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.

December 8, 2017

Tom Roberts, longtime NCR editor, retires

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

December 8, 2017

By Dennis Coday

Tom Roberts, who has served the mission and readers of NCR for nearly 24 years, is retiring.

The official record will note that Roberts joined NCR in January 1994 serving as managing editor, editor and editor at large. The simplicity of those words do not convey the true meaning of what Roberts has done for this news organization and for those of us who have had the privilege, honor and pleasure to have worked with him.

Tom’s greatest gift to NCR and what he has shared daily with NCR staff and readers is his love for journalism. He lives journalism as a craft and a vocation. He practiced and honed his skills as a reporter, writer and editor for more than four decades, and he likes nothing better than taking on an apprentice to pass on that craft. He always had time to talk over ideas, offer advice on how to approach a source or how to unclog a writer’s block.

More than the mechanics of journalism, Tom knows and models journalism as a pledge to public service that must be lived with deliberateness and integrity. Many of us are better writers and editors because of Tom’s mentorship and concern. I know too that many of us are better people for having worked with him.

NCR publisher Caitlin Hendel has observed that Tom “led NCR’s editorial coverage during a tumultuous time, for the nation, the world and the Catholic Church.” He joined NCR at the apex the John Paul II papacy, watched its last years and was in Rome for election of Pope Benedict XVI. For the election of Pope Francis, he was in the newsroom in Kansas City so I could be in Rome. Tom had a special love for Central American coverage, and he traveled to Iraq in the late 1990s when its people were suffering under years of economic sanctions. That experience guided NCR’s coverage of the debacle of the 2003 invasion of Iraq that still plagues our nation. Tom led the newsroom through the shock of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. He reported and edited more stories about clergy sex abuse than any one person should endure.

“Tom’s steady demeanor and passionate regard for the truth combined to hold institutions accountable and to put the voiceless front and center,” Hendel told me. “That is a legacy we inherit from Tom and pledge to continue.”

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 West Centre Against Sexual Assault the trauma of abuse is ongoing

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

December 8, 2017

By Clare Quirk

THE trauma of Warrnambool children abused by the Catholic Church is ongoing and should never be forgotten, according to the boss of the South West Centre Against Sexual Assault.

The comments by centre manager Mary Clapham come after the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Assault released a scathing report which condemned the church’s Ballarat diocese leaders, who were responsible for parishes across the region.

Ms Clapham said the horrific abuse which occurred in Ballarat was also experienced in south-west communities, including Warrnambool and Mortlake

“Those same priests were located here,” she said.

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

Archbishop Philip Wilson sent $1000 to abuse victim’s parents

ADELAIDE (AUSTRALIA)
9News

December 8, 2017

More than 30 years after Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson ignored an altar boy’s claims he’d been abused by a pedophile priest he sent $1000 to the parents of another boy abused by the same priest, a court has heard.

Wilson, accused of concealing sexual abuse by the now-dead priest James Fletcher in the NSW Hunter region when told about it in 1976, sent the cheque in 2009, Newcastle Local Court was told on Friday.

The family of the abused boy refused to accept Wilson’s cheque and sent it back.

The abused boy’s sister, who cannot be named, told the court Wilson had been a family friend who had officiated with Fletcher at her wedding.

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.

Ex-priest with NM ties convicted of murdering Texas woman

EDINBURG (TX)
Albuquerque Journal

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

An ex-priest who once headed the Servants of the Paraclete retreat house in Jemez Springs was convicted of murdering a 25-year-old Texas schoolteacher and beauty queen on Thursday in Edinburg, Texas, more than 57 years after Irene Garza went to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen intending to go to confession.

Garza’s bludgeoned body was found days after her April 16, 1960, disappearance. An autopsy revealed that she had been raped while unconscious and had been beaten and suffocated.

A Hidalgo County jury deliberated 6½ hours before returning its verdict in the murder trial of John Bernard Feit, an 85-year-old former priest, after hearing five days of testimony.

Feit, who was 28 at the time of her death, came under suspicion early on, telling police that he heard Garza’s confession — in the church rectory, not in the confessional — but denying he killed her.

This week, prosecutors presented evidence that elected and church officials suspected Feit killed her but wanted to avoid prosecuting him because it might harm the church’s reputation and elected officials politically. Most elected officials at the time in Hidalgo County were Catholic, and Sen. John F. Kennedy, a Catholic, was running for president that year.

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

Pastor at Come Alive Church accused of juvenile sex crimes

MEDFORD (NJ)
Courier Post Online

December 7, 2017

By Jim Walsh

MEDFORD – A 74-year-old pastor active in promoting Christian music festivals is accused of sexually assaulting four minors here over a 16-year period, authorities said Thursday.

Harry L. Thomas, who preached at Come Alive Church in Medford, allegedly assaulted his victims between 1999 and 2015, according to the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office.

It did not name the victims or describe their relationship with Thomas, a Medford resident who played a prominent role in a sensational child-abuse case more than a decade ago.

The prosecutor’s office asked anyone “who may have experienced inappropriate contact” with Thomas to contact investigators.

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.

Perth archbishop Roger Herft should face charges: Abuse victims

PERTH (AUSTRALIA)
The West Australian

December 7, 2017

By Nick Butterly

Victims of abuse by priests say former Perth Anglican Archbishop Roger Herft should face criminal charges for failing to report suspected criminal clergy to police.

Abuse survivors are also calling for Archbishop Herft to be defrocked and to hand back his Order of Australia, saying the saga has caused immeasurable pain to victims.

A report from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse which investigated the Anglican Church’s diocese of Newcastle detailed how systemic issues inside the Church allowed a group of perpetrators to operate for at least 30 years.

The report noted seven clergy and others associated with the Newcastle diocese had been convicted of child-sex offences. Father Peter Rushton, who has since died, is accepted by the church to have been a notorious abuser, but he was never charged.

The royal commission heard horrific testimony from victims of how they were taken on camps as children by Father Rushton, then chased through the bush and raped.

It was told Archbishop Herft was made aware of allegations Father Rushton had sexually abused boys in 2002 and again in 2003, but no action was taken.

Perth-based victims group Survivors and Friends, which deals mostly with cases in the Anglican Church, said the Anglican diocese of Perth needed to review any abuse cases that fell under the time Archbishop Herft led the Church.

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

Jury Delivers Guilty Verdict in John Feit Murder Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
KRGV

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG – A jury just reached their decision for a former priest on trial for the 1960 murder of Irene Garza.

The jury reached a guilty verdict minutes ago.

Eighty-four-year-old John Feit was the prime suspect in Garza’s death.

The school teacher’s body was found in a canal in Apr. 1960. She was last seen at confession at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen.

Feit was arrested last February in his Arizona home in connection with the death.

Now jurors will decide how long the former priest will spend behind bars.

Sentencing is scheduled for Friday at 10 a.m.

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.

John Feit found guilty of murder in death of beauty queen Irene Garza

EDINBURG (TX)
CBS 4 News

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Jurors on Thursday night found former priest John Feit guilty of murder in the 1960 killing of beauty queen Irene Garza.

Jurors deliberated for nearly seven hours before reaching the verdict. Earlier Thursday, jurors requested to end deliberations at 4:30 p.m.

Judge Luis Singleterry denied their request.

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.

FEIT FOUND GUILTY

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 7, 2017

By Molly Smith

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Emotions run high as jury convicts ex-priest in 1960 murder of Irene Garza

EDINBURG — Six hours of deliberation ended 57 years of speculation Thursday night when a jury found ex-priest John Feit guilty of the April 1960 murder of schoolteacher Irene Garza.

Feit showed no emotion as the verdict was read, appearing almost defiant as he learned of his conviction for murder with malice aforethought, or premeditation. The 85-year-old defendant also didn’t offer anything in the form of remarks while being led out of the courtroom, as defense attorney O. Rene Flores said Feit wouldn’t speak to the media.

In contrast, members of Garza’s family, who were present in the courtroom when the verdict was read, were visibly emotional and embraced each other following news of Feit’s fate, which ends a nearly six-decade wait for justice in the death of the 25-year-old.

Also on hand was McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez, who has worked on the case since 2002 and long believed there was sufficient probable cause to charge Feit with the murder.

Rodriguez was also among the many who testified in a trial chock-full of compelling testimony — this including accounts from women who detailed encounters with Feit in 1960 that included the then-priest asking to take photos of one at a cemetery and warning another that she was “next, honey.”

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.

Ex-priest convicted of 1960 Texas teacher murder

EDINBURG (TX)
The Associated Press via KHOU

December 07, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas (AP) – A former priest has been found guilty of murder in the 1960 slaying of a South Texas teacher and one-time beauty queen who was a member of the parish he served.

A Hidalgo County jury deliberated 6½ hours after hearing five days of deliberations before returning its verdict in the murder trial of 85-year-old John Bernard Feit. He was accused of strangling 25-year-old Irene Garza to death in McAllen, Texas.

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.

‘Wolf in Priest’s Clothing’ John Feit Convicted Of Murder

EDINBURG (TX)
Courthouse News

December 8, 2017

By Erik De La Garza

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas (CN) — A Texas jury convicted former Catholic priest John Feit of murder Thursday evening for the Easter weekend 1960 killing of schoolteacher Irene Garza, closing a case that took 57 years to bring to trial and featured allegations of a church cover-up.

The seven-woman, five-man jury deliberated for just over six hours before rejecting Feit’s decades-old claim that he had nothing to do with the disappearance and suffocation of the 25-year-old McAllen schoolteacher and former Miss South Texas.

Feit, 85, sat emotionless as the verdict was read at 8:17 p.m. in the same courtroom where he pleaded no-contest in 1962 for attacking another South Texas woman, 20-year-old college student Maria America Guerra. Feit was fined $500, but served no jail time in that case.

He will be sentenced by a jury Friday morning for first-degree murder, followed by a victim impact statement expected from her nephew.

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.

Ex-priest found guilty in 1960 murder of Texas teacher, beauty queen

EDINBURG (TX)
Fox News

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

A former priest will finally pay for his sins.

John Bernard Feit, 85, was convicted Thursday in the decades-old murder of Irene Garza, a Texas teacher and beauty queen who had visited his church for confession.

The jury handed down its ruling Thursday evening after deliberating for about 6 1/2 hours at the Hidalgo County Courthouse in Edinburg.

Feit was accused of strangling the 25-year-old woman on April 16, 1960 after she visited Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen.

Garza never returned home. Her body turned up five days later in a canal, The Monitor reported.

An autopsy determined that Garza, who was Miss All South Texas Sweetheart 1958, was beaten and raped while unconscious and asphyxiated.

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

Former priest found guilty of murder in case that haunted South Texas for decades

EDINBURG (TX)
San Antonio Express-News

December 7, 2017

By Aaron Nelsen

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG — Former priest John Feit was convicted Thursday of murder with malice aforethought in the killing of a beauty queen in 1960 and now faces a sentence of up to 99 years.

Sentencing begins today with victim impact statements.

Jurors deliberated about six hours Thursday before deciding Feit, now 85, committed murder in the death of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old schoolteacher, whose death during Holy Week that year has haunted South Texas.

Feit, who was 27 at the time of the killing, sat stone-faced as the verdict was read. He declined to comment as deputies escorted him out of the courtroom.

“Justice was served,” Noemi Sigler, Garza’s cousin, said after the proceedings. “Irene finally got her day in court. Now she can rest — her story has been told.”

Members of Garza’s family lingered in 92nd state District courtroom after the verdict was read, tearfully embracing McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez, a witness during the trial, and District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez, who fulfilled a 2014 campaign pledge to reopen the case.

“Today pigs are flying, a little bit of snow, but pigs are flying,” said Lynda de la Vina, another Garza cousin. “We’ve spoken truth to the power of the Catholic Church, and to the former political leaders of Hidalgo County.”

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

Former priest, 85, is convicted of murdering Texas beauty queen who vanished after confession in 1960

EDINBURG (TX)
New York Daily News

December 8, 2017

By Jessica Chia

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

A former priest was convicted Thursday in the brutal murder of a Texas beauty queen who was raped, beaten, and suffocated more than 57 years ago.

A jury found John Bernard Feit, 85, guilty of murdering Irene Garza after more than six hours of deliberations in Hildalgo County on Thursday.

Gaza’s family members burst into tears in the courtroom, relieved that justice had been served decades after the 25-year-old teacher and beauty queen was found dead in a canal.

In April 1960, Garza disappeared after she went to confession at the Sacred Heart Church in McAllen, where Feit was a visiting priest.

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

Former priest found guilty of murder in case that haunted South Texas for decades

EDINBURG (TX)
My San Antonio

December 7, 2017

By Aaron Nelsen

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG – A former priest accused of killing a Rio Grande Valley beauty queen in 1960 was found guilty of murder with malice aforethought Thursday after a jury deliberated for about six hours.

John Feit, now 85, sat stone-faced and showed no emotion as he was convicted of killing Irene Garza, a 25-year school teacher, when he was 27 and serving as a fill-in priest in the Valley. Family members of the victim hugged each other after the verdict was read.

Garza was last seen going to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen where Feit heard her confession. Her body was found five days later in a canal. Autopsy results showed she had been raped while unconscious and died of asphyxiation, likely from suffocation.

Garza’s grisly killing during Holy Week 1960 haunted South Texas for decades and was the subject of a 48 Hours television special.

Feit’s conviction brings an end to one of the oldest cases in the Hidalgo County judicial system, but leaves unresolved allegations of a deal cut between the district attorney and church leaders to stop the investigation into Feit and avoid a scandal.

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.

Ex-priest convicted of murdering Texas woman in 1960

EDINBURG (TX)
The Associated Press

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas – An ex-priest was convicted of murdering a 25-year-old Texas schoolteacher and beauty queen on Thursday, more than 57 years after Irene Garza went to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen intending to go to confession.

Garza’s bludgeoned body was found days after her April 16, 1960, disappearance. An autopsy revealed that she had been raped while unconscious and had been beaten and suffocated.

A Hidalgo County jury deliberated 6½ hours before returning its verdict in the murder trial of John Bernard Feit, an 85-year-old former priest, after hearing five days of testimony.

Feit, who was 28 at the time of her death, came under suspicion early on, telling police that he heard Garza’s confession — in the church rectory, not in the confessional — but denying he killed her.

This week, prosecutors presented evidence that elected and church officials suspected Feit killed her but wanted to avoid prosecuting him because it might harm the church’s reputation and elected officials politically. Most elected officials at the time in Hidalgo County were Catholic, and Sen. John F. Kennedy, a Catholic, was running for president that year.

