ABUSE TRACKER

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

May 3, 2018

Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu warns Rabbi Berland

ISRAEL
Arutz Sheva

Arutz Sheva Staff,

02/05/18

Tzfat Chief Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu warned Rabbi Eliezer Berland not to hold a celebratory bonfire at the tomb of the Taanaic sage Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai on Mount Meron Wednesday evening.

Thousands of people gathered at Meron, which is near the Galilee city of Tzfat, to celebrate Lag B’Omer Wednesday night.

According to Rabbi Eliyahu, the lighting of the bonfire by the grave of the “Rashbi” would constitute an “abomination” and an “insult” to the revered sage.

Berland, 81, is the founder of the Shuvu Banim yeshiva in the Old City of Jerusalem and was a prominent figure within the Breslov community. After the allegations of sexual misconduct came to light in 2012, Rabbi Berland fled the country, traveling Europe and Africa while evading arrest and extradition.

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.

May 2, 2018

Former Bad Axe priest investigated locally for alleged sex abuse

MICHIGAN
Huron Daily Tribune

By Brenda Battel Tribune Staff Writer

May 2, 2018

BAD AXE — A police report reveals local authorities investigated a former Huron County priest that the Saginaw Diocese recently announced was laicized following sexual abuse allegations.

Jack E. Leipert, known as “Father Jack,” was a pastor at Sacred Heart in Bad Axe, when he was investigated for allegedly molesting a 21-year-old man in 2000.

No charges were ever filed by the Huron County Prosecutor’s Office.

The Bad Axe Police Department investigated the complaint, wherein it was alleged Leipert molested the victim on Nov. 7, 2000, according to a police report.

Leipert reportedly approached the alleged victim at a gas station in Caseville about paying him to do some maintenance work.

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.

Alleged abuser nearing return to Haywood

NORTH CAROLINA
The Mountaineer

May 2, 2018

Kyle Perrotti

Howard White is one step closer to facing child sex abuse allegations in Haywood County.

White, who is charged with several felonies related to the alleged 1985 sexual abuse of two children while he was rector of Waynesville’s Grace Church in the Mountains, is scheduled to be released from Boston’s South Bay Correctional Facility Thursday.

As of now, the 76-year-old has served 12 months of an 18-month sentence for five counts of assault and battery — to which he pleaded guilty — relating to the sexual abuse of a boy while he was employed by St. George’s School in Middletown, Rhode Island in 1973.

Although White will be released from the custody of the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office, District Attorney Ashley Welch said that along with a governor’s warrant that has been signed and delivered to Massachusetts, he will be held in that state on a fugitive warrant until he can be transported to North Carolina.

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.

Legislation Gives Childhood Sexual Abuse Victims Chance to Seek Justice

NEW YORK
Hudson Valley News Network

By Kathy Welsh

May 2, 2018

CHESTER – Assemblyman James Skoufis announced he co-sponsored and helped pass the Child Victims Act, which allows more victims of childhood sexual abuse to face their abusers in civil or criminal court (A.5885-A).

The measure extends the statutes of limitations for civil and criminal cases and provides a year-long window for past victims who previously missed their statute of limitations to bring their predators to court.

“There’s absolutely nothing more despicable than willfully harming a child,” Skoufis said. “To make a tragic situation even worse, our justice system works all-too-often in favor of these sick individuals, rather than their innocent victims. Childhood victims are often too afraid or traumatized to come forward until they’re adults, and by then the statute of limitations has run out. We must change the law so that more survivors can seek justice and move forward with their lives.”

Each year, over 63,000 children are sexually abused – and that’s just the number of cases that are actually reported, said Skoufis. In reality, countless cases go unreported and many survivors live in silence, Skoufis noted. With such wide support among the public, Skoufis was disappointed the Child Victims Act died in the Senate last year and was not included as part of the state budget this year. 2018

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

Pope said to admit being ‘part of the problem’ of covering up child sexual abuse in Chile

ROME
Los Angeles Times

By TOM KINGTON

MAY 02, 2018

During hours of emotional meetings at the Vatican, Pope Francis begged for forgiveness from Chileans who have alleged priestly sexual abuse — according to those in attendance — who described their meeting with the pope as a “defining moment” in his papacy and demanded he follow through by ousting Chilean bishops they accuse of cover-ups.

“I have never seen someone so contrite. He was truly sorry, and I felt he was hurting,” said Juan Carlos Cruz, one of three people invited to sit down with the pope over the weekend for individual meetings. “He said, ‘I was part of the problem. I caused this,’ ” said Cruz, who called his three-hour meeting with Francis “very raw.”

The three men allege they endured sexual abuse as youths in Chile at the hands of prelate Fernando Karadima, who was sentenced by the Vatican in 2011 to a lifetime of penance, which means he’s been forced to retire from public life and public ministry to a life of prayer for atonement.

The Vatican did not, however, believe the men’s claim that the abuse was witnessed and covered up by Chilean Bishop Juan Barros. Francis appointed Barros bishop of the town of Osorno in 2015, hugged him publicly during his visit to Chile in January and dismissed the men’s accounts as “slander.”

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.

$20 Million Settlement Reached In Clergy Abuse Cases

MONTANA
Montana Public Radio

[with audio]

By CORIN CATES-CARNEY

APR 27, 2018

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Great Falls and Billings reached a $20 million settlement agreement Friday with more than 80 people who say they were sexually abused by clergy as children, according to attorneys in the case.

The claims of sexual abuse date from the 1950s to the 1990s, according to attorney Dan Fasy who represented some victims.

He says the settlement process has helped some of his clients recover from feeling like victims, but for others, this is just another step in their healing.

“I think the resounding response I’ve heard from the clients I’ve been working with is,” says Fasy, is “if this can prevent one child in the future from suffering the same fate of child sexual abuse, this will be a major victory.”

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.

Weinstein inappropriate with me: Blanchett

AUSTRALIA
Deniliouin Pastoral Times

by AAP NEWS

MAY 03, 2018

Cate Blanchett has accused disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein of behaving inappropriately towards her.

The Australian is the latest Hollywood star to make allegations of sexual misconduct against the producer, following claims by others including Rose McGowan, Gwyneth Paltrow, Salma Hayek and Angelina Jolie.

Blanchett has appeared in a number of films produced by Weinstein, including The Talented Mr Ripley, Carol and The Aviator.

In an interview with trade publication Variety, the Australian star was asked if Weinstein sexually harassed or behaved inappropriately towards her.

“With me, yes,” Blanchett replied.

“I think he really primarily preyed, like most predators, on the vulnerable. I mean I got a bad feeling from him. He would often say to me, ‘We’re not friends’.”

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.

Survivors hope pope will act against ‘epidemic’ of abuse in the church

ROME
Catholic News Service

By Junno Arocho Esteves
Catholic News Service

5.2.2018

ROME (CNS) — Three Chilean abuse survivors who met with Pope Francis said his apology to them must be accompanied by concrete actions, not only against those who commit sexual abuse, but against those who cover it up.

“I have never seen someone be so contrite about what he was telling me,” Juan Carlos Cruz told journalists May 2. “I also felt that he was hurting, which for me was very solemn. I don’t know what word to use because it’s not often the pope really says sorry to you and apologizes to you. He said, ‘I was part of the problem, I caused this and I’m sorry.'”

Jose Andres Murillo, another of the Chilean survivors, said, “All of us had different experiences with the pope, and even if we saw the forgiveness the pope asked, we’re waiting for actions.”

“We always said that we’re not here to do public relations but for actions,” Murillo said. “That’s what I’m waiting for.”

Pope Francis had invited Cruz, Murillo and James Hamilton to stay at the Domus Sanctae Marthae, the Vatican residence where he lives, and to meet with him individually April 27-29. They met him again as a group April 30.

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.

Update – End Doesn’t Justify Means

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholics4Change

MAY 2, 2018

by Susan Matthews

A lawyer who privately came forward was not able to help a survivor, whose story you read about in the previous post. The survivor now wants his name made public.

David Eyes was a child when he was abused by Father Robert L. Brennan. He spent too much of his adult life embroiled in a grand jury investigation. The grueling emotional process cut fresh wounds into his already scarred psyche. Suicide attempts and subsequent hospitalization made it clear that self preservation meant stepping away from it all. It was the right decision for him and his family. David is working, married and surviving.

But now, his hard-won and tenuous stability is threatened. Lawyers prosecuting a civil case against the Philadelphia archdiocese on behalf of another victim asked him to testify. David explained why he couldn’t – how it might cost him his life. They responded with a subpoena.

Cornered and forced to ensure something horrific as child, David is once again cornered and being forced to do something terrifying as an adult. The subpoena compels him to appear in court on Monday, May 7 or he’ll be held in contempt – which carries the possibility of arrest and fines. Yet, the price he’ll pay for testifying is far worse. So he and his family have decided he won’t comply with the subpoena.

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.

Advocates Rally Urging NY Assembly To Pass End Child Trafficking Act

NEW YORK
WAMC

May 2, 2018

By ELIZABETH HILL

With the legislative session in its final weeks, advocates and New York state lawmakers gathered at the capitol Tuesday to urge the state Assembly to pass the End Child Trafficking Act.

The legislation is sponsored by Democratic Assemblywoman Amy Paulin, of the lower Hudson Valley, who says the bill would eliminate the requirement to prove force, fraud or coercion in prosecutions for sex trafficking. She says the measure creates an affirmative defense for victims 19 and younger. Sanctuary for Families — a New York City-based nonprofit that advocates for victims of domestic violence and sex trafficking — led the event at the Legislative Office Building. Executive Director Judy Harris Kluger, a former judge, said the time for action is now.

“Between 2010 and 2015 there has been an 800 percent increase in online sex trafficking of children. The time has come to be in line with federal law and 48 other states,” says Kluger.

Sanctuary for Families says state prosecutors cannot build successful cases against traffickers of children unless the victim is willing and able to testify. According to Reverend Que English, CEO and founder of Not on My Watch – a nonprofit working against sex trafficking – trauma suffered as a result of being trafficked and the terror of retaliation often prevent victims from testifying.

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.

Meeting abuse survivors, Pope apologizes for being ‘part of the problem’

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

By Elise Harris

Vatican City, May 2, 2018 / 11:13 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After meeting with Pope Francis over the weekend, Chilean survivors of clerical sexual abuse said the pontiff was open, sympathetic and deeply impacted by the situation, at one point voicing sorrow for having been “part of the problem.”

Juan Carlos Cruz, a victim of Chilean abuser Fr. Fernando Karadima who met with Pope Francis privately Saturday, said he spoke to the pontiff for at least three hours, and found him “sincere, attentive and deeply apologetic for the situation.”

“For me, the pope was contrite, he was truly sorry,” Cruz said. “I felt also that he was hurting, which for me was very solemn…because it’s not often that the pope says sorry to you…he said, ‘I was part of the problem, I caused this and I am apologize.’”

Cruz was joined by fellow abuse survivors James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo, each of whom suffered abuse at the hands Chilean priest Fernando Karadima, who in 2011 was found guilty by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith of sexually abusing several minors during the 1980s and 1990s, and subsequently sentenced to a life of prayer and solitude.

Chilean civil authorities investigated Karadima but ultimately dropped charges since his crimes were beyond the statute of limitations.

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

Pope Francis tells sex abuse survivors, ‘I was part of the problem’

ROME
Crux

Inés San Martín
VATICAN CORRESPONDENT

May 2, 2018

ROME – After facing heated criticism over his actions and words regarding clerical sexual abuse in Chile, this weekend Pope Francis tried to address the scandal head-on, meeting three abuse survivors from the Latin American nation ahead of a summit later this month with Chile’s bishops.

“Pope Francis formally asked us for forgiveness, in his own name and on behalf of the universal Church,” the three said in a statement released on Wednesday in Rome after their meetings with the pope.

This weekend, abuse survivors Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton and Andres Murillo were hosted by Francis at the Vatican’s Santa Marta residence, the hotel built under St. Pope John Paul II where he’s lived since the beginning of his pontificate.

Overall, the survivors described their meetings positively, with Francis being “attentive, receptive and very empathetic during the intense and long hours of conversations.”

One of the survivors went so far as to say that he believed the pope hadn’t lied, but had been badly informed when it came to the situation in Chile. The survivor said Francis had told him, “I was part of the problem, I caused this, and I apologize to you.”

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.

Key dates in the Chilean sex abuse scandal

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The three main whistleblowers in Chile’s long-running sex abuse scandal have wrapped up their meetings with Pope Francis, after the pope discredited them and staunchly defended a bishop they had accused of witnessing and ignoring their abuse. Their visit to the Vatican marked the culmination of an extraordinary papal about-face, after Francis ordered a thorough investigation into their claims and then, after receiving the report, admitted to “serious errors in judgment.”

Some key dates in the Barros affair:
___

Jan. 10, 2015

Pope names Bishop Juan Barros, then Chile’s military chaplain, as bishop of Osorno, over the objections of some members of the Chilean bishops’ conference. They were concerned about the fallout from the scandal over the Rev. Fernando Karadima, Chile’s most notorious predator priest.
___

Jan. 31, 2015

Francis acknowledged the bishops’ concerns in a letter, obtained by The Associated Press, which revealed a plan to have Barros and two other Karadima-trained bishops resign and take yearlong sabbaticals. In the letter, Francis said the plan fell apart because the nuncio revealed it. The pope subsequently told reporters that he himself had blocked the plan because there was no “evidence” Barros was guilty of any cover-up.
___

February 2015

Fifty Chilean lawmakers and priests, deacons and more than 1,000 laity in the Osorno diocese sign petitions protesting Barros’ appointment and urging Francis revoke it.
___

Feb. 3, 2015

Juan Carlos Cruz writes a letter to the Vatican’s ambassador in Santiago, Monsignor Ivo Scapolo, accusing Barros of watching the sex abuse he experienced and doing nothing to stop it. The letter would form the basis of a subsequent letter to the pope. It is unknown what Scapolo did with his letter.

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.

‘I was part of the problem,’ pope quoted telling Chile abuse victims

ROME
Reuters

May 2, 2018

Philip Pullella

ROME (Reuters) – Pope Francis told Chilean victims of clerical sexual abuse “I was part of the problem” and apologized for dismissing accusations of a cover-up by Catholic bishops, one of the victims said on Wednesday.

At an emotional news conference after four days of private meetings with the pope, three men who were victims of Chile’s most notorious paedophile urged Francis to take action against several Chilean bishops.

“For almost 10 years we have been treated as enemies because we fight against sexual abuse and cover-up in the Church,” Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo, said in a joint statement read out to reporters.

The three men, who were guests of the pope at his residence, said that during their long conversations, Francis had been attentive, receptive and very empathetic.

“I have never, never seen someone be so contrite … I felt that he was hurting, which for me was very solemn. It’s not often that the pope says sorry to you and apologizes to you for something,” Cruz said in response to a question.

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

Pope to Chile abuse victims: I was part of the problem

ROME
Associated Press

May 2, 2018

By NICOLE WINFIELD

ROME (AP) — The three whistleblowers in Chile’s sex abuse scandal urged Pope Francis on Wednesday to transform his apology for having discredited them into concrete action to end what they called the “epidemic” of sex abuse and cover-up in the Catholic Church.

Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo spoke to reporters Wednesday after spending five days with the pope at his Vatican hotel. Their press conference was broadcast live in Chile, a sign of the unprecedented nature of their hours of meetings with the pope.

Cruz said that during his private encounter with Francis, the pope acknowledged: “I was part of the problem. I caused this, and I apologize to you.”

