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.

December 12, 2017

State Rep. Dan Johnson’s resignation sought after church member alleges sexual abuse

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Louisville Courier Journal

December 11, 2017

By Thomas Novelly

Another Frankfort legislator is being asked to step down amid allegations of sexual misconduct.

Dan Johnson, a preacher and Republican representative from Bullitt County, was accused of sexually abusing a member of his Fern Creek church, Heart of Fire, when she was 17. The woman says Johnson molested her after a New Year’s party in 2012, according to a report published Monday by the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting.

Johnson was not available for comment at his office Monday, and he did not return a phone call left at his home. Courier Journal is not naming the woman because she says she was a victim of sexual abuse.

Officials from both sides of the aisle are calling on Johnson to step down.

“Following today’s extensively sourced and documented story from the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting, we once again find ourselves in a position where we must call for him to resign, this time, from the Kentucky General Assembly,” Mac Brown, the chairman of the Republican Party of Kentucky, said in a statement.

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

Statement from LDS church about practice of clergy interviews, including with children

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
KUTV

December 11, 2017

By Larry D. Curtis

SALT LAKE CITY — (KUTV) The LDS church issued a response to KUTV about the practice of its local leaders interviewing children and teens, including questions about sexuality and masturbation. The entire church response is reprinted below:

Personal interviews are an important part of ministering to those in a congregation. They offer an opportunity for a leader to know an individual better and to help them live the gospel of Jesus Christ. Leaders are instructed to prepare spiritually so they can be guided by the Holy Ghost during these interviews. Leaders are provided with instructions in leadership resources and are asked to review them regularly.

Interviews are held for a number of reasons, including for temple recommends, priesthood quorum or Young Women class advancement, callings to serve in the Church or when a member requests to meet with a priesthood leader for personal guidance or to help them to repent from serious sin.

For youth, a bishop meets with a young person at least annually to teach, express confidence and support, and listen carefully. These interviews should be characterized by great love and the guidance of the Holy Ghost. They speak together about the testimony of the young woman or young man, their religious habits (such as prayer, church attendance and personal study of the scriptures) and their obedience to God’s commandments. They may review together these teachings in the scriptures or other Church resources, such as For the Strength of Youth.

In these interviews, Church leaders are instructed to be sensitive to the character, circumstances and understanding of the young man or young woman. They are counseled to not be unnecessarily probing or invasive in their questions, but should allow a young person to share their experiences, struggles and feelings.

There are times when a discussion of moral cleanliness is appropriate—particularly if a young man or young woman feels a need to repent. In these instances leaders are counseled to adapt the discussion to the understanding of the individual and to exercise care not to encourage curiosity or experimentation.

Church leaders have a solemn responsibility to keep confidential all information they receive in confessions and interviews. When a young person is faced with serious sin or temptation, a bishop will likely encourage them to share (as appropriate) their struggles with their parents so they can pray for, teach and encourage the young man or young woman.

When a Church leader meets with a child, youth or woman, they are encouraged to ask a parent or another adult to be in an adjoining room, foyer or hall, and to avoid circumstances that may be misunderstood.

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

Opinion: Dr. Margaret Kierstein: All women must continue breaking silence, loudly

NORTHAMPTON (MA)
Daily Hampshire Gazette

December 11, 2017

LETTER TO THE EDITOR
All women must continue breaking silence, loudly
Thank you Time magazine. It has done a wonderful job of highlighting the prevalence and profound importance of the abuse of woman over the course of recent history (“Time magazine honors ‘Silence Breakers’,” Dec. 7).

This abuse has gone on since the beginning of time, but repeatedly has new waves of silence breaking, with #MeToo calling on woman to use social media to tell their stories.

Recent history points to the Catholic Church, President Trump, Roy Moore and their ilk, and of course Hollywood’s men in power, to name just a few.

I’m not on Facebook or Twitter, so have not used #MeToo, but I want to be counted here. My incidents are numerous, from doing child care as a young teen, to boys in high school who could assault you as you walked down the hall, to a professor at the University of Massachusetts where my grade depended on whether I had sex with him, to a psychiatrist at a local mental health center who was a colleague. His personnel file was sealed and the abuser moved to yet another mental health facility after at least 11 others came forward as victims. He fortunately ended up in prison since his abuse involved a child as well.

