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.

May 2, 2017

Jewish academy teacher from East Windsor charged with sexually assaulting 12-year-old boy

NEW JERSEY
The Trentonian

By David Foster, The Trentonian

TRENTON >> Menachem Chinn’s wife, Ruth, recalls the day well.

She said Friday in a phone interview with The Trentonian that the boy had a leg cramp on the day in question in 2012.

“He was screaming, withering in pain,” Ruth Chinn said of the incident that occurred at the couple’s East Windsor home. “What do you do if the kid is withering in pain with knots in his muscle on his leg? You don’t help him?”

The wife said the boy was in the basement with a bunch of kids for her husband’s youth programming when the incident occurred. She’s unsure if her husband massaged the boy’s leg, but implied he worked the cramp out.

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.

Protests to be held today over National Maternity Hospital ownership

IRELAND
Hot Press

The row over whether a new €300m taxpayer-funded National Maternity Hospital should be granted to the Religious Sisters of Charity has gained momentum over the weekend, with protests scheduled at The Dail this afternoon at 1pm.

The move to hand over ownership of the National Maternity Hospital to the Sisters of Charity has proved highly controversial, with many people questioning the logic of there being any over-arching religious influence on such a key medical institution.

Despite attempts by Rhona Mahony, the Master of the National Maternity Hospital, to downplay the influence of the Religious Sisters of Charity, saying that it is a mere “technical detail”, there is a growing consensus that the issue of ownership is far more than a this, with the former Master of the Coombe Hospital, Chris Fitzpatrick, also coming out strongly against any involvement for the Sisters of Charity in the National Maternity Hospital project.

“This is a defining moment in terms of Irish maternity services,” he said in a letter to the HSE, “the first of four co-located maternity hospitals to be built arising out of the new Government strategy – so it’s essential to get it right.”

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.

Lujan determined to prove District Court has jurisdiction

GUAM
KUAM

[with video]

Updated: May 02, 2017

By Krystal Paco

Another round of clergy sex abuse cases was on the calendar in federal court today, but like the previous batch, the question of whether they actually belong there was raised. On the docket today were the plaintiffs accusing Archbishop Anthony Apuron and Father David Anderson of child sex abuse.

But the hearing didn’t get very far because of questions raised as to jurisdiction or whether it even belongs in the District Court.

KUAM News asked Attorney David Lujan if he was concerned that he wouldn’t be able to prove jurisdiction for a majority of your clients, to which he replied, “I think we’ll be able to prove for a majority of our clients. But then, you know, even the ones we don’t prove jurisdiction of course we’re back in superior court. So all it means is that it transfers courts, you know.”

Attorney Jacque Terlaje represents Apuron, who maintains his innocence. During the hearing she moved the cases be thrown out. She said, “Generally speaking, when you’re dealing with civil pleadings the plaintiff has the absolute burden to set forth certain things in order for the court to attain jurisdiction of the matter. And so essentially what was occurring in the hearing was that there was a proffer of certain evidence outside of that document so essentially I told the court the best way to deal with this issue is to dismiss it if the plaintiff has not met that burden and to start all over again essentially.”

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.

RMS property among assets Archdiocese may sell to compensate abuse victims

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

The archdiocese says parishes and school buildings will not be liquidated at this time.

Guam – The once-controversial Redemptoris Mater Seminary is among the properties the Archdiocese of Agana may be looking to sell as part of a larger effort to liquidate assets that will be used as compensation for clergy sexual abuse victims.

During a press conference today, Coadjutor Archbishop Michael Byrnes fielded questions about a reported list of assets the archdiocese put together of that could be potentially sold. The archdiocese has already contributed $1 million in seed money for the Hope and Healing fund that will provide counseling services and compensation to clergy sex abuse victims.

However, based on the sheer number of abuse victims who have already filed suit–58–as well as the dozens and dozens of callers into the Hope and Healing hotline, $1 million will clearly not cut it. Byrnes says the list of assets that may be liquidated include the RMS property in Yona which was mired in controversy as the archdiocese and leaders of the Neocatechumenal Way wrestled over ownership of the multimillion dollar property.

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

Former Simcoe Muskoka Catholic teacher facing abuse charges

CANADA
Muskoka Region

May 01, 2017 by Paige Phillips Huntsville Forester

MUSKOKA — A former employee with Simcoe Muskoka Catholic District School Board is facing six charges of professional misconduct.

Genevieve Charlton-Rogers faced a disciplinary hearing in Toronto on Tuesday, April 25, with the Ontario College of Teachers to answer to her actions during the 2012-2013 school year.

Charlton-Rogers is charged with professional misconduct under the Ontario College of Teachers Act. The college states that she failed to maintain the standards of the profession, abused a student or students psychologically or emotionally, abused a student or students sexually, failed to comply with the Education Act, committed acts that are regarded as disgraceful, dishonourable or unprofessional and engaged in conduct unbecoming.

An investigation committee of the Ontario College of Teachers is looking into allegations that during the 2012-2013 school year, while employed by the Simcoe Muskoka Catholic District School Board, Charlton-Rogers had an inappropriate personal relationship with a student and a sexual relationship.

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.

Belen priest removed from Archdiocese of Santa Fe

NEW MEXICO
KRQE

By David Romero
Published: May 1, 2017

BELEN, N.M. (KRQE) – Fr. Jonas Romea, the priest at Our Lady of Belen Catholic Church who made controversial comments about Muslims wanting to behead everyone, has now been removed from the Archdiocese of Santa Fe. Many people are asking why, but neither the church or the Archdiocese is talking.

Back in March, the church said the situation with Fr. Romea’s remarks had been handled. However, it appears a new situation with Fr. Romea was brought to the attention of the church within the last week.

It was also brought to the attention of Belen Police. They confirm with KRQE News 13 that they got an anonymous call involving Fr. Romea and a claim of possible sexual harassment. Chief Conner said detectives are looking into the matter to see if a full investigation is warranted.