“I believe that he was sincere,” Cruz said.

Cruz said he believed that Francis was simply misinformed about the case of Bishop Juan Barros, whom the three men have long accused of having witnessed and ignored 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.

Diócesis de Mexicali protege a sacerdote pederasta denunciado desde 2013

TIJUANA (MEXICO)
Los Ángeles Press [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

May 2, 2018

By Guadalupe Lizárraga

Read original article

Autoridades de la Diócesis de Mexicali encubren a sacerdote pederasta Jesús Antonio Canseco cambiándolo de una parroquia a otra, uso de tráfico de influencias, y amenazas a la víctima desde 2013 

MEXICALI, México.- Osvaldo Agundiz Quevedo tenía 14 años de edad cuando fue víctima de abuso sexual por el sacerdote diocesano Jesús Antonio Canseco, de la parroquia Divino Niño en la colonia Villas del Rey, en Mexicali, Baja California. Hoy, Osvaldo tiene 21 años, y lleva siete años, junto a sus padres, pidiendo justicia, mientras las autoridades de la Diócesis de Mexicali protegen al sacerdote acusado de pederastia desde 2013, cambiándolo de una parroquia a otra dentro de la zona conurbada en la misma ciudad, retardando la justicia penal y evitando que trascienda la información sobre el caso.

Estudiante de quinto semestre de Ingeniería de la Universidad Autónoma de Baja California y empleado del Ayuntamiento de Mexicali, Osvaldo Agundiz, pese a amenazas y acoso cibernético, ha emprendido esta lucha contra la pederastia de los sacerdotes católicos en Mexicali, porque asegura que no ha sido la única víctima de este tipo de abuso en manos de Canseco y de otros sacerdotes de la ciudad. “He sabido y conocido a otros jóvenes, pero no se animan a hablarlo”, dijo a Los Ángeles Press en entrevista a la salida de la segunda audiencia ante el Poder Judicial del Estado, donde se le imputó al sacerdote acusado de pederastia el cargo de abuso sexual y corrupción de menores de acuerdo con la abogada de oficio que lleva el caso bajo el número 0202-2016-49200. 

En la primera resolución judicial, con fecha del 30 de diciembre de 2016, la agente del Ministerio Público de la Coordinación de Delitos contra la Libertad sexual y la familia, Hermelinda Sánchez Pacheco, resolvió el “no ejercicio de la acción penal a favor del imputado Jesús Antonio Canseco por la comisión del delito de abuso sexual”, por considerar “en exceso el plazo que prevé la prescripción punitiva”. En una segunda resolución, con fecha del 22 de noviembre de 2017, la titular de la misma institución resolvió también el “no ejercicio de la acción penal” bajo el mismo argumento de la prescripción punitiva. Adicionalmente, en ambos documentos se hizo alusión a que el imputado “nunca ejerció violencia física sobre la víctima, no lo amagó, nunca lo golpeó, amenazó, ni utilizó sustancia alguna para obtener su consentimiento”, pese a que la víctima declaró “que se sentía sin fuerza para moverse, por la fuerza que el imputado ejercía al tocarlo”, y más aún como si el abuso sexual y psicológico no fueran violencia.

En conversación telefónica con el vicario general de la Diócesis de Mexicali, Arnoldo Rascón Pérez, Los Ángeles Press preguntó su opinión sobre este caso de pederastia. La respuesta inmediata del vicario fue de decir que no tenía ninguna referencia. A insistencia de la periodista sobre los tres años que había tardado en hacer una cita a la familia con el obispo para dar seguimiento a la denuncia, el vicario en un tono cortante dijo que si quería hablar con él fuera al obispado y cortó la llamada. No obstante, en una carta firmada por el obispo de Chihuahua, Jesús José Herrera, y dirigida al obispo de Mexicali, José Isidro Guerrero Macías, con fecha del 21 de octubre de 2016, se hizo referencia que desde 2013, las autoridades de la Diócesis de Mexicali, incluyendo al vicario y seis sacerdotes más, sabían ya del caso de abuso.

En otro documento dirigido al juez del Tribunal eclesiástico, Marco Antonio Encinas, en noviembre de 2016, el decano Marcos Zavala Nava dio su testimonio sobre los hechos en relación con el abuso sexual perpetrado por el sacerdote Jesús Antonio Canseco y de cómo este sacerdote abusaba de la confianza de la familia por ser padrino de confirmación de la víctima. En ese mismo documento, Zavala Nava declaró haberle hecho una cita a la familia con el vicario general de la Diócesis, Arnoldo Rascón Pérez, y de que éste le había llamado por teléfono para informarle que ya había atendido a la familia. Concluyó el documento con una nota después de su firma: “Anexo la carta que dirigimos al obispo el día 2 de octubre de 2013”.

Antecedentes

En 2013, la primera autoridad eclesiástica con la que habló Osvaldo sobre el abuso fue con el decano de la Diócesis de Mexicali, Marco Zavala Nava, para denunciar al sacerdote Jesús Antonio Canseco por abuso sexual. El decano les dijo a él y a sus padres que los iba ayudar con la denuncia ante las autoridades de la iglesia y así lo hizo. Sin embargo, pasaron ocho meses y no hubo ningún indicio de justicia sobre el caso. Después de varias entrevistas con seis sacerdotes, la familia fue dirigida al vicario general de la Diócesis de Mexicali, Arnoldo Rascón Pérez, por medio de Zavala Nava. El vicario también prometió ayudarlos y, de la misma manera, dejó pasar el tiempo, en esta ocasión fueron hasta tres años, mientras trataba de disuadir a la familia para que no pusiera la denuncia penal porque, según sus palabras, la persona más perjudicada sería la víctima.

La madre de Osvaldo, Diana Quevedo, pese a ser una colaboradora voluntaria de la Iglesia Católica, aseguró al vicario que no iba a dejar de exigir justicia para su hijo y que denunciaría ante el Ministerio Público al abusador. El vicario alertó al obispo José Isidro Guerrero Macías de las intenciones de la madre y fue éste quien se adelantó a poner la denuncia ante el Ministerio Público contra el sacerdote Jesús Antonio Canseco por abuso sexual. Antes, ya el mismo obispo había intentado también de persuadir a la familia a que renunciara a poner la denuncia contra el depredador, y enfatizaba cuestionamientos sobre los altos costos de abogados y los daños colaterales por exhibir la situación de la víctima.

La Procuraduría de Justicia del Estado abrió una carpeta de investigación contra Jesús Antonio Canseco en 2016, pero el Ministerio Público dio largas al asunto y nunca llegó a investigar cabalmente los hechos. Cuando la familia llegaba a preguntar por el caso, los agentes les decían “que estaban armando la carpeta”. Y al tiempo, les dijeron que el caso se había cerrado: “no había delito que perseguir porque el tiempo había expirado para la denuncia”, como lo evidencian las resoluciones judiciales de diciembre de 2016 y noviembre de 2017. 

Las represalias

De acuerdo con la denuncia de Osvaldo Agundiz Quevedo, él y su familia han sido amenazados vía telefónica y hostigados por las redes sociales a partir de que hicieron pública la denuncia contra Jesús Antonio Canseco por pederastia. Incluso en su perfil de Facebook, le dejan comentarios soeces para intimidarlo. Sin embargo, no solamente la familia ha sido acosada, señaló Agundiz, también el sacerdote Álvaro Salvador Gutiérrez Félix, el padre Álvaro, porque los ha acompañado al juzgado y ha estado con la familia para darles fuerza moral. 

“Antes de ver al obispo, fuimos a pedir ayuda con muchos padres, y no nos quisieron ayudar. Todos decían que, si sabíamos lo que nos iba a costar hacer la denuncia, y que la gente se iba a burlar de mí, y muchas cosas más. El que nos ayudó y nos ha acompañado es el padre Álvaro”, afirmó Agundiz.

Como represalia al padre Álvaro, el obispo José Isidro Guerrero llamó al seminario para que lo retiraran de la docencia. También le pidió al sacerdote de la pastoral social que lo retirara de cualquier actividad de causa social, ya que el padre Álvaro trabajaba ayudando a migrantes que llegaban a la frontera. Incluso, pidió que lo quitara de su comunidad y lo enviaran a una comunidad apartada como Puerto Peñasco, el lugar más lejano de la Diócesis de Mexicali para ejercer el ministerio.

Hacer viva la palabra del Papa Francisco

Diana Quevedo, en entrevista con el periodista argentino Gustavo Daniel Pescetta, de SOS Señal de Radio, con sede en Buenos Aires, pidió al Papa Francisco “que hiciera viva su palabra de no más tolerancia a estas situaciones”. Como madre de la víctima, denunció a la radio argentina no sólo el dolor que están viviendo como familia después de haber servido a la Iglesia, sino “que es muy triste ver a la Iglesia que en vez de ayudar a las personas actúen como una mafia porque se están encubriendo entre ellos”, sostuvo.

El periodista Daniel Pescetta hizo alusión a la visita del Papa Francisco a su tierra natal y a Chile a principios de enero de 2018, donde pidió perdón a las víctimas de abuso sexual por parte de sacerdotes pederastas. «No puedo dejar de manifestar el dolor y la vergüenza que siento ante el daño irreparable causado a niños por parte de ministros de la Iglesia», sostuvo Francisco por las investigaciones de la fiscalía chilena contra religiosos maristas.  

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.

RABBI CONVICTED OF SEX OFFENSES TO LIGHT LAG BA’OMER BONFIRE, DRAWING IRE

ISRAEL
The Jerusalem Post

BY AVRAHAM GOLD

MAY 2, 2018

Hassidic leader Rabbi Eliezer Berland, who was convicted for sexual assault, will light a central bonfire for Lag Ba’Omer on Wednesday night outside of Meron. The decision drew the ire of MK Ayelet Nahmias-Verbin (Zionist Union), who sent a letter to Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit requesting he intervene.

Berland, the head of the Shuvu Banim community of the Breslov Hassidic sect, was convicted in a November 2016 plea bargain of two counts of indecent assault for sexual attacks on two women, as well as instructing one of his followers to assault the husband of one of the women he sexually assaulted. He was sentenced to 18 months in jail but was released under house arrest following an urgent operation in February.

Nahmias-Verbin posted the letter on Twitter, adding in a post that haredi (ultra-Orthodox) members of Knesset have told her privately they oppose the decision to allow Berland to light a bonfire. “It is difficult to understand how it is possible that a convicted person, who holds the title of rabbi and holds responsibility towards the public, will take part in a significant and widely-attended event funded by the state,” she wrote in the letter. “I call on you to intervene and act immediately against this, and prevent further severe harm to women who have been harmed, and to protect the public against an authorized offender.”

The Shuvu Banim bonfire will take place at midnight, according to haredi news site B’Hadrei Haredim.

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

Former Episcopal priest Howard White to be extradited to North Carolina on sex abuse charges

MASSACHUSETTS
MassLive

May 2, 2018

By Jacqueline Tempera JTempera@masslive.com

When Howard White, a former Episcopal priest behind bars in Massachusetts after he raped a prep school student in the 1970s, is released from jail Thursday he will be extradited to face more charges in North Carolina, prosecutors said.

White, 76, is one of six named offenders in the sex abuse scandal at St. George’s School in Middletown, R.I.

Last May he pleaded guilty to five counts of assault and battery in Suffolk Superior Court for his abuse of an unnamed former student in the 1970s. He served 12 months of an 18-month sentence and was due to be released on Thursday.

But a new indictment from North Carolina accusing White of raping two more teenagers there will change things, prosecutors said.

The charges are: one count of rape; four counts of second-degree sexual offense; one count of second-degree rape; one count of first-degree forcible sex offense; and two counts of indecent liberties with a child.

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.

Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry: Orphanage volunteer ‘tried to protect boy from nun’s ridicule’

SCOTLAND
Sunday Post

Conor Riordan, 02 May 2018

A FORMER volunteer at an orphanage has told how she tried to cover up a child’s bed wetting to save him from being “ridiculed” by a nun.

Margaret White was studying at the University of Aberdeen between 1974 and 1977 when she helped out at Nazareth House in the city.

The 63-year-old told the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry on Wednesday how she had never seen children being hit but she felt the way one boy was treated for bed wetting was “wrong”.

She said: “There was a young lad who did wet the bed and he was, probably, very harshly done by by the sister. He was never physically hurt.

“From what I know now, it was very wrong – a nine-year-old boy wetting the bed and being punished verbally.

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.

DECEPTIVE ADVERTISING

UNITED STATES
Church Militant

It’s not working.

May 2, 2018

TRANSCRIPT

The Church in America is doing splendidly — never been better, excelling everywhere, burgeoning at the seams, reason for great hope. Or as New York’s Cdl. Timothy Cardinal Dolan so perfectly laid it out at the press conference back in 2010 when he was elected president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, “It’s not like we’re in a crisis.”

Yes, see, no crisis here, His Eminence even has said so, which begs the question, precisely what does Dolan think actually constitutes a crisis? And further, if there’s no crisis, then why is Cdl. Dolan shaking down the flock in New York for $200 million or the archbishop of Detroit, after having soaked the sheep for $130 million in a recently wrapped up finance campaign, now preparing another campaign for an additional $200 million? Sources close to the archdiocese of Detroit tell Church Militant that some of Abp. Allen Vigneron’s closest allies actually wanted to unveil it this year but top brass thought it might appear too greedy after just wrapping up the previous campaign, uh, you think?

Then there is the still-secret plan in Abp. Jose Gomez’s Los Angeles archdiocese to unleash a half a billion dollar campaign on the unknowing faithful in Southern California — that’s right, a $500 million shakedown of the faithful. In truth, there are many of these massive war chest gathering initiatives going on all over the country — money and power grabs before old Catholics die off and leave their bucks to their children who could give a hoot about the Church and will not share their inheritances with what they see as irrelevant bishops. The Los Angeles half-billion shakedown was revealed to us by sources in the archdiocese who are disgusted with the plans, again, not yet made public. But, wait for it … and when these planned money grabs are eventually made public, they will come adorned with scriptural and mystical sounding names, upbeat sounding themes designed to make you think, well … there’s no crisis. For example, Detroit has a zippy sounding plan called “Unleash the Gospel,” as though it has ever been leashed up to begin within, and if it was leashed in Detroit have those who were responsible for tying it up been kicked out, otherwise, why throw good money after bad?

Practically every diocese in the country is doing two things right now — grabbing money and closing parishes. Often the plans are related to each other and get great marketing names, which stands to reason because local bishops are calling in Madison Avenue-style marketing firms and giving them 10 percent of everything collected to assess the decline, draw up a list of parishes to annihilate and squeeze every dime out of you possible. And, yes, you heard that correctly — 10 percent! When you are collectively dealing with billions of dollars, 10 percent is quite the haul.

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.

Sex offender rabbi to be honored at Lag B’Omer festival

ISRAEL
Times of Israel

By MARISSA NEWMAN and TOI STAFF

A rabbi convicted of sex offenses, including against a minor, is set to be honored at the annual Lag B’Omer festival at a pilgrimage site in northern Israel on Wednesday night, sparking an outcry.

Eliezer Berland, 80, who served five months of an 18-month prison sentence after eluding arrest for three years, will be among the 20 rabbis who will light a bonfire at the tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yohai in Meron, where hundreds of thousands of worshipers were expected to gather Wednesday evening and Thursday.

The Religious Affairs Ministry, which contributes some NIS 15 million ($4 million) in funding to the Meron ceremonies, condemned Berland’s participation, but insisted it was powerless to stop him as the annual festival fell under police purview.