Feit later spent time at a treatment center in New Mexico for troubled priests and after that became a supervisor and had a part in clearing priests for assignments to parishes. Among the men Feit helped keep in ministry was child molester James Porter, who assaulted more than 100 victims before he was ultimately defrocked and sent to prison.

Feit left the priesthood in 1972, married and went on to work at the Catholic charity St. Vincent de Paul in Phoenix for a number of years, training and recruiting volunteers and helping oversee the charity’s network of food pantries.

Among the evidence that pointed to Feit as a suspect over the years: His portable photographic slide viewer was found near Garza’s body. Two fellow priests told authorities Feit confessed to them. And one of them said he saw scratches on Feit soon after Garza’s disappearance.

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 1960, she went to confession and vanished. Now we know the priest murdered her.

EDINBURG (TX)
The Washington Post

December 8, 2017

By Samantha Schmidt

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

For more than five decades, the black-and-white image of Irene Garza has haunted the town of McAllen, Tex., her story painfully recounted again and again.

She was a 25-year-old dark-haired former beauty queen, her high school’s first Latina drum majorette, the first in her family to graduate from college. She was named Miss All South Texas Sweetheart, and worked as a teacher for disadvantaged children.

But at the center of Garza’s life was her Catholic faith. In a letter to a friend in April 1960, she wrote about how she was no longer afraid of death. “You see, I’ve been going to communion and Mass daily and you can’t imagine the courage and faith and happiness it has given me,” she wrote in the letter, according to Texas Monthly.

And so when Holy Week came, the most sacred time of year for Catholics, Garza decided to go to confession.

On the eve of Easter, she drove to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen.

She never came home. Two days later, her beige, high-heeled shoe was found inches from the curb near the church. The following Thursday, her body was found floating in an irrigation canal.

An autopsy would later determine she had been beaten, suffocated, and raped while unconscious.

Authorities found few clues and struggled to piece together the moments before her death. But one fact soon became clear. Among the last to see her was a 27-year-old priest with horn-rimmed glasses — the Rev. John Feit.

The young priest admitted he had heard Irene’s confession that night, in the rectory instead of the confessional. But he denied killing the young woman. The priest avoided criminal charges, decade after decade. As the years passed, witnesses died, detectives changed and the investigation into Garza’s murder stalled.

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.

Both sides rest in trial of former priest accused of murder

EDINBURG (TX)
McAllen Monitor

December 7, 2017

By Lorenzo Zazueta-Castro

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Both sides in the trial of former Priest John Feit rested Wednesday, bringing an unexpectedly short ending to the proceedings.

Feit, who is accused of murder in the 1960 death of 25-year-old Irene Garza, considered testifying in his own defense but told the court outside the jury’s presence that he decided against it on the advice of his attorneys.

“It’s a wrestling match between my vanity and common sense,” he said.

After five days of testimony, the state rested shortly after the court returned from recess at 1:30 p.m. The prosecution had been expected to spend up to two weeks presenting its case.

For its part, the defense rested after one witness, investigator Rudy Jaramillo, a member of the Texas Rangers cold case unit assigned to the Garza slaying in 2002. Jaramillo had been called earlier as a prosecution witness and detailed how his unit reviewed the cold case.

Also Thursday, Hidalgo County forensic pathologist Norma Jean Farley testified that, based on files and medical records she reviewed, Garza died of asphyxiation, most likely from being suffocated. The defense had no questions.

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.

Amid a sex abuse crisis, a new conservative Christian vision for womanhood?

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

December 7, 2017

By Jonathan Merritt

In times of cultural crisis, societies have no choice but to enter a period of rethinking.

America has crossed the rubicon with the recent tidal wave of sex abuse scandals. Dozens of influential men have lost their jobs and reputations due to their offensive, predatory, and often illegal behaviors. These allegations have torn down the facade of respectability these men had carefully constructed, but they’ve also unmasked the lies some have believed for too long.

We can no longer pretend that sexism is a thing of the past. Or that powerful men can be trusted to behave with decorum and respect in the workplace. Or that women are safe and protected in our “enlightened” age. Amid this cultural crisis, religious communities must now enter a period of rethinking.

Julie Roys, a popular conservative Christian radio show host, believes that this must include a critical discussion about popular notions of womanhood. In her book, “Redeeming the Feminine Soul: God’s Surprising Vision for Womanhood,” she rejects the “feminist distortion” and “fundamentalist caricature” of womanhood. I’ve known Roys for years, and while we often disagree, I’ve always found her to be fair-minded and thoughtful. So I decided to invite her to share her vision for womanhood with the “On Faith and Culture” audience.

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.

John Cleary paid the price for speaking out in Newcastle Anglican diocese

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Newcastle Herald

December 8, 2017

By Joanne McCarthy

JOHN Cleary is the former banker who looked back fondly on his banking years while drowning in Newcastle Anglican Church’s dark child sex history for more than a decade.

“There were days when I thought, ‘Oh gee I miss the banks’,” said the former Newcastle Anglican diocese registrar who became a whistleblower before severing ties with the church in February.

“People bag the banks for doing the wrong thing but look what the Royal Commission’s shown us about what happened in churches. Is there a lot of difference?” he said as the long-awaited final report into the Hunter Anglican history was released.

Mr Cleary settled a legal case against the diocese after alleging he had been “marginalised, bullied and ostracised” by senior church officials for his stand on behalf of victims of abuse and attempts at reform.

Although it is nearly one year since he left the diocese to work at a Hunter aged care facility, Mr Cleary said the “horrific and graphic abuse of children” he discovered, exacerbated by the diocese’s “cover-up culture”, caused real damage.

“I don’t know if I can every truly switch off from it,” Mr Cleary said.

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

Clergy sex abuse at Mortlake tests mum’s faith

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

December 8, 2017

By Brendan Wrigley

It will come as no surprise to anyone who has followed the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse to hear Anne Levey has not stepped foot inside a Catholic church for more than two years.

Her son Paul’s tale of being sent to live with notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale in Mortlake in the mid-1970s was among the most harrowing heard across more than two years of testimony.

Despite her best efforts to have her teenage son removed from Ridsdale’s control, disgraced former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns claimed he could not fulfill her wish despite knowing of the priest’s abusive history.

Now living in Albury, Ms Levey said her once devout commitment to the cross had evaporated after hearing countless cases of rampant sexual abuse and systematic cover-ups.

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.

Melbourne archbishop prioritized church interest over clergy abuse victims, Royal Commission finds

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Christian Daily

December 7, 2017

By Lorraine Caballero

The former Melbourne Catholic Archbishop had prioritized the interest of the church over the welfare of its clergy abuse victims and covered up the allegations by transferring offending priests to other locations, the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse has found.

In a recently released report, the Royal Commission shared how the late Archbishop Frank Little went to certain lengths to hide the sexual abuse allegations against priests under him. The investigating body made the conclusion after it heard the accusations against seven ministers in the Melbourne Archdiocese, ABC News relayed.

In addition, the commission found that Archbishop Little had transferred Father Peter Searson from the Sunbury Parish after accusations – including those of sex abuse and rape – had surfaced in the years leading to 1984. Even after he was transferred to Doveton Parish, similar complaints still followed him there.

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Little legacy lost after school wipes former archbishop’s name from school building

VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA)
The Age

December 6, 2017

By Melissa Cunningham

Former Melbourne Archbishop Frank Little will have his name removed from a building at his old school for his role in orchestrating a culture of secrecy that allowed scores of children to be sexually abused by Catholic clergy.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse delivered a withering assessment of the Melbourne archdiocese’s handling of clerical abuse on Tuesday, with much of its opprobrium reserved for Archbishop Little.

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Archbishop Philip Wilson faces landmark trial on allegations he failed to report child sex allegations

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Newcastle Herald

December 8 2017

By Sam Rigney

CONCERNED about the “acts of punishment” that Hunter priest Jim Fletcher had been subjecting him to, a young Peter Creigh reached out to someone he thought he could trust.

It was 1976 and Mr Creigh, then a 15-year-old boy, sought out the “young, fun” priest who organised the youth group activities at St Joseph’s Church, East Maitland.

That man, he claims, was Philip Wilson, then a junior Maitland-Newcastle priest, now the Archbishop of Adelaide and the most senior Catholic cleric in the world to be charged with concealing child sex allegations involving another priest. He denies the allegation.

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Brouillard named in 149th Sex abuse lawsuit against Catholic church

GUAM
Pacific News Center

December 8, 2017

By Jolene Toves

The cases against Father Louis Brouillard continue to roll in as another alleged victim shares details of the the sexual abuse he endured nearly 39 years ago.

Guam – His father gave consent without the slightest of doubt, “not realizing that he was send the victim J.Q.M.and his brother to be sexually abused by a predator disguised in the robes of the clergy,” states a complaint filed in District Court this week.

Why? Well, according to court documents, J.Q.M.’s father was decieved by Brouillard just as the Catholic community at large on Guam had been inculcated by a deep-seeded trust in the Catholic Church. Brouillard has been named in a multitude of sexual abuse cases filed against the Archdiocese of Guam.

In this particular case, the victim J.Q.M. was around the age of ten or 11 years old when he was repeatedly sexually abused and raped. Like the other cases against Brouillard, it details the retired priest’s M-O, targeting young boys who served as altar boys and boy scouts, sexually abusing and raping them on “outings” and then rewarding them by taking them to restaurants. He shares that during these outings, Brouillard would swim naked and instruct the boys to do the same so as to fondle and grope 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.

DISGRACED EX CHURCH OF ENGLAND BISHOP WANTS TO BECOME CATHOLIC

ENGLAND
The Tablet

December 7, 2017

By Bernadette Kehoe

‘We love the Church of England but would like to end our days in a church where we can live and worship in anonymity and without constant fear’

Clifton diocese has confirmed that a former Church of England bishop jailed for sex offences and his twin brother have said they are looking to become Catholics “to live and worship in anonymity.”

A spokesman for the diocese told The Tablet : “We confirm that Peter and Michael Ball have been in contact with the Clifton Diocese expressing an interest in becoming members of the Catholic Church. This matter is subject to discussions with the Statutory Authorities, who are the lead with regards to Peter Ball’s risk management in the community. The Church of England authorities including their Safeguarding Team are aware of this request.”

The former Bishop of Lewes and of Gloucester, Peter Ball was jailed for 32 months for offences against 18 teenagers and men. He was released in February after serving 16 months. He carried out the abuse between the 1970s and 1990s. Ball’s identical twin, Michael Ball, the former Anglican Bishop of Truro, said in an email that “the events of the last years and rightly or wrongly the battering by the Church have totally wearied and reduced us.”

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Disgraced former Anglican Bishop becoming Catholic to ‘live and worship in anonymity’

CLIFTON (ENGLAND)
Herald Malaysia

December 8, 2017

Peter Ball is reportedly in discussions about joining the Catholic Diocese of Clifton

CLIFTON: An Anglican bishop who was jailed for sexually abusing 18 young men is converting to Catholicism to “live and worship in anonymity”.

Peter Ball, who was Bishop of Lewes and of Gloucester for the Church of England, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 for offences dating back to the 1970s.

A spokesman confirmed that he has been in talks to join the Catholic Diocese of Clifton, although he is unlikely to take Holy Orders.

The Daily Mail reports that his identical twin brother Michael, who served as an Anglican bishop, sent an email to friends and relatives revealing the plan.

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Victims of abuse in the Catholic Church find help locally

MEMPHIS (TN)
WMC Action News 5

December 7, 2017

By Janeen Gordon

In the wake of the hashtag #MeToo Movement initiated by “The Silence Breakers,” women who spoke out against sexual abuse and assault and the allegations of sexual misconduct that spans from the United State Senate, to prominent journalists, to Hollywood, one local diocese is offering help to local victims abused by a member of the Catholic Church.

For decades the Catholic Church has been plagued by allegations of sexual abuse and protecting the church rather than the victims.

One local church wants to change that. In a weekly bulletin posted by St. Augustine Catholic Church, “The Catholic Diocese of Memphis encourages all victims, or parents of minors who are victims of sexual abuse by a priest, deacon, or diocesan employee or agent, to report such abuse…” The church encourages victims to contact the Tennessee Child Abuse Hotline.

The Diocese of Memphis also is said to offer abused victims spiritual and psychological assistance.

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Catholic Archdiocese of New York Pays $40M to sexual Abuse Victims

NEW YORK (NY)
USA Herald

December 8, 2017

By Marivic Cabural Summers

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The Archdiocese of the Roman Catholic Church in New York paid $40.05 million to sexual abuse victims.

According to the archdiocese,189 sexual abuse victims received payments through the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP). The administrators of IRCP are still processing compensation for additional victims.

Last year, the New York archdiocese launched the IRCP, an outreach program to reach out to the victims of its clergy. More than 200 individual participated and submitted their claims through program, which ended on November 1.

Around 40 priests committed sexual abuse

In 2016, the New York Times reported that around 40 priests were accused of sexual abuse. The archdiocese did not and will not release the names of the priests.

During the launching of the IRCP, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of New York expressed hope to bring a measure of peace and healing” to the victims.

Atty. Ken Feinberg, a well-known mediator and his associate Camilline Biros served as administrators of the IRCP. They had full independence in evaluating the claims of the victims and determining the amount of compensation for them.

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New York Catholic Church Paid $40 Million to Sex Abuse Victims

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

(NEW YORK) — The Archdiocese of New York says it has paid just over $40 million in compensation to 189 people who identified themselves as victims of clergy sexual abuse.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program ended Nov. 30, but some additional claims are still being processed.

Mediators evaluated claims and determined the amount of compensation.

A spokesman for the Roman Catholic archdiocese did not have a breakdown on the various amounts of payments to each recipient. Some of the victims’ claims date back decades.

The archdiocese also issued an eight-page report detailing efforts it is making to prevent future cases of abuse.

U.S. Catholic leaders have grappled with a clergy sexual abuse crisis since 2002.

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Archdiocese Of New York Pays $40 Million To Sexual Abuse Victims

NEW YORK (NY)
The Huffington Post

December 7, 2017

By Antonia Blumberg

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The compensation payments were made to nearly 200 survivors.

The seat of the Roman Catholic Church in New York says it has paid roughly $40 million in compensation to victims of sexual abuse.

In a press release posted on the archdiocese’s website Thursday, media liaisons Joseph Zwilling and Mercedes Lopez Blanco said the payments were made to 189 abuse survivors.

