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 6, 2013

Private Royal Commission sessions begin in Sydney on Tuesday

AUSTRALIA
Central Telegraph

APN Newsdesk 6th May 20131:50 PM

SURVIVORS of child sexual abuse will get the chance to “tell their stories” in face-to-face private sessions when the next phase of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse begins on Tuesday.

The commission plans to travel around Australia conducting private sessions in capital cities and regional locations.

Private sessions will begin in Sydney on Tuesday and are expected to run for many months.

There are also plans for the commission to hold private sessions in Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth in the coming months, with the details to be released soon.

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.

Hunter whistleblower given extra work

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A senior police whistleblower’s office was searched while he was away on leave, an inquiry into the alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the NSW Hunter Valley will hear.

Counsel assisting the inquiry, Julia Lonergan SC, told its first hearing in Newcastle on Monday that evidence relating to Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox would be presented to the inquiry.

Ms Lonergan said evidence would show Insp Fox – whose allegations sparked the commission – pursued investigations that he kept to himself, rather than logging through official police channels.

In 2012 he was removed from any investigative role into sexual abuse in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, and later that year he had become so concerned by the “absence of any obvious investigations” that he appeared on ABC TV’s Lateline program to air his claims.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC said in her opening remarks the diocese had a “troubled history” of sexual abuse by clergymen, and many people had been deeply affected by such “abhorrent” crimes.

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 mafia’ covered up Hunter abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A police whistleblower who alleges a “Catholic mafia” including police covered up child sexual abuse by priests in the NSW Hunter Valley has made explosive claims that his office was ransacked while he was away on leave.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox told a government-ordered inquiry that in September 2010, on the day he started a month’s leave, he was asked to handle a ministerial complaint regarding concerns about a “church conspiracy”.

When he returned from leave he was told by a now-retired public servant that his superior, Superintendent Charles Haggett, and Detective Chief Inspector Wayne Humphrey, had got the keys to his office and searched it “from top to bottom, looking in every filing cabinet”.

“You are kidding,” an astonished Insp Fox told the public servant.

“Please don’t tell them I told you,” she said. “But whatever it was they were looking for, they didn’t find it.”

Insp Fox told the special commission of inquiry in Newcastle on Monday he had taken the precaution of locking the file in his safe because he was concerned that “something like this” might occur.

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.

Verdingkinder wollen Geld

SCHWEIZ
Blick

Publiziert: 05.05.2013
Von Peter Hossli

Fast ein Menschenleben lang hatte Charles Probst (83) auf Worte der Reue gewartet. Bis sie am 11. April kamen. «Für das Leid, das Ihnen angetan wurde, bitte ich Sie im Namen der Landesregierung aufrichtig und von ganzem Herzen um Entschuldigung», sagte Bundesrätin Simonetta Sommaruga (52). Einstige Verdingkinder wie Probst hörten ihr im Berner Kursaal zu.

Mit sechs kam Charly 1936 zu einer Pflegefamilie auf einen Bauernhof im Oberaargau BE. Zu arm war seine Mutter für ein Kind. Beamte nahmen ihr den Kleinen weg.

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.

Trierer Bischof entlässt erneut Priester wegen Missbrauchs

DEUTSCHLAND
BRF

Es handelt sich um einen Geistlichen im Ruhestand aus dem Saarland. Was ihm vorgeworfen wird, ist noch nicht bekannt. Die Entlassung aus dem Klerikerstand ist im Kirchenrecht die Höchststrafe.

Der Trierer Bischof Ackermann
Der Trierer Bischof Stephan Ackermann hat zum zweiten Mal einen Priester in seinem Bistum wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs aus dem Klerikerstand entlassen. Ein entsprechendes Dekret sei am 2. Mai ergangen, sagte der Sprecher des Bistums Trier am Montag und bestätigte damit einen Bericht der Zeitung «Trierischer Volksfreund».

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.

Personal cost of fight for justice

AUSTRALIA
ABC Newcastle

By Jeannette McMahon

Chief Inspector Peter Fox has spoken of the personal toll his pursuit of justice for child victims of sexual abuse by the Catholic Church has taken on himself and his family.

A number of senior police, including Chief Inspector Fox, will give evidence at a public inquiry which starts in Newcastle today.

Fox is seen as a hero by many of the victims and their families for his tenacious pursuit of justice and his public comments, which have created career and personal pressure for himself.

The inquiry was set up by the NSW Premier after Fox appeared on the ABC’s Lateline, alleging some church officials failed to report claims of child sex abuse to police, and that he was told to stop investigating the matter.

The inquiry, overseen by NSW deputy crown prosecutor Margaret Cuneen, will look specifically at how the church handled complaints about former Hunter priests Jim Fletcher and Denis McAlinden, both now deceased.

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.

NSW special commission of inquiry …

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

NSW special commission of inquiry into alleged child abuse in Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese begins

NEIL KEENE From: The Daily Telegraph May 06, 2013

THE Special Commission of Inquiry into alleged child abuse in the Catholic diocese of Maitland-Newcastle got under way this morning in Newcastle.

This inquiry was ordered by the NSW Government and differs from the federal government’s royal commission into institutionalised child sex abuse which began earlier this year.

The NSW inquiry was launched last year to investigate alleged abuse by senior church members, along with allegations the church helped cover up those 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.

Whistleblower detective fronts sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio and video]

By Dan Cox and staff

The New South Wales policeman who blew the whistle on an alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse in the Hunter Valley says senior police searched his office for sensitive files while he was on leave.

The inquiry is looking at how complaints about deceased former priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese were investigated.

It was sparked by the allegations of whistleblower Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox, who is giving evidence today.

Peter Fox has told the inquiry two senior police officers turned his office upside down while he was on leave for a month.

He said the sensitive files they were after were in a secure safe, but after that he started to distrust senior police.

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.

VIDEO: Police discussed bishop concealing sex crimes: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JASON GORDON May 6, 2013

SENIOR Newcastle police held informal discussions about charging former Newcastle Catholic Bishop Michael Malone with concealing serious child sex crimes, an inquiry has heard.

The Special Commission of Inquiry into the police handling of allegations against the church began in Newcastle Supreme Court this morning before Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC.

In her opening address, Commissioner Cunneen said the sexual abuse of ‘‘inherently vulnerable children’’ represented a ‘‘reprehensible betrayal of trust’’. She noted the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle had a ‘‘very troubled history’’ of priests who had abused children.

Commissioner Cunneen said the inquiry would this week focus on allegations made by Detective Chief Inspector Fox in the Newcastle Herald and on ABC television’s Lateline program last November, during which he alleged he had been asked to cease his investigations into the church and that the church had attempted to cover up instances of child sexual abuse.

Inspector Fox took to the stand shortly after 11am today. He has told the inquiry he believed the diocese had warned former priest James Fletcher that he was being investigated by police.

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.

Opening remarks in child sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

Special Commission of Inquiry into matters relating to the Police investigation of certain child sexual abuse allegations in the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle

Opening Address of Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC

Newcastle Supreme Court – Monday, 6 May 2013

1. Welcome to the public hearings of the Special Commission of Inquiry into matters relating to the Police investigation of certain child sexual abuse allegations in the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle.

2. I intend to make some introductory remarks about certain matters before inviting Senior Counsel Assisting, Ms Lonergan SC, to provide an opening address.

3. After that, I will take the appearances for parties authorised to appear at the public 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.

‘Catholic mafia’ …

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX From: The Australian May 06, 2013

NSW police officers discussed whether a “Catholic mafia” existed within the force, deliberately hindering the investigation of pedophile priests, an inquiry has heard.

Giving evidence at the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry into child sex abuse, Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox said he discussed these fears in 2002 with the current state Nationals MP, Troy Grant, then a serving officer.

Mr Grant “was highly critical of some senior police at Newcastle in what he perceived to be hindering his investigation” into alleged child abuse by clergy, Detective Fox said.

The MP, who will give evidence tomorrow, used the phrase “Catholic mafia” to describe two particular officers he felt were deliberately asking him to work on other criminal investigations, Detective Fox said.

“He was referring to what he perceived to be police who he felt to be aligned to the Catholic Church, who were attempting to discourage investigations into clergy,” he said.

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

Office ransacked: NSW police whistleblower

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

BY DOUG CONWAY, AAP SENIOR CORRESPONDENT From: AAP May 06, 2013

A POLICE whistleblower who alleges a “Catholic mafia” including police covered up child sexual abuse by priests in the NSW Hunter Valley has made explosive claims that his office was ransacked while he was away on leave.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox told a government-ordered inquiry that in September 2010, on the day he started a month’s leave, he was asked to handle a ministerial complaint regarding concerns about a “church conspiracy”.

When he returned from leave he was told by a now-retired public servant that his superior, Superintendent Charles Haggett, and Detective Chief Inspector Wayne Humphrey, had got the keys to his office and searched it “from top to bottom, looking in every filing cabinet”.

“You are kidding,” an astonished Insp Fox told the public servant.

“Please don’t tell them I told you,” she said. “But whatever it was they were looking for, they didn’t find 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.

May 5, 2013

Mum’s call to perv priest

IRELAND
Irish Sun

By MICHAEL DOYLE

THE mum of a man who took his own life over the childhood abuse he suffered at the hands of Fr Bill Carney has hit out at the perv priest’s continued attempts to evade justice.

Paul Dwyer was just 13 when he was raped by the vile cleric and was left so mentally tormented by the attacks that he committed suicide in 2005, when he was 31.

Carney, who was defrocked in 1992 and has lived in the UK for the past 20 years, was described in the Murphy report as a serial sex offender and there was evidence that he carried out at least 32 attacks on boys and girls.

He is expected to be extradited from the UK in the coming week after British detectives arrested him in London on foot of a European Arrest warrant.

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.

INQUIRY TO PROBE CHURCH HANDLING OF SEX ABUSE COMPLAINTS

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By court reporter Jamelle Wells, ABC
Updated May 6, 2013

Some of the most senior police officers in New South Wales will give evidence at a public inquiry starting today into child sex abuse and the Catholic Church.

New South Wales Deputy Crown Prosecutor Margaret Cunneen is overseeing the inquiry, which is looking at how the church handled complaints about former priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher in the Newcastle-Hunter area of New South Wales.

The men have since died, but, giving an overview of the inquiry in February, Margaret Cunneen said they “victimised” children and it appears that “collective responsibility” to take action against them was ignored.

New South Wales Premier Barry O’Farrell set up the inquiry after Hunter police Chief Inspector Peter Fox appeared on the ABC’s Lateline program.

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

Child abuse inquiry begins in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JASON GORDON May 6, 2013

DETECTIVE Chief Inspector Peter Fox raised concerns with senior police about alleged cover-ups of child abuse within the Maitland-Newcastle Diocese of the Catholic Church as early as 2004, a court heard Monday morning.

The Special Commission of Inquiry into the police handling of allegations against the church began in Newcastle Supreme Court this morning before Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC.

In opening statements, Commissioner Cunneen said the inquiry will this week focus on allegations made by Inspector Fox in the Newcastle Herald and on ABC television’s Lateline program last November where he alleged that he had been asked to cease his investigations into the church.

Counsel Assisting, Ms Lonergan SC, said the inquiry will consider whether or not Inspector Fox was asked to cease investigating the cover-up claims, what he had been investigating, and whether or not those matters were shelved or ‘‘put to one side because they were considered too complex’’.

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.

Cultural blindness in church abuse investigations

AUSTRALIA
ABC – The Drum

By ABC’s Suzanne Smith

The Special Commission into sexual abuse in the Hunter is about the importance of a fundamental principle – the separation of church and state, writes Suzanne Smith.

It is the genesis of decades of suffering, the silent wrecking ball in our community behind too many broken families, too many lost and shattered lives and too much pain.” (Joanne McCarthy, The Newcastle Herald, 2012)

For many victims and their families in the northern NSW region of the Hunter, today will be a historic day.

It is the first day of hearings by the Special Commission of Inquiry set up by the premier Barry O’Farrell to investigate the police investigations into two notorious paedophile priests; Father James Fletcher and Father Denis McAlinden.

The Terms of Reference for the next two week’s inquiry is about the “circumstances in which Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox was asked to cease investigating relevant matters and whether it was appropriate to do so.”

