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.

June 23, 2017

Abusi su minori: prete condannato 8 anni

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Abuse of minors: Priest sentenced 8 years.]

Cagliari, per altri 10 non potrà frequentare luoghi con ragazzi

(ANSA) – CAGLIARI, 22 GIU – Otto anni di reclusione scontati i quali, per i successivi dieci, non potrà avvicinarsi ai luoghi frequentati dai ragazzini per effetto delle misure di prevenzione. E’ la sentenza di condanna pronunciata dal giudice di Cagliari Ermengarda Ferrarese nei confronti del’ex parroco di Mandas e Villamar, don Pascal Manca, accusato di violenza sessuale su minori.

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

‘The Keepers’: How 2 women delve into the dark mystery of their teacher’s unsolved killing

UNITED STATES
ABC News

By NICOLE PELLETIERE
Jun 23, 2017

Two retired women who took it upon themselves to investigate the unsolved slaying of their former high school teacher, Sister Catherine Cesnik, are hoping a new Netflix documentary about the nearly 50-year-old case brings some kind of resolution.

“The Keepers” tells the story of those who said they survived sexual abuse at the hands of a priest who was the school chaplain, and the belief among many that Cesnik was killed because she was about to expose the alleged abuse.

Gemma Hoskins and Abbie Schaub, who were students at the old Baltimore city school when Cesnik died, appear in the Netflix original. In an interview last week with ABC News, the women shared how they came to be involved with the true crime series, which premiered May 19.

“For me, I’ve had a lot of ups and downs in my life, and I feel like this was actually the reason why I was put here [on Earth],” Hoskins told ABC News. “The series is released, everybody knows who I am in the whole world; they want to hear what [we] have to say.”

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.

Time limit lifted on damages in child abuse cases in Scotland

SCOTLAND
Holyrood

Written by Jenni Davidson on 23 June 2017

A bill lifting the time limit on damages for child abuse cases has been passed by the Scottish Parliament.

MSPs unanimously voted to approve the Limitation (Childhood Abuse) (Scotland) Bill yesterday.

The bill removes the current three-year limitation period for personal injury actions in cases of child abuse where the person was under 18 at the time of the abuse.

It will apply to all cases of child abuse after 26 September 1964.

The aims of the bill have attracted broad support, but some concerns have been raised about the potential costs to organisations such as councils, religious organisations and charities of paying out compensation for a large number of historic cases.

In its submission to the Scottish Parliament’s Finance and Constitution Committee, local government umbrella body COSLA said: “COSLA supports the intent of the legislation is and is clear that removing any barrier to justice for survivors of historical childhood abuse is a positive move.

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.

Victims of child abuse get 50-year compensation window after MSPs vote to remove time bar

SCOTLAND
Police Professional

The Scottish Parliament has voted to remove the three-year limit on child abuse survivors suing for damages in court.

This will allow victims of abuse dating back to September 26, 1964 to claim compensation for their injuries following the implementation of the Limitation (Childhood Abuse) (Scotland) Bill.

The Bill was unanimously approved by 115 votes from MSPs.

Under the Bill, the individual responsible for carrying out the abuse can be sued directly, and damages can also be sought against employers for their current or former employees.

The Scottish government estimates a potential 2,200 victims will be affected by the changes in the law.

When the Bill was tabled in February, Alistair Gaw from Social Work Scotland warned the payouts could cost around £200 million.

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.

Damning Review Exposes Church Sex Abuse Cover Up

UNITED KINGDOM
Slater and Gordon

By
Jack Bowman
Media Executive

The Church of England “colluded” with a bishop to hide sex abuse of young men, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

The state church “concealed” evidence of child abuse by a former bishop stretching over two decades, according to a new major independent review.

The Church’s report, Abuse of Faith, shed light on how it handled the case of Peter Ball, the former Bishop of Lewes who was jailed for 32 months in 2015, having pleaded guilty to offences, including two counts of indecent assault.

The court was told Ball hand-picked 18 vulnerable victims to commit acts of “debasement” in the name of religion, including praying naked at the altar and encouraging them to submit to beatings.

The review stated: “The Church at its most senior levels and over many years supported [Ball] unwisely and displayed little care for his victims.

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

Disgraced sex abuse bishop Peter Ball used links to Prince Charles to boost his position in cover-up, report finds

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Disgraced former bishop and convicted paedophile Peter Ball tried to used his “status of confidant” with Prince Charles to boost his position, a damming report has revealed.

A major independent review found the Church of England “concealed” evidence of child abuse against Ball for more than 20 years.

He was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 after admitting to a string of historical sex offences against teenage boys and young men between the 1970s and the 1990s.

The report, Abuse of Faith, found that Ball, then bishop of Gloucester, suggested “on many occasions” to the former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord George Carey and others that he “enjoys the status of confidant of the Prince of Wales”.

He “sought to exploit his contact with members of the royal family in order to bolster his position, particularly in the eyes of Lord Carey and others from whom he hoped to receive sympathetic treatment,” the report says.

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.

Brooklyn Diocese announces abuse compensation program

NEW YORK
National Catholic Reporter

Peter Feuerherd | Jun. 23, 2017

BROOKLYN, N.Y. Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio announced June 22 that the Brooklyn Diocese will compensate victims of sex abuse by clergy and church workers via a program modeled on one in the neighboring New York Archdiocese.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program will allow survivors of sexual abuse by priests or deacons of the diocese to seek financial compensation.

“I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse,” but the compensation program is “a concrete expression of our contrition and our desire to make amends,” DiMarzio said in a video statement.

The Brooklyn Diocese’s program will be administered by compensation experts Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros, both of whom worked on a program compensating the families of victims of the 9/11 attacks in New York. Feinberg and Biros are administering the archdiocesan program.

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.

Backers of George Pell tipping sex abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
The Weekend Australian

June 24, 2017

JOHN FERGUSON
Victorian EditorMelbourne
@fergusonjw

Those closest to George Pell are increasingly pessimistic about his chances of avoiding charges over historical child sex abuse ­allegations.

The Weekend Australian has been told by multiple sources that — despite his vehement ­denial of wrongdoing — there is a growing resignation that ­charges will almost certainly be laid, plunging the church into what would be an unprecedented scandal.

Sources familiar with Cardinal Pell’s thinking expect him to return to Australia to fight any charges, with Victoria Police in the final stages of deciding whether to prosecute. If charges are laid, it is expected that Cardinal Pell would resign as the head of the Vatican’s finances.

He has consistently vowed to fight any charges, stating that he has done nothing wrong.

It is likely that if he were to ­return to Australia, in the event of charges, the church would provide him with accommodation and legal support in order for him to defend himself.

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

The Ins and Out of the IRCP Part 2: Phases and Deadlines

NEW YORK
The Worthy Adversary

June 23, 2017 Joelle Casteix

Part two of this series was originally going to be a little about IRCP plan administrator Ken Feinberg, but since the Diocese of Brooklyn has posted its official IRCP website (full of legalese), I thought I would go over some of the details here. *

The only survivors who qualify are those to whom the diocese has reached out directly. (That’s why we knew this announcement was coming – You can’t call a bunch of survivors and not have the word get around)

Whom did they call? People who had come forward to them in the past with complaints of abuse by priests or deacons of the Diocese of Brooklyn.

Does it count if their parents/teachers/neighbors/therapists complained? I don’t know.

This phase does NOT include victims abused by teachers, order priests, nuns, brothers, volunteers, or employees of the Diocese of Brooklyn … beginning to see the problem?

It only gets worse when we look at the Archdiocese of New York.

If you have not been contacted by the Diocese of Brooklyn, there is nothing you can do in Phase One. But if you were sexually abused in the diocese, you can register for Phase Two. That will probably begin sometime in September, when Phase One ends.

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.

Lord Carey steps back from ministry after ‘harrowing’ report on Peter Ball case

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by HATTIE WILLIAMS 22 JUNE 2017

BOTH the Archbishop of Canterbury’s predecessors have issued personal apologies, and the Archbishop has asked Lord Carey to consider his position as an honorary assistant bishop in the diocese of Oxford, after the publication of an independent report on the Peter Ball case and the Church’s part in it.

Lord Carey has been strongly criticised in the report of the review group, chaired by Dame Moira Gibb, which was published on Thursday, almost two years after the review was announced by Archbishop Welby (News, 7 October 2015).

The 81-page report, Abuse of Faith, sets out in detail the events and circumstances leading up to, surrounding, and following the arrest and imprisonment of Ball, who received a three-year sentence in October 2015, having admitted to a series of indecent assaults and the abuse of 18 young men aged 17-25. One of his victims took his own life. Ball, who is 85, was released in February after serving 16 months of his sentence.

The report criticises the conduct of several senior Church of England figures — in particular, Lord Carey, who, it says, failed to respond to repeated expressions of concern and allegations against Bishop Ball — most notably those of the late Neil Todd, who was repeatedly abused by the bishop during the 1980s and ’90s.

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.

Charles’s friend the paedophile priest and a cover-up that shames the Church

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By Tom Kelly for the Daily Mail

Former Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey colluded with senior clergy to protect a paedophile bishop, a damning report revealed yesterday.

As a result, serial sex offender Peter Ball – who boasted of being a confidant of Prince Charles – escaped prosecution for more than 20 years.

An independent inquiry into the scandal found that the Church of England knew of a string of allegations against Ball, then bishop of Gloucester, but failed to alert the police. Current Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby urged Lord Carey to step down from his role as an assistant bishop after the report covering his time as head of the Church of England.

Some of Ball’s victims called for a criminal investigation into senior clergy after the report found that the Church was ‘more interested in protecting itself’ than helping those he had abused, and that at least nine bishops knew allegations had been made against him.

Ball, a former suffragan bishop of Lewes, was let off with caution for molesting a teenage novice monk in 1993. Although the Church knew of other allegations against him, it was not until 2015 that Ball was finally prosecuted and jailed.

He admitted abusing 18 teenagers and young men who had sought spiritual guidance from him between 1977 and 1992.

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.

79th alleged victim accuses Chalan Pago priest of molestation

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 23, 2017

By Krystal Paco

71-year-old “S.N.J.C.” is the latest victim to file suit against the Church.

When he was a teen attending the Chalan Pago church, S.N.J.C. alleges he was sexually molested and raped by Father Antonio Cruz, who is now deceased. During the sexual acts, the priest reportedly stated “Don’t be afraid, I won’t hurt you” and called the boy “mannge” which means “good” in Chamorro.

S.N.J.C. is suing for $5 million.

Although his attorney David Lujan previously stated he was in settlement talks with Hope and Healing Guam and would file a motion to stay – or suspend the cases in federal court, he tells KUAM today “I haven’t seen their insurance policies.”

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.

U.S. Bishops Will ‘Stay the Course’ Against Children, Women and LGBTQ Persons

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on June 23, 2017 by Betty Clermont

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) held their semi-annual meeting June 14-15 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Child Sex Abuse

They began with a Mass “held in response to a call from Pope Francis for all episcopal conferences across the world to have a Day of Prayer and Penance for victims of sexual abuse within the Church.”

In an excellent work of investigative journalism, Nicole Sotelo researched the location of 33 Chicago Archdiocese former priests accused of child sex abuse who are still alive. She was able to locate the whereabouts of 29. “At least 16 – approximately half – of the abusive former priests currently reside or have recently resided within close proximity of a school or child services facility, ranging from less than 500 feet to under 1,500 feet….Two are currently in state or federal mental health facilities. [O]nly one former priest is part of a sex offender registry.” None are being monitored by the archdiocese.

“Church officials covered up crimes for so long that in many cases the statute of limitations for criminal charges expired. [I]t is a sobering reminder that if Church officials had not shielded these men from the law or fought to keep the statute of limitations, some of these men would be registered sex offenders and, thus, identifiable to concerned parents and teachers,” Sotelo noted.

Shortly before their meeting, the bishops released their 2016 Annual Report on clerical sex abuse in the U.S. For the years 2014, 2015 and 2016 combined, 1333 victims made “new credible allegations” against 799 clerics. Even a conservative extrapolation from Sotelo’s findings would be horrific.

In their report, the bishops do not give us the names of the credibly alleged predators, nor which ones are free men and where are they located, nor which ones – if any – they reported to the police. They do not act because Pope Francis protects sexual predators and so, will never hold them accountable for following his lead.

