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.

October 24, 2017

Malojloj man latest to accuse priest of molestation

GUAM
KUAM News

October 24, 2017

By Krystal Paco

A 53-year-old Malojloj man is the latest person to come forward alleging child sex abuse involving the local Catholic Church. Identified only as J.T., it was between 1972 through 1976 that he was sexually molested by Fr. Louis Brouillard who was the priest at San Isidro Catholic Church and a Boy Scout Master. JT during that time was an altar boy and Boy Scout.

He alleges Fr. Brouillard sexually molested him on parish grounds and during Boy Scout outings. Several years later Fr. Brouillard was reassigned to Minnesota. In 1981 he wrote to JT’s parents offering to pay for his college tuition, air fare, food and housing. Although JT didn’t want to go, his parents convinced him that it was an opportunity he could not pass up.

Under the impression he would be attending college, not soon after he arrived, Fr Brouillard took him to Canada where he allegedly tried to force JT to have sex with him. The victim pushed him away, refused and told the priest he would not be his sex toy. This was the last time JT ever saw or had a sexual encounter with Brouillard.

In an interview with KUAM last year, the priest confessed to sexually molesting boys in Guam, saying he thought it made them happy.

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.

Archdiocese committed to protecting youth against sexual abuse

GUAM
Pacific News Center

October 24, 2017

By Jolene Toves
.
The Archdiocese of Agana is implementing a revised policy intended to protect our island’s youth from sexual predators in hopes of rebuilding faith in the Catholic Church.

Guam – Over the last several years the Archdiocese of Guam has found itself in the midst of sexual abuse scandals, to date over 100 cases of sexual abuse has been filed against the church. But even more alarming in each case it is alleged that the Archdiocese was aware and conspired to cover-up the widespread sexual violence.

In September, both the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests and the Center for Constitutional Rights, in a report to the UN argued “that the Holy See has not made substantial progress in genuinely acknowledging, internalizing and implements the full range of policies and practices that would center children’s best interest and protect them against sexual violence.”

Today, it appears that at least for the Archdiocese of Guam, they are attempting to make a change, through the implementation of policies addressing the problems of sexual abuse by clergy, employees and volunteers.

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.

Man says he refused to be priest’s sex toy in US

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 24, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

Father Louis Brouillard is accused of bringing another altar boy and Boy Scout from Guam to Minnesota and Canada decades ago, allegedly to continue sexually abusing him.

J.T., now 53, said in his lawsuit filed in federal court Tuesday, that he thought Brouillard brought him to Pine City, Minnesota, around 1981, to attend college, which is what Brouillard told his parents.

According to the lawsuit, Brouillard had sexually abused J.T. earlier on Guam, from 1972 to 1976.

J.T. said in his lawsuit that he lived with Brouillard and his parents in a two-bedroom retirement home.

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.

#MeToo brings to light scope of sexual assault, victims’ suffering

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

October 23, 2017

By Phyllis Zagano

A few days ago, actress Alyssa Milano tweeted: “If you’ve been sexually harassed or assaulted write ‘me too’ as a reply to this tweet.” Since then, some half million people tweeted “Me Too.” More than twelve million people posted #MeToo on Facebook.

Sexual assault is no joke.

Sometimes they tell tragic stories. Sometimes they name names. Sometimes they just say #MeToo.

They are women and men, girls and boys. They share the common bonds of anger, hurt, resentment and doubt. How could they be treated like that, like what? Like an object? Like an animal? Like a piece of meat?

Their stories are remarkably similar. The professor, the director, the editor, the priest, the manager — always someone with the power to create or destroy a career or a life — physically or emotionally cornered their prey and, more often than not, pounced. These are the up-close-and-personal harassments and assaults: the off-tune comments; the brushing past and “accidentally” touching private places above or below the waist; the promise of some sort of help in return for “favors.”

There is rape, yes, but there are also the subtle line crossings that curdle the soul.

There is the leering and staring, the equally disturbing at-a-distance harassments. The person granted a whistle or a catcall when walking down the street, or the one who is “checked out” coming into a room does not forget it.

Please remember, it’s not just women and girls. Men and boys are often targets of entitled strangers (or friends, or acquaintances or superiors) who only know about defined boundaries on maps. These days we hear more about women and girls.

The salacious facts about the latest celebrity that now spread across newspapers underscore the national interest in little more than salacious facts. Today’s news is forgotten once it wraps tomorrow’s fish. The names paraded across television screens soon drop into a memory hole. Today: Harvey Weinstein. Yesterday: Bill Cosby, Anthony Weiner, and Jerry Sandusky. Other celebrity scandals have already faded. Who remembers Roman Polanski?

Celebrities aside, there are the 6,721 accused priests and bishops in the United States counted by bishopaccountability.org. The sickness of going after children is mind-boggling, but we know at least some are predators intent on abusing older teenagers. Besides these, the uncounted legion of priests with paramours (male or female) brings abuse to a new level. And, we have no idea of the number of fathers among the fathers; we only know of the few whose children or consciences eventually outed them.

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.

October 23, 2017

Priest pleads guilty to reduced misdemeanor charges of sex assaulting a child at Wauwatosa school

WAUWATOSA (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

October 23, 2017

By Bruce Vielmetti

[See the entry for Marsicek in BishopAccountability.org’s database of accused U.S. clergy.]

A Milwaukee priest pleaded guilty to three counts of misdemeanor sexual contact with a girl while at a Catholic school in Wauwatosa between 2007 and 2011.

Robert Marsicek, 76, who was removed from ministry in 2013, was charged in February with three felony counts of first-degree sexual assault of a child, but as a result of negotiations with prosecutors entered his pleas to fourth-degree sexual assault, a misdemeanor that involves sexual touching.

Sentencing was set for Dec. 15. He remains free on a $50,000 personal recognizance bond and conditions that he have no contact with the victim or anyone under the age of 18.

According to the original complaint, Marsicek touched the girl while at Pius X Parish and school in Wauwatosa between 2007 and 2011. Among the incidents, she said Marsicek at one point laid on her and touched her breasts and at another reached under her jumper to “pat” her vagina.

Marsicek told detectives that the girl was clingy and liked to sit on his lap, and that he told her it was not acceptable. He said he did not remember the other details of her allegations. The complaint references similar incidents involving boys in California.

Asked if he was aroused by boys and young girls, Marsicek allegedly told detectives, “Certainly, I’m aroused (by) just the cuteness and beauty of them,” but not to the level that he would want to have sex with them.

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.

Vintage ‘Bernardin Bishop’ says Pope Francis is vindicating his legacy

UNITED STATES
Crux Now

October 23, 2017

By Christopher White

As Bishop Gerald Kicanas prepares to hand over the reigns of the diocese of Tucson, Arizona next month, he looks back on his 51 years as a priest and a Church that has dramatically changed since he was first ordained. In an interview with Crux, Kicanas laments the current polarization in the Church and says he hopes to see more “Francis-like actions” by the U.S. bishops.

When Bishop Gerald Kicanas of Tucson, Arizona, officially hands over the reigns of his diocese to his successor next month, he says he’ll leave behind a place that seemed virtually in ruins when he got there, but which has now been remade.

In the spirit of Pope Francis, Kicanas is proud to boast that his diocese is eager to “share the journey” and to promote Christian discipleship in its totality. Such a mission, he says, requires both administrative savvy and an attractive witness to the gospel – both of which have defined the bishop’s time in Tucson.

Kicanas arrived in Tucson in 2001 to serve as coadjutor bishop of the diocese right as the clergy sexual abuse crisis was close to a boiling point. The diocese, then led by Bishop Manuel Moreno, had been plagued by numerous sexual abuse cases from previous years, and together he and Bishop Kicanas put the house in order.

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.

Secret children of Catholic priests: Solid Associated Press report takes one very strange turn

UNITED STATES
GetReligion.org

October 23, 2017

By Terry Mattingly

All journalists who hold jobs in which they have to write hard-news stories on tight deadlines – in wire-service newsrooms, for example – know about the challenge of writing short, accurate summary paragraphs that package lots of facts into very few words.

My college mentor, the famous J-prof David McHam, used to put it this way: A journalist is someone who can write a solid 500-word story in 20 minutes, even with a headache.

You really have to watch out for the transition paragraphs, however, the ones in which you try to give readers a big idea in a punchy sentence, or two. You can end up with strained logic, or worse. Hold that thought, because we will return to it later.

Recently, a careful reader of this blog sent me the URL for an Associated Press story that ran at Crux focusing on a complex and very difficult subject. The headline is rather calm, considering the scandalous subject: “Pope’s advisers on sex abuse also take up children of priests.” Here is the overture:

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.

Cash restriction removed from child sex abuse suspect’s bond

ALABAMA
WSFA 12

October 23, 2017

Prattville AL – A judge has updated the bond requirements for John Edgar Harris, a former Prattville church employee who was arrested and charged with child sex crimes on Oct. 13.

Harris is charged with one count of first-degree sexual abuse and one count of facilitating the travel of a child for an unlawful sex act. His $150,000 bond initially required payment in cash, but that restriction has since been removed.

Other bond restrictions placed on Harris include requirements that he wear an ankle monitor at all times, that he cannot leave the state of Alabama, that he have no contact with anyone under the age of 19, and that he cannot enter property owned by his previous employer, Glynwood Baptist Church of Prattville.

Harris’ preliminary court hearing has been reset for November. He remains in the Autauga Metro Jail at this time.

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.

Glencoe Police Department Letter Regarding Reverend James Devorak

MINNESOTA
Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

October 20, 2017

Source: Tom Halden, Director of Communications

Link to letter from Glencoe Police Chief James R. Raiter regarding allegation against Reverend James Devorak:

GLENCOE PD STATEMENT ON REV JAMES DEVORAK

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.

Statement Regarding Reinstatement of Reverend James Devorak

MINNESOTA
Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

October 20, 2017

Source: Tom Halden, Director of Communications

From Archbishop Bernard A. Hebda

I have accepted the recommendation of the Archdiocesan Ministerial Review Board (MRB) and the Director of the Office of Ministerial Standards and Safe Environment to return Father James Devorak to ministry in the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.

Father Devorak is a retired priest of the Diocese of New Ulm who has served parishes in the Archdiocese since 2015.

In July 2017, an accusation of an alleged single incident of sexual abuse said to have occurred in 1995 was reported to the Glencoe Police Department. On August 31, 2017, the Glencoe Police Department announced that it had completed its investigation, that Father Devorak had fully cooperated in the investigation and that no charges would be brought. Further, Chief of Police James Raiter issued a letter stating that “[a]fter a thorough and exhaustive investigation into this allegation by Captain Wyatt Bienfang, the facts became clear that this one allegation was unfounded, meaning the allegation had no merit. It is my hope that this one allegation will not over shadow the life’s work of Father James Devorak.” (Chief Raiter’s September 8, 2017 letter is posted on the Archdiocesan website)

On October 6, 2017, the Diocese of New Ulm Clergy Review Board recommended that Father Devorak’s authority to engage in ministry be reinstated. Also on October 6, 2017, Monsignor Douglas Grams, Vicar General of the Diocese of New Ulm, informed the Archdiocese in writing that Father Devorak had been reinstated to ministry. In his letter, Monsignor Grams stated that other than the 1995 allegation there are no other allegations in Father Devorak’s past. Additionally, Monsignor Grams wrote that “[o]n October 5, 2017, Jeff Anderson [an attorney retained by the accuser] called Tom Weiser [an attorney retained by the Diocese of New Ulm] to let him know Jeff Anderson’s office was withdrawing from the representation of the individual who made the claim against Father Devorak. Mr. Anderson stated his office had conducted its due diligence review and did not want a cloud over Father Devorak because of his client’s claim.”

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.

More former students sue over alleged abuse at boarding school

CHARLESTON (WV)
Charleston Gazette-Mail

October 23, 2017

By Lacie Pierson

Nine former students of a now-closed boarding school have filed lawsuits this month saying they suffered severe abuse as part of a “culture of silence and secrecy” among officials at two schools in West Virginia and Tennessee.

The lawsuits, filed in Kanawha Circuit Court from Oct. 13-17, are the latest legal actions taken in the case of Miracle Meadows School in Salem, Harrison County. Two other former students filed a similar lawsuit in January.

The former students said school staff sexually assaulted and mentally and physically abused them while denying them food and an education at the school, which state officials closed in 2014, following the arrest of two employees on child abuse and neglect charges.

Miracle Meadows is one of 14 defendants named in each of the lawsuits. Other defendants include Susan Gayle Clark, former director of Miracle Meadows; Seventh-Day Adventist Church North American Division and the Advent Home Learning Center in Calhoun, Tennessee, about 45 minutes northwest of Chattanooga; and its director, Blondel Senior.

All of the plaintiffs were minors during their time at the schools, and they are identified by their initials in the complaints filed in court last week.

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.

Guam’s Catholic Church does not believe perpetrators remain in clergy

GUAM
Radio New Zealand (RNZ)

October 23, 2017

Guam’s Catholic Church says it does not believe perpetrators remain in the clergy despite a growing number of historical sexual abuse complaints.

In the latest of more than 130 lawsuits a former altar boy alleges he was abused by a now deceased priest for five years from 1969.

Another new lawsuit alleges Archbishop Anthony Apuron advised a victim of abuse by a priest in the 1990s that prayer would help him to get over it.

But Archdiocese spokesperson Tony Diaz said under the church’s new Archbishop they had adopted a charter to protect children, introduced training, and were encouraging victims and others to come forward.

“I can’t say with full confidence right. We seem to be on top of the situation. The Archbishop has regular meetings with the priests themselves. So we do not believe that there are clergymen right now who have abused.

He said if anyone had an inkling of abuse they had to speak out about it.

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.

Guam’s Catholic Church says clergy now free of sexual abusers

GUAM
Radio New Zealand (RNZ)

October 23, 2017

The historical sexual abuse scandal in Guam’s Catholic Church continues to grow with allegations made against another priest.

A lawsuit has also been filed in relation to abuse by a now defrocked priest in the 1990s – raising questions about whether abuse may have been occurring more recently. But the church says it has now taken steps to prevent abuses.

Jo O’Brien reports.

Listen [AUDIO LINK]

TRANSCRIPT

A deceased priest Monsignor Jose Guerrero is the latest to be accused of sexual abuse – his victim was just nine years old when five years of alleged abuse began in 1969. Another complainant says he tried to report eight years of abuse by a priest in the 1990s to Archbishop Anthony Apuron in 1999. His lawyer David Lujan says the Archbishop’s advice that prayer would help him get over it is not surprising, given accusations of abuse have also been made against 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.

October 22, 2017

La visita del Papa Francisco: luces y sombras

PUNTA ARENAS (CHILE)
La Prensa Austral

October 22, 2017

By Marcos Buvinic

[Google translation of excerpt: But, also, the awaited visit of Pope Francis, puts before our eyes the ambiguity that crosses all the human realities, even if they are bearers of the Spirit of God. The shadow that crosses the life of the Church in Osorno with the presence of Bishop Barros -discerned Karadima-, presence that remains despite the damage that means the division of the community and the loss of credibility, as well as the lack of respect to a responsible laity who tries to confront the plague of clericalism. If, until now, the painful situation of the Church of Osorno is maintained – and it affects the whole Church – we will have to wait for what Pope Francisco does and says, and how he relates to the community he treated as “foolish” and Left handed.]

Como todas las cosas de este mundo y las situaciones de la historia humana, la próxima visita a Chile del Papa Francisco está atravesada por luces y sombras. Mientras se prepara la visita del Papa al pueblo chileno y, particularmente, a los católicos del país, es importante y conveniente hacernos conscientes de esta realidad, para no caer -por un lado- en un triunfalismo ridículo y lleno de añoranzas de otros tiempos, o -por otro lado- en la indiferencia indolente o el rechazo irrespetuoso a una de las mayores figuras del mundo actual y líder espiritual de los católicos, que representamos una parte muy importante de la población chilena.

Lo más luminoso es -evidentemente- la visita de Francisco, una de las figuras y voces más relevantes de nuestro tiempo, y un líder espiritual que con sus gestos sencillos y su palabra clara ha traído una luz de esperanza en los complejos tiempos que vive la humanidad. Sus gestos y palabras son una interpelación a la conciencia de todos a construir un mundo más humano y bueno para todos. Significativas son sus intervenciones en favor de la paz allí donde la violencia y la guerra destruyen vidas e ilusiones, también en la defensa del medio ambiente como el cuidado de la casa común; su acción en favor de los refugiados y migrantes, así como su cercanía, consuelo y esperanza ante tantas formas de dolor humano.