Get The Times of Israel’s Daily Edition by email and never miss our top stories FREE SIGN UP
Police, in a statement, disputed the ministry’s account, saying they were responsible only for securing the event. The Israel Police “doesn’t determine the identities of the participants and lighters, since [Berland’s inclusion] does not constitute a violation of the laws of the State of Israel, and therefore the claim regarding the police is out of place and wholly unclear,” it said.

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

Chilean clerical abuse victims denounce ‘pathological’ use of power in Church

ROME
Reuters

ROME (Reuters) – Chilean victims of clerical sexual abuse said on Wednesday that they had complained to Pope Francis about a “pathological and unlimited exercise of power” within the Church that had facilitated the cover-up of a sex scandal.

In a joint statement, the three victims, Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo, said that during four days of private meetings with the pope, he had asked them for forgiveness for not having taken their plight seriously before.

“For almost 10 years we have been treated as enemies because we fight against sexual abuse and cover-up in the Church. These days we met the friendly face of the Church, completely different from the one we had met before,” the statement said.

“We spoke with the pope about the pathological and unlimited exercise of power, which is the cornerstone of sexual abuse and cover-up. We expressed to him how the Church has the duty to become an ally and a guide in the global fight against abuse and a refuge for the victims, something that does not happen today.”

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.

Meet The Couple Helping The Survivors Of Britain’s ‘Worst’ Child Sexual Abuse Scandal

UNITED KINGDOM
HuffPost

By Natasha Hinde

A couple in Telford have gone above and beyond to help survivors of child sexual abuse in the wake of recent allegations that rocked the Shropshire town.

Civil servant Anji Gowans, 45, and security specialist Craig Badley, 45, run Telford Time 4 Change (TT4C) while juggling full-time jobs. They launched the group in mid-March this year with the aim of supporting victims and survivors of child sexual abuse, while raising awareness of exploitation in the community.

Anji and Craig run a Facebook page, which has 8,000 supporters, and say that since its inception TT4C has helped 10 survivors – either by signposting them to police, counselling or other services. Of those they’ve helped, some were recently abused, while for others the ordeal happened 15 or even 30 years ago.

Telford was thrown into the national spotlight in March when The Mirror reported up to 1,000 children were estimated to have fallen victim to child sexual abuse since the 1980s. For some, it came as no surprise – particularly after Operation Chalice, a 2009 police inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Telford in which seven men were jailed for multiple crimes including sexually abusing teenagers as young as 13.

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.

Alleged Australian child abuser to face extradition in Israel this month

AUSTRALIA/ISRAEL
The Guardian

Oliver Holmes in Jerusalem

2 May 2018

A former Melbourne head teacher wanted by Australian police on 74 charges of child sex abuse will face extradition proceedings this month, a judge in Israel has ruled.

At the Jerusalem district court on Wednesday, the judge delayed the hearing until 16 May and ordered the prosecution to hand over evidence it claims shows Malka Leifer is mentally fit to be extradited.

Guards escorted Leifer, 54, into court on Wednesday with her hands cuffed.

Manny Waks, an Australian activist who works to combat child sex abuse in the Jewish community and lives in Israel, was present and walked up to Leifer after she was brought into the courtroom. “Can I ask you for a message to send to the girls that you abused?” Waks asked. Leifer gave no response.

Leifer, 54, stood only when the judge entered the room, but spent the majority of the trial hunkered over with her head buried in her arms, even bending down entirely at times behind the court dock. At one point, she appeared in distress and the judge permitted a request from a guard for her to leave the room.

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

Former principal and alleged child abuser Malka Leifer to remain in jail ahead of court hearing

ISRAEL/AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

By Gabrielle Weiniger

2 May 2018

Former Melbourne principal and alleged child sexual abuser Malka Leifer will remain behind bars in Israel after an extradition hearing at a Jerusalem court postponed her next trial date for a further two weeks.

Victorian police want Leifer to return to Australia to face 74 charges of child sex abuse. She is being held in Israel’s sole women’s prison, Neve Tzira, in the central Israeli city of Ramle.

Leifer fled Australia for Israel in 2008 after allegations were first raised over her time as head of the ultra-orthodox Adass Israel girls school in Melbourne. The school was ordered to pay over $1.1m in damages to her alleged victims in 2015.

In 2016, Leifer was declared unfit to stand trial by a Jerusalem district judge because of her mental health, but in February this year she was arrested and accused by local authorities of obstructing justice by feigning illness to avoid trial.

In the latest hearing, Judge Hannah Lomp ordered the prosecution to present the defence with all the evidence collected against Leifer, evidence the prosecution claims shows she is mentally fit to be extradited. The next extradition hearing will be held on May 16th.

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.

Malka Leifer’s lawyer secures two-week delay in extradition case

AUSTRALIA/ISRAEL
ABC News

May 2, 2018

By Norman Hermant

Malka Leifer’s extradition case in Jerusalem’s District Court has been put over until May 16.

Ms Leifer’s lawyer, Yahuda Fried, argued the defence had not received all of the evidence into her obstruction of justice case, successfully earning the two-week delay.

The prosecution says it will now hand over all of the evidence in relation to the investigation of whether Ms Leifer lied about being too unwell mentally to go through an extradition trial.

Near the end of today’s proceedings, Ms Leifer’s guards said she was unwell, and she was escorted from the courtroom before proceedings finished.

Israeli-Australian victims rights advocate Manny Waks said he was encouraged despite the delay.

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.

Equity v. Statute: In Bankruptcy, the Code Prevails (The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis et al.)

MINNESOTA
Lexology

Bryan Cave LLP

May 1 2018

Garrison Keillor once said, “Sometimes I look reality straight in the eye and deny it.”[1] Being that the case arose in Minnesota, perhaps Circuit Judge Michael Melloy channeled Keillor, one of that state’s great humorists, when he authored the opinion in The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis et al. (In re: The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis) Case No. 17-1079 2018 WL 1954482 (8th Cir. April 26, 2018) [a link to the opinion is here].[2] Regardless, the quote must sum up the Appellant’s view of the outcome. The unsecured creditors that make up the Committee, most of whom were victims of clergy sexual abuse, will not obtain access to the value of over 200 non-profit entities affiliated with the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis to pay their claims.

In a concise opinion, the 8th Circuit held that a bankruptcy court’s authority to issue “necessary or appropriate” orders did not give it the power to substantively consolidate a Chapter 11 estate of a bankrupt nonprofit entity, the Archdiocese, with the estates of non-debtor parishes and parish schools that also qualified as nonprofit entities under Minnesota law. Despite the breadth 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), the Court looked past weighty equitable interests and instead relied on to state law, and on the plain language of the Section 303(a) of the Bankruptcy Code (which prohibits an involuntary filing against “a corporation that is not a moneyed, business, or commercial corporation”).

Background

The case arose from the 2013 passage of Minnesota’s Child Victims Act, which allowed previously time-barred sexual abuse claims to be brought. Hundreds of claims of clergy sexual abuse were filed against the Archdiocese. In 2015 the Archdiocese filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In May 2016, the Committee, representing more than 400 clergy sexual abuse claimants, filed a motion in the bankruptcy case to substantively consolidate Debtor with over 200 affiliated non-profit entities. The bankruptcy court applied Rule 7012 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure to the Committee’s motion, converting the motion to an adversary proceeding and allowing the responding parties to file motions to dismiss, which many did. The Bankruptcy Court dismissed the Committee’s Complaint and the District Court upheld that decision.

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 inquiry hears of child ‘repeatedly locked in cupboard’

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL

02 May 2018

A former children’s home resident who has spent his life in and out of prison said he was “taught fear, paranoia and violence” by an abusive nun.

“Ned”, who is now in his 50s, told the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry he had been in 24 institutions throughout his life after being admitted to Nazareth House, Aberdeen in the late 1960s.

He told the inquiry he had been separated from his sisters, repeatedly locked in a cupboard and beaten by a nun using a wooden stick.

The inquiry, led by Lady Smith, is hearing evidence relating to four children’s homes run by the Sisters of Nazareth until their closure in the 1980s.

Ned also remembered having his genitals fondled by an unknown male during his time at the home. He said the violence inflicted on him was to have a “profound” effect on the rest of his life.

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

Child abuse at Aberdeen’s Nazareth House ‘a well known secret’ says councillor

SCOTLAND
Press and Journal

Jon Hebditch

May 2, 2018

Abuse of children at Aberdeen’s Nazareth House was once an “open secret”, a local councillor has claimed.

Martin Greig said the city’s people knew of the brutality faced by children at the home but failed to act because such actions were “considered normal”.

Mr Greig said that while it was “horrific to acknowledge” it was nonetheless true and called upon current and future generations to learn lessons from what took place.

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry is investigating allegations against the Catholic Sisters of Nazareth order who are accused of a litany of historical child abuse allegations.

Police revealed that officers had received 308 complaints about 194 people associated with institutions run by the order between 1934 and 1984.

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.

NYS Exposed: Who’s opposed to giving child sex abuse victims more time to file lawsuits?

NEW YORK
WHEC

May 02, 2018

Should victims of child sex abuse be able to sue their abusers decades later?

The New York State Legislature is considering extending the statute of limitations on child sex crimes but there are some big organizations spending thousands of dollars to fight it.

Currently, someone who is sexually abused as a child has until the age of 23 to press criminal charges against his or her abuser. Under the proposed legislation, a victim would have until his 28th birthday to file criminal charges and his 50th birthday to file civil charges.

At the age of 13, a family member shattered Melanie Blow’s trust, “one day he pulled me aside, he sexually assaulted me and I mean… inside my world changed, outside, I didn’t dare tell anybody,” she recalled.

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.

Assembly passes Child Victims Act again, setting up another tough fight in the Senate

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

GLENN BLAIN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

May 1, 2018

ALBANY — The state Assembly approved a bill Tuesday to make it easier for child sex abuse survivors to seek justice as adults — and put pressure on the Senate to do the same.

Voting 124-9, the Assembly approved the Child Victims Act, marking the second consecutive year the Democrat-controlled chamber approved the bill. The measure, however, remains stalled in the GOP-controlled Senate.

“The CVA will ensure that adults who were sexually abused as children have a path to justice, and it will help make every New Yorker safer,” said Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal (D-Manhattan), who sponsored the bill.

Senate Republicans have said they will discuss the bill, but have not committed to passing it. A spokesman for Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan (R-Suffolk County) did not respond to a request for comment.

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

Editorial: The evil of silence

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

By News Editorial Board

May 1, 2018

It’s not just priests.

It’s also teachers, Scout leaders, Little League coaches and more. Pedophiles know their prey: who the most vulnerable are; where to find them; how to approach them and, critically, how to silence them.

Too often, they move from place to place, finding new targets while the public is left in an ignorance that, in some instances, has been deliberately imposed by institutional leaders. It needs to change.

The point, already well enough known, was made plain in stories appearing in the weekend’s editions of The Buffalo News. On Saturday, leaders of the Park School announced that four former educators may have engaged inappropriately and sexually with students there in the 1970s and 80s.

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.

Death penalty for child rape: ‘Many special provisions in POCSO not implemented’

INDIA
Indian Express

by Sadaf Modak | Mumbai |

May 2, 2018

AS THE Union Cabinet approved an Ordinance to allow courts to award death penalty to those convicted of raping children up to 12 years, stakeholders said the focus should have been on strengthening the existing Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.

The Act was introduced in 2012 to address sexual assault against children to ensure that provisions are made specifically to address the needs of child victims, including introduction of child-friendly courtrooms, changes in the way victims’ statements are recorded by the police, courts, as well as rehabilitation of victims. Stakeholders say many of the special provisions formulated for children remain unimplemented with the Act becoming part of the mainstream criminal justice system.

“Rights of the victims in the criminal justice system are often neglected. Even in the POCSO Act, the focus was to have child-friendly courts where child victims could come to depose but the victims continue to depose before the usual courts, part of the adult criminal justice system. While there are provisions for stringent punishment, aspects of victim rehabiliation, like compensation, psychological and other assistance to victims, is not usually provided for,” said Pravin Khandpasole, director of Disha, an organisation based in Amravati district that works on creating a legal, social and policy framework for 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.

Child Victims Act passes NY Assembly; Senate prospects dim

NEW YORK
Bristol Herald Courier

May 2, 2018

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Legislation to make it easier for molestation victims to seek criminal charges or file lawsuits against their abusers has once again passed the New York state Assembly.

The measure known as the Child Victims Act was endorsed by the Democrat-led Assembly on Tuesday. Prospects in the Republican-controlled state Senate, however, remain dim.

Current law gives victims until age 23 to file civil cases or seek criminal charges. Under the act, victims could file civil suits until age 50 and seek criminal charges until age 28. The bill would also create a one-year window allowing victims to file civil lawsuits for alleged abuse now barred by the existing statute of limitations.

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.

Parishes explore healing circles’ potential for restorative justice

UNITED STATES
The Catholic Spirit

Maria Wiering | May 1, 2018

The woman in the film said she was 12 when a priest began to abuse her, which was complicated by feelings of being in love with him.

Confused about the situation, she eventually reached out to a religious sister at her school and then met with her parish pastor. That pastor, who was not the perpetrator, told her that, although she was young, she was “old enough to seduce a priest.” Then her parents found love-letters the priest had written. Her father accused her of sexual immorality and her mother asked, “How could you do this to us?”

Identified only as Mary, the now middle-aged woman said she lived for decades feeling the abuse was her fault, even when a therapist she visited in her 40s insisted it wasn’t. She shared her story as part of a 2016 healing circle in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, documented by its leader, Janine Geske, a law professor at Marquette University in Milwaukee, and founder and former director of Marquette’s Restorative Justice Initiative.

Geske, who also sat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court from 1993-1998, showed the documentary April 29 at St. Joseph the Worker in Maple Grove and Our Lady of Lourdes in Minneapolis. Both two-hour events included brief remarks from Geske, “The Healing Circle” video and then the opportunity for attendees to participate with small groups in the healing circle process.

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.

Pell’s committal to trial will give hope to victims, says legal academic

AUSTRALIA
Lawyer’s Weekly

02 MAY 2018

By: Jerome Doraisamy

The Australian cardinal is set to become the highest-ranking figure in the history of the Catholic Church to ever stand trial on criminal charges for historical child sexual abuse.

Earlier Tuesday morning, Victorian magistrate Belinda Wallington committed Cardinal George Pell to stand trial for at least two alleged offences, one of which supposedly occurred in a swimming pool in Ballarat in the 1970s, having determined there was sufficient evidence for a jury to consider.

Ms Wallington also found there was insufficient evidence to charge the Cardinal on multiple separate charges, one of which pertained to allegations of abuse in a cinema, also in Ballarat, and had those charges struck out.

Cardinal Pell was in court for the ruling, as he has been for the committal hearing in preceding months, having returned home to Australia from his post as treasurer for the Vatican.

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart declined to make any substantive comment in relation to the court’s decision, but “expressed his confidence in the judicial system in Australia and said that justice must now take its course”, in an online statement published by Melbourne Catholic Magazine.

Dr Judy Courtin, who represents victims of institutional sexual abuse and completed a PhD at Monash University examining the appellate journey for child sexual assault convictions in Victoria, said the committal to trial would be hugely encouraging for victims and their families.

“Survivors, victims and families have been fighting to be heard for so long, and with the recent Royal Commission and Victorian inquiry, slowly but surely victims are beginning to be heard and believed,” she said.

“What this means — not just for people in Australia, but around the world — is that it’s worth stopping the silence. It’s worth speaking up and coming forward, because claims are now being taken seriously and believed by authorities.”