The payments mark the end of a reconciliation program to evaluate claims by alleged abuse victims. In 2016, the New York Catholic Church launched its Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program to assess abuse claims by more than 200 people who said they’d been victimized by members of the archdiocese’s clergy.

The cases involved roughly 40 priests, The New York Times reported last year. Zwilling told HuffPost the archdiocese will not be releasing the names of the clergy members involved in the claims.

The program was headed up by Kenneth Feinberg, a lawyer who also mediated in the compensation fund for victims of the Sept. 11 attacks. In administering the archdiocese’s reconciliation program, Feinberg and his colleague, Camille Biros, “were given total independence to evaluate claims and determine compensation,” the release said.

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NYC Sex Abuse Victims Get $40M From Catholic Church

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York City Patch

December 7, 2017

By Noah Manskar

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program made payments to 189 people who were abused by priests.

NEW YORK, NY — Some 189 people who were sexually abused by Catholic priests got more than $40 million from a new victims compensation fund as of Nov. 30, the Catholic Archdiocese of New York announced Thursday. The payments were the first from the archdiocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Fund, a pool of money created last year to repay survivors of abuse.

More than 200 victims of abuse applied for compesnation before the Nov. 1 deadline, the archdiocese said. The average amount paid out so far is about $211,904.

“Throughout the process, victim-survivors made clear they are not just interested in money, but instead are seeking some tangible sign of the Church’s desire for healing and reconciliation,” the archdiocese wrote in its report released Thursday.

The report does not include information about any individual cases. But one of those who got payments was former priest Stephen Ryan-Vuotto, who has said the well known Greenwich Village priest Rev. Robert Lott sexually abused him as a teenager. Ryan-Vuotto told reporters he reached a $500,000 settlement with the compensation fund.

Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros, two high-profile attorneys specializing in mediation, are in charge of evaluating victims’ applications for compensation, the archdiocese says. An independent panel that includes former NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly oversees their work.

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New York Catholic Church pays $40M to clergy sex abuse victims

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

NEW YORK — Just over $40 million in compensation has been paid to 189 people who identified themselves as victims of clergy sex abuse, the Archdiocese of New York said in a report released Thursday. The archdiocese noted that the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program ended Nov. 30, but some additional claims are still being processed.

Money for the payouts came through a long-term loan.

Mediators Ken Feinberg and Camille Biros evaluated victim claims and determined compensation.

Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said he did not have a specific breakdown of how much each recipient received; some of the victims’ claims date back decades. The payouts averaged $211,600.

The eight-page report also summarized efforts by the church to combat sexual abuse.

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Person of the Year: Time magazine explains mystery arm

ENGLAND
BBC News

December 7, 2017

The faces of five women who have spoken out about sexual harassment appear on Time magazine’s Person of the Year front cover – along with a mystery right arm. But whose is it?

If you simply glanced at the front cover of the latest Time magazine you may have missed it – an apparently rogue right arm poking into shot.

The faces of five women – including singer Taylor Swift and actor Ashley Judd – feature on the magazine’s 2017 Person of the Year cover.

The quintet represent the “the Silence Breakers” – “the thousands of people across the world who have come forward with their experiences of sexual harassment and assault” this year, the magazine says.

However, in the bottom right-hand corner of the cover is the arm of an anonymous woman, with the remainder of her body deliberately cropped out of shot.

Helpfully, the magazine has now explained who the arm belongs to and why it’s there.

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Former Victoria Police detective Denis Ryan a hero of child abuse inquiry

CANBERRA (AUSTRALIA)
The Australian

December 8, 2017

By Jack the Insider

Imagine in this age of instant gratification, having to wait for something, anything for 45 years. Then think what it must be like to have to wait so long for something as fundamental as the truth.

Former Victoria Police detective, Denis Ryan, turned 86 last month.

In 1972, he was forced out of the Victoria Police Force after trying to bring the pedophile priest, Monsignor John Day, to justice.

Forty years later, Denis came to my home and together we wrote the book of that appalling story, Unholy Trinity: The Hunt for the Pedophile Priest Monsignor John Day”.

At the time I cautioned Denis about setting his expectations too high. The subject material of the book was so disturbing I doubted it would be a bestseller. To publisher Allen & Unwin’s credit they published anyway.

The book was a modest seller but some important people read it, including a former Chief Commissioner of Victoria Police, Mick Miller. Mick is in his 90s but he agitated on Denis’s behalf within the upper echelons of the Victoria Police Force.

Earlier this week the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse handed down its report into Catholic Church Authorities in Ballarat, known otherwise as Case Study 28. .

On page 231 of that report an extract of Mick Miller’s testimony appears.

“This entire episode was a shameful event in the history of Victoria Police. It might well be remembered as a definite disincentive to others, confronted by a similar set of circumstances, to emulate former Senior Detective Denis Ryan’s peerless, principled performance of his sworn duty.”

Mick’s remark was followed by a two word note from the Commission.

“We agree.”

And with those two simple words, vindication came for Denis Ryan.

Denis had given evidence to the Royal Commission. He took to the witness box immediately before Mick Miller back in December 2015. Like Miller, his evidence was not challenged. There was no cross examination. Police knew the game was up. Since then VicPol has offered its apologies to Denis in a formal setting at their St Kilda Road headquarters. Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton has offered apologies in public and in private at Denis’s home.

The Royal Commission’s Report was the final and most formal stage in the process of Ryan’s vindication.

How does one feel after waiting so long? Relieved? Exhilarated?

“I feel flat this morning. It took 45 years to expose what has been said is the biggest criminal conspiracy in Victoria’s history,” Denis said.

“Victoria Police pushed me out of the place. I was a good policeman.”

He was better than good. He was hell on wheels as a detective. He solved murders. In his own methodical, probing way, he obtained confessions from violent criminals.

When he came to investigate Monsignor John Day, Denis had a pool of Mildura’s young men – not crooks, just young adults hooning around in cars, doing what young men in country towns do to ease the boredom. He’d befriended them and often sort them out for information. That group of young men were the catalyst in the investigation, one Denis would later describe as “like stepping stones”, going from one victim to the next.

They knew what the denizens of Mildura merely suspected. Day was an outrageous pedophile. The young blokes knew because some of them were his victims and it was only when they were together, perhaps ripping the top off a few cold ones down on the banks of the Murray that they felt safe enough to share their stories. They felt safe enough to share their stories with Denis, too.

Denis took their statements and then sought help from senior police outside Mildura. That was when the shit hit the fan.

Denis was ordered off the investigation. Senior cops put the smother on. Denis was offered an inducement – a promotion – to run dead on the investigation. He declined. He continued making his inquiries. More victims, more statements. In the end, a Detective Chief Superintendent and a Detective Chief Inspector both working under the instruction of the Chief Commissioner Reg Jackson, basically tore up Denis’s work, silenced victims and destroyed Denis’s career.

Denis was ostracised. For nine months no police officer would speak to him. He was placed on divisional patrol duties. Denis was instructed not to leave the Mildura area without the approval of his senior officers. He was threatened with disciplinary action but the charges were a joke and never saw the light of day. Denis had always done things by the book. He was meticulous.

Then he was ordered to transfer to Melbourne, something senior police knew he could not do, due to the health of his children.

More importantly Denis knew if he did accept the transfer that would make him complicit in the conspiracy. It is almost certainly true that if Denis had remained in the force, we simply would not know today what happened in Mildura in 1972 and how Victoria’s most senior police conspired with Bishop Ronald Mulkearns to remove Day from Mildura and set him up in another parish where the old degenerate priest offended again. Monsignor John Day, in my view one of the most prolific child sex offenders in this country’s history, died in 1978. He was never brought to account for his many crimes.

By any measure it was a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice and everyone involved from Commissioner Jackson down should have been prosecuted for it.

But only Denis would be punished, forced out of the job he loved.

There will be more to the Denis Ryan story. Vindication is one step in the process. Compensation another. Denis Ryan should be seen as the hero he is, as a model for any servant of the public, one that when challenged, never wavered, never took the easy way out. It cost him half his life. Financial mayhem, emotional pain, psychological torment.

When I spoke to Denis just after the Royal Commission handed down its report. I was triumphant but Denis was not in celebratory mood.

“I still think about how many hundreds of victims might have been spared if Victoria’s most senior police did what they were charged to do, what they took an oath to do.”

Then he paused.

“It’s been a long time.”

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December 7, 2017

Closing Arguments Done, Jury to Deliberate in John Feit Murder Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
KRGV

December 7, 2017

By Christian Von Preysing

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG – Closing arguments are underway in the trial against former priest John Feit. He is accused of killing Irene Garza in the 1960s.

The prosecution spent the morning reminding jurors of testimony about Feit’s aggressive attitude towards women.

They also asked the jury to consider how the church moved him out of the Valley right after Garza’s death.

Prosecutor Michael Garza reminded the jury of Feit’s previous conviction of assaulting America Guerra and that the other women reported him as well.

Garza touched on how the Catholic Church and the Hidalgo County sheriff at the time colluded to avoid a scandal.

The defense said there’s a lack of physical evidence in the case that can, with certainty, prove Feit killed Garza.

Defense attorney Oscar Flores questioned one piece of evidence – a viewfinder police say they found at the scene in 1960.

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Accused Murderer John Feit Will Not Testify at Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
Courthouse News

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas (CN) – Accused murderer John Feit will not testify in his own defense, so after closing arguments Thursday the jury must decide whether the former Catholic priest killed a South Texas schoolteacher 57 years ago, suffocating her in a bathtub in the church rectory.

“It was a wrestling match between my vanity and my common sense, and my common sense prevailed,” Feit told Hidalgo County Judge Luis Singleterry on Wednesday, outside the jury’s presence, on the fifth and final day of testimony.

Feit is charged with the first-degree murder of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old elementary school teacher and beauty queen, who was assaulted, bound and suffocated to death with a cellophane bag on Easter weekend in 1960, testimony revealed.

Feit, then a 27-year-old visiting priest at McAllen’s Sacred Heart Church, pulled the devoutly religious schoolteacher by the arm and told her she was “too good” to give confession in church, prosecutors said. He led her to its next-door rectory, and killed her there on Holy Saturday, according to the state.

Prosecutors called the 57-year-old cold case a Catholic Church cover-up, a claim bolstered by an internal church letter dated Oct. 1, 1960 that showed a relationship between the church and local authorities, to avoid the potential scandal to it “as an institution.”

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The Latest from Day 6: Deliberations in the John Feit murder trial begin

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 7, 2017

By Lorenzo Zazueta-Castro

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG — John Feit, a former priest, is on trial for the 1960 murder of Irene Garza after she went to confession at McAllen’s Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Here is the latest from the trial:

12:42 p.m.

The cold case that has captivated the Rio Grande Valley for more than 50 years is now in the hands of a jury.

The jury has been moved out of the courtroom to begin deliberations.

Jurors are instructed that “intent to kill” is an essential element of murder. If jurors have reasonable doubt regarding this element, they are to consider aggravated assault.

12:35 p.m.

The defense asks jury “what evidence is there that Feit had intent to kill?” during its closing arguments Thursday, adding that “there wasn’t any.”

Defense says there is no evidence that Feit had intent to kill or was involved in Garza’s disappearance.

The defense passes to the state for its rebuttal.

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Priest accused of sexual assault won’t have to go through trial

NEW BRUNSWICK (CANADA)
CBC News

December 7, 2017

By Gabrielle Fahmy

Crown withdraws charge against Paul Breau after doctors declare former U of M chaplain mentally incompetent

A sexual assault charge was withdrawn Thursday against the former chaplain at the University of Moncton after the Crown learned he was mentally incompetent for a trial.

Priest Paul Breau, who is 86, was not in court when the Crown announced it was not going ahead with the charge.

According to the file, the alleged incidents took place in 1985 and 1986 in Shediac, when Breau was priest at the St. Joseph parish.

Breau was the chaplain at the University of Moncton until just recently and is now in a nursing home. His arraignment was scheduled for Thursday.

But a Crown prosecutor told reporters outside court that a decision was made to withdraw the charge against Breau after two medical reports, including one from his doctor, declared him incompetent.

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London priest who fled to Kosovo found guilty of abusing schoolboys

ENGLAND
The Guardian

December 6, 2017

By Owen Bowcott

Andrew Soper convicted of sexually abusing pupils at St Benedict’s school in Ealing during 1970s and 80sAndrew Soper

A former abbot who fled to Kosovo to escape justice has been convicted of abusing 10 boys at a Catholic-run school in London during the 1970s and 80s.

Andrew Soper, 74, formerly known as Father Laurence Soper, was found guilty of 19 charges of rape and other sexual offences after a lengthy trial at the Old Bailey.

Soper sexually abused pupils while he was master in charge of discipline at St Benedict’s school in Ealing, west London. He would assault them after subjecting them to corporal punishment using a cane.

The first victim contacted police in 2004 after Soper left his role as abbot of Ealing Abbey and moved to the Benedictine order’s headquarters in Rome.

The former pupil was initially told by officers there was insufficient evidence.

Soper was later interviewed at Heathrow police station in 2010 and subsequently fled to Kosovo while on police bail the following year.

He was arrested at Luton airport in August 2016 after being deported by the Kosovan authorities and returned to the UK.

Tetteh Turkson, a senior Crown Prosecution Service lawyer involved in the case, said: “Soper used his position as a teacher and as a priest to abuse children for his own sexual gratification.

“He compounded this by trying to evade justice and fleeing to Kosovo in order to go into hiding. The victims’ bravery in coming forward and giving evidence has seen him convicted of these serious offences.”

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Sexual Harassment Is Everybody’s Problem

BROOKLYN (NY)
Jacobin Magazine

December 7, 2017

By Alex N. Press

Let’s seize this opportunity to change how harassment is dealt with.

n an article on sexual harassment by Linda Gordon — originally published in a special issue of Radical America from 1981 and recently republished in Viewpoint Magazine — Gordon explains why sexual abuse matters as an obstacle to working-class solidarity and unity, and as an obstacle to unity on the Left:

The attitudes that produce sexual harassment also maintain a powerful bonding among men which not only weakens any existing class consciousness, but is one of the major obstacles to its development.

Thus, from a socialist perspective as well as from a feminist one, no general issue is more important than sexual harassment. To challenge it, to make it unacceptable, is to attack one of the major barriers to unity among people who have the possibility of bringing about radical social change.

If the racism of white workers was debilitating for the American labor movement, the same could be said for sexism within the working class. From the earliest years of labor organizing, sexism, and unions’ periodic complicity in preventing full equality in the workplace for women and people of color, male and female alike, hamstrung the development of working-class power. Neither of these bigotries has been resolved: racism remains a problem among white workers of all genders, and as we can see from the overwhelming evidence of pervasive sexual harassment, sexism continues to infuse the workplace.