* * *

Pero, también, la esperada visita del Papa Francisco, pone ante nuestros ojos la ambigüedad que atraviesa todas las realidades humanas, aun cuando ellas sean portadoras del Espíritu de Dios. La sombra que atraviesa la vida de la Iglesia en Osorno con la presencia del obispo Barros -discípulo de Karadima-, presencia que se mantiene a pesar del daño que significa la división de la comunidad y la pérdida de credibilidad, así como la falta de respeto a un laicado responsable que intenta enfrentar la peste del clericalismo. Si hasta ahora se mantiene la dolorosa situación de la Iglesia de Osorno -y que afecta a toda la Iglesia-, habrá que esperar qué hace y dice el Papa Francisco, y cómo se relaciona con la comunidad a la que trató de “tonta” y “zurda”.

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.

Missbrauch: Eine schwere Hypothek für das Bistum

HAMBURG (GERMANY)
Norddeutscher Rundfunk

October 20, 2017

By Florian Breitmeier

[Google translation of one paragraph: The report was written because those affected by sexualized violence in the bishopric of Hildesheim had the courage to speak about their terrible experiences. Victim associations have established the public. Children and adolescents, men and women have not been silent like so many Church officials. What would have been a strong signal, if Auxiliary Bishop Schwerdtfeger and Bishop Ackermann had particularly appreciated this in their statements.]

Eine unabhängige Studie hat dem Bistum Hildesheim jahrzehntelange schwerwiegende Versäumnisse im Umgang mit sexuellen Missbrauchsfällen angelastet, die symptomatisch für die katholische Kirche insgesamt gewesen seien. Zu diesem Ergebnis kommt das vom Bistum beauftragte Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung (IPP) aus München, das seine Ergebnisse am Montag vorgelegt hat.

Ein Kommentar von Florian Breitmeier, NDR Redaktion Religion und Gesellschaft

Die Forscher vom IPP haben ganze Arbeit geleistet und eine bemerkenswerte Studie vorgelegt. Beispielhaft zeigt sich: Institutionen mit extrem hierarchischen Strukturen und hohem moralischen Anspruch sind bei Skandalen in den eigenen Reihen nur bedingt aufklärungsfähig. Der selbstsichere Glaube daran, dass die Kirche ihre Angelegenheiten allein regeln kann, war lange Zeit weit verbreitet, nicht nur am Hildesheimer Domhof.

Worte finden für das Unglaubliche

Die klaren Worte und schonungslosen Bekenntnisse der Weihbischöfe am vergangenen Montag sind deshalb aller Ehren wert und in der katholischen Kirche nicht selbstverständlich. Allerdings waren die Fehler der Bistumsverantwortlichen über Jahrzehnte hinweg auch so haarsträubend, dass es einem beim Lesen des Berichts die Sprache verschlägt. Es galt, Worte zu finden für das Unglaubliche. Zum Glück haben die Bistumsverantwortlichen ihre Fehler offensiv angesprochen und die Opfer um Vergebung gebeten. Das war ein wichtiger Schritt, der Anerkennung verdient. Vor zwei Jahren, 2015, als die neuen Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen Peter R. in einer WDR-Dokumentation bekannt wurden, war die Reaktion des Bistums noch eine ganz andere. Da wurde auf der damaligen Pressekonferenz relativiert, verharmlost und Journalisten schäbiges Verhalten vorgeworfen.

Als Oberhirte kann man Verantwortung nicht delegieren

Ein ganz anderer Ton herrschte am vergangenen Montag. Aus traurigem Grund. Das schonungslose Gutachten des IPP verfehlte seine Wirkung nicht. Demut allenthalben aufgrund eindeutiger Erkenntnisse. Keine Frage: Die vorgestellten Ergebnisse hätten einen Rücktritt an der Bistumsspitze gerechtfertigt. Bischof Norbert Trelle hat das für sich stets abgelehnt und nicht auf eine Veröffentlichung der unangenehmen Ergebnisse in seiner Amtszeit gedrängt. Das steht für sich. Unangenehme Aufgaben kann man als Oberhirte vielleicht delegieren, Verantwortung aber nicht.

Trelle als Chefaufklärer?

Rückendeckung bekommt der emeritierte Hildesheimer Bischof gleichwohl. Weihbischof Nikolaus Schwerdtfeger war es gleich zu Beginn der Pressekonferenz wichtig zu betonen, dass Norbert Trelle das unangenehme Gutachten angestoßen habe. Sehr flott nach der Pressekonferenz in Hildesheim meldet sich der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der deutschen Bischofskonferenz, Stephan Ackermann, zu Wort. Auch er dankt zunächst Norbert Trelle dafür, dass er dieses Gutachten angestoßen habe. Diese doch sehr binnenfixierte Sicht darauf, wer wann was angestoßen hat, kann dann doch Anstoß erregen. Es stößt bitter auf, wenn hohe katholische Würdenträger ausgerechnet in dieser Frage ganz amtsbrüderlich dem Hildesheimer Bischof besondere Tatkraft attestieren, ihn indirekt zu einer Art Chefaufklärer machen. Aber: Die entscheidenden Impulse für dieses Gutachten hat nicht Norbert Trelle gesetzt.

Opferverbände stellten Öffentlichkeit her

Das Gutachten wurde geschrieben, weil Betroffene sexualisierter Gewalt im Bistum Hildesheim den Mut hatten und haben, über ihre schrecklichen Erlebnisse zu sprechen. Opferverbände haben Öffentlichkeit hergestellt. Kinder und Jugendliche, Männer und Frauen haben nicht geschwiegen wie so viele kirchliche Amtsträger. Was wäre es für ein starkes Signal gewesen, wenn Weihbischof Schwerdtfeger und Bischof Ackermann dies in ihren Statements besonders gewürdigt hätten.

Eine vergebene Chance.

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

The church has forgotten an inconvenient truth in its opposition to same-sex marriage

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

October 17, 2017

By Anna Krien

In Senator Penny Wong’s much celebrated speech in the Senate opposing the Coalition’s postal plebiscite, she responded with contempt to Liberal senator Mathias Cormann’s comment that the plebiscite on marriage equality could be a “unifying moment”. “But I tell you,” she said in a steely voice, “have a read of some of the things which are said about us and our families and then come back here and tell us this is a unifying moment.”

She recalled the Australian Christian Lobby’s description of children brought up in same-sex family units as “the stolen generation”. “We love our children,” Wong said passionately.

* * *

Ah, the children. The “yes” campaign needs only two words to respond to the ACL, the Catholic Church, the Anglican Church and the other religious heavy-hitters’ concerns about the “children”.

If there is ever a moment in time when a vast spectrum of Australian religious institutions and their lobby groups should shut right up about the protection of children, it is now, in the wake of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

For four years now, since 2013, the royal commission has revealed institutionalised silence and cover-ups of children sexually abused within the framework of various churches. To date, thousands of horrific stories have been heard – of children being preyed upon, sexually abused, their families groomed, and most importantly of numerous religious authorities not only looking the other way but enabling the abuse to continue. That many of these same institutions even deign to utter the words “children” and “protection” in the current marriage equality debate is contemptuous.

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

The Church’s child abuse record doesn’t disqualify it from opposing same-sex marriage

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

By Kevin Donnelly

Author Anna Krien’s recent condemnation of the church’s apparent hypocrisy (The Age, 17/10) in arguing that heterosexual marriage is best for children while being guilty of failing to address historical child abuse appears convincing.

A closer reading, though, reveals it for what it is.

While Krien’s argument is emotionally persuasive she fails to provide a rational argument linking the two. Yes, the church clearly opposes same-sex marriage but to simply dismiss its arguments because of its failure to address paedophilia is wrong.

Firstly, the Catholic Church has long admitted it failed to protect children and that it did not do enough to bring the guilty to justice and to properly recompense victims.

Francis Sullivan, the head of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council, describes this as “a massive failure on the part of the Catholic Church in Australia to protect children from abusers”.

In 1996 when then-archbishop of Melbourne George Pell implemented the Melbourne Response it, notwithstanding a number of shortcomings, represented one of the first attempts to properly address the issue.

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.

South Korea church scandals under spotlight in new film

DHAKA (BANGLADESH)
Agence France Presse via Prothom Alo

October 21, 2017

Catholic corruption and sex abuse allegations have made global headlines for years. Now a new film shines a spotlight on scandals at South Korea’s vast and politically powerful Protestant churches.

South Koreans are enthusiastic religious believers, with 44 percent practising or considering themselves religious, according to state data. Protestants are the largest group, followed by Buddhists and Catholics.

The country is home to several of the world’s biggest “megachurches”, with hundreds of thousands of members, while conservative evangelical church groups boast millions of followers and enormous political lobbying power.

Many star pastors build enormous personal fortunes and often pass control over their churches to their own children in a generational power transfer.

But corruption or sex scandals involving evangelical leaders make frequent headlines, as do court battles over lucrative congregations.

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.

Review of Maher and O’Brien’s Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism

BELFAST (NORTHERN IRELAND)
Slugger O’Toole

October 20, 2017

By Gladys Ganiel

[Note: The passage from the Ryan report, mentioned in this review, may be found here at paragraph 3.149.]

There is much insightful reading in a new collection of essays edited by Eamon Maher and Eugene O’Brien, Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism: From Galway to Cloyne and Beyond (Manchester University Press, 2017).

Maher, who lectures in Humanities at the Institute of Technology, Tallaght, has co-edited a number of collections on Irish Catholicism in recent years – all of which have made a valuable contribution in conversations about the future of the Church.

Titles such as Contemporary Catholicism in Ireland: A Critical Appraisal (2008) and The Dublin/Murphy Report: A Watershed for Irish Catholicism (2010) were published by Columba, a popular press based in Dublin that has since folded.

* * *

Maher and O’Brien, who lectures in English Language and Literature at Mary Immaculate College in Limerick, have assembled a fascinating series of contributions. In most chapters, the writing and argumentation are accessible to both popular and academic audiences.

Maher and O’Brien ensure that all the contributions are read in light of the clerical abuse scandals.

The scandals are emphasised not only in the subtitle of the book but also in their Introduction. So in the opening pages of the book, they contrast the ‘euphoria’ of Pope John Paul II’s visit to Ballybrit Racecourse, Galway, in 1979 at a special mass for young people, with how priests and religious were abusing children across the island.

They reproduce a particularly harrowing passage from the 2009 Ryan Report on Child Abuse, detailing abuses at St Joseph’s Industrial School, Ferryhouse, Clonmel, about events that happened on the same day as the Pope’s visit to Limerick (p. 3):

The other boy was sent for, and Fr Stefano described how ‘the two boys sat in my office and unfolded to me a most horrific story of what had been happening to them.’ The boys told Fr Stefano story after story of cruelty and abuse. The worst, as far as he was concerned, was the abuse of one of the boys during the Pope’s visit to Ireland in 1979. The whole school went to see the Pope in Limerick, except for one of the two boys who was not allowed to go because of his record of absconding. Br Bruno volunteered to stay back and supervise him. The boy told Fr Stefano that, when the rest of the boys left, ‘this Brother came and raped me in my bed’. (Ryan, 2009: II, 2, 87; italics in original)

Maher and O’Brien then comment:

Therefore, while the Pope was speaking about the value of children in the Catholic world view some forty miles away, a Rosminian brother was raping two boys who had been placed under his care by both the Catholic Church and the State.

Maher and O’Brien’s Introduction is followed by a chapter by the Irish Times’ religious affairs correspondent, Patsy McGarry, which delves in greater detail into the scandals. It also explores the role of the media, including a succession of television documentaries, in unravelling an authoritarian Catholic culture.

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.

Cemetery Won’t Allow Mention of ‘Rapist’ Priests at Grave

DETROIT (MI)
CBS WWJ 950

October 21, 2017

Wheaton, Ill. – A Kalamazoo man is in a dispute with a Roman Catholic diocese over his efforts to install a marker at his mother’s gravesite at a Chicago-area cemetery that proclaims her support for victims of “rapist” priests.

Jack Ruhl says the Roman Catholic Diocese of Joliet will not allow a marker at his mother Marguerite Ridgeway’s gravesite at a cemetery the diocese owns because it includes “explicit language,” The Chicago Tribune reported.

Ruhl wants to install a marker that reads: “She supported priest rapist victims.”

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.

Op-Ed: Harvey Weinstein’s alleged pattern of harassment echoes that of child sexual abusers

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

October 22, 2017

By Paul Mones

There are many striking aspects to the breathtaking fall of Harvey Weinstein — the volume of women who have come forward, the number of years his alleged behavior remained an open secret, the sheer brazenness of that alleged behavior and, now, the ripple effects it is having well beyond Hollywood.

But as an attorney who has represented scores of victims of child sexual abuse, sexual assault and sexual harassment across the country, here’s what I find most remarkable: The similarities between the pattern of harassment that Weinstein allegedly engaged in, and the patterns of abuse that emerge in an entirely different context — namely, the sexual abuse of children in trusted institutions.

Although the specifics are different, the psychological and behavioral dynamics at play among the perpetrators and victims are virtually identical. The way in which Weinstein allegedly wielded power and relied on institutional silence echoes the manner in which Catholic priests were able to perpetrate grievous wrongs against generations of children.

Child abusers are consummately skilled in identifying vulnerable kids and knowing exactly what to say and do to accomplish their goals. Little is left to chance. They use their positions of power to cajole, knowing, for example, that praise and hints of special treatment are necessary in order to begin the process of initiating control.

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.

October 21, 2017

Guam’s Catholic Church abuse scandal widens

WELLINGTON (NEW ZEALAND)
Radio New Zealand

September 20, 2017

By Jamie Tahana

[Note: We missed this important summary article and broadcast during our Tracker blogging in late September.]

In 1985, a 15-year-old boy was invited to do yard work at the local church, that soon led to invitations to watch TV, and then to drink seminary wine with the priest. One day, according to a lawsuit, the priest assaulted him – then dozens of times after that.

In another case, a 7-year-old was first abused on his 7th birthday, and then more than 100 times after that. Another claims he was assaulted in the car on his way to his grandmother’s funeral.

These are just some of the allegations detailed in more than 100 lawsuits filed against the Catholic Church on Guam in the past year. New allegations continue to surface, along with signs of a systematic, decades-long cover-up.

So far, 16 priests, two archbishops and a bishop have been implicated in alleged abuse that spans from the mid-1950s to the early 1990s.

“It will continue getting bigger,” said David Lujan, the lawyer representing a majority of the plaintiffs. “I still have another probably 15 more cases that I have yet to file and I keep getting phone calls from new clients. I suspect it’s going to grow to at least 150, if not more.”

The north Pacific island of 160,000 is one of the most Catholic places in the world – about 85 percent of the population identifies as Catholic.

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.

NZ priest’s secret children to come out of hiding

WELLINGTON (NEW ZEALAND)
Radio New Zealand

October 19, 2017

By Phil Pennington

The secret children of a Catholic priest in New Zealand are about to reveal their identity to their local bishop, and a New Zealander who personally briefed the Pope on the topic says the Vatican has recognised the right to know one’s parents

The adult siblings are among thousands internationally who have contacted the Coping International website, which offers support to the children of clergy.

The site’s founder Vincent Doyle – an Irish man who himself is the son of a priest – said he expected many more New Zealanders who are priests’ children, or their mothers, to come forward as they gained courage to speak up.

“We’ve been contacted from a number of people in New Zealand – one family where there’s more than one child to the same priest, to the same woman – but they’re going to be making moves in the coming future to the respective diocese and they’ll be contacting the bishop concerned.”

The family had contacted his website in the last three months, and granted him permission to speak a little about their situation, but most details remained confidential such as how many children there were and where they had grown up.

They were among 13,500 people worldwide who had been in touch with Mr Doyle since he started the website in late 2014.

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.

Institut stellt Gutachten vor Missbrauch: »Muster des Wegschauens« im Bistum Hildesheim

MÜNSTER (GERMANY)
Kirche + Leben

[Google Translation of First Paragraph: In the abuse case of the suspended priest Peter R., the independent Munich Institute for Practice Research and Project Counseling has accused the Diocese of Hildesheim and the Jesuits with a “pattern of the way to look.” The threat posed by Peter R. had been consciously accepted by the Catholic bishopric over the decades, said expert Peter Mosser in Hildesheim on Monday.]

Im Missbrauchs-Fall um den suspendierten Priester Peter R. hat das unabhängige Münchener Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung dem Bistum Hildesheim und den Jesuiten ein »Muster des Wegschauens« vorgeworfen. Die Gefährdung durch Peter R. sei von dem katholischen Bistum im Laufe der Jahrzehnte wissentlich in Kauf genommen worden, sagte Gutachter Peter Mosser am Montag in Hildesheim.