I don’t believe I know a woman who has not been a victim. May we all keep breaking the silence as often as needed, and doing so very loudly.

Dr. Margaret Kierstein
Northampton

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

Disney Music Executive Charged with Child Sex Abuse (EXCLUSIVE)

SANTA CLARITA (CA)
Variety

December 8, 2017

By Gene Maddaus

Jon Heely, the director of music publishing at Disney, has been charged with three felony counts of child sexual abuse.

Heely, 58, of Santa Clarita, is accused of sexually abusing two underage girls approximately a decade ago. He allegedly victimized the first girl when she was 15. According to the charges, he began abusing the second when she was about 11 years old and continued until she was 15.

In a statement, a Disney spokesman said the company suspended Heely late on Friday, after being informed of the charges.

“Immediately upon learning of this situation tonight, he has been suspended without pay until the matter is resolved by the courts,” the spokesman said.

Heely was arrested on Nov. 16 by deputies from the Santa Clarita station of the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department. Booking records indicate he was later released on $150,000 bail.

On Wednesday, prosecutors charged him with three counts of lewd and lascivious acts on a child. Heely pleaded not guilty at his arraignment at the San Fernando courthouse on Thursday. He is due back in court on Jan. 10. If convicted, he faces up to nine years and three months 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.

Disney executive, 58, charged with three felony counts of child sexual abuse

SANTA CLARITA (CA)
AOL.COM

December 11, 2017

By Jennifer Kline

A Disney executive has been charged with three felony counts of child sexual abuse.

Jon Heely, 58, is Disney’s director of music publishing. He is accused of sexually abusing two underage girls. The first child was fifteen. The second child was 11 when the alleged abuse began, and it continued until she was 15.

Specific dates are not yet known, but Variety reports that the incidents occurred about ten 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.

New Yorker fires star reporter Ryan Lizza over sexual misconduct, CNN pulls him off air

NEW YORK (NY)
Fox News

December 11, 2017

By Brian Flood

The New Yorker has severed ties with star reporter Ryan Lizza in response to behavior the magazine described as “improper sexual conduct.”

Lizza emerged as a household name last summer after he recorded a phone call with then-White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci, who went off on a profanity-laced tirade. President Trump fired Scaramucci after less than two weeks.

“The New Yorker recently learned that Ryan Lizza engaged in what we believe was improper sexual conduct. We have reviewed the matter and, as a result, have severed ties with Lizza. Due to a request for privacy, we are not commenting further,” the magazine said in a statement.

Lizza is also a contributor to CNN and the network put out its own statement shortly after the news broke.

“We have just learned of the New Yorker’s decision. Ryan Lizza will not appear on CNN while we look into this matter,” a CNN spokesperson said.

“I am dismayed that The New Yorker has decided to characterize a respectful relationship with a woman I dated as somehow inappropriate,” Lizza said in a statement to the media. “I am sorry to my friends, workplace colleagues, and loved ones for any embarrassment this episode may cause. I love The New Yorker… But this decision, which was made hastily and without a full investigation of the relevant facts, was a terrible mistake.”

“In no way did Mr. Lizza’s misconduct constitute a ‘respectful relationship’ as he has now tried to characterize it,” the unnamed accuser’s attorney, Douglas Wigdor, told a Washington Post reporter.

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

Prosecutors review checks as part of priest embezzlement case

TULARE (CA)
ABC 30 Action News (KFSN)

December 11, 2017

By Brian Johnson

TULARE, Calif. (KFSN) — A South Valley priest accused of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from his church was back in court Monday.

52-year-old Ignacio Villafan was the former priest at Rita’s Catholic Church in Tulare. His preliminary hearing continued on Monday, and Gerrie Lenn Pimentel again took the witness stand.

As director of parish financial reporting for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno, she discovered discrepancies that eventually lead to Villafan’s arrest in late 2014.

Prosecutors say Villafan stole $425,000 from St. Rita’s between 2005 and 2012.

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

Julia Gillard prepares for end of the royal commission she ordered five years ago

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

December 12, 2017

By Joanne McCarthy

The prime minister who instigated the royal commission into sexual abuse says Australians “won’t tolerate” more inaction, and predicts removing tax concessions to push “recalcitrant” churches to act on reforms would win strong public support.