And sexual abuse isn’t just an obstacle to working-class unity: it also remains a presence on the Left and in our movements. As I’ve written elsewhere:

I am not alone in having experienced the immense pressure brought to bear on anyone speaking out about sexual violence in an organizing space. At worst, you become subject to reminders of the damage you can do to the movement by accusing a prominent man (it’s not always a man, but it usually is) of sexual violence. “The Right will use this information against us,” you might be reminded, or, “We can’t win without him” — the implication being that if you insist on bringing up a leader’s misconduct, “we” can’t win with you.

I recently asked a friend how we on the Left, in our limited capacity, can use this moment — and referring to it as a moment, not a movement, is a useful way to describe what we’re experiencing today — in a way that will have long-lasting effects. And one answer is that we can use it to democratize and build our movements and spaces, especially workplaces but also anywhere that we exist: among our colleagues, our families, our friends, our communities, and our organizations.

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Ex-priest found guilty of 19 historic sex abuse charges

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Independent Catholic News

December 7, 2017

A former abbot who fled to Kosovo to escape justice has been convicted of abusing 10 boys at a Catholic school in west London during the 1970s and 80s.

Andrew Soper, 74, was found guilty of 19 charges of rape and other sexual offences after a lengthy trial at the Old Bailey. He will be sentenced on 19 December.

In a statement issued today, Ealing Abbey said:

Andrew Soper has finally been brought to justice.

Our thoughts and prayers are with his victims. We admire them for their courage in coming forward as witnesses in order to secure his conviction.

We apologise to everyone who is affected by the crimes Soper committed while he was a monk of Ealing and a teacher at St Benedict’s School in the 1970s and 1980s. The prosecution of non recent sexual offences is an important element in ensuring that, so far as possible, such events do not occur in future.

Soper, whose religious name was Laurence, was Head of St Benedict’s Middle School between 1975 and 1984 and Abbot of Ealing from 1991 to 2000. After stepping down as Abbot he became Bursar at S’Anselmo, the Benedictine University in Rome. When allegations were made against him these were subject to investigation by Police and Social Services with the co-operation and assistance of the Abbey and St Benedict’s School. Soper was immediately placed under restrictions at S’Anselmo, which included no unsupervised contact with children or young people and restrictions on his movements away from the campus.

Having agreed to co-operate with the Police by returning to London for further questioning, in March 2011 he failed to return for a police interview and left the monastery in Rome. To our knowledge nothing further was heard from or about him until he was arrested in Kosovo in May 2016.

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Suzette Martinez Standring: The Catholic Church and financial transparency

DOYLESTOWN (PA)
The Intelligencer

December 7, 2017

By Suzette Martinez Standring

Sunday collections and annual appeals: How transparent is your Catholic diocese or archdiocese? Do they post audited financial statements on their websites? How are cash donations protected from theft? Recent survey results make me feel as insecure as a basket of $20 bills in an empty room.

The national survey by Voice of the Faithful measured and ranked online financial transparency of 177 U.S. territorial dioceses and archdioceses by examining their websites for audited financial statements and weekly collection security practices. VOTF is a Catholic lay group founded in 2002 in response to the sex abuse crisis within the Catholic Church.

Answers to 10 objective survey questions were examined about arch/diocese website information:
— Can financial data be found within a few to several minutes?
— Is there a workable search function?
— Are audited financial statements posted?
— If not, is financial info reported in another format, e.g., booklet form?
— Is the Bishop’s Annual Appeal explained somewhere on the website, and/or is it reported on the financial statements?
— Is the annual parish assessment explained somewhere on the website, and/or is it reported on the financial statements?
— Is contact info for the business office posted?
— Is the finance council identified?
— Are parish financial guidelines posted?
— Are detailed collection and counting procedures posted?

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NY Catholic Church pays $40 million to sex abuse victims

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

December 7, 2017

NEW YORK – Just over $40 million in compensation has been paid to 189 people who identified themselves as victims of clergy sex abuse, the Archdiocese of New York said in a report released Thursday.

The archdiocese noted that the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program ended Nov. 30, but some additional claims are still being processed. Money for the payouts came through a long-term loan.

Mediators Ken Feinberg and Camille Biros evaluated victim claims and determined compensation.

Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said he did not have a specific breakdown of how much each recipient received; some of the victims’ claims date back decades. The payouts averaged $211,600.

The eight-page report also summarized efforts by the church to combat sexual abuse.

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Kristine Ward, ‘moral advocate for survivors’ of abuse, remembered

DAYTON (OH)
National Catholic Reporter

December 7, 2017

by Brian Roewe

Memorial Mass for co-founder of National Survivor Advocates Coalition is Dec. 9 in Dayton, Ohio

A memorial Mass Dec. 9 in Dayton, Ohio, will remember Kristine Ward, a lay Catholic compelled by the Boston Globe’s 2002 clergy sex abuse investigations to become a prominent advocate for survivors.

Ward died Nov. 9 after a years-long battle with cancer. The Mass will take place at Queen of Martyrs Church, in Dayton, followed by a celebration of life reception.

Ward was chair and co-founder of the National Survivor Advocates Coalition, an organization formed in 2009 by lay Catholics with an intent focus on promoting justice for abuse survivors and educating other Catholics about sexual abuse.

“She was just a fierce and loving advocate, and she set the bar high for the Catholics in the pews, and I think that will be her legacy, that very strong and uncompromising voice of hers,” said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org.

Jason Berry, a leading journalist and author in unmasking the clergy abuse scandal, described Ward as “a moral advocate for survivors” who worked tirelessly on their behalf.

Friends and colleagues remember Ward as a dynamic speaker, fierce defender and fun-loving. It was Ward who introduced an ice cream social at annual Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) conferences as a way to help attendees feel more comfortable and also to add some cheer before serious and, often emotional, discussions.

“There’s a lot of people in the movement that do great things and you like and respect them, but Kris was somebody you had a good time with,” said Barbara Dorris, SNAP executive director. “When you were with Kris, you knew you were going to have a good time.”

“From the tip of her flame-colored hair to her cherry-red lips and scarlet nails, Kris Ward was a walking firebrand,” her close friend Ginny Hoehne stated in a testimonial she plans to read at the memorial service. “But the true flame came from within. The flame of love, compassion, caring, and desire for justice for children of abuse. Those abused by war, and those abused by clergy, Kris devoted her life to find justice for these hurting souls.”

A former UPI reporter, Ward grew up in Pennsylvania and earned a degree in broadcast journalism from Penn State University. Like many Catholics, she was devastated in 2002 by the Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigations into the sexual abuse of children by at least 70 priests and the cover-up efforts undertaken by the Boston Archdiocese. Rather than hold her in despair, the revelations shook her to take action.

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Larry Nassar, USA Gymnastics doctor, sentenced to 60 years on child porn charges

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
The Washington Post

December 7, 2017

By Will Hobson

A judge sentenced Larry Nassar, the former Olympic gymnastics team physician and longtime Michigan State University instructor, to 60 years in prison on Thursday for federal child pornography crimes. The sentence, handed down by a judge in Grand Rapids, Mich., ensures that Nassar, 54, likely will spend the rest of his life in prison.

Nassar, accused in civil and criminal complaints of sexually assaulting more than 140 women, also has pleaded guilty to several sex crimes in two counties in Michigan, and will be sentenced for those charges in separate hearings in state courts next month. The judge Thursday ordered Nassar to serve his federal sentence — 20 years each for three counts — consecutively to state sentences, seemingly foreclosing any possibility he obtains an early release.

Olympians McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman and Gabby Douglas are among those who have said Nassar assaulted them.

“He abused my trust, he abused my body and he left scars on my psyche that may never go away … He needs to be behind bars so he will never prey upon another child,” Maroney wrote in a statement to the judge before Thursday’s hearing.

Once one of the most respected sports physicians in the country specializing in treating gymnasts, Nassar’s swift downfall started last August, when a woman filed a police report alleging Nassar had assaulted her during a medical examination years prior, when she was a 15-year-old gymnast in Michigan seeking treatment for back pain.

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Women sexually abused by senior rabbi speak out for first time

ISRAEL
Israel Hayom

November 30, 2017

By Emily Amrousi

Complainants against Safed Rabbi Ezra Sheinberg describe to Israel Hayom how he wielded his influence to have them perform sexual acts • Sheinberg pleaded guilty to eight counts of sexual offenses as part of a plea bargain inked in July.

Complainants against Safed Rabbi Ezra Sheinberg are speaking out for the first time.

Sheinberg, a prominent rabbi who previously headed a Jewish community and a network of yeshivas in the northern Israeli city pleaded guilty to eight counts of sexual offenses against eight separate women who had turned to Sheinberg for spiritual guidance, as part of a plea bargain signed in July.

Three of Sheinberg’s victims spoke to Israel Hayom about how he used his influence to demand they perform sexual acts on themselves while speaking to him via video chat and later that they meet with him privately.

“The meetings slowly became more physical. In his home and at my home, when my husband was away,” one of the victims said. “A medical issue that I had in my body went away, and I was convinced it was due to the ‘treatments’ he performed on me. It created a sort of dependency on my part. Every time, he would think of a new sickness I had, and I believed the illnesses went away because of him. He said that if I said anything about the ‘relaxation treatments,’ the blessing would not take effect, and something terrible would happen to my husband or my kids.”

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Text of Catholic Church correspondence entered as evidence in Feit trial

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 6, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Editor’s Note: Below is the full text of the 1960 letter from Rev. Joseph Pawlicki to Rev. Lawrence Seidel regarding the investigation of then-Rev. John Feit’s role in the murder of Irene Garza. It was read to jurors in Feit’s trial on Tuesday.

Aug. 1, 1960

Father Seidel:

Last week I had the opportunity of speaking with the sheriff about the case. His observations are not only keen, and based upon much experience in such matters, but seem to be the course we should follow. I gave this same set of observations to Bishop Reicher, and he too is impressed with the saneness, and the practicality of the sheriff’s conclusion.

After outlining to the sheriff the many facts I had received from Father Nash, the Sheriff is of the opinion that the case is quite weak for the prosecution. He is also of the opinion that the prosecution must be made to see just how weak their case is, lest they go off half-cocked, and set the wheels into motion that would bring this out in public print, and give the opponents of the Church a field day. He is also of the opinion that the case would be tried here, and would not be judged on logic, but on the prejudices of the jury. There are also political implications to this that could make this a juicy scandal for the opposition to Kennedy, and last of all there are the Masons, whom the Bishop feels smell a chance to hurt the Church, just as the H.E.B. Baptists paid for the prosecution of the Priest in East Texas who was killed by the lad he befriended.

What to do about this? First, the Sheriff said that we should follow the idea of not hiring a lawyer, for the reasons given by Father Nash. Second, we should not put a detective on the case hired by us, since that would mean he would be snooping around, requestioning witnesses, and stirring up things again. However, he does feel that we should hire a person, something like a first class private detective who would be able to sit down with Father Nash and Father (Pastor of McAllen) to get all the information on this case. Then let him write it up and present it on paper in such a way as to highlight the loopholes that are so numerous in this case. Once this is done, arrange a meeting with the police chief of McAllen, the prosecuting attorney, and the sheriff, plus four priests. At this meeting the whole situation is brought out, and the prosecution will be able to see how strong this opposition is to their charges. They can also be brought to realize in a nice way that the Church will not take this sitting down.

The Sheriff does not want more than the number mentioned, and he thinks that this will quiet things considerably. Once this is done, then after three or four months, or even less if possible, have this young man transferred to another part of the country, as a normal obedience. He feels that everyone knows that priests are always being transferred around so this would not be strange. After some time in his new place, a year or two, then have him sent out to a foreign Mission. The reason for the first move is to get him out of the area of suspicion. If something happens, the officers at the area will always be suspicious of him.

The sheriff concludes that the longer time we have, the weaker the case gets, and so he suggested all the foregoing. He has much experience in such things, and I believe this is extremely wise. He also is a Catholic, and he also stands to lose materially by such a scandal here, in such a non Catholic area. I feel that he has rendered us an invaluable service. I submit these ideas after having consulted with Bishop Reicher, who is also in agreement with this course.

The Bishop wishes to see you, Father, at your convenience. Let me know if I can do anything in the future to help this thing along. Your worries are ours, since we fight the same Evil One who has concocted this thing in his ceaseless fight against the Church, and to stop the good being done by your wonderful Congregation. My prayers, and my Mass intentions are with you, Father, and I am sure our Priests will pray hard for a “special intention” mentioned as such to them.

Father J.F. Pawlicki, c.s.c.

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Commentary: It’s time for Muslims to talk about sexual misconduct among our Islamic preachers

DALLAS (TX)
The Dallas Morning News

December 7, 2017

By Shaheen Pasha

Activist Alia Salem had just finished watching the Oscar-winning film Spotlight, detailing sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, when she received a text message from a Muslim mother asking for help. Her daughter was in an inappropriate relationship with a Muslim clergy member from whom she had sought counseling. The clergyman had used his authority over the young woman to coerce her into a sexual relationship and the mother had no idea where to turn.

Salem said the young woman desperately needed an advocate to navigate the criminal act — in 17 states it is a felony for clergy members to have sex with anyone they are counseling — but couldn’t find any organization within the U.S. Muslim community equipped to handle such issues.

“I considered it a moment of divine intervention,” Salem said. “I saw patterns happening across the country, across communities. But in our Muslim community, there was no specific mechanism to call out such abuses, to investigate whether allegations were true, to prevent (the perpetrators) from going somewhere else and doing it again.”

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Editorial: We all have responsibility in dealing with sexual abuse of girls and women

MADISON (WI)
Catholic Herald

December 7, 2017

By Mary C. Uhler

We’ve been hearing a lot about incidents of sexual abuse of girls and women this year.

It is a difficult subject to talk about, and I think many people want to avoid discussing it. However, I think we all have a responsibility to deal with this issue, especially in our own families.

My experiences as a child
Being a teacher, my mother was ahead of her time in discussing the dangers of sexual abuse with her children.

She warned us — when we were pretty young — to be cautious about any suspicious behaviors of boys and men. If someone tried to do something we didn’t like or think was appropriate, she asked us to tell her right away.

I remembered her warnings when a boy in our neighborhood tried to do something inappropriate with me. I told my mother, she talked with his mother, and that was the end of that kind of behavior.

