U.S. Latino religious thought,” has died of unknown causes nearly a year after he was accused in a lawsuit of sexually abusing a boy 30 years ago.

Elizondo, a native of San Antonio who taught at the University of Notre Dame, was found dead in San Antonio Monday morning, according to authorities and media reports.

No cause of death was given though a longtime friend and administrative assistant, Janie Dillard, told the San Antonio Express-News that the priest, who was 80, “died of a broken heart.”

Another report on Tuesday (March 15) cited church sources saying Elizondo had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller said in a statement that he was “stunned by the news” of Elizondo’s death, which he said was “an occasion for great sorrow, as his death was sudden and unexpected.”

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Father Virgilio Elizondo, former rector of San Fernando, has died

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

By Elaine Ayala Updated Monday, March 14, 2016

Father Virgilio Elizondo, a well-known theologian, professor at the University of Notre Dame and former rector of San Fernando Cathedral, died Monday, according to several sources.

The Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office verified his death late Monday night, as did a longtime friend and administrative assistant Janie Dillard.

Archdiocese of San Antonio officials did not return calls, nor did several other Catholic officials who knew Elizondo well.

Widely considered the founder of U.S. Latino theology, Elizondo had been living under a cloud of suspicion after a lawsuit filed in Bexar County last May accused him of sexually abusing an unidentified boy more than 30 years ago.

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Fr. Virgilio Elizondo Reportedly Takes His Own Life

TEXAS
The Rivard Report

Fr. Virgilio Elizondo, one of San Antonio’s most accomplished and beloved Catholic priests whose work brought him recognition in Latin America and Europe and an esteemed faculty position at the University of Notre Dame, reportedly died of a self-inflicted gunshot at his home Monday afternoon, according to sources in the Catholic community.

Friends spoke of being devastated and in disbelief as the news made its way through Elizondo’s large circle in the city. Elizondo, 80, a Westside native and the son of Mexican immigrants, became a beacon for Catholics and non-Catholics inspired by his deep appreciation of mestizo history, culture and spirituality. His own roots gave him a grounded understanding as a theologian of what the poor and oppressed throughout Latin America were experiencing under the rule and repression of military dictatorships in the 1960s, 70s and 80s. For Elizondo, liberation theology that swept the continent in those decades was one and the same with his mestizo-rooted theology.

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Grand jury: Conspiracy involving 3 religious leaders allowed sexual abuse of more than 80 children

PENNSYLVANIA
Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane

JOHNSTOWN — Three religious leaders were criminally charged today for taking part in an alleged conspiracy that allowed more than 80 victims to be sexually abused by Stephen Baker, a proven child predator, and put hundreds of other children in danger.

The charges against Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61, were announced today by Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane, who addressed the media at a news conference at the University of Pittsburgh’s Johnstown campus.

“These men knew there was a child predator in their organization. Yet they continued to put him in positions where he had countless opportunities to prey upon children,” Attorney General Kane said. “Their silence resulted in immeasurable pain and suffering for so many victims. These men turned a blind eye to the innocent children they were trusted to protect.”

Schinelli, D’Aversa and Criscitelli are members of the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception, which is based in Hollidaysburg, Blair County. They are each charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of children and criminal conspiracy.

The three men all served as minsters provincial for the Third Order Regulars, or T.O.R., meaning they had exclusive and total control over the assignment of personnel within the organization. In other words, they made the final call on where to assign Baker, who was officially assigned for eight years to Bishop McCort Catholic High School.

The Office of Attorney General spent two years investigating the allegations surrounding Baker, whose 2013 death was ruled a suicide. The office’s investigators in April 2014 took the matter to a statewide investigating grand jury, which heard testimony from a number of witnesses and reviewed more than 200 exhibits.

The grand jury issued a presentment recommending the criminal charges filed today. The jurors found the three ministers provincial engaged in efforts to protect the image and reputation of the T.O.R. instead of acting in the best interests of the children in their care. The grand jury also found leaders of the organization knew in 1988 of a sexual abuse allegation involving Baker. Yet he was assigned to Bishop McCort in 1992 and allowed to be in contact with children without a forewarning to school officials.

The filing of the criminal charges comes two weeks after Attorney General Kane released the grand jury’s other findings — a 147-page report that detailed the sexual abuse hundreds of children endured for decades at the hands of religious leaders and priests associated with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

Attorney General Kane stressed the grand jury’s review of the Baker matter revealed conduct similar to that detailed in the grand jury’s report. Documentation proved leaders of the T.O.R. on at least eight occasions transferred Franciscan Friars within their organization to other locations following sexual abuse allegations involving children, the grand jury found.

“The evidence shows the organization’s leaders acted callously when dealing with members accused of sexual abuse,” Kane said. “No reports were ever made to law enforcement. As the grand jury found, the ultimate priority was to avoid public scrutiny at all costs.”

Baker alleged to have groped victims as Bishop McCort athletic trainer

The grand jury learned that Baker was assigned in 1992 to Bishop McCort Catholic High School. He taught religion and worked as an athletic trainer for the school’s sports programs. Baker was assigned to the school until 2000. For several years thereafter, he regularly returned to participate in school events. Victims further stated that Baker had access to Bishop McCort facilities until 2010.

Baker is accused of molesting more than 80 children from Bishop McCort between 1992 and 2010.

Baker was allowed to “treat” children as an athletic trainer despite no formal training in the field of sports medicine. Victim statements detailed incidents involving Baker in which he would grope the genitals of male children and digitally penetrate their anuses, the grand jury found.

The alleged conduct often occurred on the grounds of Bishop McCort and a related training facility. Two victims reported they were sexually assaulted on the Bishop McCort grounds after Baker was officially removed from the school.

The grand jury reviewed evidence obtained during the execution of a search warrant on the grounds of the Saint Bernardine Monastery in Hollidaysburg. Documents recovered during the search showed the T.O.R. knew in 1988 of a sexual abuse allegation involving Baker.

Schinelli, the minister provincial from 1986 to 1994, sent Baker for a psychological evaluation and was told Baker was not to have one-on-one contact with children, but nonetheless later assigned him to Bishop McCort, where he had regular contact with children, the grand jury found.

D’Aversa, the minister provincial from 1994 to 2002, allegedly failed to notify school officials and law enforcement of the reason that Baker was removed from the school in 2000. His removal followed what D’Aversa believed was a new, credible allegation of child sexual abuse, according to the grand jury. D’Aversa later appointed Baker vocations director of the T.O.R.

Under this appointment, Baker conducted overnight youth retreats throughout the United States. Baker in 2008 was assigned as a volunteer trainer at Mt. Aloysius College. His position allowed him to sexually offend three additional children, the grand jury discovered. The grand jurors found this abuse occurred because Baker was kept in active ministry, which allowed him to engage the public.

Criscitelli, the minister provincial from 2002 to 2010, further allowed Baker access to children by allowing him to work at a shopping mall. He also knew Baker required “safety plans” advising no contact with minors, yet Criscitelli signed such plans while residing in Minnesota. Meanwhile, Baker lived unsupervised in Pennsylvania. He also lived at one time with another accused child predator, the grand jury found.

The grand jury also reviewed evidence that Baker in the 1980s molested at least a dozen students while assigned as a teacher and sports trainer at a high school in Ohio.

The grand jury further learned the T.O.R.’s leaders had considerable experience in hiding members of the organization who were accused of sexual abuse. The evidence allegedly showed the allegations of abuse were never reported to law enforcement.

Instead, the accused members were transferred to other locations throughout the country. Meanwhile, the T.O.R.’s leaders were routinely in contact with attorneys and insurance companies to assess liability and potential payouts related to sexual abuse victims, the grand jury stated.

Hotline remains active for victims of abuse

Schinelli, D’Aversa and Criscitelli all live out of state. Investigators expect their preliminary arraignments to be scheduled in the coming days.

The Office of Attorney General assumed jurisdiction of this matter upon a formal conflict referral by Cambria County District Attorney Kelly Callihan. The matter was presented to the grand jury and will be prosecuted by Deputy Attorney General Daniel J. Dye of the Office of Attorney General’s Criminal Prosecutions Section. The office’s Bureau of Criminal Investigations also spent a significant amount of time gathering the evidence that was presented to the grand jury.

The Attorney General’s investigators also were aided greatly by behavioral experts with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Critical Incident Response Group, Behavioral Analysis Unit.

Attorney General Kane thanked all who took part in the investigation for their commitment and hard work.

The Office of Attorney General earlier this month established a hotline — 888-538-8541 — for people to submit information related to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown. Attorney General Kane encouraged people with information relating to Baker and the T.O.R. to call the hotline. It is being manned by investigators who have worked directly on the case.

“It is our hope that people with information will continue to reach out to us,” Attorney General Kane said. “As we have stressed in recent weeks, this is an ongoing investigation. One call could provide a new investigative lead. At the same time, it is our hope that we have created an avenue for the victims who have lived with this pain for years to come forward.”

(A person charged with a crime is presumed innocent until proven guilty.)

# # #

Supplemental materials :

Grand jury presentment

Schinelli complaint

D’Aversa complaint

Criscitelli complaint

Timeline created by FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit

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3 Franciscan leaders charged in sexual abuse at Pennsylvania school

PENNSYLVANIA
Fox News

AP

Three leaders of a Franciscan religious order allowed a friar who was a known sexual predator to take on jobs, including as a high school athletic trainer, that enabled him to molest more than 100 children, according to a grand jury report released Tuesday.

Giles Schinelli, 73; Robert D’Aversa, 69; and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61, were successively the provincial ministers of a religious order of the Roman Catholic Church in western Pennsylvania from 1986 to 2010. In that role, each had the power to assign and supervisor the order’s members.

Each was charged with conspiracy and endangering the welfare of children. All three now live outside Pennsylvania, and prosecutors said their arraignments would be scheduled in the coming days.

The order says it will issue a statement later Tuesday addressing the accusations, and a message was left with a lawyer for the organization. It’s unclear where the three men live and whether they have attorneys who could comment on the charges.

“These men knew there was a child predator in their organization, yet they continued to put him in positions where he had countless opportunities to prey upon children,” said Attorney General Kathleen Kane, who announced the charges.