Insgesamt konnten Mosser zufolge elf gemeldete Fälle sexualisierter Gewalt während der Tätigkeit des Priesters in Hildesheim nachgewiesen werden, sechs davon seien den damaligen Bistumsverantwortlichen bekannt gewesen.

Vorwurf gegen Bischof weder bewiesen noch entkräftet

Der suspendierte Priester Peter R. gilt als einer der Haupttäter im Missbrauchsskandal am Berliner Gymnasium Canisius-Kolleg. Später arbeitete er rund 20 Jahre lang im Bistum Hildesheim.

Vorwürfe gegen den verstorbenen Bischof Janssen, zwischen 1958 und 1963 einen Jungen sexuell missbraucht zu haben, konnte das Gutachten weder beweisen noch entkräften. Dass in diesem Fall glaubwürdige Indizien nicht unter den Teppich gekehrt worden seien, sei ein großer Fortschritt, so Mosser. Ein Betroffener hatte sich Anfang 2015 an das Bistum Hildesheim gewandt. Eine Anerkennungszahlung von 10.000 Euro erfolgte laut Gutachten möglicherweise vorschnell. Auch hier hätte das Bistum professioneller vorgehen können, hieß es.
Die aktuellen Bemühungen des Bistums Hildesheim zur Vorbeugung von Missbrauch entsprächen dem Stand der Zeit, so die Gutachter. Dennoch solle sich die Diözese um weitere Professionalisierung bemühen.

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Missbrauch – scharfe Kritik an Haltung des Bistums

HILDESHEIM (GERMANY)
Hildesheimer Allgemeine Zeitung

October 16, 2017

[Google Translation of title and first paragraph – Abuse: Sharp criticism of the attitude of the bishopric. Whether the former Hildesheim bishop Heinfrich Maria Janssen sexually abused teenagers or not, will probably never be enlightened. This is the conclusion reached by the experts of the Munich Institute IPP, which commissioned the Bishopric of Hildesheim to deal with the cases of Janssen and the former Jesuit Peter R.]

Hildesheim – Ob der frühere Hildesheimer Bischof Heinfrich Maria Janssen Jugendliche sexuell missbraucht hat oder nicht, wird sich wohl nie aufklären lassen. Zu diesem Schluss kommen die Gutachter des Münchner Instituts IPP, die das Bistum Hildesheim mit der Aufarbeitung der Fälle Janssens und des früheren Jesuitenpaters Peter R. beauftragt hatte.

Mit Blick auf den Fall R. übten die Gutachter teilweise scharfe Kritik am Vorgehen des Bistums. Weihbischof Heinz-Günter Bongartz bot deshalb seinen Rücktritt an. Der amtierende Bistumsleiter Nikolaus Schwerdtfeger lehnte das Ansinnen aber ab.

„Im Fall Janssen ist es unmöglich, die Vorwürfe zu belegen oder zu widerlegen“, sagte Gutachter Peter Mosser. Für Schwerdtfeger, der das Bistum nach dem Ende der Amtszeit von Norbert Trelle bis zur Bestimmung eines neuen Bischofs leitet, heißt das: „Die Unschuldsvermutung gilt. Aber der Zwiespalt bleibt.“

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

Diocese of Sioux City in Compliance with Dallas Charter

SIOUX CITY (IA)
The Catholic Globe of the Diocese of Sioux City

October 19, 2017

By Joanne Fox

[Note: See also the BishopAccountability.org database entry on the important case of Fr. Peter B. Murphy.]

The Diocese of Sioux City submitted its audit on Aug. 30 pertaining to the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People (Dallas Charter) to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and is in compliance.

According to Dan Ellis, diocesan coordinator of the office of safe environment, during the 2016-17 fiscal year, there were nine new allegations of misconduct reported to the diocese. All of the allegations pertained to priests who are currently retired or are deceased. There were no new allegations regarding any priests currently serving in the diocese.

Ellis stressed the importance of the church remaining diligent in the work of protecting children. He noted that in every case of abuse, there were warning signs that were either not recognized or not reported.

“The child protection measures that the Catholic Church takes cannot guarantee every child will be shielded from abusers – nothing can do that,” he said. “But we can, and do, insist that every adult who works with our children knows the warning signs of an abuser, and how to report those warning signs.”

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

St. Pius first NM stop for Perrault

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal

October 20, 2017

By Olivier Uyttebrouck

[Note: See the Perrault, Sigler, and Griego files.]

St. Pius X High School leaders were hit with a “bombshell” in 1970 when they were told of allegations of sexual abuse against the Rev. Arthur Perrault, a teacher at the Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s flagship high school.

Those allegations remained secret for decades, but documents released this week pull back the curtain on how those school leaders and the archbishop responded.

And the documents show that, once again, a priest was simply moved to another post where he had access to new victims. They also show that Perrault was sent to St. Pius in the first place as a “good test period” to allow the archbishop to observe the 20-something priest after he was released from a Jemez Springs center that treated pedophile priests.

He was at the school four years and was later accused of molesting 11 victims during that period, from 1966-1970.

In 1970, St. Pius board members were approached by the father of a student, who asked to meet with them because “one of his sons that was at Pius had been involved with Father Perrault,” a board member recalled in a 1992 deposition. The father said that as a result of the abuse, his son “was so messed up that he had been thinking about suicide.”

The father, who is not identified in the deposition, said he discussed the abuse with then-Archbishop of Santa Fe James Davis. The allegations were electrifying, the board member said, because Perrault was chairman of the theology department at the archdiocese’s flagship high school.

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 wake of Weinstein abuse scandal, Catholics call Church to leadership

DENVER (CO)
Crux

October 20, 2017

By Claire Giangravè

After thousands of men and women tweeted #metoo, recounting their experiences of sexual harassment and expressing support for victims in the wake of abuse allegations against Harvey Weinstein, Catholics say the Church should take a position of leadership in the fight against the exploitation of women.

Rome – When ‘Charmed’ actress Alyssa Milano asked her twitter followers to answer #metoo if they had also been victims of sexual harassment or assault, she probably wasn’t expecting to initiate a global viral trend.

In the wake of sexual abuse allegations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, thousands of women – and men – have taken to their social media accounts to tell their stories and show support for victims.

Many leading Christian voices spoke up, including Catholics, who underlined that not only do people of faith object to such injustices, but also that the Church should take charge when it comes to sexual harassment.

“The Catholic Church should take a leading role, not only in raising people’s awareness of the crime against human dignity that is sexual abuse but also the Catholic Church should likewise lead in promoting healing,” said Dawn Eden Goldstein, assistant professor of dogmatic theology at the Holy Apostles College and Seminary of Connecticut, in an interview with Crux.

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.

Man wants mom’s tombstone to say she ‘supported priest rapist victims,’ but diocese objects

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

October 20, 2017

Marguerite Ridgeway was a fervent Catholic until her faith was shaken when church sex abuse scandals came to light, particularly a decades-old trauma recounted by her daughter-in-law.

Now Ridgeway’s son wants to install a marker at his late mother’s gravesite in Wheaton bearing the inscription “She supported priest rapist victims.”

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Joliet, which owns Assumption Cemetery, has objected to what it calls the “explicit language” of the epitaph.

Ridgeway’s son, Jack Ruhl, of Kalamazoo, Mich., recently sent a rendering of the planned marker to the cemetery, along with a $350 check to cover the installation fee.

“I ask that you do not dishonor the memory of my mother by further delay in installation of her grave marker,” he said in an email to officials with the diocese earlier this month.

An attorney for the diocese in an Oct. 6 letter proposed removing the word “rapist” and substituting softer language, such as “She supported clergy sex abuse victims,” or “She supported victims of clergy sex abuse.”

The letter described the word rapist as “graphic, offensive and shocking to the senses.”

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

A Papua New Guinea bishop confirms police investigation and backs reinstatement of priest

NEWCASTLE, NEW SOUTH WALES (AUSTRALIA)
Newcastle Herald

October 21, 2017

By Joanne McCarthy

A Papua New Guinea Catholic bishop says he will reinstate an Australian Vincentian priest to a PNG high school despite a police investigation of allegations involving school students, and a church investigation confirming the priest touched students’ legs and sometimes slapped them.

Bishop Rolando Santos said Australian Vincentian priest Neil Lams was “firm, upright and committed” and he was not changing the priest’s assignment as chaplain to the PNG school. The bishop reserved the right to take defamation action against people, including school teachers, who complained about the priest’s behaviour.

A church investigation report, which Bishop Santos supplied to the Newcastle Herald, found no evidence to support allegations Father Lams sexually abused two female students at a Catholic high school in eastern PNG.

But investigators for the PNG Catholic Church Office of Right Relationships in Ministry found evidence of confessional “incidents”, where Father Lams touched students on the legs and asked questions about sex that left students “embarrassed or scared or hurt or surprised”.

Photo Caption – Criticism: Port Stephens woman Wendy Stein and Vincentian Bishop Rolando Santos in Papua New Guinea. Bishop Santos has criticised Ms Stein for reporting sexual abuse allegations to police.

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October 20, 2017

El juicio por abusos contra el cura Justo Ilarraz será el 13 de noviembre

ARGENTINA
Diario El Argentino

October 19, 2017

[Google Translate: The trial for abuses against the priest Justo Ilarraz will be on November 13. The start date for one of the most anticipated debates this year is scheduled for November 13. The priest is accused of abusing children and adolescents at the Lower Paraná Seminary between the late 1980s and early 1990s, and will now sit in front of the court composed of Alicia Vivian of the Court of Trials and Appeals of Gualeguaychú); Edwin Ives Bastian (member of the Concordia Court of Appeals and Trials); and Darío Crespo (member of the Court of Appeals and Gualeguay).]

La fecha de inicio para uno de los debates más esperados de este año está prevista para el 13 de noviembre. El cura está acusado de abusar de niños y adolescentes en el Seminario Menor de Paraná -entre fines de la década del ’80 y los primeros años de la década del ’90-, y ahora deberá sentarse frente al tribunal compuesto por Alicia Vivian (vocal del Tribunal de Juicios y Apelaciones de Gualeguaychú); Edwin Ives Bastian (vocal del Tribunal de Juicios y Apelaciones de Concordia); y Darío Crespo (vocal del Tribunal de Juicios y Apelaciones de Gualeguay). Cabe señalar que este último también integró el tribunal que juzgó y condenó en los primeros días de septiembre al cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria; y que el defensor del cura colombiano, Milton Urrutia, se tornará querellante para el juicio a Ilarraz; consignó Análisis Digital.

“Su mayor defensa siempre fue la prescripción”, recordó hace un tiempo atrás la abogada querellante Rosario Romero, sobre la estrategia que aplicó el cura Ilarraz para defenderse en la causa judicial. La gravísima denuncia periodística por abusos a menores en el Seminario de Paraná se hizo en septiembre de 2012, a raíz de la investigación publicada por la revista Análisis. Entonces, la Procuración General del Poder Judicial decidió abrir una investigación de oficio. La causa comenzó con innumerables traspiés y demoras, tanto así que hace ya más de cinco años de aquella publicación que conmocionó a la prensa provincial, nacional e internacional. Incluso, actualmente existe un recurso que debe resolver la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación, en el cual los defensores del cura reclaman que los delitos se declaren prescriptos.

El juicio llevará varios días de noviembre e incluso algunos de diciembre en los tribunales de Paraná, además tendrá varias singularidades: probablemente sea a puertas cerradas por el tipo de delitos que se juzga. Entre los testigos pasará el cardenal Estanislao Esteban Karlic, quien al momento de los hechos denunciados era obispo de Paraná, jefe directo y muy cercano a Ilarraz; también declarará el actual obispo Juan Alberto Puiggari, en la época de los hechos investigados estaba a cargo del Seminario Mayor, entre otros sacerdotes y autoridades de la Iglesia Católica.

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New Mexico judge orders release of clergy sex abuse records

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
The Associated Press

October 19, 2017

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — The Archdiocese of Santa Fe has released hundreds of pages of court records related to sexual abuse allegations against clergy members in response to an order from a New Mexico judge, marking the largest disclosure of such records since alleged victims began suing the archdiocese nearly three decades ago.

Church officials said in a statement issued after Wednesday’s (Oct. 18) release that they hope the disclosure along with the recent publication of a list of clergy accused of sexual misconduct will serve as an additional step in healing for survivors, their families and parishioners.

The documents include letters showing church leaders knew of sexual abuse allegations that had been leveled against three priests from the 1960s through the 1980s.

Judge Alan Malott’s order stems from a request by KOB-TV , which intervened in several abuse cases for the purpose of obtaining the records. The Albuquerque station had argued that much of the information should no longer be guarded by a court-protected confidentiality order.

“I think it’s important because it gives people who have been abused the concrete validation of their claims,” Levi Monagle, an attorney for some of the victims. “It’s one thing to know your own truth, but it’s another thing to see that truth acknowledged by people in the highest positions of power within an institution like the church.”

The records paint a picture of a diocese that repeatedly assigned priests accused of sexually abusing children to posts where they could abuse again, the Albuquerque Journal reported . The records include letters and reports from psychologists to church leaders that detail allegations against the three priests.

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Former Bishop of Chester Victor Whitsey was an abuser, police told

ENGLAND
Church Times

October 20, 2017

By Madeleine Davies

CHESTER police have announced that they have conducted an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse made against a former Bishop of Chester, the Rt Revd Victor Whitsey, who died in 1987.

They confirmed on Tuesday that, were he alive today, he would have been spoken to by police.

Alleged victims of the Bishop say that they reported the abuse, one on the following day, but that no action was ever taken.

The current Bishop of Chester, Dr Peter Forster, and the Archbishop of York, Dr Sentamu, supported the investigation into “allegations of sexual offences against children and adults” by Bishop Whitsey, and have apologised to those who came forward.

The allegations date from 1974 onwards, when Bishop Whitsey was Bishop of Chester, and continued after 1981 when he retired and moved to Blackburn diocese, with permission to officiate. They relate to 13 complainants, five male and eight female.

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.

Pope Francis reveals what will happen to priests guilty of child molestation

NIGERIA
Daily Post

October 19, 2017

By Chijioke Jannah

Supreme leader of the Catholic Church, Pope Francis, on Thursday vowed that priests who were indicted in cases of sexual indecency against children would no longer be given a right of appeal against being kicked out of the Church.

Pope Francis, who added that he would never pardon any of such priests, said he had learned his lesson after allowing an Italian Bishop to not defrock a priest who had been found guilty of acts of abuse, and who then committed similar offences two years later.

The Catholic Pontiff said this while addressing his child abuse advisory panel at the Vatican.

Francis also acknowledged that the Church had been slow to wake up to the scale of the problem of clerical abuse, which has done enormous damage to its standing in many countries.

He said, “The abuse of a minor, if it is proven, is sufficient for there to be no possibility of appeal. If the proof is there, the punishment is definitive.

“And as for requests for papal pardons, I will not sign anything for these crimes.

“The means of resolving the problem are also arriving a bit late.

“That is the reality, the old practice of moving (paedophile priests) from one diocese to the other put people’s conscience to sleep.”

Francis has repeatedly vowed to rid the church of the scourge of paedophilia through a zero-tolerance approach which his predecessors proved incapable of implementing.

But his credibility on the issue has been hit by the resignation of two members of his advisory panel over opposition to changes from within the Vatican hierarchy.

Victims’ organisations also maintain that the church remains reluctant to hand paedophile priests over to criminal justice authorities.

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.

Lawyer not surprised Guam church abuse victim was shunned

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

October 20, 2017

A lawyer for church sexual abuse complainants on Guam is not surprised an alleged victim was ‘shunned’ when he tried to report abuse.

A former altar boy alleged Archbishop Anthony Apuron encouraged him to pray as a way of getting over repeated abuse by a priest in the 1990s.

The man, who is now 40, is seeking five million US dollars in damages for the abuse which allegedly occurred over eight years.

His lawyer David Lujan said the Archbishop’s response was understandable given the accusations of abuse that had been made against him.

“Because the victim is reporting the abuse to another abuser, in fact the abuser-in-chief,” he said.

“Apuron has been abusing young kids for a couple of decades already at that point.”

Mr Lujan said he believed there were more recent cases of abuse in Guam’s Catholic Church but the victims were yet to come forward.

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New developments in disturbing case involving Catholic priests in NM

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
KOAT Action 7 News

October 19, 2017

By Nancy Laflin

There are new developments in a disturbing case involving Catholic priests in New Mexico — a judge is allowing hundreds of pages of court records to be unsealed.

Attorneys involved in this case say the documents detail that the Catholic Church was put on notice of predatory priests dating back to the 1960’s. Many of them were sent to New Mexico and ended up in parishes throughout the state.