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

Vatican confirms Pell can retain senior role in church hierarchy

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

May 2, 2018

By Steve Cannane

The Vatican has stated that Cardinal George Pell will not be forced to quit his role in the church hierarchy, following the decision he would stand trial on multiple historical sexual offences.

Pope Francis has said he would not comment on the case until it was over.

The 76-year old is pleading not guilty to the charges and strenuously denies all allegations.

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.

Pell faces demotion in Rome, Vatican expert says

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

By Nick Miller

2 May 2018

London: Cardinal George Pell is likely to be replaced as head of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy now that he has been committed to stand trial on sexual assault charges, an experienced Vatican observer says.

“The great likelihood is that he’s never going back to Rome, at least as head of the Secretariat,” said John Allen jnr, editor at Crux and a long-time reporter and author on Catholicism and the Vatican.

Before charges were laid and Pell left for Australia last year, he was one of the most powerful men in the Vatican.

He led the Secretariat, tasked with cleaning up the Vatican’s finances, rooting out corruption and embezzlement, and auditing the corners of the Holy See where money has been secreted with minimal accountability or transparency.

But that body is now on “autopilot”, Allen said.

Since Pell’s absence, it has been run by his second in command, who is not a cardinal. And it could be another 18 months before Pell is free to return, whether or not he is found guilty at trial.

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.

Pell continues to fight sex charges

AUSTRALIA
9 News

May 2, 2018

Cardinal George Pell has taken the next step in fighting historical sexual offence charges after being committed to stand trial.

The 76-year-old on Wednesday faced Victoria’s County Court where he will stand trial on multiple charges, the details of which cannot be revealed for legal reasons.

During a brief hearing, Judge Sue Pullen adjourned the matter to May 16 for a further mention.

Pell flew back into Sydney on Wednesday afternoon and was quizzed about whether he’d give evidence.

“Of course,” he told the Seven Network at Sydney Airport.

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.

Vatican treasurer’s trial on historical sex offences to last 10 weeks, court hears

AUSTRALIA
Yahoo!

May 1, 2018

MELBOURNE, May 2 (Reuters) – The trial of Vatican treasurer George Pell, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of historical sexual offences, is expected to last 10 weeks, an Australian court heard on Wednesday.

The County Court of Victoria state will hold a second hearing on May 16 to plan the trial, where a judge will consider the prosecution and defence’s request to go ahead with two separate trials that will last about 10 weeks in total.

Pell, 76, was ordered to face trial on historical sexual offences involving multiple accusers following a month-long pre-trial hearing. He reiterated his not guilty plea after a magistrate ordered the trial on Tuesday. No date been set yet.

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.

George Pell set to face two trials over historical assault allegations

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

By Adam Cooper

2 May 2018

George Pell is likely to face two trials and two juries, with his sexual assault charges set to be heard separately, but a date for his first trial is yet to be set.

Less than 24 hours after being committed to stand trial on half the historic sexual assault charges he faced, Cardinal Pell on Wednesday returned to court, but this time to appear before a County Court judge instead of a magistrate.

The 76-year-old moved slowly both as he arrived and left, despite the buzz of media around him, surrounded by police officers during his walks to and from a waiting car.

In court, he sat still and quietly during the short administrative hearing.

At one point after the hearing, outside the building, he turned his head towards a reporter who asked a question, but didn’t say a word.

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

Australia’s Cardinal Pell in court on Wednesday on sex-abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Crux

May 2, 2018

AP

MELBOURNE, Australia – The first details of Cardinal George Pell’s upcoming trials on sexual abuse charges emerged Wednesday when he made an administrative appearance in court.

Prosecutors and defense lawyers agreed the charges would likely be split into two separate trials which would take a total of between eight and 10 weeks to be heard.

Pell’s lawyer Robert Richter asked the judge to start the trials as soon as possible, due in part to the cardinal’s advanced age of 76. Prosecutor Mark Gibson asked for up to three months to prepare the case.

Judge Sue Pullen said she thought three months was a “little excessive.”

Pell left the court on bail ahead of his next hearing on May 16. Pullen rejected Richter’s application for Pell to be excused from attending court that day.

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.

2 Trials Set For Cardinal Pell On Sex Abuse Charges

AUSTRALIA
NPR

May 2, 2018

Attorneys for Cardinal George Pell, the former archbishop of Sydney, were granted a request that the allegations of child sex abuse against him that date back decades be handled in two separate trials.

Pell, the highest-ranking Vatican official to stand trial on such charges, appeared in court on Wednesday for the second day after pleading not guilty to multiple charges involving alleged sexual offenses dating from the 1970s and 1990s when he was a priest in the Melbourne area and later archbishop of the southern Australian city.

The 76-year-old Pell’s lawyer, Robert Richter, argued before Judge Sue Pullen that the charges from the 70s and those from the 90s were “of a completely different nature” and “separated by 20 years” and therefore should be handled discretely.

Last year, Pell publicly proclaimed his innocence, saying the allegations were all “false” and that “The whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me.”

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.

Senior Pope aide Cardinal George Pell could face two trials over abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph (UK)

2 MAY 2018

Top Pope aide Cardinal George Pell could face two separate trials as he fights to clear his name over historic sexual offence allegations, an Australian court heard Wednesday.

A Melbourne judge on Tuesday ordered the Vatican finance chief, 76, to stand trial on multiple charges, making him the highest-ranked Catholic to face such allegations.

Pell pleaded not guilty, and half of the charges initially filed against him were thrown out.

The exact details and nature of the alleged offenses remain confidential, other than they involve “multiple charges and multiple complainants”, dating from the 1970s and 1990s.

Some of the alleged offences were at a swimming pool in the town of Ballarat in Victoria state where Pell was a priest in the 1970s, and a second set of alleged actions were at Melbourne’s St Patrick’s Cathedral in the 1990s.

At Wednesday’s brief directions hearing in the Victoria County Court, Pell’s barrister Robert Richter argued that because the charges related to different locations and were 20 years apart, they should be split and heard in two trials.

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.

May 1, 2018

Scotland ‘should be ashamed’ of childcare system abuse says former orphan who reveals history of beatings and trauma

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

By Conor Riordan

1 MAY 2018

Scotland “should be ashamed” for failing to face up to a history of abuse and neglect in the childcare system, a former orphanage resident has said.

The witness, who cannot be named, revealed life at Nazareth House in Aberdeen between 1968 and 1972 consisted of routine beatings, sexual assaults and emotional trauma.

Speaking at the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry yesterday, he said his experiences contributed to him serving time in “many prisons” and having a history of “serious” violence.

The man, now in his 50s, said: “Scotland as a country should be ashamed that it’s taken this long for this (inquiry) to happen.

“The 21 years since I reported this, it’s hurt me a lot more than what the care system has.”

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.

Protecting Against Abuse At Summer Camps

UNITED STATES
Times of Israel

OPINION

BY MICHAEL J. SALAMON

May 1, 2018

With summer on the horizon and talk about camp plans at a feverish pitch, this time of year is one of excitement for many. But it can be stressful for those of us who work with sexual abuse survivors. Just a few years ago I wrote about a man that I was treating who had been sexually abused by a counselor in a sleepaway camp when he was in his early teens. I never mentioned his name nor the name of the camp. But after the piece was published, I was inundated with letters, e-mails and calls from other men — older and younger than he — telling me about their similar experiences.

In all, more than 100 people contacted me. About 30 of them had been to the same camp and were abused by the same counselor who had been promoted over the years to head counselor. It was an open secret that he would select campers to go skinny dipping with him late at night and would abuse them. Still, he was revered by many at the camp.

That abusive man has since passed on. But stories like that do not. There are many similar cases, and while there is a significant effort to prevent abuse through stricter policies and more robust vetting, it is a given that abuse will likely continue to occur.

Last summer I was informed of two situations at sleepaway camps where abuse occurred. Both of those took place at camps that have anti-harassment and abuse policies – an absolute must. What is most often missing, though, is the necessary supervision of camp employees, the need to believe a person who finally feels strong and comfortable enough to report that he or she was abused, and the proper education of children who go off to camp. While it would be a fool’s errand to believe that all abuse can be eradicated, it is these three areas — staff supervision, believing victims and educating children that can provide the most effective buffer against abusers.

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.

Lawsuit against Father Bob, Saginaw Diocese moved to state court

MICHIGAN
MLive

May 1, 2018

By Cole Waterman cwaterma@mlive.com

SAGINAW, MI — A lawsuit alleging the Rev. Robert J. “Father Bob” DeLand Jr. had groomed and molested a teenage boy has moved from the federal courts to the state level.

The lawsuit against DeLand, Bishop Joseph R. Cistone, and the Catholic Diocese of Saginaw was originally filed in the federal courthouse in downtown Bay City on March 12. The suit was filed by attorney Todd J. Weglarz, of Southfield firm Fieger, Fieger, Kenney & Harington, on behalf of a minor identified as John Doe and an adult representative.

The lawsuit sought a judgment against the three defendants, jointly and severally, in excess of $75,000.

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.

2018 Catholic Charities Appeal looks to pick up steam

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

By Harold McNeil

May 1, 201With two months remaining, the 94th annual Catholic Charities of Buffalo Appeal has reached nearly $8.9 million in cash and pledges, but needs to pick up steam, according to diocese officials.

That’s just shy of 81 percent of its 2018 goal. An additional $2.1 million has to be raised between now and June 30 in order to reach this year’s $11 million goal. Sister Mary McCarrick, diocesan director of Catholic Charities, said the organization has seen strong support, particularly after being featured in a recent segment on the Today Show, but the appeal should be closer to 90 percent of its goal or greater at this point. She said the last time the appeal failed to reach its goal was in 2009, when it was at 88 percent of its final goal at this stage of the campaign.

Funds raised during the appeal help support the 70 programs and services provided by Catholic Charities at 61 sites throughout Western New York, along with a number of ministries that are part of the Bishop’s Fund for the Faith.

“If we don’t reach our goal, we will need to take a serious look at these services to people in need,” McCarrick said in a statement announcing the progress of the campaign. “For example, it costs about $50,000 to fund one food pantry and we currently operate eight pantries; six in Erie County, and one each in Cattaraugus and Allegany County.”

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

House of Commons passes ‘historic’ motion to ask Pope Francis for apology over residential schools

CANADA
Global News

May 1, 2018

By Amanda Connolly National Online Journalist

The Canadian House of Commons will formally ask Pope Francis to apologize for the role of the Catholic Church in the residential school system.

In a vote that garnered support across party lines on Tuesday, MPs supported a motion presented by NDP MP Charlie Angus for the House of Commons to ask for a formal apology from the Pope to the Indigenous peoples of Canada for the physical, sexual and emotional abuse suffered by the thousands of children forced to attend the schools.

A total of 269 Liberal, Conservative, NDP, Green and other MPs voted in favour of the motion.

Ten Conservative MPs opposed it but the motion has passed.

“I am very, very proud today,” said Angus to reporters ahead of the vote.

“This is a historic day for our country.”

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.

Latin American Millennials Question Pope Francis’s Handling of Sexual Abuse Cases

LATIN AMERICA
The Global Catholic Review

MAY 1, 2018

Co-authored by Dr. Kate Kingsbury* and Dr. Andrew Chesnut

Recent figures reveal that the Catholic Church is losing followers in Latin America at an accelerated rate. Contrary to pundits’ predictions, Pope Francis rather than proving popular and precipitating a proliferation in numbers of the faithful is losing support. What explains the shrinking Latin American flock? And what can the Catholic Church do to conciliate and captivate their congregants in Latin America anew?

Bad Publicity

Many assumed that a Latin American pope would entail more support within his home region and ensure the future of the Catholic Church there, but this presumption has proved erroneous. Phineas T. Barnum, a 19th century showman, enounced there is no such thing as bad publicity’. Unfortunately this adage has not proved a truism when it comes to the Catholic Church. In an era of mass media, technology has been both a friend and a foe for the Church. What in the past were once rumours or could be controverted as calumnies, have with the advent of the internet and hypercommunications come to comprise front page news stories. The inept and often corrupt handling of sex abuse scandals have tarnished the Church’s reputation, especially among Latin American Millennials who are becoming Religious Nones at unprecedented rates.

Many Latin Americans, especially Millennials, have lost faith in the Church, even if their parents and grandparents have not. As Carla, a 29 year old Ecuadorian described, ‘everybody knows that the Catholic Church cannot be trusted and that some of the clergy are guilty of paedophilia. You see it in the news all the time. I still believe in God but I do not go to church anymore as I just cannot respect the priests and pope after everything I have heard and seen. I pray in my house as does my sister and our children.’ Juan, a 23 year old from Venezuela agreed: ‘I will always believe in God as does my family, but the Catholic Church is just an institution to me now, nothing more and nothing less. Even if I don’t dislike the Pope I think he has done too little to address the many problems that plague the Church. Take Bishop Barros in Chile, for example. But my grandmother still goes to Church.’

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

Canadian MPs really want the Pope to apologize for residential schools

CANADA
National Post

May 1, 2018

/the Canadian Press

OTTAWA — MPs have voted overwhelmingly to extend to Pope Francis a formal invitation to apologize in person to Indigenous Peoples for decades of abuse meted out in residential schools across Canada.

New Democrat MPs Charlie Angus and residential school survivor Romeo Saganash introduced the motion, which passed today by a margin of 269-10.

Cheers erupted for both MPs as they voted; Angus held aloft a feather as his vote was acknowledged.

Among the 94 calls to action by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission was to ask for an apology, to be delivered in Canada by the pontiff, for the church’s role in the residential school abuse of First Nations, Inuit and Metis children.

But in March, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops said that while the Pope acknowledged the commission’s findings and expressed regret for past wrongs, he “felt he could not personally respond.”

The motion also calls on the Catholic Church to pay money owed to residential school survivors and to turn over relevant documentation regarding the government-sponsored schools.

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

Child sexual abuse inquiry to hold hearings in Nottingham

UNITED KINGDOM
West Bridgford Wire

May 1, 2018

The Inquiry will come to Trent Bridge Cricket Ground from 1 to 5 October 2018, where the Chair, Professor Alexis Jay OBE, and panel will hear opening statements and evidence from some witnesses.

The Inquiry will spend three weeks looking into the extent of any institutional failures to protect children in the care of Nottingham City and Nottinghamshire Councils from abuse and exploitation.

It will also look at how institutions including those councils and the police responded to any abuse claims.

The remaining two weeks of the hearing will take place at the Inquiry’s hearing centre in London.

Further details will be provided on the Inquiry’s website www.iicsa.org.uk and Twitter feed @InquiryCSA

Children living in care in residential homes and foster families are amongst the most vulnerable children in society. Allegations of widespread sexual abuse and exploitation of children who were in the care of Nottingham City Council and Nottinghamshire Council require detailed public scrutiny.

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

In a Town of 2,000, Three Consecutive Priests Abused Children for 30 Years

NEW YORK
Friendly Atheist

APRIL 30, 2018

BY TERRY FIRMA

When the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, New York recently released a list of priests credibly accused of child sex abuse, parishioners in Angola, 20 miles to the south, were in disbelief. Because on that list were four priests who had served their town of just over 2,000 people.

What … set Most Precious Blood [the parish church] apart from other parishes was the span in which one accused priest after another worked in the parish for nearly 30 consecutive years.

The Rev. Fred G. Fingerle was assigned as an associate pastor there from 1967 to 1977, except for one year at another parish in 1970. Fingerle was succeeded by the Rev. John P. Hajduk from 1977 to 1982. And Hajduk was followed by Monsignor J. Grant Higgins, who served as pastor from 1983 until 1997.