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe would only send a statement regarding Romea’s dismissal, saying he is an active priest from the Diocese of Tagbilaran in the Philippines. The statement went on to say he served as Parochial Vicar at Our Lady of Belen, then thanked him for his ministry and wished him well.

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

Child molester priest rejects plea deal in second sex crime case

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Michaelangelo Conte | The Jersey Journal

A North Hudson preacher and self-proclaimed exorcist who was convicted of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old boy rejected a plea deal yesterday on another sex crime charge.

But first Gregorio Martinez, who was on the lam for 18 months after his February 2015 conviction, had some grievances to air with Hudson County Superior Court Judge Mitzy Galis-Menendez.

“I’m not guilty of anything,” Martinez, 49, the former North Bergen pastor, told the judge.

Martinez also complained at the hearing that when he is brought to court for a hearing, prisoners in other holding cells spit at him while he waits in his cell.

“When they are leaving they spit at my face and they spit at my chest,” Martinez said through a Spanish translator. Galis-Menendez called the spitting inappropriate and said she would alert the sheriff’s officers who handle the prisoners.

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.

US court jurisdiction in Apuron, Anderson cases raised

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com May 2, 2017

U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Joaquin V.E. Manibusan Jr. on Tuesday raised concerns anew on whether the federal court has jurisdiction over another batch of clergy sex abuse cases.

The cases include those filed against former Rev. David Anderson and Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron, both accused of raping and sexually abusing former altar boys.

Attorney David Lujan, counsel for former altar boys accusing Apuron and Anderson, asked for, and was granted, unt9l to June 2 to file a position paper proving court jurisdiction.

During Tuesday’s scheduling conference, Manibusan cited the case filed by the estate of the now-deceased former altar boy Joseph “Sonny” Quinata, who died in Hawaii, in 2005. The judge also sought stipulation as to where the other plaintiffs live.

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.

Judges recuse themselves in clergy sex abuse suits

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com May 2, 2017

While Guam clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed in federal court still need to resolve jurisdiction matters before moving forward, the lawsuits filed in local court continue to deal with judge recusals.

Judges have recused themselves from 12 of 13clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed in local court from March through April. Seven of eight Superior Court of Guam judges filed disqualification notices related to 12 lawsuits as of April 26, documents from the Judiciary of Guam show.

The recusals stem from conflict or potential conflict of interest, mainly because of the judges’ relationships with either the plaintiffs or the defendants.

The plaintiffs include former altar boys and former Boy Scouts who allege they were sexually abused by priests. The defendants include the Archdiocese of Agana and its clergy, the Boy Scouts of America and the Capuchin Franciscans.

In some cases, the judges cited ties to several members of the Neocatechumenal Way, such as Judge Anita A. Sukola, or the Concerned Catholics of Guam, in the case of Judge Vernon Perez.

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.

Central Catholic teacher from Salisbury under investigation

MASSACHUSETTS
Newburyport Daily News

LAWRENCE — A Salisbury resident is one of two members of Central Catholic High School’s staff identified as recently being placed on leave pending the outcome of misconduct investigations.

Parents, students and law enforcement officials identified social studies teacher and Salisbury resident John Housianitis, as well as basketball coach and Dean of Students Richard Nault, as the two staff members suspended last week during investigations of their behavior.

Information on the action taken was included in a letter sent Thursday evening to students, parents and alumni by Central Catholic’s president, Christopher Sullivan. The two were not identified in Sullivan’s letter.

Allegations involving the staff members came to the school’s attention in the wake of the firing of Andrew Nikonchuk, the former director of curriculum and instruction at the school. Nikonchuk, 36, of Lowell is under investigation for the drugging and rape of a student in 2006.

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Succession rules safeguard Catholic ethos of church’s health service assets

IRELAND
Irish Times

Colm Keena

In light of public controversy over the proposed movement of the National Maternity Hospital from Holles Street to the St Vincent’s campus, Minister for Health Simon Harris has said he would like to see a debate about the possible divestment of health service assets held by religious congregations.

Hospital and disability services used by hundreds of thousands of Irish people every year, paid for by the State and by private health insurance, are owned by religious congregations motivated by their Catholic faith.

An examination by The Irish Times of the four largest providers of such services shows that they all have rules that require that their assets are transferred to other charitable bodies with a Catholic ethos in the event that the congregations decide to wind up the companies that run these services.

With many of the congregations now seriously reduced in numbers, and their remaining members elderly, the hospitals and other services controlled by these orders are likely to be transferred to trusts and other such charitable entities, with a stated Catholic ethos, over the coming years.

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Thou Shalt Do Hard Jail Time: Judge increases prison sentence for pastor who ‘groomed,’ impregnated teen

PENNSYLVANIA
Crime Online

by Leigh Egan
May 1, 2017

After a Pennsylvania man pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a teenager and getting her pregnant, a judge shut down a two-year sentence jail term agreement and said that the punishment was “too low.”

People reports that Jacob Malone, 35, a married pastor of Exton, Pennsylvania, began sexually assaulting a 14-year-old teen in the fall of 2014 while he was acting as her guardian. According to Chester County Assistant District Attorney Emily Provencher, the sexual abuse lasted about a year. During the one-year time span, the suspect gave the victim alcohol and ended up getting her pregnant.

Malone was convicted of corruption of minors, institutional sex assault, and endangerment the welfare of children. Judge Jacqueline Cody sentenced Malone to three to six years in prison, followed by five months probation. After release, he’ll have to register as a sex offender for 15 years.

“This is one of the times when the court system fails. You are serving a sentence much lighter than the crime deserves,” Judge Cody said.