During the Mass, Archbishop Wilton Gregory said the U.S. bishops “can never say that we are sorry enough for the share that we have had in this tragedy of broken fidelity and trust – the clergy sex abuse crisis.” But he failed to commit to the above measures nor did he pledge that the bishops would stop obstructing statute of limitations reform for all American victims of sex abuse.

As Marci Hamilton, a distinguished scholar at the University of Pennsylvania, wrote on June 15, New York’s Child Victims Act amending the statute of limitations “would have been law long ago but for the bishops’ lobbying against it … Indeed, they invest millions and concoct arguments to scare lawmakers away from doing what is right for the unjustifiably exiled victims … The diocesan bankruptcy filings to date have generally been a way of reorganizing to protect assets, to keep victim compensation low, and to cut off future claims for past victims.”

Republicans are primarily responsible “for blocking simple legislative change that would identify the hidden predators and provide justice to victims” killed the New York legislation on June 21.

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.

Gov. Cuomo bemoans failure of child victims act

NEW YORK
Washington Times

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) – New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he’s disappointed lawmakers have ended their session without loosening the statute of limitations for molestation to give victims more time to report abuse.

The bill would have given victims more time to file civil lawsuits or seek criminal charges against their abusers. It also would have created a one-year window for past victims to file civil suits.

Victims now have until they turn 23 to sue, but supporters say it often takes far longer for victims to report their 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.

Bishop of Chichester responds to report into handling of abuse claims against Peter Ball

UNITED KINGDOM
Brighton and Hove News

Posted On 23 Jun 2017

Frank le Duc

The Bishop of Chichester Martin Warner has responded to a report about the church’s failings when claims of sexual abuse were made against the former Bishop of Lewes Peter Ball.

Dr Warner said: “We who serve in the diocese of Chichester welcome the report of the independent review by Dame Moira Gibb into the Church of England’s handling of the abuse committed by Peter Ball.”

Ball, 85, was jailed in 2015 for sexually abusing teenage boys and young men more than 20 years after his behaviour was brought to the attention of the church authorities.

He started his career as a curate in Rottingdean, having been to school at Lancing College. He went on to found a religious order called the Community of the Glorious Ascension in Lewes before he became Bishop of Lewes.

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

Clergy sexual abuse fund created by Diocese of Brooklyn to compensate victims

NEW YORK
am New York

By Ivan Pereira ivan.pereira@amny.com June 22, 2017

The Diocese of Brooklyn announced on Thursday the creation of a compensation program for victims of clergy sexual abuse.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, or IRCP, will first provide monetary compensation to survivors who have previously reported abuse by a priest or deacon. Those who come forward with unreported claims will have a chance to register with the program during phase two in October.

The Brooklyn Diocese, which oversees the churches in Brooklyn and Queens, said the funds will come from loans — not parishioners’ collections — and it will keep the survivors’ identities confidential.

A committee, including retired NYPD First Deputy Commissioner Joseph P. Dunne, retired New York State Supreme Court Justice Joseph G. Golia and former president of the Queens Chapter of the American Psychiatric Association Barbara L. Ponieman, will oversee the process. Settlements will be administered by attorneys Kenneth R. Feinberg and Camille S. Biros.

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

Man alleges he was repeatedly raped by Father Antonio C. Cruz

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com June 23, 2017

A now-deceased Guam priest, Father Antonio C. Cruz, allegedly raped and sexually abused an altar boy in Chalan Pago from 1960 to 1962, according to a lawsuit filed Friday.

The plaintiff, identified in court documents only as S.N.J.C. to protect his privacy, alleged Cruz sexually abused and raped him when he was around 14 to 16 years old and serving as altar boy at the Our Lady of Peace and Safe Journey Catholic Church.

Now 71 years old, S.N.J.C. filed his lawsuit in the U.S. District Court of Guam on Friday. He’s represented by attorney David Lujan.

The lawsuit says the alleged abuses started after a Sunday Mass when Cruz instructed S.N.J.C. to stay behind and meet him at the rectory. The priest allegedly told the boy that it was mannge, which means good in Chamorro, the complaint says.

“The sexual abuse and rape continued for the next two years,” the lawsuit alleges.

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.

FRANCIS ‘SOUNDING BOARD’ RETIRED US ARCHBISHOP JOHN QUINN DIES AGED 88

CALIFORNIA
The Tablet

23 June 2017 | by Catholic News Service

Archbishop Quinn was a staunch defender of immigrants and an early voice in combatting clerical sexual abuse

Retired Archbishop John Quinn of San Francisco, who led the Northern California archdiocese for 18 years, died on 22 June after a long illness. He was 88.

“Our hearts are breaking at losing such a great priest and friend,” San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone said in an announcement. “Join me in praying for the repose of his soul.”

The archbishop had moved to the Jewish Home of San Francisco from St Mary’s Medical Centre on 16 June, but he “experienced difficulties with his breathing early this morning. He was transported to the nearest hospital but could not be revived.” …

Archbishop Quinn was an early leader in combating clerical sexual abuse. The Archdiocese of San Francisco put into force in 1992 a sexual abuse and harassment policy, and at that time urged all victims of child sexual abuse by a priest or church worker to “come forward and tell us their story.”

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.

June 22, 2017

LDS bishop arrested by Mapleton police on reports of sexually abusing two underage males

UTAH
Daily Herald

Kurt Hanson Daily Herald

Officers with the Mapleton Police Department arrested a man Wednesday on reports of sexually abusing two underage boys.

Police reports state on April 20, a now 18-year-old man told police he was sexually abused by a man about three years ago.

The young man said Erik Hughes, 51, was at first very friendly and provided him with what the male thought was melatonin to help him sleep. But it made him disoriented and Hughes told him he must’ve given him the wrong pill.

On another occasion, Hughes gave the young man a smoothie. The young man reported that the smoothie was bitter and after he finished drinking it, he felt woozy and disoriented, just like when he took the pills earlier.

Hughes helped the young man to his bed, where he dozed off. The next thing he reportedly remembered was Hughes touching him inappropriately. The young man fell asleep again and when he awoke, the young man’s underwear was removed and Hughes was again touching him inappropriately, reports state.

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.

Demonstrate Against Agudah’s Protection of Child Molesters this Sunday at 3pm

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

I urge all my readers to become part of this demonstration in front of the Midwood home of the Exec VP of Agudath Israel of America (aka Agudah), Dovd Zweibel.

Agudah discourages reporting of child molesters by misrepresenting halacha to claim one must consult with a rabbi. Most Agudah rabbis then either rule against reporting or discourage it for non-halachic reasons

Agudah, together with the Catholic Church, has blocked New York State legislation to strengthen prosecution of molesters as criminals and to force them and their protectors to pay for the damage they cause. For the 9th year in a row, they have blocked attempts to reform the NYS Statute of Limitations. Why? Because they want to avoid embarrassment and avoid paying for the damage caused by tolerating and covering up for molesters.

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 John R. Quinn, Catholic progressive, dies in S.F.

CALIFORNIA
SFGate

By Carl Nolte Thursday, June 22, 2017

John R. Quinn, archbishop emeritus of San Francisco and a former president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, died early Thursday after a long illness.

Archbishop Quinn, who was an advocate of interfaith cooperation, died at the Jewish Home of San Francisco after a long hospital stay. He was 88.

He served as archbishop of San Francisco from 1977 to 1995, and had built a reputation as an advocate of social justice and a leader in the liberalization of the Catholic Church. In his retirement, he lectured and wrote two books on reform of the papacy and was working on a third when he died.

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.

Local child victim speaks out about Legislature’s failure to pass Child Victims Act

NEW YORK
News 10

[with video]

By Lexi Nahl
Published: June 22, 2017

ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) – The New York State Senate struck down a bill Wednesday that would have loosened the statute of limitations of child molestation for the 11th year in a row.

“New York has the worst laws on the books anywhere in the country pertaining to the statute of limitations for crimes of child sexual abuse,” Senator and Bill Sponsor Brad Hoylman (D) said.

This year, the bill, called the Child Victims Act came closer than ever to passing. It received support across the aisle in both the Senate and Assembly. It passed in the Assembly for the first time since 2008. The bill died before it hit could the Senate floor.

Right now, victims have until the age of 23 to come forward and file claims, but the bill would have given them something invaluable.

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

The need for truth and apologies

SCOTLAND
Scottish Catholic Observer

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry is now underway to the point where Lady Smith, the Chair, is hearing witnesses on behalf of different organisations involved in residential child care in Scotland within living memory. Many organisations within Scotland have been asked to report to the Inquiry and to give details about their involvement in such care, the Church is among them.

At the moment, the Inquiry seems to be examining the broad picture and learning about structures and how children came to be under the care of different establishments.

The work of the Inquiry will be complex and lengthy and will inevitably involve difficult press coverage for the Catholic Community. For that reason, I hoped that the Catholic Media would be a great resource in explaining the evidence given to the Inquiry in a way which helped Catholics understand the truth. I found myself fundamentally disagreeing with the angle which last week’s SCO used in covering the story of my testimony to that Inquiry. This article is designed to help clarify the story.

From the beginning, the Bishops of Scotland have been unanimous in their desire to assist and cooperate with the Inquiry and created a group which would prepare materials and respond on the bishops’ behalf. As a member of that group, I found myself standing in the Inquiry’s hearing room recently, raising my hand and swearing to tell the truth. Unfortunately, the SCO headline and story was presented last week, didn’t serve the complexity of the truth I tried to tell.

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.

Brooklyn diocese announces sex abuse compensation program

NEW YORK
San Francisco Chronicle

KAREN MATTHEWS, ASSOCIATED PRESS
June 22, 2017

NEW YORK (AP) — The Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn announced Thursday it is setting up a compensation program for victims of past sexual abuse by priests, modeled after a program the larger New York archdiocese started last year.

“I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse, but this program is a concrete expression of our contrition and our desire to make amends, Bishop Nicholas DiMarzo said.

DiMarzo said the diocese will take out a loan to pay the claims and will not use money intended to support parishes, schools or charitable works. He did not specify the loan amount.

The program will be administered by Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros, who are also running the New York archdiocese program. They will review claims and determine how much money to offer.

Under the first phase of the program, the diocese is contacting about 235 people who previously reported being abused when they were minors and explaining how to file a claim. The deadline for filing a claim under Phase 1 will be Sept. 30. …

Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston-based lawyer representing victims of childhood sex abuse by clergy members, said some abuse survivors will welcome the Brooklyn diocese’s compensation program.

“For those victims who want to try to heal and move on, the program will be helpful,” Garabedian said. “For others who want their day in court and want to obtain transparency through a court proceeding, the program will not be helpful.”

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.

Abuse survivors call for action on George Pell sex claims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

June 23, 2017

TESSA AKERMAN
ReporterMelbourne
@TessaAkerman

JOHN FERGUSON
Victorian EditorMelbourne
@fergusonjw

Victoria Police faces demands from survivors to act or explain its slow investigative progress into claims of sexual abuse against Cardinal George Pell.

Catholic Church officials are on edge over the possibility of ­Cardinal Pell being charged but Australia’s most senior Catholic remains insistent that he has done nothing wrong.

Police are believed to be winding up their investigations into the cardinal but senior church figures have yet to be told whether or not charges will be laid.

Peter Blenkiron, who was 11 when he was abused by a Christian Brother at school in Ballarat, said it was unhelpful for police to leave people speculating about reasons for the delay.

The Office of Public Prosecutions returned the second brief of evidence on Cardinal Pell to the police in mid-May, with officers as recently as this month still trawling through unsubstantiated allegations against the former archbishop of Melbourne.

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.

Catholic Church in Brooklyn to compensate sexual abuse victims

NEW YORK
Reuters

By Jonathan Allen | NEW YORK

The Roman Catholic Church in the New York City borough of Brooklyn has set up a compensation program for victims of sexual abuse by its clergy, the Diocese of Brooklyn said on Thursday.

The program is modeled on one set up last year by the neighboring Archdiocese of New York, which encompasses the city’s boroughs of Manhattan, Staten Island and the Bronx. Both programs were created in part to give victims who were abused a long time ago, beyond statutes of limitations, a chance for compensation.

“I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse, but this program is a concrete expression of our contrition and our desire to make amends,” Nicholas DiMarzio, the Bishop of Brooklyn, said in a video statement. He said he had met more than 50 victims of sexual abuse by clergy.