For years KOAT has been telling you about a place called the Servants of the Paraclete. Priests from all across the country were sent to northern New Mexico for counseling and therapy, including priests who were accused of sexually molesting children.

Now unsealed documents detail exactly what happened in those cases — dating back decades.

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Mitchell Garabedian vs. the Catholic Church

BOSTON (MA)
Bostonia (Boston University magazine)

Fall 2017 (originally published Summer 2017)

By Lara Ehrlich • Photos by Jackie Ricciardi • Videos by Devin Hahn

A Boston lawyer crusades against clergy sex abuse — as told by clients and colleagues, survivors and Secret Files

In 2002, Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian represented 86 people who claimed to have been molested or raped as children by Father John J. Geoghan, a Catholic priest from Dorchester, Mass. The case led to a $10 million settlement for Garabedian’s clients, and to a Boston Globe Spotlight team investigation that exposed an international epidemic of abuse and coverup extending all the way to the Vatican. Garabedian has since represented more than 1,000 victims in 14 countries, and he still gets more than 20 calls a month from alleged victims seeking his help.

The Globe investigation was rewarded with a Pulitzer Prize, and became the subject of the 2015 Academy Award–winning film Spotlight. Actor Stanley Tucci portrays Garabedian (CGS’71, CAS’73) in the film with such intensity, the Boston attorney says, that many reporters are now terrified of meeting with him.

People who know him don’t disavow that intensity, but, they say, there are other sides to the sometimes fearsome lawyer who grew up on a farm in Methuen, Mass. He is witty, and he is generous, a trait inherited from his father, whose farmhands often came to him for advice. His family attended an Armenian Apostolic church every Sunday. “It was a very peaceful, kind way to live,” says Garabedian, whose office, piled high with boxes and papers, is just around the corner from Faneuil Hall, where his family once sold vegetables grown on their farm.

Bostonia talked with him, and with people who know him well, about the scandal, his commitment to the victims, and what drove him to take on the Catholic Church.

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October 19, 2017

Redacted Timelines and Supporting Documents Regarding Fr. Arthur Perrault, Fr. Jason Sigler, and Fr. Sabine Griego

WALTHAM (MA)
BishopAccountability.org

October 19, 2017

These files and supporting documents were redacted and released pursuant to Judge Alan M. Malott’s October 11, 2017 Order Allowing Disclosure, in Jane Doe “D” et al. v. Archdiocese of Santa Fe et al. Judge Malott was responding to the Plaintiff’s request for permission to release the documents supporting their timelines of transfers, notice, and abuse, and to KOB-TV’s request for access to those documents. The timelines and supporting documents were produced by the Law Offices of Brad D. Hall.

We have optimized the files for somewhat easier download (they are still quite large), and we have added page numbers to each file in the lower left corner of the page, for easier handling and reference. We have not changed the content of the files in any way.

Some supporting documents listed in the timelines do not appear in the files. They were removed to comply with Judge Malott’s Order before the files were released.

• Exhibit 1: Redacted Timeline of Fr. Arthur Perrault with Supporting Documents [406 pages; 49 megabyte file]

• Exhibit 2: Redacted Timeline of Fr. Jason Sigler with Supporting Documents [405 pages; 47 megabyte file]

• Exhibit 3: Redacted Timeline of Fr. Sabine Griego with Supporting Documents [181 pages; 17 megabyte file]

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Abuse at exclusive schools revealed by royal commission

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Daily Telegraph

October 17, 2017

By Janet Fife-Yeomans

Two of Sydney’s most exclusive religious schools have come under fire from the child sex abuse royal commission after boys were “raped” with a homemade wooden dildo at one school while other boys were bullied and one called a “cum rag” at another.

The shocking abuse at Parramatta’s The King’s School and Trinity Grammar at Summer Hill — where parents pay up to $60,000 a year for tuition and boarding — was not adequately dealt with by the schools, the royal commission said today.

The commission had heard that at Trinity, a year 9 boarding student was found by the boarding house master on the floor, crying, his face covered in black boot polish and his trousers down in August 2000.

He had been sexually assaulted with a large wooden dildo, dubbed “the anaconda”, that one of the boys made in a school woodwork class.

The royal commission found that it was not the only time “the anaconda” was used and the headmaster Milton Cujes was “likely” told about it later that day.

However without an investigation by the school psychologist Katherine Lumsdaine, the school would have done nothing, the commission said.

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Abuse royal commission: Trinity headmaster misled council over assault

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
The Australian

October 18, 2017

By Stefanie Balogh

[Note: See also the text of the report and the hearings, submissions, and exhibits that support it.]

Abuse royal commission: Trinity headmaster misled council over assault
Trinity headmaster Milton Cujes did not inform the school council he was aware of allegations made by CLB, the royal commission says.

The Royal Commission into child sexual abuse has found a headmaster at one of the nation’s leading boys’ schools misled his school council over the alleged abuse of a student who accused boarders of carrying out assaults with a wooden implement dubbed “the anaconda’’.

The commission has today released its report into problematic and harmful sexual behaviours of children in schools. It examined three NSW government run primary schools, an independent boarding school, The King’s School in Parramatta, Trinity Grammar in Summer Hill, and Shalom Christian College in Queensland.

The infamous case of the wooden dildo, which was made in woodwork class and called “the anaconda’’, at Sydney’s elite Trinity Grammar led to two boarders pleading guilty to indecent assault charges which occurred in the boarding house in 2000.

A Year 10 boarder, known as CLA, was the main victim.

But separate allegations were also raised involving a Year 9 boarder known as CLB.

The commission’s report said the senior master and boarding master “knew that CLB had alleged that other boys in the boarding house had sexually assaulted boys and used wooden dildos on boys in the boarding house on multiple occasions before 11 August 2000’’.

It found Trinity’s headmaster Milton Cujes was given CLB’s incident report and knew of the allegations. CLB’s incident report alleged some boarders had tried to “rape’ him on August 11, 2000 and this was not the first time they had tried.

He alleged a boarder had made a “dildo in wood tech class’’ but it was not used that day.

“He (Mr Cujes) did not initiate an investigation of the allegations at any time before 7 September 2000. It is clear from his evidence that Mr Cujes did not inform the school council at any time on or before 13 February 2001 that he had been given CLB’s incident report on 11 August 2000,’’ the report said.

The commission said it was satisfied Mr Cujes was present at the school council meeting on February 13, 2001 and did not inform the school council he was aware of the allegations made by CLB and the effect of not disclosing that he, the senior master and boarding master were aware of allegations was that the “council was misled’’ about the adequacy of the response to the incident on 11 August 2000.

“Both Trinity and Mr Cujes submitted that a proposed finding that the school council was misled about the adequacy of the school’s response to the incident in the boarding house on 11 August 2000 should not be made because it is not available on the evidence,’’ the report says.

Despite this the commission found it was Mr Cujes had misled the school council.

“The effect of Mr Cujes misleading the school council was that the school council passed a resolution stating that it believed that ‘existing procedures were properly followed’ and expressed ‘full confidence in the Head Master and Staff in this regard’,’’ the report said.

“We accept … that the school council would not have passed the resolution if it had not been misled.’’

Then senior school psychologist, Katherine Lumsdaine, the commission said, was concerned that senior staff would not investigate the allegations so commenced her own inquiries, finding numerous accounts of students being sexually assault with the wooden dildo.

The commission said it was satisfied that if Ms Lumsdaine had not interviewed the boys and reported her conclusion there would have been no investigation of the sexual assaults that were occurring in the boarding house at Trinity in 2000.

“Save for Ms Lumsdaine’s investigation, Trinity did not seek out other boys who may have been sexually assaulted. Support was not given to the boys affected,’’ the commission said.

This report follows a public hearing held in Sydney in October and November 2016.

The report also said that Mr Cujes did not recall seeing CLB’s incident report and three senior staff members were investigating the incident. “His impression was that ‘the behaviour was a dorm rumble that got out of hand’,’’ the report said.

“He said that he did not ask for the details, because three trusted members of staff were already involved.’’

During last year’s hearings, he said he had “no idea that there was a sexual element’’ to the allegations and he had delegated responsibility for the investigation into the incident and it was not “put to one side’’.

The royal commission also found the prestigious The King’s School in Parramatta in Sydney’s west was beset with a culture of bullying in 2013 including an incident where a student was humiliated at a cadet camp.

Today’s report found the failure of senior management at the school to deal with the incident was “candidly’’ accepted by former headmaster Dr Timothy Hawkes.

CLC, who was a Year 10 student in 2013, woke up one night at a cadet camp to find another student had ejaculated onto his sleeping bag.

CLC was bullied over the following months including being called a “cum rag’’ and “cum dumpster’’.

On one occasion, students renamed The King’s wi-fi networks “CLC is a cum rag’’.

The student raised the alarm in August 2013, telling staff he had been bullied at the cadet camp.

Over the next fortnight, the deputy headmaster, Andrew Parry, conducted an investigation into the camp incident and the bullying, which broadly confirmed CLC’s allegations, the commission said.

Dr Parry discussed it with the Castle Hill police who advised him in an email that a criminal act had been committed and incident should be reported to police.

But no report was made.

The commission found it was “satisfied that the measures King’s took to address the bullying of CLC were ineffective. King’s also did not adequately address CLC’s parents’ concerns about the school’s response to the bullying of CLC’’.

“The commissioners found that in 2013 a bullying culture existed at King’s, both inside the boarding houses and in the school more generally,’’ the report said, and the school’s measures to address the bullying were ineffective.

CLC left King’s in Year 10 and began in Year 11 in 2014 at St Ignatius’ College, Riverview, which addressed bullying differently.

CLC told commission his experience at Riverview was “very different’’.

Combined tuition and boarding fees at The King’s School and Trinity are about $60,000 per senior school student.

Trinity Grammar’s spokesperson and council chairman Richard Pegg said the school “acknowledges with regret that its initial response to the incident of 2000 was inadequate’’.

“As the Head Master stated to the commission ‘we could have done better, we should have done better’,’’ Mr Pegg said.

“From the day the School became fully aware of the seriousness and extent of the issue and reported it to the authorities, the school committed itself unreservedly to the review and taking of appropriate measures to ensure the safety and wellbeing of all students.’’

Mr Pegg said “the welfare and wellbeing of our boys are paramount and we will consider seriously for implementation all recommendations that the Commission makes in its final report’’.

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Top NSW private schools failed to address sex abuse claims: royal commission report

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

October 18, 2017

By Rachel Browne

[Note: See also the Royal Commission’s Report of Case Study No. 45.]

Two of the state’s most exclusive private schools failed adequately to investigate and address allegations of sexual abuse involving students, a royal commission has found.

Senior management of The King’s School in Parramatta did not report the alleged sexual assault of a student in 2013 to authorities, despite a police officer’s written advice to do so.

The inaction was described by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse as “a failure by the senior management of King’s”.

In its report into harmful sexual behaviour of children in schools, the royal commission also found senior management at Trinity Grammar School in Summer Hill did not adequately investigate allegations that students were being “raped” in the boarding house.

The report found that senior management, including headmaster Milton Cujes, were made aware of the allegations of sexual assault involving boarders in 2000.

School psychologist Kate Lumsdaine initiated her own inquiry because she was “concerned that senior staff would not investigate the allegations”, the report determined.

“We are satisfied that, if Ms Lumsdaine had not interviewed the boys and reported her conclusion, there would have been no investigation of the sexual assaults that were occurring in the boarding house at Trinity in 2000,” the commissioners wrote.

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Report into problematic and harmful sexual behaviours of children in schools released

SYDNEY, NEW SOUTH WALES (AUSTRALIA)
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

October 18, 2017

[Note: See also the text of the Report of Case Study No. 45: Problematic and harmful sexual behaviours of children in schools, and the Case Study No. 45 page with links to hearings transcripts, submissions, and exhibits.]

The Royal Commission into Institutional Reponses to Child Sexual Abuse’s Report of Case Study 45 – Problematic and harmful sexual behaviours of children in schools – was released today.

This report follows a public hearing held in Sydney in October and November 2016.

The King’s School, Parramatta NSW

The Royal Commission examined the response of The King’s School to an incident of harmful sexual behaviour involving CLC, a former King’s student, at a cadet camp in April 2013.

CLC, then in year 10, awoke one night to find that another student had ejaculated onto his sleeping bag. Over the following months, CLC was bullied by students, who called him ‘cum rag’ and ‘cum dumpster’. On one occasion, students renamed the King’s wi-fi networks ‘CLC is a cum rag’.

In August 2013, CLC disclosed the cadet camp incident and the bullying he was experiencing to staff at King’s. Over the next fortnight, the deputy headmaster, Dr Andrew Parry, conducted an investigation into the camp incident and the bullying, which broadly confirmed CLC’s allegations.

Dr Parry telephoned the youth liaison officer at Castle Hill police station to discuss the incident. Following this conversation, the police officer sent Dr Parry an email advising that a criminal act had been committed and that the incident should be reported to police. However, no report was made.

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Lawsuit accuses prominent church of not reporting abuse

WINSTON-SALEM (NC)
Baptist News Global

October 18, 2017

By Bob Allen

A new lawsuit alleges that one of South Carolina’s largest and most respected Southern Baptist churches failed to report to police evidence of child sex abuse by a volunteer youth worker as required by law.

The lawsuit filed Oct. 10 in Richland County, S.C., claims a now 17-year-old teen identified under a pseudonym began attending First Baptist Church of Columbia, S.C., with family members when he was in elementary school.

When he was 11 and starting middle school, the youth says he began attending a Sunday night discussion group led by an adult volunteer who groomed the child and over time “gradually escalated his inappropriate and illegal activity” to include lewd text messages and “intentional touching.”

When informed of the messages, the lawsuit claims, church leaders did not turn over findings of their own investigation to law enforcement in compliance with a state law requiring certain professions, including clergy, to report information they receive in their professional capacity that gives them reason to believe a child has or may have suffered abuse or neglect.

A statement on the church website says the congregation became aware of the allegations last fall. An investigation by a church committee found the volunteer had violated church policies, and disciplinary action was taken. The volunteer no longer attends First Baptist, the statement says, and is prohibited from further contact with students.

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New twist to the case of the Surrey pastor charged with sex assault

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA (CANADA)
Global News/CKNW

October 17, 2017

By Jeremy Lye

Weeks after multiple sexual assault charges were laid against a Surrey pastor and his wife, a Bible camp on Vancouver Island where he has been listed as a director, may have been the scene of other assaults.

Samuel Emerson has reportedly been taken off the board at Cowichan River Bible Camp, although the Canada Revenue Agency’s website still has him listed as a “Director-Trustee Official.”

Meanwhile, CKNW has spoken to a woman who says as a teenager she used to be a regular guest at the camp.

“It started out with really long hugs, then their face would get closer to me and they would start giving me kisses on the cheek and then they’d start kissing me on the lips and then the next thing you know they’re caressing me to the point where they’re touching my genitals.”

“At that point, I realized something’s wrong and there’s nothing I can do about it and it’s completely out of my control, you ask them to stop and then they go ‘you’re the one who’s going to be in trouble.’”

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Hunter Pentecostal Christian pleads guilty to sexually abusing boys

NEWCASTLE, NEW SOUTH WALES (AUSTRALIA)
Newcastle Herald

October 18, 2017

By Joanne McCarthy
.
By day he was the committed Pentecostal Christian youth pastor who ran a Hunter refuge for youths and praised Jesus during Assemblies of God church services at Hamilton.

By night Christopher Laban Bridge was a sexual predator, whose abuse of two boys was known by at least one Assemblies of God church leader from the early 1970s, before Bridge moved to the Hunter to take up a youth pastor position.

Court documents show Bridge moved to a Hamilton Assemblies of God church in 1975 after a Dubbo Assemblies of God minister was told Bridge sexually abused two boys in far west NSW. Bridge went on to sexually abuse a third boy at Charlestown in 1976 and a fourth boy at Cardiff in the early 1980s.

Bridge, 69, of Yarramalong, has entered guilty pleas to sexually abusing the four boys, including a boy who was abused at a Hunter refuge for “young people with drug addictions” after Bridge told him: “I need to check you to see if you are a virgin.”

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Police say 4 accusers claim abuse by Little Rock doctor

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

October 19, 2017

By Ryan Tarinelli

Police said Wednesday that four people have accused a Little Rock doctor and church mentor of sexual assault.

James Nesmith, 53, was arrested Tuesday morning and charged with one count of second-degree sexual assault, according to a police report.

Lt. Michael Ford, a Little Rock police spokesman, said Wednesday that a church pastor had reported allegations against Nesmith to the Child Abuse Hotline in 2015. According to Ford, the pastor reported that four people said they were sexually assaulted by Nesmith.

“It’s an ongoing investigation and we are expecting, probably, more victims to come forward,” Ford said at a news conference Wednesday.