I wonder if they traded tips about their victims as they passed the baton.

The fourth accused priest was the Rev. James H. Cotter, assigned to Most Precious Blood from 1955 to 1958.

A true pioneer, that one.

“The sticker shock was the number, not that it had happened,” said longtime member Karen A. Erickson. “The sticker shock of so many in your community was what had people talking.”

Her fellow believers in certain other towns in upper New York state surely feel the same way.

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.

Press Office: Statement on Cardinal George Pell

VATICAN CITY
Vatican News

The Holy See releases a press statement after the Australian court orders Cardinal George Pell to stand trial.

The Holy See on Tuesday released the following statement regarding Cardinal George Pell.

Holy See’s Statement

“The Holy See has taken note of the decision issued by judicial authorities in Australia regarding His Eminence Cardinal George Pell. Last year, the Holy Father granted Cardinal Pell a leave of absence so he could defend himself from the accusations. The leave of absence is still in place.”

Today’s ruling

Cardinal George Pell appeared in an Australian court on Tuesday and entered a not guilty plea to the criminal charges against him. At the conclusion of preliminary hearings, a Melbourne magistrate dismissed some of the charges against Cardinal Pell, but decided that others warrant a jury trial. Trial proceedings will begin on Wednesday in Victoria State County Court.

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

Why Won’t Pope Francis Quit Cardinal Pell, His Sketchy No. 3?

ROME
The Daily Beast

BARBIE LATZA NADEAU

05.01.18

ROME—Cardinal George Pell, the 76-year-old head of the Vatican’s Secretariat of the Economy, will stand trial in Melbourne, Australia, for criminal sexual abuse he is alleged to have inflicted on young boys in his home country during the 1970s and ’90s.

Exact details of the charges have not been made public due to victim privacy laws, but one of the alleged incidents apparently took place over a 12-month period with a child from St. Joseph’s Boys Home, according to reporters in Australia. Another is purported to have occurred at various times with the same victim in a local swimming pool frequented by a Catholic youth group under Pell’s supervision.

Pell’s alleged behavior has been the focus of a committal hearing in Australia meant to determine if there is enough criminal evidence to support a jury trial. Pell left Vatican City last June to face his accusers, despite initially pleading ill health that would have kept him safe inside the protected Vatican city-state, where he enjoys diplomatic status.

After a month of hearings in which the court heard disturbing details of the alleged abuse from a number of victims, including one event that is said to have occurred during the screening of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Magistrate Belinda Wallington ruled that several of the accusations were to be dismissed due to either lack of or incoherent evidence. Only two of the many allegations against him have enough solid evidence to warrant a trial, she said, though it cannot yet be reported which two those are.

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.

Masses of security, media and protesters at Cardinal George Pell trial

AUSTRALIA
Newstalk ZB

1 May 2018

A mass of security, media and protestors honed in today for a court appearance of Australia’s Cardinal George Pell.

The 76-year-old pleaded not guilty to historic sex offences dating back to the 1970’s and 1990’s at a Melbourne magistrate’s court.

Pell has maintained his innocence since allegations came to light, and taken leave from his position at the Vatican to fight the complaints.

Australian correspondent Murray Olds told Larry Williams several more charges were on the table but ultimately thrown out.

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

The Latest: Cardinal Pell has court appearance Wednesday

AUSTRALIA
Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The Latest on Cardinal George Pell (all times local):

3:30 p.m.

Cardinal George Pell has been ordered to appear Wednesday in the Victoria state County Court where he will eventually stand trial.

Under his bail conditions, Pell cannot leave Australia, contact prosecution witnesses and he must give police notice of any change of address.

An Australian magistrate earlier Tuesday ordered the most senior Vatican official to be charged in the Catholic Church sex abuse crisis to stand trial.

He entered a plea of not guilty. Melbourne Magistrate Belinda Wallington dismissed some charges but decided the prosecution’s case on others was strong enough to warrant a trial by jury.

Details have not been disclosed about the crimes alleged to have occurred decades ago.

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.

Mikvah-peeping Rabbi Barry Freundel’s jail sentence reduced by over a year due to good behavior

WASHINGTON (DC)
JTA

By Josefin Dolsten

April 26, 2018

(JTA) — The jail sentence of Rabbi Barry Freundel, a once-prominent Modern Orthodox rabbi in Washington, D.C. who secretly filmed women in his synagogue’s mikvah, has been shortened by over a year due to good behavior, his lawyer said.

Freundel’s 6 1/2-year sentence also was reduced because he participated as an instructor in a program to educate other inmates, the attorney, Jeffrey Harris, told JTA on Thursday.

A day earlier, the D.C. Department of Corrections had sent an email to Freundel’s victims saying the rabbi would be released on Aug. 21. On Thursday, however, the department sent another email saying that Freundel will be released on Aug. 21, 2020. Director Quincy Booth told JTA in a statement that the original email was sent in error.

“In the case of Mr. Freundal [sic], the email incorrectly calculated his scheduled release date and sent the email to Mr. Freundal’s victims who signed up for the VINE service,” Booth said, referring to the department’s automated notification system. “DOC has corrected the error that caused the incorrect release calculation and email notification.”

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.

Malka Leifer – Alleged Sexual Predator

ISRAEL/AUSTRALIA
Times of Israel

May 1, 2918

Shoshana Mael

In my lifetime, I’ve met hundreds of people who’ve been sexually abused. It’s not something I’ll ever get used to, although it doesn’t shock me in the same way that it once did. Still, hearing stories about children being victimized in the Orthodox community is something that will forever shake me to my core. Maybe it’s because I still feel a familial connection to that community, and personal tragedy isn’t something you can inoculate yourself against. Whatever the reason, today I feel compelled to write about Malka Leifer, a former high school principal from Australia, and the three sisters who went public with allegations of sexually abusive behavior and are in the process of fighting for justice.

I want to focus on three elements of this situation that are unique to Orthodox communities, and make this story all the more painful.

1. The sisters were raised by a mercurial and abusive mother. This made them particularly susceptible to the manipulative tactics of Ms. Leifer, as they were desperate for maternal affection and attention. Ms. Leifer preyed on them, knowing that they were keeping their volatile home situation a secret. To them, this secrecy was necessary because should word get out that they came from a dysfunctional family, their shidduch prospects would be negatively affected. While there are many reasons why children don’t disclose parental abuse, fear of not finding a ‘suitable’ husband should never be one of them.

2. Within the Orthodox community, there exists a lack of boundaries that allows abuse and molestation to fester. The sisters relate how Ms. Leifer would invite girls to her house and and spend time alone with them in her office, with the blinds drawn and the door closed. In the closeness of the Orthodox community, questionable boundaries are allowed to exist because the small size of the community is rife with dual relationships. It’s common for your pediatrician to also be your neighbor and also be the person you sit next to in shul. There’s a dangerous and naive sense of trust that all such behavior is innocent. Ms. Leifer was able to exploit this fact and crossed boundaries with the three sisters — in public — and later progressed to significantly worse violations. It is a shame that her behavior was chalked up to ‘taking girls under her wing’ and wasn’t recognized for the grooming behavior that it was.

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.

‘We are deeply sorry’ – boarding schools apologise for child abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
tes

By Charlotte Santry

01 May 2018

Boarding schools must correct “the wrongs of the past” and create “obstructive obstacles” to deter potential abusers, headteachers have been told today.

Martin Reader, the chair of the Boarding Schools’ Association (BSA), is today set to apologise for the abuse suffered by former pupils, on behalf of his organisation’s members.

Addressing the BSA’s annual conference in Brighton today, he will say: “It is to our great shame that there have been those adults at our schools who have used their positions of power to abuse those they were supposed to be looking after, or have failed to use their positions of power to stand up against those abusers, putting school reputations before children.

“We are deeply sorry to the victims and survivors of the abuse that happened in our schools and are thoroughly committed to making our schools as safe as possible.”

His comments follow recent media reports about the scale of abuse at UK boarding schools, including in recent years.

Ampleforth College, in North Yorkshire, is currently subject to three ongoing police investigations into historic allegations of sexual offences.

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.

Australian cardinal to face trial on sexual abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Associated Press

By ROD McGUIRK

May 1, 2018

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australian Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Vatican official to be charged in the Catholic Church sex abuse crisis, must stand trial on charges alleging he sexually abused multiple victims decades ago, a magistrate ruled Tuesday.

Magistrate Belinda Wallington dismissed around half the charges that had been heard in the four-week preliminary hearing in Melbourne but decided the prosecution’s case was strong enough for the remainder to warrant a trial by jury. The number of charges has not been made public

When she asked Pell how he pleaded, the cardinal said in a firm voice, “Not guilty.” Wallington gave the 76-year-old permission not to stand, which is customary. …

Anne Barrett Doyle, of BishopAccountability.org, a Massachusetts-based online abuse resource, described the magistrate’s decision to make Pell stand trial as “a turning point in the global abuse crisis in the Catholic Church.”

“Whatever its outcome, the judge’s decision marks the victory of accountability over impunity, and of the rule of secular law over the Vatican’s failed strategy of cover-up,” she said.

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

Cardinal George Pell trial ruling welcomed by survivors’ rights group

ROME
The Guardian (UK)

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Rome

1 May 2018

A survivors’ rights group has hailed as a “turning point” an Australian magistrate’s ruling that Cardinal George Pell, one of the most senior officials in the Vatican, will stand trial on historical sexual offence charges.

The decision by Belinda Wallington comes as the church in Rome continues to be dogged by accusations that it has failed to do enough to come to grips with a sexual abuse crisis.

For some advocates, the development in Melbourne was a rare victory for secular law, after decades in which the church has handled priests and senior clergy accused of sexual abuse within the Vatican’s own judicial system.

“[The] decision today … marks a turning point in the global abuse crisis in the Catholic church,” said a statement by BishopsAccountability.org, which tracks cases of alleged abuse. “The Australian government has put the Catholic church on equal footing with other institutions, and treated its leaders as fellow citizens.”

In Rome, the question now is whether Pope Francis is prepared to take tougher action against accused priests, as well as the bishops who have been accused of protecting them.

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

Lancaster Co. man sexually abused by priest says testimony to grand jury afforded emotional release

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

May 1, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus idejesus@pennlive.com

In the fall of 2016, after a lifetime of torment from painful memories, Todd Frey got an emotional release.

After nearly four decades of living with the pain and confusion of having been sexually molested by his priest, Frey got the chance to talk about it before a panel of men and women who he hopes can help give him the opportunity to seek legal recourse.

Frey in October of that year testified before the 40th Statewide Grand Jury, which is investigating the sexual abuse of children across six dioceses in Pennsylvania.

“Ever since grand jury listened to me that day that I spoke, I felt like I was truly counted,” said Frey, who is nearing his 50th birthday. “It made a difference. It made a big difference.”

Frey, of Lancaster County, is among an untold number of victims who in the past 18 months have testified before the grand jury as the state attorney general’s office wraps up its investigation into the dioceses of Harrisburg, Allentown, Pittsburgh, Erie, Scranton and Greensburg.

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.

Cardinal Pell to remain on leave after indictment: Vatican says

VATICAN CITY
Yahoo!

May 1, 2018

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Cardinal George Pell will remain on a leave of absence from the Vatican after an Australian court ordered him to stand trial on charges of historical sexual offences, the Vatican said on Tuesday.

A statement said the Holy See had “taken note” of the ruling. [L8N1S814C].

It said the leave of absence that Pope Francis had granted Pell, head of the Vatican’s economy ministry, last year so he could defend himself “is still in place”. Pell pleaded not guilty.

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.

Vatican treasurer to face trial in Australia on historical sexual offense charges

AUSTRALIA
Reuters

May 1, 2018

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Vatican Treasurer George Pell must face trial on charges of historical sexual offences, an Australian court ruled on Tuesday, making him the most senior Catholic official to be tried on such allegations. He pleaded not guilty.

Magistrate Belinda Wallington handed down her decision that Pell’s case will proceed to trial in a Melbourne court, following a month-long pre-trial hearing.

Pell did not comment when he left the court, surrounded by police and flanked by his legal team.

Pope Francis has said he would not comment on the case involving his economy minister until it was over.

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.

From the Vatican to William Street: George Pell’s next journey is across the street

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

By Adam Cooper

May 2018

It takes seconds to walk across William Street to get from Melbourne Magistrates Court to Victoria’s County Court.

Usually a magistrate’s decision to refer a criminal case to the higher court is just as straightforward, in some cases a formality from the start of a pre-trial hearing.

But in the case against George Pell, things weren’t so clear.

After a four-week hearing in March, which featured more than 30 witnesses and some rigorous cross-examination by Cardinal Pell’s lawyers, prosecutors and defence lawyers submitted pages of arguments advising magistrate Belinda Wallington what to do: commit Australia’s most senior Catholic to stand trial or strike out the multiple sexual assault charges he faced.

The credibility and believability of witnesses – particularly accusers, who gave evidence in a closed court – was to be considered, as was the passage of time, the influence of media reports and the cardinal’s profile, and timelines and geographic layouts which would help determine whether the allegations were plausible or improbable.

At the start of her ruling on Tuesday, Ms Wallington said it was a magistrate’s job to sort the wheat from the chaff, to comb the evidence and determine whether it was capable of convincing a jury of 12 ordinary folk to find an accused person guilty.

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.

Cardinal George Pell to stand trial on historical sex assault charges

AUSTRALIA
The Age

By Adam Cooper & Tom Cowie

1 May 2018

George Pell will be the most senior Catholic leader to face a jury after being committed to stand trial on multiple historic sexual assault charges.

In a decision that will ring loud through the Vatican and around the religious world, Australia’s most senior Catholic and the man who a year ago oversaw management of the Vatican’s finances was on Tuesday committed to stand trial on half the charges he faced, involving multiple accusers.

However, magistrate Belinda Wallington struck out a series of serious charges at the start of her ruling, finding there was insufficient evidence for him to be convicted by a jury.

Ms Wallington committed the 76-year-old on charges against multiple complainants, involving alleged sexual offending at a swimming pool in the 1970s in Ballarat, where the accused man was then working as a priest; and at St Patrick’s Cathedral in Melbourne in 1990s, when he was the then Archbishop of Melbourne.

Asked to enter a plea, Cardinal Pell said in a loud, clear voice: “Not guilty.”

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.

Cardinal Pell, Vatican treasurer, to become most senior member of Catholic church to stand trial on sex charges

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph (UK)

Jonathan Pearlman, Sydney

1 MAY 2018

Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican’s treasurer, has become the most senior Catholic figure to face sexual assault charges after a court in Melbourne committed him to stand trial on historical offences involving multiple victims.

After being asked for a plea, 76-year-old Pell, a trusted aide of Pope Francis, stated firmly and loudly: “Not guilty”.

Magistrate Belinda Wallington dismissed about half the charges because of a lack of evidence or concerns about witness credibility. These included – according to Pell’s lawyer – the more “vile” of the alleged offences.

But Ms Wallington ordered the Cardinal to face a trial by jury for alleged sexual offending at a pool in the 1970s in Ballarat, near Melbourne, and at St Patrick’s Cathedral in Melbourne in the 1990s when he was the city’s Archbishop. After the magistrate left the court, a group of the Cardinal’s critics broke into applause.

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.

Accused pastor may not attend hearing on sex charges

ALABAMA
WTVY

By Ken Curtis

Apr 30, 2018

Dothan, AL (WTVY)- In a unique request, the attorney for a minister charged with sexual abuse doesn’t want his client to attend a hearing to determine if charges will be dropped.