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Shalom Torah teacher charged with sex assault

NEW JERSEY
CentralJersey.com

By Lea Kahn, Staff Writer Apr 28, 2017

A 36-year-old East Windsor Township man who teaches at the Shalom Torah Academy in Monmouth County has been charged with one count each of endangering the welfare of a child and sexual assault, said Acting Mercer County Prosecutor Doris Galuchie and East Windsor Township Police Chief James A. Geary.

Menachem A. Chinn, 36, of East Windsor Township, was arrested April 20 at the East Windsor Township Police Department, according to Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office spokeswoman Casey DeBlasio. A detention hearing is pending.

The incident, which involved a 12-year-old boy, occurred at Chinn’s home in 2012. He is alleged to have touched the boy inappropriately.

The East Windsor Township Police Department recently learned of the allegations involving the boy, and contacted the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office’s Special Victims Unit. The two agencies conducted an investigation into the allegations.

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Teacher charged with sexually assaulting boy at home

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Kevin Shea | For NJ.com

EAST WINDSOR — Authorities have charged a teacher at a Monmouth County school with sexually assaulting a 12-year-old boy at his township home in 2012.

Detectives arrested Menachem A. Chinn, 36, Thursday night at East Windsor police headquarters, township police and the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office announced Friday.

Chinn is a teacher at the Shalom Torah Academy in the Morganville section of Marlboro, the prosecutor’s office said.

The school’s website lists him as a rabbi who instructs 6th and 7th grade boys. Another website, for a Jewish youth organization, also lists him as an instructor.

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Marlboro rabbi arrested for alleged sexual assault of boy in 2012

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey Jewish News

by Debra Rubin
NJJN Bureau Chief
May 1, 2017

A teacher at Shalom Torah Academy in Morganville and director of the Twin Rivers chapter of the National Council of Synagogue Youth (NCSY) is being held in the Mercer County Correctional Center for the alleged sexual assault of a 12-year-old boy.

According to a press release from acting Mercer County Prosecutor Doris M. Galuchie and East Windsor Township Police Chief James A. Geary, police were recently made aware that Chinn allegedly touched the victim inappropriately on one occasion. A report on NJ.com noted that the prosecutor’s office did not elaborate on why the victim was at the rabbi’s home; another on NJ1015.com wrote that it was unclear if the boy was a student at Shalom Torah. The police contacted the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Special Victims Unit and the agencies conducted a joint investigation. Prosecutor’s office spokesperson Casey DeBlasio told NJJN that a detention hearing was held April 26 in Mercer County Superior Court where a judge ordered Chinn held.

NCSY, the youth movement affiliated with the Orthodox Union, immediately placed Chinn on leave pending the results of the investigation. An NCSY New Jersey website that had listed him as “Twin Rivers Director” was taken down some days later. In a statement released shortly thereafter, NCSY wrote that it was “shocked” to learn of the arrest.

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Msgr. John J. O’Keefe – Assignment History

NEW YORK
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: John “Jack” J. O’Keefe was ordained for the Archdiocese of New York in 1972. He went on to assist in three Bronx parishes and, in 1977, he joined the faculty of Cardinal Hayes High School. In the early 1990s, after over 25 years years as a teacher and guidance counselor, O’Keefe left Hayes to assume the role of president of Archbishop Stepinac High in White Plains. In 1995 he was elevated to Monsignor status. O’Keefe moved on from Stepinac High in 2004 to pastor St. Margaret’s parish in Pearl River.

In December 2015 O’Keefe was removed from St. Margaret’s and suspended from active ministry after he was accused in a lawsuit of having sexually abused a Hayes High School student in the early 1980s. The abuse was said to have occurred on two occasions – in a Virginia hotel during a school trip to Washington D.C., and during a weekend leadership training program at the Irish Christian Brothers’ retreat house in Esopus, New York. District Attorneys in Virginia and New York deemed the allegations ‘credible.’ O’Keefe denied them. He was reportedly living in a supervised setting for evaluation and risk assessment after his suspension. In September 2016 O’Keefe was permanently removed from ministry; two other male accusers had come forward by then with credible allegations.

Ordained: 1972

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Lawsuit claims BSA, LDS Church concealed information on abuse by Idaho Scout leaders

IDAHO
Deseret News

By Scott Taylor
Published: May 1, 2017

SALT LAKE CITY — Five men who claimed to have been abused as youth by Scouting leaders in two separate Idaho cities, are suing the Boys Scouts of America and the LDS Church, with the lawsuit saying both organizations deceptively presented the youth program as a safe and wholesome activity for boys.

The lawsuit was filed Monday in Boise’s U.S. District Court by attorneys from Boise and Portland, Oregon, who have represented other men bringing similar sexual-abuse lawsuits against the BSA and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The lawsuit says both organizations knew of problems with child molesters in Idaho Scout troops and intentionally concealed this problem from families, participants, volunteers and law enforcement.

Monday’s case involved two plantiffs by name and three “John Does,” citing abuse that was committed by Scouting leaders to youth participants in the 1960s and ’70s in Boise and Lewiston, the latter 266 miles to the north of Idaho’s capital city. Three former Scout leaders were specifically named in the lawsuit.

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Five men sue Boy Scouts, the Mormon church

IDAHO
The Columbian

By REBECCA BOONE, Associated Press
Published: May 1, 2017

BOISE, Idaho — Five men who say they were sexually abused as kids while in the Boy Scouts of America are suing the organization and the Mormon church because they say both groups fraudulently presented the Boy Scouts as a safe, wholesome activity for boys.

The men filed the lawsuit Monday in Boise’s U.S. District Court. They contend that the Boy Scouts of America and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints knew that there were child molesters in the Boy Scouts, but they covered up the danger instead of letting parents and children know about the risk.

LDS church spokesman Eric Hawkins said in a prepared statement, “We have only recently learned about this legal action, and will take time to understand it fully and to respond as appropriate.”

The Boy Scouts of America said in a prepared statement that the behavior included in the allegations is abhorrent, and that the organization has strengthened its efforts to protect youth in the years since the abuse occurred.