The Roman Catholic Church, which has more than 1.2 billion adherents, has grappled in recent years with the damage done to its role as a moral authority as more than a thousand people around the world have said they were abused by clergy, typically when they were children.

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Church Of England ‘Colluded And Concealed’ Bishop’s Sex Abuse, Leader Says

UNITED KINGDOM
NPR

June 22, 2017

COLIN DWYER

When faced with allegations of sex abuse against one of its bishops, the Church of England “colluded and concealed rather than seeking to help those who were brave enough to come forward,” the church’s leader acknowledged Thursday.

“For the survivors who were brave enough to share their story and bring Peter Ball to justice, I once again offer an unreserved apology,” Justin Welby, archbishop of Canterbury, said in a statement. “There are no excuses whatsoever for what took place and the systemic abuse of trust perpetrated by Peter Ball over decades.”

Welby was responding to the findings of an independent investigation into how the church handled the allegations against Ball, a former bishop who pleaded guilty in 2015 to indecent assault against young men. That report, also released Thursday, found that Ball “abused many boys and men over a period of twenty years or more.”

“That is shocking in itself but is compounded by the failure of the Church to respond appropriately to his misconduct, again over a period of many years,” Moira Gibb, who led the investigation, said in the report. “Ball’s priority was to protect and promote himself and he maligned the abused. The Church colluded with that rather than seeking to help those he had harmed, or assuring itself of the safety of others.”

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Monsignor Richard Mouton passes away

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

[Msgr. Richard Mouton Funeral Announcement – News15]

Claire Taylor , ctaylor@theadvertiser.com June 21, 2017

Monsignor Richard von Phul Mouton of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lafayette passed away Wednesday. He was 86 years old.

Mouton died at 2:21 p.m. Wednesday at Lafayette General Medical Center, according to his brother, Frank Anthony Mouton.

Funeral arrangements are not complete but will be handled by the diocese, he said.

“The monsignor would be the first to admit he didn’t walk on water,” Ted Power, former Daily Advertiser publisher, wrote in response to Mouton’s passing. “But he was a man with immeasurable passion for his faith and he spent his life driven to instill that passion and faith in others.” …

When Mouton was pastor at St. Mary Magdalene Church two parishioners approached him in 1976 with allegations about the Rev. Gilbert Gauthe, according to Jason Berry, an investigative reporter at the time with The Times newspaper. Mouton, he wrote, confronted Gauthe and required him to see a psychiatrist.

Gauthe pled guilty to 34 counts of sexually abusing children and served time in jail.

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Statement by the Archbishop of Canterbury on the Peter Ball report

UNITED KINGDOM
Archbishop of Canterbury

Thursday 22nd June 2017

Statement by Archbishop Justin Welby on the publication today of the independent report by Dame Moira Gibb into the Church’s handling of the Bishop Peter Ball case.

“Abuse of Faith makes harrowing reading: the Church colluded and concealed rather than seeking to help those who were brave enough to come forward. This is inexcusable and shocking behaviour and although Dame Moira notes that most of the events took place many years ago, and does not think that the Church now would conduct itself in the ways described we can never be complacent, we must learn lessons.

“I fully endorse the recommendations in the report and will ensure that the House of Bishops addresses how we can implement these as soon as possible, working with the National Safeguarding Team. For the survivors who were brave enough to share their story and bring Peter Ball to justice, I once again offer an unreserved apology. There are no excuses whatsoever for what took place and the systemic abuse of trust perpetrated by Peter Ball over decades.”

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Archbishop Welby asks Lord Carey to consider his position as assistant bishop over Ball abuse ca

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

James Macintyre 22 June 2017

Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has written to his predecessor George Carey asking him to consider his position as an honorary assistant bishop in Oxford over criticism of his conduct in the case of the former bishop and convicted abuser Peter Ball.

The letter was written ahead of publication today of a damning report into the handling of Ball’s case by the respected former social worker Dame Moira Gibb, who concluded that the Church of England ‘colluded’ in abuse by Ball.

At a press conference with Dame Moira launching the independent report today, Peter Hancock, the Bishop of Bath and Wells and the lead bishop on safeguarding in the Church, confirmed that Archbishop Welby had ‘written directly’ to Lord Carey asking him ‘carefully’ to consider his position.

Bishop Hancock said that ‘this is now a matter for Lord Carey and the Bishop of Oxford’ who have been having conversations on the telephone and are set to meet in the next two days.

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Ex-Archbishop asked to leave Diocese of Oxford over sex abuse ‘collusion’

UNITED KINGDOM
Oxford Mail

A SENIOR figure in the Church of England has been asked to step down from his role in the Diocese of Oxford over ‘collusion’ in covering up historic sexual abuse.

Lord Carey was Archbishop of Canterbury at the time of abuses carried out by former bishop of Lewes and Gloucester Peter Ball between the 1970s and 1990s.

Ball, now 85, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 after admitting sex offences against 18 teenagers and young men.

Lord Carey has now been asked to step down by current Archbishop Justin Welby from his role as an honorary assistant bishop at the Diocese of Oxford.

A newly-published independent review found that Lord Carey received seven letters from families and individuals following the arrest and cautioning of Ball in 1992 for gross indecency, but failed to pass six of them to the police.

He chose not to put Ball on the Church of England’s ‘Lambeth List’, which names clergymen about whom questions of suitability for ministry have been raised, and also gave Ball funds to support him.

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Church of England ‘colluded’ and hid bishop’s sex abuse, says Justin Welby

UNITED KINGDOM
Sky News

By Alice Udale-Smith, News Reporter

The Church of England “colluded and concealed” the sexual abuse of young men by one of its bishops, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

The Most Rev Justin Welby has offered an “unreserved apology” to the victims of Peter Ball, a former Bishop of Lewes and Gloucester.

The Archbishop’s statement came as the Church published an independent review, chaired by Dame Moira Gibb, of how it handled the case.

Mr Welby described the report as “harrowing reading” and said: “The Church colluded and concealed rather than seeking to help those who were brave enough to come forward.

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Church of England ‘Colluded’ With Bishop to Hide Sex Abuse, Report Says

UNITED KINGDOM
New York Times

By DAN BILEFSKY
JUNE 22, 2017

LONDON — Senior people in the Church of England “colluded” over two decades with a bishop to help cover up his serial abuse of young men and boys, an independent review found on Thursday.

The unsparing report, titled “An Abuse of Faith,” centers on Peter Ball, the former bishop of Lewes and Gloucester, who was convicted in 2015 of misconduct in public office and of indecent assaults against 18 victims over a 15-year period from the late 1970s to the early 1990s. Now 85, Mr. Ball was released from prison in February after serving half his 32-month sentence.

Overseen by Dame Moira Gibb, a former social worker, the report shines an uncomfortable light at the highest echelons of the church. The report was commissioned by the archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Justin Welby, who called it “harrowing reading.”

Among the report’s most damning criticisms is its rebuke of the former archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey, now the honorary assistant bishop in the Diocese of Oxford. It accuses him of setting “the tone for the church’s response to Mr. Ball’s crimes” and enabling Mr. Ball’s declarations of innocence to be accepted, even as victims and members of the public came forward to expose abuse by the former bishop.

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“Nobody told us she had died” – the story of Margaret Bullen, who spent her entire life in a Magdalene Laundry

IRELAND
The Journal

THE FASCINATING AND tragic story of a mother who spent her life in a series of Magdalene Laundries will be told this evening.

RTÉ’s Liveline Callback will tell the story of Margaret Bullen, a mother-of-three who spent her entire life in state institutions such as the infamous Laundries.

Samantha Long was 29 years old and seven months pregnant in October 2003 when she listened to an edition of Liveline on RTÉ Radio in which a woman was decrying the fact that one of her good friends had died and been buried in a communal grave by the nuns at her laundry.

And then she heard the woman’s name. Margaret Bullen. Her mother, who she had first met just eight years previously. Who met her and her twin sister in the Gresham Hotel on O’Connell Street carrying an empty handbag because she owned nothing to put in it.

“When we were just two weeks old, Margaret was sent back to work,” Samantha says today, five years after first sharing her story with TheJournal.ie.

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Christian Brothers apologise for abuse of boys at Fife school

SCOTLAND
Fife Today

LIZ ROUGVIE

22 June 2017

A religious order has apologised for ‘systemic failures’ which allowed paedophile priests to abuse boys at a residential school in Fife.

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has heard that safeguarding measures put in place by the Christian Brothers at the former St Ninian’s school in Falkland fell ‘well short’ of what would be expected today.

Last year two former teachers were jailed for a total of 15 years after being convicted of the physical and sexual abuse of boys in their care.

Victim Dave Sharp, who was sent to St Ninian’s at the age of 10, has previously told how he was repeatedly raped, shut in a coffin with the lid closed and even taken to Ireland to be passed around priests at sex parties.

His abuser has since died. Appearing before the inquiry in Edinburgh on behalf of the Christian Brothers, Michael Madigan said the congregation acknowledged with ‘deepest regret’ that children had been abused.

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Diocese announces compensation plan for sex abuse survivors

NEW YORK
Queens Chronicle

by Anthony O’Reilly / Associate Editor

The Diocese of Brooklyn on Thursday announced a program to compensate survivors of sexual abuse committed by clergy members.

“I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse, but this compensation program is a concrete expression of our contrition and our desire to make amends,” Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, head of the diocese, said in a statement.

The program, called The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, will be administered by attorneys Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros — both of whom have years of experience in overseeing settlements, the former with the Department of Justice.

Both will have “total independence in determining compensation for survivors,” according to the diocese.

An Independent Oversight Committee has also been established — made up of retired NYPD First Deputy Commissioner Joseph Dunne, retired state Supreme Court Justice Joseph Golia and American Psychiatric Association Queens Chapter President Dr. Barbara Ponieman — the panel will review the program’s protocols and oversee its implantation but cannot overturn decisions made by Feinberg and Birosm, the diocese said.

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Brooklyn Diocese Sets Up Abuse Victim Compensation Fund

NEW YORK
NY 1

A major part of the city’s Catholic community is reaching out to survivors of abuse.

The head of the Brooklyn Diocese says it will financially compensate parishioners who were abused in the past by priests or deacons.

The fund will be overseen by a committee which is independent from the church.

The Diocese, which covers Brooklyn and Queens, will abide by the committee’s decisions.

Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio says this will help mend the relationship between the Church and the communities it serves.

“I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse, but this is a program and a concrete expression of our contrition, and our desire to make amends. We hope it will help with the healing process, and bring survivors some amount of healing,” DiMarzio said.

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THE INDEPENDENT RECONCILIATION AND COMPENSATION PROGRAM FOR THE DIOCESE OF BROOKLYN, NEW YORK (“IRCP”)

NEW YORK
Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn

for Compensation of Certain Individual Claims of Clergy Sexual Abuse of Minors Previously Submitted to the Diocese of Brooklyn (Phase I)

June 22, 2017

An Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program to pay victims of alleged clergy sexual abuse of minors was announced today by Bishop Nicholas DeMarzio of the Diocese of Brooklyn, New York (the “IRCP”). Read Press Release

The Administrators, Kenneth R. Feinberg and Camille S. Biros, will begin this assignment and will work with Bishop DiMarzio and the distinguished members of the IRCP Independent Oversight Committee.

* The Program is purely voluntary; no individual is required to participate in the Program. Only if the individual is satisfied with, and agrees to accept, the offered compensation, does the individual agree to waive his/her rights to litigate against the Diocese of Brooklyn.

* The Program is limited in scope to those individuals who previously submitted a complaint of sexual abuse of a minor to the Diocese of Brooklyn. Individuals who allege clergy sexual abuse, but have not previously complained to the Diocese of Brooklyn, will have an opportunity to seek compensation later this year during Phase II of this Program. These individuals may register immediately with the Program, providing their names, contact information and a summary description of the nature of the claim, including the dates, time, location of the alleged abuse and the name of the alleged perpetrator.

* Mr. Feinberg and Ms. Biros retain complete and sole discretion over all compensation awards to eligible victims, including eligibility to participate in the Program and the amounts of compensation. By agreement, the Diocese of Brooklyn cannot reject the Administrators’ final determinations as to eligibility and the amount of compensation.

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Brooklyn Diocese begins compensation program for clergy sex abuse victims

NEW YORK
PIX 11

JUNE 22, 2017, BY CHRISTINA REINWALD

BROOKLYN, N.Y. — The Diocese of Brooklyn has announced it is starting its program to pay victims of sexual abuse by priests and deacons within the Roman Catholic Church.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program is modeled after the Archdiocese of New York’s sexual abuse settlement process that launched in October 2016.