Brother Stephen Baker, the friar at the center of the abuse allegations, killed himself in 2013 — with two knives to the heart — after church officials in Youngstown, Ohio, announced they were settling lawsuits by 11 former students who said Baker abused them at schools in Ohio from 1986 to 1990.

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Sex abuse case review highlights damning Church of England failures

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

Ruth Gledhill CHRISTIAN TODAY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR 15 March

The Church of England failed to act over “credible” claims of sadistic sexual abuse disclosed repeatedly by a survivor over 40 years.

The Church, of which the Queen is Supreme Governor, is to change way it deals with abuse claims after a damning review published today that dicloses how at least three bishops failed to act after they were told.

The church described the review “embarrassing and uncomfortable”.

The office of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, is criticised for failing to make a meaningful response as the survivor tried repeatedly through 2015 to get some action taken against his abuser.

Referring to the survivor as “B” and the perpetrator as “Rev A”, the Church said today: “The reports of abuse that B has made are credible. They contain a tragic catalogue of exploitation and harm. The many attempts made by B to secure help from the Church within which he had grown up, resulted in frustration and failure. This increased his sense of anger at what had happened to him. He felt ignored.

“His loss of faith is another tragic consequence of the experiences that he was subject to. The impact on his health appears to have been significant and continues today. Despite all of this, B retains a desire to see practice in the Church greatly improve. He wants to ensure that others who present in a similar way to himself and who are seeking to be heard, helped, and healed by the Church, will receive a fundamentally different response than he did.”

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Grand jury: 3 religious leaders allowed sexual abuse of more than 80 children

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

JOHNSTOWN — Three religious leaders were criminally charged Tuesday for taking part in an alleged conspiracy that allowed more than 80 victims to be sexually abused by Stephen Baker, a proven child predator, and put hundreds of other children in danger.

Attorney General Kathleen announced the charges against Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61, were announced by Attorney General Kathleen Kane during a news conference at Pitt-Johnstown’s Heritage Hall.

Baker was a former trainer at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown.

“These men knew there was a child predator in their organization. Yet they continued to put him in positions where he had countless opportunities to prey upon children,” Kane said. “Their silence resulted in immeasurable pain and suffering for so many victims. These men turned a blind eye to the innocent children they were trusted to protect.”

Schinelli, D’Aversa and Criscitelli are members of the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception, which is based in Hollidaysburg, Blair County. They are each charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of children and criminal conspiracy.

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BREAKING: Conspiracy involving 3 religous leaders allowed sex abuse of more than 80 kids, grand jury says

PENNSYLVANIA
WGAL

PENNSYLVANIA —Attorney General Kathleen Kane has charged three religious leaders in the Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

Kane says the men took part in an alleged conspiracy that allowed more than 80 victims to be sexually abused by Stephen Baker, a proven child predator, and put hundreds of other children in danger.

The charges are against Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony Criscitelli, 61. The men are a part of the Franciscan Friars in Hollidaysburg, Blair County. They are each charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of children and criminal conspiracy.

According to the attorney general’s office, “these men knew there was a child predator in their organization,” Stephen Baker. Baker has passed away.

The announcement comes after a report that alleged sex abuse within the diocese.

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3 Franciscan leaders charged in abuse at central Pennsylvania school

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Three current and former superiors of a Franciscan religious order face felony charges for allegedly conspiring to enable a serial predator to sexually assault more than 100 Catholic high school students in Johnstown and elsewhere as part of an even wider trail of devastation across multiple states and decades.

The state charges announced today represent one of the broadest-ever drives to hold the Roman Catholic hierarchy to account in any American criminal court for the sexual abuse of minors by those under their supervision.

Filed by the state attorney general’s office, the charges were recommended by the same statewide grand jury that released a report two weeks ago blasting the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown for decades of covering up sexual abuse by more than 50 priests and other church leaders.

But the Altoona-Johnstown report resulted in no criminal charges due to what prosecutors said were the time constraints of the statute of limitations. In this case, however, the grand jury did find cause to allege a years-long conspiracy on the part of leaders of the Blair County-based Province of the Immaculate Conception of the Franciscan Friar, Third Order Regular.

The trio are each charged with one count of endangering the welfare of children and criminal conspiracy, which are third-degree felonies.

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Three diocese leaders allowed predator priest to continue abusing children: Attorney General

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

JOHNSTOWN — Three Catholic leaders from the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese are facing criminal charges for their part in an alleged conspiracy that allowed more than 80 victims to be sexually abused by a known child predator.

That predator, Stephen Baker, was a member of the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception, which is based in Hollidaysburg, Blair County. He killed himself in 2013.

Assigned for a time to work at Bishop McCort Catholic High School in Johnstown, investigators said Baker is accused of molesting 80 children there. Despite allegations of abuse, he continued to be assigned duties — including leading overnight retreats across the country — that investigators say put hundreds of children in danger.

The state Attorney General’s office Tuesday announced that church officials who gave Baker those assignments — Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61 — have each been charged with endangering the welfare of children and conspiracy.

“These men knew there was a child predator in their organization. Yet they continued to put him in positions where he had countless opportunities to prey upon children,” said Attorney General Kathleen Kane, who announced the charges

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Elliott Review

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

March 2016

Summary and background

A review of the case of Rev A was commissioned in September 2015. This followed the disclosure of alleged sexual abuse committed by Rev A on Survivor B, decades ago, when he was a young person. B also reported that he had disclosed this abuse to a number of different people on separate occasions through the intervening years, both within and outside the Church. On each occasion, B reported that he had not received a response which he felt adequately addressed his needs. B also reported two other allegations of abuse – one by a senior church figure, (Brother C).

The National Safeguarding Adviser, Graham Tilby, along with the diocese of London, formally commissioned CCPAS (Churches Child Protection Advisory Service) to undertake the review to establish what lessons could be drawn from an independent examination of the case.

CCPAS engaged Ian Elliott, Safeguarding Consultant, with whom they have a joint working agreement, to undertake the review to establish what lessons could be drawn from an independent examination of the case.

In December the Church of England issued a statement about the review in response to a newspaper interview with the survivor, offering an unreserved apology and confirming that a settlement had been reached with the survivor. The Church’s response is still ongoing and further details will be released at a later stage.

Response

A senior woman in the Church of England, the Bishop of Crediton, Sarah Mullally, received the report, at the request of Survivor B. Read her response to the report here.

Conclusions:

1. The reports of abuse that B has made are credible. They contain a tragic catalogue of exploitation and harm. The many attempts made by B to secure help from the Church within which he had grown up, resulted in frustration and failure. This increased his sense of anger at what had happened to him. He felt ignored.

2. His loss of faith is another tragic consequence of the experiences that he was subject to. The impact on his health appears to have been significant and continues today. Despite all of this, B retains a desire to see practice in the Church greatly improve. He wants to ensure that others who present in a similar way to himself and who are seeking to be heard, helped, and healed by the Church, will receive a fundamentally different response than he did.

3. The expectation that a survivor of abuse would have in contacting the Church, would be shaped by the policy documents that it has produced. As has already been stated, the reviewer holds the main policy document for the Church in high regard. Unfortunately, practice in this case does not comply with what is contained in this policy. It falls short of it in that it did not place the pastoral needs of the survivor in a position of priority. Financial interests were allowed to impact practice.

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Elliott Review findings

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

15 March 2016

The Bishop of Crediton, Sarah Mullally, has today responded to, at the request of the survivor, the findings and recommendations of a report – the Elliott Review – into alleged sexual abuse committed by senior figures in the Church of England.

“I was horrified to hear and read of the abuse suffered by the survivor in this case. It has clearly devastated his life. I apologise profusely for the failings of the Church towards him, and for the horrific abuse he suffered. It has taken him years of heartache and distress to get his story heard and believed by those in authority and it is clear he has been failed in many ways over a long period of time. We should have been swifter to listen, to believe and to act. This report is deeply uncomfortable for the Church of England.

“I know we have made some progress but we still have so much to learn and to do, and we need to do it quickly. I cannot imagine what it costs survivors to come forward, and we owe it to them to act swiftly and compassionately. I am humbled by the fact the survivor in this case has persisted and is still willing to give his time to try and ensure we learn these lessons.

“This report has published a series of important recommendations. The Archbishop of Canterbury has seen these recommendations and will ensure they are implemented as quickly as possible.

“How we respond to those who have survived abuse in any form, whether as a child or an adult, is a measure of our humanity, compassion and of the Church’s mission in the world.”

Read the background and full recommendations to the Elliott Review

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Kane: 3 Franciscan officials charged for allowing ‘predator’ access to kids

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED AND DEBRA ERDLEY | Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Attorney General Kathleen Kane on Tuesday accused three Franciscan Friars officials responsible for personnel assignments of allowing a child predator in the order to sexually abuse about 80 victims and put hundreds of other children in jeopardy

The so-called “ministers provincial” for the order “turned a blind eye to the innocent children they were entrusted to protect,” Kane said at a news conference. The charges stem from a two-year investigation of allegations against Brother Stephen Baker, who killed himself in 2013 by stabbing himself in the heart. His death was ruled a suicide.

A statewide grand jury reviewed evidence obtained through a search warrant executed in June 2015 at the Saint Bernadine Monastery in Hollidaysburg, where Baker lived.

The three men, who now live out of state, were charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of children and one count each of criminal conspiracy.

Kane’s office identified them as Giles A. Schinelli, 73, Robert J. D’Aversa, 69, and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61. Their preliminary arraignments will be scheduled over the next few days, investigators said.

Kane herself is a criminal defendant facing charges in an unrelated case of perjury, obstruction of justice and official oppression in Montgomery County. She maintains her innocence.

A statewide grand jury report found the three ministers for the “Third Order Regulars” of the Franciscans engaged in efforts to protect the image and reputation of the order at the expense of kids. Leaders of the organization knew of a sexual abuse allegation against Baker as early as 1988, yet he was assigned to Bishop McCort Catholic High School in 1992 without any warning to school officials, the grand jury said.