Julia Gillard said Australians would be “waiting and watching” for any sense of church or political delay after the release on Friday of the landmark final report from the five-year long Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“Any sense that this is going to go on the back shelf and gather some dust, the community won’t tolerate it, the public won’t tolerate it,” Ms Gillard told Fairfax Media.
She declined to predict if the royal commission would recommend linking tax concessions to reforms, after a public hearing in March where commission chair Justice Peter McClellan raised a scenario with senior Anglican clergy where the state could intervene by denying financial concessions “unless you get your house in order”.

Ms Gillard said churches, governments and other institutions would need time to respond to the report but public pressure will exist regardless of “what levers are then needed to push some recalcitrants into action”.

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

Closed court hearings for Cardinal George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

December 12, 2017

The Melbourne Magistrates Court has requested an off site location for two weeks, when the trial against Cardinal George Pell begins next year.

The remote location will be used to hear the evidence of complainants in a closed court.

Closed court hearings are required for certain types of complainants in Victoria.

Lawyers for Pell are also continuing to negotiate with the ABC over information subpoenad from one of its journalists.

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

Maitland-Newcastle Royal Commission report withheld until “a later time”

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Newcastle Herald

December 12, 2017

By Ian Kirkwood

THE Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has handed its report into the Catholic Church’s Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle to the federal government.

But it has recommended the contents not be made public at this point.

The commission said on Tuesday that it had delivered Case Study 43 – The response of Catholic Church authorities in the Maitland-Newcastle region to allegations of child sexual abuse by clergy and religious.

It also handed up Case Study 44, which involved “allegations of child sexual abuse against a priest” in the the Catholic dioceses of Armidale and Parramatta.

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

December 11, 2017

Notice Of Credible Allegation Of Abuse Dating To 1950s

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Catholic Key

December 11, 2017

The diocese recently received an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by Father Sylvester Hoppe dating to 1953 to 1956. The priest, who died in 2002, was chaplain to St. Mary’s Orphanage in St. Joseph at the time.

Consistent with diocesan policy, the allegation was reported to the civil authorities and investigated. It was found credible by the independent ombudsman, Independent Review Board and Bishop Johnston.

Several prior allegations have been received against Hoppe since 2002. He also was the subject of two lawsuits claiming child sexual abuse that the diocese settled in 2008.

Hoppe served at Immaculate Conception, St. Joseph; St. Rose, Savannah; St. Patrick, Forest City; St. Paul, Tarkio; St. Benedict, Burlington Junction; St. Columban, Chillicothe; St. Ann, Excelsior Springs, and Sacred Heart Norborne. He also served as diocesan director of Catholic Boy Scouts before retiring in 1991.

“Our prayers are with the individual who came forward, which takes great courage, and with all those who have been affected,” said Carrie Cooper, Director of the office of Child and Youth Protection.

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

Op-Ed Dylan Farrow: Why has the #MeToo revolution spared Woody Allen?

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Times

December 7, 2017

By Dylan Farrow

Editor’s Note: Woody Allen, who declined to comment prior to publication, has long denied the allegations described in this Op-Ed. Dylan Farrow’s allegations against Allen were investigated by sex-abuse experts at Yale-New Haven Hospital, who found no evidence of abuse. Some questioned their methodology. A state’s attorney in Connecticut said he had “probable cause” to prosecute in 1993 but did not file charges.

We are in the midst of a revolution. From allegations against studio heads and journalists, to hotel maids recounting abuses on the job, women are exposing the truth and men are losing their jobs. But the revolution has been selective.

I have long maintained that when I was 7 years old, Woody Allen led me into an attic, away from the babysitters who had been instructed never to leave me alone with him. He then sexually assaulted me. I told the truth to the authorities then, and I have been telling it, unaltered, for more than 20 years. Why is it that Harvey Weinstein and other accused celebrities have been cast out by Hollywood, while Allen recently secured a multimillion-dollar distribution deal with Amazon, greenlit by former Amazon Studios executive Roy Price before he was suspended over sexual misconduct allegations? Allen’s latest feature, “Wonder Wheel,” was released theatrically on Dec. 1.