“This Bishop [DiMarzio] is listening to survivors,” Anthony Hughes said in a statement. “People need to know that the Church is moving in the right direction.”

Hughes, now 41, said he was sexually abused by a priest in Brooklyn in the 1980s. He came forward in 2006, but said at the time, the church was “unsupportive.” Now, he said there’s been a “significant shift” in how the church handles these allegations.

Two mediators and an oversight committee “will have total independence” to determine payment to victims, the diocese said.

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Samantha Bee Takes the Catholic Church and New York State Senate to Task for Failing to Help Child Abuse Victims

NEW YORK
Slate

[with video]

By Marissa Martinelli

New York has the shortest statute of limitations for child abuse victims in the country, and as of Wednesday night, that’s not about to change. Samantha Bee dedicated a segment of Full Frontal to shaming the New York state senate after they wrapped up their 2017 legislative session without voting on the Child Victims Act, which would allow adult victims of child abuse to seek justice up to the age of 28 in criminal cases, and age 50 in civil cases.

Who could possibly oppose such a piece of legislation? Most notably, the Boy Scouts of America and the Catholic Church, who have been lobbying against it, ostensibly because it could open them up to more lawsuits from adult victims—which means spending more money. As Bee puts it: “I’m gonna go out on a limb here and say that if you’re an institution that has hurt so many children that paying out civil settlements would make you go bankrupt, maybe you should.” Bill Donohue, who is president of the Catholic League (an organization independent from the church), has even reached Milo Yiannopoulos levels of trolling in his opposition to the Child Victims Act, calling it “a vindictive bill pushed by lawyers and activists out to rape the Catholic Church.” Seriously.

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SAMANTHA BEE’S DISHONEST HARANGUE

BEW TIRJ
Catholic League

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on last night’s edition of “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee”:

Samantha Bee is no stranger to Catholic bashing, so it was hardly surprising to learn that she ripped the Catholic Church in her June 21st show. Her focus was the Child Victims Act, a bill being considered by the New York State legislature. The least controversial aspect of the bill is extending the number of years that alleged victims could sue; the most controversial component is allowing a one-year window to revive old cases.

According to Bee, the bill’s opponents are evil-minded persons who seek to justify child sexual molestation (she went off-the-rails on me). She interviewed a sponsor of one of the bills, State Senator Brad Hoylman, who said opposition was coming from the Catholic Church, yeshivas, and the Boy Scouts.

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Samantha Bee: NY’s Slogan Should Be ‘We Protect Child Molesters’

NEW YORK
Gothamist

BY JAKE OFFENHARTZ ON JUN 22, 2017

Keeping with a decade-long tradition, the New York State senate has once again refused to take up a widely-supported bill extending the amount of time that child sexual abuse victims can seek justice as adults. On Wednesday, the senate ended its legislative session by refusing to vote on the Child Victims Act [CVA], despite Governor Cuomo’s repeated promise to survivors that this was the year the legislation would finally pass.

The bill’s failure was the topic of a caustic segment on Wednesday night’s Full Frontal with Samantha Bee, in which the comedian does her best to understand, “Why have they been blocking this bill for 11 years?”

As State Senator Brad Hoylman notes, the bill would lift New York’s restrictive 5-year civil and criminal statute of limitation on childhood sexual assault, sending a lifeline to the majority of survivors who take years to report their abusers. But according to the Manhattan representative, “Churches, Yeshivas, the Boy Scouts of America, they’re all trying to quash the ability for survivors of child sex abuse to file claims.”

Of those powerful institutions, none has done more to stop the CVA than the Catholic Church. Between 2007 and 2015, the Tim Dolan-led Catholic Conference paid out more than $2.1 million to Albany lobbyists to block the legislation. Meanwhile, Catholic League President Bill Donohue has taunted those pushing for the bill as “losers,” and claimed last year that the act is “a vindictive bill pushed by lawyers and activists out to rape the Catholic Church.”

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The Ins and Out of the IRCP: Is it a Hoax? Why Brooklyn?

NEW YORK
The Worthy Adversary

June 22, 2017 Joelle CasteixClergy Abuse Crisis, IRCP

~PART ONE OF A MULTI-PART SERIES ON THE IRCP~

I had planned on talking about the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP) in this blog, but I wanted to wait until after the end of the current New York legislative session.

My hope was that the plan would be rendered redundant—that the Child Victims’ Act (CVA) would have passed, and survivors of child sexual abuse across the state would have the ability to use the civil courts for justice.

But the CVA died. Less than 24 hours later, the Diocese of Brooklyn danced of the grave of the CVA and announced their own IRCP.

So it’s time to start talking.

Is the IRCP a Hoax?

In a previous a post, I called Hope and Healing Guam—a plan almost exactly like Dolan’s on the island territory—an outright hoax.

The reason I did so is because survivors of sexual abuse on Guam have the right to use the civil justice system to expose the archdiocese-wide conspiracy to cover up child sexual abuse—a conspiracy that lasted decades and included the cover-up of alleged sexual abuse by the archbishop himself.

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Fr. Zollner on clerical sex abuse: Our goal is for victims of abuse to feel listened to

ROME
Rome Reports

[with video]

2017-06-22

With the recent resignation of Marie Collins, the last clerical sex abuse survivor on the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, the Commission and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican are attempting to point out the problem areas and move forward.

The president of the Centre for Child Protection at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Hans Zollner, S.J., opens up about what else the Commission and the Vatican can do so each case is handled properly when it arrives to the congregation.

FR. HANS ZOLLNER
Pontifical Commission Protection of Minors

“What they can do and what they should do and what they want to do also is at least acknowledge that they have received that letter. But you must realize that at the Congregation, that section of the congregation that deals with these cases. I think, at the moment, there are 10 people who deal with 100s of cases, not only from this year but from decades ago. It’s not like in the US or Canada or Ireland, where for decades you have spoken about this, in some countries they are starting now. So things come up that have happened yesterday or 50 years ago.”

Now, some victims are contacting the Vatican, opening up about their situations that may have been hidden for years. However, they usually don’t receive an answer, as the case is being investigated and the letter could be seen as an “interference in the process.”

The other problem is when these letters are forwarded to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, there are not enough people to respond to each victim and resolve the cases, leading many victims of abuse to think the Vatican does not care.

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John Clegg was a welfare officer and man of God who raped students

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

Joanne McCarthy
22 Jun 2017

A TEENAGER who was sexually assaulted by a St John of God Brother was expelled from his school after punching the Brother in the face during an attempted sexual assault in the 1980s.

The student walked 10 kilometres before catching a train and ending up at Newcastle railway station in the middle of the night, Justice Anthony Payne said after rejecting the appeal of former Brother John Clegg against his conviction and sentence for child sex offences against two teenage boys.

Clegg, 64, was found guilty in June, 2015 of seven offences against one student, 14, including multiple charges of sexual intercourse, and four offences against a second student, 14, including sexual intercourse.

He was sentenced to seven years’ jail, with a minimum term of four years and six months and an earliest release date in June, 2022. Clegg’s name was suppressed until the appeal against his conviction was published on Monday.

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Diocese of Brooklyn launches fund for victims of clergy sex abuse that mirrors Cardinal Dolan program

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
DENIS SLATTERY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, June 22, 2017

The Diocese of Brooklyn is setting up a fund to compensate people who were abused by clergy when they were kids, mirroring a plan set up by Cardinal Dolan across the East River.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, announced Thursday by Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, will allow victims of sexual abuse by priests or deacons of the diocese to seek financial compensation.

“I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse, but this compensation program is a concrete expression of our contrition and our desire to make amends,” DiMarzio said in a video statement.

The Brooklyn diocese oversees 186 parishes and 211 churches in both Brooklyn and Queens.

A loan will be taken out by the church to pay for the cost of compensating survivors, church officials said.

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Bishop of Truro left appalled by report into abuse cover up by the Church of England

UNITED KINGDOM
Cornwall Live

By DaveCDM | Posted: June 22, 2017

The Bishop of Truro has admitted feeling ‘appalled and deeply saddened’ after an independent report was published showing how the Church of England “colluded” with and helped to hide the long-term sexual abuse of young men by one its bishops.

The report says the church showed little care for the victims of abuse and tried instead to support Peter Ball, the former Bishop of Lewes, who was jailed for 32 months at the Old Bailey in 2015 after pleading guilty to a string of historical offences, including two counts of indecent assault.

Peter Ball’s identical twin brother Michael was Bishop of Truro from 1990 to 1997, and Peter served as a priest in Truro for six months in 1995 – two years after he had accepted a police caution for gross indecency.

The church today published Abuse Of Faith, an independent review chaired by Dame Moira Gibb, which found that “Ball’s conduct has caused serious and enduring damage to the lives of many men”.

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Church of England bosses helped to cover up former Bishop of Gloucester’s sexual offences

UNITED KINGDOM
Gloucestershire Live

BY ROBIN JENKINS
22 JUN 2017

Some of the Church of England’s most senior figures colluded with a disgraced former Bishop of Gloucester who tried to cover up his sexual offences.

The situation was revealed today in an independent report into Peter Ball’s abuse of boys and men over at least 20 years.

Dame Moira Gibb’s report revealed that one man, Neil Todd, killed himself in 2012 after being abused by Ball in Gloucester in 1992.

The expose of what happened, and the failure of the Church to respond appropriately to his misconduct, led to the current Bishop of Gloucester, the Right Revd Rachel Treweek, saying she was “greatly shocked and distressed” by what she described as a “devastating account” of Ball’s abuse.

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Senior Church of England figures ‘colluded’ with bishop convicted of abusing young men to conceal his crimes

UNITED KINGDOM
Mirror

BY HELEN WILLIAM
RHIAN LUBIN
22 JUN 2017

Senior Church of England figures helped to hide the long-term sexual abuse of young men by one its bishops instead of helping victims, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

The Most Rev Justin Welby’s statement came as the Church published Abuse Of Faith, an independent review of how it handled the case of Peter Ball, the former Bishop of Lewes who was jailed for 32 months at the Old Bailey in 2015.

He pleaded guilty to a string of historical offences, including two counts of indecent assault.

The review, chaired by Dame Moira Gibb, found that “Ball’s conduct has caused serious and enduring damage to the lives of many men”.

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Church ‘colluded’ with sex abuse bishop Peter Ball

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Senior figures in the Church of England “colluded” with a former bishop who abused young men, an independent review has found.

Peter Ball, who is now 85, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 after admitting sex offences against 18 teenagers and young men.

The former bishop of Lewes and bishop of Gloucester carried out the abuse between the 1970s and 1990s

Dame Moira Gibb’s review criticises ex-Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey.

He accepted the criticism and apologised to Ball’s victims.

The review found Lord Carey received seven letters from families and individuals following the arrest and cautioning of Ball in 1992 for gross indecency – when he stood down as bishop of Gloucester – but failed to pass six of them to the police.

He also chose not to put Ball on the Church of England’s “Lambeth List”, which names clergymen about whom questions of suitability for ministry have been raised.

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Dissenting Indonesian priests seek Vatican help over bishop

INDONESIA
Vatican Radio

Nearly 70 of priests of Ruteng Diocese in eastern Indonesia have sought the mediation of the Vatican to help resolve a bitter dispute with their bishop, whom they accuse of misappropriating more than US$100,000 in church funds.

Representatives of the priests, accompanied by a bishops’ conference official met Apostolic Nuncio Archbishop Antonio Guido Filipazzi on June 16, seeking his help for a complete overhaul and transparency from Bishop Hubertus Leteng regarding how things are run in the diocese. The move comes after dozens of priests in the diocese on Catholic-majority Flores Island quit their posts in protest against their bishop.

Father Alfonsius Segar, one of the priests who met Arch. Filipazzi, told UCANEWS that the Holy See’s representative to Indonesia, has promised to help resolve the dispute. “He will immediately take this issue up with the Vatican,” Father Segar said. The priest also said the nuncio will send someone to the diocese to appraise the situation. “We are looking forward to a swift Vatican decision on this,” Father Segar added.

Meanwhile, Indonesia’s Ambassador to the Holy See, Antonius Agus Sriyono told Vatican Radio he was currently observing the crisis in Ruteng Diocese, but if “requested” he was ready “to become a mediator” of his government with the Vatican.