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Damning report reveals Church of England’s failure to act on abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent
@harrietsherwood
Tuesday 15 March 2016

The Church of England is to make far-reaching changes to the way it deals with cases of sex abuse following a damning independent report that details how senior church figures failed to act upon repeated disclosures of a sadistic assault.

The first independent review commissioned by the church into its handling of a sex abuse case highlights the “deeply disturbing” failure of those in senior positions to record or take action on the survivor’s disclosures over a period of almost four decades. The church acknowledged the report was “embarrassing and uncomfortable”.

The Guardian understands that among those told of the abuse were three bishops and a senior clergyman later ordained as a bishop. None of them are named in the report.

The review also criticises the office of Justin Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, for failing to respond meaningfully to repeated efforts by the survivor throughout 2015 to bring his case to the church leader’s attention.

The review’s conclusions were released on Tuesday as the government-appointed inquiry into child sex abuse prepares to examine hundreds of thousands of files relating to the abuse of children and vulnerable adults within the church. Welby has said that abuse by church figures and within other institutions has been “rampant”.

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‘I told so many bishops’: survivor tells of system that protected priest

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent
@harrietsherwood
Tuesday 15 March 2016

For almost 40 years, Joe has struggled to be heard by the Church of England over the sexual abuse that has blighted his life. The depression, anxiety and occasional suicidal thoughts that have dogged him since he was a teenager were, he says, as much the product of the church’s failure to listen to and act on his anguish as the original assault in 1976.

He speaks of a culture of inertia, obfuscation, denial and cover-up. “I raised core, critical issues with a very significant senior slice of the church down through the decades. I told an astonishing number of people.”

Even when, finally, he formally reported the abuse, he felt “blanked”. “It’s a very effective device for shutting down an issue. And you leave the issue, the burden, on the survivor’s shoulders – who feels cowed, intimidated by the weight of silence.”

Joe hopes that Tuesday’s publication of the C of E’s independent review of its handling of his case – with its recognition of the church’s failures, along with the apologies he has received from a handful of senior figures – will allow him to finally attain an inner equilibrium. But he is in a very small minority, he says. “As things stand, most survivors will probably not receive a personal apology or any real justice. I am one of the lucky few.”

His story begins when he was 15. Garth Moore, the chancellor of the dioceses of Southwark, Durham and Gloucester and the vicar of St Mary’s Abchurch in the City of London, was a family friend. According to Moore’s obituary, published in 1990 in the Ecclesiastical Law Journal, he was “the foremost canonist of his generation in the Church of England”.

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VATILEAKS PRIEST ‘WAS NOT LUCID’ WHEN HE PASSED DOCUMENTS TO PRESS

VATICAN CITY
The Tablet (UK)

15 March 2016 | by Christopher Lamb in Rome

A priest has admitted giving confidential financial documents of the Holy See to journalists, but claimed he was not “fully lucid” when doing so.

Monsignor Angelo Lucio Vallejo Balda, who had sat on a top level papal commission overhauling Vatican finances and administration, was giving evidence in the so-called Vatileaks trial of five people, including two journalists.

The defendants, who face up to eight years in jail, are accused of breaking a Vatican law created by Pope Francis in 2013 criminalising leaking.

“Yes, I passed documents,” Mgr Vallejo Balda said under questioning yesterday. “I did it spontaneously, probably not fully lucid.”

He admitted to passing material to both Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi who both wrote books based on the documents, which revealed widespread financial mismanagement in the Vatican.

The 54-year-old Spanish priest said he gave Nuzzi – who made waves with the first Vatileaks scandal in 2012 – a five-page list of some 87 passwords to access the reform commission’s password-protected emails.

The priest claimed, however, that he was convinced Nuzzi already had access to the material.

Mgr Vallejo Balda also said he was under pressure from fellow defendant and member of the commission, Francesca Chaouqui, a 34-year-old PR expert.

He explained that he felt under pressure from Chaouqui who at one time he had been close to. He said he had felt “compromised” after she had once entered his hotel room in Florence. The relationship, however, turned sour and Mgr Vallejo Balda said she and her husband had sent him threatening text messages especially after the reform commission ended in 2015 and Chaouqui was left without work.

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Trial at the Vatican

VATICAN CITY
news.va

2016-03-15 Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The trial of three former Vatican employees and two journalists resumed this week at the Vatican. The five defendants are charged with acquiring and publishing confidential documents of the Holy See.

Listen to Christopher Wells’ report:

Monday’s session of the so-called “Vatileaks 2” trial saw testimony from Monsignor Lucio Ángel Vallejo Balda, former secretary of the Prefecture of Economic Affairs, who is accused of giving confidential information to journalists.

Under questioning from the prosecutor and the presiding judge, Monsignor Vallejo Balda admitted to leaking documents and providing email passwords to the journalists. He said he was sometimes asked for documents, and sometimes had offered them spontaneously, but claimed he never handed over hard copies or more important documents.

Referring to witness testimony, the prosecutor, known as the Promoter of Justice, accused Vallejo Balda, with his assistant Nicola Maio and laywoman Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, of forming a kind of “shadow commission” within the prefecture. He also showed, from conversations on the “Whatsapp” messaging platform, the relationship between Vallejo Balda and journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi.

In his testimony the cleric maintained that the relationship between Chaouqui and himself was initially one of trust and confidence, but later became one of suspicion. Vallejo Balda said he felt pressured and used by Chaouqui, who has not yet had a chance to testify.

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AG update: Kane to announce criminal charges related to Brother Stephen Baker case

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY ABBEY WAY TUESDAY, MARCH 15TH 2016

Attorney General Kathleen Kane said Tuesday she will announce at her 10:30 news conference criminal charges stemming from the Office of Attorney General’s investigation of the Blair-County based Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception.

Kane’s office seized documents from the order last summer.

Brother Stephen Baker, a former athletic trainer at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown, committed suicide at the monastery in January 2013.

That happened days after Youngstown, Ohio, church officials settled lawsuits filed by 11 students who claimed Baker molested them in the late 1980s.

That prompted more than 90 former students at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown to settle abuse claims against Baker for more than $8 million.

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Charges Coming for Pennsylvanian Franciscan Order: Attorney General

PENNSYLVANIA
NBC 10

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane says she’ll announce criminal charges involving a Franciscan religious order based in central Pennsylvania.

WATCH LIVE: Kane’s news conference will be carried LIVE on this page at 10:30 a.m.

Kane has a news conference scheduled for Tuesday morning. She’s not saying who’s being charged or what they’re accused of doing. But she says the investigation centers on the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, based near Hollidaysburg.
A phone call to the monastery wasn’t immediately returned early Tuesday.

Read more: http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/Johnstown-Bishops-Child-Abuse-Kathleen-Kane-Franciscan-Order-372094482.html#ixzz42yaXzx27
Follow us: @nbcphiladelphia on Twitter | nbcphiladelphia on Facebook

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Clerical paedophile crisis deepens

FRANCE
RFI

By David Roe

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has urged Cardinal Philippe Barbarin accused of covering up the sexual abuse of Scouts by a priest, to “take responsibility”. This as it emerged Tuesday that another complaint, this time in respect of abuses committed during the 1990s by a priest still active in the Lyon area, had been made in February.

“The only message I have, without … taking the place of the Church, of the judges — because an investigation is under way — is that he must take responsibility, speak and act,” Valls told the national TV station BFM TV.

“I expect not only words, but acts,” the prime minister added.
Barbarin is one of several senior officials being sued for the alleged cover-up.

Church Cover-up

He is accused of being aware that priest Bernard Preynat had been sexually abusing young boys between 1986 and 1991.

According to a statement from the dioceses of Lyon, the complaint that was lodged in February was made by a highly placed government official, aged 42, who is said to have developed suicidal tendencies as a result of the abuse.

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AG Kane: Charge coming for Pennsylvania Franciscan order

PENNSYLVANIA
The Eagle

[live stream to begin at 10:30 a.m.]

Associated Press

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Attorney General Kathleen Kane says she’ll announce criminal charges stemming involving a Franciscan religious order based in central Pennsylvania later Tuesday morning.

Kane’s not saying who’s being charged or what they’re accused of doing. But Kane says the investigation centers on the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Reception based near Hollidaysburg. A phone call to the monastery wasn’t immediately returned.

Kane’s office seized documents from the order last summer and Brother Stephen Baker stabbed himself in the heart at the monastery in January 2013.

That happened days after Youngstown, Ohio church officials settled lawsuits filed by 11 students who claimed Baker molested them in the late 1980s. That prompted more than 90 former students at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown to settle abuse claims against Baker for more than $8 million.

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‘Lives shortened by residential home abuse’ victim says

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Lives have been shortened by abuse in residential homes, a survivor has said.

Many of the boys and girls are no longer alive today, Jon McCourt from Survivors North West added, claiming the defenceless children had a right to truth and justice.

Mr McCourt was a resident in St Joseph’s Catholic home (Termonbacca) in Derry and said he was beaten by a nun for being left -handed.

“For many survivors, the effects of the abuse have been long-lasting and harm has been passed down the generations.

“We not only expect a full apology for what was done to us, but also an acknowledgement that government has a responsibility to right those wrongs.”

Mr McCourt waived his right to anonymity to tell the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry how he was punished for being left-handed.

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Kane to announce charges involving a religious order

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

March 15, 2016 — 7:35 AM EDT

by Staff Report

Attorney General Kathleen Kane will announce “criminal charges related to a major investigation” of a religious order this morning during a stop in Johnstown.

The announcement about the Franciscans, set for 10:30 a.m. at the University of Pittsburgh’s Johnstown Living Learning Center, comes two weeks after Kane released a grand jury report accusing dozens of priests in the Roman Catholic diocese of Altoona-Johnstown of either sexually abusing children or covering up the abuse.

After a two-year investigation, a statewide grand jury found that hundreds of children were abused over 40 years, while several diocesan leaders hid the horrors to protect the priests.

Two weeks ago, Kane said many of the crimes couldn’t be prosecuted because many alleged abusers had died, the statute of limitations for the crimes expired, and many victims remained too traumatized to testify in court.

To view a livestream of her news conference, go to: http://pacast.com/players/live_ag.asp

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Priest accused of historical sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Wigan Today

A Catholic priest was today due to appear before magistrates to face historical sex abuse charges relating to his time at a former Wigan seminary.