Williams Wesley “Wes” Williamson, 28, was arrested in March on three felonies involving the alleged molestation of two boys under the age of 12 at a church camp last summer.

On Friday, he has a preliminary hearing scheduled to determine if there is sufficient evidence to send the case to a grand jury or if charges will be dismissed.

However, defense attorney Thomas Smith doesn’t want Williamson in the courtroom during the hearing and recently filed a motion asking his appearance to be waived. He didn’t give a reason.

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.

‘Let’s talk about sex’ has taken on new meaning

UNITED STATES
The Mennonite

4.30. 2018

Written By: Indigo Rey Miller

“Let’s talk about sex,” doesn’t mean what it used to. At one time these provocative song lyrics spoke specifically to the act of sex and would never have been spoken openly in many of our church communities. Mennonites, and the majority of Christians, have a long history of shutting down conversations about the body, but the past few years have forced our hand.

Mennonite Church USA got a cold shock when influential Mennonite theologian John Howard Yoder’s decades of harassment and sexual abuse of more than 50 women finally came to full light in 2013. The Mennonite Church has had to grapple with what it means to face the reality that leaders—champions of peace and ethics no less—and members of our own congregations are capable of such persistent violent disrespect for the bodies of humans.

Harvey Weinstein, the #MeToo movement and a wave of sexual assault survivors coming forward over the past year should be no surprise to Mennonites. Now the lyrics “Let’s talk about sex,” have a profound relevance in our churches and communities. Now it’s a plea for our faith communities to explore the complexities of our embodied human sexuality, both as a healing response to profound trauma and a hope that we can learn to embrace the embodied existence God has gifted us.

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

Former Gresham pastor gets 12 years for abusing family member

OREGON
The Bulletin

April 30, 2018

GARRETT ANDREWS
THE BULLETIN
@GarrettGAndrews

Former Gresham pastor James Daniel “Jamie” Worley was sentenced to 12½ years in prison Monday in Deschutes County Circuit Court for sexually abusing a family member when he lived in Bend in the early 2000s, when his victim was between age 5 and 7.

Worley’s recent trial lasted four weeks before a jury returned guilty verdicts on March 14.

The drama on Monday came down to whether Judge Beth M. Bagley would choose to run three 75-month sentences concurrently — as the defense had asked — or consecutively, as the prosecution asked.

Bagley said that despite an expert witness who testified Worley represented a low level of risk to the community, the pain he caused his victim needed to be addressed in her sentence.

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.

Rundown of sex abuse within the Catholic church

GLOBAL
The Straits Times (Singapore)

May 1, 2018

MELBOURNE (AFP) – Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell on Tuesday (May 1) became the highest-ranked Catholic ever to be sent to trial for sex offences, adding to a series of scandals facing the church globally.

Here is a rundown of notable cases:

AUSTRALIA
Cardinal George Pell, the third highest member of the Vatican hierarchy, has been ordered to stand trial on “multiple” historical sex charges, which he denies.

His case coincided with a public enquiry that found that seven percent of priests were presumed to have committed paedophilic acts in Australia between 1950 and 2010.

AUSTRIA
Two scandals forced the Vatican to revoke two high-ranking ultra-conservative clerics, Viennese Archbishop Hans Hermann Groer in 1995 and the bishop of Sankt-Poelten, Kurt Krenn in 2004.

BELGIUM
In 2010, the bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, resigned after acknowledging sex abuse of two nephews. Since 2012 the Catholic Church in Belgium has received hundreds of complaints and paid almost 4.13 million euros in compensation.

CANADA
In the late 1980s, a huge scandal broke out regarding the mistreatment of children at an orphanage in Newfoundland in the 1950s-1960s.

CHILE
Some 80 members of the Chilean clergy have been implicated in a series of sex abuse affairs over the past few years.

Controversy over the bishop Juan Barros, accused of covering for a paedophile priest, marred Pope Francis’ trip to the country in January 2018 when he hugged and defended the bishop.

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

Another priest with local ties placed on leave after allegations of abuse

NEW YORK
The Daily News

By SCOTT DESMIT
SDESMIT@BATAVIANEWS.COM

MAY 1, 2018

BATAVIA — Another priest who once served in Batavia has been placed on leave after allegations of sexual abuse were made to the Diocese of Buffalo.

The Rev. Samuel J. Venne, who once served at St. Anthony’s Church, was placed on administrative leave after Bishop Richard J. Malone received an abuse complaint,” the diocese announced on its website last week. Venne is believed to have been with St. Anthony’s in the 1970s. He also served as a chaplain and scoutmaster in the Boy Scouts.

The diocese and Malone also placed Rev. Arthur Smith on leave as an investigation continues.

Venne is a retired priest who still serves at St. Stephen’s Parish in Grand Island. Smith serves at Blessed Mother of Teresa of Calcutta Parish in Depew.

“In both cases, please note that this administrative leave is for the purpose of investigation and does not imply any determination as to the truth or falsity of the complaint,” Malone wrote on the website.

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.

Cardinal George Pell To Face Sexual Assault Charges In Australia

AUSTRALIA
Maine Public Radio

May 1, 2018

By SCOTT NEUMAN

A magistrate in Australia has ordered Cardinal George Pell, one of the Vatican’s senior-most officials, to stand trial on sexual abuse charges involving allegations from multiple individuals dating back decades.

Pell is the highest-ranking Vatican official to be charged in the church’s long-standing sex abuse scandal.

Although Melbourne Magistrate Belinda Wallington dismissed many of the charges against Pell, who was appointed archbishop of Sydney in 2001 and later oversaw the Vatican’s finances under Pope Francis, she said that the prosecution’s case was strong enough to warrant a jury trial on the remaining charges.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Wallington, following a month-long hearing committed the 76-year-old cleric “on charges against multiple complainants, involving alleged sexual offending at a swimming pool in the 1970s in Ballarat [near Melbourne], where the accused man was then working as a priest; and at St Patrick’s Cathedral in Melbourne in 1990s, when he was the then 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.

PRIEST SCANDAL Who is Cardinal George Pell, what has the Vatican treasurer been accused of and when will he stand trial?

AUSTRALIA
The Sun (UK)

By Thea Jacobs

1st May 2018

Cardinal George Pell is the most senior member of the Australian clergy who has now come under fire for historic child sexual abuse allegations.

He is the most senior catholic clergy member to face sexual abuse allegations. In light of the allegations we’ve brought together everything you need to know about him.

Who is Cardinal George Pell?

Cardinal George Pell was born in Ballarat, Australia, on June 8 1941 to George Arthur and Margaret Lillian Pell and his mother was a devout catholic.

In his early life he was a keen American Football player, including being signed to Richmond Football Club – however, he says he realised he had an unavoidable calling to become a priest.

In 1960 he started his studies to become a Catholic priest at Corpus Christi College in Werribee and in 1963 he was assigned to continue his studies at the Pontifical Urban University in Rome.

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.

Vatican Treasurer to stand trial on sex abuse charges in Australia

AUSTRALIA
Newstalk (Ireland)

1 May 2018

The man in charge of the Vatican’s finances is to face sex abuse charges in Australia.

Cardinal George Pell is the most senior Catholic Church official to be charged with such offences, which relate to his time as a priest and bishop in Australia.

Following a month-long pre-trial hearing, magistrate Belinda Wallington ruled that some of the historical allegations against the 76-year-old should be tested in court.

Cardinal Pell has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

He will next appear in court on Wednesday in Melbourne. He is facing at least one charge after being accused of sexually abusing multiple victims decades ago.

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.

April 30, 2018

Sin credibilidad y dividida, la Iglesia que deja Chávez Botello

OAXACA (MEXICO)
Real Politik [Oaxaca de Juárez, Oaxaca, Mexico]

April 30, 2018

By David Méndez

Read original article

Protagonista de uno de los pasajes más oscuros del catolicismo oaxaqueño, José Luis Chávez Botello dejó definitivamente, el pasado 25 de abril, la Arquidiócesis de Antequera-Oaxaca, a la que llegó hace 14 años y medio, el ocho de noviembre de 2003. Chávez se fue, al parecer, sin ninguna indagatoria judicial en su contra, a pesar de las múltiples acusaciones por brindar protección a curas pederastas y de orquestar campañas de represión en contra de quienes osaron revelar la verdad que impera detrás de la Iglesia oaxaqueña

Texto: David MÉNDEZ

Fotos: Esteban CHINCOYA

Entre polémica, acusado no sólo de ocultar casos de pederastia cometidos por sacerdotes sino de haber brindado protección a al menos dos de los  imputados –uno sentenciado y otro prófugo de la justicia–, lo que sumió a la Iglesia Católica de la entidad en una crisis de credibilidad y división, José Luis Chávez Botello dejó oficialmente la Arquidiócesis de Antequera Oaxaca el pasado 25 de abril, luego de 14 años y cinco meses al frente de ella.

Chávez Botello se desempeñó como Arzobispo hasta el 10 de febrero de 2018, día en que El Vaticano aceptó su renuncia al cargo, presentada en 2016; luego, a la espera del nombramiento del nuevo titular, fungió como administrador apostólico.

Intolerante a los cuestionamientos, tal y como fue durante sus últimos años al frente del gobierno de la Provincia Eclesiástica de Antequera, Chávez se fue impidiendo que el nuncio Apostólico –representante del Papa en México–, Franco Coppola, hablara a detalle sobre la crisis de violencia que sacude actualmente al país y que entre sus antecedentes recientes resalta el asesinato de tres estudiantes de Jalisco y la disolución de sus cuerpos en ácido para borrar cualquier rastro de ellos, así como la desaparición de cinco jóvenes más oriundos de Tlaxcala, cuyos vehículos fueron localizados incinerados sobre la carretera Temascal-La Granja, en los límites de Oaxaca y Veracruz.

Cuando Coppola, italiano radicado en México desde hace casi dos años, respondía a Real Politik en torno a los planteamientos sobre la amnistía a criminales hechos por el candidato a la presidencia de la República, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Chávez Botello hizo un gesto de desaprobación y soltó un “ya, ya”, que propició que los tres guaruras que custodiaban a ambos personajes se abalanzaran en contra del reportero para detenerlo, mientras las autoridades católicas subían presurosas al vehículo que las alejaría del auditorio Guelaguetza, donde se había realizado una “celebración eucarística”.

Aquel festejo religioso, al que asistieron alrededor de 9 mil personas, fue organizado, justamente, al mediodía del miércoles 25 de abril para darle la bienvenida como nuevo Arzobispo a Pedro Vázquez Villalobos, quien a partir de ese día y durante los próximos ocho años –cuando cumpla 75 años y deba retirarse, como lo hizo su antecesor–, se desempeñará como jerarca de la Arquidiócesis de Antequera, a la que pertenecen las diócesis de Puerto Escondido, Tuxtepec, Tehuantepec y las prelaturas de Huautla de Jiménez y de Mixes (con sede en San Pedro y San Pablo Ayutla), que abarcan las parroquias erigidas en siete de las ocho regiones de la entidad (Huajuapan de León pertenece a la Arquidiócesis de Puebla).

En su primer discurso enviado a los fieles, el ex obispo de Puerto Escondido admitió que la Iglesia oaxaqueña ha fallado, que se encuentra “desfigurada”, pero, al mismo tiempo,  “blindó” el actuar de Chávez Botello, al que calificó como “siervo bueno y fiel”, al que le pidió recibir el “cariño” y “gratitud” de todos los católicos.

 La Iglesia exonera a Chávez

Horas antes, en las instalaciones de la Catedral de Oaxaca, sede de la Arquidiócesis, Vásquez, en una conferencia de prensa realizada tras haber asumido de manera oficial el cargo, había sido más claro: “No creo que (Chávez Botello) haya encubierto los casos de pederastia; creo que los trató como debía de tratar todos esos casos”.

Y luego intentó desmarcarse de su antecesor: “(Habrá) cero tolerancia (a la pederastia durante mi gestión), y yo le pido a Dios que ninguno de nosotros ministros, que ninguno de los fieles, cometamos estos delitos”.

No se pronunció, sin embargo, sobre si apoyaría alguna indagatoria judicial en contra del anterior Arzobispo.

Lo que sí hizo el nuevo líder católico, de 67 años y también nacido en Jalisco, fue matizar las denuncias que existen en contra de los integrantes de la Iglesia: “Porque se señala a los sacerdotes como si fueran los únicos, pero, a veces, en nuestra familia están los más grandes pederastas: el padre de familia, el hermano”.

Durante el encuentro oficial con los medios de comunicación no hizo más pronunciamientos al respecto, y, horas después, al término del festejo realizado en el auditorio Guelaguetza, se negó a hablar con Real Politik.

“Ahora no”, soltó, luego de ser abordado y siguió su marcha a paso veloz hasta salir del inmueble y abordar un vehículo, siempre custodiado por un escolta.

Encubrimientos y represión, el legado

Chávez Botello, quien presentó su renuncia ante El Vaticano el ocho de febrero de 2016, después de cumplir la edad para su retiro, enfrentó durante los últimos dos años de su gestión diversos escándalos por casos de pederastia, recordó la revista Proceso.

Entre ellos destacan el del sacerdote Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, condenado a 16 años de prisión por corrupción de menores, y el del vicario Episcopal de Pastoral de la Arquidiócesis de Antequera, Carlos Franco Pérez Méndez, calificado como “mano derecha” del ex arzobispo, quien fue aprehendido por la Agencia Estatal de Investigaciones (AEI) el 15 de julio de 2016 por el delito de abuso sexual agravado en contra del catequista Lenin Moisés López Jiménez.

Tres días después de la detención del Vicario, el Juez Cuarto de lo Penal otorgó a favor del indiciado un auto de libertad, bajo el argumento de que no existían elementos para ser sometido a juicio; sin embargo, siete meses después, en febrero de 2017, el Tribunal Superior de Justicia del Estado de Oaxaca (TSJE) revocó la resolución y ordenó su reaprehensión, tras considerar que existían elementos para que fuera sometido a un proceso penal.

Desde entonces, el hombre, cuya influencia en la Iglesia era equiparable con la de un Obispo Diocesano, permanece prófugo.

Pasaje oscuro del catolicismo

Luego de que la acusación contra Carlos Franco Pérez se hizo pública, el coordinador de la Pastoral de Movilidad Humana Pacífico Sur de la Conferencia del Episcopado Mexicano, Alejandro Solalinde Guerra, se pronunció a favor de la familia del menor y acusó a Chávez Botello de proteger al inculpado.

En julio de 2016, tras la detención de Pérez, Solalinde demandó la renuncia del entonces Arzobispo por haber incurrido en el delito de encubrimiento.

“El papa Francisco ordenó a Obispos encubridores de pederastas  que renunciaran. Usted encubrió a su vicario, Carlos Franco. Renuncie! (sic)”, publicó el 15 de julio en la red social de Twitter, el también activista y defensor de migrantes.

“El Jueves Santo (de 2016) Carlos Franco, vicario de Pastoral de Oaxaca, abusó sexualmente de un hijo de dirigentes católicos. El Arzobispo, lo encubrió”, remarcó posteriormente, quien en 2017 fuera postulado al Premio Nobel de la Paz.

En su momento, José Luis Chávez dijo desconocer por qué Solalinde pedía su renuncia y argumentó que todos los integrantes de la Iglesia debían caminar “en la verdad”.

Sobre el caso que involucra al ex vicario, argumentó que podría tratarse de una “cortina de humo”, para tapar escándalos del gobierno.