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The Mistake Christians Made in Defending Bill O’Reilly

UNITED STATES
New York Times

By KATELYN BEATY
MAY 2, 2017

Institutions plagued by sexual assault scandals tend to look alike: They are usually insular organizations that resist external checks and revolve around authoritative men.

This characterization fits Fox News, which recently fired its host Bill O’Reilly after sexual harassment allegations against him (and pressure from advertisers) mounted.

But it is also applies to the white evangelical Christian community. This group is not a monolith, but its social hierarchy often functions like the military, a university or private business. It’s not a coincidence that conservative evangelical leaders tend to resist taking harassment and assault claims seriously.

Eric Metaxas, a best-selling Christian author, tweeted after the firing that Mr. O’Reilly’s ouster was “tremendously sad” and that his show had been a “blessing to millions.” When people responding to his tweet noted that he was silent on the harassment itself, he wrote “Jesus loves Bill O’Reilly” and told his followers to pray for their enemies.

Many Christian leaders responded to Donald Trump’s bragging about sexual assault with a similar line of defense. Jerry Falwell Jr., president of Liberty University, the country’s largest Christian college, said that “we’re all sinners” and that Mr. Trump had apologized. (In fact, Mr. Trump has said that he doesn’t ask God for forgiveness and didn’t need to ask his wife for it either.) Mr. Falwell later claimed to have proof that the women accusing Mr. Trump of sexual harassment were lying.

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Sisters of Charity must be allowed exercise their conscience too

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

In a weekend interview the Master at Holles Street Hospital in Dublin, Rhona Mahony, was clear. The need for the new National Maternity Hospital at St Vincent’s in Elm Park, owing to conditions at Holles Street, was “unarguable”, “unassailable”, “a simple, clinical imperative”, she said.

“It would be terrible if it was stopped because of a sideshow. When the next woman dies, how will the conversation go then?” Indeed. And “there’s the rub”, as Hamlet might say, the nub of this “sideshow.”

Speaking of “the next woman” in this context Dr Mahony may have been referring to Savita Halappanavar, the 31-year-old Indian woman who died in October 2012 at University Hospital Galway a week after she was found to be miscarrying.Her husband, Praveen, said she asked several times over three days for a termination and this was refused because the foetal heartbeat was still present and, as one midwife said, “this is a Catholic country”.

One of Dr Mahony’s predecessors as Master at Holles St, Dr Peter Boylan, was an expert witness at an inquiry and at the inquest into Halappanavar’s death.

Clearly he too is anxious that there will be no “next woman” to die in circumstances similar to those in which Halappanavar lost her life.

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Defining An Occurrence For Sexual Abuse Cases

MINNESOTA
Law 360

By Katharine Thompson, Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani LLP
April 27, 2017

In Diocese of Duluth v. Liberty Mutual Group et al., case no. 16-05012 (Mar. 30, 2017), the Bankruptcy Court for the District Court for Minnesota was asked to determine the trigger of coverage and the number of “occurrences” related to negligence claims asserted against the Diocese of Duluth by victims of priest sexual abuse. Such claims drove the Diocese to file for bankruptcy. As part of that bankruptcy proceeding, the Diocese filed an adversary proceeding seeking coverage from several of its insurers which had issued multiple “occurrence”-based policies spanning several decades. Ruling in favor of the Diocese, the court found that multiple years of coverage could be triggered and that multiple “occurrences” could be found in each policy year because each victim was a separate “occurrence.”

The Diocese successfully argued that each alleged act of abuse constituted a separate “occurrence” under all insurer’s policies, although it conceded that under the policies’ “occurrence” definition (“arising out of continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general conditions shall be considered as arising out of one occurrence”) multiple instances of abuse of the same victim by the same priest in the same year constituted a single “occurrence” for that year.

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Father Kevin Dillon leaves Geelong after 17 years of service

AUSTRALIA
Geelong Advertiser

Bodey Dittloff, Geelong Advertiser
May 2, 2017

MUCH-LOVED and admired Geelong priest, Father Kevin Dillon, has confirmed he is leaving his post following a remarkable 17-year service to the local church and wider community.

The St Mary of the Angels Parish priest is set to take up a new position in July at St Simon the Apostle Parish in Rowville, which is located in Melbourne’s far-eastern suburbs.

Speaking to 3AW radio today, Fr Dillon said the change of scenery was his decision alone as he edged towards the retirement marker of 75 years of age, but that leaving would “just about kill me”. …

Having also been a long-time critic of the church’s handling of sexual abuse claims, Father Dillon said he remained in contact with “a lot” of those affected and hoped to continue his advocacy.

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Jurisdiction for sex abuse lawsuits stalls cases

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

Attorney Lujan will have until June 2 to submit a position paper regarding diversity jurisdiction.

Guam – Jurisdiction for some of the dozens of cases of church sex abuse lawsuits in federal court continues to be an issue and if no judge will take on the case, Attorney David Lujan says he will press on until they can find one.

Attorney Lujan represents 45 plaintiffs suing the Archdiocese of Agana and various clergy members in federal court for millions of dollars in civil claims of sexual abuse. Today he was summoned for a hearing by US Magistrate Judge Joaquin Manibusan who expressed the same concerns he had last week regarding diversity jurisdiction.

At this point, it’s unclear for some of Lujan’s clients where they are registered as residents and Judge Manibusan wants to ensure that he will have jurisdiction to preside over the cases. Lujan notes that even if he cannot prove diversity jurisdiction for some of his clients, they will find a way around it.

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May 1, 2017

Past sex abuse allegations revealed at Central protest

MASSACHUSETTS
Eagle-Tribune

By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

LAWRENCE — The leader of a recovery group for sexual abuse survivors said he was saddened, but not surprised, to hear a former Central Catholic High School student say he was drugged and raped by a teacher.

“Now, we wait. We are going to get more calls,” predicted Dr. Robert Hoatson, founder and leader of Road to Recovery.

