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.

April 24, 2013

Fr. William Vatterott indicted on child porn charges

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK

ST. LOUIS (KSDK) – A federal grand jury indicted a St. Louis priest on child pornography charges Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Attorney Richard Callahan said.

According to court documents, Fr. William Vatterott was found to be in possession of the illicit materials between June 2010 and June 2011.

Two teens reported to the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 2011 that Fr. Vatterott engaged in inappropriate electronic communications with them. One teenager, who was 18-years-old at the time, also reported underage drinking and other undisclosed inappropriate behaviors. Neither teenager reported physical contact or solicitation of any kind.

Fr. Vatterott was placed on administrative leave after the incidents were reported. He had served as pastor at St. Cecilia Parish since January 2008, after serving as associate pastor at Holy Infant Parish in Ballwin.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Jerome Listecki releases letter after Mass of Atonement

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

April 24, 2013, by Katie DeLong

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — This week, Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki held a Mass of Atonement — a Mass that has become an annual event during which the church seeks forgiveness for clergy who have sexually abused children. Now, Listecki has released a letter following that Mass in which he discusses Child Abuse Awareness month and Safe Environment Week within the Archdiocese.

Archbishop Listecki’s letter reads:

Love One Another
April 23, 2013

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

This is Child Abuse Awareness month and this week is Safe Environment Week in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, where we pay special attention to the measures adopted over the past 10 years to ensure children are safe in our parishes and schools.

Last night, as a way of marking these events, I celebrated a Mass of Atonement, joining our prayers to the sacrificial act of Jesus, to pray for those who have suffered from clergy sexual abuse, for the community that carries the pain associated with their brothers and sisters, for the reform in the heart and mind of those clergy who have abused, but most importantly, for a sense of understanding that God’s love can accomplish a reconciliation in our lives and in our community.

In preparing for the Mass, which was hosted by St. John Vianney Parish in Brookfield, I began thinking about how our attention to Safe Environment is one of the good things that has come out of the evil that was perpetrated upon innocent children. The Safeguarding All of God’s Family program has provided training to more than 50,000 adults who have contact with our young people and, in addition, more than 100,000 children received safe environment education in their curriculum.

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

St. Louis priest indicted on child porn charge

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

By Robert Patrick rpatrick@post-dispatch.com 314-621-5154

ST. LOUIS • A St. Louis priest was indicted Wednesday on one federal child pornography charge, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.

Prosecutors say Father William F. Vatterott, 36, possessed child pornography between June 2010 and June 2011. The indictment accuses Vatterott of having at least two images of child porn on his computer; both were images of an unidentified nude boy.

Vatterott is expected to appear in federal court late this week or early next week, they said.

If convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison.

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

Judge Issues Opinion in Priest Sex-Abuse Appeal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Legal Intelligencer

By Amaris Elliott-Engel
The Legal Intelligencer

April 24, 2013

The Philadelphia judge who presided over the first trial in the country of a Catholic Church official charged with endangering the welfare of children abused by other priests said there was evidence that his motive was to perpetuate a system of protecting abusive priests over their sexual-abuse victims.

Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina, writing in a 236-page opinion required under procedural rules in the appeal of Monsignor William J. Lynn, said that Lynn “followed in his predecessors’ footsteps, perpetuating the system that he inherited.”

Lynn was responsible for reviewing allegations of sexual abuse involving priests as the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s secretary of clergy from 1992 until 2004.

For example, Sarmina cited the situation of Father Nicholas Cudemo, who Lynn knew had been accused of abusing at least nine different girls, and whom Lynn instructed to comply with restrictions on his ministry “’for the good of the church and the avoidance of scandal,”’ according to the opinion.

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

Pa. Judge Defends Church Aide’s Trial, Conviction

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
ABC News

By MARYCLAIRE DALE Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA April 25, 2013 (AP)

A Philadelphia judge is defending her decisions in the trial of the first Catholic Church official in the U.S. to be charged and convicted in the cover-up of the priest abuse scandal.

Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina argues Monsignor William Lynn lied to perpetuate a church cover-up of child sexual abuse. Her opinion explains some of her trial decisions, which Lynn plans to challenge on appeal.

The Legal Intelligencer first reported on the judge’s April 12 ruling on Wednesday.

Lynn was a longtime secretary for clergy. He was convicted of child endangerment and is serving a three- to six-year prison term.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Clogher singled out for failing to prevent child abuse in the past

IRELAND
Highland Radio

The border diocese of Clogher has been singled out for failing to prevent child abuse in the past.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church criticised the former bishop.

The Diocese consists of County Monaghan, much of County Fermanagh with parts of Counties Tyrone, and Donegal.

The reviewers said it was clear that in the past – opportunities to intervene and prevent abuse were consistently missed.

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

Clogher clerical abuse report: retired bishop accepts criticism over handling of allegations

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

The former Bishop of the cross-border Catholic diocese of Clogher Joseph Duffy has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour by priests there in a report published today.

A review by the National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC), the Catholic Church’s child protection watchdog, found that “opportunities for preventive interventions were consistently missed when concerns of abuse by clergy were highlighted in the past” in Clogher.

Bishop Duffy, a former spokesman for the Catholic bishops, led the diocese for 31 years until his retirement in 2010.

The NBSC review, published this morning, covered the period from January 1st, 1975. It found a line had been drawn “between the practice of this diocese today and some of the practice that existed previously”.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 child abuse: 187 allegations against 98 priests have led to zero convictions

IRELAND
The Journal

“I am one of the fortunate survivors to have succeeded in securing a criminal conviction against one of two Spiritan priests who sexually abused me,” writes campaigner Mark Vincent Healy.

THE DIOCESES OF Clogher, Elphin, Killala and Waterford join the infamous group of seven Catholic Church authorities, including Derry, Dramore and Limerick, where not one priest has been convicted for having committed an offence or offences against a child or young person despite numerous allegations since 1 January 1975.

From the 16 dioceses reviewed to date by the National Board for Safeguarding Children, there have been 187 allegations made in relation to 98 priests where there have been no convictions. This represents a third of the church authorities examined where not one priest was held to account. Following the publication of the third tranche of audits, today is yet another difficult day to bear for any survivor from these Catholic Church authorities.

It is hard to take in the sense of pain and suffering inflicted upon those brave enough to bring their case forward, to seek justice. Seven of the 16 dioceses sent their complainants away with nothing for their pain and suffering save an empty apology having re-traumatised them all over again.

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

Oakland priest holds vigil for church reform while on voluntary exile

OAKLAND (CA)
National Catholic Reporter

by Monica Clark | Apr. 24, 2013

Oakland, Calif. —
Every Sunday morning for the last three years, Tim Stier, former pastor of Corpus Christi Parish in Fremont, Cailf., has stood outside Oakland’s Cathedral of Christ the Light to call attention to the need for what he calls “structural reform” within the church. Sometimes he is alone, holding a large sign that reads, “Include the Excluded: Women, Gay Persons, Abuse Survivors.” At other times, a handful of supporters joins him in the two-hour vigil.

On April 14, the third anniversary of his demonstration, about two dozen adults gathered in solidarity with him. Some were members of the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests. Others belonged to Women of Magdala, a local group advocating for the ordination of women. There were also gay and lesbian Catholics and a few of his Fremont parishioners.

“It’s important to stand with him,” said Patty Leal, who has known Stier since he presided at her wedding 32 years ago. “I have such great respect for him. I know what it has cost him to follow his conscience.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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-bishop accepts mistakes …

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Ex-bishop accepts mistakes after watchdog criticises poor judgement in dealing with paedophile priests

24 April 2013

A retired Catholic bishop has admitted mistakes after a watchdog found opportunities to stop dangerous paedophile priests were consistently missed.

Joseph Duffy, who led the Diocese of Clogher on the border in Ireland for 31 years, conceded poor judgment among past hierarchy in dealing with clerical abuse allegations.

The damning review found one serial abuser had not been taken out of ministry but moved to a new parish and eventually sent overseas for therapy.

In a second case, auditors said it was unacceptable to allow a priest facing a credible abuse allegation to continue to minister.

“I accept the criticism in the review and regret that, in the past, the standard of managing some cases fell short of what is expected today,” Bishop Duffy 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.

Minnesota SOL Reform

WALTHAM (MA)
BishopAccountability.org

As of April 19, 2013, the Minnesota legislature appears close to passing the Child Victims Act (HF 681 [see also another web posting of HF 681] / SF 534). It would eliminate prospectively the civil statute of limitations for minors and provide a three-year window in which previously barred cases could be brought.

If passed into law, it will make Minnesota’s justice system accessible to adults who were sexually assaulted as children and result in the identification of sexual predators — including some who may be abusing children still.

Bills like the Child Victims Act give society another benefit that is seldom mentioned: they expose institutional wrong-doing. In Delaware, a similar law resulted ultimately in the release by the Catholic Diocese of Wilmington of 11,000 pages of formerly secret abuse files. In California, the San Diego diocese released 10,000 pages and the Los Angeles archdiocese, 12,000 pages – both disclosures the result of a law that freed victims of time restrictions. When victims have civil recourse, institutions are forced to account for their actions.

It is troubling that in Minnesota, some of those lobbying against the Child Victims Act have been involved in the very bureaucracy whose actions in abuse cases would be revealed if the bill passes. The bill faces active opposition from the Minnesota Religious Council. Three Council members are from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, including two – Rev. Kevin McDonough and former archdiocesan attorney Andrew Eisenzimmer – who worked for decades in the archdiocese to manage abuse cases. Their involvement in the Minnesota Religious Council effectively continues that effort.

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

Abuse survivor demands state inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah Stack and David Young– 24 April 2013

AN abuse survivor who alleges an uncle of the former Bishop of Clogher was one of his attackers has demanded a state inquiry into clerical sex crimes in Northern Ireland.

The Stormont Executive has established a statutory probe into abuse committed in state and church-run institutions, but its remit does not cover criminal acts committed by priests outside of children’s residential facilities.

Michael Connolly claims he was victimised for five years of his childhood in Donagh, Co Fermanagh, by parish priest Peter Duffy, who was later promoted to canon.

The deceased cleric was the uncle of the former Bishop of Clogher, Joseph Duffy, who was today heavily criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour of priests 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.