Más casos

Pero Solalinde no fue el único que acusó a Chávez de dar protección a abusadores sexuales y violadores de menores, pues el sacerdote de la parroquia de San Francisco Telixtlahuaca, Miguel Ángel Morelos García, uno de los primeros en denunciar públicamente  el caso de Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, el párroco detenido en 2013 y sentenciado en enero de 2017 a 16 años de prisión al comprobarse su participación en el delito doloso de corrupción de menores en su modalidad de inducción a actos sexuales y exposición de filmes pornográficos, denunció en reiteradas ocasiones que la Arquidiócesis intentó separarlo de su cargo como represalia por sus acciones en contra de los ultrajes clericales.

Incluso, la población de Telixtlahuaca tuvo que salir en diversas ocasiones en defensa de Morelos, cuando las autoridades católicas intentaron desalojarlo de la parroquia. Finalmente, el sacerdote murió el 27 de diciembre de 2017, sin ser removido.

Los que no pudieron contrarrestar  el embate del entonces Arzobispo fueron los párrocos de las iglesias de Cristo Rey, Apolonio Merino Hernández, y de Santiago Camotlán, Ángel Noguera Nieto, quienes fueron separados del sacerdocio en 2015 –de acuerdo con sus denuncias—también por haber ventilado públicamente los abusos sexuales que cometía Silvestre Hernández.

Al igual que Miguel Ángel Morelos, Apolonio Merino y Ángel Noguera exigieron castigo en contra de los responsables de violaciones clericales y el fincamiento de responsabilidades contra su ex jerarca por encubrir esos hechos.

Las movilizaciones llegaron a tal grado que sacerdotes, víctimas y familiares de éstas demandaron que José Luis Chávez Botello ofreciera una disculpa pública a nombre de la Iglesia por los agravios cometidos en contra de la sociedad. Ésta, sin embargo, nunca llegó.

Olvidan pederastia, recriminan

pobreza y evaden inseguridad

Tras sortear el tema de la pederastia ante los medios de comunicación, el nuevo arzobispo, Pedro Vásquez, respaldado por el nuncio, Franco Coppola, recriminaron la miseria y pobreza que predominan en la entidad, así como la inestabilidad social, que han “herido” tanto a Oaxaca como a la Virgen de la Soledad, su patrona.

Ante los fieles, que esperaban impacientes en el auditorio Guelaguetza el primer mensaje del representante del catolicismo, Vásquez lanzó una crítica en contra de las autoridades, a las que cuestionó si habían decidido seguir al “mal”.

El gobernador de Oaxaca, Alejandro Murat; su esposa, Ivette Moran, y el titular del Poder Judicial, Raúl Bolaños Cacho Guzmán, acudieron al acto y escucharon el sermón.

“Nuestras autoridades, sean federales, estatales o municipales, deben actuar con misericordia. Nuestro pueblo sufre la pobreza viviendo en una tierra rica ¿Qué ha pasado?, ¿qué está pasando? ¿Por qué muchos de nuestros hermanos viven en la pobreza y muchos más en la miseria?”, dijo ante los asistentes.

“Al pensar en nuestros pueblos, se piensa también en las autoridades: ¿Qué hacen? ¿Cómo ejercen su autoridad?… Al mirar el sufrimiento, la pobreza y el desencanto de nuestro pueblo, quiero hacer una pregunta a quiénes son autoridades: ¿Cómo han vivido? ¿Han hecho a un lado la bondad que Dios ha puesto en sus corazones y ha entrado a vivir en ustedes la maldad?…”, reprochó.

Después de ello, pidió a los funcionarios ser “buenos administradores” porque la distribución equitativa de los bienes cambiará el “rostro triste” de quienes sufren pobreza y miseria.

***

Según información de la Secretaría de Finanzas de Oaxaca, durante los últimos 14 años, el gasto ejercido directamente por los últimos tres gobernadores, sin la intermediación del gobierno federal, asciende a por lo menos 641 mil 916 millones de pesos, lo que equivale a casi la totalidad de los ingresos petroleros obtenidos por México entre 2016 y 2017.

Sin embargo, a pesar de los multimillonarios presupuestos con que han contado las autoridades de Oaxaca, el Consejo Nacional de Evaluación de la Política de Desarrollo Social (Coneval) reportó que el número de pobres en el estado aumentó de 2 millones 310 mil personas, en 2008, a 2 millones 847 mil en, 2016; es decir, 537 mil ciudadanos más en esa condición.

Los Indicadores de Bienestar del Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía (Inegi) reportaron que la informalidad laboral –personas que trabajan sin prestaciones de ley o que no son reconocidas como empleados– pasó de 79.39 por ciento, en 2007, a 82.02, en 2016, mientras que la tasa de condiciones críticas de ocupación –personas que necesitan trabajar más tiempo debido a que sus ingresos no les son suficientes para subsistir—subió de 17.1 a 21 por ciento, en el mismo periodo.

Por inercia, la desigualdad también aumentó: el coeficiente de Gini pasó de .509, en 2010, a 0.513, en 2016. Los componentes anteriores derivaron en que esta entidad, en 2016, haya reportado el peor índice de satisfacción con la vida del país, con 75 por ciento.

“…La iglesia debe tener esta voz, acercarse a los muchos que están dolidos, heridos”, dijo, en su intervención, el Nuncio Apostólico.

“Don Pedro Vásquez, el Papa sueña con una Iglesia que sea familia y le confía esta iglesia de Antequera-Oaxaca, una iglesia tan herida, tan dolida, que sufre tanto… La Virgen de Guadalupe, como la Virgen de la Soledad, está dolida y necesita compañía; cercanía…”, continuó.

México, sumido en 

crisis de inseguridad

En la Catedral Metropolitana, Franco Coppola había calificado como “insoportable” e “inaceptable” la violencia que se suscita actualmente tanto en Oaxaca como en todo el país.

Consultado por la prensa sobre los casos de los estudiantes jaliscienses Javier Salomón Aceves Gastélum, Jesús Daniel Díaz García y Marco Francisco García Ávalos, desparecidos el pasado 19 de marzo y que fueron asesinados y disueltos en ácido en una finca por presuntos integrantes del Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, escisión del Cartel  Milenio, comentó: “Mi opinión yo la dije desde mi llegada hace un año y medio, en septiembre, la violencia que se vive es insoportable e inaceptable por el pueblo mexicano, tan cristiano, tan católico.

“Es un desafío para las autoridades no llegar a matarse y es algo que concede la educación”.

“(Más que) condenar, tenemos que interrogarnos y hacer mucho más en la formación. Todos, a todos los niveles, el Estado, la Iglesia, la sociedad civil, en formación de respeto de uno a otro”.

Hora más tardes, a su salida del auditorio Guelaguetza, este medio lo abordó:

–El nuevo Arzobispo y usted coincidieron que Oaxaca está herida

–Claro, es evidente; me parece.

–¿Hay una crisis de seguridad en el país?

–Es evidente, pero tampoco son cosas fáciles de resolver.

–Hay quienes dicen que una amnistía sería benéfica, ¿qué opina?

–No, no es papel de la Iglesia, eso.

–¿Lo vería bien?

Cuando se disponía a responder, los guardias de seguridad se abalanzaron contra el reportero, por lo que el embajador de El Vaticano optó por enmudecer y subir al vehículo que lo esperaba tanto a él, como a José Luis Chávez Botello, quien solo miró.

Minutos después, también el arzobispo Pedro Vázquez Villalobos evitó responder.

–Mencionaba que Oaxaca está dañada.

–Ahorita no puedo.

–¿Cómo se puede restablecer la paz?, soltó el reportero mientras caminaba detrás de él

–Trabajaremos, trabajaremos.

Su semblante fue distinto al que minutos antes había mantenido frente a los feligreses, ante los que reconoció que la Iglesia ha fallado.

“Dice el apóstol Pedro: ‘El enemigo, el diablo, como león rugiente, anda buscando a quién devorar. Cuando se piensa en el caminar de la Iglesia, se piensa en los obispos y sacerdotes. Nuestro pueblo se fija cómo vivimos, qué hacemos, cuál es nuestro testimonio… así se califica a la iglesia.

“Bien o mal, con dolor reconocemos que hemos fallado y el rostro de la Iglesia de Cristo se ha desfigurado”.

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.

Cardinal George Pell pleads not guilty to historical sexual offence charges after being committed to stand trial

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

May 1, 2018

By court reporter Emma Younger

Australia’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal George Pell has pleaded not guilty to multiple historical sexual offence charges after being committed to stand trial.

Magistrate Belinda Wallington committed Cardinal Pell to stand trial on some counts, but she has discharged more than half the original charges, including the most serious allegations.

Cardinal Pell was escorted into the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court under police guard.

He has strenuously denied the accusations.

Today’s ruling follows a month-long committal hearing in March.

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.

Cardinal Pell ordered to stand trial on sexual assault charges

AUSTRALIA
BBC News

Vatican treasurer Cardinal George Pell will stand trial on historical sexual assault charges, a court has ruled.

Cardinal Pell formally pleaded not guilty to the charges on Tuesday. He has consistently denied any wrongdoing.

An Australian magistrate ruled on Tuesday that there was enough evidence for the case to proceed to a trial on some charges, but not on others.

Cardinal Pell is Australia’s most senior Catholic and one of the most powerful officials in the Vatican.

Magistrate Belinda Wallington read out her decision on each charge individually in a Melbourne court, following a month-long hearing.

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.

Scottsdale church hires private firm to examine sex abuse claims

ARIZONA
AZCentral

Uriel J. Garcia, The Republic | azcentral.com

April 30, 2018

A Scottsdale church has hired a private firm to investigate sexual misconduct allegations levied against a pastor who has resigned from his most recent post last week, according to a statement on the church’s web site.

Les Hughey, 64, who is the founder of the Highlands Community Church in north Scottsdale and has since stepped down as executive pastor, has been accused by women of sexual abuse during his time as youth pastor at Scottsdale Bible Church in the 1980s and ’90s.

Scottsdale Bible Church said in its statement that church leaders hired a firm called Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment, also known as GRACE, to conduct an independent investigation.

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.

Why the Cardinal Pell Case Has Been So Secretive

AUSTRALIA
New York Times

By DAMIEN CAVE and ADAM BAIDAWI

APRIL 30, 2018

Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican’s third-highest ranking official will stand trial on several charge of sexual abuse from multiple complainants, an Australian court ruled on Tuesday.

The slow-moving case — charges were filed in June — has been a test of both Australia’s justice system and the Vatican’s efforts to hold clerics accountable after decades of abuse scandals.

It is occurring in a country where where defamation law favors plaintiffs, where criminal law protects defendants more than it does in many other countries, and where a number of legal standards restrict reporters’ ability to publish information related to criminal cases.

Here’s a guide to why many of the details of Cardinal Pell’s case may remain obscured, and to what we know about the cardinal and the case so far.

Why can’t the public know more?

Australian criminal law tends to be more favorable to defendants, and its proceedings more secretive, than in the United States.

The country’s contempt standards prohibit reporting — after charges have been filed, and before a verdict has been reached — that might be seen as prejudicial against, or for, a defendant.

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.

Cardinal George Pell to stand trial over historical sex offences

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

May 1, 2018

AAP

THE most senior Vatican official to be charged in the Catholic Church sex abuse crisis has been ordered to stand trial.

Cardinal George Pell arrived at Australian court on Tuesday surrounded by police and media to learn whether he must stand trial on charges that he sexually abused multiple victims decades ago.

Melbourne magistrate Belinda Wallington found there is evidence of sufficient weight on one of multiple charges against Pope Francis’ closest aide for him to stand trial. Some other charges against 76-year-old Pell were struck out.

Pell arrived by car in front of the downtown court where more than 40 uniformed police officers were waiting to maintain order as media jostled on the crowded sidewalk to videotape and photograph him.

Pell climbed the stairs to court accompanied by his lawyer Robert Richter about 45 minutes before the hearing was to begin. Some protesters shouted as he arrived.

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.

Vatican treasurer Cardinal Pell to face trial on historical abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
CNN

By Lucie Morris-Marr and Ben Westcott, CNN

April 30, 2018

Melbourne, Australia (CNN)Vatican treasurer Cardinal George Pell will face trial on charges of historical sexual abuse, a Melbourne magistrate announced on Tuesday.

While several of the more serious charges against Pell were dropped, Magistrate Belinda Wallington announced the cardinal would still be committed to trial.

The 76-year-old cardinal was facing multiple charges of historical sex assault offenses from a number of complainants. He has vigorously denied all charges.

The magistrate’s decision is still being read with the possibility of additional charges.

One of the country’s most senior Catholic figures, Pell arrived at Melbourne Magistrate’s Court early Tuesday, accompanied by his lead barrister, Robert Richter QC, as dozens of police sought to keep media and protesters at bay.

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.

Cardinal Pell to stand trial on sex abuse, but some charges dismissed

AUSTRALIA
Crux

John L. Allen Jr.
EDITOR

May 1, 2018

Following a four-week committal hearing last month, an Australian magistrate on Tuesday dismissed some of the most serious charges of “historical sexual offenses” against Cardinal George Pell but also ruled that the 76-year-old prelate will stand trial on at least three different complaints.

It’s not clear at this point when that trial will take place, though sources in Australia say that criminal procedures of this sort often can last one year to 18 months. Pell has denied the charges vigorously since police first filed them last summer.

He is expected to face a directions hearing in Melbourne’s County Court in the future, when a trial date will be set.

Pell is currently on a leave of absence from his post as the Vatican’s Secretary for the Economy, and he becomes the most senior Church official ever to face criminal charges of sexual abuse in a civil court of law.

His committal hearing is believed to have been one of the longest ever in the Australian state of Victoria, the capital of which is the city of Melbourne where Pell’s legal proceedings have unfolded. The first 10 days of the hearing were heard in closed session, when Pell’s accusers were questioned.

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.

Cardinal George Pell to Stand Trial on ‘Historical’ Sex Offenses

AUSTRALIA
New York Times

By ADAM BAIDAWI

APRIL 30, 2018

MELBOURNE, Australia — Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican’s third-highest-ranking official, must stand trial on at least three charges of sexual abuse, an Australian court ruled on Tuesday, promising to prolong a case that has already dragged on for months, and which many see as a moment of reckoning for a church racked by scandal.

Belinda Wallington, a Melbourne magistrate, found there was sufficient evidence for prosecutors to bring the cardinal’s case to trial, ending a two-month pretrial hearing, in which witnesses described abuse they said took place decades ago.

Cardinal Pell, 76, is the most senior Roman Catholic official to be charged with crimes of sexual abuse. As the Vatican’s de facto finance chief, he was granted leave by the pope to return to Australia to conduct his defense.

The cardinal has been accused of “historical sexual offenses,” meaning they took place decades ago, but the details of the criminal complaint, including the identities of his accusers, have not been made public. Such cases are subject to Australia’s strict contempt standards, and other legal restrictions, which prohibit journalists from reporting on details of criminal allegations.

Robert Richter, the cardinal’s lawyer, said last year there was “voluminous” evidence to prove that “what was alleged is impossible.”

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.

Richard Garcia, bishop of the Monterey Diocese, is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

CALIFORNIA
Mercury County Weekly

April 30, 2018

Sara Rubin

Since Pope Benedict XI appointed Richard Garcia as the fourth bishop of the Diocese of Monterey in 2006, he has been the spiritual leader of tens of thousands of parishioners at dozens of churches in a region that spans from Santa Cruz to Hollister to San Luis Obispo.

On April 27, the diocese announced Garcia, 71, has been diagnosed with an early stage of Alzheimer’s disease, following several weeks of not feeling well.