An international, nonprofit group, Road to Recovery helps sexual abuse survivors, many of whom are men who report being abused as boys by clergy members.

Late Monday morning, Hoatson demonstrated on a public sidewalk across from Central Catholic High School where last week an administrator, Andrew Nikonchuk, 36, of Lowell, was fired for failing to maintain “appropriate social boundaries” between teachers and students. The Middlesex district attorney’s office launched an investigation of Nikonchuk after a former student said Nikonchuk drugged and assaulted him in 2006 when the student was age 15.

The alleged victim graduated from Central in 2008. The matter remains under investigation by authorities and no charges have been filed.

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Involving children in decisions ‘will help protect them from sexual abuse’

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
Monday 1 May 2017

Involving children in the research and decisions that will impact their lives is essential to protect them from being abused within institutions such as sporting clubs, churches and schools, a symposium held by the child sexual abuse royal commission has heard.

On Monday researchers released the findings from three research reports ordered by the commission on the topic of child-safe institutions. The reports examined: key elements of child-safe organisations; the safety of young people in residential care; and disability and institutional child sexual abuse.

One of the six royal commissioners, Justice Jennifer Coate, told the symposium that survivors of child sexual abuse often shared their stories in the hope they could help stop the scourge of child sexual abuse into the future. As children, they were often unheard, or heard but ignored and punished.

“A key challenge for the commission has been the lack of research on institutional child sexual abuse to date,” Coate said. “There has been no large-scale, cross-jurisdiction focus on the topic.”

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Man alleging he was raped by Central Catholic teacher hired renowned sex-abuse lawyer

MASSACHUSETTS
The Lowell Sun

[with video]

By Robert Mills, rmills@lowellsun.com

LAWRENCE — Well-known Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who played a major role in exposing the Catholic Church sex scandal, is now working with a client who alleges he was sexually abused by four Marist Brothers at Central Catholic High School in the 1960s.

The allegations were announced Monday, less than a week after allegations of inappropriate behavior by two administrators and a teacher rocked the school.

Garabedian said he was contacted over a week ago by a man in his 60s who alleges he was sexually abused by four Marist Brothers in the school when he was 14 and 15 years old.

That client, whose name and hometown Garabedian declined to share, also says he was sexually abused by the late Rev. Paul Rynne at St. Patrick’s parish in Lawrence. Rynne, who died in 2004, previously faced accusations that he sexually abused boys at parishes in Plymouth and Brockton.

“We’re preparing my client’s case so we can notify the Archdiocese of Boston and the Marist Brothers of the sexual abuse and take appropriate action from there,” Garabedian said.

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Accused priest to appear in St. Martin court

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Ken Stickney , kstickney@theadvertiser.com May 1, 2017

The Rev. Felix David Broussard, accused 10 months ago in a child pornography case in Breaux Bridge, is expected to enter a guilty plea Tuesday, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Lafayette said.

Broussard, an Acadia Parish native and diocesan parish priest for more than 20 years, was accused last July after the Louisiana State Police Special Victims Unit said they found more than 500 images of child pornography on his personal computer, which was kept at the residence of St. Bernard Roman Catholic Church in Breaux Bridge. State Police joined the investigation at the request of the St. Martin Sheriff’s Office.

Broussard had served as pastor at St. Bernard and chancellor of the parish school for two years at the time of his arrest. Investigators said he had been seeking pornographic images of children on his computer for most of that time.

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Duterte, Sex Abuse, & Street Justice

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • May 1, 2017

Rodrigo Duterte, the violent, authoritarian populist president of the Philippines, claims he was sexually abused by a Jesuit priest in his youth. From a 2015 story published when he was mayor of Davao City:

Mayor Rodrigo Duterte has named the priest who allegedly molested him and several other high school boys when he was a teenager studying at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Davao University (AdDU) here.

Duterte said the sexual abuser was the late Fr. Mark Falvey, SJ, one of the Jesuit priests at AdDU, and that the abuse happened once when he was a high school freshman in 1956. And he spelled out the name of the American Jesuit priest.

“It happened during our generation, two years ahead of us and two years following us,” Duterte told reporters here late Thursday.

All of this makes emotional sense to me. As many of you readers know, it was becoming deeply involved in reporting and commenting on the sex abuse story in the early 2000s that ended up costing me my Catholic faith. The other night in Nashville, in conversation with a new Catholic friend, I tried to explain to him what that felt like from the inside. He had said, reasonably, “I don’t understand why the sins of priests made you quit believing in the teachings of the Church.”

What I explained was that I too had believed that as long as I had all the arguments clear in my mind, my faith would be impregnable. And you know, that may work for some people. But entering into the stories of Catholic child victims of molester priests, and their families, changed me in ways that I could never have anticipated.

William Lobdell, once the religion reporter for the Los Angeles Times, writes about how the same experience cost him his faith in Christianity, period. He used to be an enthusiastic churchgoer, and had entered into the process by which one joins the Roman Catholic Church. When he started covering the abuse scandal, a priest warned him to keep his eyes on Christ, not on priests. But then:

But then I began going over the documents. And interviewing the victims, scores of them. I discovered that the term “sexual abuse” is a euphemism. Most of these children were raped and sodomized by someone they and their family believed was Christ’s representative on Earth. That’s not something an 8-year-old’s mind can process; it forever warps a person’s sexuality and spirituality.

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New allegation of abuse surfaces against deceased former priest

MISSOURI
Joplin Globe

A complaint of sexual abuse involving a minor and Larry Gregovich, a former Catholic priest who died earlier this year, has been made to the Diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau, the diocese announced in a statement Monday.

The diocese, which covers the southern third of Missouri, also said in the statement that it notified civil authorities of the incident, which occurred more than 30 years ago, but did not say who was notified, or where. The allegation also was forwarded to the diocesan Safe Environment Review Board, which found it “credible” during a recent meeting.