When I was in seventh grade, a boy pulled me into a locker at school during recess and closed the door. I also told my mother about that, she talked with his mother, and that ended that behavior.

I don’t know why I didn’t tell my teacher about that incident, but it was perhaps because we hadn’t discussed what to do about that kind of behavior in our classroom.

A pope’s letter to women
Another person who was ahead of his time was St. John Paul II. In 1995, he wrote a letter to women of the world, still available on the Vatican website (http://w2.vatican.va/content/vatican/en.html). In that letter, he said, “Unfortunately, we are heirs to a history which has conditioned us to a remarkable extent. . . . Women’s dignity has often been unacknowledged and their prerogatives misrepresented; they have often been relegated to the margins of society and even reduced to servitude.”

When it comes to setting women free from every kind of exploitation and domination, St. John Paul II said, we have only to look to the attitude of Jesus Christ himself as revealed in the Gospels. “Transcending the established norms of his own culture, Jesus treated women with openness, respect, acceptance, and tenderness. In this way, he honored the dignity which women have always possessed according to God’s plan and in his love.”

In his letter, St. John Paul II addressed the topic of violence against women in the area of sexuality. “At the threshold of the Third Millennium, we cannot remain indifferent and resigned before this phenomenon,” he said. “The time has come to condemn vigorously the types of sexual violence which frequently have women for their object and to pass laws which effectively defend them from such violence.”

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Disgraced ex-Church of England bishop who was confidant of Prince Charles and jailed for sex abuse plans switch to Catholicism to ‘live and worship in anonymity’

ENGLAND
Daily Mail

December 7, 2017

By Anthony Joseph

– Peter Ball, the former Bishop of Lewes and Gloucester who boasted of links to royalty, has asked to join the Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton in Bristol
– His identical twin brother, Michael Ball, also sent an email to friends telling them
– Peter Ball was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 for offences in the 1970s
– Justin Welby commissioned a report into his actions after the sentencing

A disgraced former Church of England bishop, who was a confidant of Prince Charles and jailed for sex abuse plans, has converted to Catholicism to ‘live and worship in anonymity’.

Peter Ball, the former Bishop of Lewes and Gloucester who boasted of links to royalty, has asked to join the Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton, in Bristol, a spokesman for the Church confirmed.

His identical twin brother, the former bishop of Truro Michael Ball, also sent an email to friends telling them of the idea.

Peter Ball, now 85, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 for offences dating back to the 1970s against 18 young men at his home in East Sussex.

The email sent yesterday morning said the pair would not be sending Christmas cards after recent events had ‘totally wearied and reduced’ them.

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UK Catholic School Master Convicted Of Sex Abuse

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Agence France-Presse

December 7, 2017

A jury in London found him guilty of all charges. Soper, who faces about 10 years behind bars, is to be sentenced on December 19.

LONDON: A former master at a top British Catholic school was convicted Wednesday of raping and sexual abusing boys in crimes dating back to the 1970s.

Andrew Soper, 74, fled to Kosovo in 2011 to avoid prosecution over charges he molested boys at St Benedict’s School in London.

He was extradited in 2016 to face 19 counts of indecent assault and buggery against 10 former pupils in the 1970s and 1980s.

A jury in London found him guilty of all charges. Soper, who faces about 10 years behind bars, is to be sentenced on December 19.

Prosecutor Gillian Etherton told the court how Soper’s victims were subjected to sadistic beatings for “fake reasons”.

They included kicking a football “in the wrong direction”, “failing to use double margins”, and “using the (wrong) staircase”, leading to a caning and a sexual assault, she said.

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Former USY Director Admits To Sexual Misconduct In The ’80s – Allegations Reported To Movement Years Ago

NEW YORK (NY)
The NY Jewish Week

December 6, 2017

By Gary Rosenblatt

Robert D. Fisher admitted to “improper behavior” with at least three USY teenage boys in his charge in the late 1980s.

The sleepover invitations seemed almost innocent, at least from the vantage point of the late 1980s.

At the time, Robert D. Fisher was the highly popular and charismatic leader of the Pacific Southwest Region of United Synagogue Youth, the Conservative movement’s youth arm. Two top youth leaders, David Benkof, then 18 and the international president of USY, and Ben (who asked that his full name not be used), then 16, were inspired by Fisher, and each — on separate occasions — took the older, single man up on his invitation to sleep over at his house in Los Angeles.

In a series of telephone and email interviews with The Jewish Week in recent days, Benkof, now 47, said, “He told me to sleep in his bed with him and even tried to shame me into undressing while he watched, saying ‘I’ve never known an international president to be shy.’” He did on one occasion but no physical contact took place, Benkof said.

About a year earlier, Ben, who was 16 at the time, had driven an hour from his home to Los Angeles to help plan a USY bus tour later that summer. He had slept over at Fisher’s house several other times — even in his bed, though he thought it was strange — without incident. One morning, though, Ben recounted to The Jewish Week, he woke up to find Fisher massaging his legs and slowly working his way up with his hands.

“I was on my stomach, and when he reached the top of my buttocks, I got very scared and froze, and then started to shake uncontrollably. Then he stopped.”

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Ex-teacher jailed for sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press

December 7, 2017

By Rick Goodman

A former Melbourne schoolteacher has been jailed for four years for sexually abusing boys in his care.

A former Melbourne schoolteacher who sexually abused schoolboys under his care decades ago could walk from jail in a year.

Vili Kovac, 85, raped a boy during a school camp while teaching at Marcellin College and abused another boy while working as an athletics coach at Xavier College.

The assaults occurred in the 1960s when the boys were aged 12 or 13 and attending the Catholic schools.

Kovac was on Thursday jailed for four years for buggery and indecent assault.

He denied the buggery charge, which went to trial during which the victim had to recount to a jury the school camp attack.

The rape occurred in a tent at night during a camp Kovac was supervising at Wilson’s Promontory, the victim said.

“He described waking up to a hand over his mouth,” Victorian County Court Judge Susan Cohen said.

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Caldey Island: Victim’s call to remove abuse monk’s body

WALES
BBC News

December 7, 2017

A survivor of abuse perpetrated by a monk from Caldey Abbey has called for his body to be exhumed and removed from the island.

The woman, who was abused by Father Thaddeus Kotik in the 1970s and 80s, said she wants an inquiry to be held.

Charlotte said that she did not speak out about the abuse as a child because Kotik threatened her.

Caldey Abbey has previously apologised for not passing the reports of abuse on to police at the time.

Charlotte (not her real name) visited Caldey Island as a child until she moved to Australia when she was 11.

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December 6, 2017

HISTORY STORIES: Step Into the Vatican’s Secret Archives

New York (NY)
History

December 6, 2017

By Erin Blakemore

Fifty-three miles of shelving. Thirty-five thousand volumes of catalogue. Twelve centuries worth of documents. Housed in one of the most iconic bastions of religion and culture ever, the Vatican’s Secret Archives are the stuff of historical legend—but their existence is absolutely real.

Just the name invokes the mystery and pageantry of the Catholic Church, and prompts the more imaginative to come up with sinister theories about what might lie within. The archives’ indexes are not public—and are only accessible to scholars once they are 75 years old—and they are housed in a fortress-like part of the Vatican.

The secretive nature of the Catholic Church and the potential trove within have fueled years of wild speculation about what was inside. Even today, conspiracy theories abound over its contents—like wacky speculation that the Vatican is hiding extraterrestrial beings inside.

In reality, however, the Vatican’s Secret Archives are not actually secret. The word “secret” comes from a misunderstanding of the Latin word “secretum,” or private. The archives were—and still are—designed to house the Holy See’s official paperwork along with correspondence and other information related to the Pope.

They also contain some of the Catholic Church’s most impressive treasures—documents that date back from the eighth century. But, until 1881, not even scholars of Christianity were permitted access to the archive. That’s when Pope Leo XIII, known as an intellectual who confronted the modernization of the late 19th century, opened the trove to researchers. These fascinating documents tell not just the story of the Church, but the rest of the world.

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Reggio Calabria: Arcivescovo sospende sacerdote per pedofilia

ITALY
Notizie

December 6, 2017

By Giada Talamo

[Google Translate: Another priest who abused children. An archbishop has removed a priest for possession of child pornography and for sexual abuse]

Un altro prete che ha abusato dei bambini. Un arcivescovo ha allontanato un prete per possesso di materiale pedopornografico e per abuso sessuale

L’arcivescovo di Reggio Calabria, mons. Giuseppe Fiorini Morosini, ha sospeso un sacerdote che, nel ruolo di rappresentante di Dio, è don Carmelo Perrello, parroco della chiesa di San Gregorio, conseguentemente al fatto che al prete è stato notificato un decreto di perquisizione da parte della Procura della Repubblica per detenzione di materiale pedopornografico. Materiale in cui la visione era di bambini, che erano alla “mercé” di uomini adulti. Il don è indagato anche per rapporti sessuali con minorenni.

Pedofilia, la Chiesa

Il Credo cattolico ultimamente è visto sotto l’aspetto di una religione che deve mettere insieme dei pezzi, Una sorta di puzzel che non è del tutto chiara. Le IENE, trasmissione di punta di Mediaset, proprio per le ultime notizie sugli abusi perpetuati dai preti pedofili, ha messo in luce le ultime testimonianze dei chierichetti. Chierichetti, che sono stati allontanati dalla possibilità di fare un percorso nel pendere la tonaca clericale proprio perché si sono esposti ai media.

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Witness: Catholic leaders feared Feit scandal could affect JFK’s bid for president

EDINBURG (TX)
San Antonio Express-News

December 5, 2017

By Aaron Nelsen

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

EDINBURG — The Hidalgo County sheriff told Catholic Church officials in 1960 they should hire a private investigator to undermine the murder investigation of Father John Feit and thereby avoid a scandal that threatened to rock the presidential campaign of John F. Kennedy, a witness testified Tuesday.

Feit, now 85 and no longer a priest, is on trial for the murder of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old elementary school teacher and former beauty queen killed during Holy Week that year. He was 27 at the time and serving as a fill-in priest in the Rio Grande Valley.

An official letter dated Oct. 1, 1960, written by Father Joseph Pawlicki, pastor of a church in Georgetown near Austin, to Father Lawrence J. Seidel, provincial of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate Southern Province, urged church officials to avoid a public scandal.

“I believe I found some element in every paragraph that I found very unusual, that pointed to an attempt to cover this up, to minimize the circumstances … to make it go away,” testified Father Thomas Doyle, 73, a canon lawyer who has worked with survivors of priest sex abuse.

Doyle read the letter to the jury Tuesday.

Sheriff E.E. Vickers, a Catholic, suggested a private investigator might compel the district attorney to find a case against Feit weak, Pawlicki wrote.

Pawlicki also told Seidel that allowing the case to go before a jury would expose the church to its enemies, and threatened to become a political scandal possibly affecting Kennedy, who was running for president.

Kennedy would be the first Catholic elected to the nation’s highest office and was the target of anti-Catholic sentiment.

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FORMER ABBOT LAURENCE SOPER CONVICTED OF SEXUALLY ABUSING BOYS AT CATHOLIC SCHOOL

ENGLAND
The Tablet

December 6, 2017

By Rose Gamble

‘Soper abused his position as a teacher and as a priest to abuse children for his own sexual gratification’

The former Abbot of Ealing Abbey, Laurence Soper, has been convicted of abusing 10 boys at a Catholic-run school in the 1970s and 80s.

Andrew Soper, 74, was found guilty on Wednesday afternoon of 19 individual rape and sexual offences of offences after a trial at London’s Old Bailey.

Soper sexually abused 10 boys while he was a teacher at St Benedict’s School, Ealing. He would abuse them after hitting them with a cane, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

His first victim came forward in 2004, after Soper had left his role as Abbot and moved to the Benedictine headquarters in Rome. He was initially told by police there was insufficient evidence.

Soper was interviewed by appointment by Police at Heathrow airport in 2010, but he fled to Kosovo while on police bail in 2011.

He was arrested at Luton Airport in August 2016 after he was deported by the Kosovan authorities.

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Judge Denies Motion for Mistrial in John Feit Murder Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
KRGV

December 6, 2017

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

EDINBURG – The judge overseeing a 1960 murder case out of Hidalgo County issued his ruling on the defense’s request for a mistrial.

Judge Luis Singleterry denied the motion for a mistrial in the John Feit murder trial. He said trial proceedings are now set to continue today.

Feit is on trial for the murder of Irene Garza. Today marks day five of the trial.

CHANNEL 5 NEWS will continue to report the latest.

You read other reports about the trial and from people who knew the victim visit here.

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The Latest from Day 5: Forensic pathologist expected to take stand in Feit trial

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 6, 2017

By Lorenzo Zazueta-Castro

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

EDINBURG — John Feit, a former priest, is accused of the 1960 murder of Irene Garza after she went to confession at McAllen’s Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Here is the latest from the trial:

Tuesday’s proceedings were highlighted by expert testimony by a former monk and former priest.

Richard Sipe is a former Benedictine monk who has written books about Catholicism and the sexual abuses arising from the Catholic Church’s requirements of celibacy.

Thomas Doyle was a Catholic priest in the Dominican Order. He co-authored “The Problem of Sexual Molestation by Roman Catholic Clergy” in 1986, alerting bishops of sexual abuse by clergy.

Each testified as experts in these fields to further drive the state’s argument that there was collusion between high-level church officials and authorities to keep the Garza case under wraps.

The day’s most damning testimony against Feit was that of Doyle, who read a letter he said was about “protecting the church.” The letter, written by one church official to others, addressed how to best maneuver around the the Garza case before Feit was moved to a monastery in Missouri.

Today, the trial is set to begin with Hidalgo County’s forensic pathologist, Norma Jean Farley.

Also expected to testify is Texas Ranger Rudy Jaramillo and another Texas Department of Public Safety lab technician.

It is possible that the state will rest its case today.

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Judge Denies Defense Motion For Mistrial In John Feit Murder Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
710 KURV News Talk

December 6, 2017

By Zack Cantu

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

The murder trial of former McAllen priest John Feit will continue. Judge Luis Singleterry this morning denied a defense motion for a mistrial, saying the mention of the word “polygraph” by a prosecution witness was not grounds to declare a mistrial. The parties had agreed that the polygraph tests given to John Feit after the murder of Irene Garza would not be mentioned in the trial. But under cross-examination by the defense yesterday afternoon, a prosecution witness made mention of those tests. The defense argued the witness acted in bad faith and harmed Feit’s right to a fair trial. Prosecutors argued against that and Judge Singleterry agreed, but also ordered that part of the testimony be stricken from the record. Jurors will return to the courtroom this hour for day five of trial testimony.