Father Michael Higginbottom, who worked at St Joseph’s College in Up Holland throughout the 1970s, has been charged with six offences relating to two victims under the age of 16.

The 72-year-old, of West Farm Road, Newcastle, is due at Ormskirk Magistrates’ Court today having been charged last month following an investigation by Lancashire Police.

He is currently suspended from his post at a church in the North East, a spokesman for the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle told the Evening Post.

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Le cardinal Barbarin face à un nouveau témoignage mettant en cause un autre prêtre

FRANCE
Le Figaro

[EXCLUSIVE – Pierre, now aged 42, says he was a victim of sexual touching at age 16 by Father Jerome Billioud. His lawsuit, filed in 2009, was closed due to prescription. He said Cardinal Philippe Barbarin knew about the priest’s abuse but did nothing to remove him from access to other children. The question is raised whether this scandal could be the “Spotlight” on the French church.]

EXCLUSIF – Pierre, aujourd’hui âgé de 42 ans, affirme avoir été victime d’attouchements sexuels à 16 ans par le père Jérôme Billioud. Sa plainte, déposée en 2009, a été classée pour cause de prescription.

Serait-ce le début d’un Spotlightà la française? Le film américain, tout juste primé aux Oscars, raconte la mise au jour des pratiques de prêtres pédophiles couverts par l’Église catholique dans la région de Boston. Aujourd’hui en France, le scandale touche Lyon. Et Pierre -qui souhaite pour l’heure conserver l’anonymat-, livre au Figaro un nouveau témoignage.

Il affirme qu’à 16 ans, il a été victime des attouchements d’un prêtre lyonnais. À 42 ans aujourd’hui, il occupe un poste de premier plan dans un ministère. Avec calme et émotion, il raconte comment il a été abusé par le père Jérôme Billioud, de l’ensemble paroissial La Croix Rousse. Le prêtre est notamment connu pour avoir célébré une messe le 21 janvier 2011 pour la mort de Louis XVI avec l’Action française. Pierre soutient que le cardinal Barbarin «n’a rien fait pour éloigner ce prêtre des autres enfants ». Sa plainte, déposée en 2009, a été classée pour cause de prescription. Mais dans les souvenirs de Pierre, les années n’ont pas prescrit la souffrance. Pis, les témoignages des anciens de Saint-Luc ont «réveillé un certain nombre de choses », explique-t-il. C’est pourquoi le 12 février, il a contacté le procureur de la République de Lyon. Deux jours plus tard, il lui a envoyé une lettre. Pierre doit être réentendu prochainement par la justice. À Lyon, une enquête préliminaire est ouverte pour «non-dénonciation de crime » et «mise en danger de la vie d’autrui ».

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Pédophilie : nouveau témoignage accablant contre le cardinal Barbarin

FRANCE
Marianne

[Already in turmoil with the case of priest Bernard Preynat, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin of Lyon is accused on Tuesday, March 15 in “Le Figaro” of covering another pedophile priest.]

Déjà dans la tourmente avec l’affaire Bernard Preynat, l’archevêque de Lyon Philippe Barbarin est accusé ce mardi 15 mars dans “Le Figaro” d’avoir couvert un autre prêtre pédophile.

Le diocèse de Lyon est plus que jamais dans la tourmente. Le Figaro daté de ce mardi 15 mars publie un nouveau témoignage accablant pour le cardinal Philippe Barbarin. Pierre, 42 ans, affirme au quotidien avoir été victime d’attouchements d’un prêtre lyonnais de l’ensemble paroissial La Croix Rousse, le père Jérôme Billioud, lorsqu’il avait 16 ans. Il a déposé une plainte à l’encontre de l’archevêque de Lyon, déjà dans le collimateur après les révélations d’anciens scouts victimes d’attouchements d’un autre prêtre du diocèse.

Pierre raconte qu’au début des années 1990, il a rencontré ce prêtre lors d’un pèlerinage à Lourdes. “Il était comme un grand frère, un père de substitution”, explique-t-il. Or, dans une chambre d’hôtel à Biarritz, “le père Billioud a commencé à se frotter et à se masturber contre moi. J’étais très gêné, je ne savais pas quoi faire, j’ai fini par dormir par terre et j’ai fait comme si rien ne s’était passé”, se souvient-il.

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CALL FOR DIRECT INTERVENTION IN SOUTH YORKSHIRE POLICE OVER CHILD SEX ABUSE

UNITED KINGDOM
Care Appointments

Press Association

Direct Government intervention with South Yorkshire Police is needed to improve the force’s performance when dealing with the sexual abuse of children, the Lords heard.

Lib Dem peer Lord Scriven expressed concern at the way exploitation cases had been treated in the police area during Lords question time.

“Will the Minister seriously consider direct intervention by the Government in South Yorkshire Police’s performance in dealing with child sexual exploitation?

“This has been highlighted by the recent report from Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary, which said that South Yorkshire Police still needs to make major improvements. …

Conservative peer Lord Lexden raised concerns about the Church of England.

“Is it not essential that all agencies involved in protecting children investigate allegations of sexual abuse fully, fairly and openly? Will my noble friend agree that the more stringent procedures now required of bodies such as our school inspectorates and the Church of England authorities represent real progress?

“However, are we yet in a position to place total confidence in the church authorities? They failed to give an adequate account of the process which led them to accept last October the veracity of a single uncorroborated complaint of child sexual abuse made against one of our greatest, most venerated bishops, George Bell, Bishop of Chichester, who died in 1958. He was a man held in the highest regard in this House during his 20 years of service to it and the nation,” Lord Lexden said.

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Royal commission: Sexual abuse victim calls for ‘group trials’ to be used against offenders

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Nicole Chettle

A man who was sexually abused as a child at an exclusive Sydney Catholic boarding school said he would have preferred for all of the matters against his assailant to have been heard at the same time, an inquiry has heard.

The survivor, known as CDR, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney he was abused in 1984 at St Joseph’s College, but wished his matter had gone to trial with five other abuse victims.

Counsel assisting the commission Jeremy Kirk SC told the hearing Brother John Denis Maguire was found not guilty on 17 counts of child sexual abuse, after six trials and two retrials in 2003 and 2004.

Maguire was later found guilty of child sex offences against another boy and in March 2015 he was sentenced to three years’ jail, with a non-parole period of one year and nine months.

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Vatican leaks scandal: Spanish priest admits to passing classified documents

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

A Spanish priest has admitted to leaking classified Vatican documents to journalists, saying he had felt intimidated.

Monsignor Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda has said he was manipulated by a woman co-defendant with whom he was romantically entangled.

He was questioned as the so-called Vatileaks II trial resumed.

It centres on two books that depict a Vatican plagued by graft and where Pope Francis faces resistance to his agenda.

The books came out last year and were based on the leaked information. The five people on trial face jail terms of up to eight years.

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Child sexual abuse compensation could be paid in state schemes

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 15, 2016

Jane Lee
Legal affairs, health and science reporter

Child sexual abuse survivors have joined the Catholic Church to call on the Turnbull government to commit to a national redress scheme, fearing they will receive different levels of compensation, depending on where they were abused, through state-run schemes.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse last year recommended the federal government establish a single national redress scheme for 60,000 survivors, which it said was “the most effective structure for ensuring justice for survivors” and the most cost-efficient model. The “next-best option” was for state and territory governments to run their own schemes, it said.

Social Services Minister Christian Porter told Parliament earlier this month that the government was working on a nationally consistent approach for state and territory schemes. This was because a single national scheme would require all states and territories to agree to it and South Australia had already indicated it did not.

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Denby Fawcett: How Many Sexual Abuse Victims Still Suffer In Silence?

HAWAII
Honolule Civil Beat

Editor’s Note: Civil Beat generally does not use anonymous sources, as noted in our long-standing policy. We’re making an exception here because of the importance of hearing a sexual abuse victim’s perspective, and the fact that court records, including a settlement with the Catholic Church, do not reveal his identity.

“I consider myself one of the lucky ones,” says a man who recently settled a sex abuse case against the Catholic Church.

MG, as he’s referred to in court records that keep his identify secret, says he feels “lucky” because after decades of battling alcoholism, drug addiction, mood disorders and depression, he’s at the point where he can begin to forgive three Catholic priests he says sexually assaulted him when he was too young to stop them.

“To me, it is like they killed the kid in me. There is a part of me that was a kid and he died,” says MG.

On Jan. 21, the Diocese of Honolulu, the Associated Sulpicians of the United States and the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers reached a mediated settlement with MG for an undisclosed amount.

He is one of 63 people who have sued Hawaii’s Catholic Church and the religious orders overseeing parishes and schools, where they allege they were sexually attacked when they were children.

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Baptist Church Was Led By Sex Offender For Years

CONNECTICUT
Hartford Courant

Dave Altimari

A pastor at a Baptist Church in New Haven was allowed to continue leading his church for five years while on the state sex offender registry after a child-molestation conviction, letters from church officials and state court records show.

It was only after his second arrest — in 2014 on child pornography charges — that Eli Echevarria stepped down from leading El Calvario Baptist Church, according to the letters and court records.

Church leaders, who operate independently of the central Baptist governing authority in Connecticut, have not responded to multiple requests for comment. Echevarria is serving a two-year prison sentence.

But the case and the way it was handled have sparked criticism of the church’s governing authority.

The fact that American Baptist Churches of Connecticut, the church’s ruling body, never informed other pastors of Echevarria’s history came to the attention of William Keane, pastor at First Baptist Church of Branford, after Echevarria began attending his church.

Keane criticized the statewide church’s handling of Echevarria’s situation, including a policy put in place after Echevarria’s second conviction that requires state church officials to run the names of all pastors through the state’s sex offender registry list at least once every two years.

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Cry for reform for all child sex abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Brandie Kessler, bkessler@ydr.com

State Rep. Mark Rozzi stood inside the capitol rotunda Monday and pressured lawmakers, specifically State Rep. Ronald Marsico, to reform the state’s statute of limitations on child sexual abuse.