Gregovich had been the target of earlier allegations that were made public by the diocese in 2002, but he was never charged with any criminal wrongdoing.

Leslie Eidson, spokesperson for the diocese, said more details were not being released because the alleged victim wants to remain anonymous.

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Diocese adds names to sex abuser list

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., April 29, 2017

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

GALLUP — Officials with the Diocese of Gallup announced they have added three more names to the list of credibly accused clergy sex abusers Wednesday.

“There have been credible allegations of past sexual abuse of a minor (all occurring prior to 2004) against Br. Mark Schornack, OFM, Fr. Ephraim Beltramea, OFM, and Fr. Diego Mazon, OFM,” the diocese announced in a news release.

All three were Franciscan friars who were assigned to churches in the Gallup Diocese for at least part of their ministry. This brings the number of names on the diocese’s credibly accused list to 34, which now includes 33 clergy members and one lay church worker.

However, contrary to the diocese’s announcement, church officials did not add the additional names to the diocese’s published website list until Friday afternoon, after being notified by the Gallup Independent that the names were still absent.

When contacted about the oversight, Suzanne Hammons, the spokeswoman for the Diocese, corrected the website list but said she would not answer any questions about the announcement now because she “gave the exclusive on the story” to the Catholic News Agency.

Public allegations

Although the Diocese of Gallup has just pronounced the allegations to be credible, allegations against the men have been public for years.

Schornack was named in two clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed by Phoenix attorney Robert E. Pastor on behalf of two women who said they were abused as children by Schornack at either St. Michael Mission or St. Michael Indian School. Both women were claimants in the Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case, and both received settlements as part of the Chapter 11 plan of reorganization. One of the women currently has a lawsuit against the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament who operate St. Michael Indian School. Schornack died in 2012.

Mazon, who is originally from the Gallup area, has been the subject of media reports after the Gallup Independent discovered he had been named in a clergy sex abuse lawsuit filed in 2005, on behalf of a woman who said Mazon abused her as a child in Roswell in the 1970s. Along with Mazon, the Archdiocese of Santa Fe and the Franciscan Province of St. John the Baptist in Ohio were named as defendants. In 2009, Annette M. Klimka, the victims’ assistance coordinator for the Santa Fe Archdiocese, confirmed Mazon had been removed from ministry at St. Francis Church in Gallup because of the abuse allegations, and she said a settlement agreement had been made in the case. Parishioners in Gallup, however, were told Mazon stepped down for health reasons. Mazon lives in retirement in the Albuquerque area, along with the Rev. Lawrence “Larry” Schreiber, another credibly accused Franciscan friar.

Beltramea, aka Ephrem or John Beltramea, was named by at least one abuse claimant in the Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case. According to the diocese, Beltramea had only one ministry assignment in the diocese: St. Francis Church in Gallup from 1970-1973. Online websites indicate he was ordained in Washburn, Illinois, in 1961, and he served for some time as a priest in Illinois before coming to the Southwest. Diocesan officials haven’t been able to determine if Beltramea is still living.

Right direction, slow pace

“I think it’s finally a step in the right direction for the diocese,” Gallup resident Prudence Jones said in a phone interview Thursday. “But there are still many more steps ahead for the victims’ relief.”

As a child, Jones was abused by Schornack at St. Michael Mission. During the diocese’s bankruptcy case, she served on the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, which represented the interests of abuse claimants. She said she hopes the Gallup Diocese will add more names to its list of credibly accused abusers in the near future.

Jones expressed anger over the “really slow, slow pace — frustratingly slow” time that it took the Diocese of Gallup to admit Schornack was a credibly accused abuser.

“It took a lifetime,” she said.

Jones said Schornack apologized to her not long before his death, but his apology left her wondering how many other children he had abused. Jones explained she had confided the story of her abuse to a priest at St. Francis Church in Gallup. That priest then arranged for Jones to meet with Schornack, who was a resident at the Little Sisters of the Poor facility in Gallup.

“The first words he spoke to me was, ‘Did I hurt you?’” Jones recalled. When Jones said yes, Schornack apologized to her.

“That floored me,” Jones said. “How many more were there?”

Jones also expressed frustration that the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament and St. Michael Indian School failed to contribute to the Diocese of Gallup’s settlement agreement and are now fighting another Schornack abuse survivor in court. Jones described the Sisters’ legal approach to the abuse survivor as similar to that taken by other church entities: “Deny, deny. Dig your feet in and don’t go willingly.”

With the addition of the three names to the diocese’s list of credibly accused abusers, Bishop James S. Wall will need to add two more healing services for abuse survivors to his schedule. Under the non-monetary provisions of the Chapter 11 reorganization, Wall is required to visit every Catholic school and church where an abuser was assigned. Wall will now need to visit the Arizona parishes of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Kayenta and St. Anne in Klagetoh, both on the Navajo Nation.

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‘Chiesa e pedofilia, il caso italiano’, Tulli e Zanardi presentano il libro di cui nessuno vuole parlare

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[‘Church and pedophilia, the Italian case’, Tulli and Zanardi present the book that nobody wants to talk about.]

Presentato ieri il libro “Chiesa e pedofilia, il caso italiano” nella libreria di viale Libia

Chi lo ha letto, giura che “Lussuria” scritto da Emiliano Fittipaldi, il giornalista prima incriminato e poi assolto dal Vaticano, a confronto sembri un fumetto per ragazzi, tante sono scottanti le rivelazioni contenute nell’opera di Federico Tulli. Eppure, la stampa nazionale continua a far finta di non conoscerne l’esistenza. Silenzio tombale.

Ma ieri, la firma storica di Left, la rivista settimanale di sinistra, lo ha presentato a Roma, a pochi passi dal Vaticano. Ed è proprio nella città-Stato che la pubblicazione ha creato il maggior imbarazzo. Il contenuto non solo fa riferimento ai preti pedofili, di cui ormai tutti parlano, ma mette in discussione la figura di Bergoglio, che, contrariamente a quanto predica dal famoso davanzale di Piazza San Pietro, sarebbe complice delle ignobili coperture perpetrate dalla Chiesa nei confronti dei carnefici di bambini.