Which brings us back to the fundamental question; why has there not been, until fairly recently, a more concerted effort by the police to investigate, with the full resources and power of the law, the most senior members of the clergy? Some police have done a tremendous job but in very difficult circumstances. Troy Grant, the current National Party MP from Dubbo, successfully prosecuted Father Vincent Ryan who had 31 victims in the Hunter. One of his victims was awarded the largest payout in Australia’s history; a sum of $3 million.

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

Sex abuse inquiry opens in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

An inquiry has opened in Newcastle into an alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the NSW Hunter Valley.

The special commission of inquiry began on Monday with an opening address by counsel assisting, Julia Lonergan SC.

Over the next fortnight Commissioner Margaret Cunneen will investigate the circumstances in which Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox, whose allegations of a church cover-up sparked the inquiry, was asked to stop probing certain matters.

She will hear evidence from senior police including two assistant commissioners and two superintendents, as well as former policeman and now state Nationals MP Troy Grant.

The inquiry will concentrate on two priests, serial sex offender Father Denis McAlinden and convicted pedophile Father James Fletcher, both now dead.

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.

NSW special commission …

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

NSW special commission of inquiry into alleged child abuse in Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese begins

NEIL KEENE From: The Daily Telegraph May 06, 2013

THE Special Commission of Inquiry into alleged child abuse in the Catholic diocese of Maitland-Newcastle got under way this morning in Newcastle.

This inquiry was ordered by the NSW Government and differs from the federal government’s royal commission into institutionalised child sex abuse which began earlier this year.

The NSW inquiry was launched last year to investigate alleged abuse by senior church members, along with allegations the church helped cover up those offences.

It will also investigate why senior police officer Detective Inspector Peter Fox was ordered to halt his investigation into the 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.

Whistleblower’s office searched: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A senior police whistleblower’s office was searched while he was away on leave, an inquiry into the alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the NSW Hunter Valley will hear.

Counsel assisting the inquiry, Julia Lonergan SC, told its first hearing in Newcastle on Monday that evidence relating to Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox would be presented to the inquiry.

Ms Lonergan said evidence would show Insp Fox – whose allegations sparked the commission – pursued investigations that he kept to himself, rather than logging through official police channels.

In 2012 he was removed from any investigative role into sexual abuse in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, and later that year he had become so concerned by the “absence of any obvious investigations” that he appeared on ABC TV’s Lateline program to air his claims.

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

Victims prepare to front abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

PIA AKERMAN From: The Australian May 06, 2013

THE royal commission examining institutional responses to child sexual abuse has revealed it will begin hearing from victims this week, as a separate inquiry into alleged Catholic Church cover-ups in the Hunter Valley begins.

Survivors of child sexual abuse in institutions will start telling their stories to the royal commission in private sessions beginning tomorrow in Sydney, ahead of other private hearings in Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.

Commission chief executive Janette Dines said many people had already come forward wanting to speak about their experiences.

“I want to assure people who have already called that we will get back to them,” she said. ‘As soon as we have enough people registered in a particular location we will make arrangements to travel to that place.

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.

Community will be ‘appalled, outraged and angry’: Bishop

AUSTRALIA
Border Mail

By SAM RIGNEY and EMMA SWAIN May 6, 2013

AUSTRALIA’S first commission of inquiry into child sex abuse in the Catholic Church will begin today in Newcastle Supreme Court.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox, who helped bring about the NSW public inquiry, is scheduled to give evidence during the first two days.

A long list of senior NSW police will follow Chief Inspector Fox into the witness box during the first two weeks of the inquiry, which precedes and runs separately from the broader federal royal commission into sex abuse.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC will rule on hearing in-camera testimony from some witnesses to avoid prejudicing potential future criminal proceedings.

The NSW commission of inquiry will consider police investigations of the late Hunter paedophile priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher over the next two weeks. It will later examine Church handling of allegations involving the priests, from June 24 to July 12.

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 Keith O’Brien ‘should stay in Scotland’

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

By CRAIG BROWN
Published on 06/05/2013

THE MSP Margo MacDonald has voiced her support for Cardinal Keith O’Brien following reports the Vatican ordered the disgraced former archbishop to leave the UK.

Ms MacDonald, a friend of 75-year-old cleric, said if the reports were true then the Vatican’s position showed “a lack of charity”.

The cardinal was last week seen moving his possessions from his former residence in Edinburgh to a church property in Dunbar where, he said, he intended to settle.

It was the first time he had been seen in public since February when he was ordered by Pope Benedict XVI to step down after allegations emerged of his relations with a priest in Aberdeen and four priests in the diocese of Edinburgh and St Andrews.

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.

Protest held outside St. Mary’s over sex abuse concerns

NEW JERSEY
News 12

Protesters demonstrated outside St. Mary’s in Colts Neck after learning a convicted child molester has been working with children.

Father Thomas Triggs has been serving as pastor of the church since 2007. Under his watch, Father Michael Fugee was allowed on retreats with children. Since 2007, Fugee has had an agreement with the Bergen County prosecutor to never again work with children following…

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.

Colts Neck pastor, youth ministers step down amid controversy

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

COLTS NECK — The pastor and two youth ministers at a Colts Neck church have left their posts amid criticism that a priest once accused of child molestation was allowed to work with young parish members.

The Star-Ledger of Newark reported that the Rev. Thomas Triggs announced his resignation from the pulpit during a service Saturday night at St. Mary’s Parish in Colts Neck. The newspaper also said youth ministers Michael and Amy Lenehan no longer held those positions, though it was not clear if they resigned or were forced out.

The shakeup comes just days after the resignation of the Rev. Michael Fugee, a priest in the Archdiocese of Newark. Parishioners say Fugee, who is longtime friends with the Lenehans, had been involved with the parish youth group in defiance of an agreement with Bergen County prosecutors that he not to work with children.

Fugee was convicted in 2003 of criminal sexual contact involving a boy. It was overturned by an appeals court and the priest eventually entered a pretrial intervention program.

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

“Honey Hide the Kids”: New Evangelization Impeded by Moral Failure of Bishops Like John Myers of Newark

NEW JERSEY
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

I can’t let this week end and another begin without mentioning, at least, the important story that has been reported of late from the archdiocese of Newark, NJ. As many readers of this blog will now know, it has come to light that after Father Michael Fugee was convicted of abusing minors in 2003, his conviction got overturned, in part, because the archdiocese of Newark agreed to keep him from contact with children.

That didn’t happen. Knowing fully Fugee’s track record and having made an agreement with the court to keep Fugee away from children, Newark archbishop John Myers has permitted Fugee to attend youth retreats and to go on youth pilgrimages. He appointed Fugee to the important position of co-director of an office forming new priests for the diocese, and he sent Fugee to a parish to do pastoral ministry among families with children without telling any of the parishioners of Fugee’s past.

And so the Newark Star-Ledger is now calling for Myers’s resignation, while Fugee has submitted his resignation from the priesthood. As Mike McShea notes at his This Cultural Christian site, some of the state’s legislators including Sen. Joseph Vitale are also echoing the call for Myers to resign.

Myers, don’t forget, is the Opus Dei bishop (and see also here) who told Catholics supporting marriage equality to stop taking communion last year. At the very same time in which Myers has known that he was exposing children to danger and violating a court agreement to keep Fugee from children, that is to say, he’s been rattling his moral saber about someone else–about his gay brothers and sisters.

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.

Special Commission…

AUSTRALIA
Government of New South Wales

Special Commission of Inquiry into matters relating to the Police investigation of certain child sexual abuse allegations in the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle

Margaret Cunneen SC has been appointed as Special Commissioner to inquire into and report on matters relating to the Police investigation of certain child sexual abuse allegations in the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle.

The Commissioner will be assisted by Julia Lonergan SC, David Kell and Warwick Hunt of Counsel and the Crown Solicitor.

View the Terms of Reference for the Inquiry [PDF, 133kb]

Court dates

Public hearings will be held in the Newcastle Supreme Court, Court Room No.1, Church Street, Newcastle from 6 May to 17 May and from 24 June to 12 July 2013.

The Schedule of Witnesses [PDF, 147KB] details the witnesses proposed to be called to give evidence at public hearings starting at 10am on Monday, 6 May 2013. Please note that this schedule may be subject to change and will accordingly be updated periodically.

Practice Note no.1 [PDF, 138kb] explains the authorisation process for individuals or organisations who wish to appear at public hearings before the Commission.

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

Bishop prepares public to hear a lot of grim stories

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By EMMA S WAIN May 6, 2013

Today marks the start of the first public hearings into child sexual abuse allegations within the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle.

By his own admission, Diocesan head Bishop Bill Wright (pictured) said the hearings would leave the community appalled, outraged and angered. He said above all – the stories about to be heard – would be extremely grim.

“We know there will be a lot of people wishing to tell their stories and that’s going to be pretty awful,” Bishop Wright said.

“In the first instance, the community will be appalled, outraged, angry, sympathetic and all the rest of it. And for people who have not had their minds turned too much to this whole issue, I think it’s going to be very hard to avoid it in the coming time.

“There will be a lot of stories that will be very grim for people to hear and there will be a lot of anger ­directed, and fair enough, at the ­perpetrators. But this will also be directed at the church and, as time goes on, other institutions which have dealt badly with these things.” …

The hearings will continue until May 17 and will resume again on June 24 until July 12. The special commission of inquiry will work with the National Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual 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.

ST. MARY PASTOR, YOUTH MINISTERS RESIGN POSTS

NEW JERSEY
Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton

Bishop David M. O’Connell, C.M., has accepted the resignation of Father Thomas J. Triggs as pastor of St. Mary Parish, Colts Neck, effective immediately. The May 4 resignation follows recent reports that Father Michael Fugee, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, had assisted in several activities of the parish’s youth group despite having been restricted from such ministry in an agreement with law enforcement authorities in Bergen County.

Bishop O’Connell has granted Father Triggs a period of sabbatical before he will be given a new assignment. A parish administrator will be appointed for St. Mary Parish.

In one of his last official acts as pastor, Father Triggs accepted the resignations of Michael and Amy Lenehan, parish youth group ministers, effective immediately. The Lenehans had invited Father Fugee to take part in youth ministry events without ensuring that he would have been cleared for such ministry in compliance with the Diocese of Trenton’s policies.

The Diocese of Trenton released a statement April 29 reporting that it was first made aware of the presence of Father Michael Fugee at a youth retreat held in St. Mary Parish through an inquiry from the media on April 23, 2013. The statement stipulated that Father Fugee had been given no permission to exercise ministry there by the Diocese nor had he filed with the Chancery the “letter of suitability” required of all priests outside of the Diocese before they are to conduct ministry here.

According to that statement, upon learning of Father Fugee’s activities, Bishop O’Connell immediately contacted Father Triggs and indicated that Father Fugee may not exercise ministry there, including any ministry involving youth. Bishop O’Connell then contacted officials in the Archdiocese of Newark to inform them of developments concerning Father Fugee.

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 religious prefect: ‘I was left out of LCWR finding’

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | May. 5, 2013

ROME The controversial Vatican decision last year to place the main representative group of U.S. Catholic sisters under the control of bishops was made without consultation or knowledge of the Vatican office that normally deals with matters of religious life, the office’s leader said Sunday.

That lack of discussion over whether to sharply criticize the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), said Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, caused him “much pain.”

“We have to change this way of doing things,” said Braz de Aviz, head of the Vatican’s Congregation for Religious.

“We have to improve these relationships,” he continued, referring to the April 2012 order regarding LCWR from the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — approved by Pope Benedict XVI — that ordered the U.S. sisters’ group to revise.

“Cardinals can’t be mistrustful of each other,” Braz de Aviz said. “This is not the way the church should function.”

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.

Governors stand down at sex scandal hit St Bede’s College

UNITED KINGDOM
Manchester Evening News

Governors at a top Catholic school rocked by historic sex abuse claims have stepped down to shield themselves from legal action brought by almost 20 alleged victims.

Former headmaster John Byrne is among seven governors who have resigned from the board at St Bede’s College, the M.E.N. can reveal.

The Bishop of Salford, the Diocese of Salford and governors at the Whalley Range school all face being sued over accusations that former rector Monsignor Thomas Duggan sexually abused schoolboys at St Bede’s during the 1950s and 1960s.

The M.EN. has learnt that one alleged victim claims he was raped by the late Mgr Duggan as a 12-year-old. We can also reveal that accusations of serious sexual abuse have been made against two other priests at St Bede’s in the 1950s – Father Charles Mulholland and Father Vincent Hamilton – who have both also since died.