Leslie Taylor, a UAMS spokesman, said Tuesday that Nesmith is an associate professor at UAMS and a physician at Arkansas Children’s Hospital. She said Nesmith, who was hired in 1995, was involved in adolescent and sports medicine.

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Court docs: Rushville pastor lured young girls into office with candy, molested them

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Fox 59

October 19, 2017

Rushville, Ind. – Officers with the Rushville Police Department arrested a pastor on child molestation charges following an investigation into sexual assault allegations at the Rushville Baptist Temple.

Garry Evans, 72, was charged with 3 counts of child molest, a Level 4 Felony; 4 counts of sexual battery, a Level 5 Felony; and 5 counts of child solicitation, a Level 6 Felony.

According to court documents, the investigation began on September 4 when a 3-year-old girl disclosed info to her mother who then reported the incident to the Department of Child Services.

In an interview with police, the girl said Evans took her into his office by herself to get candy. Once in the office, Evans pulled down his pants and made the girl touch his penis. He then told the girl not to tell anyone.

Officers obtained a search warrant, and it was executed on September 22 at the Rushville Baptist Temple Church in the 1300 block of North Spencer Street.

As word of the allegations spread throughout the church, it prompted several other women to ask their daughters about it. According to court documents, police interviewed four more girls all under the age of 10 who said they were molested by Evans.

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Opinion: Moving an accused abuser to public schools is a new low for the Catholic Church

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

October 19, 2017

To the editor: It is appalling that officials in the Seattle Roman Catholic Archdiocese took accommodation of child sexual abuse by a member of the clergy to an unimaginable low. They removed a priest repeatedly accused of child molestation from their diocese — and then recommended him for hire in a public school. (“The Catholic Church knew he was an abuser, but helped him get a job in public schools,” Oct. 13)

Thus this priest was able to become a public school teacher and continue assaulting minors. The church’s apology and $1.3-million payment to a victim doesn’t mean justice has been done. Perhaps this sad case will prompt laws making church officials criminally liable for failure to report sexual assault allegations to police, as many states now require.

The state of Washington, alas, permits “penitent privilege” to shield child abusers from law enforcement scrutiny. Deference to religion should end short of allowing children’s lives to be irreparably ravaged.

Edward Alston, Santa Maria

..

To the editor: On the one hand, I empathize with churches that do their utmost to secure devout, law-abiding clergy, yet wind up with chronic sex offenders in their pulpits.

On the other hand, I feel that any church whose administrators strive to cover up clergy sexual assaults should answer to the law (if not to their god) . . .

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My view: Let’s talk about married priests

DERRY (NORTHERN IRELAND)
Derry Now

October 15, 2017

By Father Paddy O’Kane

[Note: The photo at the top of this article is not identified. It shows Anglican priest Father Alberto Cutié, who left the Catholic Church and married in 2009. He is pictured with his wife, stepson, and infant daughter in Biscayne Park FL in 2011.]

Story one. Three years ago in Lourdes we were sharing the hotel with another pilgrimage from Liverpool. In the bedroom next to mine there was a Roman Catholic priest and his wife.

All above board. He had been an Anglican minister and became a convert, one of the many to leave their church in protest against the introduction of women priests and bishops.

Story two. After dinner one evening on a recent pilgrimage I passed this question around the room: ‘”If you were Pope Francis for a day what changes would you make?”

I was surprised by how many who said: “The first thing I would do would be to would allow priests to marry.”

Story three. Let’s face it, we have a crisis. This year the national seminary in Maynooth had only eight students entering to study for the priesthood. Half of these will probably leave during their training. When I went there in 1966 there was over 80!

Priest-less parishes are appearing all over Ireland and may be here in this diocese before long.

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‘Priests should be allowed to marry’ says Derry clergyman

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

October 19, 2017

A Londonderry priest has said he believes marriage should be an option for Catholic Church clergymen.

Fr Paddy O’Kane, of Holy Family Church in Ballymagroarty, said the move could help address the global shortage of Catholic priests.

A quarter of Catholic parishes worldwide now have no resident priest.

Fr O’Kane said the Church may have to “take another look at celibacy and women priests.”

“Many priests might choose to be celibate, but for those who want to get married it should be an option,” he said.

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8 recent films that take on the church: Across the globe, cinematic portrayals of Christianity are increasingly emphasizing its faults

CHICAGO (IL)
Christian Century

October 19, 2017

By Philip Jenkins

With the Roman Catholic Church hit by scandals involving abusive clergy, the figure of the pedophile priest has attracted the attention of some of the most significant filmmakers around the globe. Anti­clerical works of art are nothing new, but the proliferation of hostile images of the church can hardly fail to make a lasting impact on public opinion.

The brilliant 2015 Chilean film The Club is set at a remote seaside house that serves as a refuge for disgraced clergy whose sins are mainly sexual in nature. That same year brought another devastating Chilean study of a serially abusive cleric, Karadima’s Forest. The Mexican film Perfect Obedience (2016) describes abusive priests in a tale in­spired by the true-life career of Marcial Maciel, the influential founder of the worldwide Legion of Christ movement. The Irish film Calvary (2014) has at its center a fine and even heroic priest, but one whose life is destroyed by the fury of an abuse victim seeking revenge against the church.

Each of these films is impressive as an artistic production, and each contains superb acting. But each also carries a potent ideological message: the abuse scandals not only reveal the sins of individuals but are symptoms of comprehensive neglect and connivance by the church as an institution. Such systematic failings poison the work of even the best pastors. None of the films suggests any hope for the institution.

Crimes of sexual abuse are by no means the only indictment against the church. The Chilean church exposed in The Club also has to come to terms with its collaboration with that country’s homicidal military dictatorship of the 1970s. The British film Philomena (2013) addressed the once common custom that forced Ireland’s young unmarried mothers to give up their babies to adoption. As in the abuse films, clergy and nuns emerge as ruthless and flint-hearted.

Quite apart from these spectacular scandals, many other recent films depict the Catholic Church as largely irrelevant to the lives of its faithful. One Italian contribution is Alice Rohrwacher’s Heavenly Body (2011), a study of a teen­age girl preparing for confirmation. Heavenly Body is in no sense an anti-church film, and it shows the brave if ultimately doomed efforts of lay teachers to make religious training lively and enjoyable. The problem is that any successes occur despite the contributions of the priests rather than because of them. The priests are wholly involved in their political and business dealings and barely even go through the motions of working with youth.

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Priest released from Port Aransas church; parishioners ask for reasons

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
Caller Times

October 17, 2017

By Monica Lopez

A Catholic church in Port Aransas is left without a priest after he was removed Wednesday by the bishop of the Diocese of Corpus Christi.

Rev. Krzysztof Bauta, known as Father Kris by his parishioners, said he was called into the bishop’s office Wednesday and was told he was being removed from St. Joseph Parish.

“I was very distraught and shocked,” Bauta said. “I asked him why and I was not given a reason.”

* * *

“The pastoral change at St. Joseph’s Parish in Port Aransas was not prompted by allegations of sexual misconduct. As a matter of procedure, the Diocese of Corpus Christi is declining to comment further. This has not caused a change in the current Mass Schedule or the administration of the Sacraments,” the diocese stated. “With proper oversight, accountability and in keeping with the law, any funds donated for Hurricane Harvey relief will be used for that purpose.”

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Priest charged with East Gosford child sex offences in the 90’s

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Triple M 105.1

October 19, 2017

A former Catholic priest who also worked as a teacher has been charged with historical child sex offences dating back to the 80s and 90s.

It will be alleged the man indecently assaulted three young boys a number of times; firstly a young boy whilst he was employed as a teacher in Campbelltown in the 80s, and then two other boys when he was a Parish Priest in the East Gosford area in the 90s.

Following an extensive investigation by Brisbane Water detectives, yesterday police arrested a 78-year-old man at Coonabarabran.

He was charged with 13 child sex related offences and granted conditional bail to appear before Gosford Local Court on 31 October 2017.

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Former Campbelltown Catholic priest charged with historic sex offences

WOLLONDILLY, NEW SOUTH WALES (AUSTRALIA)
Wollondilly Advertiser

October 19, 2017

A former Catholic priest who also worked as a Campbelltown teacher in the 1980s and 1990s, has been charged with historic sexual assault offences.

It is alleged the 78-year-old man assaulted three boys. One of the boys was allegedly assaulted during the man’s time as a teacher in Campbelltown.

The other two boys were allegedly assaulted when he worked as a Parish Priest in East Gosford in the 1990s.

He was arrested by Brisbane Water detectives at Coonabarabran yesterday.

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A cautionary tale: Clergy sex abuse victim’s confidentiality breached

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

October 21, 2017

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola

[Note: See also BishopAccountability.org’s database entry on Schornack, with links to complaints, newsletters, and other sources.]

Flagstaff, Ariz. – The story of plaintiff Jane L.S. Doe’s clergy sex abuse lawsuit in Coconino County Superior Court should be a cautionary tale for all sex abuse victims.

Particularly for any abuse survivor who is given promises that his or her identity and personal information will be kept confidential by attorneys and the court system.

In the case of Jane L.S. Doe v. the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament and St. Michael Indian School, Doe’s real name, identifying information and confidential details about her abuse have been published all throughout the public court file for months courtesy of the attorneys for the Sisters and Catholic school and her own attorney is now scrambling to seal all those documents.

The breach of Doe’s identity and confidential information came to light recently after a Gallup Independent reporter drove to Flagstaff to inspect the court file. Doe’s exposed information includes her name, date of birth, current address, previous employer, tribal census number, her parents’ names, her mother’s occupation and census number, and current and former spouses’ names.

The file also includes pages from Doe’s St. Michael’s school records, including transcripts of her high school grades, as well as a copy of Doe’s confidential proof of claim that was filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court during the Diocese of Gallup’s Chapter 11 reorganization. Although personal names were redacted on the claim form, which details her sexual abuse, the same names can be found elsewhere in the file.

Information laid bare

Doe is a middle-aged Navajo woman who was sent as a child to St. Michael Indian School in St. Michaels, Arizona, where she was sexually molested by the late Brother Mark Schornack, OFM, a Franciscan brother who drove a school bus and threw roller skating parties for St. Michael students. Doe is not an “alleged victim” and Schornack was not an “alleged abuser.” As an abuse claimant in the Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case, her claim was deemed credible by court officials. Schornack has been publicly identified by the Gallup Diocese as a credibly accused child sex abuser.

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Court docs exposed: Brother assigned to area while at treatment center for sex abusers

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

October 17, 2017

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola

[Note: See also BishopAccountability.org’s database entry on Brother Mark Schornack OFM. The letter linked below was reproduced when this story ran in the Gallup Independent .]

Flagstaff, Ariz. — Usually it takes a judge’s order to pry the lid off a clergy sex abuser’s confidential personnel file.

But in the case of Brother Mark Schornack, OFM, it just took a mistake by a courthouse employee to publicly release restricted documents that were supposed to be filed under seal.

That mistake was made in Flagstaff’s Coconino County Courthouse with the case Jane L.S. Doe v. Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament and St. Michael Indian School. The documents reveal that Schornack, who has been identified as a credibly accused child molester by the Diocese of Gallup, was accepted into the Franciscan religious order while he was a patient at Via Coeli, the notorious New Mexico treatment center known for treating and recycling Catholic clergy sex abusers.

“Your application for admission to the brotherhood has been approved,” the Rev. Herbert Klosterkemper OFM wrote to Schornack Feb. 14, 1952. “You may arrange to report at St. Michael Mission, St. Michaels, Arizona, around the end of this month.” The letter was marked “Restricted Material” and “Confidential SJB001548” by the Franciscan Province of St. John the Baptist in Cincinnati, Ohio.

And with this acceptance letter, the Franciscans sent Schornack straight to his first mission assignment on the Navajo Nation and the Diocese of Gallup. According to the diocese’s list of credibly accused abusers, Schornack worked in the diocese from 1952 to 1984. Known mostly for driving a school bus and throwing roller skating parties for children, Schornack also had at least one assignment in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe at Jemez Pueblo in 1985. He died in January 2012 after being a resident at the Little Sisters of the Poor facility in Gallup.

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Petaling Jaya priest under probe for allegedly sexually abusing adopted daughter

KUALA LUMPUR (MALAYSIA)
New Straits Times

October 19, 2017

By Faisal Asyraf

A priest is being investigated over allegations that he had sexually abused his own adopted daughter since 2009.

Police sources said the 49-year old man had allegedly molested the 17-year-old girl and forced her into peforming oral sex on him.

He is also said to have also forced the girl to sleep naked with him at night.

The incidents were believed to have taken place in a house in Petaling Jaya.

Sources said the girl’s nightmare began when her biological father died and her mother, a Chinese citizen, returned to China and entrusted the priest to take care of the girl.

She began living with the priest on Nov 15, 2009 as his adopted daughter.

“After several months, the man began to sexually abusing the girl. He threatened to hurt her if she told other people what he was doing,” said the source.

On Oct 17, the girl finally worked up enough courage to run away from the house. She called her mother to tell her what happened and also lodged a report at the district police headquarters.

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Awareness of the sins of the fathers

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal

October 18, 2017

By Olivier Uyttebrouck and Maggie Shepard

[Note: The front page of the Albuquerque Journal showed excerpts from a document relating to each priest. The article includes summaries of the three priests whose files have been released: Jason Sigler, Sabine Griego, and Arthur Perrault. See also BishopAccountability.org’s database entries on Sigler, Griego, and Perrault.]

Nearly 1,000 pages of Archdiocese of Santa Fe court records were released to the public on Wednesday, including letters written showing that church leaders knew of allegations of sexual abuse against three priests long before the priests left or were barred from ministry.

The records, released by order of District Judge Alan Malott, mark the largest release of Archdiocese of Santa Fe records since alleged victims of clerical sexual abuse began filing lawsuits against the archdiocese in the early 1990s.

The records include a wide variety of documents from the archdiocese’s personnel files, including letters written by three archbishops of Santa Fe, some in correspondence with bishops of other dioceses where the three priests lived and worked.

The records comprise what had been a secret history of the careers of former priests Jason Sigler and Sabine Griego, who both live today in New Mexico, and Arthur Perrault, who has fled the country.

Malott issued the order in response to a request by KOB-TV LLC, which filed in July as an intervenor in seven clerical abuse cases for the purpose of obtaining court records.

The records were obtained in the course of lawsuits filed by Albuquerque attorney Brad Hall, who has filed more than 70 lawsuits since 2011 on behalf of alleged clerical abuse victims. Hall compiled the records to support “timelines” he uses in ongoing lawsuits against the archdiocese.

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Why we fought to unseal records detailing abuse by NM priests, and what’s next

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
KOB4

October 18, 2017

By Chris Ramirez

[Note: This video includes scenes from Judge Alan Malott’s courtroom, a brief interview with survivors’ attorney Levi Monagle, and a statement of KOB’s planned approach to the three released files.]

For decades, the Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe has kept thousands of files on priests who abused children a secret, guarded by a court-protected confidentiality order.

KOB and members of its legal team challenged that secrecy in court. Judge Alan Malott agreed with the station that much of the information should no longer be kept in guarded files, saying that’s time to make the information available to the public.

Watch the above video to hear from KOB’s Chris Ramirez on why the station waged the fight, and what we plan on doing next.

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October 18, 2017

The church covered up a catalogue of abuse, then installed a paedophile priest, but 30 years after he ruined another boy’s childhood no-one has visited to say ‘sorry’

ENGLAND
Devon Live

October 17, 2017

By Anita Merritt

Parishioner calls for Bishop of Exeter to stand in pulpit and apologise for the cover-up that allowed Peter Cranch to repeatedly assault a choirboy

The Bishop of Exeter is being asked to apologise in person to the congregation of a church where a known paedophile was installed as a vicar.

Rev Peter Cranch was known to have abused boys in Cornwall and Devon in the 1970s before the church moved him to All Saints Church in Exmouth, where he went on to subject a choirboy to a horrific catalogue of abuse, sexually assaulting him hundreds of times.

In 2004, Cranch was sentenced to eight years in prison for serious sexual assaults against the boy. Then aged 57, he was found guilty of six charges of assaulting a male under 16, four of a serious sexual assault and two of indecency with a child. The boy had been attacked over a five-year period between 1985 and 1990 at All Saints. The judge accused him of “stealing his victim’s childhood”.

Although the then Bishop of Exeter, Michael Langrish, apologised for the Church’s conduct after Cranch’s conviction, no senior clergy have ever appeared in person to apologise to the All Saints’ congregation, despite a lengthy campaign by parishioner Graham Martin

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Sacred Hearts Academy fires teacher for alleged ‘inappropriate behavior’ with 2 students

HAWAII
Honolulu Star Advertiser

October 17, 2017

By Kristen Consillio

Sacred Hearts Academy, on Waialae Avenue in Kaimuki, has fired a teacher after a report of “inappropriate behavior.”