Ex-priest claims Australian Church hid sex abuse

MALTA/AUSTRALIA
Times of Malta

A Maltese man has blown the lid on the Australian Church by quitting the priesthood and claiming the Victorian Archdiocese has been deleting child sex abuse records.

Victor Buhagiar claims he “saw and heard” the Archbishop of Victoria order a secretary to turn off a recorder before discussing clerical sex abuse during a Church council meeting in April 2012.

He bowed out as a priest last January, saying his subsequent enquiries into the matter had led him to a metaphorical dead end.

“I believe there’s a devil in the hierarchy,” Mr Buhagiar has now told Australian investigative TV show Today Tonight.

“I suspect the recorder was turned off to create a black hole, so that investigators will…find nothing. Certain data is not being recorded in any way, shape or form.”

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

Abuse watchdog heads to Australia

AUSTRALIA/IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

24 April 2013

The head of the Catholic church watchdog into clerical abuse in Ireland is to head up a similar review panel in Australia, he has revealed.

Ian Elliott said he will leave his post in the summer after examining the records of 16 diocese and four religious orders.

The remaining 10 dioceses will be complete by the end of this year, he said, with the 100 plus orders and religious authorities examined by 2015.

“I have been invited to go work in Australia with the Catholic church,” he said. “They are interested in a review process and are learning from the Irish experience.”

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

IL- Alleged predator priest is sued; SNAP responds

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 24, 2013

Two men are suing the Chicago Catholic archdiocese and a former priest for alleged child sex crimes.

For the most part, only the most egregious child molesting clerics were defrocked in the 1970s, so we suspect that Fr. Baranowski assaulted many kids. We hope every single person who saw, suspected or suffered his crimes will find the courage to speak up, get help, expose wrongdoing, call police, and start healing.

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

Pfarrer wegen Kindesmissbrauchs vom Vatikan entlassen

DEUTSCHLAND
Neues

Veröffentlicht am Mittwoch, 24. April 2013 von Stefan Domeyer

Der wegen Kindesmissbrauch verurteilte Pfarrer Andreas L. ist nicht mehr Priester. Ein von der vatikanischen Glaubenskongregation durchgeführtes kirchenrechtliches Verfahren führte zu seiner Entlassung aus dem Klerikerstand. Dies teilte das Bistum Hildesheim mit.

Andreas L. wurde im Januar vorigen Jahres zu sechs Jahren Haft verurteilt. Das Landgericht Braunschweig sah es als erwiesen an, dass er drei Jungen über mehrere Jahre sexuell schwer missbraucht hat. An die strafrechtliche Verurteilung schloss sich ein kirchenrechtliches Verfahren gegen L. an. Das staatliche Urteil wurde zusammen mit den Unterlagen der bisherigen kirchlichen Ermittlungen an die Glaubenskongregation weitergereicht.

„Das entspricht den Vorgaben des Vatikans in Fällen von sexuellem Missbrauch“, erläutert Weihbischof Heinz-Günter Bongartz, Geschäftsführer des Bischöflichen Beraterstabes für Verdachtsfälle des sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Geistliche im Bistum Hildesheim. Das Urteil der Glaubenskongregation könne sich so auf die staatlichen Ermittlungen stützen.

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

‘Significant developments’ in child safeguarding in Diocese of Ferns

IRELAND
The Journal

[Diocese of Ferns]

A REPORT INTO child protection practices in the Diocese of Ferns, which was the subject of the Ferns Report into allegations of clerical sexual abuse, was published today.

The report was published by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI), as part of a review of safeguarding practice within all the Church authorities on the island of Ireland.

Criteria

The 2005 Ferns Inquiry Report was an official government inquiry into clerical sexual abuse allegations made against the Diocese of Ferns. One of the offenders was Fr Seán Fortune, who abused a large number of teenage boys. Fortune took his own life before his trial.

Today’s report found Ferns met 47 out of its 48 criteria fully, and one partially.

There are approximately 100,000 Catholic residents in the diocese, across 49 parishes. Its bishop, Bishop Denis Brennan, was installed on 1 March 2006

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

Clogher Diocese child sex abuse abuse report released

IRELAND
Fermanagh Herald

A report into how allegations of child sex abuse were handled in the Clogher Diocese has revealed opportunities were “consistently missed”.

The audit by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church revealed allegations were made against 13 priests since 1975.

The Clogher Diocese includes six Tyrone parishes: Fintona, Dromore, Trillick, Eskra, Clogher and Aghavea-Aghintaine (Fivemiletown/Brookeboro). The diocese also spans across Fermanagh, Monaghan, Donegal, Louth and Cavan.

Of the 13 priests subject to allegations, seven were dead at the date the review commence on November 7 2012. A total of 23 allegations were reported to An Garda Síochána and 22 allegations to the HSE since January 1 1975.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 continues investigation into priest accused of misconduct

SOUTH CAROLINA
Fox Carolina

By Casey Vaughn

GREENWOOD, SC (FOX Carolina) –
A man who told Greenwood County deputies he was touched by a priest 15 years ago has decided not to pursue charges, according to reports.

The Index-Journal reported Tuesday that the victim told deputies he did not want to further pursue the investigation.

The allegations against Father Hayden Vaverek made news in early March when the Catholic Diocese of Charleston released a statement saying he had been put on administrative leave after someone reported the misconduct.

The diocese reported that the misconduct occurred while Vaverek was pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Greenwood, but “no parishioners of that parish were involved in the reported allegation.” Diocesan officials said the sexual misconduct involved a minor and happened more than 15 years ago.

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

Abuse response was ‘often unsatisfactory’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Londonderry Sentinel

By Kevin Mullan
Published on 24/04/2013

OPPORTUNITIES to intervene following reports of clerical abuse in the cross-border Catholic Diocese of Clogher were consistently missed in the past, according to a newly-published report commissioned by Bundoran-born Bishop Liam McDaid.

The report carried out by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church (NBSCCC) at the request of Bishop McDaid who was ordained in 2010, was published on Wednesday (April 23).

Twenty-three allegations were made against 13 priests in the Diocese, which includes parts of Donegal, Tyrone and Fermanagh, since 1975. Three were still alive at the time of the review last November; two were convicted of offences against children; but one against whom an allegation had been made was never convicted of any offence.

Whilst acknowledging Bishop McDaid’s hard work ensuring good working relationships were maintained with safeguarding agencies in both jurisdictions of his diocese, the report does point to serious failings prior to his prelacy.

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

2 men sue Chicago archdiocese, allege priest molested them in ’60s

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY LEEANN SHELTON
Staff Reporter

Last Modified: Apr 22, 2013

Two men are suing the Chicago Archdiocese and a former priest, claiming he molested them during unsupervised overnight trips more than 50 years ago.

The plaintiffs — now both in their mid-60s — say they met then-priest Alexander Sylvester Baranowski when they were students at St. Wenceslaus grammar school in Chicago.

Both men say Baranowski molested them on separate overnight ministry trips to Springfield in 1961 and 1962, on which he would take only one student with him, according to the suit filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court.

They claim that on each trip, Baranowski feigned that the hotel had made a mistake, and that the only room available had only one bed, forcing them to share a bed with him, the suit said. The priest then sexually abused them while they were sleeping, both men claim.

Church officials have since substantiated allegations against Baranowski, accusing him of sexual misconduct involving minors. He resigned in 1975 and was stripped of his priesthood a year later, according to the archdiocese’s website.

The men blame the archdiocese for failing to act, claiming church officials knew about the alleged abuse but concealed it from their families, law enforcement and other Catholics to protect the church’s reputation.

A spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Chicago said Monday night that officials have not yet seen the suit and declined to comment.

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

Don Mayo – a sexual abuse victim’s battle to be believed

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Janet Fife-Yeomans
From:The Daily Telegraph
April 25, 2013

ALL child sex abuse victim Don Mayo wants is justice – but his story is so confronting, the Victims Compensation Tribunal at first said it could never have happened.

Now a well-known radio announcer, Mr Mayo was repeatedly raped as a boy by four brothers and a lay teacher at Christian Brothers College, Burwood.

Like most victims of childhood abuse, it took him decades before he could talk about it and, by then, his life “had fallen apart”.

Now he is one of the thousands pinning their hopes on the royal commission into institutionalised child sex abuse to provide answers.

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

‘Unacceptable delays and unsatisfactory responses’ to abuse concerns in Clogher

IRELAND
The Journal

THE NATIONAL BOARD for Safeguarding Children’s review into child protection practices in the Clogher diocese was highly critical of past responses to abuse allegations.

However, investigators drew a clear line between the past and current systems.

The report said that from the cases examined, “it was clear that opportunities for preventive interventions were consistently missed when concerns of abuse by clergy were highlighted in the past”.

In one particular case, there was an “unacceptable delay” in taking action against a priest and removing him from all ministry following a “credible allegation”.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 safeguarding report on Galway diocese makes 9 recommendations

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

Nine recommendations have been issued in a report into safeguarding practice in the diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora.

The 28 page document issued by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church examines seven standards.

It’s based on case material made available by Bishop Martin Drennan along with interviews with key personnel who contribute to safeguarding within the diocese.

The review references practice under the leadership of Bishop Drennan, Bishop McLoughlin and Bishop Casey.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 hierarchy ‘failed to stop’ child sex abuse by priests in Clogher

IRELAND
The Guardian (UK)

[Diocese of Clogher]

Henry McDonald, Ireland correspondent
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 24 April 2013

The Catholic hierarchy failed to step in and prevent ongoing child sex abuse by priests in a Northern Ireland diocese, one of seven internal church reports has admitted.

Irish Catholicism’s National Board for Safeguarding Children found on Wednesday that there was “an unacceptable delay” in taking action against one priest after what it describes as “a credible allegation” in the Clogher diocese, which covers the border counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh as well as Cavan and Donegal in the Irish Republic.

Among the cases of system failure cited by the report is of a priest suspected of being a serial abuser who was not removed from the ministry but was instead first moved to another parish in the diocese and then sent overseas.

He was eventually extradited back to Ireland after several years but died before he could be brought before a court, the report concluded.