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MA PERCHÈ LA CHIESA NON AGISCE DECISA?

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[ABUSE Network is a non-profit organization of victims, including me, abused by priests. We take care to welcome and assist, especially from the legal point of view, those who turn to the association as a result of abuse. We also collect reports from sources of various kinds then we store and we catalog. Just as the story of Carlos Buela whose presence in the Archdiocese of Genoa has been documented by us due to warnings of the victims who follow us all over the world.]

Rete L’ABUSO è una Onlus di vittime, io compreso, abusate da sacerdoti. Ci occupiamo di accogliere e assistere, soprattutto dal punto di vista legale, coloro che si rivolgono all’associazione a seguito di abusi. Inoltre raccogliamo segnalazioni anche da fonti di varia natura, che poi archiviamo e cataloghiamo. Proprio come la vicenda di Carlos Buela, la cui presenza nell’Arcidiocesi di Genova è stata da noi documentata grazie agli avvisi delle vittime che ci seguono da tutto il mondo.

Persone che si sono fatte forza e, in concomitanza con lo scandalo che in Argentina vedeva protagonista don Nicola Corradi, ci hanno scritto, mandato documenti e indicazioni che ci hanno permesso di localizzare Buela. Da quando abbiamo deciso di seguire da vicino queste sconvolgenti vicende, abbiamo capito che in Italia se ne verificano molte: negli ultimi 15 anni, sono stati più di 250 i preti coinvolti (135 condannati in via definitiva e i rimanenti in attesa di giudizio o svaniti nel nulla).

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Indian Catholics frustrated over clergy sex abuse cases

INDIA
National Catholic Reporter

Jose Kavi | May. 1, 2017

NEW DELHI
A rash of recent alleged sex abuse cases involving Catholic priests in Southern India have left Christians distraught and frustrated over the local church’s lack of response. More than 100 theologians, women religious, priests and feminists have written to India’s bishops to demand they react quickly in accordance with the pope’s call to end such transgressions.

“We are trying every way to get the bishops to act. We thought this is a good opportunity,” says Virginia Saldanha, a theologian who was part of the team that drafted the March 22 letter to the bishops.

Astrid Lobo Gajiwala, another theologian who coordinated the letter’s drafting, says the Feb. 28 arrest of a Catholic priest who allegedly raped and impregnated a young teenage girl in his parish in Kerala state spurred them to go to church authorities.

Police apprehended Fr. Robin Vadakkumcherry, 48, of the Mananthavady Diocese while he was trying to flee the country after the alleged crimes. Vadakkumcherry is now in jail awaiting trial, police said.

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Bankruptcy Judge Recuses Self in Diocese Bankruptcy

MONTANA
U.S. News

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Montana’s federal bankruptcy judge has recused himself from overseeing the bankruptcy filing of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Great Falls-Billings because his former law firm provided assistance in the case.

The Billings Gazette reports (http://bit.ly/2oYu7s3) U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Benjamin Hursh disqualified himself from hearing the case on April 24. The case has been assigned to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jim Pappas of Idaho.

The diocese filed for bankruptcy in March as part of the negotiations to settle 72 claims of sexual abuse.

The diocese says it and its insurance carrier would contribute to a fund to compensate victims.

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Latest sex abuse case names deceased monsignor

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | The Guam Daily Post May 2, 2017

A former monsignor of the Archdiocese of Agana has been named in the latest child sexual abuse lawsuit filed in the District Court of Guam.

According to court documents, a plaintiff by the initials H.J.C. has accused former Guam priest Raymond Cepeda and now-deceased Monsignor Zoilo Camacho of child sexual abuse from 1974 through 1980 at the Santa Barbara Catholic Church in Dededo.

The lawsuit described H.J.C. as having been raised in a devout Catholic family that regularly attended Mass, volunteered at functions and donated money to the church. Though H.J.C. was not an altar boy, court documents indicate that he would volunteer his services by helping to clean around the church after services.

The 53-year-old H.J.C. alleged Camacho gave him gifts and toys when he attended the Dededo parish between the ages of 11 and 15 and, on numerous occasions, would fondle his private parts and force H.J.C. to masturbate him.

“On several occasions, during confession, Camacho would instruct H.J.C. to close his eyes and start to fondle H.J.C.,” court documents state. “Camacho would then take H.J.C.’s hand, put it on Camacho’s penis and force H.J.C. to masturbate Chamacho. Whenever H.J.C. attempted to pull his hand away, Camacho would say, ‘Boboy don’t worry’ and he would tell H.J.C. that he would buy (him) more toys.”

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Central Catholic sex abuse demonstration will unveil new allegations from 1960s incident

MASSACHUSETTS
Eagle-Tribune

By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

LAWRENCE — An international group that supports sexual abuse survivors will be on the public sidewalk in front of Central Catholic High School in Lawrence late Monday morning.

The group, Road to Recovery, is coming to the city after Central Catholic administrator Andrew Nikonchuk was fired last Tuesday due to allegations that he drugged and raped a student in 2006.

Road to Recovery is also exposing new information and allegations regarding sexual abuse of a boy by a priest at St. Patrick’s Church and members of a Catholic order of brothers who worked at Central Catholic High School in the 1960s, said Dr. Robert Hoatson, founder and leader of Road to Recovery.

“In light of this new information, we will still be at Central Catholic, but not rallying so much as exposing this latest disturbing information,” Hoatson told The Eagle-Tribune.

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Separation of Irish health service from church ‘could take years’

IRELAND
Newstalk

It could take years not months for the full evolution of health services in Ireland from church to State.

