ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

October 12, 2017

Indonesian bishop resigns amid embezzlement, affair accusations

RUTENG (INDONESIA)
Catholic News Agency/EWTN

October 11, 2017

An Indonesian prelate resigned Wednesday as Bishop of Ruteng amid mounting concerns surrounding an alleged mistress and reportedly stolen funds.

Bishop Hubertus Leteng, 58, was accused of borrowing $94,000 from the Indonesian bishops’ conference, as well as $30,000 from the Diocese of Ruteng.

Leteng said the money was being used to fund a poor youth’s education, although he failed to give any further details or information, according to Ucanews. He was additionally criticized for reportedly taking a mistress – an allegation which Leteng called “slanderous.”

In June, more than 60 priests of the diocese resigned from their assignments in protest of Leteng’s administration of the diocese.

A year earlier, 112 of the diocese’s 167 priests had signed a letter of no confidence in Leteng, citing their suspicions of financial mismanagement and incontinence.

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.

Indonesia bishop resigns in finance, mistress scandal

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press via Washington Post

October 11, 2017

[Note: See the earlier UCAnews reports Vatican investigates bishop’s money, alleged mistress and Vatican investigator wraps up cash, mistresss probe. See also Catholic Hierarchy’s entry on Bishop Hubertus Leteng.]

A Roman Catholic bishop in Indonesia has resigned following reports that he had a mistress and siphoned off more than $100,000 in church funds.

Pope Francis on Wednesday accepted the resignation of Bishop Hubertus Leteng of Indonesia’s Ruteng diocese. The Denpasar bishop, Monsignor Sylvester San, will run the diocese until a permanent replacement is found, the Vatican said.

Local Indonesian media and the Ucanews agency, which covers the Catholic Church in Asia, reported that dozens of priests resigned en masse in June to protest Leteng’s administration.

The Vatican sent an investigator to look into their allegations that Leteng had a mistress and secretly borrowed $94,000 from the Indonesian bishops’ conference and another $30,000 from the diocese without accounting for it.

According to Ucanews, Leteng said the money was used to finance the education of a poor youth, though he declined to provide details. He called allegations he had a relationship with a woman “slanderous.”

The Vatican didn’t address the scandal or explain why Leteng was retiring early. The Ruteng diocese made no mention of the allegations in its announcement of Leteng’s departure Wednesday. Bishops normally submit their resignations when they reach age 75. Leteng is 58.

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.

23 Women Accuse Former Queens Priest of Abusing Them as Children

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

October 11, 2017

By Sharon Otterman

A former teacher at a Catholic school in Queens who said she had reported the sexual abuse of seven female students by a priest in 1991 now claims that the Diocese of Brooklyn covered it up for more than a decade, allowing more girls to be abused.

The teacher, Linda Porcaro, said on Wednesday that she is coming forward now because the victims, on whose behalf she was speaking, are ready to seek justice. Over the last two months, 23 women who said they were abused by the former priest, Adam Prochaski, have become clients of the lawyer, Mitchell Garabedian, who was portrayed in the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight,” about clergy sex abuse. Most of the women’s claims have been referred to the police.

Mr. Prochaski was based at Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church in Maspeth for nearly 25 years. He is accused of abusing the girls between 1972 and 1994, when they were between the ages 5 and 16.

In New York State, no criminal or civil litigation can take place for most child sex abuse crimes after a victim turns 23. But an exception can be made for rape. The New York Police Department was investigating whether any of the recent allegations qualify for prosecution, a spokeswoman for the Queens district attorney’s office 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.

October 11, 2017

A leading advocate for survivors of childhood sexual abuse is Penn’s latest ‘professor of practice’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Daily Pennsylvanian

October 10, 2017

By Lucy Curtis

Marci Hamilton, a 1988 Penn Law School graduate and a leading advocate for survivors of childhood sexual abuse, has just been hired as Penn’s third “professor of practice” in the Robert A. Fox Leadership Program in the College, according to an announcement by the University.

Practice professors are subject matter experts from outside of the world of academia, brought in to teach real-world applications of theory. The position is non-tenured and involves a term of three years for an associate practice professorship and five years for a full professorship.

Hamilton, who is also a scholar on church-state relations, will be teaching a seminar on law, religion and politics.

“I loved going to Penn’s law school — it was a formative part of my career and it’s nice to be back,” Hamilton said. She formerly served as the Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University.

Hamilton is the founder, CEO and academic director of CHILD USA, the first research-based nonprofit think tank dedicated to preventing child neglect and abuse. Hamilton has dedicated her professional life to supporting victims of abuse. She is also the author of the Pulitzer Prize-nominated book, “Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children.”

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.

Las Cruces Youth Pastor Accused of Child Sexual Exploitation

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
The Associated Press via U.S. News & World Report

October 10, 2017

Federal authorities say a youth pastor from Las Cruces is facing child sexual exploitation and pornography charges.

They say 30-year-old Stephen Mendoza Arellano made his initial appearance Tuesday in federal court in Albuquerque.

He’s being held on a criminal complaint charging him with attempted production of child pornography, enticement of a child to engage in sexual activity, and travel to meet a minor to engage in sexual conduct.

Prosecutors say the alleged crimes occurred between May and August of this year and involved a 15-year-old girl in El Paso, 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.

Dark Canyon: Trust and Betrayal in the Northern New Mexico Church

NEW MEXICO
KSFR (Santa Fe Public Radio)

October 11, 2017

By Ellen Berkovitch, Rita Daniels & Hannah Colton

[See also earlier features in KSFR’s Dark Canyon investigation: Sexual Abuse and Secrecy in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe. Part 1; and A Follow-Up Interview with Bishop Accountability President.]

For the second feature-length installment of our series, our reporters go to Northern New Mexico where Catholicism has been a central part of life for centuries, since the Spanish conquest of New Mexico. The list of 74 credibly accused priests, brothers and deacons released by the Archbishop last month names more than a dozen priests who served the parishes in the Taos area.

St. Francis de Asis church in Ranchos de Taos is Rita Daniels begins the story. Ellen Berkovitch picks up from there with an exposition of all that is known about the 22-year of Father Michael P. O’Brien in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe.

Listen [Link to Audio]

Next time when our series continues… One of the priests whom the Brad Hall law firm calls one of the most prolific abusers, Fr. Sabine Griego—is still alive. He’s been laicized but he’s still living in Las Vegas NM among many of the people who reported him for abuse.

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.

Australia’s top bishops visit Vatican for talks on restoring trust

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service via National Catholic Reporter

October 10, 2017

By Carol Glatz

The top leaders of the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference and chair of the church’s Truth, Justice and Healing Council met with Vatican officials to discuss issues emerging from national investigations into the abuse of minors.

“Topics covered included the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, the relationship between the church and society at large, the restoration of trust, and greater participation of the laity in decision-making roles in the church,” the Vatican press office said in a written communique Oct. 7.

The bishops’ delegation met Oct. 5 with Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state; Archbishop Paul Gallagher, Vatican foreign minister; Cardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops; and Archbishop Giacomo Morandi, secretary for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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.

Liberal Hollywood destroys any credibility it had left

UNITED STATES
Conservative Review

October 11, 2017

By Steve Deace

In the immortal words of the great prophet Dave Chappelle, “You played yourself.”

From this time forward, when any insipidly sanctimonious Hollywood star comes forward to lecture us on Marxist agitprop masquerading as do-gooderism, the rest of America that does most of the living and dying around here can simply dismiss such virtue signaling with the following two words: “Harvey Weinstein.”

How ironic is it that in 2016, Hollywood deservedly awarded its coveted Best Picture award to the fantastic movie “Spotlight,” about the journalistic quest to break the long-hidden child abuse scandal within the Catholic Church — when many, too many, of those in attendance at the Oscars that evening were knowingly concealing a sexual predator of their own, masquerading as a movie mogul.

In fact, the “Los Angeles Times” wrote a feature about those 2016 Oscars and how rare it was for the “Diet Coke swigging, chain-smoking master” (as they described Weinstein) to be shut out from Hollywood’s biggest night. Absent from that piece was any mention of how Weinstein turned the already infamous casting couch into his personal hunting ground.

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.

London priest ‘sex abuse victim’ had ‘nightmares’

ENGLAND
BBC

October 11, 2017

An alleged victim of a senior Roman Catholic priest has told a court he was haunted by “nightmares” of the sex abuse he suffered as a boy.

Laurence Soper, 74, the abbot of Ealing Abbey from 1991-2000, was headmaster and senior priest at St Benedict’s School in Ealing, west London.

He is on trial at the Old Bailey where he denies 19 charges of child sex abuse against 10 boys between 1970 and 1980.

The boys allege they were subjected to sexual touching and beaten with a cane.

The witness told the court he would get “flashbacks” and “nightmares” about Mr Soper.

“It’s a nightmare that is waking me up at the moment. I wake up absolutely soaking in sweat and the bed is wet,” he 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 Byrnes still needs approval from Rome to sell RMS property

GUAM
Pacific News Center

October 11, 2017

By Janela Carrera

Archbishop Byrnes has indicated that the property could be worth between $2 million to $7 million.

While the closing of the disputed Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Yona may be a done deal, the sale of the property isn’t yet a guarantee.

Last week, Archbishop Michael Byrnes announced that, in consultation with various church organizations, such as the College of Consultors, the Archdiocesan Finance Council and the Presbyteral Council, the RMS will be closing down by the end of December.

Archbishop Byrnes also acknowledged that the closure of the seminary is being done, in part, in anticipation of the sale of the property next March or April. The funds will then be used to settle dozens of sex abuse claims filed against the church in court.

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.

Priest acquitted in rape case, Court rejects woman’s claims

NEW DELHI (INDIA)
The New Indian Express

October 11, 2017

Refusing to rely on the statement of a woman that she was raped and assaulted by a temple priest, a Delhi court has acquitted him observing that things do not appear to have happened the way they were projected.

Additional Sessions Judge Sanjiv Jain said though in rape cases conviction can be made on the sole testimony of the victim, in this case the woman’s statement was “exaggerated” and led to doubts on the veracity of her evidence. Therefore, it is not safe to rely on her “uncorroborated version”.

The court relied on the priest’s version that he was assaulted by the woman on an assumption that he had a role in breaking the engagement of her son.

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.

Lawsuits: Brouillard took advantage of ‘childhood and innocence’

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

October 11, 2017

By Mindy Aguon

[See also the entry for Brouillard in the database of accused U.S. priests on BishopAccountability.org.]

Four new clergy sex abuse lawsuits, seeking a total of $25 million in damages, were filed in the Superior and District Courts in the last week against Louis Brouillard, the Archdiocese of Agana and Boy Scouts of America. Brouillard took advantage of the altar boys’ “childhood and innocence,” court documents state.

Three cases filed by attorney Michael Berman on behalf of his clients, F.M., P.P. and R.G., in the Superior Court of Guam seek $5 million in damages each.

The alleged abuse occurred while Brouillard was a priest at the San Isidro Catholic Church in Malojloj, San Vicente Church in Barrigada and the Tumon parish in the 1970s.

F.M., who is now 49, alleges he was subjected to sexual abuse by Brouillard when he served as an altar boy at the Barrigada and Tumon parishes when he was 10 to 17 years old.

The lawsuit alleges Brouillard forced F.M. to shower with him and sexually abused the boy on church grounds, during Boy Scout swimming outings and in Beroun, Minnesota, where the priest relocated after leaving Guam.

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.

Commentary:Vatican’s Double Standard on Child Abuse

VATICAN CITY
ChurchMilitant.com

October 10, 2017

By Bradley Eli, M.Div., Ma.Th.

Clerical sex abuse will continue until Church confronts problem of homosexual bishops and priests

Critics are noting Rome’s apparent double standard in addressing child abuse in the wake of last week’s Vatican-sponsored, three-day conference on child pornography, while seemingly protecting a priest who’s wanted for allegedly trafficking in child porn.

At issue is the Vatican’s use of diplomatic immunity to shield from civil prosecution a priest, Msgr. Carlo Alberto Capella, who’s wanted by Canadian officials for his alleged involvement in child porn. Capella, a Vatican diplomat formerly stationed in D.C., was abruptly removed from his post when charges surfaced alleging he downloaded child pornography.

Canadian officials accused Capella of downloading child porn from a parish computer over Christmas last December. After U.S. authorities brought up similar charges in August, Capella was immediately recalled to Rome. The Vatican refuses to come forward with any information on the case and refuses to extradite Capella for civil prosecution. The Vatican is investigating the case and may try Capella in ecclesiastical court.

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

St. Louis priest settles part of civil case against accuser and SNAP

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

October 10, 2017

By Robert Patrick

A Roman Catholic priest has settled part of a federal lawsuit he filed against the mother of a boy who accused him of abuse, the group that supported the accuser and police, court filings Tuesday say.

In a filing in U.S. District Court in St. Louis, a lawyer for the Rev. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang wrote that the case had been settled with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, and SNAP officials, and that Jiang and the mother of his former accuser had “reached an agreement in principle.”

The formal dismissal of that part of the case should be filed before Oct. 23, Jiang’s attorney Neil Bruntrager wrote.

Bruntrager declined to comment Tuesday. Lawyers for SNAP did not return messages seeking comment.

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.