For years, proposed legislation to change the statute of limitations in Pennsylvania, has not made it out of the house judiciary committee, which Marsico, R-Dauphin, chairs. Rozzi said that needs to change, and the proposed legislation needs to be voted on.

“We will jam up the (judiciary) committee, we will stop the committee from functioning if we have to,” Rozzi, D-Berks, told a crowd of dozens, including many who came specifically for the reform rally. “We’re just asking, basically, Chairman Ron Marsico to do his job, and that’s to pass that bill out (of) committee to protect the victims, the children of this commonwealth.”

Among the people standing behind Rozzi was Kristen Pfautz Woolley, founder of Turning Point Women’s Counseling and Advocacy Center in York. She is a survivor of child sexual abuse.

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Pa. legislators, advocates rally for statute of limitations reform

PENNSYLVANIA
Centre Daily Times

BY CATE HANSBERRY
chansberry@centredaily.com

In the wake of a grand jury report on abuse in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese released earlier this month, state representatives, adult victims of child sexual abuse and advocates gathered Monday at the Capitol to push for statute of limitations reform.

Led by Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks, the rally in the Capitol Rotunda was held to demonstrate public support of efforts to revise child sex abuse statute of limitations laws to allow adult victims to prosecute their abusers.

According to the grand jury investigation, priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese sexually abused hundreds of children over about 40 years. The report alleges that religious leaders worked to cover up the abuse.

Due to statute of limitations laws, the case cannot be prosecuted.

“First it was Boston, then Philadelphia and Los Angeles, and the pattern repeats itself in Altoona-Johnstown,” Rozzi, who was a victim of child sexual abuse, said. “The only way this ends is if we make it loud and clear to child rapists and those who harbor them, that they can no longer hide.”

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Diocese mediation talks expected to begin in June

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By Tom Olsen on Mar 14, 2016

The Diocese of Duluth is expected to enter mediation this summer with representatives of dozens of alleged victims of child sexual abuse, as the parties seek to reach an amicable agreement in the diocese’s ongoing bankruptcy case.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel approved a motion to appoint Gregg Zive as a mediator to work with the diocese, its insurers and attorneys representing claimants.

Zive, a bankruptcy judge in Arizona who has experience handling diocesan bankruptcies, was mutually recommended by the diocese and St. Paul-based Jeff Anderson and Associates, the law firm representing most of its creditors.

Kressel said Zive is not expected to be available until June, which places the likely start date after the May 25 deadline for abuse victims to file claims in bankruptcy court.

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State leaders call for change in statute of limitations for child sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Karen Langley / Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau

HARRISBURG — In the wake of a grand jury report alleging extensive child sexual abuse in the Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Attorney General Kathleen Kane and other state leaders called Monday for legislators to change statutes of limitations for child sexual abuse.

After changes in 2002 and 2006 following abuse scandals, victims of child sexual abuse in Pennsylvania can now bring criminal cases until their 50th birthdays and civil lawsuits until their 30th birthdays.

Speaking in the Capitol, Ms. Kane called for an end of limitations for criminal and civil cases.

“We ask ourselves as a society, who are we?” she said. ”Do we protect our children? Do we make sure that child sexual abusers never stop looking over their shoulder? Or do we protect the rapists?”

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Church abuse survivor home from Rome

AUSTRALIA
Star Weekly

March 15, 2016

by Matt Crossman

More church abuse survivors from Sunbury have spoken up in the wake of Cardinal George Pell’s Royal Commission appearance.

Sunbury’s Paul Levey, who was in Rome when Cardinal Pell gave evidence via videolink, said he had been inundated with calls and emails since returning last week.

Some were from men who were talking for the first time after being abused while students at Salesian College.

‘‘More brothers, priests and teachers who were at Salesian have been named, and I know for sure they’ve not been previously named or charged,’’ Mr Levey said.

“There’s been a 25 per cent increase in calls to the Centre Against Sexual Assault in Ballarat … Sunbury, now, has just exploded.’’

A large number of Salesian College principals, boarding masters and brothers who were at the college between 1960 and 1990 have faced courts on scores of sexual abuse charges.

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Kane says charges planned in priest abuse case, advocates extended window to prosecute

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED | Monday, March 14, 2016

HARRISBURG — Attorney General Kathleen Kane on Tuesday will announce criminal charges related to a “major investigation” in Johnstown about two weeks after a statewide grand jury report detailed child sex abuse by priests and cover-ups by bishops in the Altoona-Johnstown region.

Kane attended a news conference Monday in Harrisburg to advocate for legislation that would extend the amount of time prosecutors have to bring charges in sexual abuse cases. She would not say whether the upcoming charges are related to the grand jury report, but she told reporters her office has received 150 calls on a hotline established to collect tips about the grand jury’s allegations.

The report said hundreds of children had been abused by priests during four decades.

“I can’t comment on any further cases we might have,” Kane said when asked whether secret archives detailing abuse and seized by search warrant in the Altoona-Johnstown case would be available from other diocese offices.

Pennsylvania’s statutes of limitations are “mediocre” compared with other states, a legal expert said.

Marci Hamilton, a professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo Law School and at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, said legislators in Pennsylvania and New York haven’t made it a priority to eliminate criminal and civil statutes of limitation and allow a two-year “window” to file lawsuits from the date a bill is passed.

“It’s primarily the effect of the Catholic Conference (lobbying against changes),” said Hamilton, who has studied statutes in abuse cases.

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Editorial: Records of alleged priest abuse should go public

NEW MEXICO
Albuquerque Journal

By Albuquerque Journal Editorial Board
Tuesday, March 15th, 2016

Catholic Church leaders often take public positions, staking out what to them is the high moral ground and calling for action on a wide range of social issues ranging from immigrant rights to climate change to abortion to food stamp rules.

But their high road has developed a significant pothole from the refusal to make public the church records involved in the Gallup diocese’s bankruptcy case, including personnel files of alleged pedophile priests.

In 2013, Gallup was the ninth Roman Catholic diocese in the U.S. to file for Chapter 11 reorganization bankruptcy in response to civil lawsuits filed by alleged victims of clerical sex abuse.

A Phoenix attorney who has filed 13 such lawsuits against the Gallup diocese says the records are critical to reaching a settlement in the bankruptcy case in which 57 people have filed claims.

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French Prime Minister urges cardinal to ‘take responsibility’ in abuse scandal

FRANCE
Times LIVE (South Africa)

AFP | 15 March, 2016

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls urged a cardinal accused of covering up the sexual abuse of Scouts by a priest, to “take responsibility” in a case which has shocked France.

“The only message I have, without … taking the place of the Church, of the judges — because an investigation is underway — is that he must take responsibility, speak and act,” Valls told BFM TV.

Asked whether he meant Cardinal Philippe Barbarin should resign, Valls said: “It is his responsibility, but he must also understand the pain.”

“I expect not only words, but acts,” the prime minister added.

Barbarin is one of several senior officials being sued for the alleged cover-up.

He is accused of being aware that priest Bernard Preynat had been sexually abusing young boys between 1986 and 1991.

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Growing sex abuse scandal rocks French Catholic Church

FRANCE
The Local

A French cardinal at the centre of a paedophile scandal came under renewed pressure on Tuesday when another witness accused him of covering up sex abuse and the French PM told him to take responsibility for his actions.

Bishops from across France met in the sanctuary of Lourdes for their annual behind-closed-doors conference on Tuesday, just as a paedophile rocked the catholic church and beyond.

At the centre of the scandal is Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, who is being sued as part of an alleged cover-up of sex abuse on boy scouts by a priest in the late 1980s.

On Tuesday Barbarin was hit by new allegations that he covered for a second priest that was accused of sexual abuse in 2009 relating to incidents years earlier.

In an interview with Le Figaro newspaper, the victim said Barbarin was aware of the abuse the priest had carried out, but did nothing.

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March 14, 2016

Warrant: Seymour Priest Admitted ‘Unauthorized Borrowing’

CONNECTICUT
Valley Independent Sentinel

BY Ethan Fry | MAR 14, 2016

Detectives probing embezzlement allegations at a Seymour Catholic church spent nearly a year following a paper trail in the case, tracking much of the money from local bank accounts to locations as far-flung as Canada and central Africa.

Their conclusion? The Rev. Honore Kombo, the parish priest of St. Augustine’s on Washington Avenue, had taken tens of thousands of dollars intended for the church and used it for other purposes.

In interviews with police, Kombo told cops that he had “no ill intentions.” He said the money he took went to support programs in his native Congo, and would be paid back.

“It is very unfortunate what I did and I’m deeply sorry but it was not for ill intention and I’m responsible for it,” Kombo is quoted in an arrest warrant as telling detectives. “I will accept whatever the law sees fit in cases like this.”

Seymour police charged Kombo with first-degree larceny Feb. 29.

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Priest admits to relaying confidential documents in ‘Vatileaks’ trial

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

Vatican City, Mar 14, 2016 / 05:37 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- During a Vatican City trial on Monday over a case in which five individuals are accused of leaking and disseminating confidential financial documents, a former Vatican official said he relayed documents only under duress.

“Yes, I passed documents,” Msgr. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, a former secretary of the Prefecture for Economic Affairs, told Vatican prosecutors March 14. “I was convinced I was in a situation without exit.”

Msgr. Vallejo claimed he felt trapped by “the powerful world behind” Francesca Chaouqui – another of the defendants in the trial.

Chaouqui, a public relations expert, was a member of a committee formed by Pope Francis in 2013 to help reform Vatican finances. The committee, COSEA, has since been dissolved.

The three other defendants are Nicola Maio, Msgr. Vallejo’s secretary, and the journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi.

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

Arson attempt on Catholic church where paedophile Terrence Pidoto was priest

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 15, 2016

Cameron Houston

Another Melbourne Catholic Church historically linked with a prominent paedophile priest has been targeted in an attempted arson attack.

St Bede’s Church in Balwyn North was broken into about 4.30am on Sunday morning, but the intruder is understood to have fled the Severn Street property after an alarm was activated.

Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne spokesman, Shane Healy confirmed that a window had been broken and accelerant poured around the alter, but no fire had been lit.

Mass on Sunday morning was relocated to an adjoining building following the failed arson attempt.