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Advocates confused and angry over handling of the Child Victims Act

NEW YORK
Legislative Gazette

Written by THOMAS GIERY PUDNEY, assistant editor on June 21, 2017

Activists pushing for the long-contested Child Victims Act were left wondering the motives of lawmakers after a week in which Gov. Andrew Cuomo introduced and then questioned the chances, of his own program bill.

“The advocates feel his office hoodwinked us by appeasing victims with his program bill and than appeasing Cardinal Dolan and the church by killing his own bill,” said Gary Greenberg, founder of Fighting for Children Public Action Committee. “I say to this Governor Cuomo: shame on you!”

Greenberg is referring to comments made by Cuomo on a conference call with the press on Friday, two days after introducing his own program bill, that he “was not optimistic,” about its passage in the Senate.

“Cuomo needs to get back to Albany and pass a Child Victims Act,” added Greenberg. “He has disappeared from Albany the last few weeks, the governor has the power to stop 150 kids a day from being sexually abused in New York.”

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Sanford rabbi accused of impregnating teen

FLORIDA
ClickonOrlando

SANFORD, Fla. – A rabbi accused of molesting and impregnating a 15-year-old girl has been arrested, the Sanford Police Department said.

Investigators arrested Lloyd Haughton for sexual assault on a minor living in the custody of Haughton.

The Sanford Police Department said it was notified March 31 by the 15-year-old girl that Haughton had been molesting her for the past two years.

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Sanford rabbi sexually assaults, impregnates minor, police say

FLORIDA
WESH

SANFORD, Fla. —
Sanford police arrested a rabbi for allegedly sexually assaulting a minor.

Authorities said a 15-year-old girl contacted them in March, telling police Lloyd Haughton, a rabbi affiliated with the Synagogue Beth Israel on Maple Avenue, had been molesting her for the past two years.

The victim told police Haughton touched her inappropriately.

When confronted and questioned about the incidents, police said Haughton denied all allegations.

In late April, investigators were informed by the victim’s mother that the victim was pregnant with Haughton’s child.

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Sanford rabbi charged with impregnating 15-year-old

FLORIDA
WFTV

[with video]

SANFORD, Fla. – A Sanford rabbi was arrested Wednesday on charges he molested a 15-year-old girl over the course of two years before impregnating her earlier this year, investigators said.

The investigation into Lloyd Haughton, who is affiliated with the Synagogue Beth Israel on South Maple Avenue, started on March 31, when the girl told police about the alleged abuse.

Officers questioned Haughton, who denied the allegations, the Sanford Police Department said in a media release.

Less than a month later, the girl’s mother contacted police and told them that her daughter was pregnant and claimed Haughton was the father.

The girl terminated her pregnancy, but the Florida Department of Law Enforcement determined Wednesday that Haughton was the biological father of the fetus, investigators said.

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Sanford rabbi accused of molesting 15-year-old girl, police say

FLORIDA
Orlando Sentinel

Michael Williams

ASanford rabbi is accused of molesting and impregnating a 15-year-old girl who lived in his custody, according to the Sanford Police Department.

On March 31, authorities say, they began investigating Lloyd Haughton — a rabbi affiliated with Synagogue Beth Israel in Sanford, a Messianic congregation — after the victim told police that Haughton had been molesting her for the past two years.

On April 25, the victim’s mother told police that the 15-year-old was pregnant by Haughton, police said.

A blood test confirmed that Haughton was the father.

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Le pape accusé d’avoir protégé des prêtres soupçonnés d’actes pédophil

ARGENTINA/ITALY
Le Monde

[Pope accused of protecting priests suspected of pedophile acts in Argentina and Italy]

Le scandale provoqué par la révélation des viols subis par des dizaines d’enfants sourds et muets dans un institut religieux d’Argentine éclabousse jusqu’au pape François.

LE MONDE | 19.06.2017

Par Christine Legrand (Mendoza (Argentine), envoyée spéciale, avec Jérôme Gautheret à Rome)

Le pape François a-t-il ignoré plusieurs alertes sur la présence, dans un institut pour enfants sourds-muets en Argentine – son pays d’origine –, de prêtres qui avaient été accusés de pédophilie lorsqu’ils officiaient pour le même institut en Italie ?

C’est ce qu’affirment des avocats représentant des enfants qui disent avoir été victimes d’agressions sexuelles dans l’institut catholique Provolo de Mendoza, au pied de la cordillère des Andes, à 980 kilomètres à l’ouest de Buenos Aires.

Selon Carlos Lombardi, conseiller de la Fédération des survivants des abus sexuels ecclésiastiques, le réseau L’Abuso, une association de victimes de pédophilie, avait fourni dès 2014 – quelques mois après l’élection au Vatican du pontife argentin Jorge Mario Bergoglio, le 13 mars 2013 – une liste de quinze prêtres qui auraient quitté l’institut Provolo de Vérone (Italie), la maison mère de l’établissement de Mendoza, après avoir été impliqués dans des scandales d’agressions sexuelles.

En savoir plus sur http://www.lemonde.fr/enquetes/article/2017/06/19/en-argentine-et-en-italie-un-scandale-de-pedophilie-entache-l-eglise_5147049_1653553.html#2Uxy14mZsqZTeDRc.99

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Did Pope Francis help cover for pedophile priests in Argentina?

ITALY/FRANCE/ARGENTINA
La Croix

An Italian association of sexual abuse victims is seeking to prove that the Pope ignored several alerts to the presence of pedophile priests at an institute for deaf-mute children in Argentina, his country of origin.

Marie Malzac

Did Pope Francis cover up for pedophile priests at the Provolo Institute, an establishment for deaf-mute children in Mendoza at the foot of the Andes, 980 km to the west of Buenos Aires?

This question was raised by the French newspaper Le Monde on Monday, June 19, following accusations relating to the pope earlier over the matter of several days by an Italian association, the Federation of Survivors of Ecclesiastical Sexual Abuse.According to the Federation, Pope Francis was aware of the background of several priests suspected of having abused children in Italy who were later sent by their superiors to the Provolo Institute in Argentina.

These priests, who were arrested in November 2016, are now in prison.According to a document uncovered by the “L’abuso” network and other victims’ associations, the Vatican was made aware several times of the actions of the 14 priests from the Verona region. Moreover, at that time, Pope Francis was no longer in Argentina but at the Vatican since the first report dates to 2014.

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Justin Welby admits Church colluded and concealed abuse of children

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Thu 22 Jun 2017
By Marcus Jones

The Archbishop of Canterbury has issued an unreserved apology after admitting the Church of England colluded and concealed the abuse committed by Bishop Peter Ball.

The Church has released the findings of an independent review into its handling of the abuse.

The review, titled ‘An Abuse of Faith’ was launched after Ball was sentenced in 2015 to 32 months’ in prison after admitting the abuse of 18 children between 1977 and 1992.

He was released from prison earlier this year having served half his sentence.

The review by Dame Moira Gibb found the Church failed to respond appropriately while the Archbishop of Canterbury at the time, Lord Carey, didn’t listen to survivors of abuse.

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CHURCH OF ENGLAND HEAD SAYS IT ‘COLLUDED WITH’ SEX ABUSE

UNITED KINGDOM
Associated Press

LONDON (AP) — The head of the Church of England has said that the institution “colluded” with and helped to hide the long-term sexual abuse of young men by one of its former bishops.

Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, made the statement Thursday as the church published a review of how it handled the case of former bishop Peter Ball, who was convicted and imprisoned in 2015 after pleading guilty to offenses including two counts of indecent assault.

Welby said the report was “harrowing reading” and that the church didn’t help those who were brave enough to come forward.

The report said Ball’s conduct “caused serious and enduring damage to the lives of many men,” and that “the church at its most senior levels and over many years supported him unwisely.”

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Bishop ‘shocked’ by Ball abuse report

UNITED KINGDOM
Forest of Dean and Wye Valley Review

Thursday, 22 June 2017 By Mark Elson

THE Bishop of Gloucester, the Right Rev Rachel Treweek, says she is “greatly shocked and distressed” by the findings of an independent report into disgraced church leader Peter Ball.

‘An Abuse of Faith’, produced by Dame Moira Gibb, claims that senior figures in the Church of England “colluded” to cover up evidence of former Gloucester bishop Ball’s abuse of boys as young as 12.

The former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey is among those criticised in the report, which was commissioned by the church after Ball was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 for misconduct in public office and indecent assault. Ball was freed last February having served 16 months.

He was first reported to Gloucester Police by novice monk Neil Todd and others in 1992, but no charges were brought against him after police reportedly received supportive phone calls from MPs, former public school headmasters, magistrates and even a Lord Chief Justice.

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Anger at compensation delay for sex abuse victims in Northern Ireland

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Staff Reporter
June 22 2017

Victims of historical child abuse in Northern Ireland have been told they will not receive promised financial compensation for at least another 10 months because of the political crisis.

Many have been left devastated to discover that no provision was made in the 2017/18 budget to cover the scheme.

Politicians have been advised by the head of the Civil Service that, with no working Executive, it is unlikely any financial redress will be made before April 2018.

Financial payments were promised to victims more than a year ago.

Politicians have warned that many have been left suicidal or facing financial ruin as the current Stormont impasse means that the findings and recommendations of a four-year inquiry into State and Church abuse have still not been presented to the Assembly. The report, which was published just days before the Assembly collapsed in January, promised victims State-backed compensation payments of up to £100,000.

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Church of England colluded in abuse by former bishop, says damning report

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

James Macintyre 22 June 2017

The Church of England ‘colluded’ with the former bishop Peter Ball over his abuse of young boys and men, a new independent report into Ball’s case states.

The report, Abuse of Faith by the respected former social worker Dame Moira Gibb is damning of the Church’s handling of the 84-year-old former Bishop of Lewes and Gloucester, who was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 after admitting a string of historical sex offences against 18 teenagers and young men.

The report has led to apologies from two former Archbishops of Canterbury, George Carey and Rowan Williams, over how they handled the allegations against Ball.

Following Ball’s conviction, Justin Welby, the current Archbishop of Canterbury commissioned the report into Ball, who was released from jail in February after serving 16 months.

‘This report considers the serious sexual wrongdoing of Peter Ball…who abused many boys and men over a period of twenty years or more. That is shocking in itself but it is compounded by the failure of the Church to respond appropriately to his misconduct, again over a period of many years,’ Dame Moira writes in the report’s foreword.

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Senior church figures ‘colluded’ with disgraced bishop Peter Ball to cover up sex offences, report finds

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Olivia Rudgard, religious affairs correspondent
22 JUNE 2017

Senior church figures “colluded” with a disgraced bishop to cover up evidence of his sex offences, a report has found.

The report, the result of a year-long enquiry by Dame Moira Gibb, found that senior figures “trivialised” the actions of the disgraced bishop and sought to protect its reputation by covering up evidence of further abuse.

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey has been heavily criticised by a damning report which condemns the Church of England over its handling of the case of bishop Peter Ball, who was convicted of sex offences in 2015.

The former bishop of Lewes and Gloucester admitted abusing boys as young as 12. He was released from prison earlier this year.

The report found that Lord Carey wrote to Peter Ball’s twin brother Bishop Michael Ball in 1993, after Peter Ball had accepted a caution for gross indecency, saying he believed he was “basically innocent”.

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Church of England colluded with bishop who abused boys, says Welby

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent

Thursday 22 June 2017

Senior figures in the Church of England colluded for a period of 20 years with a disgraced former bishop who sexually abused boys and men, a damning independent report has found.

The archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, said the report on the church’s handling of former bishop Peter Ball made “harrowing reading”.

“The church colluded and concealed rather than seeking to help those who were brave enough to come forward. This is inexcusable and shocking behaviour,” he said.

“To the survivors who were brave enough to share their story and bring Peter Ball to justice, I once again offer an unreserved apology. There are no excuses whatsoever for what took place and the systemic abuse of trust perpetrated by Peter Ball over decades.”

Two former archbishops of Canterbury, George Carey and Rowan Williams, apologised to the victims of Peter Ball after being criticised for their failures in relation to him.