The report, which does not name any priest involved, says there were complaints against 13 clergy in the diocese over four decades. Two of the priests from Clogher were subsequently jailed.

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

Retired bishop criticised over handling of child abuse allegations

IRELAND
Irish Times

The former Bishop of the cross-border Catholic diocese of Clogher Joseph Duffy has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour by priests there in a report published today.

A review by the National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC), the Catholic Church’s child protection watchdog, found that “opportunities for preventive interventions were consistently missed when concerns of abuse by clergy were highlighted in the past” in Clogher.

Bishop Duffy, a former spokesman for the Catholic bishops, led the diocese for 31 years until his retirement in 2010.

The NBSC review, published this morning, covered the period from January 1st, 1975. It found a line had been drawn “between the practice of this diocese today and some of the practice that existed previously”.

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

Abuse allegations against three active priests in Galway diocese

IRELAND
The Journal

THE REVIEW by the Church’s national board for the safeguarding of children has revealed that abuse allegations have been made against three of the 63 priests who are currently on active duty in the Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora.

The review of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (PDF) is broadly positive of safeguarding procedures in the diocese, in a report which examines its performance under three different bishops since 1975.

While there is some criticism of how complaints had previously been managed in the diocese, the appraisal of procedures since the appointment of Bishop Martin Drennan in 2005.

Bishop Drennan this morning told Galway Bay FM that the allegations against the three active priests had been discussed with the Gardaí and HSE, and it was considered that the allegations were not significant enough to warrant removing them from duty.

The priests are not named in the Safeguarding Board’s report.

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

Killala diocese records only a small number of abuse allegations

IRELAND
Irish Independent

[Diocese of Killala]

Caroline Crawford– 24 April 2013

THE Review of Safeguarding Practice within the Diocese of Killala found only a small number of allegations of abuse.

The report revealed that allegations were made against three priests in the Diocese with only four allegations received.

Three of these allegations were reported to gardai while only one was reported to the HSE. No convictions resulted from the allegations.

Two of the priests against whom allegations were made are still alive. The third was deceased at the time the allegation was made anonymously.

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Rosarian Academy former teacher Stephen Budd arrest prompts town hall to

FLORIDA
WPTV

[with video]

By: Jeff Skrzypek

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Stunned by the aftermath of sex crime allegations involving an ex-teacher at Rosarian Academy, parents and teachers got advice from experts on how to keep their children safe.

In early April, former Rosarian Academy teacher Stephen Budd was arrested for allegedly forcing several students into sex acts.

Weeks later, Rosarian Academy parents like Eliezer Hernandez sat and listened on Tuesday to a panel who hoped to prevent future sex crimes involving children.

“I mean what do you say? We’re at a loss for what we say to our six-year-old,” said Hernandez, who has both a six-year-old and a two-year-old at Rosarian Academy.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office along with the Center for Missing and Exploited Children tried to help parents on Tuesday to prevent their kids from trusting the wrong people.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Jerome Listecki suggests church erred in Wauwatosa priest case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

April 23, 2013

Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki issued a letter Tuesday suggesting the Catholic Church erred in its handling of a Wauwatosa priest suspended from leading two parishes and schools after a teacher reported what she considered inappropriate contact with a child in March.

Listecki said Father Robert Marsicek’s history of boundary issues involving children called into question the decision to leave him in ministry after it was learned in May 2012 that he was being investigated for alleged sexual abuse of two boys in the late 1980s to 1990s in California.

“While our decisions followed the letter of the law in accordance with existing policies, I am not sure they followed the spirit of the law with regard to our pledge to be vigilant in keeping children safe,” Listecki said in his weekly letter to Catholics in southeastern Wisconsin.

That decision, Listecki said, undermines the progress the church has made in addressing its sex abuse scandal and working to keep children safe in their parishes and schools.

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

Fresh abuse allegations as diocese reports launched

IRELAND
Newstalk

Seven reports have been released today which exmained child protection services in 6 dioceses and one order

Galway, Waterford, Clogher, Ferns, Kilalla and Elphin as well as the Society of African Missions religious order have all been subject to the reviews.

Out of the 7, the report into the Diocese of Ferns, is severely critical of two former Bishops in the Diocese for their handling of child sexual abuse cases.

The report by the National Bord for Safeguarding Children shows 100 allegations of child sexual abuse were made in the diocese since 1975.

3 priests have been convicted of committing an offence against a child in that time.

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Watchdog criticises former bishop as Diocese of Elphin commended

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

[3rd Tranche of NBSCCCI Reviews – April 2013]

A watchdog review of the Diocese of Clogher, which straddles the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, found opportunities to prevent attacks in the past were consistently missed when concerns were raised.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland said, however, that a line should be drawn between how the diocese used to do its business and the rules in place today.

Bishop Joseph Duffy led the diocese for about 30 years until his retirement in 2010.

The report into Clogher is one of seven being released today by the watchdog.

Bishop Liam McDaid was ordained as Bishop of Clogher on July 25, 2010.

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Ex-bishop criticised over claims

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

A former bishop has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour of priests.

A watchdog review of the Diocese of Clogher, which straddles the border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland, found opportunities to prevent attacks in the past were consistently missed when concerns were raised.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland said, however, that a line should be drawn between how the diocese used to do its business and the rules in place today.

Bishop Joseph Duffy led the diocese for about 30 years until his retirement in 2010.

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Christian Pfeiffer: Mehr Gewalt in freikirchlichen Familien

DEUTSCHLAND
nw-news

Bielefeld (sim). In freikirchlichen Familien erleiden Kinder nach Untersuchungen des Kriminologen Christian Pfeiffer mehr Gewalt als in anderen Familien. Je stärker christlich-fundamentalistische Eltern im Glauben verankert seien, desto mehr prügelten sie, sagte Pfeiffer beim Deutschen Präventionstag in Bielefeld.

In katholischen und evangelischen Elternhäusern sei es umgekehrt: “Je religiöser sie sind, desto seltener üben sie Gewalt aus.” Grundlage der Befunde sind Befragungen des Kriminologischen Forschungsinstituts Niedersachsen in den Jahren 2008 bis 2011 unter 23.500 deutschen Jugendlichen aus Familien, die einer christlichen Gemeinde angehören. Pfeiffer war Schlussredner des Präventionstags der Deutschen Stiftung für Verbrechensverhütung und Straffälligenhilfe.

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Kirche verschleppt Missbrauchs-Aufklärung

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

Panorama 3 – 23.04.2013 21:15 Uhr

Offen und schonungslos gegenüber sich selbst wollte die katholische Kirche Missbrauchsfälle aufklären. Doch bis heute leiden die Opfer unter dem Schweigen der Kirche.

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Opfer und Betroffene sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Angehörige der katholischen Kirche im Bistum Trier – ein Blog von Claudia Adams

DEUTSCHLAND
MissBiT

NDR: “Das heißt, Sie haben persönlich mit Leuten gesprochen, die Ihnen bestätigt haben, dass in den Kirchenarchiven geschreddert worden ist?” Prof. Dr. Schüller: “Das kann ich bestätigen, ja.”

Professor Dr. Schüller war lange Kirchenanwalt im Bistum Limburg. Nur mit Hilfe der Akten konnte er einzelne Missbrauchsfälle aufarbeiten.

Prof. Dr. Schüller: “Sie sind deswegen so wichtig, weil, wenn der Bestand vollständig erhalten ist, man sehr genau rekonstruieren kann, wie auf eine Anzeige reagiert wurde und welche Maßnahmen ergriffen wurden. Und dann kann man das abgleichen. Insofern ist das sehr gut um zu rekonstruieren, ob man vertuschend oder sachgerecht damit umgegangen ist.”

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Mauert das Franz-Sales-Haus? WDR-Filmteam ausgesperrt

DEUTSCHLAND
Helmut Jacob

Derzeit erstellt der WDR Bonn eine Serie mit ehemaligen Heimkindern, die während ihres Heimaufenthaltes in den Jahren von 1960 bis 1975 schwer misshandelt und sexuell missbraucht wurden. Durch die Weigerung der Pressesprecherin des Franz Sales Hauses, Valeska Ehlert, dem WDR zu gestatten auf dem Gelände des Heimes zu drehen, liegt die Vermutung nahe, dass die Einrichtung an einer Aufklärung der schweren Verwürfe nicht interessiert ist.

Alle ehemaligen Heimkinder und Betroffene von Kinder- und Jugendheimen in Deutschland sind eingeladen am Montag, den 22. April, gegen 11.15 Uhr vor dem Franz Sales Haus, Essen, (Haupteingang), Steelerstraße 261 durch ihre Anwesenheit Solidarität zu zeigen und die Filmaufnahmen zu unterstützen.

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Serbien: Sex, Lügen und Skandale

SERBIEN
Die Presse

Von Selbstbereicherung über Verherrlichung von Kriegsverbrechen bis zu Kindesmissbrauch: Bischöfe der serbisch-orthodoxen Kirche im Zwielicht.

Alter schützt offenbar auch betagte Kirchenfürsten nicht vor fatalen Fehltritten: Seit Tagen berichten serbische und bosnische Medien über anzügliche Videoaufnahmen des sogenannten „Teufelsbischofs“, Vasilije Kačavenda: Sie sollen den 74-jährigen, optisch ziemlich streng wirkenden Bischof des serbisch-orthodoxen Bistums von Zvornik-Tuzla in Bosnien beim Austausch intimer Zärtlichkeiten mit vermutlich Minderjährigen zeigen.

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Bishop of Chichester apologises to abuse victim

UNITED KINGDOM
Chichester People

The Bishop of Chichester has this month apologised to a child abuse victim in the US

In a letter of apology to a victim, who now lives in the US, Dr Martin Warner, the Bishop of Chichester who took up the post last year, said there had been “deception and cover-up” at his diocese and conceded there had been an “ineptitude and irresponsible lack of professionalism.”

Former choirboy Gary Johnson, who has waved his anonymity, and his older brother, both from Eastbourne, were abused by Roy Cotton, who worked for the Diocese of Chichester, during the 1970s and 1980s.

The diocese is embroiled in a number of historical clerical sex abuse claims and its child protection policies are the subject of an official inquiry set up by the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams.