Convicted priests still getting pensions and medical benefits

LOUISVILLE (KY)
wave3.com

October 10 2017

By Connie Leonard

[See also the entry for Hemmerle in the database of accused U.S. priests on BishopAccountability.org.]

Louisville area priests convicted of molesting children in a court of law are still getting money and benefits from the Catholic Church.

What message is it sending?

Victims of priest abuse maintain that’s a question parishioners should be asking their Catholic church leaders, to make sure their children and others are protected.

Priests, like Father Joseph Hemmerle, may deny heinous acts against children. “I’m innocent of all these charges,” Hemmerle told a judge after being convicted by a Meade County jury.

Victims say that’s what makes them so dangerous.

“As far as I’m concerned, the guy is a huge threat to other children,” said Hemmerle molestation victim Michael Norris. Norris recently found out that because the crime occurred when he was 11, before 1980, the old rules apply and Hemmerle will be eligible for parole in 2018.

“I think it’s absurd,” Norris said. But he contends what’s more absurd is that even though Hemmerle is a twice convicted pedophile, the Archdiocese of Louisville hasn’t begun the process to remove him.

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

Matt Flynn announces gubernal candidacy

MADISON (WI)
The Daily Cardinal

October 10, 2017

By Will Husted

Former Wisconsin Democratic Party Chairman Matt Flynn announced Tuesday he will run against Gov. Scott Walker in 2018.

A former lawyer for the Quarles and Brady firm, Flynn looks to reverse the fortune of past campaigns for public office. Flynn encountered unsuccessful bids for the U.S. Senate in 1986 and 1988 and for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1978 and 2004.

Flynn announced his candidacy in a video in which he states he “cannot stand by and watch our democracy be destroyed,” adding that “Scott Walker is destroying the Wisconsin way.” He additionally asserted that Walker is controlled by “big, strong corporate donors” and that Walker has been “taken to the cleaners” in the $3 billion Foxconn deal.

Flynn joins a long list of Democratic hopefuls in gubernatorial campaigns that include State Superintendent Tony Evers, businessman Andy Gronik, government reform advocate Mike McCabe, state Sen. Kathleen Vinehout, D-Alma, and state Rep. Dana Wachs, D-Eau Claire.

Spokesperson for the Republican Party of Wisconsin Alec Zimmerman has called Flynn a “dirty defense lawyer” who supports interests that “prey on Wisconsin families.”

“Flynn’s record [of] strong-arming victims of sexual abuse proves Wisconsin families cannot trust him,” Zimmerman said in a statement, referencing a sexual abuse case Flynn worked on for the Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee.

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.

Chief judge grants Apuron’s request for more time in sex abuse cases

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 11, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com

U.S. District Court Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood on Wednesday granted Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron’s request for more time to file his objection to a recommendation that sex abuse lawsuits filed against Apuron by former altar boys should not be dismissed.

Four lawsuits alleged that Apuron sexually abused or raped altar boys in the 1970s while Apuron was the parish priest in Agat. They are among 131 clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed so far in local and federal court, and Apuron is the only one that’s not pursuing mediation and out-of-court settlement.

Apuron’s original deadline to file an objection was Oct. 11, but the chief judge extended the filing deadline up to Oct. 25 as Apuron requested.

Attorney Jacqueline Terlaje, counsel for Apuron, asked for additional time, citing complex constitutional law issues that District Court Magistrate Judge Joaquin Manibusan addressed in his Sept. 27 report and recommendation.

Manibusan recommended that the chief judge not to dismiss the lawsuits against Apuron because the claims are not time-barred and do not infringe upon the archbishop’s due process rights.

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

October 10, 2017

Condenan a profesor por abusar de dos niños

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

October 10, 2017

Read original article

El docente deberá pasar cuatro años tras las rejas. En tanto, un sacerdote fue sobreseído acusado de tener relaciones íntimas con una menor.

Un profesor de música fue condenado a cuatro años de prisión por el delito de abuso sexual en perjuicio de dos menores de edad, mientras que un sacerdote fue sobreseído porque no fueron probadas las acusaciones de corrupción hechas en su contra por una adolescente. 

Claudio Alvarez, profesor de música en el jardín de infantes 901 de la localidad bonaerense de Vicente López, fue condenado a cuatro años de prisión al probarse la materialidad en dos de las denuncias de abuso sexual contra alumnos de 3 y 4 años. 

El fallo, tras un mes y medio de juicio, fue dictado hoy por el Tribunal Oral 4 de San Isidro, integrado por los jueces Federico Ecke, Osvaldo Rossi y Carlos Santillán y el secretario Pablo Rolón, tras la pruebas presentadas por la fiscal Gabriela Baigún. 

En octubre de 2000, cuatro padres denunciaron en la justicia que el profesor de música del jardín de infantes de Vicente López había abusado sexualmente de sus hijos, que entonces tenían entre 3 y 4 años. 

A partir de esa fecha se iniciaron las investigaciones del caso, que terminaron en el juicio oral en el que Alvarez fue representado por el abogado particular Carlos Adrián. 
Tras las pruebas presentadas los jueces
 encontraron a Alvarez culpable de los delitos, al comprobarse en forma material el abuso sexual contra dos chicos, y lo condenaron a cuatro años de prisión más accesorias y costas. 

En tanto, el sacerdote Luis Anguita, del Colegio Franciscano Tierra Santa de esta capital, que había sido acusado por una alumna de haber mantenido relaciones íntimas cuando tenía 13 años, fue sobreseido por la justicia. 

Fuentes judiciales señalaron a Télam que en la investigaciones realizadas contra el sacerdote “nada de la denuncia se pudo probar”. 

El sobreseimiento fue dictado por el juez de instrucción Julio Lucini, quien aseguró que el expediente no afectó el “buen nombre y honor” del religioso. 

El magistrado ordenó además extraer testimonios del expediente y enviarlos a la Cámara del Crimen, para que se investigue si la joven incurrió en el delito de “falsa denuncia”. 

La causa se había iniciado en setiembre pasado, cuando la denunciante aseguró que conoció al sacerdote cuando éste se desempeñaba como Prefecto de Disciplina en el colegio, y ella tenía 13 años. 

La joven enumeró una larga serie de episodios de tintes escabrosos y pasionales e incluso aseguró haber estado embarazada de Anguita, hecho que no fue constatado durante la instrucción de la causa. 

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.

Another sex abuse lawsuit filed against church

GUAM
PNC News First

October 10, 2017

By Janela Carrera

As the Archdiocese of Agana continues to wait on word regarding the fate of Archbishop Anthony Apuron, more lawsuits are being filed against them.

The latest lawsuit was filed in District Court by a 49-year-old man with the initials H.A.W. who claims he was molested by former Guam priest and Boy Scout Scoutmaster Louis Brouillard.

H.A.W. says it happened in the late 1970s when he was between the ages of 8 and 10 years old. While H.A.W. and other altar boys waited for CCD classes to start, the lawsuit states Brouillard would invite them over to the convent and sexually assault them.

H.A.W. is being represented by Attorney David Lujan and is seeking $10 million in damages.

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.

Sacerdote denunciado por acoso sexual enfrentará juicio oral

PARAGUAY
Paraguay.com

[Priest denounced for sexual harassment will face oral trial: The case of the parish priest accused of sexual harassment of a young woman in the youth ministry, will go to oral and public trial, by resolution of the Court of the city of Limpio.]

El caso del cura párroco acusado de acoso sexual a una joven de la pastoral juvenil, irá a juicio oral y público, por resolución del Juzgado de la ciudad de Limpio.

October 5, 2017

La jueza Elsa Ydoyaga, encargada del proceso, con base a todos los antecedentes recabados de ambas partes, tomó la decisión de elevar el caso a juicio oral y público, que fue tomada con conformidad por parte de la víctima, así como del acusado.

El Padre Silvestre Olmedo estuvo acompañado de una gran masa de feligreses que afirman que el hecho no ocurrió y que en esta instancia se podrá demostrar su inocencia. Así también, un grupo de mujeres realizó una manifestación fuera del Juzgado mientras se resolvía la dirección que tomaría el proceso, según reporta Última Hora.

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.

Cura va a juicio oral y público

PARAGUAY
ABC

October 5, 2017

[Google Translate: The case of the priest Silvestre Olmedo, who is accused of allegedly harassing a young woman, was brought to trial by the judge Elsa Idoyaga. The judge determined that there are elements to bring the case to trial.]

El caso del sacerdote Silvestre Olmedo, quien es acusado de supuestamente acosar a una joven, fue elevado a juicio oral y público por la jueza Elsa Idoyaga. La magistrada determinó que existen elementos para llevar la causa a juicio.

Luego de la audiencia preliminar, la jueza Elsa Idoyaga informó esta mañana sobre la decisión de elevar a juicio oral y público el caso del sacerdote Silvestre Olmedo, expárroco de Limpio. La imputación de coacción sexual contra el religioso tiene una expectativa de pena de 10 años de cárcel.

Idoyaga manifestó que el Ministerio Público rechazó la pericia psicológica que solicitó la defensa técnica debido a que la joven no puede ser doblemente victimizada. La defensa planteó sobreseimiento definitivo, pero la magistrada analizó y determinó que sí existen elementos para elevar la causa a juicio oral por el hecho punible de acoso sexual, informó la corresponsal Rocío Portillo.

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.

‘He took my innocence’: Victims describe toll of ex-bishop’s abuse

PROVO (UT)
Deseret News

October 10, 2017

By McKenzie Romero

Mapleton man sentenced to up to 20 years in prison

PROVO — When they turned to their LDS bishop as vulnerable teenagers, two young men told a judge Tuesday that they instead became victims of a sly sexual predator who isolated them from their families and left them buried beneath guilt.

Erik Hughes, 51, was sentenced to at least one and up to 20 years in prison Tuesday, ordered to serve concurrent terms of one to 15 years for two counts of forcible sexual abuse, a second-degree felony, followed by a consecutive term of up to five years for witnesses tampering, a third-degree felony.

A recommendation for the sentence was agreed upon when Hughes pleaded guilty as charged in August, just two months after his arrest. A spokesman for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has said Hughes was immediately removed from his position when the allegations became known.

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.

Priest withdrew money and ‘went on the run in Albania after being accused of sexually abusing schoolchildren’

ENGLAND
The Daily Mail

October 10, 2017

By Abe Hawken

Father Laurence Soper, 74, was a former abbot of Ealing Abbey in west London

Soper then skipped bail and flew to Kosovo when he was accused of sex offences

It is claimed the Catholic priest caned pupils to give himself a thrill at the school

A Roman Catholic priest withdrew £182,000 from his Vatican bank account and went on the run in Albania after he was accused of sexually abusing schoolchildren in the 1970s and 1980s, a court heard.

Father Laurence Soper, 74, a former abbot of Ealing Abbey in west London, skipped bail and flew to Kosovo when he was accused of sex offences including buggery and indecent assault on boys under 16, it is 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.

Number Of Abuse Allegations Against Queens Priest Are Growing

NEW YORK
WCBS-880 (CBS Radio)

October 10, 2017

The number of sexual abuse allegations against a Catholic priest in Queens is growing.

Twenty-three women now say the former Rev. Adam Prochaski abused them as children when he served at the Holy Cross parish in Maspeth from the early 1970s to the mid 1990s.

The alleged victims are being represented by Mitch Garabedian who was portrayed by actor Stanley Tucci in the Oscar-winning 2015 film “Spotlight.”

He believes the Brooklyn Diocese covered it up.

“There’s no doubt in my mind he was open and notorious,” he told WCBS 880. “He would sexually abuse children in the hallways.”

The parish has a large Polish congregation and Garabedian said many of these victims were first generation immigrants.

“I’ve heard that Father Prochaski used to help children get into the country and once they got into the country he sexually abused them,” Garabedian said. “He had a scheme going on and the supervisors were turning their backs and it was all about secrecy.”

Prochaski was suspended in 1994 and left the priesthood in 1995, but the official Catholic directory shows he was absent or on sick leave through 2002.

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.

Bullies among clergy caused fall of Catholic Church in Ireland, says priest

REPUBLIC OF IRELAND
The Irish Times

October 10, 2017

By Patsy McGarry

Bullies among clergy contributed most to fall of Catholic Church in Ireland, says priest

A general failure exists to respect individual in Rome and within religious congregations

The bullying of the people by some clergy played a greater role in Catholic church decline in Ireland than clerical child sexual abuse, a leading Dominican priest has said.

“They had little or no respect for individual people – and not just for minors,” said Fr Tom Jordan, editor of Spirituality magazine.

Referring in the current issue to a remark by an unnamed “acute observer of the church in Ireland,” he said “the failure of the church in recent times was due not so much to the abysmal behaviour by some clergy in sexually abusing minors but that some clergy were bullies.”

One of the glaring deficiencies of church practice in recent times was the failure of leadership to respect the individual.

“Consider the number of priests silenced or removed from office because of their expressed views, and without being afforded an opportunity of defending themselves.”

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Wisconsin gov. candidate Matt Flynn defends his work on priest abuse cases

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

October 10, 2017

By Daniel Bice

As he made his formal announcement to run for governor, former Democratic Party Chairman Matthew Flynn defended himself against charges that he was overly aggressive in representing the Archdiocese of Milwaukee against victims of sexual abuse by priests.