Allen denies my allegations. But this is not a “he said, child said” situation. Allen’s pattern of inappropriate behavior — putting his thumb in my mouth, climbing into bed with me in his underwear, constant grooming and touching — was witnessed by friends and family members. At the time of the alleged assault, he was in therapy for his conduct towards me. Three eyewitnesses substantiated my account, including a babysitter who saw Allen with his head buried in my lap after he had taken off my underwear. Allen refused to take a polygraph administered by the Connecticut state police.

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

Child sex abuse royal commission: sins of the fathers to be laid bare

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

December 11, 2017

By John Ferguson

When the late Frank Little retired two decades ago, he recounted with humility and understated ­humour the highlight of his 22-year calling as Archbishop of Melbourne.

Little was preparing to pass the keys to St Patrick’s Cathedral to ­George Pell when he recounted a trip around Flemington Racecourse with Pope John Paul II in 1986.

“I was in the Popemobile with the Holy Father and we were going down the straight, away from people, and then there was a lady who was separated from everyone else and she saw her ­opportunity and ran over to the fence,” Little recalled.

“The Holy Father was getting ready to wave to her, then she waved like mad and yelled out, ‘Hello, Archbishop Little.’ He was marvellous, he was sort of taken aback for a moment, and then he turned around and sort of smiled saying, ‘Win some, lose some.’ ”

In the nearly 10 years since Little died aged 83 in 2008, many have forgotten the broad sense of warmth and appeal that marked the late archbishop’s decades in charge of the heartland of Victorian Catholicism.

Fast-forward a decade and few could have predicted that Little’s reputational win-loss ratio had peaked, that his fall from grace would be so catastrophically complete and his history so comprehensively rewritten.

As the child sex abuse royal commission prepares to release its final report this week, two of its last three case studies focused on dioceses in Melbourne and Ballarat and the third on the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle.

The two faiths dominated complaints cited at the inquiry; 4756 Catholic abuse complaints, mostly between 1950 and 1989, and 1119 reported Anglican complaints, between 1980 and 2015.

In the Victorian reports, the commission found that the once admired Little had led a coterie of senior Catholics in Melbourne ­between 1974 and 1996 who were responsible for a run of cover-ups of sex offending by clergy and a long-term pattern of failing to protect children.

The evidence is appalling, ­including cases where obfuscation or inaction guaranteed further ­offending; where seven of the priests mentioned by the com­mission committed possibly hundreds of offences aided and abetted by a system of Machiavellian indifference to the suffering of the children.

Little’s complicity was only ­exceeded by the relentless number of crimes committed in a neighbouring diocese, with the effective green light of the Bishop of Balla­rat, Ronald Mulkearns, a man ­unmatched in his capacity to shop abusers around western Victoria to continue their offending.

There were probably thousands of offences committed under Mulkearns’s reign, although the final number will never be known, with apparently fewer than 10 core offenders, some of whom — like their bishop — never facing proper justice.

Combined, the two Victorian case studies provided 825 pages of evidence and commentary on some of the worst institution-sanctioned sex crimes committed in church history.

The Melbourne case study outlined in stunning detail the extent to which Little failed to act to protect the children of the Archdiocese of Melbourne, how police and prosecutors dropped the ball in the handling of investigations into the disgraced priest Father Nazareno Fasciale.

But also the extent to which no fewer than four high-ranking church men and some Catholic educators failed to head off offenders like the insane Father Peter Searson, who terrorised parish children in the full knowledge of Little’s church.

Worse, Little conspired to conceal the truth of offending across the diocese, destroyed documents and worked assiduously with ­others to send offenders to other postings where they would go on offending.

Like Ballarat, the numbers of offending clergy weren’t radically high; fewer than 10 offending men of the cloth in the archdiocese ­examined by the commission were left to operate unchallenged.

This was enough, though, to cause decades of turmoil that is still being unpicked by church authorities.

History shows that it wasn’t until George Pell took over as Archbishop of Melbourne in 1996 and the Melbourne Response ­that the archdiocese started transforming its systems and compensating victims for their trials. Little, like Mulkearns, was the roadblock with key underlings adding obstacles to the passage of justice.