On Sunday night police arrested a man, believed to be a victim of clerical abuse, who was questioned but released without charge.

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.

AG Kathleen Kane to announce ‘criminal charges’ during Johnstown news conference

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane will announce “criminal charges related to a major investigation” during a Johnstown stop Tuesday, her office said Monday.

Kane’s second local news conference this month will begin at 10:30 a.m. at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown Living Learning Center.

The AG’s office did not confirm what subject will be discussed.

On March 1, Kane held a press conference at the Blair County Convention Center during which she discussed a grand jury report that accused the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown of perpetrating a decades-long cover-up to protect dozens of priests and other religious leaders who allegedly sexually abused children.

The document noted that the large investigation started when the attorney general’s office began looking into allegations made against Brother Stephen Baker – who, in his role as an athletic trainer, reportedly abused dozens of students at what was formally called Bishop McCort High School. But the document did not provide any additional information about the Baker case.

“The question is really whether more evidence has surfaced indicating Brother Baker sexually abused children in Pennsylvania or prior to Pennsylvania,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston attorney who represented more than 30 of the victims from Bishop McCort.

Garabedian said because of the “enormity” of the information involved in cases, such as the one involving Baker, the diocese and local law enforcement, it is “not unusual that press conferences would take place in close proximity to each other.”

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Vatican monsignor confesses to church court he leaked documents

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

Rosie Scammell | March 14, 2016

VATICAN CITY (RNS) A Spanish priest has confessed to leaking secret Vatican information to journalists, telling a Holy See court he felt trapped and in danger, especially from an Italian co-worker he had fallen for.

Monsignor Angelo Lucio Vallejo Balda told the court on Monday (March 14) that he passed information to two Italian journalists, Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, who in November published books featuring the confidential documents on Vatican financial misfeasance and Pope Francis’ efforts to overhaul the system.

“Yes, I passed documents,” said Vallejo, who was appointed to a commission tasked with advising the pope on reforming the Vatican administration. “I did it spontaneously, probably not fully lucid,” the Associated Press reported.

Included in the information he gave to Nuzzi was a five-page document containing 87 passwords which gave the reporter access to the committee’s work.

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Clergyman admits he gave classified Vatican documents to journalists

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Rome

A Spanish monsignor who is on trial for disclosing classified church documents admitted on Monday that he passed information on to journalists but suggested he was coerced into it by a woman he had a relationship with.

“Yes, I passed documents,” Lucio Vallejo Balda said in response to questions from a Vatican prosecutor. “I did it spontaneously, probably not fully lucid.”

He added that he had handed “87 passwords” over to a journalist at a time when he was being treated for depression and stress.

“I was convinced I was in a situation without exit,” he said.

It was a critical admission in a trial against the Spanish prelate and four others – including two journalists – who technically face up to eight years in jail following accusations that they disseminated classified information about mismanagement of Vatican funds.

It has also pitted Balda against a former colleague on a special papal commission in which both had been tasked with the job of investigating the church’s murky finances: a laywoman and PR executive named Francesca Chaouqui.

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Seattle archdiocese protesters want more abuse documents disclosed

WASHINGTON
KIRO

Updated: Mar 14, 2016

Protesters held signs and childhood photos in a demonstration to the Seattle archdiocese on Monday.

Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests said they want abuse documents disclosed.

The Archdiocese of Seattle released a list of clergy child sex abusers in January. It listed dozens of people who served from 1923 to 2008: 30 archdiocesans, 16 religious priests, 14 religious brothers, one religious sister, two deacons and 14 priests from other dioceses.

See below for map of churches, schools and hospitals in Washington where child sex abusers, serving as priests, worked on assignment. Read the list here.

Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain apologized on behalf of those who abused minors in a news release after the list was released.

“I will continue to pray for all survivors of sexual abuse, and deeply regret that vulnerable individuals in the church’s care have been harmed,” Sartain wrote.

In a news release to KIRO 7 about Monday’s planned protest, SNAP said it wants Sartain to add four more priests to his list. The group also believes that abusive nuns, seminarians and lay staff should be added.

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

Vatileaks trial: Priest claims emotional blackmail behind leaks

VATICAN CITY
Straits Times

VATICAN CITY (AFP) – A Spanish priest at the centre of a controversial Vatican leaks trial admitted on Monday to passing classified documents to the press but insisted he had acted under emotional blackmail from a female colleague with whom he was romantically entangled.

“Yes, I sent documents to journalists, I handed over a list of five pages with 87 passwords,” Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda told a Holy See court.

The Spanish Vatican official said he had not been “fully lucid” when he leaked the documents and had since been treated by a psychiatrist for depression and stress.

Vallejo Balda described his former colleague, Italian PR consultant Francesca Chaouqui, as a dangerous and manipulative woman who had cooerced him into leaking the documents by threatening to reveal an intense relationship between them.

“I was certain that there were illegitimate interests behind Chaouqui,” he told the court, revealing that he believed his colleague and her husband to have been working for the Italian secret services.

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Vatican prelate admits leaks; says woman ‘spy’ intimidated him

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

VATICAN CITY | BY PHILIP PULLELLA

A Vatican prelate on Monday admitted in court he had leaked confidential documents to the media and said he had been manipulated into it by a woman co-defendant who claimed she was a spy.

After an adjournment of more than three months, Spanish Monsignor Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda was questioned at the resumption of the so-called “Vatileaks II” trial.

Vallejo and four other people are on trial in the case, which centers on the publication last year of two books based on leaked documents that depict a Vatican plagued by graft and where Pope Francis faces stiff resistance to his agenda.

Pressed by the prosecution and the court president on whether he had leaked documents, Vallejo said “yes”. He also said he had given the author of one of the books some 85 passwords to access electronic documents and email accounts in the Vatican.

Most of the three hours of the questioning of Vallejo, a 54-year-old Spaniard, revolved around his relationship with Francesca Chaouqui, 35, a married public relations consultant.

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Attorney General Kane to announce criminal charges related to major investigation

PENNSYLVANIA
Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane

3/14/2016

Monday, March 14, 2016

Attorney General Kane Press Office / 717-787-5211
press@attorneygeneral.gov
Twitter: @PaAttorneyGen

***ADVISORY***

TOMORROW: ATTORNEY GENERAL KANE TO ANNOUNCE CRIMINAL CHARGES RELATED TO MAJOR INVESTIGATION

WHAT:
News conference announcing criminal charges related to a major investigation conducted by the Office of Attorney General

WHO:
Kathleen G. Kane, Pennsylvania Attorney General

WHEN:
Tuesday, March 15 at 10:30 a.m.

WHERE:
University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, Heritage Hall within the Living-Learning Center, 450 Schoolhouse Road, Johnstown, Pa. 15904

LIVESTREAM:
http://pacast.com/players/live_ag.asp

SATELLITE COORDINATES:
EVENT: Attorney General

TIME: 10:15 to 11:00 (Eastern)

FORMAT: 16 x 9 HD 720p

SATELLITE: AMC – 9 (KU-Band – DIGITAL)

ORBITAL POSITION: 83 Degrees West

TRANSPONDER: K 23

CHANNEL: A/B (18Mhz)

SYM RATE: 13.235 msps

FEC: 3/4

BIT RATE: 18.295441

DOWNLINK POL: Horizontal

DOWNLINK FREQ: 12151.00 MHz

Modulation Type: DVB-S, QPSK

TROUBLE: 717-772-4282

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Sex abuse victims rally for statute of limitations reform

PENNSYLVANIA
WFMZ

HARRISBURG, Pa. – Victims of child sexual abuse and their advocates gathered beneath the Capitol dome in Harrisburg on Monday.

Led by Pennsylvania Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Berks County Democrat who, himself, was abused as a child, they called on the full House of Representatives to take up a pair of bills that would reform child sex abuse statute of limitations.

Rozzi cited a pattern of child sex abuse cases continuing to be revealed across the country, the most recent one being in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, where a grand jury found that hundreds of children were sexually abused for at least 40 years.

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PA Advocates Renew Push To Eliminate Statute Of Limitations In Child Sex Abuse Cases

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

By Tony Romeo

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — Advocates say they believe the grand jury report about abuse by priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese is a tipping point in their effort to eliminate the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases.

Advocates have been trying for more than a decade to enact legislation that would eliminate the statute of limitations for both criminal and civil cases of child sex abuse. At a state capitol event Monday, Attorney General Kathleen Kane was among those who argued for a change in the law.

“That those who prey on our children know that you’ll never get a free pass,” Kane said.

Brenda Dick, identified as a victim of the Altoona-Johnstown abuse, made a personal plea for action.

“It is a life sentence,” Dick said. “I’m not asking, I’m begging.”

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Advocates for statute of limitation reform seize ‘tipping point,’ ‘movement’ to demand changes

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

HARRISBURG – Calling the latest grand jury investigation into clergy sex abuse a tipping point in their cause, a cadre of advocates for victims of child sexual abuse on Monday continued to seize the momentum created by that report to reiterate calls for reform in the statute of limitations.

Led by Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Berks County Democrat and clergy sex abuse survivor, the advocates, flanked by several dozen survivors, made impassioned appeals at the podium that thundered throughout the Main Rotunda of the state Capitol.

“To my colleagues in this building, I urge you to stand with me and pass our bills. Let’s get this done,” said Rozzi, who is pushing legislation sponsored by Rep. Tom Murt (R- Montgomery/Phila.) calling for a two-year window in the law to allow victims whose legal bounds have expired to seek legal redress for their abuse.

“They want their truth to come out and I’m here to fight for their justice,” Rozzi said.

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Attorney General to announce criminal charges in Johnstown Tuesday

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY RON MUSSELMAN MONDAY, MARCH 14TH 2016

Attorney General Kathleen Kane will be in Johnstown Tuesday morning to announce criminal charges related to a major investigation.

Pennsylvania’s top prosecutor has not said what the announcement is about, but it’s widely speculated the charges are related to findings from a grand jury report released by Kane two weeks ago.

That 147-page report claimed two Roman Catholic bishops in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by over 50 priests or religious leaders over a 40-year period.

Kane has said none of the alleged criminal acts can be prosecuted because some abusers have died, statutes of limitations have run their course and victims are too traumatized to testify.