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Bishop of Chichester apologises for abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
The Portsmouth News

THE Bishop of Chichester has said there has been ‘deception and cover-up’ which has been at the centre of historic clerical sex scandals.

In a personal letter of apology to a child abuse victim, Dr Martin Warner conceded there has been ‘ineptitude and irresponsible lack of professionalism’ at the Diocese of Chichester in West Sussex.

The diocese has faced historic child abuse claims, and its child protection policies are the subject of an official inquiry set up in 2011 by the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams.

Dr Warner wrote the letter earlier this month to a victim who suffered abuse as a boy in the 1970s and 1980s at the hands of paedophile Anglican clergyman Roy Cotton, who died in 2006.

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St. James teacher put on leave in Shawnee sex investigation

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star

April 22

By TONY RIZZO
The Kansas City Star

Catholic school administrators placed science teacher Jeremy J. Way, 42, on administrative leave as soon as they learned Shawnee police were investigating him for an alleged sex crime, officials said Monday.

Way, who teaches at St. James Academy in Lenexa and coaches the school’s Science Olympiad team, was charged Friday with criminal sodomy and electronic solicitation of a child older than 14 but younger than 16, court records show. The incident involving a 14-year-old boy allegedly happened between Oct. 1 and Feb. 18, according to the Johnson County criminal complaint.

Way, who lives in Shawnee, posted a $100,000 bond and was released from custody pending his first court appearance on April 30. He declined to comment when reached by phone Sunday .

Shawnee police notified school officials of the investigation Thursday, according to a spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas. School officials were told that the incident did not involve a student, the spokeswoman said.

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Three priests still working in Galway because child sex abuse allegations ‘insufficient’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

[Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora]

By Caroline Crawford– 24 April 2013

THREE priests against whom allegations were made remain in ministry in the Galway diocese.

Galway Bishop, Martin Drennan said the three men where not removed from ministry because the concerns expressed were “not of a sufficient nature” to warrant their removal from ministry.

“The HSE and the gardai advised us that what was being done was sufficient in terms of monitoring,” he told Galway Bay fm.

The review of the Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora covers files from 1975 up to 2010. It was carried out in January of this year and took three months to complete.

It revealed that allegations were made against 14 priests between the dates covered. The dioceses had reviewed 38 allegations over that period. No priests have been named in the report.

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Child safeguarding body publishes report on Galway diocese

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

A report on the diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora has now been published.

The 28 page document issued by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church examines seven standards.

It’s based on case material made available by Bishop Martin Drennan along with interviews with key personnel who contribute to safeguarding within the diocese.

Galway Bay fm news notes the report references practice under the leadership of Bishop Drennan, Bishop McLoughlin and Bishop Casey. …

It notes that three priests against whom an allegation has been made are still in ministry.

It also records that one priest has been convicted of having committed an offence against a child or young person in the period since January 1975.

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Diocese of Clogher has been singled out for failing to prevent child abuse in the past

IRELAND
Highland Radio

The border diocese of Clogher has been singled out for failing to prevent child abuse in the past.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church criticised the former bishop.

The Diocese consists of County Monaghan, much of County Fermanagh with parts of Counties Tyrone, and Donegal.

The reviewers said it was clear that in the past – opportunities to intervene and prevent abuse were consistently missed.

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Watchdog criticises former bishop as Diocese of Elphin commended

IRELAND
Breaking News

A former bishop has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour of priests.

A watchdog review of the Diocese of Clogher, which straddles the border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland, found opportunities to prevent attacks in the past were consistently missed when concerns were raised.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland said, however, that a line should be drawn between how the diocese used to do its business and the rules in place today.

Bishop Joseph Duffy led the diocese for about 30 years until his retirement in 2010.

The report into Clogher is one of seven being released today by the watchdog.

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Clogher report: Opportunities ‘missed’ to tackle child abuse

IRELAND
BBC News

Opportunities for the Catholic Church to step in and tackle child abuse in the Clogher diocese were consistently missed, according to a report.

The church’s National Board for Safeguarding Children has published its report as part of the ongoing audits of dioceses across Ireland.

It said claims were made against 13 priests in the diocese over almost four decades.

Two of the priests were subsequently jailed.

The report said that under the current Bishop of Clogher, Dr Liam McDaid, the issue of safeguarding children is effectively prioritised in the diocese.

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Audit into how children are being safeguarded in Clogher diocese to be launched

IRELAND
Impartial Reporter

Sarah Saunderson
Published 24 Apr 2013

An audit into the practices undertaken to safeguard children in the Clogher Diocese is to be launched this morning in Monaghan.

The Catholic Bishop of Clogher, the Very Rev. Bishop Liam MacDaid, will address a press conference on the report later this morning.

The Clogher report — which is expected to detail any incidence of allegations against priests in the diocese from the mid-70s — is part of the third tranche of similar reports by the National Board for the Safeguarding of Children in the Catholic Church (NBSCCI).

It comes after seven Safeguarding Review Reports reports were published for dioceses and religious congregations last September.

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Bishop Drennan says report shows good safeguarding of children in Galway Diocese

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

[Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora]

April 24, 2013

Bishop Drennan says report shows good safeguarding of children in Galway Diocese

The Bishop of Galway Martin Drennan says a report to be officially published later today shows good safeguarding practice in the diocese and is a very significant day for the church.

The report is one of six nationwide to be issued by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church.

It examines files from 1975 to 2010 and has been three months in the making with the main field work completed in January.

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Report highly critical of retired Clogher bishop

IRELAND
RTE News

[Diocese of Clogher]

Retired bishop of Clogher Joseph Duffy consistently missed opportunities to prevent clergy from sexually abusing children, according to the Catholic Church’s watchdog.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children has published audits of several dioceses.

It states that in one particular case in Clogher, there was an unacceptable delay in taking action against a priest and removing him from all ministry following receipt of a credible allegation.

Another priest suspected of multiple abuse was transferred to another parish and eventually was sent overseas for therapeutic help.

Eventually, he was extradited to the Republic from the United States but died before he could be brought before the courts.

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Can The New Pope Fix The Sexual Scandals of The Church?

UNITED STATES
The Legal Examiner

Mike Bryant

There is an easy answer and that is “yes”. Jeff Anderson took a look at this topic over at his must read blog based on a CNN Interview:

There are seven concrete measures the future pope can and must implement to bring about change within the clerical culture on child sexual abuse. First, disclose the names of all the clerics credibly accused and known to the Vatican worldwide along with the country, state, and parish or school where the offenses were allegedly committed. More than a dozen bishops have already created such lists and made them public.

Second, publicly disclose all of the documents within the Vatican’s archives that pertain to reports of child sex abuse, the Vatican’s response to it, and the hierarchy’s role in the abuse. The church must begin to make amends to survivors, and exposing the secrets and concealment contained in such documents is a critical step.

Third, revise church canon law and Vatican protocols so that no secrecy surrounds child sex abuse. Secrecy is toxic, and in it, child abuse flourishes. Fourth, require each bishop and church official to report clergy accused of sexual abuse of minors to law enforcement.

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3rd Tranche of NBSCCCI Reviews – April 2013

IRELAND
National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church

NBSCCCI Media Statement on the Third Tranche of Safeguarding Reviews

Clear evidence of steady progress

The Third Tranche of the Reviews of Safeguarding practice across the Catholic Church were released today by the seven Church authorities involved. They were the dioceses of Killalla, Elphin, Wexford and Lismore, Galway, Clogher, and Ferns. They also included the Society of Missions to Africa. This brings the total of Church authorities reviewed to date by this process to 20.

“It is gratifying to report clear evidence of steady progress in developing robust safeguarding structures in all these authorities,” said Ian Elliott the CEO of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI).

“The overall picture is a very positive one with the vast majority of the criteria used to assess performance against the Review standards as being fully met.”

He went on to state that this was very encouraging progress and represented a significant improvement on past performance.

“In particular, I want to thank and congratulate the army of volunteers who regularly give their time to supporting the safeguarding of children in the Church. Their efforts have been nothing short of heroic”, said Elliott.

Downloads

Diocese of Clogher

Diocese of Elphin

Diocese of Ferns

Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora

Diocese of Killala

Society of African Missions (SMA)

Diocese of Waterford

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Allegations of abuse against three more priests in ‘notorious’ Ferns diocese

IRELAND
Irish Independent

[Diocese of Ferns]

Cormac McQuinn– 24 April 2013

A REVIEW of child safeguarding practices in a Catholic Diocese notorious for sex abuse by priests has found that it is now complying with standards required for the protection of children and procedures for reporting abuse.

However, the review also revealed that allegations of abuse have been made against three more priests in the Diocese, who weren’t included in the damning 2005 Ferns Report into child abuse at the Co Wexford-based Diocese.

Church-funded watchdog, The National Body for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI), found that the Diocese of Ferns was fully compliant with six out of seven standards for protecting children.

And it found that the Diocese was mostly compliant with guidelines for the management of child abuse allegations.

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April 23, 2013

Archbishop speaks after recent removal of priest from duties

WISCONSIN
WISN

[with video]

BROOKFIELD, Wis. —Milwaukee’s archbishop delivered a mass of atonement Monday night at St. John Vianney, focusing on the victims of clergy sex abuse.

This was the first time Archbishop Jerome Listecki has spoken on removing the Rev. Bob Marsicek from his duties last month.

Listecki delivered his fourth Mass of atonement recognizing the church needs to bring reconciliation for priest sex abuse. He said the church’s change in policy is working.

“There is no one operating in the archdiocese today with a substantiated allegation of child sex abuse. There just isn’t,” Listecki said.

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Maltese priest resigns, becomes whistleblower in Australia

MALTA/AUSTRALIA
Times of Malta

A Maltese has quit the priesthood in Victoria, Australia, claiming the Victorian Archdiocese is continuing to hide child abuse cases.

Victor Buhagiar, a priest for 25 years, told Today Tonight that it had become impossible to continue after he found out the Church was deleting records relating to child sexual abuse.

During one meeting, he said, he heard the Archbishop telling the secretary to turn off the recorder.

“As soon as the recording was turned off, the Archbishop started talking about the sex abuse situation.