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

Pope Francis On Sexual Abuse By Priests: Catholic Church Must ‘Act Decisively’ (VIDEO)

VATICAN CITY
Huffington Post

Reuters | By Philip Pullella
Posted: 05/05/2013

(Reuters) – Pope Francis wants the Catholic Church to “act decisively” to root out sexual abuse of children by priests and ensure the perpetrators are punished, the Vatican said on Friday.

Francis, in a meeting with the Holy See’s doctrinal chief, Archbishop Gerhard Mueller, had declared that combating sexual abuse was important “for the Church and its credibility”, a statement said.

Francis inherited a Church mired in problems and a major scandal over priestly abuse of children. It was believed to be the first time he had taken up the issue of sex abuse with a senior member of his staff since his election on March 13.

Mueller is head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican department which includes the office of the “promoter of justice”, or sex crimes prosecutor, which investigates cases of sexual abuse and decides if priests are to be defrocked.

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

Pastor, youth ministers step down at church where priest violated ban on child contact

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on May 05, 2013

COLTS NECK — The pastor and two youth ministers at the Monmouth County church where a visiting priest violated a lifetime ban on ministry to children have stepped down from their posts, the latest fallout in an escalating scandal enveloping Newark Archbishop John J. Myers.

The Rev. Thomas Triggs, pastor of St. Mary’s Parish in Colts Neck, announced his resignation from the pulpit during Mass on Saturday evening, parishioners said. Trenton Bishop David M. O’Connell confirmed the development in an email to priests of his diocese, said the Rev. John Bambrick, a diocesan priest who received the message.

The email said the youth ministers, Michael and Amy Lenehan, no longer held those positions. It was not immediately clear if they voluntarily resigned or were forced out.

O’Connell met with Triggs at the church Saturday morning to discuss the controversy, Bambrick said. Based on the email, it did not appear as if the bishop demanded Triggs’ resignation, the priest said.

“Bishop O’Connell said Father Triggs offered to resign and that he accepted,” Bambrick 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.

Pastor, youth ministers step down amid controversy

NEW JERSEY
Newsday

Updated: May 5, 2013
By The Associated Press
COLTS NECK, N.J. – (AP) — The pastor and two youth ministers at a central New Jersey church have left their posts amid criticism that a priest once accused of child molestation was allowed to work with young parish members.

The Star-Ledger of Newark (http://bit.ly/12FwUnN) reported that the Rev. Thomas Triggs announced his resignation from the pulpit during a service Saturday night at St. Mary’s Parish in Colts Neck. The newspaper also said youth ministers Michael and Amy Lenehan no longer held those positions, though it was not clear if they resigned or were forced out.

The shakeup comes just days after the resignation of the Rev. Michael Fugee, a priest in the Archdiocese of Newark. Parishioners say Fugee, who is longtime friends with the Lenehans, had been involved with the parish youth group in defiance of an agreement with Bergen County prosecutors that he not to work with children.

Fugee was convicted in 2003 of criminal sexual contact involving a boy. It was overturned by an appeals court and the priest eventually entered a pretrial intervention program.

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

Politicians ‘have responsibility’ to legislate on abortion

IRELAND
Irish Times

MARY MINIHAN

Taoiseach Enda Kenny has said he has told the Catholic Church’s most senior representative in Ireland Cardinal Sean Brady that politicians have a duty and responsibility to legislate for limited abortion.

“Everybody’s entitled to their opinion here but as explained to the Cardinal and members of the church my book is the constitution and the constitution is determined by the people. That’s the people’s book. We live in a Republic and I have a duty and responsibility as head of Government to legislate in respect of what the people’s wishes are,” Mr Kenny 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 keeps excommunication threat hanging over abortion TDs

IRELAND
Irish Independent

BRIAN MCDONALD – 05 MAY 2013

The Catholic Church has left the threat of excommunication hanging over the heads of Catholic members of the Dail who vote for the abortion legislation in its current format.

Cardinal Sean Brady yesterday refused to be drawn on the consequences for either Catholic ministers who introduce the legislation or those TDs who vote for it as it stands.

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.

Column: Catholic bishops made five mistakes in their opposition to abortion legislation

IRELAND
The Journal

The Catholic Church teaching on abortion still holds – but the bishops are opposing the proposed legislation the wrong way, writes Fr Tony Flannery.

THE IRISH BISHOPS have made a very strong statement condemning the Heads of Bill presented by the Government under the title Protection of Life during Pregnancy. I asked a friend of mine today, a solid, intelligent older man who is a regular church goer what he thought. “It is just what I expected them to say”, he replied in a weary voice. He was clearly not impressed.

In the unlikely event that they might ask me for advice I would suggest the following:

Firstly, it is still about fourteen weeks before the final vote on this bill in the Dail. There are a number of stages to go through, and plenty of opportunity for discussion and change in the proposed bill. By coming out so strongly, in such an aggressive and black-and-white way, they have effectively ruled themselves out of any real engagement in the process from now on. They will condemn, and they will lobby individual legislators, but their public position is now fixed and unbending. This is not the way to go about influencing a democratic process.

Secondly, the choice of Cardinal Sean Brady as spokesperson for the campaign is a big mistake. Cardinal Brady is a lovely man, warm and friendly to meet at a personal level. But in the media he comes across as stiff and authoritarian. Also, whether we like it or not, he is massively damaged by his involvement in investigating a case of clerical sexual abuse in his early life. This has left him permanently ‘holed beneath the water line’, and as such, he is no longer the proper person to lead such a campaign. Apart from the Cardinal’s credibility difficulties, it appears as if the Catholic hierarchy have not yet recognized that they no longer hold a significant position of influence in Irish society—for two reasons: (a) their reluctance to tackle the clerical child sexual abuse issue and (b) their failure to revoke the church’s teaching on contraception as outlined in Humanae Vitae which is so out of tune with this generation that it makes the Church’s teaching on any sexual matter appear ridiculous.

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 Record: Matter of faith

NEW JERSEY
The Record

SUNDAY MAY 5, 2013, 9:52 AM
THE RECORD

Editorial

[RELATED DOCUMENTS via The Star-Ledger
Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s agreement with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office

Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s confession to police

Read Archbishop John J. Myers’ February letter to priests about the Rev. Michael Fugee]

THE REV. Michael Fugee’s resignation from ministry last week closes one chapter, not the book on why this priest was ever returned to ministry after being charged with groping a 13-year-old boy.

Fugee was convicted in 2003 on a charge of aggravated criminal sexual contact, but that verdict was overturned on appeal because jurors hadn’t been given a full explanation of the charge. Rather than face a new trial, Fugee cut a deal with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office that prohibited him from any unsupervised contact with children and ministering or working with children.

But in the ensuing years, Fugee had unsupervised contact with children and ministered to children. He also held two positions within the Archdiocese of Newark. Those are the positions from which Fugee resigned. He is no longer a priest in good standing in the archdiocese, which means he cannot celebrate Mass or perform sacramental work. But he remains a priest. It would take Vatican action to defrock Fugee.

Throughout, Newark Archbishop John J. Myers has held firm to the position that the archdiocese did not violate the agreement Fugee made with prosecutors. The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office has said it continues to investigate. What is most troubling is that the archdiocese continues to hew to a course bound by a faulty reading of criminal law rather than follow the moral high road that is not ambiguous at all. Fugee should have been barred from all ministry after he entered a probation program for first-time offenders and signed the agreement restricting his access to children.

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

Pope Encourages Protection of Children from Abuse

VATICAN CITY
Newsmax

Sunday, 05 May 2013

Pope Francis is calling for courageous defense of children to protect them from abuse.

Francis made no mention of the church scandals in many countries in which clergy abused children and hierarchy covered up for them. At a Mass he celebrated Sunday in crowded St. Peter’s Square, Francis said abuse victims are in his prayers.

He stressed that all must work with courage so that children, who are among the most vulnerable people, be always defended and protected.

Ignoring sometimes heavy rain, Francis toured the square in a popemobile, but left the vehicle to embrace disabled adults and children along his route.

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 remembers child abuse victims, offers prayers

VATICAN CITY
DFW Catholic

Vatican City, May 5, 2013 / 06:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- At the end of Mass, Pope Francis noted that the Day of Child Victims of Violence is observed today and assured all those who “have suffered and are suffering because of abuse” that they “are present in my prayers.”

“I would also say emphatically that we must all commit ourselves with clarity and courage to every human person, especially children, who are among the most vulnerable,” the Pope told the crowd of thousands on May 5, before reciting the Regina Caeli prayer.

He also spoke to the groups from throughout Europe who are devoted to particular saints and were present at the Mass.

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 says all must courageously work to defend and protect children from abuse

VATICAN CITY
Ottawa Citizen

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MAY 5, 2013

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis is calling for courageous defence of children to protect them from abuse.

Francis made no mention of the church scandals in many countries in which clergy abused children and hierarchy covered up for them. At a Mass he celebrated Sunday in crowded St. Peter’s Square, Francis said abuse victims are in his prayers.

He stressed that all must work with courage so that children, who are among the most vulnerable people, be always defended and protected.

Ignoring sometimes heavy rain, Francis toured the square in a popemobile, but left the vehicle to embrace disabled adults and children along his route.

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.

Adubato: ‘Communication game’ can be dangerous

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

[RELATED DOCUMENTS via The Star-Ledger
Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s agreement with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office

Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s confession to police

Read Archbishop John J. Myers’ February letter to priests about the Rev. Michael Fugee]

By Steve Adubato
on May 05, 2013

Sometimes people play games with words. I call it “the communication game.” Often the game doesn’t matter very much, but sometimes the stakes can be very high. Do you remember when former President Bill Clinton argued the definition of the word “is” and boldly said on camera, “I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky”? Corporate executives often play the communication game when trying to avoid responsibility.

Often our children play communication games with words. If you don’t ask exactly the right question, even if they know the intent behind the question, they will parse your words and give you an answer that gets them out of a jam or shades the truth.

Now consider the case involving the Rev. Michael Fugee who, according to an April 28 Star-Ledger editorial, was convicted, “after he confessed to fondling a 14-year-old boy …”

Fugee’s conviction was later overturned on a technicality, and prosecutors decided they would not try the priest again, but rather allow him to evade going to jail by entering a program for first-time offenders. According to The Star-Ledger editorial, part of the deal was an agreement that Fugee signed along with the Archdiocese of Newark, in which all parties committed to keeping Fugee away from minors. Specifically, “he would have no affiliation with youth groups. He would not attend youth retreats. He would not hear the confessions of minors.”

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.

Inquiry into NSW church sex abuse to begin

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By court reporter Jamelle Wells

Some of the most senior police in New South Wales will give evidence at a public inquiry into child sex abuse and the Catholic Church.

NSW deputy crown prosecutor Margaret Cunneen is overseeing the inquiry, which begins tomorrow.

It will look at how the church handled complaints about former priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher in the Hunter area.

The men have since died but when giving an overview of the inquiry in February, Ms Cunneen said they “victimised” children and it appears that “collective responsibility” to take action against them was ignored.

NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell set up the inquiry after Hunter Chief Inspector Peter Fox appeared on the ABC’s Lateline program.

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

NSW abuse inquiry to begin in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

May 5, 2013

The man who helped bring about a NSW public inquiry into alleged Catholic Church cover-ups of child sex abuse will give evidence on its first two days.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox will be the first of a long list of senior police who will be in the witness box when the inquiry begins in the Newcastle Supreme Court on Monday.

The special commission of inquiry was announced by NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell in November, following explosive allegations made to the media by Insp Fox.

He alleged the Catholic church had covered up evidence about pedophile priests in the diocese of Maitland-Newcastle in the Hunter region of NSW.

The inquiry will look at how the church handled complaints about former priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher, both now dead.

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.

Shine the light: Commission hearing in Newcastle

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By SAM RIGNEY May 5, 2013

AUSTRALIA’S first commission of inquiry into child sex abuse in the Catholic Church will begin today in Newcastle Supreme Court.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox, who helped bring about the NSW public inquiry, is scheduled to give evidence during the first two days.

A long list of senior NSW police will follow Chief Inspector Fox into the witness box during the first two weeks of the inquiry, which precedes and runs separately from the broader federal royal commission into sex abuse.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC will rule on hearing in-camera testimony from some witnesses to avoid prejudicing potential future criminal proceedings.