Specifically, Flynn came under attack for moving to collect $4,000 in legal fees from an alleged victim who lost his case. Also, Flynn is accused of telling a lawyer for several abuse victims that the archdiocese would “throw a crumb to your clients if you drop these cases.”

“Baloney!” Flynn said in response to the “crumbs” statement in an interview after his announcement in Glendale on Tuesday. “I never said that.”

Flynn is one of eight Democrats seeking to challenge GOP Gov. Scott Walker next year.

This week, Peter Isley, Midwest director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, called into question whether Flynn should be running for the state’s highest political post.

Isley said the primary duty of any governor is the protection and safety of all state residents, especially children. But Isley said Flynn’s record doesn’t suggest he would be the best person to do this.

“For some fifteen years, Matt Flynn was the chief corporate lawyer for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee during the height of the widespread and systematic cover up of thousands of sex crimes against children by dozens of sex offender priests,” Isley said.

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Comenzó en Río Negro el juicio a un cura acusado de abuso sexual

GENERAL ROCA (ARGENTINA)
El Diario

October 6, 2017

[Google Translate: The trial of a priest accused of sexual abuse began in Rio Negro, in the city of General Roca. The parish priest was accused of sexually abusing a minor … in 2010, when the victim was 14 years old and the parish priest, Juan José Urrutia, was at the head of the Santa Catalina Parish of Allen.]

El cura párroco acusado de abusar sexualmente de un menor de edad comenzó a ser enjuiciado a en los tribunales de la ciudad rionegrina de General Roca. El proceso se llevó a cabo a puertas cerradas.

Si bien sobre el caso existe un fuerte hermetismo judicial, se supo que el hecho juzgado habría ocurrido en el 2010, cuando la víctima tenía 14 años de edad y el cura párroco, Juan José Urrutia, estaba al frente de la Parroquia Santa Catalina de Allen. Al religioso se le imputa el delito de abuso sexual con acceso carnal por aprovechamiento de la inmadurez sexual de la víctima.

Trascendió además que durante el proceso no habrá querella. La acusación está a cargo del fiscal, Andrés Nelli. La defensa del sacerdote acusado tendrá el patrocinio de los abogados Jorge Crespo y Guillermo Leskovar Garrigós. Según dio a conocer el Diario Río Negro, en la lista de testigos citados a declarar en el juicio figuran varios vecinos de Allen. También trascendió que la víctima y su familia se fueron de Allen hace ya un tiempo.

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Santa Sede suspende a sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual contra 15 mujeres en Constanza

SANTO DOMINGO (DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)
El Nuevo Diario

October 6, 2017

[The Holy See has suspended Juan Manuel Mota de Jesus (“Jhonny”), a priest accused of sexual abuse against 15 girls and women in Constanza.]

La Santa Sede despojó de sus atribuciones como sacerdote al padre Juan Manuel Mota de Jesús “Jhonny”, acusado de abuso sexual contra 15 mujeres en el municipio de Constanza, en La Vega.

La información fue ofrecida por el canciller del obispado local de La Vega, reverendo Fausto García, a un programa de televisión de Santiago, quien manifestó que la Santa Sede tomó la decisión tras ponderar las denuncias de 15 mujeres la cuales sostienen que fueron abusadas sexualmente por el sacerdote.

Las violaciones las habría llevado a cabo el suspendido cura mientras se desempeñaba como párroco de la iglesia principal del municipio de Constanza.

En el marco de una entrevista, el reverendo Fausto García manifestó que desde hace varios días, desde la Sede del Vaticano al país llegó una comunicación suspendiendo al cura.

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New CCCB President outlines vision for future

CANADA
Vatican Radio

October 9, 2017

Bishop Lionel Gendron of Saint-Jean-Longueuil was elected President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) at the end of September.

Bishop Gendron, who will serve a two-year term, has been vice president of the CCCB since 2015.

He spoke to Linda Bordoni about the main points discussed during the plenary during which he was elected and about his vision for the Church in Canada in the years to come. [Link to audio] …

… Another important theme at the plenary, Bishop Gendron explained, are the issues pertaining to the request for an apology by Canada’s ‘Truth and Reconciliation Commission’ (TRC) regarding the First Nations and the question of the residential schools, most of which were run by the Catholic, Anglican and United Churches.

Gendron explained that the TRC is asking different things from different Churches and the Catholic Church has been responding.

“One of the requests of the TRC is the visit of the Pope to Canada (within the year) to ask forgiveness for what has been done in the residential schools” Gendron explained, pointing out that this is not easy because in Canada one is liable to be sued for something like this.

So, he said “right now – the spirit is always working in the Church – there is a new shift, a new vision: instead of being there to respond to the TRC, and instead of answering the government that is insisting on that point, our mission is not to answer the TRC or the government, but to answer according to the Gospel”.

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Pope Urges Global Response to Protect Children From Pornography, Online Abuse

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

October 9, 2017

By Edward Pentin

[See also the full text of the Pope’s remarks.]

Four-day ‘Child Dignity in the Digital World’ conference brought religious and secular experts together to tackle a host of digital threats.

In the face of extensive online threats to minors, especially internet pornography easily accessible to millions of children worldwide, Pope Francis has cautioned against a sense of paralysis, urging leaders from various sectors to “join forces” to find the “right means and approaches needed for effective responses.”

Speaking Oct. 6 to a group of religious and secular experts from around the world in Rome to attend a four-day conference on the theme “Child Dignity in the Digital World,” the Pope said, “We have to keep our eyes open and not hide from an unpleasant truth that we would rather not see.

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Second boy claims priest brought him to Minnesota for sex abuse

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 10, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com

[See also the entry for Brouillard in the accused priest database on BishopAccountability.org.]

Four new clergy sex abuse lawsuits were filed in local and federal court, including one by a second former altar boy who said priest Louis Brouillard paid for his summer trip to Minnesota and sexually abused and molested him.

The lawsuit states that Brouillard forced the boy to engage in sexual activity with another boy during the trip.

The plaintiff, identified in court documents only as F.M. to protect his privacy, said in the complaint that Brouillard sent for him and his friend.

Brouillard, now 96 and is living in Minnesota, was a Catholic priest on Guam from 1948 to 1981.

F.M.’s friend, with the initials F.S.L. based on court documents, filed a lawsuit Sept. 26.

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Catholic Church struggles to erase stain of child sex abuse

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
October 7, 2017

By Santiago del Carril

Pope Francis admits the Church has not done enough to tackle the abhorent acts commited by some members of the clergy. The Vatican and the Argentine Synod say they are taking steps to tackle the problem. But survivors, victims and experts warn that some inside the Church are resistant to change and that many cases still go unreported.

In the Roman Catholic Church, they can no longer ignore the elephant in the room.

Growing public awareness of sex abuse offences committed by members of the clergy – in part aided by bombshell cases that have revealed scandalous attempts to cover-up the crimes and critically acclaimed movies addressing the topic, such as Spotlight – is piling pressure on the Church’s leaders, forcing them to act.

Yet experts consulted by the Times warn that some inside the Church remain resistant to change and that many abuse cases still go unreported.

Both the Vatican and locally, the Argentine Synod (Argentine Catholic Episcopal conference), have said they are taking steps to combat the rape and molestation of victims by members of the clergy, forming commissions to create policies on how to investigate these cases, protect minors and future potential victims.

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Australian Church Facing Biggest Crisis in Its History, Says Brisbane Archbishop

ROME (ITALY)
The Tablet

October 9, 2017

By Christopher Lamb

The archbishop said the Church had been ‘shaken to the core’ by the abuse scandal and today was being called to a ‘greater authenticity’

A leading Australian bishop says the Church in his country is facing the biggest crisis in its history after taking part in talks with the Vatican over how to address the problem.

The Archbishop of Brisbane, Mark Coleridge, who is Vice President of the Australian Bishops’ Conference, told The Tablet that he and fellow bishops were in Rome to discuss the fallout of the clerical sexual abuse crisis, and how the Church will adopt a new approach. This, he says, will look at how to include women in positions of “governance”.

High on the agenda at the Vatican summit was Australia’s Royal Commission inquiry into how institutions handled child sexual abuse. This has seen the Catholic Church facing unrelenting criticism for its response to the scandal. The problem has been magnified after the Australian police’s decision to charge Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican treasurer and former Archbishop of Sydney, with historic sexual offences.

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Equality loophole ‘allows culture of abuse’ at church

ENGLAND
The Times

October 9, 2017

By Kaya Burgess

The Church of England should be stripped of its exemptions under the Equality Act to help it to stamp out a culture of abuse, homophobia and sexism, a serving bishop has said.

Under the 2010 act, the church as a religious institution has special permission to insist that those it appoints are Christians, but can also discriminate over sex, sexuality, marital history and gender identity if they conflict with “strongly held religious convictions”.

These exceptions should be scrapped, the Bishop of Buckingham has told The Times, for the established church to adhere to the law of the land. This includes allowing priests to conduct same-sex weddings, he said.

The Right Rev Dr Alan Wilson, 62, also set out seven failings in the church’s safeguarding policies, warning that despite “good intentions” they did not provide survivors with enough protection from abuse.

The Archbishop of Canterbury faced a protest from sexual abuse victims outside Canterbury Cathedral last week.

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Legionaries of Christ chief reveals his two children

ROME (ITALY)
The Australian

October 10, 2017

By Tom Kington

[Note: See also the Legionaries’ announcement and Turrión’s letter.]

A powerful order of Catholic priests hit by revelations that its founder had a secret family and abused children has now ­admitted that the head of its Rome seminary is the father of two children.

The Legionaries of Christ said Father Oscar Turrion, a 49-year-old Spaniard, would leave the priesthood.

It released a letter in which the priest asks “forgiveness for the scandal … forgiveness for my bad example and the negative witness I have given”.

The order said Father Turrion, who supervised men studying for the priesthood in Rome, was replaced after he admitted in March that he had a daughter.

Last week he confessed that he had also had a son with the same woman but had kept quiet due to “weakness and shame”.

He had not used church funds to support his family, he added, relying on donations from friends.

The priest said he had “lost his grounding” and started a family at the time when the first scandal emerged involving the order’s founder, Father Marcial Maciel, having fathered children.

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Expert ‘shocked’ at lack of awareness about online abuse

ROME
Catholic News Agency

October 9, 2017

By Elise Harris

(CNA/EWTN News).- At the close of a Rome conference on child protection online, a leading expert in the field said that while the statistics are well-known, he was surprised by the lack of awareness about the problem.

He added that all sectors of society need to take a more pro-active approach to the difficulty.

“If you study this field and if you work in it, you know about the numbers. I am more amazed about the lack of realization in many people about the scale of the problem about which we speak,” Fr. Hans Zollner SJ told CNA Oct. 7.

President of the Pontifical Gregorian University’s Center of Child Protection (CCP) and a member of Pope Francis’ commission for the protection of minors, spoke to CNA at the close of a four-day conference on “Child Dignity in the Digital World.”

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Number of women accusing Catholic priest of sexual abuse rises to 23

QUEENS (NY)
New York Daily News

October 9, 2017

By Graham Rayman

The number of women alleging they were abused as children by a Catholic priest in Queens has swelled to 23, the Daily News has learned.

The accusers of former Rev. Adam Prochaski, ranging in age from 39 to 57, say the priest abused them in the Holy Cross parish in Maspeth between 1972 and 1994. The women were between 11 to 16 years old when the abuse allegedly took place.

Mitchell Garabedian, their lawyer, said he’s been contacted by women now living in six states, as well as Canada and London. When he first came forward with the allegations, there were 15 accusers.

“Many of them claim he abused them for years in the school, the church, the rectory, and some were abused in his car,” Garabedian said.

“The police are investigating this matter. I have forwarded many of my clients’ names to them and I am informed they are interviewing my clients.”

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October 9, 2017

The next domino falls: Rockville Center NY

CORONA DEL MAR (CA)
The Worthy Adversary

October 8, 2017

By Joelle Casteix

The Catholic Diocese of Rockville Center, NY has announced an Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Plan. These plans, administered by Ken Feinberg and funded by the individual dioceses, aim to compensate victims for abuse. You can read more about them in my four-part series here.

Victims of sexual abuse in the Long Island Catholic diocese of Rockville Center began receiving letters last week. I predicted this back in July.

Like the other plans in the Archdiocese of New York and the Diocese of Brooklyn, victims receiving letters are in “phase one.” These are men and women who have previously come forward to the diocese to say that they were sexually abused.

Rockville Center, however, is a very unique place.

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Der Pädophiliefall „Anneke“ in Belgien

GREVEN (GERMANY)
Katholisches: Magazin für Kirche und Kultur

October 3, 2017

By Ferdinand Boischot

[Summary: Review of the case of “Anneke” a survivor of abuse perpetrated in 1995 at St. Idesbald, a special school in Roeselare, Belgium, run by the Broeders van Liefde (Brothers of Love). Brother Emiel Ceustermans, who was accused of the abuse, was sentenced in 1999 and died soon thereafter. The case unfolded against the background of the Dutroux affair. The article also summarizes subsequent events, including the cases of Cardinal Danneels, Abbot André Vanderlyn, and Abbot Robert Borremans (misidentified as Roger).]

Anneke war ein leicht geistig behindertes Mädchen aus Westflandern (Belgien), 8 Jahre alt, das in die Sonderschule St. Idesbald der karitativen Kongregation Broeders van Liefde (Brüder der Liebe) in Roeselare zur Schule ging.