Sacred Hearts Academy, an all-girls Catholic school in Kaimuki, has fired a teacher after two high school students reported “inappropriate behavior,” according to a letter sent to alumnae on Friday .

“We immediately investigated and dismissed the teacher on the same day the incidents were reported. We notified authorities, and the parents filed a police report. This is now a police matter, and we are fully cooperating with the investigation,” Betty White, head of school, said in the letter. “We acted quickly and deliberately in responding to our students who were very courageous in reporting the inappropriate behavior of this teacher.”

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Not Much To ‘Smile’ About In Roddy Doyle’s Intense New Novel

IRELAND
National Public Radio

October 18, 2017

By Michael Schaub

Irish novelist Roddy Doyle has always had a lot of literary tools in his belt, but the one he’s most known for is his sense of humor. His first three novels, The Commitments, The Snapper and The Van, were all laugh-out-loud funny, and even his most serious novel, The Woman Who Walked into Doors, which dealt with alcoholism and spousal abuse, had its (darkly) humorous moments.

Fans of Doyle might be expecting more of the same with his latest novel — it’s called Smile, after all, and although its plot involves a broken relationship, Doyle has managed to mine humor out of similar situations before. But there are no laughs in Smile; the few jokes it has aren’t designed to be funny. It’s a shocking book, at times almost unbearable to read, and it’s by far the most serious of Doyle’s career. It also proves that there may not be anything that the novelist can’t do.

Smile follows Victor Forde, a 54-year-old Irish man with an undistinguished career as a journalist and a long-term relationship that has recently dissolved. He’s moved from the home he used to share with his famous wife into a lonely apartment, and spends his nights haunting a local pub. One evening, he meets a former secondary school classmate named Fitzpatrick; Victor has no memory of him, and isn’t happy to make his acquaintance: “I didn’t like him. I knew that, immediately.”

When the resolutely uncharming Fitzpatrick starts teasing Victor about their days at a Christian Brothers school (“What was the name of the Brother that used to fancy you?”), it opens a floodgate of unhappy memories. One of the first is a comment that a Brother made in class: “Victor Forde, I can never resist your smile.” It’s quickly followed by the memory of another, more serious incident that’s been gnawing at Victor for decades.

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France considers tough new laws to fight sexual harassment and abuse

FRANCE
The Guardian

October 16 2017

By Kim Willsher

MPs to debate measures including a clear age of consent after court dropped rape charge in case involving an 11-year-old girl

French MPs are to debate legislation to crack down on sexist or sexual aggression and harassment, especially assaults on children.

A proposed legal bill would set down a clear age of consent for minors after a shocking case in which a rape charge was dropped when a court decided an 11-year-old girl had consented to sex with a man more than twice her age.

It will also give traumatised child victims more time to come forward to bring criminal charges against their attackers.

The announcement on Monday from the French equality minister, Marlène Schiappa, could hardly have come at a more appropriate time, with scores of French women coming forward to detail incidents of harassment and assault following the Harvey Weinstein scandal.

A Twitter appeal by the radio journalist Sandra Muller using #balancetonporc (squeal on your pig), encouraging women to publicly shame their attackers, was top of the French Twitter trend list over the weekend. A second international campaign #MeToo is now trending in France.

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Do You Care About the #MeToo Trend? Beth Moore & Kay Warren Explain Why You Should

UNITED STATES
CBN News

October 17, 2017

By Heather Sells

Thousands of women are self-identifying on social media as victims of sexual assault or harassment, and they include women whose offenders were church leaders or who were told to keep quiet by church leaders.

Actress Alyssa Milano started the #MeToo hashtag on Sunday and since then thousands of women have publicly shared their stories. They want the world to know that the abuse which Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein is being accused of is rampant across the country.

Bible study leader Beth Moore has shared publicly for years about her childhood sexual abuse, but on Sunday she tweeted of a mentor who told her at age 25 “that people couldn’t handle hearing about sexual abuse and that it would sink my ministry.”

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Call to open Church records to abuse survivors

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

October 18, 2017

By Conall Ó Fátharta

The Government must push the Catholic Church and religious orders to open their records to abuse survivors and academics.

Catriona Crowe, former head of special projects at the National Archives of Ireland, said that it “should not be a matter of grace and favour” that survivors are granted full access to records, but a matter of right.

She said Ireland had seen unprecedented disclosures relating to treatment of vulnerable women and children across a unique archipelago of institutions — mother and baby homes, Magdalene laundries, industrial schools, and reformatories. She said the only way to achieve a complete picture of what happened is to have full access to their archives.

She said these institutions were run largely with the blessing of the State and, as a result, the State should now intervene.

“There should be very high-level talks between the Catholic Church and the State and the outcome of that should be that the Catholic Church would agree to put its records into an independent repository, including their parish records.”

Ms Crowe said some religious records were regarded as “a private fiefdom” by the Catholic Church, the dioceses, and religious orders.

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Victim reported sex abuse to Apuron and Cristobal but was allegedly “shunned away”

GUAM
Pacific News Center

October 18, 2017

By Janela Carrera

The former altar boy left the church after he was turned away while seeking help.

The most recent sex abuse lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Agana details sexual abuse that went on for a period of 8 years. The former altar server says he even reported the abuse to Archbishop Anthony Apuron and former Chancellor Father Adrian Cristobal but was “shunned away.”

It is perhaps the longest period of sexual assault that has been reported since the scores of sex abuse lawsuits have been filed, and it appears to be the most recent–the allegations took place between 1992 to 1999.

Filed by now 40-year-old P.P., the alleged sexual assault happened at the Santa Barbara Catholic parish in Dededo—the alleged abuser, now defrocked priest Raymond Cepeda.

P.P. says it began when he confided in Cepeda as a trusted mentor. Instead of helping the 15-year-old aspiring priest, Cepeda “took advantage of his vulnerability.”

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Lawsuit: Priest lured boys into homosexual lifestyle, smoking

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 18, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com

Father Louis Brouillard allegedly gave altar boys access to pornographic homosexual literature, allowed them to smoke, and treated them to restaurants while also sexually abusing them during Boy Scouts swimming trips, a lawsuit filed in local court on Tuesday states.

S.S., a plaintiff in the latest clergy sex abuse lawsuit, alleged that Brouillard sexually abused him on the grounds of the Barrigada parish and at Boy Scouts outings in or around 1978 to 1979, when he was about 12 to 13.

He was an altar boy and a Boy Scout at the time.

S.S., represented by attorney Michael Berman, demands a jury trial and at least $10 million in damages.

The lawsuit states Brouillard walked around naked in front of S.S. and other altar boys.

“While in his room, Brouillard had on display pornographic homosexual literature, showing adult males with underage boys, thereby hoping to entice S.S. into a homosexuality lifestyle with him,” states the lawsuit filed in the Superior Court of Guam late Tuesday afternoon.

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New priest accused of raping boy for 5 years

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 18, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com

Another priest, the now-deceased Monsignor Jose Ada Leon Guerrero, was added to the list of Guam clergy accused of sexually abusing or raping children.

A plaintiff, identified in court documents only as C.M.V. to protect his privacy, said in his complaint filed Wednesday that the priest sexually abused him, including penetration, when he was about 9 to 13 years old from about 1969 to 1973.

The priest allegedly abused the boy about twice a week for almost five years, and the priest would remind the boy not to tell anybody, the lawsuit says.

On several occasions, the priest would give the boy a gift to silence him, the complaint says.

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Assignment Record – Rev. William T. White

NEW YORK (NY)
BishopAccountability.org

October 17, 2017

Summary of Case: William T. White was a priest of the Archdiocese of New York, ordained in 1958. He worked as an assistant priest at a Manhattan parish early on, going on to spend a decade at Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, where he served as a counselor and dean of students. That assignment was followed by a year with the Archdiocesan Department of Education, then six years as principal of Cardinal Spellman High School in the Bronx. From there White spent twelve years as pastor of a parish in New Rochelle. There is a gap in his assignments 1994-1995. During 1995-2002, White taught at St. Vincent de Paul Seminary in Boynton Beach, Florida in the Palm Beach diocese, while assisting at area parishes.

In 1997 a man reported to the archdiocese that White sexually abused him over a three-year period, beginning when the man was a 17-year-old Stepinac student in the 1970s. White admitted to the abuse. The former student received a settlement in 1998. White wasn’t removed from ministry until March 2002, when the clergy sex abuse crisis was a major focus of attention in the news media. In 2004 White was accused in a lawsuit of having sexually abused a boy, ages 9-11, from 1959 to 1961, at Holy Cross parish in Manhattan.

Ordained: 1958

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October 17, 2017

Alleged victim of clergy abuse shares story as diocese unveils fund

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
News12 Long Island

October 16, 2017

As the Diocese of Rockville Centre unveils a compensation fund for victims of clergy sex abuse, a Long Island man who says he was sexually abused by a priest decades ago is sharing his story.

Thomas McGarvey says he grew up in a typical Irish Catholic family. He also says he was abused by a priest at St. Catherine of Sienna in Franklin Square, starting when he was 16.

Ever since then, McGarvey says he has struggled in both his personal and professional life.

“It almost ended my marriage,” he says. “I had to take an early retirement from American Airlines.”

McGarvey’s attorney, Mitchell Garabedian, has represented clergy sexual abuse victims in Boston and in New York for years.

“Six different priests have been named to me by victims within the Diocese of Rockville Centre spanning a period of 21 years of abuse,” Garabedian says.

On Monday, the Diocese of Rockville Centre unveiled its new Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program. Officials say it is for survivors of sexual abuse by clergy within the diocese.

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Motion filed to unseal documents involving prior First Baptist Church sex abuse

COLUMBIA (SC)
WIS-TV, Channel 10

October 17, 2017

By Caroline Patrickis

A popular Columbia church is at the center of a lawsuit claiming sex abuse – again.

The family of a teen filed a civil lawsuit in Richland County against First Baptist Church of Columbia accusing a former youth ministry volunteer of sex abuse last week.

The attorneys behind the lawsuit say they’re hoping to unseal documents in a previous civil lawsuit case from years ago. Among many allegations is that the church did not notify the police department about on-going sex abuse happening in the church.

The church is no stranger to child sex assault allegations: in 2002, the church was sued after a man was convicted of abusing a minor more than once at First Baptist Church.

The attorney behind this lawsuit, John Simmons, says he’s filed a motion to uncover the details in that case that he calls a cover-up. The lawsuit also names the church and several staff members, including their now-retiring pastor.

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Pro-Child Victims Act PAC presses for constitutional convention

ALBANY (NY)
Albany Times Union

October 17, 2017

By Matthew Hamilton

The founder of a PAC formed to supposed candidates in favor of the stalled Child Victims Act in the Legislature is urging sexual assault survivors to vote yes on holding a constitutional convention in November.

Fighting for Children PAC founder Gary Greenberg, a sexual abuse survivor, said Tuesday that a constitutional convention, which would be held in 2019, would allow victims of sexual abuse to run as delegates and ultimately propose amendments reforming sexual abuse statutes.

Delegates would be selected in 2018 if a convention process is triggered.

Greenberg said he is looking into spending on online advertising and signs in support of a convention.

The Child Victims Act has been a controversial proposal at the Capitol. The Assembly passed a version of the bill, which would extend the statute of limitation for criminal and civil child sex abuse cases. The state Senate declined to take such legislation up at the end of the legislative session in June.

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Assignment Record – Rev. James W. Devorak

MINNESOTA
BishopAccountability.org

October 17, 2017

Summary of Case: James W. Devorak was ordained for the Diocese of New Ulm in 1972. He went on to assist parishes in Marshall and Wilmar, after which he pastored in Graceville, Barry, Glencoe, Fairfax, Lake Benton, Stewart, Granite Falls, Montevido, Clara City, Rosen, Nassau and Ortonville. He also had assignments in parishes in Hutchinson, Darwin, Kandiyohi, and Lake Lillian. After his retirement in July 2015, Devorak worked as an assistant at two Roseville parishes, in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

In August 2017 Devorak was removed from public ministry due to an allegation against him of sexual abuse, stemming from his time in Glencoe in the 1990s. Glencoe police were investigating. Devorak denied the allegation.

Ordained: 1972
Retired: 2015

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Guam archbishop to join talks on settling island’s priest sexual abuse cases

HAGÅTÑA (GUAM)
USA TODAY Network / Pacific Daily News

October 17, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

U.S. District Court Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood on Tuesday ordered Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron, or his attorney, to participate in premediation talks to try to settle 134 Guam clergy sex abuse cases.

Apuron’s attorney, Jacqueline Terlaje, who participated at a status hearing Tuesday afternoon via phone, confirmed they will take part in the talks. Judge Alex Munson will be the discovery monitor and California-based Antonio Piazza has been recommended to serve as a mediator.

Apuron has a pending motion to dismiss four clergy sex abuse cases filed against him, saying they are time-barred and infringe upon his constitutional rights. He also earlier asked the civil court to wait for the results of his Vatican canonical trial before seeking to include him in mediation.

Earlier in October, Archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes, who currently is in charge of the Catholic Church on Guam, said he was told by a Vatican official that a decision has been made in Apuron’s trial. Byrnes, however, said he has yet to receive information on the specific charges and the specific verdict, as well as the punishment, because the judges have yet to sign off on the decisio

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40-year-old claims molestation by Dededo priest

GUAM
KUAM News

October 17, 2017

By Krystal Paco

Another lawsuit filed just as Church status hearings wrapped up late this afternoon.

A 40-year-old man with the initials P.P. alleges he was sexually molested by Raymond Cepeda from 1992 through 1999 when he was a priest at the Santa Barbara Catholic Church in Dededo.

The alleged abuse started as sexual comments, touching, massages, fondling and groping on a daily basis.

The abuse ultimately resulted in masturbation and oral copulation.

Others knew about the abuse as P.P. states a retreat facilitator walked in on one of the incidents.

He also reports telling Monsignor Ziolo Camacho who told him to meet with Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

Apuron allegedly told him that “P.P. needs to pray about these types of evil in the world and that P.P. would get over it, if he prayed about it.”

He also tried to meet with spiritual director Father Adrian Cristobal who reportedly shunned him away.

P.P. is suing for 5-million dollars.

Cepeda, meanwhile, was defrocked in 2009 or 2010.

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Renewal of CBCP broadcast franchise not acted upon by House

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
Interaksyon/News5

October 17, 2017

By Lira Dalangin-Fernandez

MANILA, Philippines – The House of Representatives has failed to renew the broadcast franchise of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) for its television and radio service, which expired last August 7.

House Bill No. 4820 seeking the extension of the franchise for another 25 years was filed January this year, but it remained mired at the committee level.

“It has been referred to the committee on legislative franchises, and it is awaiting hearing,” Albay Representative Joey Salceda, the bill’s author, said. …

The Church and the Duterte administration have been at odds over the rising number of deaths in the President’s war on drugs. The Church has also staunchly opposed the restoration of the death penalty, which the House approved on third and final reading. The Senate, however, has yet to act on the bill.

Last week, Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez also slammed the bishops for not addressing the issue of sexual abuse by priests.

“Mga minor pinapatulan, ang dami nila … mga pedophiles, ayusin muna nila iyong hanay nila bago sila putak nang putak laban sa gobyerno (They prey on minors, so many of them … are pedophiles, let them clean up their ranks before criticizing government),” he had said.

He added that instead of homilies against the war on drugs, “bakit hindi sermunan iyong mga pari na ang daming ginagawang kabulastugan (why not direct the sermons on sinful priests)?”

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Long Island Diocese Creates Compensation Fund For Clergy Abuse Victims

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
WSHU Public Radio

October 17, 2017

By Nicole Shannon

[LINK TO AUDIO BROADCAST]

On Long Island, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre has started a compensation program for victims of clergy sexual abuse.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation program will allow victims who previously reported abuse to apply for compensation. Victims who accept the compensation must agree not to pursue legal action against the diocese.

Bishop John Barres made the announcement on the Diocese’s television channel. “I think it’s a powerful moment for all of us to be united in communion and mission to take this next step, to really reach out at an extraordinarily deep level to our survivors of clergy sexual abuse, their friends, their family and the entire community.”

Critics of the program say the diocese is reacting to increased pressure by legislators, who are discussing lifting the statute of limitation that requires victims to come forward before they turn 23.

In January, the program will open up to victims who haven’t previously reported abuse.