The NSW commission of inquiry will consider police investigations of the late Hunter paedophile priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher over the next two weeks. It will later examine Church handling of allegations involving the priests, from June 24 to July 12.

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 the Spirit: Holy Wisdom Monastery now off-limits to Catholic priests

WISCONSIN
Wisconsin State Journal

DOUG ERICKSON | Wisconsin State Journal | derickson@madison.com | 608-252-6149

Bishop Robert Morlino is continuing to put more distance between the Madison Catholic Diocese and Holy Wisdom Monastery, a former Catholic monastery on the outskirts of Madison that is now a non-Catholic ecumenical retreat center.

In the latest development, Morlino is now prohibiting priests in the diocese from “attendance or participation at all events held at Holy Wisdom Monastery and all events sponsored or co-sponsored by Holy Wisdom Monastery or the Benedictine Women of Madison,” according to a March 7 letter to priests leaked to the State Journal.

A February visit to the monastery by Sister Simone Campbell, an outspoken, progressive Catholic nun, appeared to be the final straw for Morlino.

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

Archbishop John Myers’ admission: Editorial

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Star-Ledger Editorial Board
on May 05, 2013

After denying the charge for several days, Archbishop John J. Myers reversed himself Thursday and acknowledged that a pedophile priest under his supervision, the Rev. Michael Fugee, repeatedly violated a binding legal agreement to stay away from children.

That will have to count for progress. But this goes well beyond the behavior of Fugee, who resigned his ministry that day. Myers was a party to that legal agreement, with a responsibility to protect children by ensuring that Fugee would keep his distance.

Given his failure in this case, and his long history of irresponsible stewardship over pedophile priests, it is clear that the archdiocese cannot be trusted to handle these cases on its own, at least while Myers continues to resist growing calls for his resignation.

The next move is up to Bergen County Prosecutor John Molinelli, who struck the agreement with Myers and Fugee in the first place.

Fugee was convicted in 2003 on a charge of aggravated criminal sexual contact after admitting that he fondled a teenage boy and derived sexual pleasure from the act. That crime draws a maximum penalty of five years in prison, but Fugee, like most first-time offenders, was sentenced to five years’ probation. He was also required to register as a sex offender under Megan’s Law.

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 abuse priest extradited to face 34 charges here

IRELAND
Irish Independent

MAEVE SHEEHAN AND SHANE HICKEY – 05 MAY 2013

He was known for decades as the foul-mouthed, flashy priest whose abusive friendships with vulnerable children forced him out of the church.

But a subdued Bill Carney appeared before the London court that last Friday ordered his extradition to Ireland to face 34 charges of indecent assault on eight males and two females.

Now 73 and still imposing at 6ft 4in, a green jumper covered his large gut. He stared around the courtroom, only speaking to confirm his name and age. His solicitor mentioned his heart condition and listed his many medications. Afterwards, he was sent back to Holloway prison, where he remains this weekend.

When his shocking past as child abuser was first exposed by the Commission of Investigation into clerical abuse in 2009, Carney had reinvented himself as a respectable married man and owner of a guest house in the Scottish golfing town of St Andrews, where he passed his days perfecting his swing. Since then, his marriage has collapsed but he continued to live freely in the UK, pursued occasionally by the media and blaming his past on his drinking.

On April 25, Carney was arrested in the leafy village of Bidford in Warrickshire, where he has been living in recent months.

The latest alleged offences occurred during the late Seventies and Eighties when Bill Carney was at his most “crude and loutish” as a priest in various Dublin parishes. One former resident of a children’s home in south Dublin recalled how, as a young seminarian at Clonliffe College, Bill Carney, inveigled his way in as chaplain, delighting the nuns and making himself “the children’s favourite”.

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.

Herald News: Fugee’s resignation changes little

NEW JERSEY
Herald News

[RELATED DOCUMENTS via the Star-Ledger
Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s agreement with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office

Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s confession to police

Read Archbishop John J. Myers’ February letter to priests about the Rev. Michael Fugee]

SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013
HERALD NEWS

THE REV. Michael Fugee’s resignation from ministry last week closes one chapter, not the book on why this priest was ever returned to ministry after being charged with groping a 13-year-old boy.

Fugee was convicted in 2003 on a charge of aggravated criminal sexual contact, but that verdict was overturned on appeal because jurors hadn’t been given a full explanation of the charge. Rather than face a new trial, Fugee cut a deal with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office that prohibited him from any unsupervised contact with children and ministering or working with children.

But in the ensuing years, Fugee had unsupervised contact with children and ministered to children. He also held two positions within the Archdiocese of Newark. Those are the positions from which Fugee resigned. He is no longer a priest in good standing in the archdiocese, which means he cannot celebrate Mass or perform sacramental work. But he remains a priest. It would take Vatican action to defrock Fugee.

Throughout, Newark Archbishop John J. Myers has held firm to the position that the archdiocese did not violate the agreement Fugee made with prosecutors. The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office has said it continues to investigate. What is most troubling is that the archdiocese continues to hew to a course bound by a faulty reading of criminal law rather than follow the moral high road that is not ambiguous at all. Fugee should have been barred from all ministry after he entered a probation program for first-time offenders and signed the agreement restricting his access to children.

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

Cardinal Keith O’Brien Told By Vatican To Vacate Scotland

UNITED STATES
Lez Get Real

Posted by: Bridgette P. LaVictoire on May 4, 2013.

Cardinal O’Brien was set to retire to a little cottage in Dunbar, Scotland, but he has, apparently, been told by the Vatican to pack his bags and head to Coventry. This has upset the parish priest in Dunbar, one Canon John Creanor, who apparently expressed his upset over the decision by the Vatican to move against his “dear friend.”

It appears that the Vatican moved against O’Brien after Archbishop of Glasgow Philip Tartaglia appealed to the Holy See to take action after O’Brien reemerged in Scotland earlier this week. O’Brien admitted to having consensual sexual relationships with other priests, and been accused of assaulting a seminary student.

One anonymous supporter of O’Brien told the Scotland Herald that:

“The cardinal has been advised not to relocate to the parish in Dunbar and has been told he should leave the country. That’s extremely disappointing and not a Christian way to treat someone. There’s clearly pressure from within and outwith the Church and no show of unity.

“People expect some sort of jail sentence for Keith O’Brien or at least a desire to see him retired to monastic life. It would certainly be convenient for them. Personally, I find it an atrocious way to treat someone who has been facing up to their responsibilities.”

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 sex-assault trial of Yeshiva teacher to begin

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Written by
Kathleen Hopkins
@Khopkinsapp

TOMS RIVER — In a tight-knit community of people accustomed to handling problems among themselves, one young boy bucked the trend.

He accused a Yeshiva teacher and camp counselor of molesting him, and when a religious council of Orthodox Jews failed to take action against the man, the boy and his family went to the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office for help.

Because they skirted religious protocols, the boy and his family were ostracized by their community. Some in the community even embarked on a campaign to get the boy and his father to drop the criminal charges.

And, a flier was circulated in Lakewood saying the boy’s father made a “mockery” of the Torah and committed a “terrible deed” by going to the secular authorities.

But the family stood its ground. Now, six years after the alleged abuse occurred, the man accused of molesting the boy is set to go on trial in a case that likely is to be closely watched by Lakewood’s Orthodox Jewish community.

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.

Gauck fordert weitere Aufklärung der Missbrauchsskandale

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankenpost

«Wir müssen in Deutschland eingestehen – in Ost wie West: Es gab solche Fälle tausendfach – es gab tausendfach den unwiederbringlichen Verlust von Vertrauen», sagte Gauck am Freitag bei der 60-Jahr-Feier des Deutschen Kinderschutzbunds in München. Die Enttäuschung über die Aufarbeitung dürfe nicht zur Entmutigung werden. «Die gesellschaftliche Verständigung muss weitergehen», sagte Gauck. Die Opfer hätten ein Recht auf Unterstützung durch die Gesellschaft. «Genauso wie wir heute alles daran setzen müssen, Missbrauch keinen Raum zu geben, genauso entschlossen müssen wir auch die Untaten der Vergangenheit zum Thema unserer Gegenwart machen.»

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.

Soeben offiziell in der Abendmesse verkündet: 2. Priester aus dem Bistum Trier aus dem Klerikerstand entlassen

DEUTSCHLAND
MissBiT

Er mag es, wenn man um Hilfe schreit

Bischof räumt Fehler in Missbrauchsfall ein
Bischof Ackermann: “Sie glauben mir hoffentlich”
Trierer Bischof gesteht Fehler im Umgang mit Missbrauchsfällen ein
Bischof Ackermann: “Es gab gravierende Fehler – wir haben die Vorgaben nicht konsequent umgesetzt”

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.

Niederlande: Kirche verzeichnet mehr Misshandlungsfälle

NIEDELANDE
kathweb

Utrecht, 04.05.2013 (KAP) Die Missbrauchsmeldestelle der katholischen Kirche in den Niederlanden verzeichnet einen Zuwachs von Berichten über Misshandlungen, wie die deutsche Katholische Nachrichtenagentur KNA berichtet. Im Februar und März seien Dutzende neuer Meldungen eingegangen, die sich zu etwa 40 Prozent auf körperliche und psychische Gewalt bezögen, so niederländische Medien am Freitag unter Berufung auf die Meldestelle in Utrecht. Anfang März hatte die von den niederländischen Bischöfen eingesetzte sogenannte Deetman-Kommission einen Bericht zu sexuellem Missbrauch von Mädchen in kirchlichen Einrichtungen veröffentlicht.

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.

Church’s dirty linen will never lose its stench

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Alan Howe From: Herald Sun May 05, 2013

LAST week, the Catholic Church came clean. Sort of.

A retired bishop admitted things the rest of us had known for years – that his church realised long ago it had serious criminals within its ranks and that these men raped children.

The church also admitted it had destroyed documents detailing incidents of paedophilia and that it had listened to lawyers and insurers at the expense of its devastated victims. So far so bad.

In any case, it was much too little, far too late, and lacking still was a sense the church understood the depths of its employees’ depravity, and the extended tragedy of ruined lives, traumatised parents and countless suicides.

Finally, the Catholic Church aired much of its dirty linen, the pungent stench of which will forever occupy our nostrils.

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-abuse suit targets Newark Archbishop Myers’ former diocese in Illinois

NEW JERSEY/ILLINOIS
The Record

SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013
BY LISA ARTHUR
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

While the leader of the Archdiocese of Newark is under intense scrutiny for his handling of a Wyckoff priest-abuse case, Archbishop John J. Myers is also being faulted by those bringing a civil lawsuit in Illinois, claiming that the diocese he led there as a bishop failed to keep an alleged pedophile priest away from children.

The suit, filed in 2008 against the Diocese of Peoria, and Monsignor Thomas Maloney, claims that the plaintiff Andrew Ward was molested by Maloney in 1995 and 1996, when he was about 8 years old. The alleged abuse of the boy began a year after a woman had alleged to the diocese that she had been molested by Maloney in her childhood, according to the suit.

“The diocese did not further investigate the report … did not do a follow-up interview with the woman, did not ask Maloney’s fellow co-workers about his activities and didn’t contact law enforcement with the information,” the suit alleges.

News of the Illinois litigation comes amid questions about how the Newark Archdiocese managed the Rev. Michael Fugee, a former assistant pastor at St. Elizabeth of Hungary Church in Wyckoff who was convicted in 2003 of aggravated criminal sexual contact on allegations he repeatedly groped a 13-year-old boy.

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.

New revelations in priest scandal highlight lax supervision by Newark Archdiocese

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

[RELATED DOCUMENTS
Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s agreement with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office

Read the Rev. Michael Fugee’s confession to police

Read Archbishop John J. Myers’ February letter to priests about the Rev. Michael Fugee]

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on May 05, 2013

At Holy Family Church in Nutley, the Rev. Michael Fugee was a familiar face.

He sometimes said Mass. He visited his close friend, the Rev. Paul Bochicchio. And he gave occasional talks to the parish youth group on the Bible’s meaning.

“One thing I can tell you is that his greatest fans are teenagers,” said Bochicchio, a monsignor and Holy Family’s pastor.

Bochicchio makes no secret of Fugee’s interactions with young people. Indeed, there was nothing furtive about it. Photos on Facebook show the two priests celebrating Mass together and joining in a prayer circle with teens on an annual pilgrimage to a Canadian shrine.