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Bishop Peter Hancock statement at Peter Ball review press conference

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

The first thing I want to say at the start of this Press Conference is that I am truly sorry that as a Church we failed the survivors of the abuse perpetrated by Bishop Peter Ball. Having read the report I am appalled and deeply disturbed by its contents. As Dame Moira says in her foreword, Peter Ball abused boys and men over a 20 year period and as a Church we colluded, we failed to act and protect those who came forward for help. There are no excuses.

The Church of England commissioned this review so we could learn from it and this detailed account of what went on provides a clear picture both of Peter Ball’s abusive actions and our
woeful response.

Whilst this is about moving forward – making the Church a safer place for all in 2017 and beyond – nevertheless we have taken very seriously the comments and criticisms in the report of some senior church figures and where appropriate have taken further action. Relating to this it was very disappointing to hear about a leak of a private letter this morning from the Archbishop to Lord Carey, when the focus should be on the survivors.

As the Lead Bishop for Safeguarding I am hugely conscious of the importance of the first recommendation that our bishops must take steps to demonstrate our individual and collective accountability for the safety and protection of all within the church.

In his statement the Archbishop of Canterbury makes it very clear that he is taking a lead on this, as Dame Moira recommends, working with me and the National Safeguarding Team. Every bishop has therefore been sent the report this morning and it is now online for everyone to read.

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Independent report into the Church’s handling of Peter Ball case

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

22 June 2017

An Abuse of Faith, the independent report by Dame Moira Gibb into the Church’s handling of the Bishop Peter Ball case, has been published today. Peter Ball was convicted in 2015 of misconduct in public office and indecent assaults against teenagers and young men. The report was commissioned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, following the conviction.

In her foreword Dame Moira states:

“This report considers the serious sexual wrongdoing of Peter Ball, a bishop of the Church of England who abused many boys and men over a period of twenty years or more. That is shocking in itself but is compounded by the failure of the Church to respond appropriately to his misconduct, again over a period of many years. Ball’s priority was to protect and promote himself and he maligned the abused. The Church colluded with that rather than seeking to help those he had harmed, or assuring itself of the safety of others.

We were asked to consider changes necessary to ensure that safeguarding in the Church is of the highest possible standard. The Church has made significant progress in recent years in its understanding of abuse. We have no doubt that the Church has a genuine commitment to meeting its responsibilities towards the victims of abuse. However we can see how difficult it is to make change across the complex structures of the Church. Progress has been slow and continuing, faster improvement is still required. It is the leadership of the Archbishops and Bishops which will determine whether change is effective.”

The report has 11 recommendations for the Church focusing on a range of issues including focusing on getting the right support in place for survivors, the leadership of bishops, strengthening guidance, reviewing the Archbishops’ Lists and the effectiveness of our disciplinary measures with regards to safeguarding related cases.

Receiving the report on behalf of the Church, Bishop Peter Hancock, the CofE’s lead safeguarding bishop, said: “I am truly sorry that as a Church we failed the survivors of Peter Ball; having read the report I am appalled and disturbed by its contents; as Dame Moira says in her foreword Peter Ball abused boys and men over a 20 year period and as a Church we colluded, we failed to act and protect those who came forward for help. There are no excuses. We accept all the recommendations and are working to action them.

“For the survivors, it may feel this is all too late. I am personally aware from my meetings with individual survivors in the course of my work that they live with the effects of this abuse for their whole life. I once again offer them my wholehearted apology. This Report affirms the direction and steps that we have taken to improve the consistency, robustness and rigour of our practice, but progress has been too slow. It has taken longer than it should have done, but we are absolutely committed to implementing Dame Moira’s recommendations and my role as lead bishop is to ensure this happens.”

Statement from Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby

“Abuse of Faith makes harrowing reading: the Church colluded and concealed rather than seeking to help those who were brave enough to come forward. This is inexcusable and shocking behaviour and although Dame Moira notes that most of the events took place many years ago, and does not think that the Church now would conduct itself in the ways described we can never be complacent, we must learn lessons. I fully endorse the recommendations in the report and will ensure that the House of Bishops addresses how we can implement these as soon as possible, working with the National Safeguarding Team. For the survivors who were brave enough to share their story and bring Peter Ball to justice, I once again offer an unreserved apology. There are no excuses whatsoever for what took place and the systemic abuse of trust perpetrated by Peter Ball over decades.”

If you are affected by this report and want to talk to someone in the Church, your local diocese has a safeguarding adviser or team who can be contacted via the relevant diocesan website. Alternatively, please email the National Safeguarding Team at safeguarding@churchofengland.org. If you want to talk to someone outside of the Church of England you can call the CCPAS helpline on 0303 003 11 11

Notes

Full statement from Bishop Peter Hancock read at press conference

October 2015

Archbishop commissions independent review of Peter Ball case
https://www.churchofengland.org/media-centre/news/2015/10/archbishop-commissions-independent-review-of-peter-ball-case.aspx

Statement on sentencing of Peter Ball
https://www.churchofengland.org/media-centre/news/2015/10/statement-on-the-sentencing-of-peter-ball.aspx

Feb 2016

Dame Moira Gibb announced as Chair of independent review into Peter Ball case
https://www.churchofengland.org/media-centre/news/2016/02/dame-moira-gibb-announced-as-chair-of-independent-review-into-peter-ball-case.aspx

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Church of England failed child victims of sexual abuse while ‘colluding’ with disgraced

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Tom Batchelor @_tombatchelor

The Church of England “concealed” evidence of child abuse by a former bishop stretching over two decades, archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has said, following a major independent review.

The report, Abuse of Faith, found senior figures in the church “displayed little care” for the victims of disgraced Peter Ball, who was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 after admitting carrying out a string of historical sex offences against teenage boys and young men in the 1970s, ‘80s and ‘90s.

Dame Moira Gibb, its author, said the Church’s “failure to safeguard so many boys and young men still casts a long shadow”.

“Ball’s priority was to protect and promote himself and he maligned the abused,” the report said.

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Montreal’s Catholic Church will fingerprint priests who work with children

CANADA
VICE News

By Rachel Browne on Jun 21, 2017

In an attempt to protect young and vulnerable parishioners from abuse, the Catholic Church of Montreal will start fingerprinting all priests before they work with children.

New rules announced this week will require priests to provide digital fingerprints, and expands on a pilot project called “Responsible Pastoral Ministry” launched within 10 churches in the city last year that imposed screening processes for those working and volunteering within the diocese. All churches in the jurisdiction will have to follow these rules, which prohibits an adult from being alone with children, by 2020.

“If someone would like to do something wrong or abuse anyone, knowing there’s all this filtering, they won’t ask to become volunteers in our church,” Bertrand Montpetit, a pastor at a church in Dollard-des-Ormeaux, told reporters.

It’s all a response to allegations of rampant sexual abuse of children at the hands of Catholic priests in Montreal — and around the world.

In March, a 55-year-old Montreal priest was charged with multiple accounts of sexual assault and touching of three children. Father Brian Boucher was very involved with activities at the church, including assisting youth during confirmations and first communions. The Archdiocese of Montreal denounced any violence within the church.

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Granger reeling from priest issue

WASHINGTON
Daily Sun

By John Fannin Wednesday, June 14, 2017

GRANGER — Area residents are still in shock over a local priest’s dismissal following allegations of sexual abuse.

The Rev. Gustavo Gomez Santos, 51, served Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish, 604 E. Ave., and offered Spanish-language mass in Mabton. He was removed from ministry in the Roman Catholic Church, Yakima Diocese.

Bishop Joseph Tyson said the action was taken because the allegation of sexual abuse of a minor “… was determined to be credible,” Tyson said.

“The whole situation is bad for the victims, the priest, the whole church,” said Al Ramos, who attends mass in Zillah. “It’s bad for everybody.”

Gomez Santos was placed on leave May 5 after Yakima County Sheriff’s Office detectives shared an interview with a 21-year-old former Mattawa resident who reported he had been fondled by the priest five or six years earlier, while the priest was serving as pastor of St.

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Advocates Say Fight for Child Victims Act Not Over

NEW YORK
Spectrum News

By Sarah Blazonis
Updated Wednesday, June 21, 2017

AMHERST, N.Y. — It can take decades for people who were sexually abused as children to reach a point where they’re ready to come forward and tell their story.

Thomas Travers says he was a boy when he tried to report what happened to him.

“I came forward when I was that age. I was told I was a liar. I was told that what happened to me did not happen, that a priest would never do that to a child,” said Travers.

He was 48 before he was ready to talk again — 25 years too late to take legal action. Right now, state law sets the statute of limitations on child sex abuse civil actions at the victim’s 23rd birthday.

“An age limit of 23 is both unrealistic and archaic. People who are abused as children, studies show more often than not, repress those memories, and they can resurface as late as someone’s 40s, 50s,” said attorney William Lorenz, Jr.

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Priest at Belfast school quizzed pupils about sex – report criticises child prote

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Allan Preston
June 22 2017

A west Belfast school has been criticised for multiple weaknesses in its child protection measures after three pupils complained when a priest invited to the school asked them sexual questions in confession.

An independent review – ordered by De La Salle College’s Board of Governors in January – detailed several flaws in how the school dealt with the childrens’ complaints.

This included delays in reporting complaints to police, poor record keeping, and a lack of understanding of child protection issues.

The report centres on a visit by a Dublin priest to De La Salle College during May 2013, and of alleged inappropriate sexual conversations with three children.

The pupils complained separately to school authorities in June 2013, September 2014 and March 2015.

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Lawsuit: Boy abused more than 100 times, victim was 7 when it started

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Mindy Aguon |For The Guam Daily Post Jun 22, 2017

A former Guam resident filed a civil lawsuit in the District Court of Guam yesterday alleging he was sexually abused by a priest “more than 100 times” beginning on his 7th birthday.

Now residing in Oregon, the plaintiff, using his initials J.A., sued the Archdiocese of Agana, alleging he was subject to three years of sexual molestation and rape by father Ray Techaira, who is now deceased.

Techaira was the priest assigned to the Nino Perdido y Sagrada Familia Catholic Church in Asan where J.A. and his family regularly attended Mass and volunteered their services at the parish, court documents state.

In 1984, J.A. was helping his grandfather wipe down the church pews when Techaira allegedly instructed the boy to go to the Asan rectory because the priest wanted to give the boy a birthday gift.

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Latest lawsuit names new priest, parish

GUAM
KUAM

[with video]

Updated: Jun 22, 2017

By Krystal Paco

It appeared prayers were answered weeks ago when parties expressed optimism for out-of-court settlement for dozens of clergy sex abuse cases.

Today, it appears these talks – at least for those cases filed by attorney David Lujan – have come to a screeching halt.

Late this afternoon, the attorney filed yet another $5 million lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Agana.

The latest lawsuit names a new priest and parish.

He kept his secret because it would make him a “good Catholic.”

Or at least that’s what Father Ray Techaira would tell J.A. after he was sexually abused.

J.A. marks the 78th victim to file suit against the Archdiocese of Agana.

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New lawsuit alleges Father Ray Techaira allegedly raped and molested boy more than 100 times

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

[with video]

Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com June 22, 2017

A 14th Guam priest is accused of raping and sexually molesting a boy more than 100 times in the 1980s, starting on the boy’s seventh birthday, in a lawsuit filed Thursday, June 22.

Father Ray Techaira allegedly raped and sexually molested the boy from 1984 through 1987, the lawsuit filed in the District Court of Guam says. Techaira is now dead, according to the lawsuit.

The plaintiff, identified in court documents only as J.A. to protect his identity, is now 40 years old and is living in Oregon.

J.A., represented by attorney David Lujan, demands a jury trial and $5 million in minimum damages.

The alleged rape and molestation happened mostly at the Nino Perdido y Sagrada Familia Catholic Church in Asan, the lawsuit says.

“From approximately 1984 through 1987, around the ages of 7 through 10, J.A. was sexually molested and raped by Techaira more than one-hundred times,” the lawsuit states.

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Before Her Teacher’s Murder, This ‘Keepers’ Witness Was Already Living A Nightmare

UNITED STATES
WBHM

[with audio]

Posted 06-21-2017 by Kelly McEvers

This story includes content some readers may find disturbing.

Who killed Sister Cathy Cesnik? The Baltimore nun and school teacher was murdered in 1969, and in the Netflix documentary series The Keepers, her students tell a troubling story of abuse by priests, alleged police complicity and a possible cover-up by the Catholic Church.