“Archbishop Little abjectly ­failed to exercise proper care for the children within the arch­diocese’s parishes and schools,’’ the commission found.

The commission painted a picture, not so much of a friendly bloke next door as archbishop (he was “Uncle Frank’’ to his family) but a calculating exploiter of his position.

Little, it might have found, had behaved like a profit-driven company man rather than a man of the cloth. The same could be said of Ballarat’s Ronald Mulkearns. They were two men dressed as bishops who could easily have been Collins Street businessmen covering up wrongdoing to protect the share price.

Little and Mulkearns did to the church what business did for asbestos.

Of Little, the commission said: “During the tenure of Archbishop Little, decision-making within the archdiocese in response to complaints of child sexual abuse against priests was highly cen­tralised.

“There were no effective checks and balances on the archbishop’s exercise of his powers in relation to priests the subject of complaints.

“As the evidence in the case study makes plain, a system for responding to complaints of child sexual abuse in which the exclusive authority for making decisions was vested in one person is deeply flawed.’’

For the Catholic Church, criticism of its power structures has been running for hundreds of years. It seems likely that when the commission hands down its final report this week that it will back an overhaul of reporting sex offences within the churches, perhaps even tougher penalties for failing to ­report crimes.

Francis Sullivan, the chief executive of the church’s Truth, Justice and Healing Council, says that while Little and Mulkearns were at the head of the rotten fish, there were plenty of others ­beneath them who had failed to do enough to stop the crimes and subsequent suffering.

On the question of the church’s structures, he says: “The Catholic Church still has plenty of residue of the medieval times.

“The handling of child sex abuse in the Catholic Church is all about the misuse of power, privilege and those who participated in the positions of responsibility. The leadership and those in positions of responsibility instructively protected the institution before the welfare of the children. It’s writ large in every page (of the commission’s case studies).

“You’ve got to be angry because nothing else will change the ­system.’’

Where it’s hard to get a full picture of where the commission is heading is the significant number of pages that are heavily redacted because of looming court cases affecting both Melbourne and ­Ballarat.

To that end, it is not legally or practically possible to analyse the role of now Cardinal George Pell, who was for years a prominent figure in Ballarat and Melbourne. It’s fair to say, though, that after Pell took charge of Melbourne there were significant attempts to deal with the sex abuse scandal, chiefly the Melbourne Response compensation scheme, and the veil ­lifted on offending under Little.

This veil was removed in the Victorian parliamentary inquiry several years ago — the effective precursor to the royal commission — when both Little and Mul­kearns were excoriated for operating against the church victims’ interests.

The church is in an invidious position and is undeniably the focus of a feeding frenzy, where unfiltered or even cross-checked information is rarely sought. Where the worst possible assumptions are made and then treated as fact.

Few, for example, have both­ered to even consider the similarities between the commonwealth’s new sex abuse redress scheme and the original Melbourne ­Response set up under Pell, largely because it doesn’t fit the convenient narrative.

Of the 19 victims referred to by pseudonyms in the Melbourne case study last week, 16 were the subject of compensation and psychological care.

It’s not fashionable to give the church any credit for the attempts to deal with the wrongs committed in the past and in a purely emotional sense this is understandable, but not necessarily adding to the full factual picture.

Post-Little, the independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan QC, for example, did encourage victims to report the crimes to police and of the 145 complaints to the independent commissioners relating to the offenders Kevin O’Donnell, Nazareno Fasciale, Ronald Pickering, Desmond Gannon, David Daniel, Peter Searson and Wilfred Baker, more than a third were reported to police.

This was either before the complainants spoke to the church or after speaking to the independent commissioners. It is wrong to say that the church in Melbourne — after Little — didn’t encourage police investigation of the crimes given that every victim who ­engages the response is encouraged to report the offending.

But at the same time it’s absolutely right to say that Little and Mulkearns oversaw operations that relentlessly failed to bring in the police and in well-documented cases the police were generally hopeless.

It’s also entirely legitimate for the church’s critics to be as vocal and critical of its failures as they want to be; reading the two Victorian case studies is an exercise in melancholy and outrage-inducing bewilderment.

Lawyer Vivian Waller is a veteran advocate for victims who warns there has been, and continues to be, a dark streak of arrogance where the church sees itself as being above the law.