A week after The Star-Ledger disclosed that Fugee had violated a lifetime ban on ministry to children by working with a Monmouth County youth group, what’s become clear is that the purported supervision of the priest by the Archdiocese of Newark amounted to little or no supervision at all.

Fugee, who admitted to police in 2001 that he fondled a teenage boy, went where he wanted to go, whether it was to youth retreats outside the archdiocese or to give talks to the teens at Holy Family in Nutley. If officials in the archdiocese were watching, no one raised a flag.

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.

Uganda priest ostracized for publicizing sexual abuse

UGANDA
Los Angeles Times

By Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times
May 4, 2013

KAMPALA, Uganda — He is a celebrity across eastern and central Africa, a gospel music star known to many as the “Dancing Priest.” But for years he also was a keeper of painful secrets — his own and many others’.

In going public, Anthony Musaala has forced the Roman Catholic Church in Uganda to confront a problem it had insisted didn’t exist. And he may stir a debate far beyond Africa’s most Catholic of countries.

The Ugandan priest has been suspended indefinitely by the archbishop of Kampala for exposing what he calls an open secret: Sex abuse in the Catholic Church is a problem in Africa as well as in Western Europe and North America.

The African Catholic Church is fast-growing, pious and traditional. As the church elsewhere forks out billions of dollars to compensate the child sex abuse victims of priests, few African Catholics have questioned the assumption, voiced recently by Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Turkson, that the African church is purer than its counterpart in the West, which is regarded as secular and permissive.

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 4, 2013

Cleric told to go

SCOTLAND
The Sunday Times

Cardinal Keith O’Brien, who retired after admitting inappropriate sexual conduct with priests, has reportedly been told by the Vatican to leave Scotland. O’Brien had intended to move to East Lothian but is understood to have been told that his continued presence in Scotland could further damage the Catholic 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.

O’Brien told to leave UK for sake of church reputation

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

By SHÂN ROSS
Published on 05/05/20

CARDINAL Keith O’Brien has been told to leave the UK amid fears that his continuing presence could lead to further criticism of the Catholic Church in Scotland.

Friends of the cardinal, still Scotland’s most senior Catholic, have been reported as saying officials in Rome have told him to abandon his plans to retire to a small church-owned property in Dunbar, East Lothian.

It is understood the cleric was contacted on Friday afternoon, days after he was photographed carrying cardboard boxes of his belongings from his official residence in Edinburgh.

The former Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, aged 75, had been forced by Pope Benedict XVI to retire after admitting “inappropriate behaviour” with four priests and a seminarian.

Philip Tartaglia, Archbishop of Glasgow, acting as president of the Bishop’s Conference of Scotland, was behind an appeal to the Vatican. He wrote to the Papal Nuncio in London informing him of the cardinal’s return and the subsequent publicity.

A source close to the cardinal said: “The cardinal has been advised not to relocate to the parish in Dunbar and has been told he should leave the country. That’s extremely disappointing and not a Christian way to treat someone. There’s clearly pressure from within and outwith the Church and no show of unity.

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.

Gay adulterer Cardinal O’Brien makes King Henry VIII an honest straight guy

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Updated May 4, 2013

Paris Arrow

A 47-year-old priest in Brazil, who studied theology in Germany, who is popular in the southeastern city of Bauru, where he has been a priest since 2001, was excommunicated for supporting gay rights. But way across the othe side of the globe, the Vatican has closed its investigation on active gay Cardinal Keith O’Brien and is allowing him to retain his title as Cardinal – after he admitted in public that he has had many gay relations – as a priest , as a Bishop and as a Cardinal, that’s about 50 years of his life until his sudden retirement before the papal conclave. O’Brien in now retiring in Scotland , see news updates below. Vatican hypocrisy is at its all time high and Catholics in the world should be appalled at the Vatican Titanic ruling the 1.2 billion Catholics with double standards of morality.

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 DAY POSTPONED AT MICDS, MATTHEW PERRY IN TOWN,

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. . .Meanwhile, students at Rosati-Kain High were surprised to be let out early the other day. Staff calls to parents blamed “unforeseen circumstances.” In truth, administrators apparently wanted the place evacuated before a SNAP sidewalk news conference outside the school. The support group announced a wrongful death suit against the archdiocese and now-defrocked priest, Bryan Michael Kuchar, who worked at the school.. …

. .N.Y. Cardinal Timothy Dolan, prez of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, has hired a spokesman to help recast the hierchy’s image which some feared was started to become unfriendly to women based upon Pres. Obama’s contraception mandate.

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.

Rally For Gay Teacher At Steps Of Diocese

OHIO
NBC4i

By: Denise Alex

COLUMBUS, Ohio –
Supporters of a teacher fired because of her relationship with another woman violates the teachings of the Catholic Church took their message to the Catholic Diocese of Columbus.

“I think that she realizes what we’re doing here is bigger than any of us as individuals. What we’re doing here today (Friday) has the potential to impact policy,” says Amanda Finelli, creator of HaleStorm Ohio.

Dozens rallied in front of the building on Gay Street, wanting Carla Hale to get her job back.

The 57-year-old lost her job when a parent of a Bishop Watterson student alerted the church to an obituary which named Hale’s partner.

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.

LCWR head to global sisters: ‘Serious misunderstandings’ with Vatican

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | May. 4, 2013

ROME “Serious misunderstandings” exist between Vatican officials and Catholic sisters, the head of the U.S. sisters’ group that was ordered to place itself under the review of bishops told some 800 of her global peers Saturday.

Franciscan Sr. Florence Deacon, president of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), addressed the sisters during the plenary assembly of the International Union of Superiors General, a group of nearly 2,000 leaders of women religious throughout the world.

Deacon’s remarks constituted LCWR’s most public narrative of their relations with the Vatican. Citing a need to continue dialog with the Vatican, the group has kept a tight lip on their discussions.

In a detailed, 20-minute address, Deacon outlined for her peers how her group, which represents about 80 percent of the some 57,000 U.S. sisters, had been ordered to revise itself last April by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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

Request to remove ‘disturbing’ image of cardinal from Luss pilgrimage trail

SCOTLAND
Helensburgh Advertiser

Published 19 Apr 2013

A visitor to the pilgrimage trail at Luss has called on the church to remove a picture of disgraced Cardinal Keith O’Brien from site.

The picture of the cardinal is included on a plaque beside a tree which he planted during a visit in 2010.

However, a Roman Catholic visitor to the glebe has emailed Rev Dane Sherrard calling for the image to be removed as they found it “disturbing”.

The email, included in Mr Sherrard’s daily blog, says: “I came across the peaceful and delightful pilgrimage centre and found it thought provoking and helpful. I was however taken aback by the picture of Keith O’Brien – I found it disturbing to see his image here and that it impacted on my thoughts and feelings in a negative way.

“I think it time that image was removed, especially in light of further revelations in today’s press and his admission of terrible hypocrisy. As a Catholic I find this increasingly disturbing.”

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.

NJ Priest With History of Molestation Resigns

NEW JERSEY
ABC News

By KATIE ZEZIMA Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. May 4, 2013 (AP)

The agreement with prosecutors, reached after a priest’s conviction on charges that he fondled a teenage boy were thrown out, was unequivocal.

The Rev. Michael Fugee could return to ministry in the Archdiocese of Newark, but was barred from having unsupervised contact with minors or a job that requires him to oversee or minister to children under the age of 18.

But despite the legally binding agreement, Fugee was a presence at a church youth group, traveling with teenagers to Canada on a mission to help disabled Catholics, hearing confessions from teenagers and participating in retreat trips.

This week’s disclosure that Fugee continued to work with children has roiled the faithful in New Jersey, opening up wounds from the church abuse scandal that started in Boston more than 10 years ago and raising questions about how closely the archdiocese monitored Fugee’s activities.

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 ‘orders Cardinal Keith O’Brien to leave Scotland’

SCOTLAND
The Guardian

Conal Urquhart
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 4 May 2013

Cardinal Keith O’Brien, Britain’s most senior priest, has been ordered by the Vatican to leave Scotland, it has been reported.

The cardinal, who retired from the leadership of the church in Scotland after admitting inappropriate sexual conduct with priests, has been advised against going ahead with his plan to move to a house in Dunbar in East Lothian after vacating his official residence in Edinburgh, according to the Herald.

The archbishop of Glasgow, Philip Tartaglia, wrote to the pope’s envoy in London to warn of the possibility of damage to the Catholic church if O’Brien maintained a public profile in Scotland, the paper reported.

“The cardinal has been advised not to relocate to the parish in Dunbar and has been told he should leave the country,” an anonymous source told the paper. “That’s extremely disappointing and not a Christian way to treat someone. There’s clearly pressure from within and outwith the Church and no show of unity.”

Canon John Creanor, of the Our Lady of the Waves in Dunbar, said he had no knowledge of any instructions from the Vatican to O’Brien to leave the country.

“If that was the case, I would be horrified. The people of Dunbar are keenly awaiting his arrival,” he said.

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

Cardinal O’Brien ‘ordered to leave Britain’ by Vatican

SCOTLAND
Telegraph

Damian Thompson

Gerry Braiden of the Glasgow Herald is reporting today that Cardinal Keith O’Brien, former Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, has been ordered to leave Britain by the Vatican following his admission that he made sexual advances to priests during his time as Primate of Scotland. It’s a terrible end to the career of a flawed but likeable man who, clearly, should never have accepted a cardinal’s hat in the first place. Writes Braiden:

Friends of the cleric have said he has been told by Rome to shelve his plans to retire to a church-owned cottage in East Lothian and instead leave the country.

The Herald understands Cardinal O’Brien was given the news yesterday afternoon, three days after being photographed moving his personal belongings from his official residence in Edinburgh to the residence in Dunbar where he had been spending regular weekends over the past few years.

The parish priest in Dunbar, Canon John Creanor, is understood to have voiced upset at the Vatican’s move against his “dear friend”.

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 for North Jersey boy call Newark Archdiocese slow to respond to reported abuse

NEW JERSEY
The Record

FRIDAY MAY 3, 2013

BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Ron Fraioli said he went to his pastor at St. Elizabeth’s of Hungary Church in Wyckoff in 2000 with a stunning allegation: An assistant pastor, the Rev. Michael Fugee, was repeatedly groping a 13-year-old boy in mock wrestling sessions when he visited the home of the boy’s mother.

The pastor, Monsignor Thomas O’Leary, wrote a letter making a strong case for an investigation of Fugee to his superiors at the Archdiocese of Newark, Fraioli said. Months passed with no reply.

Fraioli, a lawyer who has kept a large file of exacting notes of conversations and correspondence related to the alleged sexual abuse, said he sought a direct response from the archdiocese and was told by a lawyer there that the allegations were based on third-hand information and that he could not report them to authorities.

Five months had elapsed, he said, since the pastor wrote his letter. Fraioli and parishioner Janice Thomas, both devout Catholics who said they sought action first from their church, went to state child protection services, which referred them to the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, they said in interviews this week.

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

Greensburg diocese braces for shakeup

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

By Kate Wilcox

Published: Saturday, May 4, 2013

Two parishes in the Greensburg Catholic Diocese will close, several others will merge and the fate of three diocesan elementary schools is in question, Bishop Lawrence E. Brandt announced Friday.

Citing an ever-declining population and funds, as well as a shortage of priests, Brandt said the diocese has been slowly closing and merging schools and parishes since a strategic plan was put in place in 2006.

All parish closings and reorganizations will be effective Tuesday, June 25, 2013.

• St. Hedwig in Smock, Fayette County, and St. Boniface in Latrobe will close. There are other parishes within five to seven miles of the two churches that parishioners can attend, Brandt said.
St. Hedwig has 192 families and St. Boniface has 141 families.

• Merging into one: Madonna of Czestochowa, Cardale; St. Thomas, Footedale; Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Leckrone; All Saints, Masontown; St. Procopius, New Salem; and Holy Rosary, Republic. The new parish will be named St. Francis of Assisi with worship sites in Footedale and Masontown.

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.

Emotions run high in Colts Neck as priest resigns

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Written by
Kevin Pentón
@kevinpentonAPP

COLTS NECK — With hugs, tears and wistful smiles, hundreds of parishioners gathered at St. Mary’s Church on Friday to share their emotions and their concerns about the presence of the Rev. Michael Fugee amidst their congregation.