Jean Wehner is one of those students. She attended Archbishop Keough High School in the late 1960s. Wehner tells NPR that she was “systematically abused, manipulated, raped, conditioned by [school chaplain] Joseph Maskell for a good year and a half before any of this with Sister Cathy happened.”

Wehner buried her memories of the abuse, and they stayed buried until 1992, when she began to remember things — like telling Cesnik about what was happening to her. After their conversation, Cesnik transferred to a different school, then disappeared. She was found dead nearly two months later. Her murder remains unsolved.

Wehner believes Cesnik may have been killed for knowing too much, but Maskell always maintained his innocence in both the killing and any abuse allegations. (He died in 2001.) The Archdiocese of Baltimore denied that there was any cover-up, but they have paid nearly $500,000 in settlements to 16 people (including Wehner) who accused Maskell of sexual abuse.

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June 21, 2017

Nuns ‘could find no evidence’ of abuse at Smyllum, Lanark

SCOTLAND
Carluke Gazette

Heart-rending allegations of decades of maltreatment at Lanark’s former Smyllum Orphanage featured in the very first sitting of what will be a marathon inquiry into historical child abuse in Scotland.

Nearly four decades after the institution closed its doors, the now-ageing former occupants of the orphanage finally had their long-awaited day in court as the Scottish child abuse inquiry got under way in Edinburgh last week.

But it is understood that there is anger among those who term themselves ‘survivors’ of Smyllum Orphanage at some of the evidence given at the hearing by members of the religious order that ran the institution, the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul.

There were audible groans from the public benches at their claims that Smyllum’s punishment and medical records could not now be found despite a search of the order’s archives.

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Time bar on abuse payouts to be lifted

SCOTLAND
BBC News

The three-year limit on survivors of childhood abuse suing for damages is to be scrapped by MSPs.

The move will allow victims of abuse dating back as far as 1964 to seek compensation for their injuries though the civil courts.

Victims currently have just three years from the date of their injury – or from their 16th birthday – to bring a court action.

The limit will be removed by the Limitation (Childhood Abuse) Bill.

The bill is likely to be unanimously approved when MSPs vote in the Scottish Parliament later.

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Who killed Sister Cathy, and faith in the Catholic Church?

UNITED STATES
Lexington Herald-Leader

BY MIKE RIVAGE-SEUL

You really ought to see “The Keepers.” It will scare the hell out of you — especially if you’re a Catholic. The Netflix docuseries in seven parts tells the story of an unsolved murder of a young Catholic nun in Baltimore. The apparent perps were two Catholic priests.

I watched the film with one of my sisters who had attended Catholic schools for 12 years. “The Keepers” became our point of discussion for our two days together. Its portrayal of the cynical use of religion to exploit innocent children had us discussing Catholic schools, the pedophilia scandal, confession, outdated church teachings in general — and especially the exclusion of women from church leadership.

We found ourselves sympathizing with those (including close friends and relatives) who have left the church as irredeemably corrupt. No wonder, we agreed, “former Catholics” represent the second largest religious “denomination” in the country (with 22.8 million), behind members of the official Catholic church at 68.1 million.

“The Keepers” investigates the murder of Sister Cathy Cesnik, a high school English teacher, who disappeared shortly after confronting authorities about widespread sexual abuse at the prestigious Keough Girls’ High School in Baltimore. Two chaplains there used the confessional to identify young females who would be vulnerable to their sexual depredations. Eventually they ended up sharing their victims with school outsiders, including police officials.

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Pastor arrested for sexual assault of a child

TEXAS
Hay Free Press

Members of the Lone Star Fugitive Task Force arrested a Buda man who works as an east Austin assistant pastor on indictments of sexual assault of a child in Hays and Nueces Counties.

Ruben Garcia, 59, of Buda, was arrested by the Task Force June 12 and was booked into the Hays County Jail. Garcia is being held on $300,000 bond.

Garcia, who was on the run for the past two months, was the subject of an arrest warrant stemming from a 2015 sexual assault of a child investigation by the Nueces County Sheriff’s Office, according to the release.

A Hays County Grand Jury indicted Garcia in April on two separate counts of sexual assault of a child, along with one count of indecency with a child by sexual contact. Those indictments stemmed from an investigation that began in early 2016.

According to the release, Task Force officers established surveillance at the Betania Baptist Church on Tillery Street in east Austin. Garcia worked as an associate pastor at the church.

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Church youth leader admitted to fondling child, say investigators

TEXAS
Fox San Antonio

SAN ANTONIO – A church youth leader was arrested and charged with fondling a child who later told a school counselor about the alleged incidents.

According to court documents, the child told the counselor that the youth leader, identified as Omar Roman Salas, 25, undressed and touched him at a home a few months ago.

During the second incident in early May, the alleged victim claimed Salas performed a sex act on him.

The counselor called the victim’s mother and she confronted the church pastor, who told police Salas had admitted to fondling the victim.

Salas is charged with sexual assault of a child. The church where he led a youth group is not named in court papers.

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4 S.A. men arrested on sexual assault of a child charges within 24 hours

TEXAS
San Antonio Express News

Four San Antonio men were arrested Tuesday on charges of sexual assault of a child in connection with four separate cases of abuse.

Omar Roman Salas, 25; Johnny Gonzales, Jr., 30; Brandon May, 30; and Kenneth Perez, 36, are the accused suspects in the cases.

All four men were booked into the Bexar County Jail on Tuesday evening. Salas and Gonzales are being held on $50,000 bail each, May and Perez on $75,000 bail each.

Salas, a youth minister at a local church, is accused of fondling and sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy that goes to the same church. The first incident allegedly occurred sometime in April, when the victim spent the night at Salas’ home.

The second incident occurred around May 5 or 6, again while the victim was spending the night at Salas’ house. The victim told Salas he was uncomfortable with what happened the first time and didn’t want it to happen again, according to police records. Salas allegedly assaulted the boy anyway.

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Former Christian Brother guilty of indecent assault of school boys

IRELAND
Irish Times

David Raleigh

A former Christian brother who would “lick” his pupils ears while sexually abusing them in class, has been found guilty by a jury of 15 counts of indecent assault.

James Treacy (75), with an address at Ashford Close, Swords, Dublin, showed no emotion as a jury at Limerick Circuit Court found him guilty, by unanimous decision, of abusing three male victims.

The court heard evidence from the victims, who were aged ten years old and in fifth class at the time.

The victims said he would abuse them in front of one another while he taught a “military style” class. His modus operandi, the court heard, was to place his hands down the front of the boys trousers and fondle their privates.

One victim told the court: “It was a military style class. What I mean by that is that we had to be neat and clean; Our hair had to be cut and we had to clean our ears, and if you’re ears weren’t clean, he would actually lick your ears.”

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BISHOP DIMARZIO’S WRITTEN STATEMENT IRCP

NEW YORK
Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn

I am announcing a significant new step in the ongoing effort of the Diocese of Brooklyn to address the wounds of those sexually abused by members of the clergy. It is called the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP). It is one more way our diocese, which serves Brooklyn and Queens, can acknowledge the harm that was done by those who were priests or deacons and show our solidarity with survivors. Our Program is modeled after the program recently launched by the Archdiocese of New York. Compensation decisions will be made by Kenneth R. Feinberg who administered numerous high-profile compensation programs, including the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, the compensation fund for the victims of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, served as a mediator for sexual abuse cases for Penn State University and administered many other corporate and charitable independent compensation programs. Mr. Feinberg will have total independence in his decisions.

Throughout my time as a diocesan bishop, first in Camden and then in Brooklyn and Queens, I have met with more than 50 survivors. It is difficult to hear about the pain caused by the criminal behavior of members of the clergy. I am well aware that no amount of money will ever heal the scars of abuse, but this program is a concrete expression of our contrition and our desire to make amends. We hope it will help with the healing process and bring survivors some element of healing.

The Diocese of Brooklyn will continue all of our past efforts to support survivors. Those efforts include paying the cost of therapy provided by independent professionals who are unaffiliated with the Church, offering various support groups, providing monthly prayer groups, and holding our annual Mass of Hope and Healing.

Four years ago, survivors of clergy abuse in the Diocese of Brooklyn formed a “Survivors Advisory Committee.” This program, along with all of our outreach efforts, has been discussed with this group of survivors. I will continue to listen to and be guided by these survivors in developing new ways to respond to the needs of victims.

I wish to assure every parishioner and every donor to our diocese in Brooklyn and Queens that not a penny of their contributions or bequests will go toward compensating victims of abuse. The Diocese will take out a loan to cover for the cost, and pay it back with rental income. The Diocese will not use money given by the faithful to support parishes, schools, charitable works, ministries, apostolates, or the Generations of Faith fundraising campaign. The financial burden will rightly be felt by the central diocesan administration.

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Breaking: Diocese of Brooklyn announces Dolan-esque compensation plan

NEW YORK
The Worthy Adversary

June 21, 2017 Joelle Casteix

And the corpse of the New York Child Victims Act isn’t even cool yet.

Brooklyn Bishop DiMarzio (pictured above) has issued a written statement announcing an Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Plan mirroring that of Cardinal Dolan’s IRCP across the river.

These plans compensate victims for the child sex abuse they suffered, while keeping documents, evidence, and some wrong-doers names secret.

The plan will also be administered by Kenneth Feinberg.

This Brooklyn announcement was the world’s best unkept secret. Victims from Brooklyn have been getting calls from the diocese for months.

And considering the dirty deals that just went down in Albany with the death of the Child Victims’ Act, survivors and advocates were pretty sure that “promises were made.” Perhaps these plans were part of those promises.

I have met with Ken Feinberg (and brought a crew of experts much smarter than I am) in order to do due diligence about the Archdiocese’s plan and its execution. I’ve also watched the roll-out of Phases One and Two.

– See more at: http://theworthyadversary.com/4578-breaking-diocese-of-brooklyn-announces-dolan-esque-compensation-plan#sthash.xxOLwYtM.dpuf

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AP, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER SEEK ACCESS IN CHURCH BEATING CASE

NORTH CAROLINA
Associated Press

BY MITCH WEISS AND HOLBROOK MOHR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Associated Press and the Charlotte Observer filed legal motions Wednesday to gain access to documents and lift a gag order in the case of a North Carolina minister accused of orchestrating the beating of a congregant to expel his “homosexual demons.”

The motions filed by the news outlets are related to the case of Brooke Covington, a minister at Word of Faith Fellowship in Spindale, North Carolina. She is charged with kidnapping and assaulting Matthew Fenner in the church’s sanctuary.

Covington is accused of urging others to slap, punch and choke Fenner for nearly two hours in January 2013 in a practice known as “blasting,” which involves intense screaming meant to drive out devils.

Judge Gary Gavenus declared a mistrial June 6 after the jury foreman brought unauthorized documents into deliberations. The judge sealed those documents and issued a gag order preventing witnesses, prosecutors, defense attorneys and jurors from discussing the case.

One of the news organizations’ motions, filed in Rutherford County Superior Court, called the gag order “a blanket, unconstitutional prior restraint on speech which would effectively and improperly curtail public discussion of this case by anyone with knowledge of the case.”

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Un sondaggio sulla pedofilia boccia Bergoglio

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

Stando ai servizi della tv italiana, si direbbe che Bergoglio goda di una popolarità a dir poco straordinaria: semplice, alla mano, bonaccione, pronto a farsi delle belle e sonore risate, appare proprio come un nonnino universale, un vicino di pianerottolo, un buon parroco di campagna, se non addirittura un rivoluzionario dei costumi vaticani senza precedenti storici. L’apparenza inganna, mai proverbio fu più vero e potremmo constatarlo tutti se soltanto la stampa facesse parlare anche i suoi detrattori. Lo prova un sondaggio realizzato dalla Rete L’Abuso fondata e diretta da Francesco Zanardi e incentrato proprio sulla sua persona: Giorgio Bergoglio alias papa Francesco.

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Netflix drama The Keepers stirs memories of school murder

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

June 22, 2017

JUSTIN BURKE
JournalistSydney
@justinburke

For Sydney teacher Denise ­Imwold, the recent true-crime ­series The Keepers was a traumatic viewing experience.

The seven-part documentary, aired on Netflix, focuses on the unsolved 1969 murder of Sister Cathy Cesnik, a teacher at a Baltimore high school. Ms Imwold was taught English and drama by Cesnik at the school in the years ­immediately preceding her death.