Health Minister Simon Harris says he has heard ‘very clearly’ the public concern over the ownership issue of the the new National Maternity Hospital, and will report back by the end of May.

Minister Harris says he will now focus on the part of the agreement which allows the State to take a lien over the facility.

He also welcomed the fact that it has opened up a wider conversation about religious control of our hospitals.

“After many years of failed attempts, I was delighted when, late last year, the two voluntary hospitals involved agreed to work together to make this happen and to ensure co-location between maternity and acute adult services,” the statement read.

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Child abuse charity founder dies still fighting for justice

SCOTLAND
Third Force News

1st May 2017 by Susan Smith

The founder of charity In Care Abuse Survivors (Incas), Frank Docherty, has died aged 74 while still campaigning for justice.

Docherty’s death aged 74 has led other campaigners for victims of child abuse in state care to call for an interim compensation scheme while the Scottish Government continues its Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry.

They say there should be support for elderly victims like Docherty immediately as the inquiry is not due to report back until autumn 2019.

Docherty and his siblings were taken into care as a result of alcoholic parents when he was nine years old in 1954. They were housed at the Catholic-run orphanage Smyllum Park in Lanark where they suffered regular physical abuse including beatings and humiliation.

The orphanage is one of those specifically being investigated by the inquiry.

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Abuse victim who fought for justice dies without redress

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

THE death of a leading campaigner for victims of child abuse in state care has led to renewed calls for Deputy First Minister John Swinney to put an interim compensation scheme in place.

Frank Docherty, who died yesterday at the age of 74, was one of the founders of the charity In Care Abuse Survivors (Incas), of which he was honorary president.

In 1954 aged nine, he and his siblings were removed from the care of alcoholic parents and sent to the Catholic-run orphanage Smyllum Park, in Lanark. But while there, he suffered regular physical abuse including beatings and humiliation.

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Cop denies sex abuse of boys while teacher at Catholic college

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Shannon Hampton
Sunday, 30 April 2017

A Perth policeman accused of sexually assaulting boys while he was a teacher in the mid-1980s will stand trial to defend the allegations.

Eamon Heary, 56, who was a teacher at a Catholic college in the Perth CBD at the time of the alleged offences, has been charged with five counts of unlawfully indecently dealing with a child under 14.

He pleaded not guilty to all five charges today in the Perth Magistrate’s Court.

Mr Heary, a sergeant in the Central Metropolitan District, has been stood down from operational duties.

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58th victim alleges abuse by two Santa Barbara priests

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: May 01, 2017

By Krystal Paco

Fifty-eight – that’s the number of plaintiffs who have filed suit against the Archdiocese of Agana to date. 53-year-old H.J.C. alleges he was sexually molested and abused by both Monsignor Ziolo Camacho for about five years and separately by Father Raymond Cepeda for two years. Both men were priests at Santa Barbara Catholic Church. H.J.C. alleges Camacho sexually abused him after mass and during confessions and would promise toys in exchange. H.J.C. is suing for $10 million. He is represented by attorney David Lujan.

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Pope Francis taps Notre Dame Investment Guru for Vatican Bank

ROME
Crux

Claire Giangravè May 1, 2017
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

The IOR, also known as the Vatican bank, is turning a new page and adding three new lay members to its Supervisory Board. According to Investment Guru at Notre Dame, Scott Malpass, this change is an “expression of a rich heritage of the Church engaging with laity.”

ROME – In December 2016 the Vatican announced that the lay board of the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), also known as the Vatican Bank, had added three new members bringing the total count to seven.

This represented an effort to think outside the box for the IOR in the sense that it showed not only a strong support for reform and change within the Vatican institution, but also openness toward world-renowned lay experts and professionals to bring attention to the balance sheet.

The newbies are American Scott C. Malpass, Spaniard Javier Marín Romano and the German Georg Freiherr von Boeselager. They all have in common a vast experience in the banking and financial fields as well as the fact that none of them is Italian.

The latter caused a bit of patriotic indignation on behalf of Italian media outlets that pointed at the board as in the conspiratorial hands of “Americans, Opus Dei, and the Germans.”

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Senator Don Meredith Harassed, Sexually Abused Staff For Years, Say Former Aides

CANADA
Huffington Post

Zi-Ann Lum
ziann.lum@huffingtonpost.com

Two sets of doors were always closed before Sen. Don Meredith felt comfortable starting any meeting in his office across Parliament Hill.

The first leads to a shared hallway, the second to Meredith’s desk. Shutting them both seemed to give him a sense of privacy and control.

Staff members found it bizarre, but they did what their boss asked. “Constant paranoia” was a running theme in the office, one former female aide said.

Behind those doors, they claim, the senator began inappropriately touching his female employees. …

Meredith, who is also a pastor, would declare that they should pray together, according to the ex-worker.

“The way that his religion prays is to actually put a hand on the person next to you — and he would use that excuse to touch me more than just putting his hand on my shoulder for the prayer,” she said, alleging the senator used the intimacy of prayer to touch her breast and her bottom.

She said “it was sickening” and made her feel violated “every time.”

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11th priest accused in latest clergy sex abuse suit

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com May 1, 2017

An 11th priest has been added to the list of Guam clergy accused of sexually abusing children decades ago. Monsignor Zoilo L.G. Camacho, who died about a decade ago, is named in a lawsuit filed Monday in federal court. Camacho is the brother of another accused priest, Juan Camacho.

Defrocked priest Raymond Cepeda also sexually abused the same boy, according to the complaint, filed by a man identified in court documents as H.J.C.

H.J.C., now 53 and living on Guam, is represented by attorney David Lujan. H.J.C.’s complaint is the 58th Guam clergy sex abuse lawsuit filed so far in federal and local courts.

The complaint states Zoilo Camacho sexually abused H.J.C from around 1974 to 1978 when he was 11 to 15 years old, and he also was abused by Cepeda from around 1978 to 1980, when he was about 15 to 17.

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