“I suspect the recorder was turned off to minimise the possibility of investigators finding evidence that can be useful to the inquiry, or to the Royal Commission; to create like a black hole, an empty space that when the investigators try to see how the situation evolved during the last 10 years or so, they seem to find nothing.”

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Man drops sex charge against Upstate priest

SOUTH CAROLINA
WYFF

GREENWOOD, S.C. —Greenwood County deputies say a man who said he was inappropriately touched by priest 15 years ago has decided not to pursue charges because he thinks the Catholic church’s punishment will be enough.

An incident report obtained says the victim told investigators he met the priest while he was a student at St. Joseph’s High School in Greenville.

Deputies said the man told them the suspect rubbed him and only focused on sins related to sex during confession. The man also told investigators the priest spent the night with him on occasion.

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Calgary bishop supports priest’s defamation lawsuit

CANADA
CBC News

Bishop Fred Henry testified in a Calgary courtroom Tuesday in support of a priest who is suing an Indian man for defamation.

Father Antonio Rodrigues, a parish priest at St. Bernadette’s Church in southeast Calgary, has accused a man in India of spreading allegations that the priest molested a 13-year-old girl.

Ten years ago, the girl who made the accusation in India recanted her statement, telling local police she had lied. The case was dropped.

The priest now alleges a personal battle has led to a lawyer overseas, named Aires Rodrigues, continuing to spread the story in internet postings and emails to Calgary school and church officials.

Antonio Rodrigues is seeking $600,000 in damages. The two men share the same last name but are not related.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Patrick Henry O’Liddy

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: O’Liddy was a priest of the Missouri Province of the Society of Jesus, ordained in 1990. He took a leave of absence in February 1999 and, in August of that year, was caught sending lewd photos to a 14 year-old girl. Investigators posed as the girl and arranged for a rendezvous with O’Liddy. He was arrested when he showed up and charged with attempted sexual assault of a minor. O’Liddy pleaded guilty and was sentenced to ten years’ probation and 200 hours of community service. He left the priesthood after his sentencing.

Ordained: 1990

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Victim refuses to pursue charges

SOUTH CAROLINA
Index-Journal

By SCOTT J. BRYAN

An alleged victim of sexual misconduct of a minor by a Catholic priest will not pursue criminal charges, a Greenwood County Sheriff’s Office report released Monday indicated.

The report, filed by the GCSO’s investigations unit, said the 32-year-old Simpsonville victim, who now lives in New York, signed a criminal investigation waiver, indicating “he did not want to further pursue the investigation.”

GCSO investigator Kenny Downing said any adult can sign a waiver not to pursue charges. Minors cannot; they must have a parent or guardian’s signature.

The allegation stemmed from a meeting the GCSO had with Diocese of Charleston investigator Paul Buceti, who met with investigators March 8.

On March 10, the Diocese of Charleston issued a release stating Father Hayden Vaverek was placed on administrative leave and had his priestly faculties withdrawn after “an allegation of sexual misconduct of a minor dating back more than 15 years.”

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SC man won’t pursue charges against priest

SOUTH CAROLINA
The Item

Associated Press

Greenwood County deputies say a man who said he was inappropriately touched by priest 15 years ago has decided not to pursue charges because he thinks the Catholic church’s punishment will be enough.

An incident report obtained by The Index-Journal of Greenwood ( http://bit.ly/17Vap42) said the victim told investigators he met the priest while he was a student at St. Joseph’s High School in Greenville.

Deputies say the victim told them the suspect rubbed him and only focused on sins related to sex during confession. The victim also told investigators the priest spent the night with him on occasion.

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Back from Rome, priest on child-sex charges

AUSTRALIA
Sunbury & Macedon Ranges Weekly

By DAN OAKES, The Age
April 23, 2013,

THE former principal of a Catholic school in Sunbury has been charged with child-sex offences stretching back almost 40 years after police negotiated the man’s return from Rome with the Catholic Church.

Police have hailed the arrest of Father Julian Fox as ‘‘a breakthrough in co-operation between the Victoria Police and the Catholic Church’’.

The 67-year-old went to the police crime command headquarters at St Kilda Road and was charged with 10 offences, including buggery, indecent assault and common-law assault, allegedly committed in Sunbury and Ferntree Gully between 1976 and 1985.

Police said they had been negotiating with the Church since July over the priest’s return. He has been bailed to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on Friday.

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Message from Bishop McGrath stresses protection of children

CALIFORNIA
The Valley Catholic

Dear Friends,
As we observe “Child Abuse Prevention Month,” we are reminded, as with so many other annual observances, that what we observe is never only for a day, or even a month or a year. Just as in May and June we celebrate Mother’s Day and Father’s Day, hopefully not neglecting our parents for the rest of the year, so during April, we highlight our constant vigilance and commitment to the protection of our children, indeed of all children.

Awareness is key to these efforts, for each of us must be prepared to recognize signs of abuse, of neglect, and of bullying wherever children are present: at home, at school and at play. Our Office for the Protection of Children and Vulnerable Adults is constantly offering training for adults and children to do all that we can to ensure a safe environment, especially for the most vulnerable. We are partners with other agencies that are willing to share their resources as we work collaboratively to prevent all forms of abuse.

Each of you who are reading this letter can be an agent for good in this commitment that we share. I encourage you and your families in all of our parishes and schools to learn more about the signs of abuse – whether physical or emotional – and never to be afraid of coming forward to the proper authorities so that, in the words of the Lord, “not one hair on their heads” will be harmed.
As we celebrate the Resurrection of the Lord in this Easter Season, may each of us redouble our efforts in awareness and prevention of child abuse, knowing that God wants for us only what is good. Please know that you are all in my prayers.

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Sex abuse news gets worse for Mahony

UNITED STATES
U.S. Catholic

By Bryan Cones

It should be fairly obvious that there have been few “white hats” in the bishops’ response to the sex abuse crisis, but as time goes by, one bishop, retired Roger Mahony of Los Angeles, seems to have no hat at all. Today’s story at the National Catholic Reporter, detailing Mahony’s rejection of the original forms issued by the John Jay researchers, notes that Mahony objected that the John Jay researchers had no understanding of “ecclesiastical culture”–by which he must have meant the deference expected by local bishops in running “their” dioceses.

We can hope that Mahony’s objections, lodged 10 years ago, would not be repeated by current bishops, but recent news about a Joliet priest who had credible accusations of inappropriate behavior with a minor as early as 1986 but was not removed from ministry for a further 20 years, gives one pause. The claim made by Joliet diocesan spokesman James Dwyer that then-Bishop Joseph Imesch “did sit down with [the priest] and tell him sternly, ‘This is wrong. You can’t do stuff like this,'” is a sign of how out of touch the bishop had become. (The priest in question, William Virture [!!!], had taken a 10-year-old to an abandoned quarry, along with two six packs of beer; when police arrived, he fled, only to be arrested but released after the boy’s mother had said she had given permission for Virtue to take the boy swimming. I’m glad the bishop was “stern” in his warning.)

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Bishop of Chichester admits child abuse cover-up

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The Bishop of Chichester has admitted to a former choirboy, abused as a child by an Anglican priest in East Sussex, that there was a cover-up.

Gary Johnson and his older brother, from Eastbourne, were abused by Roy Cotton, who worked for the Diocese of Chichester, in the 1970s and 1980s.

In a private letter of apology to Mr Johnson, Dr Martin Warner wrote: “There has been deception and cover-up here.”

Welcoming the letter, Mr Johnson said: “I’ve been taken seriously at last.”

He said: “It’s given me some semblance of humanity. I’ve been validated, and I’ve been met at a level where I don’t feel like a victim or a survivor.

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Bishop comes to the aid of fellow priest

CANADA
CTV

[with video]

Michael Franklin, CTV Calgary
Published Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Bishop Fred Henry attended court on Tuesday, adamantly defending one of his parish priests against allegations of child molestation proven false almost ten years ago.

Henry testified in the defamation case by a Catholic priest against a lawyer from India who has been posting articles online claiming that he is a danger to children.

Father Newton Rodrigues was working in India at the time he was accused of molesting a 13-year-old girl.

Bishop Fred Henry was in court on Tuesday to testify in support of Catholic priest who is fighting a defamation case involving charges that were proven false ten years ago.

There was an ensuing investigation by the church and by authorities but was eventually exonerated of the charges

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Slachtoffers misbruik boos op Rooms-Katholieke kerk

NEDERLAND
RTV Oost

Misbruikte slachtoffers van een oud-pastoor in Albergen zijn boos op Kardinaal Eijk.

Hoewel de geestelijk leider van de Katholieke kerk vorig jaar september beloofde om de slachtoffers snel schadeloos te stellen, hebben zij nog steeds geen vergoeding gehad. De advocate van de slachtoffers uit Albergen heeft begrip voor de onvrede, maar volgens haar wil de kerk alle slachtoffers in héél Nederland ineens betalen en duurt het daarom zo lang.

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Kirche verschleppt Missbrauchs-Aufklärung

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

von Eva Lodde & Brid Roesner

Die ersten Kindheitserinnerungen von Mario Baltes haben nichts Unbeschwertes: Es sind Erinnerungen an Schläge, an dunkle Keller, an versalzenes Essen.

Er wächst in einem Kinderheim in Eschweiler auf. Geführt von Nonnen. Und schließlich, als er fünf Jahre alt ist, wird es noch schlimmer. Der Missbrauch fängt an: “Die Nonne hatte oben im ersten Stock ein Zimmer. An beiden Seiten Türen, die zu den Schlafsälen hingingen. (…) Die Nonne hat dann freie Auswahl gehabt. (…) Teilweise sogar zwei oder drei Jungs gleichzeitig, die dabei waren und sie alle anfassen mussten oder sie hat sie dann nach und nach geholt.”

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Frank Oude Geerdink verzucht: Nog steeds geen geld

NEDERLAND
RTV Oost

Hij schudt meewarig z’n hoofd: “Tsjongejonge…wat een bende.” Het zonlicht dringt fel door in de woonkeuken van Albergenaar Frank Oude Geerdink. Hij neemt een slok van z’n koffie. Ondanks beloftes van de kerkleiding, nu zo’n half jaar geleden, wachten hij en vijf andere voormalige slachtoffers van een vroegere pastoor, op genoegdoening.