“This news is difficult to learn, but Bishop Garcia has great faith and a deep spiritual life to assist him in facing this diagnosis,” a diocese statement says.

“This news has taken some time for bishop to adjust to as it has only been in the last few weeks that signs of this disease have become more pronounced and evident to him.”

According to the statement, no decisions about future leadership have yet been made. …

Garcia also made news when came under scrutiny for failure to take action against a priest accused of sexually abusing boys despite receiving letters from parents alerting him to the abuse. Instead, Fr. Edward Fitz-Henry was moved from parish to parish, and continued to contact with youth, until he was eventually removed from the priesthood.

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 Charities falls behind on Appeal

NEW YORK
Buffalo Business First

By Tracey Drury – Reporter, Buffalo Business First

With two months until the close of its annual fundraising appeal, Catholic Charities of Buffalo is stressing to potential donors that their dollars will not go toward settlements to abuse victims.

Although the agency is affiliated with the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, it remains an independent 501(c)(3) that serves people of all faiths with a range of human services including emergency assistance, mental health counseling and treatment, help with job training and education and specialized services for older adults.

The Diocese has been in the spotlight for several months regarding a growing number of priests acknowledged to have sexually abused children and teens in past decades. That’s led to the creation of an Independent Reconciliation & Compensation Fund, which the bishop of Buffalo has said will be paid from insurance, self-insurance liability, investment fund reserves and the sale of property – not from the Appeal or the Fund for the Faith, which provides funds to the Diocese at the discretion of the bishop.

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.

Msgr. John C. Allard

RHODE ISLAND
Curtis J. Holt’s Sons Funeral Home

[Patch]

[Turn to 10]

APRIL 27, 2018

Monsignor John C. Allard, 68, of Lake Washington, Chepachet, a retired priest of the Diocese of Providence, died April 27, 2018, in Landmark Medical Center, surrounded by his family.

Born in Woonsocket, son of the late Normand and Laurette (Chevalier) Allard, he attended Holy Family School, Woonsocket, and Our Lady of Providence Preparatory High School in Providence.

In preparation for the priesthood, he studied at Our Lady of Providence Seminary, Warwick and St. John Seminary, Brighton, Massachusetts. He was ordained to the priesthood on September 19, 1975 at St. Cecilia Church, Pawtucket, by Bishop Louis E. Gelineau.

He served as assistant pastor at Immaculate Conception Parish, Cranston (1975-84); Assistant Director (1984-86) and Director (1986-96) of the Diocesan Office of Youth Ministry; Vicar of the Diocesan Office of Evangelization and Spirituality (1986-2001); pastor of Our Lady of Good Help Parish, Mapleville (1986-96); St. Agatha Parish, Woonsocket (1996-2013); and Precious Blood Parish, Woonsocket (2006-13). Fr. John was appointed Monsignor in 1997, while serving St. Agatha’s Parish.

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.

Decision day has arrived for George Pell, as magistrate weighs options

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

By Adam Cooper

30 April 2018

His has been a path no other Australian Catholic has taken, all the way to the powerful inner workings of the Vatican, until he became the church’s most senior leader in modern times to be charged with sexual assault offences.

On Tuesday George Pell will learn if he is to forge even more new ground, and be committed to stand trial in front of a jury on allegations of sexual assault dating back more than 20 years.

In a ruling that will be heard throughout the religious world, magistrate Belinda Wallington will announce whether Cardinal Pell will stand trial on some or all of the charges, or whether they are to be struck out. If committed to trial it will most likely be in the County Court before a judge and 12 jurors.

Three hours have been set aside in Melbourne Magistrates Court for Ms Wallington to deliver her ruling on a number of charges. The hearing will be held in the building’s biggest court room, and Cardinal Pell must attend.

The 76-year-old faces multiple charges of sexual offences involving multiple accusers. Details of the charges have not been revealed.

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.

First week of major child abuse inquiry will be held at Trent Bridge, it has been confirmed

UNITED KINGDOM
Nottingham Post

By David Whitfield Digital Content Editor

30 APR 2018

The first five days of a major inquiry into historical child sex abuse in Nottinghamshire will be held at Trent Bridge Cricket Ground, it has been confirmed.

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) will spend three weeks looking into the extent of the sexual abuse of children in the care of Nottingham City and Nottinghamshire County Councils.

It will also look at how institutions including those councils and the police responded to any abuse claims.

The hearing was originally due to take place in Southwark, London, but the Nottinghamshire Child Sexual Abuse Survivors Group has asked for some of the sessions to take place locally.

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 abuse survivors grateful after private meetings with pope

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Apr 30, 2018

by Junno Arocho Esteves, Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — After private meetings with Pope Francis, three survivors of clergy sexual abuse from Chile said they felt they had been heard and were hopeful for changes in the way the Catholic Church handles accusations of abuse.

“I spoke for more than two and a half hours alone with Francis. He listened to me with great respect, affection and closeness, like a father. We talked about many subjects. Today, I have more hope in the future of our church. Even though the task is enormous,” Juan Carlos Cruz tweeted April 29 after meeting with the pope.

Francis had invited Cruz, James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo to stay at the Domus Sanctae Marthae, the Vatican residence where he lives, and to meet with him individually April 27-29. The three were to meet with the pope again as a group April 30.

Although the three survivors tweeted after their private meetings, Greg Burke, director of the Vatican press office, said Francis “expressly wished” that no official statements would be released by the Vatican regarding his discussions with the survivors.

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 Justice Principle – Part 2

AUSTRALIA
ABC

25 Apr 2018

Concluding the story of Dassi Erlich and her two sisters, who are fighting to extradite their former headmistress from Israel to face sexual abuse charges.

After the alleged abuse against the three sisters came to light in 2008, principal Malka Leifer was stood down by the Adass Israel school which facilitated her immediate departure to Israel.

Although Australian authorities have been trying to extradite her for several years Malka Leifer convinced the Israeli courts she was too mentally unwell to face a hearing.

That prompted an undercover operation to prove her mental fitness which recently resulted in Malka Leifer’s return to jail.

For Dassi and her two sisters — Nicole and Elly — justice finally seems closer than ever before.

Related Links
Catch up | Watch ‘The Justice Principle’ part 1 on ABC News Youtube

ABC News article | ‘This is a sham’: The undercover operation to bring alleged paedophile principal to justice

Support information | 1800 Respect National Sexual Assault, Domestic Family Violence counselling service – www.1800respect.org.au 1800 737 732

ABC News feature | Inside the insular Jewish community where school headmistress alleged preyed on girls

Producer profile | A brief bio about the producer of The Justice Principle, Belinda Hawkins

Transcript

INTTRODUCTION,TED BAILLIEU: Hi, I’m Ted Baillieu, former premier of Victoria. Tonight, we continue the dramatic story of Dassi Erlich and her sisters and their long battle to bring their former principal to justice.

For the past decade, Dassi, Nicole and Elly have been seeking extradition for Malka Leifer from Israel to face allegations of abuse. Now, Israeli undercover surveillance has brought them one step closer to their goal. But first, a recap.

LOOK BACK:

DASSI ERLICH: We grew up in Melbourne, in an Ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, called Adass.

ELLY SAPPER, YOUNGEST SISTER: It’s not like the wider Jewish community. It’s very insulated, very close You don’t have TV. You don’t have internet.

NICOLE MEYER, OLDER SISTER: My sisters and I went to the Adass school/the most religious, strictly orthodox school in Melbourne.

DASSI ERLICH: When I was in year 8 Malka Leifer became the new principal.

SHARON SWIATLO, FORMER ADASS ISRAEL SCHOOL TEACHER: She was a woman who exuded confidence She was well liked. One of the girls was always doing this for Mrs Leifer or that for Mrs Leifer.

ELLY SAPPER: We were all hearing, “This is good for you. What I’m doing is helping you and I’m giving you love.”

DASSI ERLICH: I had no words to describe what was happening or absolutely any understanding of how it wasn’t right.

NICOLE MEYER: In 2008, Dassi somehow let out to a social worker/therapist, that Malka Leifer had abused her.

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 Justice Principle – Part 1

AUSTRALIA
ABC

April 18, 2018

Introduced by Ted Baillieu, former Premier of Victoria.

Dassi Erlich and her two sisters are a formidable force.

Their ongoing battle to extradite former headmistress Malka Leifer from Israel to face sexual abuse allegations in Australia has made headlines across the globe.

But despite the public attention, the personal stories of the three sisters have remained largely private.

In the first program of a two-part special, Nicole Meyer and Elly Sapper give their first Australian interviews and, together with Dassi, speak candidly about their time at the Adass Israel school in Melbourne.

The program also features extracts from Dassi Erlich’s teenage diary which provide a haunting account of her traumatic childhood.

Related links
Support information | 1800 Respect National Sexual Assault, Domestic Family Violence counselling service – www.1800respect.org.au 1800 737 732

ABC News feature | Inside the insular Jewish community where school headmistress alleged preyed on girls

Overseas viewers | Watch ‘The Justice Principle’ part 1 on ABC News Youtube

Producer profile | A brief bio about the producer of The Justice Principle, Belinda Hawkins

Transcript

INTRODUCTION: Hi, I’m Ted Baillieu, former Premier of Victoria. Tonight’s story is one in which I and others have had a huge interest.

For years, Dassi Erlich and her two sisters harboured a chilling secret about their former principal, Malka Leifer. When they finally exposed her, it would spark a decade long legal battle to bring her back to Australia.

Tonight, Dassi and her sisters reveal the deeply personal story behind their very public campaign.

DASSI ERLICH: If I looked in a looking glass 10 years ago, when I was 20 years old, I would have never in my wildest dreams imagined that this is where I would be today. We really had no interaction with the outside world. And even if I imagined a different life, lobbying for justice was never a part of it.

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

Pt 1: Inside insular Jewish community where headmistress Malka Leifer allegedly preyed on girls

AUSTRALIA
YouTube

Part 2

ABC News (Australia)

Published on Apr 23, 2018

Mother-of-eight Malka Leifer looked like the perfect school principal until she was accused of being a sexual predator. This is the Australian Story of three sisters’ battle to bring their alleged abuser to justice amid the Adass Israel community in Melbourne that encouraged silence.

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.

HAREDI YESHIVA HEAD SENTENCED TO 17 MONTHS FOR DEFRAUDING STATE

ISRAEL
Jerusalem Post

BY JEREMY SHARON

APRIL 29, 2018

The Jerusalem District Court has sentenced a haredi man to 17 months imprisonment and levied NIS 900,000 of asset forfeitures against him for defrauding the state of NIS 2.2 million by forging student enrollment in his yeshivas.

Pinchas Zidman pleaded guilty and was convicted on charges of aggravated fraud, false registration of documents and money laundering.

From 2012 to 2015, Zidman established several institutions of Torah learning which were registered as non-profit organizations.

The institutions did indeed exist, but Zidman doubled the amount of students registered there to obtain larger grants from the Education Ministry by falsely registering foreign citizens who did not actually study there.

Having secured these funds, Zidman and his associates sought to hide, disguise and obscure how they used the money, who was making use of the funds and where it was being used.

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

NZ bishops reflect on children of priests issue

NEW ZEALAND
NZ Catholic

April 30, 2018

New Zealand’s Catholic bishops have discussed and reflected upon the issue of children of Catholic priests who have promised celibacy.

In a message to Coping International’s Vincent Doyle sent last month, New Zealand Catholic Bishops Conference communications advisor Amanda Gregan noted that the bishops “firmly believe that the rights and sensitivities of the child and the mother should be respected and that being the father of a child carries with it particular responsibilities”.

The bishops also referred to civic guidelines and policies in New Zealand concerning a child’s right to know his or her natural parents, adding they (the bishops) would be guided by this practice.

Mr Doyle, an Irish psychotherapist whose own father was a Catholic priest, had previously worked with Ireland’s Catholic bishops in developing a set of “principles of responsibility” regarding priests who father children while in ministry. Five principles were developed and the second states that “the needs of the child should be given first consideration”.

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, NY – Hikind: Employee Fired After Preying On Students At Prominent Girls’ School In BP; Administration Turned Blind Eye

NEW YORK
Voz IZ Neias

April 29, 2018

By: Sandy Eller

Brooklyn, NY – A Brooklyn girls’ school has found itself in a difficult position after numerous reports have surfaced alleging that an employee had been interacting with girls inappropriately for several years and that the school’s administration was reportedly aware of the behavior but did nothing to protect students.

Assemblyman Dov Hikind said that he had been contacted by multiple parents whose daughters attend the Bais Sarah school in Borough Park reporting the alleged behavior.

According to Hikind, parents told the school’s owner and principal, Rabbi Nuchem Klein, about the alleged abuse perpetrated by a non-Jewish employee who goes by the nickname Spikey, but no action was taken.

Hikind took to Twitter on Friday morning, asking parents who had knowledge of any abuse taking place at Bais Sarah to contact his office and reached out to Rabbi Klein to discuss the matter.

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

Pope Francis meets victims of Chilean paedophile priest in bid to quell sex abuse scandal

VATICAN CITY
First Post

PTI

Apr 30, 2018

Vatican City: Three victims of a Chilean paedophile priest have held private meetings with Pope Francis, as the Vatican tries to quell a sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Roman Catholic Church in Chile.

File image of Pope Francis. APFile image of Pope Francis. AP
The men, all victims of the paedophile priest Fernando Karadima, were in Vatican City at the personal invitation of the Pope, who in April admitted “grave mistakes” in his handling of the abuse controversy in Chile.

Juan Carlos Cruz said his meeting with Francis on Sunday, which lasted more than two hours, was wide-ranging and gave him “more hope for our Church, even though the task is enormous”. “I am moved, he listened to me with great respect, affection and closeness, like a father,” Cruz said on Twitter.

The Vatican had said last week that Francis would seek to “ask for their forgiveness, share their hurt and the shame they have suffered”. Jose Andres Murillo said he told Francis in his audience late Friday how important it was to understand that sexual abuse was “abuse of power”, and “the need to take responsibility… not just forgiveness”.

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.

Chilean abuse victims say talks with Pope Francis have been ‘enormously constructive’

VATICAN CITY
Christian Today

James Macintyre

30 Apr 2018

Several men who were sexually abused by a priest in Chile have described private talks they have held with Pope Francis at the Vatican over the weekend as very helpful and respectful.

James Hamilton, one of three clergy abuse survivors whom the pope invited to Italy, wrote on Twitter that his conversation with Francis, which lasted more than two hours, was ‘enormously constructive’.

A second survivor, Jose Andres Murillo, tweeted that he had stressed the importance of understanding sexual abuse as ‘abuse of power’ during his time with the pope.

The third victim, Juan Carlos Cruz, wrote: ‘I spoke for more than two and a half hours alone with Pope Francis. He listened to me with great respect, affection and closeness, like a father. We talked about many subjects. Today I have more hope in the future of our church… Even though the task is enormous.’

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.

Juror on Cosby retrial speaks about guilty verdict

PENNSYLVANIA
6 ABC

A juror on the Bill Cosby sexual assault retrial case is speaking out exclusively to ABC News.

The juror, Harrison Snyder, revealed that it may have been Cosby’s own words that sealed his fate.

“What was the evidence that made you sure beyond a reasonable doubt that he was guilty?” ABC News reporter Linsey Davis asked.

“I think it was his deposition, really. Mr. Cosby admitted to giving these Quaaludes to women, young women, in order to have sex with them,” Snyder said.

Snyder, who was juror number 1, says when he first entered the jury room, he was not sure Cosby was guilty.

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.