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TIME PERSON OF THE YEAR 2017: THE SILENCE BREAKERS

UNITED STATES
TIME Magazine

December 6, 2017

By Stephanie Zackarek, Eliana Dockterman and Haley Sweetland Edwards
Photographs by Billy and Hells for TIME

Movie stars are supposedly nothing like you and me. They’re svelte, glamorous, self-­possessed. They wear dresses we can’t afford and live in houses we can only dream of. Yet it turns out that—in the most painful and personal ways—movie stars are more like you and me than we ever knew.

In 1997, just before Ashley Judd’s career took off, she was invited to a meeting with Harvey Weinstein, head of the starmaking studio Miramax, at a Beverly Hills hotel. Astounded and offended by Weinstein’s attempt to coerce her into bed, Judd managed to escape. But instead of keeping quiet about the kind of encounter that could easily shame a woman into silence, she began spreading the word.

“I started talking about Harvey the minute that it happened,” Judd says in an interview with TIME. “Literally, I exited that hotel room at the Peninsula Hotel in 1997 and came straight downstairs to the lobby, where my dad was waiting for me, because he happened to be in Los Angeles from Kentucky, visiting me on the set. And he could tell by my face—to use his words—that something devastating had happened to me. I told him. I told everyone.”

She recalls one screenwriter friend telling her that Weinstein’s behavior was an open secret passed around on the whisper network that had been furrowing through Hollywood for years. It allowed for people to warn others to some degree, but there was no route to stop the abuse. “Were we supposed to call some fantasy attorney general of moviedom?” Judd asks. “There wasn’t a place for us to report these experiences.”

Finally, in October—when Judd went on the record about Weinstein’s behavior in the New York Times, the first star to do so—the world listened. (Weinstein said he “never laid a glove” on Judd and denies having had nonconsensual sex with other accusers.)

When movie stars don’t know where to go, what hope is there for the rest of us? What hope is there for the janitor who’s being harassed by a co-worker but remains silent out of fear she’ll lose the job she needs to support her children? For the administrative assistant who repeatedly fends off a superior who won’t take no for an answer? For the hotel housekeeper who never knows, as she goes about replacing towels and cleaning toilets, if a guest is going to corner her in a room she can’t escape?

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Time’s Person of the Year: ‘The Silence Breakers,’ for speaking out against sexual harassment

UNITED STATES
The Washington Post

December 6, 2017

By Lindsey Bever

Time magazine has named “The Silence Breakers” as its 2017 Person of the Year — the women (and some men) who came forward with stories of sexual harassment and assault, forcing a nationwide reckoning.

The magazine calls them “the voices that launched a movement.”

Among them: Actresses Ashley Judd and Rose McGowan, whose stunning accusations against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein helped lead to his downfall; activist Tarana Burke, the creator of the #MeToo movement; and Alyssa Milano, the actress who amplified it.

“The galvanizing actions of the women on our cover … along with those of hundreds of others, and of many men as well, have unleashed one of the highest-velocity shifts in our culture since the 1960s,” Time’s editor in chief, Edward Felsenthal, said in a statement to “Today.”

These “silence breakers” have forced a national reckoning on sexual harassment.

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As a Muslim woman, it’s my duty to speak out about the sexual abuse I survived as a child

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Independent

December 6, 2017

We have talked about the abuse in the Roman Catholic Church for decades, now we Muslims need to talk about this on our own doorsteps. These men can’t hide behind their beards anymore

From the outside, this man appears to the world as someone who cares about women. He is the director of a Muslim charity whose aim it is to improve lives, but they don’t know how he destroyed mine.

Fleeting moments for him were the times he served me a life sentence. The day he imposed his perversion on me was my first sexual experience – he stole my own journey of discovery as a consenting adult. I was 13 years old.

When I was a kid I dreamed of being an archaeologist. I studied Hieroglyphics and dinosaurs in my spare time. I was so excited to see Jurassic Park, yet that darkened room was where he took my innocence from me. Images of dinosaurs now give me flashbacks. From then on every night he has climbed into bed behind me, cradling me, as I lay in terror.

After a career in child protection, my adult self sees his grooming efforts for what they were. I would bend down to pick up things he would drop on the floor. I’d arise to his groin in my face. He took his time with every brush, every touch.

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Brouillard allegedly raped altar boy in Tumon church decades ago

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

December 6, 2017

By Steve Limtiaco

Former Guam priest Louis Brouillard allegedly raped an altar boy who was sleeping over at the rectory of the Tumon church in the late 1970s, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday afternoon in the U.S. District Court of Guam.

The lawsuit, filed by a 49-year-old man with the initials “J.M.Q.” is the 146th lawsuit accusing someone affiliated with the Guam Catholic church of child sexual abuse. It’s the 91st lawsuit naming Brouillard as the abuser.

According to the lawsuit filed by J.M.Q, Brouillard asked the boy’s father for permission to have J.M.Q. and his brother spend the evening at the rectory so they would not be late to serve as altar boys at Mass the following morning.

“J.M.Q.’s father gave consent without the slightest of doubt, not realizing that he was sending J.M.Q. and his brother to be sexually abused by a predator disguised in the robes of the clergy,” the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit accuses Brouillard of walking around naked and fondling J.M.Q, and of raping J.M.Q. at the Tumon rectory.

J.M.Q. who was 10 or 11 years old at the time, also was a Boy Scout with the Barrigada troop and helped Brouillard as an altar boy at the Barrigada parish, the lawsuit states.

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Inquiry into child sex abuse hears evidence from Somerset’s Downside School today – live updates

ENGLAND
Somerset Live

December 6, 2017

By Claire Herbaux

Offenders targeted two schools: One in Somerset and one in North Yorkshire

An inquiry is looking into paedophilia at a Somerset school and evidence will be heard today.

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) is examining the prevalence of paedophilia in the English Benedictine Congregation and failures in protecting young people.

This will focus on offenders that targeted children at two Roman Catholic schools, Ampleforth in North Yorkshire and Downside in Somerset , over the course of many decades.

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SPIRITUAL LEADERS HEAR SOBERING WORD ABOUT CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE WITHIN CHURCH

BIRMINGHAM (AL)
The Alabama Baptist

December 6, 2017

By Michael J. Brooks

Research suggests at least 60 million Americans are survivors of sexual abuse.

Concerned churches must be proactive in protecting children in their care from predators.

That was the message of the MinistrySafe Conference held at Canaan Baptist Church, Bessemer, on Sept. 19. The event was jointly sponsored by the Alabama Baptist State Board of Missions (SBOM) and GuideStone Financial Resources.

Greg Love, an attorney and a minister, served as presenter at the conference. Love and his wife, Kimberlee Norris, are co-founders of MinistrySafe and Abuse Prevention Systems of Fort Worth, Texas.

An estimated 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys under age 18 will be sexually abused, Love said. As a place where children are invited and welcomed, churches often attract predators.

Abusers most often go where the barriers are the lowest, Love explained.

“The Church is welcoming and affirming,” he said, “and we’re overjoyed when new people come and volunteer to work with children and youth. The abuser tries to gain the trust of leaders or what I call the ‘gatekeepers.’ They convince us they’re helpful, trustworthy and kind. Then they proceed to gain the trust of our children. This is called ‘grooming,’ and it’s a significant mark of the abuser.”

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The Latest from Day 4: Judge to rule on motion for mistrial Wednesday

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 5, 2017

By Lorenzo Zazueta-Castro

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

EDINBURG — John Feit, a former priest, is accused of the 1960 murder of Irene Garza after she went to confession at McAllen’s Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Here is the latest from the trial:

3:09 p.m.

Following testimony from Thomas Doyle, an American Catholic priest, the state called another expert witness in the study of celibacy among Roman Catholic priests.

Richard Sipe, a former Benedictine monk, has written books about Catholicism and the sexual abuses arising from the Catholic Church’s requirements of celibacy.

Sipe, who began collecting data in this field coincidentally the same year Irene Garza was killed, has written multiple books in this field and has had his research used most notably by the movie “Spotlight” — a 2015 film about the Catholic Church’s abuses in Boston.

The state established Sipe and Doyle as experts in these fields to argue that the church exhibited a pattern of concealing indiscretions by its priests.

The court recessed early for the day.

There is an issue the court will take up this afternoon related to the defense’s motion for a mistrial.

The defense claims that Sipes violated the agreement that he could only testify to evidence already entered into the record.

Because Sipes said “polygraph” during the defense’s cross-examination, the defense argued that this was in violation of what was agreed to by the court.

The state argues this was not brought up by prosecutors and that there was never a discussion of the results of Feit’s polygraph, thus no harm.

The judge is set to rule before testimony resumes tomorrow.

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Photo Gallery: Day 4 of John Feit trial

EDINBURG (TX)
CBS 4 News

December 5, 2017

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

Day four of the John Feit trial has ended with the defense asking for a mistrial motion.

After the last witness took the stand Tuesday, the defense asked the court for a mistrial regarding something that Richard Sipe said during his testimony.

The court ruled before Richard Sipe’s testimony that the state was limited to questioning Sipe only on admissible evidence. Sipe, a former priest who deals with mental health problems of priests and their sexuality, used his expertise to identify some red flags in Feit.

During his testimony, Sipe said the word “polygraph”—which was not admissible.

Feit’s defense attorney, Rene Flores, immediately asked for a mistrial.

Prosecutors say the action was a harmless error.

The court allowed the state to submit papers on the mistrial motion, but a decision will not be made until Wednesday morning.

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Former monk testifies against ex-priest accused in beauty queen’s 1960 slaying

EDINBURG (TX)
CBS/AP

December 5, 2017

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

EDINBURG, Texas — A former monk has testified that an ex-priest accused of killing a Texas woman in 1960 confessed to him three years after the killing. Dale Tacheny testified Monday in the murder trial of John Feit, now 85, who is accused of suffocating Irene Garza after she went to confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen.

An autopsy determined the teacher and former beauty queen was beaten, raped while unconscious and asphyxiated. “48 Hours” investigated the case in the 2014 episode, “The Last Confession.”

While police had interviewed hundreds of people in connection with Garza’s murder, Feit was their focus. He was the last person to see Garza. However, no charges were filed against Feit at the time. He eventually left McAllen, and the case went cold amid what many believed was a cover-up by the church.

Tacheny said Feit confessed to him in 1963, after the church sent Feit to a Missouri monastery where Tacheny worked. The former Trappist monk said Feit expressed no remorse during the confession.

Tacheny said he didn’t initially report the crime because it “was not my place to make a judgment.” The 88-year-old said he instead tried to counsel Feit to change his behavior toward women. But in 2002, Tacheny went to police in San Antonio and reported what Feit allegedly told him decades earlier.

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Feit Defense Request Motion for Mistrial after Witness’s Testimony

EDINBURG (TX)
KRGV

December 5, 2017

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

EDINBURG – After another busy day in court, jurors were dismissed early Tuesday in the John Feit murder trial.

The judge is considering a defense motion to declare a mistrial.

Two experts in Canon and Catholic Church law took the stand Tuesday. A statement from one of those experts prompted the mistrial request.

Before the request, jurors spent most of the day listening to testimony from the two church experts.

At the start of the day’s session, lead prosecutor Michael Garza said it’s a case of betrayal, murder and a cover-up.

One of the witnesses was an expert in church law and the other an expert on the sexual behavior of some Catholic priests.

Thomas Doyle is a priest who no longer conducts church ceremonies. He was given access to some of the church’s files regarding Feit.

The files included letters and memos that were exchanged between priests in the Rio Grande Valley shortly after Irene Garza was killed.

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Royal Commission slams Catholic Church leaders

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

December 6, 2017

By Monique Patterson

A “catastrophic institutional failure” by the Catholic Church to take action on cases of sexual abuse led to more south-west children being abused, a royal commission has found.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Assault released a scathing report on Wednesday, which condemned the church’s Ballarat diocese leaders, who were responsible for parishes across the region.

“That harm could have been avoided if the church had acted in the interests of children rather than in its own interests,” the report said.

“It was only when there was a possibility that the sexual abuse of children by a priest would become widely known that any action was taken.

“Invariably, that action was to remove the priest from the community for a short period and then place him in another, more distant parish.

“Restrictions were not placed on priests and supervision was not given.”

The report said “commissioners heard that there was a tendency by clergy in the Diocese to treat complaints or allegations of child sexual abuse dismissively and in favour of the priest who was the subject of the allegation”.

The commission heard about abuse at a number of locations, including Mortlake and Warrnambool.

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An update from Bishop Vincent Long about the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Outlook

December 6, 2017

Dear friends,

Re: Royal Commission Update

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will shortly release its final findings on public hearings, and its recommendations, related to the Catholic Church in Australia.

These case studies included evidence around the pain and hurt that was inflicted upon victims of abuse by Church authorities, including Diocese of Parramatta personnel.

Once again, I apologise on behalf of the Catholic Church and the Diocese of Parramatta for the irreparable harm caused to people who were betrayed by clergy, religious and lay people who were entrusted to lead ministry in this Diocese. Our response and processes at the time were clearly inadequate. For these failings, I wish to express my profound sorrow.

Throughout the Royal Commission, the Diocese of Parramatta has strived to engage in their processes with openness, transparency and a commitment to learning about our history so that our child protection policies and procedures are strengthened and there is restored confidence in Church ministry.

As we await the final reports and recommendations to be handed down, I would like to remind you that should anyone wish to report abuse by Church personnel to the Diocese, or require support for the impact upon them from abuse by Church personnel, that they may contact the Office for Safeguarding & Professional Standards on 02 8838 3419 or safeguarding@parra.catholic.org.au. Any matter of a criminal nature should be reported to the NSW Police on 131 444.

For any media related questions, please direct them to Joseph Younes, Communications Director on 02 8838 3435 or jyounes@parra.catholic.org.au.

Yours sincerely in Christ,

Most Reverend Vincent Long Van Nguyen OFM Conv

Bishop of Parramatta

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Vindication for Ballarat survivors after release of report

AUSTRALIA
Bendigo Advertiser

December 6, 2017

By Siobhan Calafiore

Clergy sexual abuse survivors feel they have been heard in a report deeming Ballarat’s Catholic Church culture of cover-up as a catastrophic institutional failure.

Survivor Paul Levey, who features in the redacted report released on Wednesday, said there was a sense of vindication in having Australia’s most powerful legal body reinforce survivors’ stories.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was scathing in its findings of the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat responses to abuse allegations.