Tuesday’s news conference will be held at Pitt-Johnstown’s Heritage Hall at 10:30 a.m.

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PA Attorney General to announce criminal charges

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Attorney General Kathleen Kane will be in Johnstown Tuesday to announce criminal charges.

Kane’s office is not being specific, only that this is related to a major investigation.

There is speculation that it will be related to the sex abuse cover-up inside the Altoona Johnstown Catholic Diocese.

At least 50 priests are accused of abusing hundreds of children, but no charges can be filed because many of the priests have died or the statute of limitations has expired.

Kane’s news conference is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Pitt Johnstown’s Heritage Hall.

Monday in Harrisburg, a group rallied to change the statute of limitations law.

Reiterating a pledge made in the wake of a grand jury report documenting rampant child sexual abuse in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese, state Rep. Frank Burns today joined a cadre of lawmakers who implored their peers to change the state’s outmoded statute of limitations laws for such crimes.

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Media Advisory: Monday News Conference in Chicago Announcing Lawsuit Filed Against Melkite-Greek Catholic Church

ILLINOIS
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Sexual Abuse Survivor of Fr. Albert Wehby Files Lawsuit Against Melkite-Greek Catholic Church

Jane Doe 247 will be present to answer questions, discuss her experience and
why she feels it’s important to share her story

Doe 247 Complaint
Albert Wehby Assignment Timeline
Albert Wehby picture 1
Albert Wehby picture 2

What: At a news conference on Monday, attorneys Jeff Anderson and Marc Pearlman will:

* Announce a civil lawsuit on behalf of Jane Doe 247 who was sexually abused as a young girl by Fr. Albert Wehby. The lawsuit names the Melkite-Greek Catholic Church and St. John the Baptist in Northlake, IL as defendants. Jane Doe 247 was sexually abused by Wehby at St. John the Baptist in Northlake in the 1990s when she was 14 to 17 years old.

* Discuss the lawsuit against the Melkite-Greek Catholic Church which alleges that Wehby’s abuse of Jane Doe 247 resulted from the organization’s negligence and concealment of information about the danger of sexual abuse by Wehby and others in the Melkite-Greek organization. By refusing to publicly release information on abusers, the Melkites continue to put children at risk.

* Urge the Melkites to come clean and take responsibility for their actions and failures.

WHEN: Monday, March 14, 2016 at 1:00 P.M. CST

WHERE: Law Offices of Kerns, Frost & Pearlman and Jeff Anderson & Associates
30 West Monroe
Suite 1600
Chicago, IL 60603

Notes:
All documents will be available online Monday prior to the press event at ww.abusedinchicago.com and www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Jeff Anderson: Office: 651.318.2650 Mobile: 612.817.8665
Contact Marc Pearlman: Office: 312.261.4550 Mobile: 773.368.0142

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Northlake Woman Files Suit Against Greek Church Over Alleged Priest Abuse

ILLINOIS
CBS Chicago

By Lisa Fielding

(CBS) — A 34-year-old woman, known only as Jane Doe 247, says she was sexually abused by a priest at St. John’s The Baptist Church in Northlake from the ages of 14 to 17.

“I was stunned the first time he touched me inappropriately. I didn’t know what to think. He was a man of the cloth,” Jane Doe tearfully recalled.

Now, she is suing the parish and the Melkite-Greek Catholic Church.

“It is the diocese and the parish that she was at St. John’s that could have and should have done something more than what they did,” said attorney Jeff Anderson.

Anderson says the abuse happened between 1995-1998 and that parish and other clerics knew was going on.

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Acusan a Arquidiócesis de encubrir abusos sexuales a 100 niños indígenas: México

MEXICO
La Prensa

[Oaxaca archdiocese is accused of covering up sexual abuse of 100 indigenous children: Mexico.]

La Arquidiócesis del Estado sureño de Oaxaca enfrenta acusaciones de encubrir a un sacerdote que abusó de más de 100 niños indígenas en una década y de ejercer represalias contra otros curas que presentaron denuncias en su contra.

La denuncia forma parte del legado del Departamento de Investigaciones sobre Abusos Religiosos (DIAR) y el Centro de Investigaciones del Instituto Cristiano Mexicano (ICM), que hace tres años reveló que el 30% (4 mil 200) de los 14 mil 000 sacerdotes católicos que existen en México han cometido algún tipo de abuso sexual.

Organizaciones civiles y familiares de las víctimas acusaron al arzobispo de Oaxaca, José Luis Chávez, de ocultarle al Vaticano las pruebas del abuso de niños indígenas y de negarse a escuchar a las víctimas.

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SPOTLIGHT ON FRANCIS

UNITED STATES
First Things

by William Doino Jr.
3 . 14 . 16

When Spotlight, the critically acclaimed film about the Boston Globe’s investigation into clergy sexual abuse, won best picture at this year’s Oscars, producer Michael Sugar accepted the award with a message:

This film gave a voice to survivors and this Oscar amplifies that voice which we hope will become a choir that will resonate all the way to the Vatican. Pope Francis, it is time to protect the children, and restore the faith.

That statement was welcomed by many victims of clergy abuse, who believe the movie’s success validates their long fight for justice; but it was also criticized for leaving the impression that the Church has done nothing to combat sexual abuse since the Globe’s 2001-2002 investigation. As Joan Desmond, who covered the abuse crisis extensively, commented:

Did the producer stop researching this topic after the Globe published its page-one stories about the cover-up in Boston more than a decade earlier? Is Michael Sugar unaware that since 2002 the Church has mounted a massive campaign to establish and implement ambitious guidelines for the protection of children and young people?

It’s a necessary question, but it’s also fair to ask whether Pope Francis, for all the excellent things he has said and done about fighting the evil of clergy sexual abuse, has lived up to all his promises. The answer, at least at this point, is no. And there are fears that he may be backsliding.

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Ex-priest, 83, pleads not guilty to Texas woman’s 1960 death

TEXAS
Star Tribune

Associated Press MARCH 14, 2016

EDINBURG, Texas — An 83-year-old former priest has pleaded not guilty to murder for the slaying of a South Texas teacher and ex-beauty queen more than a half century ago.

John Feit used a walker as he arrived in court Monday in Hidalgo County. He’s accused of the April 1960 beating and suffocation of 25-year-old Irene Garza.

State District Judge Luis Singleterry set bond at $1 million.

Feit was returned to Texas last week from Phoenix, where he was jailed since his arrest last month after prosecutors said they had new evidence against him. The nature of that evidence hasn’t been disclosed. He long had been suspected in her death.

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March 22: ‘Spotlight’ on journalism

DELAWARE
UDaily

12:38 p.m., March 14, 2016–The editor for the Boston Globe team of investigative journalists that uncovered the Catholic Church’s child sex-abuse scandal, won a Pulitzer Prize and was portrayed in the movie Spotlight will speak at the University of Delaware on Tuesday, March 22.

Walter V. Robinson’s talk, at 7 p.m. in Mitchell Hall on UD’s Newark campus, is sponsored by the Department of English and is free and open to the public.

Robinson, played by Michael Keaton in the Academy Award “Best Picture” winning film, will tell the story of the newspaper’s 2001 investigation and share his thoughts about the film. Earlier in the day, he will speak with UD journalism students and faculty.

A Globe veteran, Robinson was the editor of the paper’s investigative Spotlight Team for seven years, including the reporting project that exposed a pattern of sexual abuse of children by priests in the Boston area and a decades-long cover-up of those crimes. The work sparked similar investigations and disclosures across the country and around the world and won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service.

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What’s missing from that Pennsylvania grand-jury report

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler Mar 14, 2016

For anyone who has been following the sex-abuse scandal in the American Catholic Church, the Pennsylvania grand-jury report on the failures of the Altoona diocese follows a depressingly familiar pattern. There are the priests who molest adolescents (virtually always boys), the treatment centers that give the predators clean bills of health, enabling them to find more prey. But in the whole sad 145-page report (which is embedded in this Post-Gazette report there are also some remarkable new features:

Appeals to emotions. A grand jury’s proper function is to determine whether or not there is adequate evidence to justify criminal charges. In this case the grand jury decided that there was not, because the statute of limitations bars prosecution of crimes from the distant past. But this report is not a dispassionate, factual document; it is clearly written with a goal of rousing public outrage. The pages are laced with moral (as opposed to legal) judgments, and the prose occasionally turns purple. “A man not fit to be around a child was tasked to tend their souls,” the grand jury laments. And later: “These men wrote their legacy in the tears of children.” That sort of language might be appropriate for a newspaper editorial; it is not for a grand-jury report.

Self-congratulation. The grand jury proudly announces that it “learned” that priests were placed on “sick leave” to camouflage the fact that they were being investigated and/or treated for sexual misconduct. That’s not exactly ground-breaking detective work. Those of us who were following this story “learned” that ruse at least a dozen years ago, and now you can “learn” the same thing by spending a couple of hours at the local movie theater and watching Spotlight.

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Chaouqui arrives for Vatileaks 2 trial

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Rome, March 14 – PR expert Francesca Chaouqui, one of five defendants in the so-called Vatileaks 2 trial into the leaking of classified Holy See documents to two investigative reporters, arrived at the Vatican for a hearing on Monday afternoon accompanied by four bodyguards.

A visibly pregnant Chaouqui, wearing a black suit and pulling two wheeled suitcases, did not respond to questions from journalists as she passed through the Perugino entrance. She was preceded by Emiliano Fittipaldi, author of the bestselling ‘Avarice’ documenting lavish spending by clergymen and one of two journalists on trial on charges of spreading classified information. The other is Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of another controversial book, the Way of the Cross, documenting alleged Vatican waste and mismanagement. Fittipaldi was due to be the first defendant to take the stand in the trial, which also involves Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda and Balda’s former assistant Nicola Maio.

Chaouqui, Balda and Maio are accused of criminal association and conspiracy to leak classified documents.

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Vallejo Balda usaba un móvil para preparar su defensa, y no para contaminar pruebas

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Infovaticana

Gabriel Ariza 13 marzo, 2016

El prelado, que teme por su vida, logró hacerse con un móvil para hablar con personas de su máxima confianza y preparar su defensa, ante la indefension a la que le ha sometido la Gendarmería vaticana. Nunca intentó contaminar pruebas.