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Late Bishop of Chester abused children, witnesses allege

ENGLAND
Christian Today

October 17, 2017

By Harry Farley

The late Bishop of Chester, Hubert Victor Whitsey, would have faced police questioning were he still alive after more than 10 allegations of child sex abuse were made by witnesses, the Church of England admitted on Tuesday.

The abuse is said to have happened from 1974 while Bishop Whitsey was still in his role in Chester and from 1981 after he retired and was living in the Blackburn diocese. Before his promotion to Chester, he had been Bishop of Hertford and earlier worked as a parish priest in Chorley, South Ribble and Bolton.

The Archbishop of York apologised to those affected, saying he is ‘deeply sorry’ and describing sex abuse as a ‘heinous crime’ in a statement alongside the current Bishop of Chester, Dr Peter Forster.

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Investigation into sex abuse by bishop

ENGLAND
Lancashire Post

October 17, 2017

By Emma Pearson

Police have launched an investigation into sexual abuse by a former bishop who retired to Lancashire

Cheshire Police have published details of an investigation into historic child sex abuse by Hubert Victor Whitsey, the former Bishop of Chester.

The Church of England Bishop, who has since died, retired in 1981 and came to live in Lancashire, where he grew up and had worked as a priest before becoming bishop.

Cheshire Police said it has looked into allegation of abuse of boys and girls dating from the 1970s and 80s, which covered both the time he was bishop and his retirement in the Diocese of Blackburn.

Assistant Chief Constable Nick Bailey said: “Cheshire Constabulary has published a report into the findings of an investigation into allegations of non-recent sexual abuse made against a former Bishop of Chester. Operation Coverage focused on allegations made against the late Bishop Hubert Victor Whitsey, which date back to the 1970s and 1980s. They relate to 13 victims (five male and eight female).

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Former Bishop of Chester was ‘almost certainly’ a child abuser

ENGLAND
The Standard (Chester, England)

October 17, 2017

By Steve Creswell

A FORMER bishop of Chester was “almost certainly” a prolific abuser of children, a law firm acting on behalf of alleged victims has said.

Specialists at Slater and Gordon have been working with a number of men and women who claimed to have been abused by the late Bishop Hubert Victor Whitsey in the 1970s and 1980s.

In total eight women and five men have made complaints about the Anglican clergyman, who died in 1987 at the age of 71.

Cheshire Police conducted a thorough investigation into the allegations and have now concluded that Whitsey would be brought in for questioning, if he were alive today.

However, chiefs have stressed that this is no indication of his guilt.

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Former bishop of Chester investigated over abuse allegations

ENGLAND
The Guardian

October 17, 2017

By Harriet Sherwood

Victor Whitsey, who died in 1987, would have been interviewed over allegations if he were alive, police say

The former bishop of Chester, Victor Whitsey, is being investigated 30 years after his death over allegations of sexual abuse in the latest scandal involving high-profile figures in the Church of England.

A lawyer representing four of the alleged victims has claimed the abuse was covered up by the C of E and has called for a independent review.

The allegations date from the late 1970s when Whitsey was bishop of Chester, and in the 1980s after he had retired and was living in the diocese of Blackburn.

The C of E said it had supported a police investigation into allegations of sexual offences against children and adults. The police told the church that, had Whitsey still been alive, he would have been interviewed in relation to 10 allegations. Whitsey died in 1987.

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Long Island Diocese Creates Fund for Victims of Clergy Abuse

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
The New York Times

October 16, 2017

By Sharon Otterman

Thomas McGarvey was going through a hard time as a teenager in 1981 when he first reached out to his parish priest, the Rev. Robert L. Brown, for spiritual guidance and someone to talk to.

Instead, Mr. McGarvey said he became a victim. At age 16, he began sleeping over at the rectory of St. Catherine of Sienna Parish in Franklin Square, N.Y, in Father Brown’s room, under the noses of the other priests and staff, he said. It was there that the abuse occurred, he alleged, in encounters ranging from fondling to rape. And through the eight years it continued, from 1981 to 1989, Mr. McGarvey alleged, no one helped him, even though he revealed the abuse in confessions with other priests.

“I thought I could trust Father Brown,” Mr. McGarvey, who is now 52, said in an emotional interview on Monday. “I thought I had a friend, but he took advantage of me.”

Several years ago, Mr. McGarvey finally began talking about the abuse, he said. He contacted a lawyer, Mitchell Garabedian, who told the Diocese of Rockville Centre, which includes Nassau and Suffolk Counties on Long Island. But because Father Brown had died in the mid-1990s, their lawyer replied by letter that it was “wholly impossible for the Diocese to investigate this claim at this juncture,” Mr. Garabedian said.

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Lawsuit: Apuron told victim he would ‘get over’ sexual abuse

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

October 17, 2017

By Mindy Aguon

A former altar boy described eight years of sexual abuse at the hands of a former priest in a civil suit filed in the District Court today. He alleges he made several attempts to report the abuse to church officials, but was told he would “get over it, if he prayed about it.”

P.P., who used his initials to protect his privacy, alleges the abuse began when he was 15 while serving as an altar boy and facilitator for the Catechism program at the Santa Barbara Church in Dededo.

The civil complaint, filed by P.P.’s attorney, David Lujan, alleges the teen aspired to become a priest and confided in Raymond Cepeda in 1992 about some childhood experiences in hopes the priest would help him overcome it.

“Instead Cepeda exploited the trust and confidence… and took advantage of his vulnerability,” court documents state.

The alleged abuse began with sexual comments from Cepeda that turned into daily massaging, groping and fondling as the priest offered to “pleasure” the boy, the lawsuit states.

In 1993, during an overnight retreat at the Nuestra Senora de Las Aguas Catholic Church in Mongmong, Cepeda allegedly told the boy not to take his pain medication and said he would “take care of him,” then sexually abused him.

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October 16, 2017

Man says Franklin Square priest abused him

ROCKVILLE CENTRE
Long Island Herald

October 16, 2017

By Ben Strack

Comes forward as Diocese of RVC launches victim compensation program

The same day that the Diocese of Rockville Centre unveiled its compensation program on Monday for victims of clergy sexual abuse, Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian stood outside the diocese’s headquarters on North Park Avenue with one of his clients, asserting that the church, through the program, is “trying to put a positive spin on an evil situation.”

The man he is representing, Thomas McGarvey, was 16 when he alleges that a priest began sexually abusing him at St. Catherine of Sienna Church in Franklin Square. The abuse spanned from 1981 to 1989, he said, and that priest has since died.

McGarvey, who now lives in Queens, said he would often stay over in the rectory with the priest, who abused him, adding that the priest also made sexual advances on his brother. “I was ashamed of it,” McGarvey said. “I was trying to hide it.”

Now, he said, he is considering participating in the diocese’s new Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program — designed to grant financial settlements to victims — to put the past behind him and move on with his life

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The ‘Madness’ of Barbara Blaine: ‘Flectere si nequeo superos, Acheronta movebo’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

October 12, 2017

By Peter Isely

“Flectere si nequeo superos, Acheronta movebo.” — Virgil

This quote in Latin is not a Catholic one. It is from Virgil, the great first century Roman poet. It can be translated in various ways, most literally, “If I cannot deflect the superior powers, then I shall move the River Acheron,” and more commonly, “If I cannot bend the heavens, then I shall move the powers of hell.”

This is the epitaph I would give to my generous, difficult and “mad” friend of over 25 years, Barbara Blaine, whose sudden death Sept. 24 I am still finding incomprehensible. I place Virgil’s defiance, spoken by the goddess Juno, an infinite distance from Archbishop Wilton Gregory’s quote in The New York Times obituary for Barbara: “May God have mercy on her soul.”

Sigmund Freud famously placed Virgil’s quote on the title page of his masterwork, The Interpretations of Dreams. It is the motto for any radical change. It points to the need for disturbing and interrupting the unexpressed, underground structure of our daily life. Of all forms of violence, the one with the most catastrophic consequences is not personal or interpersonal but “systematic”: the kind of violence imposed by the fluid, seemingly natural functioning of our economic, political and religious systems.

It’s one thing to try to change the written laws, difficult as that is (as Barbara knew very intimately from years of trying to push for reforms in sexual abuse statutes), but real change only erupts when the unwritten laws of a system are disturbed. It was Freud who, through his clinical work on the unconscious, recognized that what bonds and binds individuals to a system are its secret, half-spoken, shadowy rules. What really cements group loyalty and submission is not the open agreement on which laws to keep but the “somehow always already known” ones that everyone secretly agrees to break.

My favored translation of Virgil’s saying is, “If you cannot move the upper regions, dare to move the underground.” Was this not Barbara’s supreme wager and ethical act? If you cannot move the upper regions of the Catholic Church, its pope and hierarchy, then dare to move the underground of its child sexual abuse survivors. Create a path for the upsurge from within its actually existing hell, not the one of theological fables, but the real one where across the centuries the bodies of hundreds of thousands of children have been sexually violated and dumped into the great black hole of institutional Catholicism to suffer and disappear. Bring these stories from hell to the surface, raise them up, speak to them: Shake the underground.

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Remembering Barbara Blaine, a visionary advocate for survivors everywhere

NEW YORK (NY)
The Daily Outrage – The Center for Constitutional Rights blog

September 26, 2017

By Pamela Spees

Barbara Blaine, founder and former president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, died on Sunday, September 24, 2017. She was only 61. We are devastated by the loss of our friend and colleague.

CCR’s work with SNAP launched in September 2011 with the filing of a complaint at the International Criminal Court (ICC) requesting investigation and prosecution of high-level Vatican officials, including then-Pope Benedict, for the widespread and systematic rape and sexual violence within the Catholic Church. Barbara was the energy and inspiration behind the efforts to bring the issue to international human rights bodies. She had an early instinct and vision that the International Criminal Court was an appropriate forum to deal with the Vatican, an entity with a global presence and reach that fostered a climate where widespread and systematic rape and sexual violence were being committed and covered up with impunity. She was absolutely right.

SNAP started out as a tiny group of survivors of sexual violence by priests, who came together to support and validate each other. To reassure one another that they weren’t “crazy,” as they were sometimes described back then, before the world had begun to comprehend that this was actually happening, and grasp the magnitude and extent of it all and how far up the chain it went in the Vatican (all the way to the top). Barbara talked about how reading Our Bodies, Ourselves gave her the idea to help survivors take matters into their own hands and take control of their own healing and their lives. That little support group eventually exploded into an internationalized movement of over 25,000 survivors in countries around the world.

Barbara described how in the early days they thought if they could just let the bishops know what had happened to them, the problem could then be solved. Then they learned the unthinkable – that the bishops had known all along, and more, that the Vatican had known too. They were able to rally from their own shock and sense of betrayal and isolation to begin the process of calling out the Vatican and church officials – a tiny David taking on Goliath.

No one ever envisioned back then that they would eventually be responsible, in part, for getting a pope to resign and forcing a church spokesperson to emerge during the ensuing conclave to angrily remind the media that SNAP doesn’t get to decide who the next pope is.

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Chicago’s Cardinal Cupich not expected to be moved to Rome

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

October 16, 2017

By Joshua J. McElwee

Cardinal Blase Cupich is not expected to leave the Archdiocese of Chicago for a new position at the Vatican, several sources close to the prelate say.

A recent rumor that Cupich would replace Cardinal George Pell as the head of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy is “totally without foundation” said one of the sources, who said they had been told as much by the Chicago cardinal.

Cupich has been the archbishop of Chicago since 2014. A rumor about his possible transfer to Rome appears to have been initiated by Chicago Sun-Times gossip columnist Michael Sneed, who cited discussions in “Jesuit circles” in a recent column.

Pope Francis created the Secretariat of the Economy in 2014 to consolidate and oversee the Vatican’s various financial offices. Pell, an Australian who is serving as the secretariat’s prefect, returned to his home country over the summer to fight charges of historical sexual abuse against minors.

There is no indication that Francis is seeking to replace Pell while the cardinal fights the charges against him.

Should the pope decide to replace Pell, it appears unlikely he would choose an American for the job as the Vatican already has an American in high-level leadership with Cardinal Kevin Farrell, who leads the new Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life.

[Joshua J. McElwee is NCR Vatican correspondent. His email address is jmcelwee@ncronline.org. Follow him on Twitter: @joshjmac.]

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Former pupil allegedly abused by Ealing priest denies being a ‘professional victim’

ENGLAND
getwestlondon.co.uk

October 16, 2017

By Greg Wilford and Katy Clifton

The witness was called a fantasist after claiming he was raped and indecently assaulted by Andrew Soper

A former west London pupil – who won a £135,000 settlement after claiming he was sexually abused by a school priest – was accused of being a fantasist on Monday (October 16).

The alleged victim first came forward after claiming he was raped and indecently assaulted by Andrew Soper, 74, at St Benedict’s School in Ealing in the 1970s.

The man, who remains anonymous for legal reasons, had his claim for criminal compensation refused when the case was dropped, but in 2012 he made a civil application for more than £800,000.

St Benedict’s initially offered £25,000 before agreeing to settle the case for £135,000 “without prejudice” or any admission that Soper was guilty of abuse, the Old Bailey heard.

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Suspended priest says church diverting resources from sex abuse victims

PERTH (AUSTRALIA)
9news.com.au

October 16, 2017

By Belinda Grant Geary

A Perth priest suspended for allegations of “blasphemy” says the Anglican church is wasting valuable resources disciplining him instead of supporting victims of abuse.

Reverend Chris Bedding was stood down from his role as priest at Darlington Parish two weeks ago after a complaint was lodged with the Perth Diocese Professional Standards Board last year.

Father Bedding, who moonlights as a comedian, said a string of allegations of misconduct have been levelled against him, which claim his Facebook posts and critically acclaimed comedy show Pirate Church feature “tones of blasphemy”.

The progressive priest said the Professional Standards Board was formed primarily to support victims of clerical abuse and believes valuable resources are being wasted pursuing him.

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Welby says sorry to sex abuse survivor whose 16 letters were ignored

ENGLAND
The Times

October 16, 2017

By Kaya Burgess

The Archbishop of Canterbury has issued a personal apology to a victim of sexual abuse within the church who sent 16 letters to Lambeth Palace about his ordeal with no response.

Three prominent bishops have also raised concerns in a separate letter to the Church of England’s insurers that the process of “horse-trading” between lawyers over abuse claims has shown “little concern” for the impact on survivors.

This comes just days after one of the bishops, the Bishop of Buckingham, the Right Rev Alan Wilson, told The Times that the church’s stock response to abuse reports was to “hide behind the sofa and call the lawyers”.

One survivor, known as Gilo, who suffered abuse at the hands of a senior church figure as a teenager, sent a total of 17 letters to the archbishop’s office and received only one response from Lambeth Palace, from a correspondent clerk who offered prayers.

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Bishops challenge Ecclesiastical over ‘horse trading’ of survivor settlements

ENGLAND
Church Times

October 16, 2017

By Madeleine Davies

THREE bishops have sharply criticised the record of Ecclesiastical, the insurance company, over its treatment of abuse survivors on behalf of the Church of England.

In a letter to Mark Hews, the chief executive of the Ecclesiastical Insurance Group (EIG), the bishops condemn “horse trading” between lawyers negotiating settlements for abuse survivors.

The letter was sent after a meeting with a survivor, and calls on the insurer to consider revisiting both past settlements and its overarching approach to claims, questioning, for example, whether fairness should be taking precedence over justice and reconciliation.

The move was welcomed by the survivor, Gilo, also known as “Joe”, who first spoke of “offensive horse trading” years ago, when he was awarded £35,000 in a settlement with the diocese of London (News, 4 December), an experience he described as “demeaning, degrading”. He believes that the Church must remove all responsibility for handling of survivors from Ecclesiastical (News, 28 July).

Ecclesiastical has issued a strongly worded response to the bishops, stating that their letter “seriously misrepresents” the company’s actions and “misunderstands how insurance works”.

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St William’s child abuse victims call for compensation law change

EAST YORKSHIRE (ENGLAND)
BBC

October 16, 2017

A petition calling for a change in the law to help sex abuse victims seek compensation has been handed into Downing Street.

It comes as 249 men are suing the Roman Catholic Church over abuse claims against St William’s children’s home in East Yorkshire between 1970 and 1991.

Two of St William’s former employees were jailed last year for abusing boys.

Their victims want the current three-year limit for personal injury damages to be abolished.

More than 60,000 people have signed the petition, which was started by Darren Furness, a former resident at the home in Market Weighton, which closed in 1992.

He said: “We want the government to intervene and get rid of the three-year limitation period that’s holding the victims of St William’s back, including myself.