Oude Geerdink: “Ik hoor het Kardinaal Eijk nog zeggen in september vorig jaar tijdens een persoonlijk onderhoud in een lokale horecagelegenheid: Jullie worden snel schadeloos gesteld.” Inmiddels zijn zeven maanden verstreken en is er veel correspondentie over en weer. Maar er is nog geen geld.

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Diocesan Review Board assists with advising bishop on sexual abuse allegations of priests, deacons

INDIANA
Today’s Catholic News

By Ann Carey

The Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend has several important committees and/or boards that assist Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades in keeping the diocese running smoothly. One of the most crucial boards is one that many people don’t know much about because it conducts its business quietly in order to safeguard the privacy of the people and issues it handles.

In 2005, the U.S. Bishops approved a “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People” that directed the establishment of a National Review Board as well as review boards at the diocesan level. The diocesan level review board is charged with advising the local bishop in his assessment of allegations of sexual abuse of minors by a priest or deacon of the diocese and in his determinations of suitability for ministry. It also reviews diocesan policies for dealing with sexual abuse of minors.

The Review Board for this diocese meets twice a year. Bishop Rhoades also consults board members in between regular meeting when appropriate. As the national charter directs, the diocese’s Review Board is made up mostly of lay people who have a variety of expertise (see sidebar).

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Assignment Record – Rev. Louis A. Bonacci, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: A Jesuit priest of the Maryland Province, Bonacci was accused in April 2011 of having improperly touched a minor in Maryland between 1973-1982. A second person emerged with a similar accusation during the Province’s investigation of the first case.
Bonacci was permanently removed from ministry in June 2011 and was said to be living in a monitored Jesuit residence.

Ordained: 1973

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Arquivamento liberta sacerdotes de “graves acusações”

PORTUGAL
DN Portugal

O arquivamento pelo Ministério Público (MP) de denúncias sobre alegados casos de pedofilia na Igreja Católica “liberta” as instituições e os sacerdotes visados “de graves acusações”, disse hoje à Lusa o porta-voz da Conferência Episcopal Portuguesa (CEP).

As declarações do padre Manuel Morujão, que secretaria a CEP, entidade que integra os bispos católicos portugueses, surgem após o anúncio do MP de arquivar acusações feitas pela ex-provedora da Casa Pia, Catalina Pestana, e que envolviam pelo menos cinco sacerdotes da Diocese de Lisboa.

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Hamburg: Neuer Missbrauchsfall in evangelischer Kirche

DEUTSCHLAND
Evangelisch

In der evangelischen Kirche in Hamburg ist ein neuer Fall von sexuellem Missbrauch an einem Kind bekannt geworden.

Er soll sich schon vor fast 20 Jahren in der evangelischen Thomasgemeinde in Hausbruch ereignet haben, bestätigte Remmer Koch, Sprecher des Kirchenkreises Hamburg-Ost, am Dienstag dem epd. In Verdacht steht ein ehemaliger ehrenamtlicher Leiter des Posaunenchores der Gemeinde. Er soll mindestens einen Jungen missbraucht haben.

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Volksbegehren Kirchenprivilegien gescheitert

DEUTSCHLAND
paperblog

Das Volksbegehren gegen Kirchenprivilegien ist geschei­tert. Laut vor­läu­fi­gem Endergebnis erreichte es 56.660 Unterschriften, wie das Innenministerium in der Nacht mit­teilte. Um erfolg­reich zu sein, hätte es 100.000 gebraucht. An die­ser Hürde schei­terte auch das par­al­lel lau­fende Volksbegehren „Demokratie jetzt“.

„Wir waren am Anfang eine Gruppe von viel­leicht zehn Leuten und so gut wie kei­nem Budget. Am Ende haben wir 56.660 Menschen in die­sem Land ange­spro­chen. Das ist doch etwas. Und unsere Anliegen, näm­lich dass Staat und Kirche getrennt gehö­ren, wer­den jetzt breit dis­ku­tiert.“. Andreas Rathmanner vom Organisationsbüro bringt die Stimmung in sei­ner Ansprache bei der „Wahlparty“ des Volksbegehrens Montagnacht ver­mut­lich am bes­ten auf den Punkt. Viele Unterstützer haben sich mehr erhofft. Mehr erwar­tet hat fast nie­mand

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My school hell: Horace Mann abuse victim speaks out

NEW YORK
New York Post

By JULIA MARSH and AMBER SUTHERLAND
Last Updated: 7:54 AM, April 23, 2013

A Manhattan man haunted by the repeated sexual abuse he says he endured as a 13-year-old student at the elite Horace Mann School spoke publicly about the violations for the first time yesterday.

“The effects of that abuse on my life have been profound,” Ron Klepper, 48, said. “School was no longer a safe place to learn, but turned into a frightening place where a predator lurked.”

Klepper joined attorney Gloria Allred and five other victims at a press conference to call on the state Legislature to pass a bill to allow them to bring civil lawsuits against the Bronx prep school.

The victims, now in their 40s and 50s, want lawmakers to approve the Child Victims Act bill, sponsored by Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Queens).

It would provide a one-year window in the statute of limitations that now prevents adults who were sexually abused as kids from filing claims after they turn 23.

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Card. Pell on Christ, the Church and group of 8 cardinals

VATICAN CITY
news.va

(Vatican Radio) “It is very important to preserve the prerogatives of the Successor of St Peter, the Pope and Bishop of Rome. He decides. We are there to help and be useful if we can, but we are nothing more than that”: these are the words of Cardinal George Pell, Archbishop of Sydney Australia who is also a member of the select advisory group of prelates recently created by the Holy Father.

On Monday, following a private meeting with Pope Francis, Cardinal Pell visited Vatican Radio to talk about this appointment and about his new book entitled ‘Contemplating Christ with Luke’, a series of homilies on the figure of Christ according to the Gospel of St. Luke. Emer McCarthy asked Cardinal Pell to tell us more about the group of 8 Cardinals called to advise the Pope on questions of Church governance and reform of the Roman Curia:

“I can tell you what we are not. We are not a cabinet, the Pope does not answer to us. We are not a policy making group we are not an executive group. We are there as advisors to the Holy Father. Now, how that will work I am not quite sure. It might be that he will say ‘at these meetings we will be talking about these themes, in the interim you can get yourselves organized’. Or he just my say, ‘we’ll have half a day out of the three days where you can suggest what we can talk about’.

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Cardinal Pell speaks on advising Pope Francis on church reform

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

by Thomas C. Fox | Apr. 23, 2013

After meeting with Pope Francis yesterday, one of the eight cardinals who will be advising him on questions of church governance and reform of the Roman Curia, spoke on Vatican radio:

Australian Cardinal Francis Pell, considered by many the most conservative of the eight advisors, said, “I can tell you what we are not. We are not a cabinet, the Pope does not answer to us. We are not a policy making group we are not an executive group. We are there as advisors to the Holy Father. Now, how that will work I am not quite sure.

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Fr Francis Bradley is new leader of Derry Diocese

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

A 43-year-old priest has been appointed as the new temporary leader of the Catholic Church in Derry.

Fr Francis Bradley will run the Derry Diocese until a new bishop is appointed by Pope Francis.

The diocese has been without a bishop since Dr Séamus Hegarty retired in November 2011 due to ill health.

Fr Bradley takes over from Monsignor Eamon Martin who was ordained coadjutor Archbishop of Armagh on Sunday.

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2 priests suspended over allegations of touching minors

IOWA
Quad-City Times

Steven Martens smartens@qctimes.com

The Diocese of Davenport has temporarily removed two priests from their ministries after allegations surfaced that they inappropriately touched minors.

The Rev. Robert Harness, pastor at Holy Family Church, Davenport, and the Rev. John Stack, chaplain at Mercy Medical Center, Clinton, have been removed from their positions while an investigation is conducted, according to a news release Monday from Bishop Martin Amos.

The allegations have been reported to the Scott County Attorney’s Office in compliance with a memorandum of understanding between the diocese and the county attorney.

Scott County Attorney Mike Walton said Monday the office will review the cases, according to the terms of the agreement.

“The diocese reports any and all allegations of sexual abuse to the county attorney’s office,” Walton said in a statement. This is done without screening or investigation by the diocese regarding truth of the allegations.

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Hard work awaits pope and abuse survivors

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Mary Gail Frawley-O’Dea | Apr. 23, 2013

In less than a month, we have seen Pope Francis alter a dizzying array of traditional papal accessories: his home, his shoes, what he sits on, what he wears, how he travels, and more. In addition, he has generated hope with gestures that are possible harbingers of change. His Holy Thursday visit to a prison included unprecedented acts of humility, inclusiveness and unconditional love: He washed the feet of women, a Muslim and an atheist. Vice President Joe Biden received Communion at the Vatican. It all is destabilizing in the best sense of that experience.

As Francis embarks on a papacy seemingly beautifully rooted in Gospel values, however, a dangerous cloud envelops the Vatican. Composed of the precipitates of grotesque abuse of power, and suffering that rivals that of Good Friday, the cloud of unresolved and inadequately addressed ecclesiastical cover-up of the sexual abuse of tens of thousands of innocents across the world threatens the ultimate legitimacy of even this new pope. Two truths are rumbling within that cloud.

The first truth is that Francis must once and for all embody justice and mercy for sexual abuse victims. This soul-searing crisis never has been about the priests who abuse and always has been about the ecclesiastics who protected them while lying to the people of God, including victims. Bishops and cardinals who protected abusive priests at the expense of children and then spent millions defending the indefensible and who remain still in office must be called to account in some meaningful way.

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Archbishop Listecki leads Mass of Atonement in Brookfield

WISCONSIN
Fox 6

[with video]

April 22, 2013, by Chip Brewster

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — The Milwaukee Archdiocese’s “Mass of Atonement” has become an annual event during which the church seeks forgiveness for clergy who have sexually abused children.

This year’s Mass, held on Monday, April 22nd, came on the heels of the most recent scandal involving a Wauwatosa priest allegedly touching children.

Earlier this month, Father Robert Marsicek was removed from his post at St. Pius X and the Wauwatosa Catholic School inside. He had been accused of inappropriately touching a young girl. However, this is not the first time such allegations against the man have arisen.