“After watching the first four episodes, I got an emotional hangover,” she said. “Sister Cathy was my teacher, and seeing the school corridors I had walked up and down so many times, and the faces I knew, I felt like I’d gone in a time warp, thinking: did all this ­really happen?”

The series explores the theory that Cesnik was killed to ensure her silence about students being sexually abused at the school by Father Joseph Maskell, who died in 2001. Jean Wehner, a classmate of Ms Imwold’s younger sister, is featured claiming that Maskell took her to see Cesnik’s body in the woods and telling her: “You see what happens when you say bad things about people?”

While Netflix refuses to confirm viewing figures, the low-key series is believed to have been in the top 10 most streamed shows alongside Orange is the New Black and House of Cards.

Ms Imwold says she had no notion of sexual abuse going on at the school, known as Keough, but she remembered Cesnik, then in her early 20s, as a passionate teacher and a gifted writer.

“Six months before she died, she directed me in a production of The Sound of Music; the irony was she was basically in the same position as the character Maria, about to embark on a leave of ­absence from the convent.”

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The 7 Most Interesting Updates In The Murder And Abuse Cases Of ‘The Keepers’ Since The Series Aired

UNITED STATES
Movie Pilot

By Emily Browne, writer at CREATORS.CO
Twitter: @emrbrowne

Major spoilers for The Keepers ahead. Proceed with caution.

If you haven’t binge-watched Netflix series The Keepers yet, stop what you’re doing right now and get on it — but come back when you’re done! For those that have finished the seven-episode series, you are probably now in the same boat as me, hitting up Google, Reddit and Facebook for any of the latest developments in the Sister Cathy Cesnik and Joyce Malecki murder cases. The series — which delves into Cathy’s brutal murder, as well as the alleged sex abuse which took place at Keogh High School in the 1960s — broke open a 40-year-old cold case, primarily thanks to two retired former Keogh students who were determined to discover the truth about Sister Cathy’s death.

What followed was monolithic power structures being weakened by the voices of victims determined to seek justice some 30 years later. In 1992, “Jane Doe” came forward with testimony stating that she was taken to see Sister Cathy’s body by her primary abuser Father Joseph Maskell. It was there that he threatened her, saying “See what happens when you say bad things about people.” As the case unfolded, more and more was revealed about the possible suspects, as well as events leading up to the discovery of Sister Cathy’s body in January 1970. However, the series failed to solve the case entirely, but that doesn’t mean it’s over. Since the completion of The Keepers, there have been further intriguing updates which add yet more depth to this gripping case.

1. Maryland’s Statute of Limitations Has Been Extended

In Episode 7, ‘The Conclusion’, we saw survivors of Maskell’s crimes (as well as other sex abuse victims) attempt to pass a bill which would extend the statute of limitations past the age of 25. The bill finally passed this year, and from July 1, 2017, victims in Maryland have until the age of 38 to sue their abusers. This is obviously a huge step in the right direction for those suffering with repressed memories, and will hopefully see more victims feel empowered to come forward in future.

2. The Exhumation of Maskell’s Body

Just before The Keepers hit Netflix, Father Joseph Maskell’s body was exhumed to test his DNA against that which was found at the original crime scene. As DNA is so much more advanced now than it was in 1970, Baltimore Police were able to conclude that the (assumed) cigarette butt found at the scene of the crime did not match Maskell’s DNA. While this is an important update, the series all but ruled out Maskell as the murderer, instead looking at two other men who were far more likely to have carried out the crime itself. Whether there are plans to test the DNA against either of them is unclear.

3. There Is A Brand New Facebook Group Moderated by Gemma Hoskins

The Justice For Sister Catherine Cesnik and Joyce Malecki Facebook page — which featured heavily in the series as a way to connect amateur sleuths and possible victims — was closed down a few days after The Keepers aired. The site was inundated with requests, and Hoskins told the Baltimore Sun that, “It was necessary to close the page temporarily due to a traffic jam and a technical glitch.” However, there is a brand new Facebook group open to everyone called The Keepers Official Group — Justice for Catherine Cesnik and Joyce Malecki where information pertinent to the case can be discussed and shared. The group currently has 82,000 members.

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Albany Republicans Kill The Child Victims Act

NEW YORK
Village Voice

by LAUREN EVANS

JUNE 21, 2017

The Child Victims Act will not be voted on this legislative session, despite a monumental push from survivors and lawmakers, and even a program bill from Governor Andrew Cuomo.

Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan confirmed to reporters yesterday that the bill was done for the year. “It’s under discussion, but the senate is not going to be taking that bill up,” he said.

Advocates of the CVA had high hopes that this would be the year the bill — a version of which has existed since 2006 — would finally get passed, particularly after one Republican, State Senator James Tedisco, signaled his support for it. Earlier this month, the legislation passed the state assembly for the first time since 2008, and last week Cuomo introduced his own version that matched the assembly’s.

The act, though, has powerful detractors. The Catholic Church has worked diligently to keep the bill from passing, fearing a deluge of costly lawsuits. The Boy Scouts of America shelled out $12,500 per month since February to the lobbying firm of a former state senator in an effort to have it killed.

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Abuse victims told no financial compensation for at least another 10 months

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

June 21 2017

Victims of historical child abuse in Northern Ireland have been told they will not receive promised financial compensation for at least another 10 months because of the political crisis.

Many have been left devastated to discover that no provision was made in the 2017/18 budget to cover the scheme.

Politicians have been advised by the head of the civil service that with no working executive, it is unlikely any financial redress will be made before April 2018.

Financial payments were promised to victims more than a year ago.

Victims have warned that many have been left suicidal or facing financial ruin as the current Stormont impasse means that the findings and recommendations of a four-year inquiry into state and church abuse have still not been presented to the assembly.

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Another church official resigns

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Louella Losinio | The Guam Daily Post

“The archdiocese confirms that Monsignor James Benavente has submitted his resignation as delegate of coadjutor archbishop for church patrimony.” – Statement from the Archdiocese of Agana

Monsignor James Benavente has resigned as delegate of the coadjutor archbishop for church patrimony of the Archdiocese of Agana.

“The archdiocese confirms that Monsignor James Benavente has submitted his resignation as delegate of coadjutor archbishop for church patrimony. The archbishop is praying for Monsignor James and has not made any decision on the resignation at this time,” according to an official statement from the archdiocese.

Benavente is the second recent church official to step down from his post. On June 18, Monsignor David C. Quitugua also resigned as a member of the College of Consultors.

“Archbishop Byrnes withdrew Quitugua’s membership in the College of Consultors in light of the current climate in the Church on the island,” the archdiocese stated. “He extends prayers to Monsignor David.”

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‘Systemic failures’ let priests abuse boys at Fife school

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL

21 June 2017

A religious order has apologised for “systemic failures” which allowed paedophile priests to abuse boys at a residential school.

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry heard safeguarding measures put in place by the Christian Brothers at St Ninian’s school in Fife fell “well short” of what would be expected today.

Last year two former teachers were jailed for a total of 15 years after being convicted of the physical and sexual abuse of boys in their care.

Appearing before the inquiry in Edinburgh on behalf of the Christian Brothers, Michael Madigan said the congregation acknowledged with “deepest regret” that children had been abused.

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Researcher calls for public inquiry into medical experimentation on students not compensated in settlement agreement

CANADA
APTN National News

Paul Barnsley
APTN Investigates

After he published his research in 2013 exposing medical experimentation on students at residential schools involving withholding of certain foods, the invitations started coming in for Dr. Ian Mosby.

“A lot of communities wanted me to come and explain to people myself, in person,” he said, during an interview in Toronto.

Mosby heard repeatedly that former students felt vindicated by his findings.

“People have been telling these stories of experimentation, of abuse, of all sorts of things that have now been documented by historians like myself. But people could have believed what survivors were saying a long time ago, and I think we would be a lot further than we are right now,” he added.

The stories he heard about more recent events involve complaints about how survivors were treated under the Independent Assessment Process (IAP), the system created under the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement to compensate survivors for sexual or severe physical abuse.

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Is it possible to get a fair trial if you’re a priest accused of sexual abuse?

WEST VIRGINIA
WCPO

PAULA CHRISTIAN
Jun 21, 2017

David Harper was 10 years old when a Catholic priest and family friend allegedly woke him in the middle of the night in a rectory bedroom and raped him.

For nearly two decades, Harper, now 35, told no one about what allegedly happened on his trip with Robert “Father Bob” Poandl to Spencer, West Virginia in August 1991, where Poandl celebrated Mass as a visiting priest and Harper served as altar boy.

When his allegations emerged years later, Poandl, of the Fairfield-based Glenmary Home Missioners, was charged and convicted in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati of taking a minor across state lines for sexual activity. He was sentenced to 7.5 years in prison.

Now as Poandl, 76, is being treated for life-threatening kidney cancer at a federal medical center in Butner, North Carolina, he is seeking to overturn that conviction.

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Quick progress report on the Church’s finances

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 19, 2017

By Krystal Paco

In simple terms, Coadjutor Archbishop Michael Byrnes says, “We have maxed out our credit cards and payment is due.”

Positive news to report, however, as he announces the Archdiocese’s financial advisors have developed an acceptable plan to bring the Church back to good economic health. While the plan won’t be unveiled until coming weeks, he says, “We will all need to make sacrifices, big and small… I firmly believe we will emerge as a stronger church and Archdiocese.”

He also stresses that no parish or school funds are being used to pay for the Archdiocese’s legal fees as a result of over 70 clergy sex abuse lawsuits. The pastoral letter was printed in a recent Umatuna Si Yu’os, the official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Agana.

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Senate leader: Child victims act won’t get a vote

NEW YORK
Post-Star

ALBANY — The leader of the New York state Senate says his chamber will not vote this year on a measure loosening the statute of limitations for molestation.

Republican Senate Leader John Flanagan of Long Island announced his decision to reporters on Tuesday without explanation.

The proposal would have given victims more time to file civil lawsuits or seek criminal charges against their abusers. It also would have created a one-year window for past victims to file civil suits.

Victims now have until they turn 23 to sue, but supporters say it often takes far longer for victims to report their abuse.

The bill was supported by the Assembly and Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo but faced strong opposition from the Catholic Church and other institutions.

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NY Senate won’t take up Child Victim’s Act

NEW YORK
The Journal News

Jon Campbell , jcampbell1@gannett.com June 20, 2017

ALBANY – A bill to extend the statute of limitations for child sex abuse crimes will not get a vote in the state Senate before lawmakers leave town this week, according to the Senate’s Republican leader.

Majority Leader John Flanagan, R-Suffolk County, told reporters Tuesday that the Senate would not take up the Child Victim’s Act, which supporters have pushed as a way for abuse survivors to seek charges or civil cases after they’ve grown older.

“It’s under discussion, but the Senate is not going to be taking that bill up,” Flanagan said after exiting a meeting with Gov. Andrew Cuomo and legislative leaders.

Versions of the bill have bounced around at the Capitol for more than a decade, but none have yet to make it through both houses of the Legislature.

The Assembly approved a version of the bill on June 7 that would allow abuse victims to seek criminal charges until they turn age 28, up from the current 23.

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State Senate Republicans kill the Child Victims Act again as majority leader says bill won’t get a vote this year

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
GLENN BLAIN
KENNETH LOVETT
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Tuesday, June 20, 2017

ALBANY — State Senate Republicans once again turned their backs on child sex abuse victims.

Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan responded “yes” when asked Tuesday afternoon if the Child Victims Act is done for the year.

“It’s under discussion, but the Senate is not going to be taking that bill up,” Flanagan told reporters.

Flanagan killed the bill’s chances a day after the hopes of survivors for a vote before the legislative session’s scheduled end on Wednesday were raised by Sen. James Tedisco, of Schenectady, who became the first Senate Republican to come out in favor of the Child Victims Act.

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Monsignor Benavente resigns as archbishop delegate

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, heugenio@guampdn.com June 21, 2017

Monsignor James L.G. Benavente has resigned as delegate to the archbishop for church patrimony, a post he held since Oct. 1.

The position has oversight over properties of the Archdiocese of Agana, working with the reconstituted Archdiocesan Finance Council.

“I write this letter to let you know that after much prayer and reflection I have decided to tender my letter of resignation as Delegate to Coadjutor Archbishop for Church Patrimony,” Benavente said in a June 16 letter addressed to Archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes.

The letter does not cite a reason for the resignation.

Benavente, when sought for comment, said he resigned from the post on his own.

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