Mr Levey lived at the presbytery in Mortlake after his parents separated in 1982, where he was subjected to daily sexual abuse at the hands of notorious paedophile Gerald Ridsdale.

“It has really put everything in black and white, what we all thought and what we all knew,” he said of the report.

“Because it was pretty bad what the (church) hierarchy did with it, covering it up.

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Ballarat diocese’s ‘catastrophic’ failure led to more abuse, commission finds

VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA)
The Age

December 7, 2017

By Melissa Cunningham

A “catastrophic and inexcusable” failure by the Catholic Church in Ballarat to deal with paedophile priests led to scores of children being abused, a royal commission has found.​

The response within the diocese of Ballarat to abuse complaints spanning more than three decades was driven by a desire to avoid scandal and protect the church’s reputation, the report by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse found.

“That harm could have been avoided if the Church had acted in the interests of children rather than in its own interests,” the commission said in a report released on Wednesday.

The findings, which come a day after a similarly damning report about the Melbourne archdiocese, said “there was a tendency by clergy in the diocese to treat complaints or allegations of child sexual abuse dismissively and in favour of the priest who was the subject of the allegation”.

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Report gives Ballarat abuse survivors ‘ultimate confirmation’ of failures

AUSTRALIA
The New Daily

December 6, 2017

By Lucie Morris-Marr

Witnesses at the Ballarat hearings will never forget the testimony of brave adult men as they recalled the horrific abuse they suffered as children in Catholic schools, choirs and orphanages.

Many shook violently and sobbed as they recalled in fine detail the beatings, the psychological terror and the vile sexual attacks all endured at the hands of the supposedly good men of the cloth.

Many old school friends in the town had already taken their own lives, they said, due to the unbearable memories and sense of shame and confusion about what was inflicted in dark corners of classrooms of St Alipius primary school, presbytery bedrooms and confession boxes.

Some later drove their cars into trees when they were adults.

Others spiralled into despair and depression, tumbling down into fatal hell-holes of drug and alcohol abuse.

The men who gave evidence in May 2015 were the survivors.

But only just.

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Inquiry found church failures led to abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News (AAP)

December 6, 2017

The Ballarat Catholic Church’s catastrophic and inexcusable failures led to more children being sexually abused by its clergy, a royal commission has found.

The response within the Diocese of Ballarat to abuse complaints spanning at least three decades was driven by a desire to avoid scandal and protect the church’s reputation, the commission said.

Priests were moved to another parish if allegations emerged where they often offended again.

The inexcusable failures led to more children being sexually abused by Catholic clergy in the diocese.

‘That failure led to the suffering and often irreparable harm to children, their families and the wider community,’ the commission said in its report released on Wednesday.

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Catholic schools ‘completely failed’ to protect children, abuse inquiry finds

AUSTRALIA
Christian Today

December 6, 2017

By Harry Farley

A Catholic diocese in Australia is being accused on a ‘catastrophic failure in leadership’ in a damning report into its handling of child sex abuse by priests.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse’s latest report is based on public hearings held in the Diocese of Ballarat between 2015 and 2016. It accuses the diocese of a culture of secrecy and said 90 per cent of the abuse complaints related to seven priests with more than half linked to just one, Gerald Ridsdale, acording to ABC.

Ridsdale was given 16 appointments over 29 years across western Victoria, Australia, and the report said the complaints against him were ‘remarkably and disturbingly similar’.

‘Harm could have been avoided if the Church had acted in the interests of children,’ the report said.

‘That failure led to the suffering and often irreparable harm to children, their families and the wider community.’

The report focuses on schools run by the Christian Brothers religious order and one school in particular – St Alipius boys school – where four of the school’s brothers and its chaplain, Gerald Risdale, were accused of sexually assaulting children.

The brothers’ response to the accusations was ‘grossly inadequate’, the commissions said, adding they ‘completely failed … to protect the most vulnerable children in their care’ and operatedin a structure ‘without checks and balances’.

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Catholic bishop cared little for children and left them in danger, royal commission finds

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

December 5, 2017

By Melissa Davey

Ballarat’s Ronald Mulkearns knew or strongly suspected paedophile priest was sexually abusing children and did nothing, report says

Children were sexually abused over many decades by notorious paedophile priests within the diocese of Ballarat largely because the bishop at the time, Ronald Mulkearns, had little concern for children, deliberately left them in danger, and failed to investigate or report offenders to police.

This was a key finding from a report on Catholic church authorities in Ballarat published by the child sex abuse royal commission on Wednesday. The report is the result of public hearings held in three parts in 2015 and 2016 in Ballarat and Sydney.

The hearings examined the response of the congregation of Christian Brothers in the St Patrick’s province of Ballarat and the Catholic diocese of Ballarat to complaints and allegations of child sexual abuse by Christian brothers, clergy and other religious staff.

“There is no doubt from the many documents which are in evidence that, at various times, Bishop Mulkearns, the bishop of Ballarat, knew or strongly suspected that these priests had sexually abused children in the diocese,” the report said.

“His concern was overwhelmingly about protecting the reputation of the church and avoiding scandal. There was little evidence that he was concerned to protect children from these priests.”

Mulkearns died last year aged 85. He managed the diocese from 1971 and during a time when numerous notorious paedophiles, including Gerald Ridsdale, Robert Best and Edward Dowlan, were found to have been abusing children. Australia’s most notorious paedophile, Ridsdale, has been convicted of sexually abusing 65 children, although his victims are believed to run into the hundreds.

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‘Catastrophic failure’ of Catholic Church leadership in Ballarat caused ‘irreparable suffering’: royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

December 5, 2017

By Charlotte King

The Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse has released a damning report into the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat, describing its handling of clergy child sex abuse as a “catastrophic failure of leadership”.

The commissioners found a culture of secrecy and failures in the church’s structure led to children being abused across the diocese over a number of decades.

“That failure led to the suffering and often irreparable harm to children, their families and the wider community,” the report stated.

“That harm could have been avoided if the Church had acted in the interests of children.”

The royal commission report is based on three public hearings into Ballarat — the first case study to look at the affect of child sexual abuse on an entire town.

The hearings, held over 2015 and 2016 in Ballarat and Sydney, revealed in gruelling detail the extent of child sex abuse across parishes, schools and homes in the far-reaching diocese.

Ninety per cent of the 140 abuse complaints reported to the diocese related to seven priests, with more than half of those relating to one individual, the infamous paedophile Gerald Ridsdale.

More than 100 pages of the report were dedicated to his crimes across western Victoria, where he was given 16 appointments over a period of 29 years.

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Royal Commission finds ‘inexcusable failures’ in Ballarat Catholic Church’s treatment of abuse victims

VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA)
The Age

December 6, 2017

By Megan Neil and Brendan Wrigley

A “catastrophic institutional failure” by the Ballarat Catholic Church to take action on cases of sexual abuse led to more children being abused by its clergy, a royal commission has found.

The response within the diocese of Ballarat to abuse complaints spanning at least three decades was driven by a desire to avoid scandal and protect the church’s reputation, the report by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse found.

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Archbishop accused of covering up child sex abuse for DECADES ‘told an 8-year-old boy he was lying when he complained about being abused by a priest and that he should be ASHAMED of himself’

ADELAIDE (AUSTRALIA)
Australian Associated Press

December 6, 2017

– Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson is accused of covering up child sex abuse
– Wilson allegedly tried to prevent abuse claims from being reported to police
– He’s accused of covering up abuse by now-dead pedophile priest James Fletcher

Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson has been accused of covering up child sex abuse by the Catholic clergy for nearly three decades.

Crown prosecutor Gareth Harrison told the Newcastle Local Court on Wednesday that Wilson had allegedly been involved in a number of cases where he had tried to prevent abuse claims being reported to police between 1976 and 2004 to protect the Catholic Church.

In his opening address on the first day of Wilson’s trial where he is accused of concealing information about the abuse of an altar boy by now-dead pedophile priest James Fletcher in the NSW Hunter region, Mr Harrison said the evidence would show Wilson had failed to report widespread child abuse by the Catholic clergy and a teacher.

The prosecutor said Wilson had been a priest at a parish in 1976 when an altar boy came to him in the presbytery to reveal he had been sexually abused by Fletcher when he was 10 years old.

The altar boy claimed Wilson was shocked by the abuse claims and promised to look into it but nothing happened.

Mr Harrison said another altar boy, aged between eight and nine years old, went to see Wilson in the confessional box in late 1976 to complain about being abused by Fletcher but Wilson told the boy he was lying.

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Archbishop accused of covering up child sexual abuse in landmark trial

AUSTRALIA
The Sydney Morning Herald

December 6, 2017

Joanne McCarthy

Archbishop Philip Wilson allegedly told a boy he “should be ashamed of himself for lying” and ordered him to “say 10 Hail Marys” after the child allegedly disclosed he had been sexually abused by Hunter priest Jim Fletcher, a landmark trial has heard.

Archbishop Wilson, then a junior Maitland-Newcastle priest, allegedly asked the boy “where he got the story from” and told him he did not believe him after the boy protested he was not making it up.

The court heard the boy allegedly told the then Father Philip Wilson during confession in 1976 that Father Fletcher “asked me to put my mouth on his penis, where you go to the toilet” while helping as an altar boy at an East Maitland Catholic church.

The boy was one of two alleged to have told Father Wilson in 1976 that they had been sexually abused by Fletcher.

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Ballarat Catholic diocese catastrophic, abuse royal commission finds

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

December 6, 2017

By Tessa Akerman

The Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse has slammed the leadership failings of the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat as “catastrophic”.

The commissioners said the failings led to “the suffering and often irreparable harm” to the child victims, their families and the wider community.

“That harm could have been avoided if the Church had acted in the interests of children rather than in its own interests,” they said in the report published today.

The inquiry into the vast diocese in western Victoria spanned from the late 1960s to the early 1990s and examined the conduct of Gerald Ridsdale, Australia’s most notorious paedophile priest.

The commission found Ridsdale admitted his offending to Bishop Ronald Mulkearns by late 1975 and the bishop, who died last year, knew Ridsdale’s conduct was known to Bendigo police.

“It follows that Bishop Mulkearns, knowing that Ridsdale had offended against children … placed Ridsdale in another parish situation,” they said.

“It was inexcusably wrong for Bishop Mulkearns to have done so. It was an extraordinary failure for Bishop Mulkearns to appoint Ridsdale parish priest … it showed complete disregard for the safety and welfare of children in the Parish of Bungaree.”

The commission also found Bishop Mulkearns’ further appointment of Ridsdale to Edenhope was “inexcusably wrong”.

Complaints were made about Ridsdale’s later offending at Mortlake to Father Brian Finnigan, who later became a Bishop, and told the inquiry he didn’t realise parents’ concerns regarding their children.

“Given the questions he asked of the parents, and the need to ‘confront’ Ridsdale, we are satisfied that he understood the complaints to be serious matters concerning an improper relationship that Ridsdale was having with the children,” the commission found.

Ridsdale was later moved to the Catholic Enquiry Centre in Sydney and the commission found the appointment was under the belief it would limit Ridsdale’s access to children.

“We are satisfied that Bishop Mulkearns’ overwhelming concern was to protect his Diocese and the Church from further scandal,” the commissioners said.

The commission also found a former Victorian Police Chief Superintendent offered Detective Denis Ryan a promotion if he discontinued his investigations into alleged paedophile Monsignor John Day in 1972.

Day died in 1978 without being charged.

The commissioners found Bishop Mulkearns, his vicar general Father Frank Madden and some teachers at Catholic schools in Mildura were aware of allegations concerning Monsignor Day by 1972 and then Father George Pell had heard gossip “about Monsignor Day’s sexual activity with children”.

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Adelaide Archbishop ordered to stand trial over child sex abuse cover up charges

ADELAIDE (AUSTRALIA)
Ten Eyewitness News

December 6, 2017

The trial of the world’s most senior Catholic official to be charged over failing to report child sex abuse offences will go ahead, after a Newcastle magistrate deemed him fit to stand trial.

Philip Wilson, Archbishop of Adelaide, had his trial delayed last week after “acting on medical advice” not to travel, following pacemaker surgery and because of concerns over his cognitive capacity, according to his defence barrister.

Earlier last week the Archbishop was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, for which his defence team said he was taking medication which could take six months to work.

In a statement Archbishop Wilson said he hoped the prescribed medication would assist in slowing the progress of the disease and improving his current health.

“It is a present reality that much stigma is still associated with Alzheimer’s disease,” he said.

“An initial reaction by many people is to think that life is all but over, and that a person with such a diagnosis cannot continue to live a productive life and contribute to society.

“If a point comes in the next eight years before my mandatory retirement as Archbishop of Adelaide… and I am advised by my doctors that the effects of Alzheimer’s disease might be beginning to impair my ability to function properly as Archbishop, I will offer my resignation.”

But after a one-week delay to his trial, the Newcastle Local Court heard evidence this morning from a South Australian neuropsychologist, who deemed him well enough to stand trial after examining the 67-year-old’s health.

Archbishop Wilson was charged in 2015 with failing to report child sex abuse allegations concerning another priest, dating back to the 1970s.

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Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson faces magistrate-alone trial in Newcastle over alleged abuse cover-up

ADELAIDE (AUSTRALIA)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

December 5, 2017

By Lucy Carter and Giselle Wakatama

Archbishop Philip Wilson has appeared in court in Newcastle on one count of covering up an indictable offence after being declared fit to stand trial.

He flew into Newcastle today from Adelaide for the magistrate-alone trial.

The 67-year-old is accused of covering up abuse by priest Jim Fletcher in the Hunter Valley in the 1970s.

The Adelaide Archbishop is the most senior Catholic in the world to be charged with this offence.

Last week, Archbishop Wilson’s legal team told Newcastle Local Court their client had just had a pacemaker put in and had received an Alzheimer’s diagnosis after a fall.

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Defense Motions For A Mistrial In John Feit Murder Trial, Judge To Rule Wednesday Morning

EDINBURG (TX)
710 KURV News Talk

December 5, 2017

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

Defense attorneys have filed a motion for a mistrial in the murder trial of former McAllen priest John Feit, claiming a prosecution witness violated an agreement to not mention the polygraph tests given to the defendant.

The polygraph mention came Tuesday afternoon as prosecutors were questioning Richard Sipe, a former monk who has written books about sexual abuse among Catholic priests. Judge Luis Singleterry dismissed the jury early and said he will rule on the mistrial motion prior to the start of the trial Wednesday morning.