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Kindesmissbrauch tausendfach vertuscht: Weil nicht sein kann, was nicht sein darf

GERMANY
Stern

October 15, 2017

By Katharina Kluin

[Google Translate: In the GDR (East Germany), sexual abuse of children was not only outlawed, but also a political taboo.”There was no such thing” in socialist society. The first systematic investigation shows that there were thousands of victims whose suffering was hushed up from the top. Those affected almost always remained alone.]

[This article addresses a newly published report, Historische, rechtliche und psychologische hintergründe des sexuellen Missbrauchs an Kindern und Jugendlichen in der DDR (The historical, legal and psychological background of sexual abuse of children and adolescents in the GDR).]

In der DDR war sexueller Kindesmissbrauch nicht nur geächtet, sondern auch auch ein politisches Tabu. “So etwas” hatte in der sozialistischen Gesellschaft nicht mehr vorzukommen. Die erste systematische Untersuchung zeigt: Es gab Tausende Opfer, deren Leid von höchster Stelle vertuscht wurde. Die Betroffenen blieben fast immer allein.

“Den Kindern die Zukunft” stand in großen Lettern an einem der Heime, in die sie Corinna Thalheim steckten. Man sollte ja glauben, der sozialistische Staat sorge gut für diejenigen, die es schwer hatten. Doch die Zukunft, auf die Corinna Thalheim einmal gehofft hatte, gab es nicht.

Man schrubbte sie unter der kalten Dusche “zur Begrüßung” blutig. Zwang sie in die Ausbildung zur Putzfrau. Und als sie schließlich dreimal “entwichen” und dreimal wieder aufgegriffen worden war, endete alles, woran Corinna Thalheim noch geglaubt hatte, im Jugendwerkhof Torgau, drei Monate vor ihrem 18. Geburtstag. Torgau, das hieß: Hantelspurts bis zur Ohnmacht, Schimmelfressen, Einzelarrest in Dunkelheit. Erzieher, die sich fluchtartig versetzen ließen, weil sie Menschen waren. Und Erzieher, die blieben, weil sie Sadisten waren.

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Des présumées victimes d’un prêtre apostrophent Monseigneur Lacroix

QUEBEC (CANADA)
Le Soleil

October 15, 2017

By Ian Bussières

[Men who say they were sexually abused by a priest, now deceased for more than 30 years, took advantage of the visit of Cardinal Gérald Cyprien Lacroix in Thetford Mines on Sunday to demonstrate in front of the St. Alphonsus Church and to present their grievances to the Archbishop of Quebec, whom they have been trying to meet for five years.]

Des hommes disant avoir été agressés sexuellement par un prêtre décédé depuis plus de 30 ans ont profité de la visite du cardinal Gérald Cyprien Lacroix à Thetford Mines dimanche pour manifester devant l’église Saint-Alphonse et pour présenter leurs doléances à l’archevêque de Québec, qu’ils tentent de rencontrer depuis cinq ans.

Pierre Bolduc, Denis Cloutier, Jean Poulin et Jean-Yves Tardif disent avoir été victimes de sévices sexuels de la part du prêtre thetfordois Jean-Marie Bégin alors qu’ils avaient entre 7 et 13 ans, soit de 1965 à 1980. Ils accusent le diocèse de Québec d’avoir transféré le prêtre de paroisse en paroisse, lui permettant de faire d’autres victimes. Le prêtre s’est enlevé la vie en 1986 à son chalet du lac de l’Est, à Disraeli.

Juste avant la célébration dominicale, MM. Bolduc, Cloutier et Poulin et leur porte-parole Roger Lessard sont entrés dans l’église Saint-Alphonse avec leurs pancartes pour s’adresser directement à Mgr Lacroix. «C’est la première fois qu’on lui parle. Il a toujours refusé de rencontrer les victimes. On voulait le rencontrer depuis 2012 et il nous a plutôt fait rencontrer par un avocat. On voulait lui dire que c’était immoral et hypocrite, et que le diocèse avait eu du front d’avoir fait changer de paroisse un prêtre qui a fait au moins quatre victimes», a expliqué Roger Lessard au Soleil.

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Un sacerdote fue procesado por abusar sexualmente de una adolescente de 13 años

RIO GRANDE, Tierra del Fuego (ARGENTINA)
MinutoUno.com (M1)

October 15, 2017

[Google Translate: A priest was indicted by Fuegian justice for the crime of aggravated sexual abuse against a 13-year-old girl who is the daughter of a friend of his, and, although the priest may remain at large, a restriction was imposed on him not to approach that family. The accused priest, Cristian Vázquez , denied his responsibility in the case and declared that the denunciation was part of an apparent “revenge” by the minor because of the relationship that he had established with her mother.]

[See also the entry for Vázquez in BishopAccountability.org’s database of accused clergy in Argentina.]

El cura está acusado de abusar de la hija de una amiga pero negó su responsabilidad y aseguró que la denuncia formaría parte de una aparente “venganza”.

Un sacerdote fue procesado por la justicia fueguina por el delito de abuso sexual agravado contra una adolescente de 13 años que es hija de una amiga suya y, si bien puede permanecer en libertad, se le impuso una restricción para que no se acerque a esa familia.

Así lo indicaron este domingo fuentes de la investigación y señalaron que el sacerdote acusado, Cristian Vázquez, negó su responsabilidad en el caso y aseguró que la denuncia formaría parte de una aparente “venganza” de la menor de edad por la relación que él había entablado con la madre.

El procesamiento fue dispuesto recientemente por el juez de Instrucción Daniel Cesari Hernández, de la ciudad fueguina de Río Grande, contra el religioso al entender que existe el grado de sospecha suficiente exigido en la etapa de instrucción para considerarlo autor del delito de “abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante con acceso carnal, agravados” por su condición de sacerdote.

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Priest puts in words the loneliness and isolation of Church’s lost tribe

IRELAND
The Independent

October 16, 2017

By Sean Hayes

Fiction: A Lost Tribe, William King, Lilliput Press, €15.00

Struggling with the near impossible expectations of the priesthood is a familiar subject in the work of William King, parish priest at Rathmines. His previous novels, which include The Strangled Impulse (1997, 2014) and Leaving Ardglass (2008), address such issues, while also punctuating a wider national tale that has seen Ireland shaken by scandal, and the near collapse of the Catholic Church.

Thomas Galvin finds himself at the steps of Coghill House, St Paul’s seminary, where he trained almost five decades previously, for a retreat with his ageing counterparts in the clergy. Through alternating chapters, he relives the memories of his youth, and recounts how he and his peers were seduced by the promise of power, and the supposedly modern outlook now favoured by the Vatican Council.

What is most striking, perhaps, is how far the church has fallen in the eyes of Irish society today. The seminary that once turned away hopeful entrants now has just one student up for ordination this year.

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Diocese of Rockville Centre to unveil abuse compensation program

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday

October 16, 2017

By Bart Jones, bart.jones@newsday.com

[See also the Rockville Centre’s new website about its Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The Diocese of Rockville Centre on Monday is to unveil an independent compensation program for victims of clergy sexual abuse, a move that is likely to involve dozens of victims and cost the diocese millions of dollars.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation program is similar to ones started over the past year in the Archdiocese of New York and the Diocese of Brooklyn.

Under the program, victims deemed eligible for financial compensation must agree not to pursue legal action against the church in the future in order to collect.

“With this program we are making a major commitment to the ongoing healing of survivors of acts of child sexual abuse committed by clergy,” said Bishop John Barres, spiritual leader of the diocese of 1.5 million Catholics, in a statement set to be released Monday.

“We as a Church recognize that no amount of monetary compensation could ever erase or undo the grave harm suffered by survivors of child abuse,” Barres said. “Still, we embrace Christ’s healing power and the Mission of Mercy of the Catholic Church as we begin our Independent Reconciliation and Compensation program.”

The program will be administered by Kenneth R. Feinberg, who currently is in charge of the funds in New York and Brooklyn, and Camille Biros, a business manager in his Washington, D.C., law firm who also has been closely involved in administering those and other funds. The two will independently determine who is eligible for compensation and how much money will be offered in Rockville Centre.

Feinberg also has administered the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, as well as compensation programs stemming from the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the Boston Marathon terrorist attack, the shootings at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, and abuse claims brought against Jerry Sandusky, the former Pennsylvania State University assistant football coach.

“I think it is a wonderful step that the diocese is taking,” Biros said in an interview. “It follows two very successful programs which are still ongoing in Brooklyn and New York.”

The programs are “a recognition that there was wrongdoing and I think that’s what a lot of the claimants . . . are pleased about after all these years,” she said.

More than 200 cases have been settled in New York and Brooklyn out of 437 received so far, Biros said. To date no offer of compensation has been rejected by an alleged victim, she added.

It was not immediately clear how many victims will come forward in Rockville Centre, but Manhattan-based attorney Michael Dowd said he has 35 clients claiming clergy sex abuse in the diocese.

Dowd, who also is handling cases in Brooklyn and New York, said settlements accepted by his clients in the Archdiocese of New York’s program generally have ranged from the low- to mid-six figures, though he believes some in the Diocese of Brooklyn could exceed $1 million.

Rockville Centre said it will pay the compensation “by using funds from investment returns over time and insurance programs.”

The Archdiocese of New York announced its compensation program in October 2016, followed by the Diocese of Brooklyn in June.

Rockville Centre also said an Independent Oversight Committee will monitor implementation and administration of its program. Its three members include the Honorable A. Gail Prudenti, dean of the Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University and former chief administrative judge of the Courts of New York State; Michael Cardello III, a partner with the law firm of Moritt Hock & Hamroff; and Thomas Demaria, director of the Psychological Services Center of the Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program at LIU Post.

Two weeks ago, Rockville Centre sent out letters to people who previously had filed complaints with diocesan officials, informing them that a compensation program would be announced later in the month.

The news was met with both praise and skepticism among some lawyers for clergy sex abuse victims and victims themselves.

“This is clearly a step in the right direction,” Dowd said. “It can’t possibly . . . make up for all the suffering that people have endured. [But] it’s clearly better than nothing.”

Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston-based attorney who represents victims in Boston and New York, said he will recommend to his clients that they participate in the program if they think it will help them heal.

But he also said he believes it is an effort by the Catholic Church in New York to act before state legislators lift a statute of limitations that requires victims of child sex abuse to file charges before they turn 23.

That could open the church to scores of lawsuits and potentially tens of millions of dollars in damages. It could also require the church to release information detailing the abuse including names of priests.

“The Catholic Church is feeling the heat with regard to the pending statute of limitations issues in the legislature and they are reacting to it,” said Garabedian, who was portrayed by actor Stanley Tucci in the 2015 film “Spotlight” about the church sex abuse scandal in Boston. “You have an entity that has allowed the wholesale sexual abuse of innocent children by priests for decades upon decades. They are not all of a sudden nice people.”

In response, diocesan spokesman Sean Dolan said: “Until the Archdiocese of New York announced its IRCP in October of 2016, it was not clear that a program like this could work in a diocese of our size. After substantial study, and once it became clear that it could work, Bishop Barres determined that this is the right thing to do.”

Dowd said he does not think the statute of limitations will be altered anytime soon. The Catholic Church has lobbied against efforts to overturn the law, saying it could nearly bankrupt the church.

Tom McGarvey, 52, a Jamaica resident who alleges he was abused by a priest in the diocese when he was 16 to 24 years old, and has suffered many personal and professional problems since then, said, “I’d rather have a victims sex abuse act passed” lifting the statute of limitations.

But he said he plans to participate in the diocese’s program. “At least I can put it [the abuse] behind me and move forward,” he said. “Then I could go on with my life.”

Rockville Centre’s program, like the ones in Brooklyn and New York, will operate in two phases.

In phase one, starting Monday, alleged victims who previously had reported abuse to church officials can apply for compensation, the diocese said. In phase two, anticipated to start in January 2018, alleged victims who never had reported allegations of abuse can apply.

Victims who are awarded compensation can choose to reject it and pursue other legal options on their own.

“We encourage survivors of abuse to come forward in a timely fashion to seek compensation through this independent program,” Feinberg said in a statement.

Both Dowd and Biros said they believe the model adopted by the three dioceses could spread to others around the state.

“You are going into the three biggest dioceses in New York and you are finding out that it works,” Dowd said. “It’s doing something for victims.”

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October 15, 2017

Missbrauch: Bistum veröffentlicht Gutachten

HILDESHEIM (GERMANY)
NDR (Public broadcaster)

October 13, 2017

By Florian Breitmeier

[GOOGLE TRANSLATE: The Catholic bishopric Hildesheim presented the report on the abuse allegations against the deceased Bishop Heinrich Maria Janssen and the retired priest Peter R. on Monday at 11 am. The 250-page document was written by the Independent Institute for Practice Research and Project Consulting in Munich.]

Das katholische Bistum Hildesheim stellt am Montag um 11 Uhr das Gutachten zu den Missbrauchsvorwürfen gegen den verstorbenen Bischof Heinrich Maria Janssen und den pensionierten Priester Peter R. vor. Das rund 250 Seiten umfassende Dokument wurde vom unabhängigen Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung in München verfasst.

Der Vorwurf sexualisierter Gewalt gegen den 1988 verstorbenen Bischof Janssen wurde im Herbst 2015 bekannt. Ein ehemaliger Messdiener hatte sich an die Kirche gewandt: Janssen habe ihn von Ende der 1950er- bis Anfang der 1960er-Jahre regelmäßig sexuell missbraucht. Das Bistum hielt die Schilderungen des heute rund 70 Jahre alten Mannes für plausibel und leistete 2015 nach Prüfung entsprechender Aussagen eine Anerkennungszahlung für das erlittene Leid. Als ein juristisches Schuldeingeständnis wollte das Bistum dies aber ausdrücklich nicht verstanden wissen. Später wurde das Bistum unter anderem dafür kritisiert, es habe mit der Zahlung das Ansehen des beliebten Bischofs beschädigt, ohne die Entscheidung aufgrund konkreter Beweise rechtfertigen zu können.

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L’association La Parole Libérée veut voir l’église indemniser les victimes d’abus sexuel

LYON (FRANCE)
LyonMag.com

October 14, 2017

L’association a transmis un projet de réforme pour la prise en charge « des victimes d’actes de pédophilie commis par des clercs ».

[GOOGLE TRANSLATE: The (survivors’) association has forwarded a draft reform for the “care of victims of acts of pedophilia committed by clerics.” In a report revealed this Friday to the newspaper Le Monde, the association La Parole Libérée has asked the Catholic Church of France to compensate the victims of clergy, as is the case in other European countries. Indeed, during a scandal in Germany, several hundred children of a Catholic choir had been sexually abused between 1945 and the beginning of the 1990s.]

Dans un rapport révélé ce vendredi au journal Le Monde, l’association La Parole Libérée a demandé à l’Église catholique de France d’indemniser les victimes des membres du clergé, comme c’est le cas dans d’autres pays européens. En effet, lors d’un scandale en Allemagne, plusieurs centaines d’enfants d’un choeur catholique avaient subi des sévices sexuels entre 1945 et le début des années 1990. Pour ce préjudice, les institutions religieuses avaient indemnisé chaque victime jusqu’à 20 000 euros.

La Conférence des Évêques de France (CEF) se défend en rejetant toute responsabilité envers les membres du clergé, mettant en évidence la non-présence de rapport salarié/employeur entre les prêtres et les évêques. Dans les colonnes du Progrès, le porte-parole de la CEF rappelle que les victimes peuvent obtenir réparation du préjudice en se portant partie civile devant les tribunaux.

Dans le rapport transmis par l’association La Parole Libérée, ces derniers ont réalisé un « testing », consistant à envoyer un message à 33 cellules d’accueil sur une prétendue victime d’abus sexuels. Les retours relayés par l’association font part d’une réponse de la part de 28 diocèses et de la CEF, et seulement deux d’entre eux auraient alerté le procureur de la République.

Pour rappel, l’association La Parole Libérée a été créée en décembre 2015 à Lyon par d’anciennes victimes du prêtre Bernard Preynat, mis en examens en janvier 2016 pour des abus sexuels, et dont les faits remontent de la fin des années 1970 à 1991.

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Vatican: Canada did not seek extradition for diplomat wanted on child pornography charges

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service via Catholic Herald

October 14, 2017

Canadian authorities did not request the extradition of a Vatican diplomat who has been charged by police in Canada of accessing, possessing and distributing child pornography, a Vatican spokesman said.

“No request for extradition has come from Canada and no trial has been set at the Vatican” for the diplomat, Mgr Carlo Capella, who had been working in the United States, said Greg Burke, Vatican spokesman.

The Vatican investigation “requires international collaboration, and it has not ended yet,” he added.

The Italian monsignor, who had been working at the Vatican nunciature in Washington, was first recalled to the Vatican after the U.S. State Department notified the Holy See in August of his possible violation of laws relating to child pornography images.

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