As they spoke with each other outside the community meeting, held a day after Fugee submitted his letter of resignation, some parishioners questioned the actions of St. Mary’s leaders in allowing Fugee to be part of a youth group at the church. Several wiped tears.

An agreement with prosecutors, reached after Fugee’s conviction on charges that he fondled a teenage boy were thrown out, had been unequivocal.

Fugee could return to ministry in the Archdiocese of Newark, but was barred from having unsupervised contact with minors or a job that requires him to oversee or minister to children under the age of 18.

But despite the legally binding agreement, Fugee was a presence at St. Mary’s, traveling with teenagers to Canada on a mission to help disabled Catholics, hearing confessions from teenagers and participating in retreat trips.

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.

Boston priest named bishop of Oakland

OAKLAND (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

Matthai Kuruvila

Pope Francis named a Boston priest with longtime ties to the Bay Area as the bishop of Oakland, where the future bishop emphasized that he would lead a path more pastoral than political.

Until now, Rev. Michael Barber had been the director of spiritual formation at a Boston seminary. In his first comments to diocesan staff in Oakland on Friday, Barber spoke of spending time in soup kitchens serving food, washing dishes, visiting jails and otherwise “getting my hands dirty.”

Barber, 58, is the first Jesuit bishop named by Francis, the first Jesuit pope. Oakland’s bishop-elect said it was Francis’ example he sought to follow, “to show, symbolically, that the church is there to serve the poor and the marginalized.”

The message is a notable contrast to that of his predecessor in Oakland, Salvatore Cordileone, the current San Francisco Archbishop. Cordileone has made the politics of marriage a central part of his leadership stretching back to his advocacy of Proposition 8, banned same-sex marriage in California.

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.

Civil suit against Bismarck diocese for abuse settled

NORTH DAKOTA
The Dickinson Press

By: Bryan Horwath, The Dickinson Press

A civil suit brought against the Diocese of Bismarck by a man who claimed a priest with North Dakota ties sexually abused him has been settled.

Both parties involved in civil case John Doe No. 87 vs. the Diocese of Bismarck filed in U.S. District Court in Hawaii agreed to settlement terms last month, triggering a court-ordered dismissal of the case Friday. The case had been scheduled to go to trial in July.

Colorado resident Steven Crochet, 46, who agreed to waive his anonymity as the plaintiff in the suit during an interview with The Press in January, accused Rev. Maurice G. McNeely of forcing Crochet — then a pre-teen — to perform oral sex on him at a U.S. Army base in Hawaii in the mid-1970s.

Both Crochet’s attorney, Florida-based Adam Horowitz and diocese spokesman Matthew Kurtz declined to disclose the terms of the financial settlement when contacted Friday.

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 ordered into exile by Vatican

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Saturday 4 May 2013

Gerry Braiden
Senior reporter

CARDINAL Keith O’Brien has been told by the Vatican to leave the UK amid concerns of wreaking further damage on the Catholic Church in Scotland.

Friends of the cleric have said he has been told by Rome to shelve his plans to retire to a church-owned cottage in East Lothian and instead leave the country.

The Herald understands Cardinal O’Brien was given the news yesterday afternoon, three days after being photographed moving his personal belongings from his official residence in Edinburgh to the residence in Dunbar where he had been spending regular weekends over the past few years.

The parish priest in Dunbar, Canon John Creanor, is understood to have voiced upset at the Vatican’s move against his “dear friend”.

It is the clearest indication yet of the Vatican’s unwillingness to let the matter drift and concern that the Cardinal’s admission of gay activity over decades and allegations of abuse towards trainee priests continues to damage the Church.

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

Anti-gay Cardinal Keith O’Brien to be forced into exile by Vatican

SCOTLAND
Gay Star News

04 MAY 2013 | BY DAN LITTAUER

Friends of the disgraced Cardinal Keith O’Brien say he’s been ordered by the Vatican into exile and ditch his plans for retirement in Scotland.

The Herald commented that: ‘It is the clearest indication yet of the Vatican’s unwillingness to let the matter drift’ of the Cardinal’s sexual assault on male priests when he run seminaries in the 1980s and during a drinks party in Rome.

According to the The Herald, O’Brien was given the news yesterday (3 May) after starting to move his belongings from his Edinburgh residence to his retirement home in Dunbar, East Lothain, three days ago.

The Herald revealed on Thursday that Philip Tartaglia Archbishop of Glasgow and likely to become O’Brien’s successor, was behind an appeal to the Vatican to intervene after Cardinal O’Brien’s re-emergence in Scotland this week.

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

BC court finds Abbotsford priest guilty of sex crimes

CANADA
Hindustan Times

A priest at an Abbotsford Hindu temple has been found guilty of three counts of sexual interference with two young women in his congregation. Karam Vir, 33, was charged in November 2010 with two counts of touching a young person for a sexual purpose, and one count of sexual
assault.

While delivering the verdict BC Supreme Court Justice Neill Brown remanded Vir to custody until his sentence is pronounced in August.

Brown, in reviewing the evidence, painted a picture of long-term friendships that had developed between Vir and the two teenagers over months (girls identities protected due to a publication ban).

These relationships of trust were breached when Vir made sexual advances, sexually exploiting the girls, then 17.

“I believe their testimony in the way that Vir exploited their trust,” Brown said. “I find credible the complainants’ evidence that Vir sexually touched them . . . I find both complainants were fearful.”

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.

Poll: Should Archbishop Myers resign over the handling of Rev. Fugee?

NEW JERSEY
The Jersey Journal

By Ron Zeitlinger/The Jersey Journal
on May 04, 2013

The Rev. Michael Fugee may have resigned from publicly working as a Roman catholic priest, but there is no way he’s escaping the public limelight. As as far as critics are concerned, John J. Myers, the archbishop of the Newark diocese, should be stepping down, too

“Father Fugee should have been fired and removed from ministry by Archbishop (John J.) Myers years ago, not simply allowed to resign today,” said Mark Crawford, New Jersey director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, a national advocacy and support group. “There must be consequences for those that enabled his continued access to children.”

Under mounting public pressure, Fugee stepped down from ministering publicly as a priest. The Star-Ledger reported earlier this week that Fugee attended youth retreats and heard confessions from minors in defiance of a lifetime ban on such behavior.

In a statement Thursday, Fugee says he violated a court order on his own, and without the consent of the archbishop. But critics aren’t buying it.

“If the Archbishop went to such great lengths to protect Father Fugee, then it’s likely he may be protecting others,” Crawford said. “He has failed to be transparent, open and honest, and for that Archbishop Myers must step down.”

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.

Teacher accused of rewarding girls candy for sex acts in court

FLORIDA
Fox 19

Rachel Leigh, Content Manager

WEST PALM BEACH, FL (WFLX) – Former Rosarian Academy teacher Stephen Budd, who is accused of sexual activity with two young girls, made court appearance Friday morning.

According to the West Palm Beach Police chief, in 2006, Budd allegedly had sexual encounters with two 4th graders. Budd reportedly would use “Budd Bucks” to reward the girls with candy in return for sexual acts.

One alleged victim told police Budd recently tried to get in touch with her through Facebook. That’s when she told her parents, who contacted police.

After leaving Rosarian Academy in 2007, Budd took a job at South Tech Academy charter school in Boynton Beach. Administrators there quickly placed Budd on leave pending the outcome of his case.

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 Irish priest to be extradited from the UK to face sexual charges

IRELAND
Irish Times

Mark Hennessy

A former Catholic priest who was described as “a serial abuser of children” by an investigation into clerical child abuse in the Archdiocese of Dublin, is to be extradited from Britain to Ireland to face charges of indecently assaulting children.

Mr Bill Carney, aged 73, was arrested in Warwickshire last week under a European arrest warrant. It was issued by the Irish authorities on foot of complaints made by eight men and two women about abuse they allegedly suffered as children at his hands between 1977 and 1989.

Ordained in 1974, he served in a number of Dublin parishes, including Ayrfield, until 1989. He was suspended from, or restricted in, his ministry for some of that time on foot of allegations made, and he was dismissed from the clerical state in 1992.

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

Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Over Hyped

UNITED STATES
Patch

Columnist Mike Moran argues that sexual abuse in the Catholic Church is no more prevalent than in other large institutions.

Note to pedophiles everywhere: if you have pornographic images of children saved on your computer, the employee you paid to fix your computer problems may not put his disdain of child exploitation over his chipper “customer is always right” work ethic. You may want to save that stuff somewhere else or (preferably) make getting psychological help a priority over your tech support.

Earlier this year, local deacon, William Steven Albaugh of St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church on Belair Road, was reportedly snitched on by a Baltimore County Verizon employee who had access to Albaugh’s computer. Police searched his home in March and he was charged with having more illegal images, though no children were reported to have been harmed. Albaugh is currently out on bail, presumably thanking God for not being a suspected pedophile awaiting trial within the general prison population.

While a news story about a Catholic Church official being accused of pedophilia is not at all uncommon, this current, local investigation is a good opportunity to ask the question: Why are news stories about Catholic Church officials being accused of pedophilia, not at all uncommon?

Is the Catholic Church some kind of pedophile magnet?

Do the strict sexual sanctions imposed upon Church officials drive them into pedophilia?

Or, is the existence of a higher correlation between Catholic Church officials and pedophilia merely a media-fueled mass panic, unfairly targeting the Church?

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

Corinth pastor arrested, charged with sexual abuse

TEXAS
Colony Courier Leader

By Tim Glaze, tglaze@starlocalnews.com

Published: Friday, May 3, 2013

A Corinth clergyman has been arrested after he barricaded a young girl in his office and “begged” her to remove her clothes for almost two hours.

According to an affidavit released by the Corinth Police Department, Pastor Jeffery Dale Williams of The Church of Corinth was identified on five different audio recordings asking the female to take off her clothes so he could see “eye candy” on March 30, 2013. Corinth police arrested Williams on Wednesday, May 1 and charged him with attempted sexual performance on a child – a third degree felony.

Williams bonded out of jail Wednesday night after bail was set at $10,000.

Corinth Lieutenant Jimmie Gregg said the department has been investigating Williams since early April after Child Protective Services sent the CPD two separate reports of sexual abuse allegations against the pastor.

“Someone reported something to CPS,” Gregg said. “Since then, we’ve been investigating this guy. We’ve been on it since April. I can’t release too many details at this point, but we have proof that it is [Williams] on five different audio recordings asking this girl to remove her clothing.”

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.

Woman sues church over alleged sex abuse

CANADA
Vancouver Sun

By Janet Steffenhagen, Vancouver Sun May 4, 2013

A woman who claims she was sexually abused by her now-deceased adoptive father throughout her childhood is suing her mother, the Seventh-day Adventist Church and two of its schools, alleging they knew about the abuse but failed to protect her.

Alicia Koback, who was adopted shortly after her birth in 1964 by Bob and Constance Heitsman of Aldergrove, says in a statement of claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court that the abuse began when she was a toddler and continued until she left home at 16, pregnant and traumatized. Her mother, church officials and teachers at two schools – Fraser Valley Adventist Academy in Alder-grove and Cariboo Adventist Academy in Williams Lake – knew about the abuse but did not try to stop it or report it to authorities, she claims.

The statement was filed Friday by lawyer Jim Poyner, but the allegations have not been proven in court and the four parties named in the lawsuit have yet to file a statement of defence. Contacted by The Vancouver Sun at her Aldergrove home on Friday, Connie Heits-man reacted with surprise but declined to comment.

Koback, 49, said her parents were deacons of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and she was raised in a devout household with two brothers, also adopted, and a younger sister who was the Heitsmans’ only biological child. Family and religious rules were plentiful and included obeying elders, not questioning authority and distrusting non-believers.

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.

Police on status of Pastor G allegations

VIRGINIA
WWBT

By Laura Geller

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) –
The Richmond Police Department is speaking out about a cloud of speculation surrounding a pastor involved in its faith based program.

Despite the allegations that became so public this week against Pastor Geronimo Aguilar of The ROC church in Richmond, police confirmed Wednesday they don’t have an active complaint or investigation against the pastor. They want to make it clear they don’t investigate based on speculation.

Protestors set up shop outside The ROC or Richmond Outreach Center this week. They were trying to send a message about Pastor Aguilar or Pastor G, as he’s known throughout the community. The signs they displayed detail accusations of sex with underage girls, adultery and embezzlement.