Der Fall „Anneke“

In November 1995 merkte ihre Mutter (Frau Ria C.) plötzlich schwere Verhaltensauffälligkeiten. Anneke wurde sehr traurig, grundlos aggressiv gegenüber ihren Geschwistern, hatte Unterleibsschmerzen, bekam eine Vaginitis, litt plötzlich unter Bettnässen und hatte ausgeprägte Angst vor der Schule.

Das Mädchen wurde ärztlich und psychologisch untersucht, ohne Anhaltspunkte für eine innere Krankheit oder familiale Störungen.

Anneke wurde in den nächsten Wochen noch verstörter und ängstlicher und fing plötzlich an, ihre Mutter immer wieder über den Phallus zu befragen. Ihre Mutter wurde hellhörig.

Anneke vertraute sich ihrer Mutter an. Bei einem Gang über den Schulhof, an der Hand der Mutter, zeigte sie eindeutig den 78-jährigen Bruder Emiel Ceustermans, als Übeltäter an.

Ceustermans war im Alter von 12 Jahren als „Juvenist“ zur Kongregation gekommen. Er trat der Ordensgemeinschaft bei und war langjähriger Erzieher in den Sonderschulen der Broeders van Liefde. 1993 ging er in den Ruhestand und arbeitete als Gärtner an der Schule des MPI (Medizinisch-Psychologisches Institut) St.-Idesbald in Roeselare.

Die Mutter nahm sofort Kontakt mit dem Schuldirektor, Broeder Herman, auf, der abwimmelte. Der Direktor speiste die Mutter ab mit der Aussage: „Liebe Frau, Kinder fantasieren und die Eltern fantasieren mit“.

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Fabian Vordermayer ist nicht mehr Pater

BADEN BEI WIEN (AUSTRIA)
meinBezirk

October 6, 2017

[Translation: Dr. Fabian Vodermayer can no longer call himself “Father”. He was expelled from the Benedictine Order of the Melk Abbey. Once he was a popular priest in Traiskirchen, later he was condemned for sexual abuse by a minor, which he still fights to this day. In September his book Merciless appeared.]

Traiskirchen/Melk – Dr. Fabian Vodermayer darf sich nicht mehr als “Pater” bezeichnen. Er wurde aus dem Benediktiner-Orden des Stiftes Melk ausgeschlossen. Einst war er ein beliebter Priester in Traiskirchen, später wurde er wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs eines damals Minderjährigen verurteilt, was er bis heute bekämpft. Im September erschien sein Buch “Gnadenlos”.

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Up to 50 witnesses could be called for Cardinal George Pell’s committal hearing

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

October 6, 2017

By Adam Cooper and Tom Cowie

Up to 50 witnesses could be called and a “voluminous” amount of evidence discussed when Cardinal George Pell, Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic official, faces a committal hearing next year on charges of historical sex abuse.

Cardinal Pell, 76, who has vigorously denied all allegations of sexual abuse, returned to Melbourne Magistrates Court on Friday for a 20-minute administrative hearing.

The court was told 50 witnesses could be called at a four-week committal hearing – which will determine whether he stands trial – which is due to start on March 5.

Some witnesses will be former choirboys and are to be cross-examined over what allegedly happened in St Patrick’s Cathedral.

In legal discussion, the cardinal’s high-profile defence barrister Robert Richter, QC, said the prosecution case comprised “an awful lot of witnesses”, and said the amount of evidence was “voluminous”.

Cardinal Pell was charged in June with historical sexual offences involving multiple complainants. Details of the charges are yet to be revealed.

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Woman sexually abused by school chaplain awarded 210,000 Euros

BLACKPOOL (CORK, EIRE)
Irish Examiner

October 9, 2017

By Ann O’Loughlin

A 28-year old woman who was sexually abused by a school chaplain and teacher in the South East over a period of two years has been awarded €200,000 by the High Court.

Mr Justice Robert Eagar also commended the bravery of the woman in bringing her claim as he awarded a further €10,000 in aggravated damages.

He found the former chaplain had wrongfully physically and sexually assaulted, falsely imprisoned and sexually abused the woman who was only a transition year student at secondary school when the abuse began.

* * *

In the case which lasted 34 days the woman gave evidence of how between 2005 and 2007 she was abused and subjected to sexualised behaviour by the Catholic chaplain and teacher in her secondary school.

She said on a school trip to Gambia when she was 16 years of age, the chaplain invited her and another student to sleep in his bed with him. She said the chaplain first kissed her after she turned 17 and the sexual element between them progressed and they had oral sex about 35 times.

On a youth trip to Cologne, Germany to see the Pope, she said they had oral sex and also in the chaplain’s school office, his bedroom, car and the school oratory.

The woman had also sued the school in the South East where the man was a chaplain at the time.

She also sued the local bishop.

Mr Justice Eagar, finding the school vicariously liable, said the failure of the school to adequately monitor the behaviour of the chaplain allowed for the inappropriate relationship to develop into an abusive relationship.

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Priest held for sexually abusing minor girl inside church in Kerala

CHENNNAI (TAMIL NADU, INDIA)
The Hindu Business Line

October 9, 2017

A Kerala priest was arrested today for allegedly sexually abusing a 10-year-old school girl inside a church, police said.

The crime took place yesterday when the victim had gone to the church for taking Bible lessons, they said.

The accused, Fr Devaraj (65), of Kandanthitta CSI church will be produced before a magistrate later in the evening.

A case under POCSO (Prevention of Children from Sexual Offences) Act and section 376 of IPC (rape) has been registered against the priest, police said.

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Church ‘failed’ over Sussex abuse priest Jonathan Graves

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

Concerns about a former Church of England priest who tortured and sexually abused two boys in Sussex were first raised two decades ago, a BBC investigation has revealed.

Jonathan Graves, of Eastbourne, was jailed last month for sex offences in the 1980s and 1990s. He was arrested in 2013 and charged in 2015.

One mother said she raised concerns in 1997 but the church did nothing.

The church said bishops would meet to examine the issues raised by the BBC.

The woman who reported Graves, said: “They let me, my children, and countless other families down.”

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Irish missionary priest calls for foreign travel ban on paedophiles

DUBLIN (EIRE)
Irish Times

October 8, 2017

Irish missionary priest calls for foreign travel ban on paedophiles
Nobel Peace Prize nominee says ‘international and Irish sex tourists… coming here raping our children’

A four-time Nobel Peace Prize nominee has called on developed countries to ban paedophiles and suspected sex offenders from foreign travel in the same way as suspected terrorists.

Father Shay Cullen, an Irish missionary who has been rescuing street children in the Philippines since 1974, said hundreds of thousands of sex tourists travel to the country from Europe, including the UK and Ireland, the US and Australia.

The Columban priest missed out on the Nobel prize last week, but praised the decision to award it to a campaign for the abolition of nuclear weapons.

“The whole moral fabric of society and protection of human rights and the dignity of women and children is breaking down,” Fr Cullen said.

“One thing right now I would say to any government is to pass a law that would ban all convicted sex offenders from travelling abroad. That would be a very good thing they could do.”

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Ireland to be first in Europe to cancel passports of paedophiles

BLACKPOOL (CORK, EIRE)
Irish Examiner

October 7, 2017

By Nick Bramhill

Ireland is on course to become the first country in Europe to cancel the passports of convicted paedophiles in a bid to prevent them travelling overseas to offend again.

Earlier this year Australia became the first country in the world to introduce strict legislation to clamp down on sex offenders leaving or attempting to go abroad.

Now Ireland looks set to follow with draft legislation expected to be introduced later this month, which would pave the way for this country becoming the first European nation to make it illegal for convicted paedophiles to travel overseas.

The campaign is being spearheaded by Fr Shay Cullen, the Nobel Peace Prize-nominated Irish missionary who runs the PREDA child abuse charity in the Philippines.

The Dublin-born priest said a move to prevent registered sex offenders from travelling abroad would particularly benefit developing nations, such as the Philippines, where sex tourism and child prostitution are rife.

He said: “It is a grievous crime for anyone to travel abroad to commit child abuse. Legislation was passed in Australia, but we want other countries to follow, and Ireland to take the lead in the EU on this.

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October 8, 2017

Recent rector of a Legionaries of Christ-run seminary fathered two children

ROME (ITALY)
Catholic News Agency/EWTN

October 6, 2017

[Note: See also the Legionaries’ announcement and Turrión’s letter.]

The Legionaries of Christ announced Friday that Fr. Óscar Turrión, who was of the Pontifical International College Maria Mater Ecclesiae until earlier this year, has fathered two children and intends to leave priestly ministry.

Fr. Turrión had been rector of the seminary since 2014, and a formator there since 2007.

“As those responsible for an institutions that is dedicated to the formation of candidates to the priesthood, we are conscious of the impact that the negative example of a formator and rector has on them and the Christian faithful,” the Legionaries said in an Oct. 6 statement.

“We are deeply saddened that the recent history of our congregation has quenched the fervor of some of our members. We are firmly committed to accompanying our brothers in moments of difficulty. Likewise, we reiterate our commitment to the path of renewal that we continue to follow led by the Church.”

Mater Ecclesiae was founded in 1991, and is operated by the Legionaries of Christ.

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Pope names Florida priest auxiliary bishop for Orange, California

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

October 6, 2017

Pope Francis has appointed Father Thanh Thai Nguyen, a priest of the Diocese of St. Augustine, Florida, to be an auxiliary bishop in the Diocese of Orange, California.
The appointment was announced in Washington Oct. 6 by Msgr. Walter Erbi, charge d’affaires at the Vatican’s nunciature in Washington.

Born in Vietnam, Bishop-designate Nguyen, 64, fled the country in 1979 by boat with his family and spent 10 months in a refugee camp in the Philippines before arriving in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1980. After brief studies at Hartford State Technical College, he became a math and science teacher in Hartford public schools.

In 1984, he joined the Missionaries of Our Lady of La Salette, studying at Merrimack College and the Weston School of Theology, both in Massachusetts. He was ordained to the priesthood May 11, 1991.

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Letter from Mary F. McMahon Regarding the Rockville Centre Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Diocese of Rockville Centre via Newsday from Attorney Mitchell Garabedian

October 2, 2017

By Mary F. McMahon

[Note: This posting provides an easier download of a PDF of the letter, previously posted by Newsday and included on Tracker.]

As Victim Assistance Coordinator for the Diocese of Rockville Centre, I understand the sensitivities of people who have survived abuse. With that in mind, I am writing to advise you of the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program the Diocese of Rockville Centre (“DRVC”) will be initiating in the upcoming weeks (the “DRVC IRCP”). This letter will provide you, in advance, with information you may find helpful when the program is announced.

As you may recall, in October 2016, the New York Archdiocese implemented its IRCP; a two-phase program for survivors of clergy sexual abuse. This past June, the Brooklyn Diocese made its IRCP available. The DRVC is now preparing to offer, in October 2017, the DRVC IRCP to survivors of sexual abuse by DRVC clergy. As the DRVC prepares for the initial phase of the DRVC IRCP, I want to advise you of some details of this program in order to provide you with certain important information and in the hope of allaying any concerns you may have.

Later in October, shortly after the DRVC announces the program, you will receive information in the mail, including instructions for submitting a claim, from the administrators of the program: Mr. Kenneth Feinberg and Ms. Camille Biros. This information will be sent to you because at some time in the past a report of inappropriate sexual conduct by a member of the DRVC clergy was made to the DRVC and your name was associated with this report. Please be assured that your participation in this program is completely voluntary and, subject only to the special circumstances that will be clearly outlined in the DRVC IRCP Protocol (such as any required reporting to the appropriate District Attorneys’ offices), will be kept strictly confidential All information any claimant provides on the claim form will be mailed directly by the claimant to Mr. Feinberg’ s office.

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Lawsuit: Abuse occurred in 2006

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

October 7, 2017

By Mindy Aguon

A 23-year-old former altar boy is the latest victim to come forward alleging he was sexually abused by a Capuchin brother assigned to the Agana Heights parish in 2006.

J.C.M.P., who used initials to protect his identity, filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Agana, the Capuchin Friars and Vernon Kamiaz.

The lawsuit alleges that Kamiaz sexually abused J.C.M.P. when he was 12 years old. Kamiaz allegedly was a Capuchin brother who was actively involved with training the altar boys.

One day after Mass, Kamiaz asked J.C.M.P. and his brother to help him clean up around his house, according to the lawsuit. The complaint states J.C.M.P. agreed because they looked up to Kamiaz as a trusted mentor and friend and he was also a friend of the family.

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$50M suit filed against ‘sexually violent’ ex-priest Daniel McCormack

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

October 6, 2017

A lawsuit filed Thursday in Cook County Circuit Court seeks more than $50 million in damages from convicted child molester and defrocked priest Daniel McCormack and the Archdiocese of Chicago.

The plaintiff, identified only as John Doe, developed a “trust relationship” with McCormack while playing on a basketball team the pastor coached at St. Ailbe School, 9037 S. Harper Ave., according to the suit. After graduating in 1998, the plaintiff continued playing basketball at St. Agatha’s Parish, 3147 W. Douglas Blvd., where McCormack was a pastor.