“We are imperfect human beings,” Archbishop Jerome Listecki said. …

“We want to know who’s responsible for this priest and other priests that are being left in ministry. This has always been our concern,” Peter Isley with SNAP said.

SNAP is the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. While Isley says acknowledging the crimes committed within the church is a good first step, it is simply not enough — pointing to the Marsicek case.

A police report shows a teacher came forward after seeing Father Marsicek touch a young girl in what the teacher considered an inappropriate way. As the investigation continued, the report details other similar complaints that were never investigated by police.

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Golden Valley man accused of seeking sex from cop posing as a minor

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: CHAO XIONG , Star Tribune
Updated: April 22, 2013

The Golden Valley man placed ads on Craigslist. He also claims he was abused as a child by a priest.

A Golden Valley man allegedly solicited sex with minors on Craigslist, where his ad said he accompanied his high school son’s baseball team to Florida, where “some hanky-panky went on.”

Stephen J. Schulz, 55, was charged Monday in Ramsey County District Court with one count of solicitation of a child for sexual conduct via the Internet. He was arrested April 19 after exchanging e-mails with a police officer who was posing as a 15-year-old boy.

According to the complaint: An investigator with the Minnesota Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force was looking at personal ads on Craigslist that appeared to target minors. One ad by someone claiming to be a 45-year-old “discreet” man from the west metro area referred to his high school-aged son. The man talked about the Florida baseball trip, and indicated that he was looking for oral sex. …

Schulz told police he was sexually abused by a priest as a child, and was a plaintiff in a suit brought by a local attorney against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. The attorney’s office would not confirm or deny whether Schulz was a plaintiff.

Peter Isely, Milwaukee-based Midwest director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, said he was unfamiliar with Schulz.

“What I want people to know is that people who are abused sexually as children, the vast, vast majority do not grow up to commit abuse themselves,” Isely said. “This is one of those myths that has made it difficult for victims to come forward.”

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LA cardinal called ‘obstructionist’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Tom Roberts | Apr. 23, 2013

In 2003, with the country newly focused on the sex abuse scandal in the Catholic church, a senior U.S. church leader attempted behind the scenes to head off the investigation of the crisis by researchers at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, disparaging the institution and its researchers as inadequate.

Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony, in a strongly worded letter to then-Bishop Wilton Gregory, at the time president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, complained at length about the forms that John Jay researchers produced. He described them as “designed by people who apparently have no understanding of the Roman Catholic Church, ecclesiastical culture, hierarchical structure, or the language of the Roman Catholic Church.”

The previously unpublished letters that circulated among Mahony, Gregory, former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating, Justice Anne Burke and others provide a behind-the-scenes view of some of the tensions in the air the year after the U.S. bishops formulated their Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People during their June 2002 meeting in Dallas. Public outrage had forced the bishops to take a dramatic step to deal with the scandal of sexual abuse of children by priests and the cover-up of the abuse by scores of bishops across the United States.

The letters are part of Burke’s archives, held by DePaul University in Chicago. Burke, a member of the Illinois Supreme Court, initially served as vice chairperson of the National Review Board for the Protection of Children and Young People, established under the charter. She later took over as chairperson when Keating resigned. The correspondence provides a window into the high-stakes tensions of that period, as questions swirled regarding the board’s independence and whether bishops would cooperate with or undermine investigations.

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Abusers may be at large, says church

AUSTRALIA
The Age

April 23, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

Some child sex abusers might still be among Uniting Church clergy because of poor record keeping and failure to investigate cases, the church conceded on Monday.

The Victorian inquiry into how the churches handled sex abuse instructed the church to investigate previous cases.

In other evidence, church spokesmen said it had no records of victims seeking compensation before 1998 because of inadequate record-keeping and that since then it had paid $2 million to 63 victims from the 1940s to 1986 but had not reported any cases to the police.

There have been seven cases of child abuse since 1998, all of which were reported to the police, the inquiry heard.

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Uniting Church paid $2m to sex abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

STUART RINTOUL AND PIA AKERMAN
From:The Australian
April 23, 2013

THE Uniting Church has told a Victorian child abuse inquiry that it has paid about $2 million in compensation to abuse victims arising from 63 complaints in Victoria and Tasmania dating back to the 1940s.

But the Victorian parliamentary inquiry heard that the most recent allegation involving the “criminal abuse of children” was made in September last year, among seven more recent cases.

The church’s legal adviser, Philip Battye, said many of the historic abuse cases involved the Tally Ho Methodist boys home, which closed in 1986, but many of the home’s records had been lost or destroyed.

Mr Battye said of the 63 cases spanning the 1940s to the late 80s, a “smaller rather than larger” number had been referred to police, only one involved clergy and two-thirds of the alleged perpetrators were not church employees but people involved with church homes.

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Abuse inquiry to start in May

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE McCARTHY
April 22, 2013

AUSTRALIA’S first commission of inquiry into child sex abuse in the Catholic Church will be held at Newcastle Supreme Court from May 6.

The NSW inquiry, which precedes and runs separately from the broader federal royal commission into child sex abuse, expects to hear some evidence without the public or media being present, the commission confirmed during a short hearing in Sydney on Monday.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen will rule on hearing in-camera testimony from some witnesses to avoid prejudicing any potential future criminal proceedings, the hearing was told.

The NSW commission of inquiry will consider police investigations of the late Hunter paedophile priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher from May 6 to 17, and Church handling of allegations involving the priests from June 24 to July 12.

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Whistle blowing priest

AUSTRALIA
7 News

April 23, 2013, 6:18 pm Kristy Wettenhall Today Tonight

The Royal Commission into child sexual abuse has recently began and a priest has accused the Victorian Archdiocese of a cover-up.

It’s the Royal Commission thousands of child sex abuse victims have wanted for decades – a chance to finally expose the truth through investigating institutions like the Catholic Church.

But one man fears criminal clergy will carry on undetected, claiming the Victorian Archdiocese is determined to keep its sordid secrets buried.

Victor Buhagiar has recently quit his post as a Catholic priest, walking away from the faith after 12 years leading parishes across Victoria.

Buhagiar claims it has became impossible to continue after he found out the Church was deleting records relating to child sexual abuse.

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April 22, 2013

Ex-Beauvoir teacher …

UNITED STATES/NICARAGUA
Washington Post

Ex-Beauvoir teacher Eric Toth, wanted on child pornography charges, is found abroad

By Allison Klein
Updated: Monday, April 22

Eric Justin Toth, the former D.C. elementary school teacher and accused child pornographer who replaced Osama bin Laden on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list, has been found in Nicaragua, according to sources familiar with the case.

Toth had been on the run for almost five years. He fled after officials at Washington National Cathedral’s exclusive Beauvoir elementary school found explicit photos of a student on a camera assigned to him, authorities said.

Toth, 31, was taken into custody Saturday night in Nicaragua, but as of Monday afternoon he had not been extradited to the United States, said the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because Toth was not yet in the country.

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Archbishop Martin pledges to heal wounds of disillusioned

IRELAND
Irish Independent

David Young– 21 April 2013

THE cleric set to become the next head of the Catholic Church in Ireland has pledged to work to heal the wounds of those who have lost trust in the institution.

Eamon Martin delivered a call for renewal in the church as he was ordained into an interim post ahead of eventually succeeding current Primate of All Ireland Cardinal Sean Brady.

The Derry-born former teacher today became Coadjutor Archbishop of Armagh and will act as an assistant to Cardinal Brady for at least another two years.

The 52-year-old takes up his new post after a period of unprecedented turmoil for the church in Ireland, during which its influence has been damaged by a series of clerical child abuse scandals.

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Argentine ex-bishop’s widow …

ARGENTINA
Washington Post

Argentine ex-bishop’s widow wants Pope Francis to make priestly celibacy optional

By Associated Press,
Updated: Monday, April 22

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — She uses a wheelchair and carries the weight of her 87 years, but Clelia Luro feels powerful enough to make the Roman Catholic Church pay attention to her campaign to end priestly celibacy.

This woman, whose romance with a bishop and eventual marriage became a major scandal in the 1960s, is such a close friend with Pope Francis that he called her every Sunday when he was Argentina’s leading cardinal.

Luro’s convinced that he will eventually lead the global church to end mandatory priestly celibacy, a requirement she says “the world no longer understands.” She believes this could resolve a global shortage of priests, and persuade many Catholics who are no longer practicing to recommit themselves to the church.

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Two priests investigated for abuse claims

IOWA
CBS 4

by Mike Colón
mcolon@cbs4qc.com

The Diocese of Davenport has announced that two of its priests have been removed from their duties while investigations into claims of abuse are conducted.

Father Robert Harness is pastor of Holy Family Catholic Church in Davenport, and Father John Stack is a Chaplin at Mercy Medical in Clinton.

Harness is accused of inappropriately touching a child in around 1990. Stack is accused of the same in the 1980s.

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Two local Iowa priests removed from ministry

IOWA
WQAD

April 22, 2013, by Shellie Nelson

Priests serving in Iowa communities of Davenport and Clinton have been suspended from ministry amid allegations that they had inappropriate contact with children.

Father Robert Harness, pastor of Holy Family Catholic Church in Davenport, is accused of inappropriately touching a minor in approximately 1990.

“The Diocese has reported this to the Scott County Attorney in compliance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the diocese and the County Attorney,” said a statement from Deacon David Montgomery, Director of Communication for the Diocese of Davenport.

Father Harness has been “temporarily removed from ministry” while the matter is investigated.

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Diocese suspends 2 Iowa priests after abuse claims

IOWA
Quad-City Times

The Diocese of Davenport says it has temporarily suspended two priests in eastern Iowa while it investigates allegations that they improperly touched minors decades ago.

Spokesman David Montgomery said Monday the diocese received separate reports of abuse allegations last week against Father Robert Harness, the pastor of Holy Family Church in Davenport; and John Stack, the chaplain at Mercy Medical Center in Clinton.

The diocese said that Harness has been accused of inappropriately touching a minor in approximately 1990. At the time, he was a pastor at St. Mary’s in Keota.

Stack is accused of inappropriately touching minors in the 1980s. He worked from 1988 to 1990 at Holy Family.