Prosecutors spent the day showing how the Catholic Church often attempted to hide the actions of bad priests, and before Sipe, they called to the stand another author who has investigated and written about sexual abuse by priests.

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December 5, 2017

UPDATE: Prosecution Witness Implies A Church Coverup Of The Murder Of Irene Garza

EDINBURG (TX)
710 KURV News Talk

December 5, 2017

[Note: See also http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/2004_11_21_Egerton_StexasDA_John_Feit_8.htm]

An expert prosecution witness has been testifying today about past efforts by the Catholic Church to hide the actions of bad priests. Hidalgo County prosecutors in the murder trial of former McAllen priest John Feit today called to the stand Thomas Doyle, who has investigated child sexual abuse by priests and written several books on the matter.

Doyle cited the church’s attempts to cover up crimes by troubled priests by entering into unofficial agreements with local law enforcers that would allow local church leaders to simply move the priest out of the parish in order to avoid tarnishing the image of the church.

Doyle testified he believed that’s what happened to cover up the murder of Irene Garza, believed to have been committed Easter weekend of 1960 by John Feit who was a visiting priest at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen. Jurors are hearing a fourth day of testimony today.

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Girl’s arm ‘broken by nun who discovered abuse by priest’

SCOTLAND
STV News

December 5, 2017

Theresa Tolmie-McGrane described a catalogue of abuse at an orphanage in Lanark.

A young girl had her arm broken by a nun who had discovered the child was being sexually abused by a priest, an inquiry has heard.

Theresa Tolmie-McGrane told how she had hoped she would be protected when the nun walked in on the assault in 1970, when she was eight, but was instead called a “whore”, grabbed and thrown towards a wall.

She said she was then given a “real hiding” by another nun and threatened with having her other arm broken if she told anybody what had happened.

Ms Tolmie-McGrane waived her right to anonymity at the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry.

She recounted a catalogue of abuse during her 11 years at Smyllum Park orphanage in Lanark, South Lanarkshire, which closed in the 1980s.

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Rep. John Conyers Jr. retires, ending a half-century in Congress

UNITED STATES
The Washington Post

December 5, 2017

By Elise Viebeck and David Weigel

Facing multiple allegations of sexual harassment, Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) resigned as Congress’s longest-serving member on Tuesday, becoming the first lawmaker to step down as Capitol Hill grapples with allegations of inappropriate behavior by lawmakers.

Conyers, who represented the Detroit area for 52 years, yielded to mounting pressure from Democratic leaders to step aside as a growing number of female former aides accused him of unwanted advances and mistreatment. He has denied wrongdoing.

From a hospital in Detroit, the 88-year-old congressman said he was “putting his retirement plans together” and endorsed his son John Conyers III to replace him. Another Conyers family member has already declared his intention to run for the seat, raising the specter of an intrafamily contest.

Asked about the harassment allegations, Conyers said his legacy “can’t be compromised or diminished in any way by what we’re going through now.”

“This, too, shall pass,” Conyers told a local radio station in an interview. “My legacy will continue through my children.”

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Assignment Record: Rev. Joseph Vincent Agostino, C.M.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Joseph V. Agostino was ordained for the Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians) in 1983. With the exception of a year in the late 1980s at Immaculate Conception parish in Baltimore, Agostino spent two and a half decades at St. John the Baptist in Brooklyn. He was named pastor in 2000, a role he held until 2009.

In 2003 a man came forward to allege that he had been sexually abused by Agostino. The Vincentians and the diocese investigated, both determining that there was insufficient evidence to substantiate the man’s claims. Agostino remained in ministry. In April 2009 the same man contacted the diocese, this time providing more detailed information about the alleged abuse, including that it occurred when he was a minor. Agostino was suspended pending the outcome of a new investigation. In September 2009 he was transferred to the Vincentians’ Eastern Province headquarters where, according to a bio on his order’s website in December 2017, “Fr. Joe has been assigned to various projects by the Superior General of the Congregation.”

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Il prete, i presunti abusi e l’esilio forzato a Bronte Incredulità dei fedeli: «Predicava in modo netto»

ITALY
Meridio News

December 2, 2017

By Dario de Luca

[Google Translate: So much silence and words pronounced with the dropper. In Bronte , the day after Father Pio Guidolin’s arrest , disbelief prevailed among the faithful . Many have been displaced by looking at the picture of the priest ended up in all the newspapers yesterday. Accused, by the magistrates of the prosecutor of Catania, to have carried out sexual abuse on some minors during the assignment in the church of Santa Croce in the district Sant’Agata Village . A period, that in the peripheral parish in the capital of Etna, with different shadows, including that on the economic management of funds. Elements that force the curia to move Guidolinin another location, and for the occasion the church Madonna del Riparo is located, right in Bronte.]

CRONACA – Dalle fine del 2016, e sino a qualche mese fa, il sacerdote accusato di abusi su minorenni era stato inviato dalla curia diocesana nella città del pistacchio. Dove i fedeli si dicono oggi «spiazzati» da quanto scoperchiato dai magistrati. Non diceva messe, soltanto qualche omelia: «Era pure bravo», raccontano

Tanto silenzio e parole pronunciate con il contagocce. A Bronte, il giorno dopo l’arresto di padre Pio Guidolin, tra i fedeli a prevalere è l’incredulità. In tanti sono rimasti spiazzati osservando la foto del sacerdote finita su tutti i giornali nella giornata di ieri. Accusato, dai magistrati della procura di Catania, di avere compiuto abusi sessuali su alcuni minorenni durante l’incarico nella chiesa Santa Croce nel quartiere Villaggio Sant’Agata. Un periodo, quello nella parrocchia periferica nel capoluogo etneo, con diverse ombre, compresa quella sulla gestione economica dei fondi. Elementi che costringono la curia a spostare Guidolin in altra sede, e per l’occasione viene individuata la chiesa Madonna del Riparo, proprio a Bronte. Il religioso arriva nella città del pistacchio a fine 2016 e ci rimane per diversi mesi del 2017.

«Non ha mai celebrato la messa, ma lo vedevo sull’altare», racconta a MeridioNews un fedele, che preferisce rimanere anonimo. Guidolin durante il suo esilio forzato a Bronte è stato affiancato nella chiesa guidata da padre Vincenzo Bonanno, con funzioni di assistente durante le celebrazioni religiose, senza occuparsi di somministrare i sacramenti. «Ha fatto qualche predica, ed era pure bravo. Con un linguaggio giovanile e netto», conclude il parrocchiano. Lungo le strade del centro pedemontano tutti si dicono spiazzati dal coinvolgimento dell’uomo in questa storia ma in pochi hanno davvero voglia di parlare. «È stato ospita a casa mia e non mi sarei mai immaginata una cosa del genere», aggiunge una donna.

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CHURCH REVEALED FOR ALL ITS ‘HYPOCRISY AND SELF-INTEREST, SAYS AUSTRALIAN ABUSE COUNCIL HEAD

AUSTRALIA
The Tablet

December 5, 2017

By Mark Brolly

‘The damaged credibility of the Church because of the abuse scandal affects all Catholics’

Church revealed for all its ‘hypocrisy and self-interest, says Australian abuse council head
Francis Sullivan, the chief executive of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council that was set up to coordinate the Catholic Church’s response to the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse, has said the Church “has scandalised the faithful and those who rely on it as a moral compass and prudent guide”.

He made the statement in his regular blog, after speaking to the Australian bishops’ plenary meeting in Sydney last week. The Royal Commission’s final report, to be delivered on 15 December, will make recommendations that aim to support and inform the Australian government, institutions and the general public in preventing and responding to child sexual abuse in institutional contexts.

In the blog Mr Sullivan said the Council was charged to operate for the “life of the Royal Commission”. “That time is rapidly running out,” he said. “As part of our advisory role we will provide the church leadership with our own take on what these last five years have revealed and what the implications for the Church are contained within the Commission’s findings and recommendations.”

However, before the report is released he had a harsh message for bishops and religious leaders. They must commit he said to a future that is not characterised by a “business as usual” mentality. “They cannot fall prey to those reactionary interests within and without the Church who jump at any shadow and too quickly cast any public criticism of the Church as yet another shot across the bow of religious freedom,” he warned.

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FORMER AMPLEFORTH HEADMASTER TRIED TO ‘CONTROL’ INVESTIGATION INTO CHILD SEX ABUSE, INQUIRY TOLD

ENGLAND
The Tablet

December 5, 2017

By Rose Gamble

Ampleforth did not have means, understanding or the ‘basic willingness’ to deal with child protection matters up until 2006, former social worker says

The national inquiry into child abuse has heard that police raised concerns that a former headmaster of Ampleforth college was “trying to control” an investigation into child sex abuse.

A north Yorkshire police detective asked if Father Leo Chamberlain, headmaster of the Catholic boarding school between 1992-2004, “interfered with the police investigation” by speaking to a victim of alleged abuse before informing the police.

These concerns were raised at the start of the second week of a hearing on the English Benedictine Congregation as part of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA). The Catholic Church is one of 13 organisations being examined by the inquiry, which is led by Prof Alexis Jay.

The inquiry heard details of a report from a Detective Sergeant Harnett, who was involved in investigating allegations at Ampleforth in the 1990s. In the report, he said that Fr Chamberlain had had a telephone conversation with the parents of the alleged victim, after which it was confirmed that the child would not give an account when questioned.

Giving evidence via video link on Monday 4 December, Fr Chamberlain, who worked at the school for over 30 years, told the inquiry: “There was no skulduggery before I put him on the telephone.”

“My responsibility is precisely to tell the parents, he added. “It made no obstruction to any police investigation.”

Police concerns that he had attempted to control the investigation were “completely subjective,” he told the inquiry.

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Melbourne archdiocese had culture of secrecy to protect Church interests, new report says

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The Catholic Leader

December 5, 2017

By Mark Bowling

THE Archdiocese of Melbourne allowed paedophile priests to abuse scores of children, according to a report released by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The report, which describes “a culture of secrecy” inside the Melbourne archdiocese, was released on December 5, just 10 days before the Commission’s final report is due to be handed down.

It found former Melbourne Archbishop Frank Little, who headed the archdiocese from 1974 until 1996, “sought to protect the archdiocese from scandal and liability and prioritised the interests of the Church over those of the victims”.

The Commission found Archbishop Little lied about the resignation of priests accused of child abuse, concealed ongoing financial assistance to some accused priests and moved others between parishes.

Sections of the Commission report that appear to deal with Cardinal George Pell who succeeded Archbishop Little as leader of Melbourne’s Catholics are redacted.

Cardinal Pell will face a four-week committal hearing next March as he fights sexual offence allegations. He denies the allegations.

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Former Melbourne Catholic archbishop failed to protect kids: inquiry

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Illawarra Mercury

December 5, 2017

A former Melbourne Catholic archbishop failed to protect children from a priest despite numerous complaints as he sought to avoid scandal to the church, a royal commission has found.

Archbishop Frank Little’s inaction over Doveton priest Fr Peter Searson left children at risk of harm, including sexual harm, and had catastrophic human consequences, the child abuse royal commission said.

“We are satisfied that there was a prevailing culture within the Archdiocese, led by Archbishop Little, of dealing with complaints internally and confidentially to avoid scandal to the church,” its report released on Tuesday said.

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Damning report condemns former Archbishop for failing children

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The New Daily

December 5, 2017

By Lucie Morris-Marr

Among the worst of it was a letter. It was dated August 20, 1984.

The Archbishop of Melbourne at the time, Frank Little, whose role would later be succeeded by the ambitious George Pell, wrote telling parishioners that he would not be investigating allegations of abuse by a priest as requested. He felt it was “improper”.

It was down to them to approach the priest, Father Peter Searson.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has issued a damning final report into “case study 35” on the Archdiocese of Melbourne exposing the culture of secrecy and failures.

In particular they singled out Archbishop Little, who died in 2008, for “abjectly failing to protect the safety of children” and leaving them at risk of “catastrophic human consequences”.

“Complaints were dealt with in a way that sought to protect the Archdiocese from scandal and liability and prioritised the interests of the Church over those of the victims,” the royal commission report said

The report said Archbishop Little, who headed the Archdiocese from 1974 to 1996, dismissed or ignored serious allegations of child sexual abuse against a number of priests including Searson who terrorised children.

And despite the long list of allegations against Searson, Archbishop Little then appointed him in 1984 as the parish priest at Doveton where complaints continued to be made.

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Melbourne Archdiocese put church interests first with catastrophic consequences: royal commission

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

December 5, 2017

By Nicole Asher

The former Melbourne Catholic Archbishop Frank Little led a culture of secrecy to protect the interests of the church ahead of abuse victims, the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse has concluded.

A report released by the royal commission today details how Archbishop Little covered up abuse allegations and moved offending priests to other parishes, where they continued to offend.

The report follows public hearings last year, where the royal commission was told of abuse allegations against seven priests in the Melbourne Archdiocese, including Father Peter Searson.

Father Little moved Father Searson from the Sunbury Parish after a string of allegations in the decade to 1984, including accusations he raped a woman, and threatened a girl with a knife.

He was moved to Doveton Parish where he continued to be the subject of complaints.

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Psychotic gun-wielding priest had free rein to abuse children and torture animals for years

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
International Business Times

December 5, 2017

By Ewan Palmer

– Report finds former Melbourne archbishop Thomas Francis Little “ignored” allegations against Father Peter Searson.
– Archbishop moved Searson from parish after string of sexual assault allegations against priest.
– Searson found to have pointed gun at children and killed bird with screwdriver in front of them.

The former Melbourne Catholic Archbishop has been heavily criticised for failing to act on allegations of rape, sexual misconduct and animal torture against priests in order to protect the Church from scandal, an inquiry has found.

Archbishop Thomas Francis Little, who headed the Archdiocese from 1974 to 1996, was found to have dismissed or ignored serious allegations against a number of priests, even moving some alleged abusers to other parishes where they continued to offend.

A report from the child sex abuse royal commission focussed on the allegations against one priest in particular, Father Peter Searson, in relation to his conduct in the parishes of Doveton and Sunbury.

Among the allegations that Archbishop Little ignored were that Searson had raped a woman in 1974, made a “sexual advance” to a child in the confessional, sexually assaulted several boys and girls, conducted sex education classes with students in his bedroom and heard how some parishioners would not allow their children to be alone with him.

As well as other concerns raised to Little about Searson’s “unpleasant, strange, aggressive and violent” behaviour, there were also two instances in which he was said to have tortured animals in front of children, including stabbing a bird to death with a screwdriver, pointing a gun at some children and showing a dead body to some altar boys.

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