The suit alleges that McCormack sexually assaulted John Doe on one occasion —sometime between 1998 and 2000. The plaintiff didn’t recall the sexual abuse until the summer of 2017, according to the suit, which claims his memories were repressed and/or suppressed.

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$50M Lawsuit Filed Against Former Chicago Priest

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press via U.S. News and World Report

October 6, 2017

A lawsuit seeking more than $50 million in damages has been filed against the Archdiocese of Chicago and a former priest who was convicted of child molestation.

The lawsuit filed Thursday says the alleged victim developed a “trust relationship” with Daniel McCormack while playing on a basketball team he coached. The lawsuit alleges that McCormack sexually assaulted the person, identified only as “John Doe,” on one occasion, sometime between 1998 and 2000. It says memory of the abuse had been repressed until this summer.

The lawsuit also alleges that the archdiocese was aware of McCormack’s sexual misconduct, but still ordained him.

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Rector of Legion-run seminary leaving after fathering 2 kids

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press via Washington Post

October 7, 2017

By Nicole Winfield

The Legion of Christ religious order, stained by revelations that its founder sexually abused seminarians and fathered several children, is facing a new credibility scandal: The rector of its diocesan seminary in Rome is leaving the priesthood after admitting he fathered two children of his own.

In a letter released by the Legion on Saturday, the Rev. Oscar Turrion said he fell in love with a woman a few years ago during a time of turmoil in the Legion, fathered a son and, a few months ago, a daughter.

Turrion, a 49-year-old Spaniard, had been rector of the Pontifical Maria Matter Eclesiae International College since 2014. The institution is a residence for diocesan seminarians who study at Rome universities. Currently some 107 seminarians live there, most from India, Latin America and Africa, down from about 200 a few years ago.

The issue is particularly delicate given the international diocesan character of the seminary: Bishops entrusted their seminarians to the Legion to provide them with a wholesome living environment while they completed their studies.

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Communiqué regarding the former rector of the Pontifical International College Maria Mater Ecclesiae

ROME (ITALY)
Legionaries of Christ

October 6, 2017

[Note: Includes link to an English translation of Fr. Óscar Turrión’s letter.]

1. Given the publication of news regarding the former rector of the Pontifical International College Maria Mater Ecclesiae, Fr. Óscar Turrión, LC, we offer the following chronology of events. Fr. Óscar has written a personal letter in which he acknowledges the fact that he has
fathered children, apologizes, and requests prayers.

2. On March 27, 2017, Fr. Óscar Turrión informed the superiors that he had just had a
daughter and asked them to maintain confidentiality. Upon learning of this, his superiors
proceeded to ask the Holy See to appoint a new rector of the seminary, who began his term
in August.

3. For his part, Fr. Óscar asked permission to live for a time outside of community to reflect
and pray. His major superior granted this permission, according to the can. 665 of the Code
of Canon Law, with the restriction of not exercising public priestly ministry.

4. On October 5, 2017, Father Óscar Turrión acknowledged that he had had another child
with the same woman a few years ago. He also expressed his intention to leave priestly
ministry and to ask for the dispensation from the obligations contracted with ordination.

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Nuevo escándalo en los Legionarios de Cristo

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
El Sol de México

October 7, 2017

Nuevo escándalo en los Legionarios de Cristo: rector de seminaristas tiene dos hijos
El reverendo español Oscar Turrión confesó ser padre de dos hijos y dejará el sacerdocio

By Jorge Sandoval G.

[Summary: Report on the removal of Fr. Óscar Turrión LC from leadership of the Legionaries’ Rome seminary, College Maria Mater Ecclesiae, because he had fathered his second child. This article provides useful canonical and other detail.]

Rome – Nuevo escándalo en los Legionarios de Cristo. El deplorable ejemplo del padre Marcial Maciel, fundador de esta Congregación creada en México en 1941, al parecer sigue cundiendo entre los miembros de esta orden religiosa, no obstante el periodo de “purificación” impuesto por el Papa Benedicto XVI, de frente al que fue considerado un escándalo sin precedentes en la historia moderna de la Iglesia católica. Maciel abusó sexualmente de seminaristas y tuvo varios hijos.

Ahora el protagonista es el reverendo español Oscar Turrión, de 49 años, rector en Roma del prestigioso Pontificio Colegio internacional “Mater Ecclesiae”, quien confesó ser padre de dos hijos.

Marcial Maciel abusó sexualmente de seminaristas y tuvo varios hijos. Foto: Reuters
He aquí la cronología de los hechos, según un comunicado de los Legionarios de Cristo:

El pasado 27 de marzo, Turrión informó a sus superiores que “acababa de tener una hija”, solicitando permiso “para vivir un tiempo fuera de la comunidad para reflexionar y orar”.

En base al canon 665 del código de Derecho Canónico, sus superiores se lo concedieron, pero “con la restricción de no ejercer el ministerio sacerdotal en público”.

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Legionaries of Christ hit by new scandal as priest fathers two

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

October 7, 2017

By Philip Pullella

The Legionaries of Christ, a Catholic religious order which fell into disgrace after the discovery that its founder was a sexual abuser with a secret family, has been hit by fresh scandal with revelations that the head of its Rome seminary fathered two children.

The order said in a statement late on Friday that Father Oscar Turrion would leave the priesthood. It also released a letter by Turrion in which he asks “forgiveness for the scandal … forgiveness for my bad example and the negative witness I have given”.

The Legionaries is a conservative order of Roman Catholic priests. Turrion was rector of the Pontifical International College Maria Mater Ecclesiae, a seminary for men in the order studying for the priesthood in pontifical universities in Rome.

The Legionaries said Turrion, a 49-year-old Spaniard, told his superiors in March that he had just had a daughter. A new rector was appointed and Turrion was ordered not to practice his ministry publicly.

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October 7, 2017

Celebrated Church of England bishop accused of child abuse ‘will have his good name restored’ by an inquiry

ENGLAND
The Daily Mail

October 7, 2017

Official review will criticise Church investigation into Bishop George Bell
Bishop Bell was praised for speaking out against Hitler in the 1930s
But Church said he has sexually assaulted a child on the ‘balance of probabilities’

A celebrated bishop whose reputation was destroyed when the Church of England labelled him a paedophile is set to have his good name restored, The Mail on Sunday has learned.

An official review of the handling of abuse allegations against the late Bishop George Bell will criticise the original Church investigation as flawed and unfair, it is understood.

Bishop Bell the wartime Bishop of Chichester who died in 1958, was praised for speaking out against Hitler in the 1930s – and he was granted the Anglican equivalent of a Saint’s Day, an annual commemoration.

But to the fury of devotees, his character was blackened when the Church declared two years ago that ‘on the balance of probabilities’ he had sexually assaulted a child in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

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Utah quietly withdraws from FLDS UEP Trust fund

SALT LAKE CITY (UTAH)
Deseret News

October 6, 2017

By Pat Reavy

Utah has quietly withdrawn from the $110 million United Effort Plan trust of the Fundamentalist LDS Church.

Saying that the state’s “objectives have been achieved,” the Utah Attorney General’s Office on Friday confirmed that it had removed itself from the UEP Trust, which holds most of the property and homes in the twin border towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona.

The UEP Trust was created by the FLDS Church in 1942 on the concept of a “united order,” allowing followers to share in its assets. But the state of Utah seized control of it in 2005 amid allegations of mismanagement by FLDS Church leaders including Warren Jeffs, who was later convicted of child sex abuse and is serving a life prison sentence in Texas.

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Capuchin brother accused again in clergy abuse lawsuit

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 6, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

A lawsuit filed Friday in federal court states that clergy sex abuse on Guam happened as recently as 2006 or 2007, when former Capuchin brother Vernon Kamiaz allegedly molested an Agana Heights Parish altar boy.

Most of the clergy abuse suits filed so far – nearly 130 – allege children were abused decades ago, from the mid-1950s to the early 1990s.

The plaintiff, identified in court documents only as J.C.M.P. to protect his privacy, said in his lawsuit that Kamiaz was actively involved with training altar boys at the Agana Heights Parish and was also his neighbor and family friend.

J.C.M.P. was 12 or 13 when the alleged sex abuse happened, his lawsuit states. He is now 23.

J.C.M.P. is represented by attorney David Lujan and demands $5 million in minimum damages.

Attorney Gloria L. Rudolph, of the law firm of Lujan and Wolff, confirmed that J.C.M.P. is the youngest to file a clergy abuse suit.

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‘The Keepers’: Baltimore news station uncovers lost video that could answer questions about case

BALTIMORE (MD)
9 WCPO-TV

October 6, 2017

By Christian Schaffer, Scripps National Desk

(WMAR) – A video that could hold vital answers to questions posed in Netflix’s true crime documentary “The Keepers” has been found in the archives of a Baltimore newsroom.

Journalists at WMAR in Baltimore — one of our sister stations— have uncovered video of Catholic Church documents being dug up at a local cemetery in 1994. The video, which shows black plastic bags and papers at the bottom of the a deep hole in a Baltimore cemetery, confirms the existence of documents discussed on “The Keepers,” and gives new insight into what Father Joseph Maskell hid amid accusations of sexual abuse.

“The Keepers” investigates the murder of Sister Cathy Cesnik — a teacher at Archbishop Keough High School who was killed in 1970. It also looks into allegations of sexual abuse by Maskell, a former chaplain at the school.

According to “The Keepers,” Maskell ordered dozens of boxes of documents to be buried at a local cemetery in 1990 — documents that activists say contained proof of sexual abuse of minors.

In August of 1994, the boxes were dug up. The WMAR video shows that among the documents that were buried is a version of the “Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory,” or MCMI.

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Australian bishops at Vatican discuss ‘restoring trust’

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

October 7, 2017

A delegation of top Australian bishops held meetings at the Vatican this week to discuss topics including the “restoration of trust” in the country where its senior Catholic Church figure is facing allegations of historical sexual offences.

The Vatican disclosed the meetings in a statement on Saturday, a day after Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican’s economy minister, attended a hearing in Melbourne over the allegations.

Pell, who has denied all accusations against him, has taken a leave of absence from his Vatican post to defend himself in his native Australia.

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Compensation for uprooting indigenous children: Canada to pay $640m

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Agence France-Presse via The Daily Star

October 8, 2017

An estimated 20,000 indigenous children taken from their families starting in the 1960s and placed for adoption or fostering will share in a Can$800 million (US$640 million) payout, the government announced Friday.

The so-called “Sixties Scoop” saw them placed with primarily white middle-class families in Canada, the United States and overseas.

In recent years, as the children grew into adults and became aware of their past, several lawsuits and class actions were filed over their loss of aboriginal identity, claiming in court documents that it resulted in psychiatric disorders, substance abuse, unemployment, violence and suicides.

“People affected by the ’60s Scoop have told us that the loss of their culture and language are among the worst kinds of harm that they suffered,” Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett told a press conference, flanked by Scoop survivors.

“That is why our government is responding directly to remedy the ill-advised (policies) of the past.”

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With new information, new questions arise in Aurora priest sex abuse case

AURORA (IL)
Aurora Beacon-News / Chicago Tribune

October 7, 2017

By Hannah Leone

[See the entry for Pedraza-Arias in BishopAccountability.org’s database of accused priests.]

New disclosures are raising questions in the case of an Aurora priest charged with sex abuse whose trial has been repeatedly delayed while he faces deportation.

“I know the state wants to keep this trial on the calendar,” Kane County Circuit Judge Linda Abrahamson said Friday. “But this recent disclosure is like an atomic bomb.”

Alfredo Pedraza-Arias, 51, has pleaded not guilty to multiple counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse, which allege that he sexually abused two girls at Aurora’s Sacred Heart Church between 2012 and 2014, when both girls were younger than six. He appeared in custody in the courtroom Friday, along with his attorney, David Camic; Assistant State’s Attorney Reagan Pittman; a representative from the Rockford Diocese; and a Spanish translator.

Abrahamson said the trial, slated for November, may be affected by whether lawyers have access to a man who investigated the case for the Kane County Child Advocacy Center.

New material disclosed last week includes notes about interviews the investigator conducted that weren’t turned in when they should have been, Camic said.

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Pope Francis commits the church to protect children from abuse in the digital world

VATICAN CITY
America

By Gerard O’Connell
October 6, 2017

Pope Francis today committed the Catholic Church to work “effectively and with genuine passion,” in close association with lawmakers, police authorities, technological giants in the field of social communications and other actors in civil society, for “the effective protection of the dignity of minors in the digital world.”

He offered this commitment in the Vatican’s Clementine Hall when he addressed the 140 participants from the first world congress on “Child Dignity in the Digital World” that was held at the Jesuit-run Pontifical Gregorian University, Oct. 3 to 6.

He did so in response to its “Declaration of Rome,” a 13-point call to action, which was read to him at the audience by Muireann O’Carroll, a 16-year-old Irish girl, representing the “digital natives” generation.

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Victims seek justice for former Maspeth priest’s sex abuse

MASPETH (QUEENS NY)
Queens Times Ledger

October 6, 2017

By Mark Hallum

Up to 15 victims have come forward accusing a former Maspeth parish priest of sexual abuse.

A former Maspeth priest is under investigation for the sexual assault of up to 15 girls between 1973 and 1994 with the help of Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who was depicted in the film “Spotlight. Additional women are coming forward.