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Two Priests Temporarily Removed From Ministry

IOWA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Davenport

From Bishop Amos:

The Diocese of Davenport has received a report which states that Father Robert Harness, Pastor of Holy Family Catholic Church in Davenport, inappropriately touched a minor in approximately 1990. The Diocese has reported this to the Scott County Attorney in compliance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the Diocese and the County Attorney.

Father Harness has been temporarily removed from ministry while this matter is being thoroughly investigated. The Diocese will meet with the leadership of the parish to assess its immediate needs and other issues of healing that may arise.

In an unrelated report, the Diocese of Davenport has received a report which states that Father John Stack, Chaplain at Mercy Medical Clinton in Clinton, inappropriately touched minors in approximately the 1980s. The Diocese has reported this to the Scott County Attorney in compliance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the Diocese and the County Attorney.

Father Stack has been temporarily removed from ministry while this matter is being thoroughly investigated.

The list of assignments for both priests is attached.

We apologize, again, for all those who have been abused and continue to pray for them.

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2 Iowa priests suspended due to molestation claims

IOWA
WSOC

By RYAN J. FOLEY
The Associated Press

IOWA CITY, Iowa —

Two Catholic priests in eastern Iowa have been temporarily removed from the ministry during an investigation into allegations that they sexually molested children decades ago, the Diocese of Davenport said Monday.

The diocese received separate reports of abuse allegations late last week against Father Robert Harness, the pastor of Holy Family Church in Davenport, and John Stack, the chaplain at Mercy Medical Center in Clinton, spokesman David Montgomery said.

He said the diocese turned over the reports to the Scott County Attorney’s Office, which has given church officials permission to proceed with an internal investigation into the claims.

The diocese said in a statement that Harness has been accused of inappropriately touching a minor in approximately 1990. At the time, he was a pastor at St. Mary’s in Keota. Stack is accused of inappropriately touching minors in “approximately the 1980s.” He worked at Holy Family from 1988 until 1990.

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Mortal Sins, a MUST READ New Book, for All Conscious Human Beings

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Michealene Cristini Risley

Pulitzer Prize winning writer Michael D’Antonio deserves another one. Another Pulitzer prize, that is, for his new book, “Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime and the Era of Catholic Scandal.” This work is a 343 page offering that with a flick of a switch floods light onto the dark side of the sex abuse scandals within the Catholic Church.

As D’Antonio reveals, the 2,000-year-old church, with its culture of secrecy and unlimited resources, covered-up thousands of cases of clergy abuse for over three decades. Bishops and cardinals used their influence at the highest levels of society around the world to suppress criminal investigations and deny victims both compensation and access to the truth.

The full story of the scandal is told for the first time as D’Antonio follows three major figures in the movement for victims’ rights – a lawyer named Jeffrey Anderson, a victim named Barbara Blaine, and a whistleblower priest named Rev. Thomas Doyle who sacrifices his career to the cause of children who had been raped and molested by ordained men.

In D’Antonio’s telling, Anderson and Doyle emerge as complex men who fought their own demons, including alcoholism and self doubt, to prevail in a thirty year fight. Blaine is transformed from a loyal Catholic social service worker into a fierce international advocate. Near the end of the tale she leads a group of victims from around the world to the International Criminal Court at The Hague to file lodge formal charges of crimes against humanity in a case that names the worldwide church, the pope, and Vatican officials as defendants.

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Four International Experts Discuss Catholic Abuse Scandal and Pope Francis

NEW YORK
PR Web

New York, NY (PRWEB) April 22, 2013

Four leaders of the international campaign against sexual abuse in the Catholic Church will address the ongoing scandal and the first thirty days of Francis I’s papacy at a public forum Tuesday, April 23 at 7 PM, Bleecker Street Theater New York City.

The event, co-sponsored by the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) and St. Martin’s Press, will be hosted by journalist writer Michael D’Antonio, author of Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime, and the Era of Catholic Scandal. Published last week, Mortal Sins has already been hailed by the Boston Globe and others as the definitive work on the greatest challenge facing the 1.2 billion-member church since the Reformation. (To date, 500 American priests have been imprisoned for abuse and $2 billion paid to victims).

Appearing with D’Antonio will be

Jeffrey Anderson, a St. Paul Minnesotan who pioneered the legal strategies followed in every lawsuit brought against the church.

Rev. Thomas Doyle. — Still a priest, Doyle called attention to the looming crisis in 1985, suffered the loss of his career, but spent a lifetime working on behalf of victims

Barbara Blaine, victim of abuse, founder of SNAP, and international advocate

Patrick Wall, former priest and Catholic monk, Wall was a “fixer” for parishes struck by scandal who went over to the other side and has investigated more than a thousand claims of abuse.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013, 7pm
Bleecker Street Theater, 45 Bleecker St, New York City.

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Razrešen vladika Vasilije Kačavenda!

босна-херзоговина
Glas-Javnosti

BEOGRAD – Sinod Srpske pravoslavne crkve na današnjoj sednici prihvatio je zahtev za razrešenje vladike zvorničko tuzlanskog Vasilija. Episkop banjalučki Jefrem biće administrator do izbora novog vladike na Saboru 21. maja

Portali su juče objavili skandalozne snimke na kojima se vidi vladika Vasilije Kačavenda kako se ljubi sa nepoznatim mladićem ležeći na podu.

Ovi snimci su predočeni Svetom sinodu Srpske pravoslavne crkve još u novembru prošle godine posle čega je episkop Vasilije zatražio da se „povuče zbog bolesti”, ali se predomislio i ponovo zatražio da ostane na mestu vladike dok ne završi izgradnju crkve na Pet jezera kod Bijeljine.

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Serb Church retires Bosnia bishop amid sex scandal

BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA
Kansas City Star

April 22

The Associated Press

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — The Serb Orthodox Church has accepted the resignation of its bishop in Bosnia after a video posted on the Internet appeared to show him engaged in sexual activity with a young man.

Vasilije Kacavenda submitted his resignation for what he said were health reasons last year but was asked by the Church to keep the post until May.

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Serbian Orthodox Church Rocked By Sex Scandal

BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

By Daisy Sindelar

April 22, 2013

BELGRADE — The Serbian Orthodox Church has approved the resignation of a powerful cleric amid sex-scandal claims that culminated this week with the publication of a graphic video appearing to show him engaged in sexual activity with young men.

Vasilije Kacavenda, the bishop of Tuzla and Zvornik in Bosnia-Herzegovina, retreated from his clerical duties months ago as allegations mounted that he had used his position for years to stage frequent orgies and rape underage boys and girls.

But the April 22 decision by the Holy Synod to accept his resignation appears to be the first acknowledgment of the church’s growing unease with the crush of lurid accusations that seem better suited to Caligula’s court than an Orthodox diocese.

Bojan Jovanovic, a former theological student in Bijeljina, the seat of Kacavenda’s diocese, says he observed numerous orgies organized by the 74-year-old bishop and attended by fellow clerics and prominent businessmen.

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Delbarton lawsuit against former Mendham man’s lawyer is ‘intimidation’

NEW JERSEY
Observer-Tribune

Posted: Monday, December 3, 2012

By PHIL GARBER, Managing Editor

MENDHAM – To Bill Crane, a lawsuit filed by the Delbarton School against his lawyer is one more tactic of intimidation in the ongoing battle by Crane and others to uncover victims who were sexually assaulted by priests at the school.

The former Mendham resident knows about the subject. He and his twin brother Tom, 46, filed a lawsuit in March alleging that they were sexually abused as youngsters by Rev. Luke Travers, a former Delbarton headmaster, and Rev. Justin Capato, a former Delbarton teacher.

Last month, Delbarton filed a lawsuit in Superior Court in Morristown claiming Crane’s lawyer, Gregory Gianforcaro of Phillipsburg, violated a confidentiality agreement by publicly disclosing terms of a 1988 settlement of a lawsuit filed by a teenager who was a victim of sexual misconduct by a monk at the school.

Neither Anthony Cacatiello, a spokesman for Delbarton nor Michael Critchley, the Delbarton lawyer, could be reached for comment.

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Ecclesial Deceit and the De-Railing of the New Evangelization

UNITED STATES
Catholic Life Ministries

by Robert Fontana

Popes John Paul II and Benedict VXI have been calling Catholic Christians to what they describe as a “New Evangelization:” the proclaiming of the Gospel to those people and nations who have a long history of Christianity, but have now rejected its doctrinal tenets and moral demands. The popes have in mind the people and nations of the so-called West—Europe, The United States, Canada, and Australia. They know the stories of the two Testaments, they know the outline of Christian doctrine, but for a variety of reasons, they simply no longer have faith in God.

I think the call for a New Evangelization is spot-on! It’s what I have been doing my entire adult life as a minister in the church, and it is the fundamental goal of Catholic Life Ministries: to awaken faith among men and women who have been raised within the church but live lives of practical agnosticism. Practical agnostics are people who might say they believe in God but do not participate in a faith community, do not pray, and are not guided by a desire to do God’s will. They have not entrusted their lives to the care and providence of a loving God, and for all practical purposes, they are agnostic. These are the people that the New Evangelization is meant to transform.

However, the New Evangelization is being de-railed, knocked off track, by what I call “Ecclesial Deceit.” These are the lies that the institutional church tells, and the people believe, in order to protect the status quo—and they totally contradict the integrity of the Catholic Christian witness. Cardinal Roger Mahoney of Los Angeles is guilty of “Ecclesial Deceit” on such a grand scale that his successor has suspended him from active ministry. Mahoney ought to be in jail and kicked out of the priesthood, but instead his lies are being perpetuated by the Vatican, where at the recent conclave he was a potential, however unlikely, candidate for the papacy.

How can anyone take seriously the Church’s proclamation that the Kingdom of God and of Christ is breaking into human history through the life and ministry of the Church when not one bishop who has protected pedophiles and sexual predators has been disciplined? I could get excommunicated for advocating the ordination of women to the priesthood, but if I am a Cardinal, and I protect sexual predators who have traumatized hundreds of minors and vulnerable adults and cost the church literally billions in legal fees and payouts, I get to be a candidate for the papacy, keep my pension, and participate in the Sacraments.

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