The popular leader of the church is well-known on the streets of Richmond. He is a pillar in the program that partners faith-based organizations and the police department. It reaches populations of Richmonders, which the men and women in uniform can’t necessarily affect.

NBC12 interviewed him about the program back in November at a community event.

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: Pastor Of The ROC Accused Of Sexual Misconduct

VIRGINIA
WRIC

[with video]

RICHMOND, VA-Following an 8News Investigation exposing accusations of sexual misconduct against the pastor of a large, well-known church in Richmond, Virginia, officials in Texas confirm they are investigating the pastor on allegations of child molestation and lewd acts with two children.

Texas Police confirm they are investigating Geronimo Aguilar, the pastor of The ROC church in Richmond, for accusations of sexual misconduct.

A group of Richmond faith leaders held a protest Monday, calling for Aguilar’s resignation. On multiple websites, Aguilar has been accused of sexual misconduct. 8News also discovered a Facebook page called “Richmond Outreach Center Recovery Group.” It has been set up for those who allege to be victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Aguilar.

8News has confirmed Aguilar was under investigation in California and Texas; a police report shows that he was alleged to have committed lewd acts on two children. Texas police are now actively investigating Aguilar.

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.

Texas police investigate ROC pastor

VIRGINIA
Richmond Times-Dispatch

Posted: Saturday, May 4, 2013

BY LOUIS LLOVIO Richmond Times-Dispatch

Police in Fort Worth, Texas, are investigating Geronimo Aguilar, pastor of the Richmond Outreach Center in South Richmond, on two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child.

Fort Worth Police Detective Deion Nash said Friday that the department has an active investigation into the allegations. He said the charge of aggravated sexual assault indicates that a victim is under age 14.
Aguilar, 43, has not been charged in the case.

Nash said Friday that the aggravated sexual assault of a minor is a first-degree felony. In Texas, first-degree felonies carry prison sentences ranging from five years to 99 years and fines of up to $10,000.

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.

Ex-priest faces extradition and trial over abuse

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SHANE HICKEY LONDON – 04 MAY 2013

A FORMER priest, who was exposed in the Murphy Report as a serial sex abuser, is expected to be extradited from the UK to Ireland to face a raft of indecent-assault charges.

A judge in London yesterday ordered that Bill Carney be sent back to Ireland, where he is expected to be charged with 34 offences.

The 73-year-old was described in the 2009 Murphy report into clerical abuse as “a serial sexual abuser of children, male and female”.

He pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting two altar boys and was given the Probation Act in 1983. He was defrocked in 1992. Since then he has been living in England and Spain.

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 3, 2013

Fr. Michael Fugee to Leave Public Exercise of Priestly Ministry

NEW JERSEY
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark

May 3, 2013

Jim Goodness
(973) 497-4186
(973) 202-2317 (Cell)
goodneja@rcan.org

For Release :
May 3, 2013

On Thursday, May 2, Fr. Michael Fugee, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, wrote the following to The Most Reverend John J. Myers, Archbishop of Newark:

“For the good of the Church and for my peace, I have requested permission to leave public exercise of my priestly ministry.

“In conscience, I feel it necessary to make clear to all that my actions described in recent news stories were outside of my assigned ministry within the Archdiocese. The leadership of the Archdiocese of Newark, especially Archbishop John Myers, did not know or approve of my actions. My failure to request the required permissions to engage in those ministry activities is my fault, my fault alone.

“I am sorry that my actions have caused pain to my Church and to her people.”

Archbishop Myers granted this request on May 2.

Fr. Fugee remains a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, but he no longer has faculties to minister publicly as a priest. He cannot present himself as a priest, cannot wear clerical clothing, and cannot perform publicly the duties or activities of a priest.

Following the Memorandum of Understanding, the Archdiocese did not assign Fr. Fugee to any post involving ministry with minors. His assignments were supervised administrative positions located at the Archdiocesan Center in Newark. Fr. Fugee was under continual supervision during the exercise of these ministerial duties.

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 in Newark Archdiocese scandal says contact with kids was ‘my fault alone’

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on May 03, 2013

The Newark Archdiocese has released a statement citing the resignation letter of the Rev. Michael Fugee, the priest who interacted with minors despite an agreement with law enforcement barring him from doing so.

Fugee’s actions, disclosed by The Star-Ledger last week, have created an enormous controversy for Archbishop John J. Myers, who, through a spokesman, had argued Fugee’s interactions did not violate the agreement because he was under supervision. The archdiocese reversed course Thursday night, announcing the priest’s resignation.

Below is the text of the release by James Goodness:

On Thursday, May 2, Fr. Michael Fugee, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, wrote the following to The Most Reverend John J. Myers, Archbishop of Newark:

“For the good of the Church and for my peace, I have requested permission to leave public exercise of my priestly ministry.

“In conscience, I feel it necessary to make clear to all that my actions described in recent news stories were outside of my assigned ministry within the Archdiocese. The leadership of the Archdiocese of Newark, especially Archbishop John Myers, did not know or approve of my actions. My failure to request the required permissions to engage in those ministry activities is my fault, my fault alone.

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.

NJ- Victims don’t buy predator’s new statement

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY DAVID CLOHESSY ON MAY 03, 2013

Now, Fr. Fugee says it’s all his fault.

We don’t believe him. If he’ll lie to protect himself, he’ll also lie to protect Archbishop Myers who has so long protected him.

Ministry and retreats and church trips are group efforts. Other priests, parishioners and church employees helped Fr. Fugee get access to kids. Fr. Fugee’s seemingly noble claim that all of this is his fault “alone” just doesn’t hold water.

Today, Archbishop Myers’ spokesman claims that after the deal with the prosecutor, “the Archdiocese did not assign Fr. Fugee to any post involving ministry with minors.” This is simply not true. Myers quietly put Fr. Fugee in a hospital chaplaincy, and informed no one at the hospital about Fr. Fugee’s past. Kids, of course, come and go and stay in hospitals.

“His assignments were supervised administrative positions located at the Archdiocesan Center,” says Myers’ spokesman. Again, not true. He deliberately ignores the hospital chaplaincy, which only ended when it was disclosed by the Newark Star Ledger.

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.

Público.es | “El Papa encubrió al cura que abusó de mi hijo”

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Causa Beatriz Varela Blogspot  [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

May 3, 2013

By Anonymous

Read original article

La Justicia argentina, por primera vez, considera a la Iglesia cómplice en un caso de pedofilia y la condena a indemnizar a una madre y su hijo violado por un sacerdote.
 No es fácil narrar esta historia para sus mismos protagonistas. Beatriz Varela y su hijo Gabriel han tenido que esperar casi 11 años para que la Justicia argentina, en una resolución sin precedentes en este país, sentencie a la Iglesia católica por su responsabilidad en los actos de pedofilia cometidos por un cura de su diócesis contra el joven cuando éste tenía 15 años.
La Cámara de Apelaciones del municipio de Quilmes, en la provincia de Buenos Aires, ha confirmado esta semana el fallo de un tribunal que en diciembre condenó al obispado de esa localidad a pagar 155.600 pesos más intereses (más de 23.000 euros) por gastos en tratamientos psicoterapéuticos y por el daño moral causado al chico y a su madre.
El delito ocurrió el 15 de agosto de 2002. Varela invitó a su casa al cura Rubén Pardo, vicario de una parroquia del lugar, para que instruyera a sus dos hijos varones sobre los preceptos católicos. Según adelantó la periodista Mariana Carvajal en el diario argentino Página12, el sacerdote, de unos 50 años, conversó con Gabriel en solitario, y llegada la cena, pidió a la mujer que permitiera al muchacho pasar la noche en la Casa de Formación, donde el religioso residía, para continuar con el diálogo y para que al día siguiente lo ayudara en la celebración de una misa.
Gabriel contó a la Justicia, tiempo después, que Pardo lo invitó a dormir junto a él, un gesto que el adolescente interpretó como una actitud paternal. Fue entonces cuando el sacerdote abusó sexualmente de él. “Sabía que me estaba violando, pero no podía pensar en qué podía hacer para evitarlo, porque tenía mucho miedo y estaba shockeado”, expuso. Una vez Pardo se durmió, Gabriel huyó despavorido a su casa y le confesó a su madre lo sucedido.
Varela se presentó de inmediato ante el que era el obispo de Quilmes en ese momento, Luis Stöckler. “En principio se mostró consternado, pero con el correr de los días no mostraba decisión de tomar alguna medida”, explicó a este diario. El obispo “intentó minimizar el hecho, diciendo que yo tenía que ser misericordiosa con las personas que eligen el celibato por vocación porque tienen momentos de debilidad”.
Pero la mujer le comunicó al obispo que si ella estaba allí era porque quería “verdad, justicia, y que a nadie más le ocurra”. El prelado recurrió entonces a presionarla “por las pagas”. “Yo trabajaba en una escuela del obispado”, explica la mujer.
“Bergoglio estaba al tanto de la denuncia. Su compromiso es de boca para fuera”Varela se dirigió a continuación al tribunal eclesiástico, “cuyo presidente no quiso tomarme la denuncia”, y en donde quince días después la entrevistaron cuatro curas “que me sometieron a un interrogatorio humillante, con preguntas lascivas y tendenciosas, poniéndome a mí en el lugar del victimario, cuando ellos tenían certeza de que el hecho había ocurrido porque el abusador había admitido el hecho a las 96 horas ante su obispo, que lo amonestó”.
La madre de Gabriel acudió también a la curia metropolitana, residencia del exarzobispo de Buenos Aires Jorge Bergoglio, más conocido hoy como el Papa Francisco, de donde la quisieron expulsar con personal de seguridad. En la catedral, colindante con el edificio de la curia, se enteró de que el cura pedófilo había sido alojado en una casa de la vicaría del barrio de Flores, dependiente del Arzobispado de Buenos Aires, que presidía el que es hoy es el máximo pontífice y jefe del Estado del Vaticano.
“En la Iglesia todos saben y todos callan, así que todos son cómplices””Bergoglio estaba al tanto de esta denuncia”, señala la mujer. “Nadie se instala en una vicaría sin la autorización del arzobispo. Ése es el compromiso de Bergoglio: de la boca para fuera”, arremete. “Ante casos de pedofilia, la Iglesia actúa encubriendo, con hipocresía, con mentiras, con complicidad y sin compromiso ante Dios y la sociedad. Todos saben y todos callan, así que todos son cómplices. Y encima es una institución reverenciada por la sociedad. La Iglesia se le ríe en la cara, y así y todo ésta es feliz porque un argentino ocupa un cetro”, sentencia Varela.
La mujer se arrepiente de la confianza que depositó en la Iglesia. “Los curas se capacitan para el manejo de masas, para la manipulación de mentes”, añade. “Espero que la sociedad se conciencie de que creer en Dios no pasa por estar registrado en el libro de ninguna religión, y menos en una mantenida por el Estado”.
Un nuevo caso relacionadoCualquier atisbo de alegría que hubiera podido surgir con la llegada de la sentencia contra el Obispado de Quilmes se ha empañado ahora con una llamada que Varela recibió la semana pasada. “Hay dos sacerdotes que fueron trasladados a la Arquidiócesis de Córdoba [centro del país] cuando hice la denuncia”, cuenta. “El viernes me llamó una madre desgarrada porque su hija de 4 años había sido violada por estos dos curas, que todavía trabajan en una escuela. Tenía fisuras anales, hay fotografías de ella y de otras compañeritas. Y otros niños están todavía en riesgo”.
La madre de la niña abusada, que no ha querido por ahora que el caso trascienda con datos concretos, comenzó hace siete meses una causa penal contra los curas, pero los dos clérigos todavía trabajan en la escuela. “Esto es una red de pedofilia, porque la maestra no es ajena al hecho de que tres o cuatro nenas desaparecen del recreo y aparecen más tarde. Eso se llama encubrimiento”, afirma Varela.
El sacerdote que abusó de Gabriel murió de Sida en 2005El proceso judicial por el que han pasado ella misma y su hijo no ha sido tampoco un trago fácil, y aunque agradece el fallo, siente que la Justicia se hizo esperar demasiado. “Cuando el sacerdote que abusó de mi hijo falleció [de Sida, en 2005], el expediente desapareció durante dos años. La causa corría el riesgo de prescribir, y mi hijo tuvo un intento de suicidio y estuvo internado un mes y medio en una clínica psiquiátrica”, recuerda. “Con ningún dinero compensarán lo que hemos padecido”.
A diferencia de la madre de Córdoba, Varela sí ha decidido dar a conocer lo que han soportado. Stöckler [que sigue siendo obispo emérito de Quilmes] pretendía silenciarme, pero yo le dije: “esto lo callo sólo muerta”. Mi hijo ya lo padeció. Por mi silencio no lo va a sufrir ningún otro niño”, puntualiza.
Palabra de GabrielSu hijo Gabriel, que hoy tiene 25 años, también ha consentido la difusión de su caso. “El dictamen judicial sienta una jurisprudencia y puede ayudar a otras víctimas a que no se les haga tan engorroso la búsqueda de una resolución”, expone a Público. “Estamos hablando de una institución que tiene muchísimo poder”.
Él lo sabe bien al haberlo sufrido en carne copia. “Tenía pesadillas, no me podía dormir. A veces sentía culpa por lo que había pasado, que es lo que buscaba la Iglesia diciéndole a mi mamá que ella había inducido eso o que yo había provocado a esta persona [Pardo] para que sucediera”.
Gabriel: “Hay que actuar porque mucha gente tiene miedo o vergüenza a denunciar”Uno de los momentos más difíciles llegó cuando el legajo penal se perdió. “Sentía que habíamos perdido, y que tantos años de lucha y desgaste eran en vano”, admite Gabriel. Pero, con apoyo psicológico y la contención de su madre y hermanos, pudo al final salir adelante y darse cuenta de que nada de lo que había ocurrido era culpa suya, “que uno no puede manejar la perversión que tenga otra persona, y que uno es víctima”. Pero el joven considera que no es bueno quedarse en ese papel. “Hay mucha gente que no denuncia porque tiene miedo o vergüenza al qué dirán por querellarse contra una persona con investidura. Por eso hay que actuar”.
Gabriel ya no se considera católico y está intentando tramitar su apostasía. “Cualquier decisión que tome la Iglesia te representa como fiel de esa institución. Y la Constitución indica que el Estado tiene la obligación de subsidiar al credo que tenga mayoría. Con mi desafiliación, la institución perderá poder”, concluye.
Publicada en Público.es