During the time Father Adam Prochaski was with Holy Cross parish school at 61-21 56th Rd. , Linda Porcaro, a teacher who was close to the matter and the whistleblower in the case, claims the priest had assaulted numerous girls between the ages of 5 and 16 and was known to use physical intimidation on the boys in the school.

“He was mean and intimidati­ng,” Porcaro said in an interview with TimesLedger. “He was very large, he towered over me … He was about 6-foot-4, he wasn’t slim, He wasn’t overweight, but he was built and to a child that’s already very intimidating. I know he was rough with the boys, I saw him with the boys.”

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Hiding reality of sexual abuse a grave mistake, Pope acknowledges

VATICAN CITY
Agence France-Presse via ABS-CBN News

October 7, 2017

Pope Francis on Friday urged the world, including the Catholic Church, to face up to the devastating effects of online sexual violence on young people, including extreme pornography and sexting.

“We have to keep our eyes open and not hide from an unpleasant truth that we would rather not see,” Francis said at a gathering of technology executives and health professionals at the Vatican.

Alluding to the pedophile scandals that have rocked the church, he added: “For that matter, surely we have realized sufficiently in recent years that concealing the reality of sexual abuse is a grave error and the source of many other evils?”

In a speech about protecting the dignity of children in the internet era, Francis warned of the spread of extreme pornography, sexting and online bullying as well as sexual exploitation, trafficking and the live-streaming of rape and violence against children.

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Four-week court hearing for Cardinal Pell

MELBOURNE
AAP (Australian Associated Press)

October 6, 2017

A four-week hearing in March will determine if Cardinal George Pell stands trial over historical sexual offence allegations involving multiple complainants.

As many as 50 witnesses will give evidence during a hearing that will determine if Cardinal George Pell stands trial on historical sexual offence charges.

The highest-ranking Catholic official to be charged with sexual abuse has appeared in court for the second time, again for a brief administrative hearing in the Melbourne Magistrates Court.

The case will return to the same court for a four-week committal hearing beginning on March 5.

A magistrate will then decide if Pell stands trial in the Victorian County Court over the charges involving multiple complainants.

The defence will argue some of the allegations, those involving Melbourne’s St Patrick’s Cathedral, could never have happened.

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Suburban NY Diocese Plans Compensation in Sex Abuse Cases

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Associated Press

October 7, 2017

A Roman Catholic diocese in suburban New York is creating an independent compensation program for people who were sexually abused by priests.

Newsday reports the Diocese of Rockville Centre on Long Island sent letters this week to people who previously have filed complaints.

The diocese is the eighth largest in the United States with an estimated 1.4 million Catholics.

The compensation program will be modeled after ones established in the Archdiocese of New York and the Diocese of Brooklyn during the past year.

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

Rockville Centre’s program could involve dozens of cases of alleged abuse, some dating back decades.

___

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Former Catholic priest facing trial accused of 19 historic sex abuse charges at Ealing school

ENGLAND
GetWestLondon

October 4, 2017

By Emily Pennink and Katherine Clementine

Father Laurence faces 19 historical sex charges, including beating with a cane

A former Catholic priest in Ealing has gone on trial for allegedly sexually abusing a string of pupils at a boy’s school.

Andrew Soper, known as Father Laurence, faces 19 historical sex charges relating to 10 former pupils at St Benedict’s School.

The 74-year-old former abbot has denied the offences of indecent assault, indecency with a child, and buggery allegedly committed in the 1970s and 80s.

The boys, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, were subjected to sexual touching and beaten with a cane, according to the charges.

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This victim was sent to live with a priest as punishment. Then the priest molested him.

GUAM
Pacific News Center

October 5, 2017

By Janela Carrera

The lawsuit names former priest Father Andrew Mannetta.

Guam – Another sex abuse complaint was filed in Superior Court against the Archdiocese of Agana, naming former Guam priest Father Andrew Mannetta as the alleged perpetrator.

The lawsuit is brought by a a 46-year-old man with the initials G.E.J. who claims Father Mannetta sexually abused him when he was about 14 years old at the San Miguel Church in Talofofo.

According to the complaint, G.E.J.’s parents sent him to live with Father Mannetta because he was rebelling against his parents.

G.E.J. says that on several occasions Father Mannetta ordered him to lie on his stomach and then would rub his buttocks and legs while watching television. Every time this happened, G.E.J. says the priest inched closer and closer to his genitals.

G.E.J. says this happened about 10 to 15 times before he left the rectory and finally returned home.

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Pope meets French cardinal accused of paedophilia cover-up

VATICAN CITY
Agence France-Presse via The Guardian

October 5, 2017

Pope Francis met Thursday with French Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, who is awaiting trial over allegations he covered up for a paedophile priest in his diocese.

It was the first time Francis has met with Barbarin, the Archbishop of Lyon, since the cardinal learned last month that he would have to appear in court in April in connection with priest Bernard Preynat’s abuse of boy scouts in the 1980s.

Public prosecutors ruled last year that Barbarin did not have a case to answer but he and six other co-defendants have been directly indicted by some of Preynat’s victims. A judge ruled last month that the case could proceed.

Barbarin, 66, faces a potential jail sentence if found guilty of failing to act immediately and appropriately when one of the victims reported Preynat to the Church in 2014, demanding he be sacked.

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Holy See Press Office Communiqué: Meeting of the leadership of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference in Rome, 07.10.2017

VATICAN CITY
Holy See Press Office

October 7, 2017

The leadership of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference met this week in Rome with officials from the Secretariat of State and various offices of the Holy See for a wide-ranging discussion concerning the situation of the Catholic Church in Australia at this time.

Topics covered included the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, the relationship between the Church and society at large, the restoration of trust, and greater participation of the laity in decision-making roles in the Church.

The Australian delegation was comprised of the President of the Conference, the Most Rev. Denis James Hart, Archbishop of Melbourne; and the Vice-President, the Most Rev. Mark Benedict Coleridge, Archbishop of Brisbane; accompanied by Justice Neville John Owen of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council.

The main encounter took place on Thursday, October 5, with the Cardinal Secretary of State, His Eminence Pietro Parolin; the Secretary for Relations with States, Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher; the Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, His Eminence Marc Ouellet, P.S.S.; and the Secretary for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Archbishop Giacomo Morandi.

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Australian Delegation Travels to Rome Amid Sex Abuse Scandal

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press via U.S. News & World Report

October 7, 2017

The Vatican says that leaders of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference have traveled to Rome to discuss “the restoration of trust” amid a sex abuse scandal involving Australian cardinal George Pell, a top adviser to the pope.

The Vatican announced the delegation’s visit this week in a statement Saturday, saying key Australian church leaders met with top officials including the Vatican secretary of state and the secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, which is the Vatican office that processes all cases of priests accused of sexually abusing minors.

The extraordinary meetings in Rome come months after the Vatican released Pell to return to Australia to face charges in the decades-old case. Pell, who took a leave of absence as the Vatican’s financial czar, denies the charges.

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Diocese launches compensation fund for clergy abuse victims

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
News12 Long Island

October 6, 2017

The Diocese of Rockville Centre is launching a fund to compensate victims of sex abuse by clergy.

The Diocese sent a letter to victims notifying them of the settlement program. It’s called the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program.

Victims who accept settlement money must waive their right to bring their cases to court.

The compensation fund is aimed at bringing closure to dozens of cases of alleged abuse by clergy that, in some cases, date back decades.

Settlements range from $100,000 to $500,000. Attorneys for clergy sex abuse victims say while accepting a settlement under the fund may help victims, it effectively hides the truth.

“In essence, they’re paying people off,” says attorney Mitchell Garabedian. “It’s saying to these people, ‘Here’s some money. We’re not going to list publicly the names of the predator priests. We just want you to go away.'”

It is unclear how many letters were sent out by the Diocese of Rockville Centre. A spokesman for the diocese says a formal announcement about the fund will be made in the near future.

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Diocese of Rockville Centre’s letter to those who have alleged clergy sexual abuse

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday

[This is a letter to a survivor from the Rockville Centre diocese’s Director of the Office for the Protection of Children and Young People. It was published on October 6 in Newsday’s Letter: LI Catholic diocese creates sex abuse compensation program.]

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Letter: LI Catholic diocese creates sex abuse compensation program

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday

October 6, 2017

By Bart Jones, bart.jones@newsday.com

The Diocese of Rockville Centre is creating an independent compensation program for people who were sexually abused by priests — the latest effort in New York to bring closure to a horrific chapter in modern Catholic church history.

The diocese this week sent letters to those who previously have filed such complaints with diocesan officials, according to attorneys representing some of them. Newsday obtained a copy of the letter Friday.

The program will be modeled after similar ones established in the Archdiocese of New York and the Diocese of Brooklyn during the past year.

Under those programs, victims deemed eligible for financial compensation must agree not to pursue legal action against the church in the future in order to collect. Rockville Centre’s program could encompass dozens of cases of alleged abuse, in some cases dating back decades.

In a statement to Newsday, Sean Dolan, a spokesman for the Diocese of Rockville Centre, wrote, “In the interest of providing survivors with advance notice of our impending Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, the Director of the Office for the Protection of Children and Young People sent a letter advising them of what would be occurring. A formal diocesan announcement will be made in the near future.”

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Clergy abuse happened as recently as 10 years ago, lawsuit claims

HAGÅTÑA (GUAM)
Pacific Daily News (USA TODAY Network)

October 6, 2017

By Haidee V. Eugenio

Some of the sexual abuse that more than 100 children on Guam are alleged to have suffered at the hands of Catholic clergy happened about 10 years ago, not in the more distant past as most lawsuits have claimed, according to a new suit filed Friday in federal court here.

Most of the nearly 130 lawsuits filed so far have said children were abused from the mid-1950s to the early 1990s.

But a 23-year-old man, identified in court documents as J.C.M.P., alleges that Vernon Kamiaz, a Capuchin brother involved in training altar boys at Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament Church in Agaña Heights, molested him in 2006 or 2007. Attorney Gloria L. Rudolph, of the law firm of Lujan and Wolff, confirmed that J.C.M.P. is the youngest to file a clergy abuse suit; USA TODAY does not use the names of potential victims of sexual abuse unless they consent to being identified.

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October 6, 2017

Statement: Victims group blasts Vatican abuse summit

ROME (ITALY)
SNAP, the Survivors Network (SNAPnetwork.org)

October 5, 2017

Recent cases show epidemic of child pornography and cover-up in the church

Church should be target of global response, not leading it, group says

Today, the world’s largest support group for men and women sexually abused in the Catholic Church is criticizing a Vatican summit aimed at exposing child sexual abuse on the Internet.

“If the Vatican is so dedicated to punishing people who use the internet to exploit children, the first thing they need to do is fix the problem within the church. Then they must punish their own bishops who covered up for men who made, uploaded, viewed or distributed child pornography,” said Barb Dorris, the managing director of SNAP, the Survivors Network (SNAPNetwork.org).

“And there is the obvious: they must turn over Msgr. Carlo Capella to civil authorities in the United States and Canada. Anything less than that is smoke and mirrors,” she said.

Msgr. Carlo Capella is a Vatican diplomat who was recalled to the Vatican last month when U.S. authorities accused him of possession of child pornography. Last week, Canadian officials issued a warrant for his arrest on child pornography charges there.

The three-day Child Dignity in the Digital World Conference concludes October 6, 2017 at the Gregorian University in Rome. The event has brought together world leaders in digital media, according to media reports. However, the epidemic and cover-up of child pornography, SNAP says, is a big problem in the Catholic Church:

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Ex-Maspeth priest molested girls: lawyer

MASPETH (BOROUGH OF QUEENS, NY NY)
Queens Chronicle

October 5, 2017

By Christopher Barca

More than a dozen women have come forward in recent weeks to accuse a former Maspeth priest of molesting them as children decades ago.

Prominent attorney Mitchell Garabedian told the Chronicle in a Tuesday interview that 15 women claim that former Holy Cross Church pastor the Rev. Adam Prochaski sexually abused them at some point between 1973 and 1994.

“Father Prochaski was sexually abusing innocent children for more than two decades,” Garabedian said. “My clients are very courageous for coming forward.”

According to the Daily News, which broke the story, Prochaski was first assigned to Holy Cross in 1969. Garabedian said the abuse began four years later and occurred not just at the church, but at the parish’s now-defunct school and other locations.

“Sex abuse happened at school, in Holy Cross Church, in the rectory next door and in some of the children’s homes, as well as the father’s,” the attorney said. “In many cases, his abuse was open, notorious and in plain view.”

The ages of his alleged victims, many of them Polish immigrants, ranged from just 5 years old to 16, he added.

The allegations finally graduated from whispered rumors in 1990, when former Holy Cross teacher Linda Porcaro said seven of the priest’s alleged victims told her what had happened to them.

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Pope Francis Says Tech Companies Should Protect Children From Sexual Exploitation, Cyber Bullying

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

October 6, 2017

The Pontiff argues filters and algorithms are not enough.

Pope Francis told executives of leading internet companies on Friday to use “their great profits” to defend children from sexual exploitation and other dangers lurking online.

The pontiff, speaking at a conference in Rome, said the Catholic Church needed to accept responsibility “before God, victims, and public opinion” for its own sex abuse scandals, but wanted to share the lessons it had learned.