La sala de prensa de la Santa Sede ha comunicado que “Vallejo Balda vuelve a prisión acusado de violar la prohibición de comunicarse con el exterior”. Según la agencia ANSA, el prelado estaba en semilibertad pero ha vuelto a la celda.

La realidad es muy diferente, pues Vallejo Balda nunca recuperó su libertad y su situación en el palacio de los penitenciarios se parecía más a una prisión preventiva que a un arresto domiciliario.

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Mobile phone hidden inside hollowed-out religious book ‘smuggled to prelate under detention’

VATICAN CITY
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 14 Mar 2016

A mobile phone hidden inside a Catholic religious book was smuggled to a Vatican prelate who is in detention for allegedly leaking confidential Holy See documents to investigative journalists, according to local media.

Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda is one of five people accused of leaking and publishing classified Vatican documents, with their trial inside the walls of the tiny city state to resume on Monday.

Since December the Spanish prelate has been held in a building inside the Vatican under house arrest.

But at the weekend the Vatican announced that he had been effectively rearrested and returned to a cell inside the barracks of the Vatican Gendarmerie, the sovereign state’s tiny police force, because he had “violated a ban on communicating with the outside world.”

It had been one of the conditions by which he was kept under house arrest, said the Rev Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman.

A website devoted to Vatican affairs claimed that the Spanish monsignor had been caught calling friends and supporters with a mobile phone that was smuggled to him in a hollowed-out copy of The Writings of St Francis. …

Until he was returned to the Vatican gendarmerie cell, he was being held in an apartment where a disgraced Vatican ambassador, Jozef Wesolowski, was kept pending his trial.

Archbishop Wesolowski was accused of sexually abusing teenage boys in the Dominican Republic, where he was posted. But he died suddenly last August, with the Vatican saying he had suffered a cardiac arrest.

“Balda is in fear of his life,” said Gabriel Ariza, the editor of Infovaticana. “He told me in a letter. He was being kept under house arrest in the same room where Wesolowski was found dead in mysterious circumstances.”

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Brisbane Grammar abuse victims push for tuition fee refund

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Leonie Mellor

A group of former Brisbane Grammar School (BGS) boys sexually abused by a paedophile school counsellor are calling on the royal commission into child sexual abuse to make recommendations urging private schools to refund tuition fees.

It is an attempt to force the hand of the prestigious BGS, which has refused to pay back school fees.

The men were among many who made submissions to the royal commission last year when it was investigating the handling of complaints about counsellor Kevin Lynch, who worked at BGS during the 1970s and 80s then at St Paul’s Anglican School during the 80s and 90s.

The Anglican Archdiocese of Brisbane agreed to refund school fees of victims from St Paul’s, prompting BGS students to pressure their former school to do the same.

“I had felt utterly betrayed by Brisbane Grammar School, on this particular aspect,” the father of one man said.

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WA–Victims want probe of archdiocese

WASHINGTON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims want probe of archdiocese
SNAP: “Law enforcement must act”
Group wants abuse documents disclosed
And they release part of a predator priest’s record
“Archbishop should also expand perp list,” victims say
A church agency counselor abused 2 weeks ago, they note

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will

–disclose 15 pages of church records about one of Seattle’s most notorious predator priests, and
–beg local law enforcement or the state attorney general to investigate the archdiocese with a focus on pursuing “enablers” – current or former church staff who may have destroyed evidence, obstructed justice intimidated victims, threatened whistleblowers, or refused to report known/suspected abuse to police.

They will also urge Seattle Catholic officials to

–end the “slow torture of gradual, grudging records releases” by fully “coming clean and voluntarily disclosing all documents about all child molesting clerics,” and
–add more names of child molesting priests, nuns, seminarians, brothers and lay people – including those who prey on vulnerable adults – to the recently-posted predators list on the church website.

WHEN
Monday, March 14, 1:15 p.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the Seattle Catholic archdiocesan headquarters (“chancery”) 710 9th Ave. (corner of Cherry St.) in downtown Seattle

WHO
Four-six clergy sex abuse victims who belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, including a Chicago woman who is the organization’s founder

WHY
—1) More than 115,000 pages of long-secret records about clergy sex crimes and cover up involving more than 50 priests were obtained in a recent grand jury investigation in the Altoona Pennsylvania diocese, which has garnered national attention recently. Seattle Catholic officials are hiding even more documents about even more predators, SNAP charges.

Eight other district attorneys across the US done similar investigations.

“If, for decades, dozens of staff at a hospital were hurting patients, prosecutors or the attorney general would launch investigations,” said Barbara Blaine of Chicago, SNAP’s founder. “Authorities would use their bully pulpits to urge the wounded to come forward. That’s the least that should happen here.”

—2) Even without a law enforcement investigation, SNAP says, Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain should, “for kids’ safety, victims’ healing and the church’s health,” voluntarily release those records, because kids will be safer and cover ups will be deterred if those who protected predators are publicly exposed.”

“Fixating solely on predator priests just distracts from the crux of the crisis: church staff who hide child sex crimes,” said Tim Lennon, a SNAP board member. “We believe that many employees who enabled pedophiles to hurt kids are still on the job in churches and that citizens and Catholics need and deserve to know who they are.”

—3) SNAP is making public today 15 pages of records about Fr. James McGreal. They show deliberate deception by Catholic officials. In 1977, a church therapist wrote Seattle’s then-archbishop that McGreal should “not have any close activities with teens or young adult men.” But 11 years later, the archbishop wrote to a McGreal victim’s family claiming he did not know McGreal was a pedophile until 1987.

SNAP believes “much more proof of many more lies and half-truths by more current and former Catholic supervisors” remains hidden in the archdiocesan secret files.

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Victims of French pedophile priest appeal to pope over ‘cover-up’

FRANCE
GMA News

Lyon, France – Victims of a French priest who has admitted sexually abusing boys wrote to the Vatican on Monday to ask for an audience with Pope Francis about an alleged cover-up by the archbishop of Lyon.

Priest Bernard Preynat was charged in January after victims came forward with claims he had sexually abused Scouts between 1986 and 1991.

Prosecutors say he has admitted the charges.

The victims have filed complaints against several senior officials in the Lyon diocese in eastern France, including Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, accusing them of being aware of the abuse but failing to report the priest.

“We no longer have any confidence in our diocese which is judge and jury in this case,” Bertrand Virieux, a member of the victims’ association, told AFP.

“We therefore appeal to the pope and we would like him to take firm action,” he said.

Virieux said the group did not feel it was their job to call for Barbarin’s resignation. “It is up to the pope to judge,” he said.

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Here is how PA’s ChildLine hotline failed to help victims of clergy sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

Throughout the 1990s priest across Philadelphia and Altoona were molesting hundreds of children.

Grand jury investigation reports have detailed the horrific crimes of sodomy, rape, and countless other acts of depravity carried out in confessionals, sacristies, rectory bedrooms, locker rooms and cars on altar boys, members of choirs and legions other children across parishes.

Across Catholic communities, few parents suspected such an unthinkable travesty, investigators concluded, but there were some who did.

Scores — if not hundreds — of parents and individuals in the state’s Catholic Church communities called Pennsylvania’s ChildLine hotline throughout those years to report that they suspected a priest of molesting a child, according to former Childline staffers.

Restricted by weak laws, the clerks and counselors who staffed the hotline could do little to help the callers or the possible victims. All they could do was to alert local law enforcement officials — the very people who, according to a recent state grand jury report, often ignored or colluded with church officials to hide the abuse.

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Vatican trial resumes against five charged with leaking money secrets

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By Inés San Martín
Vatican correspondent March 14, 2016

ROME — A trial against three former officials of a Vatican commission and two journalists, all accused of illegally obtaining and publishing documents revealing mismanagement of Church finances, resumed on Saturday with the first public hearings set for Monday and Tuesday.

Initially Vatican officials, including Pope Francis, had hoped the trial could be wrapped up quickly, before the pontiff’s Holy Year of Mercy began on Dec. 8. After a slew of requests for expert analysis and witnesses from defense attorneys, however, the trial before a three-judge panel was suspended in November and resumed only this week.

On Saturday, the trial judge met with technical experts in a closed-doors session to examine the admissibility of new computer evidence. Monday and Tuesday’s hearings will be dedicated to witness testimony.

Although it hasn’t been specified who will take part, some top Vatican officials have been called to testify. They include Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state; Spanish Cardinal Santos Abril y Castelló, president of a commission working on the reform of the Institute for the Works of Religion, often referred to as the “Vatican bank,” and Polish Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, head of papal charities.

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$1 million bond set against former priest accused in beauty queen murder

TEXAS
Brownsville Herald

A $1 million bond has been set against a former priest accused in the 1960 murder of McAllen beauty queen Irene Garza.

John Feit appeared this morning before 92nd state District Court Judge Luis Singleterry who placed a $1 million bond against Feit, who is a former priest.

Feit pleaded not guilty to the murder charge and was remanded back to the custody of Hidalgo County sheriff’s deputies.

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Former priest pleaded not guilty to 1960 death of McAllen schoolteacher

TEXAS
The Monitor

STAFF REPORT | Posted: Monday, March 14, 2016

With the help of a walker, 83-year-old former priest John Feit entered the courtroom Monday morning to face an Hidalgo County judge for the first time in connection with the 1960 rape and murder of Irene Garza.

After nearly 56 years of being suspected in 25-year-old Garza’s death, John Feit pleaded not guilty to murder before 92nd State District Court Judge Luis Singleterry who set his bond at $1 million.

Feit is accused in the April 1960 death of Garza, a schoolteacher and beauty queen who was last seen going to confession at McAllen’s Sacred Heart Church. Her body was found five days later after being dumped in a canal.

During the initial investigation officers linked Feit to Garza’s death after finding evidence and placing him at the church the night she disappeared. Feit was never charged in this case and was moved out of state by the church, documents show.

Feit was living in Arizona when he was arrested in February in connection to Garza’s death after a grand jury in Hidalgo County found there was enough evidence to prosecute him.

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