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 bishop fails to put children first in dealing with abusive priest

NEW JERSEY
U.S. Catholic

By Nicholas Cafardi
Guest blog

It is difficult to understand what is going on in the Archdiocese of Newark these days. A priest of that archdiocese, Father Michael Fugee, was charged with sexual assault on a minor in 2001. He confessed to the police that he had grabbed the young boy’s crotch while wrestling with him on two occasions. At his first trial, he was convicted of aggravated criminal sexual contact. That conviction was overturned by an appeals court on the grounds of improper jury instructions. Rather than retry Father Fugee, in 2007, the public prosecutor entered into an agreement with him and the Newark archdiocese which says, among other things, that:

“It is agreed and understood that Michael Fugee shall not accept any position with the Archdiocese of Newark or any Archdiocese under which he is assigned and/or placed that allows him to have any unsupervised contact with or to supervise or minister to any child/minor under the age of 18 or work in any position in which children are involved. This includes but is not limited to, presiding over a parish, involvement with a youth group, religious education/parochial school, CCD, confessions of children, youth choir, youth retreats and daycare.”

Imagine, then, the surprise of the folks in the Newark archdiocese when they found out that Father Fugee had been going on youth retreats and pilgrimages and was back to hearing the confessions of minors, in private, as all confessions must be.

That sure sounds like a violation of what the archdiocese and Father Fugee agreed to in 2007. The archbishop of Newark does not see it that way. He has written a letter to the faithful claiming that Father Fugee is back in ministry under the terms of the Dallas Charter which requires diocese to restore the reputation of priests in situations where there is a “not guilty” verdict or a dismissal of charges and the diocese’s own review board has found that no sexual abuse has occurred.

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.

Jesuit priest appointed bishop of Oakland Diocese

OAKLAND (CA)
Mercury News

By Angela Woodall
Oakland Tribune
Posted: 05/03/2013 1

Father Michael Barber will become bishop of Oakland, ending a 7-month stretch without a permanent diocese leader.

Barber, whose family has roots in the Bay Area, will be ordained May 25, taking the reigns of an ethnically and politically diverse diocese that stretches from Oakland to Danville.

“I am humbled to be the first Jesuit priest to be appointed bishop by a Jesuit pope,” Barber said just hours after the announcement became public Friday.

“It’s about time the appointment was made,” said Archbishop Alex Brunett, who has served as administrator for the diocese since the departure in July of Bishop Salvatore Cordileone, who became archbishop of the San Francisco archdiocese.

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

Archbishop’s Chichester Visitation – Final Report Published

UNITED KINGDOM
Archbishop of Canterbury

[final report]

Friday 3rd May 2013

The final report for the enquiry into the operation of the diocesan child protection policies in the Diocese of Chichester has today been published.

The report was written by Bishop John Gladwin and Chancellor Rupert Bursell QC who were appointed in 2011 as the former Archbishop of Canterbury’s commissaries to carry out the enquiry.

In responding to the final report, Archbishop Justin has made the following statement:

“I would like to express my heartfelt thanks to not only the Commissaries for their care and concern in the course of carrying out this Visitation, but also to the survivors of abuse who have been able to share their experiences. The hurt and damage that has been done to them is something the Church can never ignore and I can only repeat what I have said before – that they should never have been let down by the people who ought to have been a source of trust and comfort and I want to apologise on behalf of the Church for pain and hurt they have suffered. I remain deeply grateful for their cooperation in the work of the Visitation.

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

Bishop Martin responds to the Archbishop’s Visitation report

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Diocese of Chichester

“We welcome the Final Report that brings the Archbishop’s Visitation to a formal conclusion. This is the moment for us to record our profound thanks to Dr Rowan Williams, who instituted the visitation while he was Archbishop, to the present Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev’d and Rt Hon Justin Welby, and to the Commissaries themselves, the Rt Rev’d John Gladwin and His Honour Judge Rupert Bursell QC.

“The Visitation has enabled us to comprehend the damage done to so many people’s lives. I hope that all victims and those affected recognise in the words of the Interim and Final Reports that their concerns have begun to be heard, their determination recognised, and their extraordinary courage honoured.

“We believe that there may be many more victims of abuse who have never come forward to report their experiences. We wish to reassure them that we will listen to and respond in any ways that are appropriate to a report of abuse by priests or Church workers.

“Finally, we welcome the attention drawn in the Interim and Final Reports to the scope of the Clergy Discipline Measure 2003. It is vital that our procedures engender trust and confidence among our partner agencies, among survivors and their families.”

Link to the Final Report

Link to the Archbishop of Canterbury’s statement

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

Diocese of Chichester child abusers ‘may have gone unrecognised’

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The crimes of some clergy who abused children in the Diocese of Chichester may have gone unrecognised, a report has revealed.

The document adds that some survivors of known abusers may still feel unable to come forward.

The report’s findings have prompted the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Reverend Justin Welby, to renew his apology to victims of clerical abuse.

He said the Anglican church could never ignore the “hurt and damage” committed.

Bishop John Gladwin and Rupert Bursell QC, the report’s authors, said the diocese had “moved forward a very long way” in recent months.

The document said the diocese had put “excellent” safeguarding practices in place, and was “committed” to preventing any further abuse and to responding effectively to the ongoing trauma of 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.

More church child abuse cases may yet to be uncovered

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

By Ben James

Further cases of child abuse involving the Church of England may yet to be uncovered, a report has found.

Research into the scandal-hit Diocese of Chichester has suggested that many victims may still feel unable to come forward and report their suffering.

The study was commissioned two years ago by the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams.

It followed various child abuse incidents in the diocese.

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.

Trial set for former West Palm Beach teacher accused in sex crimes

FLORIDA
Sun Sentinel

By Marc Freeman, Sun Sentinel
4:02 p.m. EDT, May 3, 2013

A former West Palm Beach private school teacher accused of sexually assaulting two 9-year-old students during the 2006-07 school year will stand trial Sept. 23, Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Stephen Rapp ordered Friday.

Stephen Jerome Budd, 51, will stay in Palm Beach County Jail until the trial, unless the court receives a new request for bail for the former fourth-grade teacher at Rosarian Academy.

Defense attorney Jason Weiss withdrew his motion seeking bond at a hearing Friday, after conferring with his client and Assistant State Attorney Jessica Kahn. Weiss said he had just received more information concerning the charges and needed to examine it.

Rapp also alerted the attorneys that family members, including nieces, were former or current students at the school but he wasn’t aware of any connection with the case.

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.

BREAKING: Cardinal Mahony presiding over confirmations at LA parish

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on May 3, 2013

Disgraced Cardinal Roger Mahony will be officiating confirmations this evening at a local Los Angeles parish, despite promises from the new Los Angeles archbishop that Mahony and another bishop involved in sex abuse and cover-up would be relieved from public duties.

We are so disappointed

Documents released in January showed that Mahony, who retired in 2011, personally managed the careers of dozens of child-molesting clerics in Los Angeles. They also showed that Mahony and other church officials covered up abuse, moved abusers from parish to parish, and thwarted efforts by law enforcement to investigate crimes and punish offenders.

In response the the exposure of the damning documents, Archbishop Jose Gomez said in a statement that Mahony would have no public duties in the Archdiocese. Days later, a church spokesperson said that Mahony was a Cardinal “in good standing.” …

Mahony is scheduled to perform the confirmations at SS Peter and Paul Church in Wilmington tonight at 7 pm.

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.

Bill Donohue, though completely wrong, is never wrong

NEW JERSEY
dotCommonweal

May 3, 2013
Posted by Mollie Wilson O’Reilly

When being constantly outraged and on the attack is how you make your living, you’re bound to get a little sloppy with the details now and then. We’ve seen before what happens when the Catholic League’s William A. Donohue, PhD, starts out with a complaint and then has trouble backing it up with actual evidence, and it isn’t pretty.

When it comes to the church’s sex-abuse crisis, Donohue’s got his reactions all set, regardless of the facts. Is a bishop being criticized for mishandling accusations against an abusive priest? The bishop must be defended; he’s done nothing wrong; the media (and/or leftist Catholics) are plainly out to get him.

Sometimes, though, the facts just don’t line up with Donohue’s interpretation. The recent case of Newark’s Archbishop John J. Myers and Fr. Michael Fugee was a tough one; to maintain that Myers was a good guy getting an unfair rap, Donohue was forced to play lawyer — a lawyer who doesn’t know what the word “or” means. Thus, as Mark Silk explained yesterday, Donohue resorted to insisting that the New Jersey Star-Ledger had smeared Myers by calling for his resignation “because he allegedly did not hold Fugee to the terms of the agreement. As will soon be disclosed,” Donohue said, “this accusation is patently false.” And therefore “the entire editorial board of the newspaper should resign immediately.”

But Donohue’s argument that the accusation was false rests on an obviously erroneous reading of the archdiocese’s court agreement to keep Fugee away from minors. Donohue insists that “the court agreement expressly allowed Father Fugee to have contact with minors, provided he was supervised.” Here’s what the court order actually says:

It is agreed and understood that the Archdiocese shall not assign or otherwise place Michael Fugee in any position within the Archdiocese that allows him to have any unsupervised contact with or to supervise or minister to any minor/child under the age of 18 or work in any position in which children are involved. This includes, but is not limited to, presiding over a parish, involvement with a youth group, religious education/parochial school, CCD, confessions of children, youth choir, youth retreats and day care.

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

Jury acquits former Walworth County pastor in sex assault reporting case

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A former pastor has been found not guilty of failing to report sexual assaults between young boys, clearing the Walworth County man of the final charges he faced, according to GazetteXtra.com.

Joseph Fultz resigned his position as pastor of the Grace Evangelical Free Church in Walworth when he was charged with five misdemeanor counts of not reporting child abuse in June 2011, according to the website of the Janesville Gazette.

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.

NB archbishop wants fair price for property sold to to pay sex abuse compensation

CANADA
Global News

MONCTON, N.B. – The archbishop of a Roman Catholic diocese in New Brunswick says it wants fair market value for properties it’s selling to help cover the costs of a five million dollar compensation package for people who allege they were sexually abused by priests.

The number of employees within the Moncton Catholic diocese will also be cut to 14 from 20.

Archbishop Valery Vienneau says the diocese will sell its office and a vacant piece of land.

Both are in Dieppe.

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.