Speaking to participants including representatives from Facebook (FB, +1.67%) and Microsoft (MSFT, +1.37%) , he said social media businesses had to do more than set up filters and algorithms to block harmful content.

The 80-year-old pope spoke out against the spread of extreme pornography, the dangers of so-called “sexting” between young people and between adults and children, and cyber bullying, calling it “a true form of moral and physical attack.”

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PNG Catholic priest accused of sexual misconduct

PACIFIC PAPUA NEW GUINEA
RNZ (Radio New Zealand)

October 6, 2017

Police in Papua New Guinea are investigating the conduct of a Catholic Priest, who is accused of sexual misconduct.

The Milne Bay police chief, George Bayagau, says an investigation has been launched after 16 girls complained about the priest’s inappropriate behaviour.

Mr Bayagau told the Post Courier that officers from the sexual violence unit are investigating, although he refused to go into further detail.

The priest works as a chaplain at a local secondary school.

A Catholic Church investigation found no evidence of wrongdoing.

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Pope pledges church commitment to fight child abuse on- and offline

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

October 6, 2017

By Cindy Wooden

Acknowledging how often the Catholic Church failed to protect children from sexual abuse, Pope Francis pledged “to work strenuously and with foresight for the protection of minors and their dignity,” including online.

“As all of us know, in recent years the church has come to acknowledge her own failures in providing for the protection of children: Extremely grave facts have come to light, for which we have to accept our responsibility before God, before the victims and before public opinion,” the pope said Oct. 6.

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Pope Francis: ‘painful’ failures help Church lead in protecting minors

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

October 6, 2017

By Elise Harris

On Friday, Pope Francis told a group of religious and secular experts from around the world that protecting minors against increasing online threats is a serious new concern, and one in which the Church can be a leading voice given the experience gleaned from past mistakes.

“As all of us know, in recent years the Church has come to acknowledge her own failures in providing for the protection of children,” the Pope said Oct. 6. “Extremely grave facts have come to light, for which we have to accept our responsibility before God, before the victims and before public opinion.”

Because of this, “as a result of these painful experiences and the skills gained in the process of conversion and purification, the Church today feels especially bound to work strenuously and with foresight for the protection of minors and their dignity, not only within her own ranks, but in society as a whole and throughout the world.”

The Church can’t even attempt to “do this alone – for that is clearly not enough,” he said, but she stands ready by “offering her own effective and ready cooperation to all those individuals and groups in society that are committed to the same end.”

In this sense, he said, the Church adheres fully to the goal of putting an end to “the abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and torture of children” that was set by the United Nations in the 2030 Sustainable Development agenda.

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Pope Francis: speech to World Congress on Child Dignity in Digital World

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

October 6, 2017

Pope Francis addressed the participants in the World Congress on Child Dignity in the Digital World. Hosted by the Pontifical Gregorian University and its Centre for Child Protection, the four-day event brought together different government and police representatives, software companies, religious leaders and medical experts specialized in the impact of on-line abuse. Below, please find the full text of Pope Francis’ prepared remarks, in their official English translation.

***********************************************
… I thank the Rector of the Gregorian University, Father Nuno da Silva Gonçalves, and the young lady representative of the youth for their kind and informative words of introduction to our meeting. I am grateful to all of you for being here this morning and informing me of the results of your work. Above all, I thank you for sharing your concerns and your commitment to confront together, for the sake of young people worldwide, a grave new problem felt in our time. A problem that had not yet been studied and discussed by a broad spectrum of experts from various fields and areas of responsibility as you have done in these days: the problem of the effective protection of the dignity of minors in the digital world. …

… We know that minors are presently more than a quarter of the over 3 billion users of the internet; this means that over 800 million minors are navigating the internet. We know that within two years, in India alone, over 500 million persons will have access to the internet, and that half of these will be minors. What do they find on the net? And how are they regarded by those who exercise various kinds of influence over the net?

We have to keep our eyes open and not hide from an unpleasant truth that we would rather not see. For that matter, surely we have realized sufficiently in recent years that concealing the reality of sexual abuse is a grave error and the source of many other evils? So let us face reality, as you have done in these days. We encounter extremely troubling things on the net, including the spread of ever more extreme pornography, since habitual use raises the threshold of stimulation; the increasing phenomenon of sexting between young men and women who use the social media; and the growth of online bullying, a true form of moral and physical attack on the dignity of other young people. To this can be added sextortion; the solicitation of minors for sexual purposes, now widely reported in the news; to say nothing of the grave and appalling crimes of online trafficking in persons, prostitution, and even the commissioning and live viewing of acts of rape and violence against minors in other parts of the world. The net has its dark side (the “dark net”), where evil finds ever new, effective and pervasive ways to act and to expand. The spread of printed pornography in the past was a relatively small phenomenon compared to the proliferation of pornography on the net. You have addressed this clearly, based on solid research and documentation, and for this we are grateful. …

… Very appropriately, you have expressed the hope that religious leaders and communities of believers can also share in this common effort, drawing on their experience, their authority and their resources for education and for moral and spiritual formation. In effect, only the light and the strength that come from God can enable us to face these new challenges. As for the Catholic Church, I would assure you of her commitment and her readiness to help. As all of us know, in recent years the Church has come to acknowledge her own failures in providing for the protection of children: extremely grave facts have come to light, for which we have to accept our responsibility before God, before the victims and before public opinion. For this very reason, as a result of these painful experiences and the skills gained in the process of conversion and purification, the Church today feels especially bound to work strenuously and with foresight for the protection of minors and their dignity, not only within her own ranks, but in society as a whole and throughout the world. She does not attempt to do this alone – for that is clearly not enough – but by offering her own effective and ready cooperation to all those individuals and groups in society that are committed to the same end. In this sense, the Church adheres to the goal of putting an end to “the abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and torture of children” set by the United Nations in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (Target 16.2)

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Former abuse commission member Collins expresses concern over group’s restructuring

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

October 5, 2017

By Joshua J. McElwee

The clergy abuse survivor who resigned in frustration from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors last March has expressed concern about a proposal to restructure the group so it no longer includes direct involvement of survivors.

In an interview with NCR, Marie Collins said she worries the possible change to put survivors on a new advisory panel separate from the commission might mean they are not consulted on every issue the group considers.

“I feel it is a backward step,” Collins said in an email conversation Oct. 3.

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Cardinal charged with sex offenses jeered at Australia court

AUSTRALIA
Associated Press

October 6, 2017

By Trevor Marshallsea

SYDNEY (AP) — Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Catholic official to face sex offense charges, was jeered by protesters as he made a court appearance in his native Australia on Friday in a case that has rocked the Vatican and placed scrutiny on the pope’s stance against abusive clergy.

Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic and Pope Francis’ top financial adviser, Pell entered the Melbourne Magistrates Court flanked by police and media as a small group of placard-waving protesters yelled from the sidewalk. He did not react to the hecklers.

The 20-minute hearing focused on planning for the committal hearing starting March 5 that will determine whether he goes to trial. As many as 50 witnesses could be called for that proceeding, expected to last a month.

Pell, who remained silent throughout, has been charged with multiple offenses involving multiple complainants. The exact detail and nature of the charges have not been disclosed to the public, though police have described them as “historical” sexual assault offenses, meaning they are alleged to have occurred years ago.

Pell through his lawyer has vowed to fight the charges. The 76-year-old cardinal has taken leave from his position as Vatican treasurer to return to Australia and defend himself. He has not been required to enter a plea in court, though his attorney said at his first court appearance in July that Pell intended to plead not guilty.

Pell’s attorney, Robert Richter, told Friday’s hearing at least one of the allegations could not have happened.

“We propose to demonstrate to Your Honor that what was alleged was impossible,” Richter told magistrate Belinda Wallington.

Today’s brief hearing centered on which witnesses would be cross-examined at the committal hearing, and touched on a factor likely to feature prominently in the case — the memories of witnesses speaking about incidents alleged to have occurred up to several decades ago.

Richter pointed out one witness had given police a “vague” statement. Wallington noted the man was age 11 at the time.

“We’re dealing with historical events. Memory’s not static,” Wallington said.

The magistrate refused Pell’s lawyers permission to cross-examine five witnesses they had hoped to question, but granted permission for them to cross-examine dozens of others at the committal hearing, saying it was appropriate to allow those witnesses’ memories to be “further explored.”

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Pope denounces porn and corruption of kids’ minds, bodies

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press via Miami Herald

October 6, 2017

By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis on Friday denounced the proliferation of adult and child pornography on the internet and demanded better protections for children online — even as the Vatican confronts its own cross-border child porn investigation involving a top papal envoy.

Francis met with participants of a Catholic Church-backed international conference on fighting child pornography and protecting children in the digital age. He fully backed their proposals to toughen sanctions against those who abuse and exploit children online and improve technological filters to prevent young people from accessing porn online.

Francis said the Catholic Church knew well the “grave error” of trying to conceal the problem of sexual abuse — a reference to the church’s long history of cover-up of priests who have raped and molested children around the world.

He said an international, cross-disciplinary approach was needed to protect children from the dark net and the “corruption of their minds and violence against their bodies.”

Using terms that are certainly new to papal lexicon, Francis denounced “extreme pornography” on the web that adults consume and the increasing use of “sexting” and “sextortion” among the estimated 800 million minors who navigate the internet.

“We would be seriously deluding ourselves were we to think that a society where an abnormal consumption of internet sex is rampant among adults could be capable of effectively protecting minors,” he said.

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Vatican Finance Chief George Pell Faces March Hearing Over Sex-Abuse Charges

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The Wall Street Journal

October 5, 2017

By Robb M. Stewart

Australian court allows lawyers for the cardinal to cross-examine witnesses named by prosecution

Lawyers for Cardinal George Pell, one of the most senior officials in the Vatican, will cross-examine dozens of witnesses called by prosecutors accusing him of historical sexual offenses in Australia.

Cardinal Pell, who is Pope Francis’ finance chief, appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Friday for a 20-minute procedural hearing. Magistrate Belinda Wellington agreed to a four-week committal hearing from March 5, during which the court will decide if there is enough evidence to progress the matter.

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Pell to make case for abuse charges as ‘impossible’ at March hearing

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Crux

October 6, 2017

In a court hearing on Friday, an attorney for Australian Cardinal George Pell described abuse charges against the 76-year-old prelate as “impossible.” A four-week hearing has been scheduled beginning next March 5 to determine if the claims of “historical sexual offenses” against Pell are sufficient to proceed to a full trial.

Cardinal George Pell made his second appearance before an Australian court on Friday, with his defense team saying it wants to call some 50 witnesses in an effort to demonstrate that claims the 76-year-old prelate committed “historical sexual offenses” are impossible.

A four-week hearing has been scheduled beginning on March 5 of the next year to hear the evidence and determine whether the case should proceed to trial.

Legal observers in Australia say they assume Pell will have to stand trial, since roughly 95 percent of cases at the Magistrate’s Court level proceed to trial. Moreover, in a politically sensitive and high-profile case such as this, cases are rarely terminated at the preliminary stage.

Also at the March hearing, magistrates will decide which, if any, of the charges will proceed to trial, whether they will be tried together or separately.

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Cardinal George Pell to face four-week court hearing over alleged historic sex assault offences

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The Telegraph

October 6, 2017

By Jonathan Pearlman

Cardinal George Pell, one of the most powerful figures in the Vatican and Australia’s most senior Catholic, will face a four-week court hearing next March over alleged historic sex assault offences that his lawyer described as “impossible”.

The 76-year-old, who has strongly denied any wrongdoing, attended a brief procedural hearing in Melbourne but made no comment.

The court has ordered a four-week committal hearing to begin on March 5.

The court heard that at least 50 witnesses will be called, including some who were choirboys at the time of their relevant evidence. Five witnesses were disallowed.

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Top Vatican adviser Pell’s hearing date set, dozens of witnesses planned

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
CNN

October 5, 2017

By Lucie Morris-Marr and Ben Westcott, CNN

Dozens of witnesses are expected to give evidence when Vatican treasurer Cardinal George Pell faces an Australian court again in March on charges of historic sexual assault.

One of the most senior figures in the Vatican, Pell appeared at Melbourne Magistrates’ Court Friday after he was charged by detectives from Victoria Police in June.

He is fighting multiple allegations of historic sexual abuse, although the details of the charges have not been made public.

His barrister Robert Richter QC already told the court in the first hearing in July his client would plead not guilty.

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Cardinal George Pell in Melbourne court over historical sexual offences

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
9News.com

October 6, 2017

Guarded by a ring of police, Cardinal George Pell has been heckled outside the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court where he appeared for a brief mention of his case.

A frail-looking Pell, 76, left the court building on Friday morning with his barrister Robert Richter QC and a band of police, who accompanied the pair to the lawyer’s office amid a media frenzy.

As he made the slow walk to and from court, Pell was heckled by protesters but didn’t react.

Police had cordoned off the court entrance early in the day and blocked part of the road outside.

A line of about 30 people – mainly media – waited for hours to secure a seat in the courtroom where the third most senior Vatican official’s committal mention was heard.

There was no sign of Pell supporters, but some victim advocacy representatives turned up, a few holding signs.

“It doesn’t matter how high up the tree you are, it doesn’t matter how much access to money you have, no one is above the law,” Brian Cherrie said.

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Cardinal George Pell appears at Melbourne Magistrates’ Court to fight historical sexual offence allegations

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

October 6, 2017

By Emma Younger

Cardinal George Pell will face a four-week committal hearing next March as he fights historical sexual offence allegations, some of which are impossible, according to his legal team.

Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric has faced his second hearing at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court, after he was charged by Victoria Police detectives in June with offences involving multiple complainants.

The exact detail and nature of the charges have not been made public.

Cardinal Pell strenuously denies the allegations.

Cardinal Pell’s defence barrister, Robert Richter QC, said his team will aim to prove some of the allegations made against his client could never have happened.

“We want to demonstrate that what was alleged was impossible,” he told the court.

Magistrate Belinda Wallington refused Mr Richter’s application to cross-examine five witnesses, but approved all others.

The court heard the prosecution’s brief of evidence was “voluminous”.

The hearing lasted about 20 minutes and mainly dealt with administrative matters.

The court heard about 50 witnesses will give evidence at Cardinal Pell’s committal hearing, which will determine whether there is enough evidence to commit him to stand trial.

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October 5, 2017

Erzdiözese Wien verstärkt Prävention bei Kindergruppen

VIENNA (AUSTRIA)
Archdiocese of Vienna

October 4, 2017

[Summary: The Archdiocese of Vienna has released a brochure (31 megabyte download), “My Safe Place,” providing guidance on preventing violence and abuse in church youth groups.]

Umfangreiche Broschüre mit Reflexionsfragen und Checklisten für Gruppenstunden und mehrtägige Veranstaltungen – Kardinal Schönborn: “Kirche soll ein sicherer Ort sein”

Praktische Hinweise für eine bessere Prävention von Gewalt und Missbrauch in kirchlichen Kinder- und Jugendgruppen liefert eine neue Broschüre der Erzdiözese Wien. “Mein sicherer Ort” heißt die 68-seitige Handreichung, die sich speziell an ehrenamtliche Gruppenleiter richtet und in den nächsten Tagen in 3.000-facher Ausführung in die Pfarren versendet wird. “Kirche soll ein sicherer Ort sein”, betont Kardinal Christoph Schönborn im Vorwort. Die Broschüre solle alle in der Kirche Tätigen unterstützen bei ihrer Bereitschaft zu “Präventionsarbeit und auch Reflexion dessen, wie Kinder- und Jugendarbeit in den Gemeinden und Gruppen gestaltet wird”, so der Erzbischof.

Wo in der Kirche Missbrauch durch Geistliche, Priester oder Ordensleute geschehe, könne dies zur “Gottesvergiftung” werden, mahnte der Kardinal mit Blick auf die Missbrauchskrise nach dem Jahr 2010. “Missbrauch verstellt oft für ein ganzes Leben den Zugang zu Gott, der mit uns ist und der uns befreit”. Die Kirche sei verpflichtet zur “Umkehr”, zur Aufarbeitung ihrer Vergangenheit und auch dazu, “uns aktiv und engagiert für die Prävention von Missbrauch und Gewalt sowie für den Schutz der jungen Menschen einzusetzen, die uns anvertraut sind”.

Die Broschüre setzt an der bereits seit vielen Jahren laufenden Präventionsarbeit der Katholischen Jungschar an, ergänzt um die Expertise von diözesanen Präventionszuständigen und Fachleuten. Ziel sei es, “den Blickwinkel des Gewaltschutzes in die Arbeit mit Kindern und Jugendlichen einzubringen”, erklärte die Leiterin der Stabsstelle für Missbrauchs- und Gewaltprävention, Kinder- und Jugendschutz der Erzdiözese Wien, Martina Greiner-Lebenbauer, im Interview mit “Kathpress”. Auch die Themen sexuelle Übergriffe und Gewalt, Nähe und Distanz, Macht und Machtmissbrauch, Sexualität und das Verhalten in Verdachtsfällen werden im Druckwerk angeschnitten.

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Victims can lose all memory of child abuse, says judge

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
The Australian

October 2, 2017

By Richard Guilliatt

The head of the royal commission into institutional child abuse has declined to respond to criticisms that it is endorsing controversial “repressed memory” counselling techniques but says he has seen direct evidence that victims may have complete amnesia of their trauma.

Judge Peter McClellan told a conference of psychotherapists in Sydney on Saturday that he had been “somewhat startled” while leading the inquiry to meet abuse victims who have no memory of their childhood trauma.

“I have sat with people in private sessions … when we know that that person has been abused by someone and the perpetrator has confessed and been convicted, and the victim has no memory of that abuse having occurred at all,” Justice McClellan said.

The Weekend Australian revealed on Saturday that experts in the field of trauma and memory were critical of the commission for endorsing “ethically dubious” counselling ideas that they say are identical to the repressed-memory therapy of the 1980s and 90s, when a rash of false and bizarre allegations of abuse were made.

Justice McClellan said he would not comment on the criticisms, which centre in part on the commission’s endorsement of the counselling guidelines of Cathy Kezelman, a high-profile activist who says she was sexually abused during her childhood by her father and a pedophile cult led by her grandmother.

The Weekend Australian revealed on Saturday that Dr Kezelman’s mother and brother repudiate her claims, and her psychologist was investigated by the Psychology Council of NSW. Dr Kezelman, who is president of the Blue Knot Foundation and sits on the expert panel devising the $4 billion redress scheme for victims of institutional abuse, denied at the weekend that the counselling guidelines she co-wrote advocated the retrieval of repressed memories.

Fairfax Media quoted her as saying it was “totally false” to suggest her repressed memories were triggered by her psychotherapy, because the memories began emerging when she was at home, not while with her therapist.

Dr Kezelman was scheduled to introduce Justice McClellan at Saturday’s conference but did not appear because of illness. The judge has previously called her an “old friend” of the commission and said her knowledge exceeded that of many judges and bureaucrats dealing with child abuse.

In his speech, Justice McClellan alluded to an address he gave 11 years ago that contained cautionary words about the repressed memory phenomenon, whereby adult psychotherapy patients recover memories of entirely forgotten child abuse. In that earlier speech, he noted that these memories could be false, citing scientific research.

On Saturday, Justice McClellan said the royal commission had commissioned a wide range of experts, and its research indicated memory was constantly refined and reconsolidated. Some adults could not recall their trauma in detail or at all, which could present problems when dealing with police or seeking compensation.

More than 7500 people have told the royal commission they were abused in institutional settings, and all will be eligible to apply for compensation payments and subsidised counselling under the federal government’s proposed redress scheme for victims. The maximum individual compensation has been set at $150,000.

Justice McClellan said counsellors employed by the redress scheme should have expertise in dealing with complex trauma.

The judge’s speech was preceded by a presentation from Joan Haliburn, a psychiatrist at the Complex Trauma Unit at Westmead Hospital, who said at least half of her patients had no memory of their trauma before entering psychotherapy with her.

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Mum rejects Cathy Kezelman’s abuse claims

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
The Australian

October 4, 2017

By Richard Guilliatt

The elderly mother of child abuse activist Cathy Kezelman has broken her silence to reject her daughter’s claims of sexual abuse at the hands of her father and a paedophile cult.

In a letter to The Australian today, Lusia Puterman says the abuse her daughter alleges could not have occurred, describing her late husband as a loving man who “cherished his daughter”.

Dr Kezelman, whose expertise has been endorsed by the royal commission into institutional abuse and who sits on the advisory panel of the government compensation scheme for abuse victims, underwent psychotherapy for nine years and recovered repressed memories of extreme sexual abuse by multiple members of her family.

The Weekend Australian revealed on Saturday that leading experts in trauma and memory were critical of the royal commission for endorsing Dr Kezelman’s counselling ideas, which they said were potentially harmful and contravened the best-practice guidelines of major health bodies.

Mrs Puterman, who is 94 and lost her parents in the Holocaust after fleeing the Warsaw ghetto at 19, writes that she and her daughter were best friends until 1998, when Dr Kezelman entered psychotherapy following a breakdown and began experiencing repressed memories of abuse.

She says her daughter became distant and, without explanation, eventually stopped seeing her and that regular contact with her grandchildren ceased. She says she was further hurt in 2010 when her daughter published a memoir, Innocence Revisited, which detailed her allegations of abuse.

In her book, Dr Kezelman wrote that she had no recollection of being sexually abused until she began psychotherapy at 44, and that she developed a multiple-personality condition and remembered a decade of childhood abuse, including rapes by her ¬father and torture by a paedophile cult led by her grandmother.

Mrs Puterman says the allegations “stem only from Cathy’s mind” and it would have been impossible for such abuse to occur without anyone noticing. She says, however, she loves her daughter and has had email contact with her in recent years.

The commission has twice called Dr Kezelman as an expert witness and its chairman, judge Peter McClellan, has commended her expertise and appeared with her at public events.
Her counselling guidelines have been widely distributed and are quoted in the commission’s report on the proposed compensation scheme for victims.

Dr Kezelman was quoted at the weekend saying “traumatic memory is implicit, and mainly unconscious; it manifests in the body and via behavioural re–enactments rather than words”.

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Child safety leader sees not just Church’s dark past, but game-changing future

DENVER (CO)
Crux

October 5, 2017

By John L. Allen Jr. and Ines San Martin

Baroness Joanna Shields, an American-born expert on internet safety and child protection who’s now a member of the British House of Lords and a former UK Government Minister, says that when she looks at the Catholic Church and child welfare she doesn’t just see a mixed past but a potentially game-changing future: “When the pope speaks, people listen,” she said.

Rome – For Catholics who’ve lived through the carnage of the Church’s clerical sexual abuse scandals, put the words “Vatican” and “child safety” into a sentence, and inevitably, understandably, the mental associations are with where Catholicism has failed.

Someone like Baroness Joanna Shields, however, brings a fresh set of eyes. One of the world’s leading experts on child protection, she’s hardly unaware of the Church’s mixed record. However, when she looks at Catholicism today, what she sees isn’t so much the problem but a potentially key ingredient of the solution.

“When the pope speaks, people listen, especially young people,” Shields said. “I think a lot of young people are really into how he connects with them. His Ted Talk, for instance, I thought was extraordinary. He talked about technology, and how it would be great if technology empowered everyone equally.”

“Well, just adding to what he said and his wisdom, I think it’s equally important that technology protects everyone equally,” Shields said on Wednesday.

Shields, born in Pennsylvania but today a member of the British House of Lords and a former UK Minister for Internet Safety and Security, is the founder of the WePROTECT global alliance, led by the UK government and supported by over 70 countries, 30 technology companies, and NGOs to combat the global crime of online child sexual abuse and exploitation.

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Statement on Child Dignity in the Digital World

WALTHAM (MA)
BishopAccountability.org

October 5, 2017

The Vatican conference on Child Dignity in the Digital World has just concluded its speeches and workshops. There will be a reception this evening, and then a papal audience tomorrow, during which the conference’s Final Declaration will be presented to Pope Francis.

During the conference, Msgr. Carlo Capella has been the elephant in the room. The Vatican diplomat is the subject of an international child pornography investigation, yet he is being harbored by the Vatican while the conference about child abuse images/child pornography and related problems proceeds.

To my knowledge, none of the participants has confronted the ironies of this situation, certainly not Cardinal Pietro Parolin. He dealt briefly with the “very painful” matter of Msgr. Capella before the conference, and then in his keynote address invoked the “tragic reality” and “extremely grave facts” of the Catholic abuse crisis, mentioning them as qualifications for the Vatican’s hosting the conference: “We want to share the experience we have acquired.”

Cardinal Parolin went on to cite the Holy See’s “adherence” to the Convention for the Rights of the Child. Yet in its Concluding Observations (2014), the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child stated:

“The Committee is gravely concerned that the Holy See has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, nor taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and to protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which have enabled the continuation of sexual abuse by clerics and impunity for the perpetrators.” (para. 43)

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New Hampshire front at Rome’s child safety summit: ‘We can do something!’

DENVER (CO)
Crux

October 5, 2017

By John L. Allen Jr.

At an Oct. 3-6 summit at Rome’s Gregorian University, with the support of the Vatican, on efforts to keep children safe in the digital world, there’s been a lot of talk about the massiveness of the challenges. In that context, speakers from New Hampshire have provided a badly-needed dose of hope, insisting that data show smartly-crafted and long-term programs to help children actually do make a difference.

Rome – New Hampshire is the lone state among the original 13 American colonies in which no Revolutionary War battle was fought, but militias from the “Live Free or Die” state did play key roles in several turning points in the struggle for independence, including helping the Continental Army win the Battle of Saratoga.

Perhaps that background helps explain why the New Hampshire contingent at an Oct. 3-6 summit at Rome’s Gregorian University devoted to “Child Dignity in the Digital Age” has been the most emphatic voice of optimism, insisting that the struggle against child abuse and exploitation online is not only a battle that can be fought, but it can be won.

From the beginning of the conference, one strong thrust has been to sound alarms about the massive dimensions of child abuse online.

Tim Morris, Executive Director of Police Services for Interpol, told participants that the “incidents” the global law enforcement agency flagged in 2016 – meaning a lewd comment on-line, an upload of offensive material, an attempt to lure a young person into sexual situations, and so on – amounted to 2.3 million on 15 notorious websites they monitor.

In the first eight months of 2017, he said, Interpol has already logged 3 million incidents.

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