“What Australian company or tertiary organisation wouldn’t ­involve the police?’’ she asks.

“Especially if it’s such a widespread thing. And I think part of the problem also from the cultural point of view is that the Catholic Church seemed to regard sexual offending against children as a moral failing which would be forgiven at confession and the perpetrator sent out again.

“As opposed to thinking of it as criminal failure.’’

For sheer weight of offending, it’s hard to go past the corruption that Mulkearns oversaw in the diocese of Ballarat, which spreads across Victoria’s west.

It seems that when Mulkearns couldn’t cover it up, the Christian Brothers finished the job.

With the aid of a pathetic police force in past decades, few can match the excesses of Mulkearns, who covered up offending and shifted wickedly prolific priests such as Gerald Ridsdale from parish to parish.

Ridsdale probably offended against hundreds of children ­although there have been 78 formal claims. The number of convictions against him masks the reality that most child sex offending goes unpunished.

Mulkearns and many others were given relentless warnings that Ridsdale was offending, yet did little except shift him; Mul­kearns’s defenders point to a ­different era, a lack of understanding of pedophilia and the misguided cultural demand that the church’s reputation be protected at every turn.

“On no occasion during the public hearing did commissioners hear evidence that Bishop Mul­kearns or any other member of the clergy reported allegations or complaints of child sexual abuse to the police or another authority,’’ the Ballarat commission case study reported.

The commission also has ­remarked on the role of the bishop and the power and authority that went with the position in terms of reporting to police, adding: “There was evidence that some records relating to allegations of child sexual abuse were destroyed.’’

However, the commission found that Mulkearns did not keep his conniving to himself, suggesting that Mulkearns had discussed allegations about offending clergy with others.

Like Melbourne, there were several senior diocese officials made relentlessly aware of offending.

In brutally simple language, Mulkearns was a liar and a ­destroyer of documents.

“Of the many reports to the diocese which we found were made by victims, their families and others in the community, very few were recorded in contemporaneous notes or documents.’’

Books have been written on any number of child sex offenders, including Monsignor John Day, who benefited from police cor­ruption that helped cover up his offending in Victoria’s far northwest, with one brave policeman, Denis Ryan, the exception to the rule.

There is a book in Ridsdale for anyone who wants to drown in the sorrow of Catholic wrongdoing. The commission data states that 140 people made a claim of sexual abuse against police and religious figures operating in the Ballarat Diocese between January 1980 and early 2015, but this excludes Christian Brothers offending, which was profound. Given that Ridsdale’s family and victims feared he offended against up to 500 children, this number seems quite conservative.

Ninety per cent of all claims in Ballarat were made against seven priests, who were each subject to three or more claims of child sexual abuse and 95 per cent of claims relating to between 1950 and 1989.

There is a lag between when ­offending occurs and when victims feel empowered enough to ­report, which means more cases are inevitable but hopefully not at the same rate as the past.

One significant factor will be the determination of the church and schools to ensure the past is not repeated.

To that end, on the day that the commission tore apart Little’s ­already battered reputation, Little’s alma mater — St Patrick’s College in Ballarat — drove a bulldozer into his grave.

The school that gave the church Little and Cardinal Pell and 111 AFL-VFL footballers, will strike Little’s name from a campus building and pen a line through his legacy on the school honour board.

Citing the withering findings of the commission’s Melbourne case study, the school’s headmaster, John Crowley, said today’s college demanded the highest possible standards of behaviour to students in its care. Little, he argued, failed those standards.

“The findings demonstrate that Archbishop Little’s behaviours do not meet these expectations,” Crowley said.

For many in the scarred ­regional city of Ballarat it was a welcome act of contrition.

For others, it will be too Little, too late.

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

Sisters at Catholic orphanage force-fed residents, child abuse inquiry hears

SCOTLAND
The Herald

December 11, 2017

By Colin McNeill

A former resident of a Catholic orphanage has told an inquiry how she was severely punished for wetting the bed.

June Smith, who waived her right to anonymity, said she had moved in to Smyllum Park in Lanark, South Lanarkshire, in 1969 when she was about three or four.

She told the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry in Edinburgh that she persistently wet the bed until she was 15, which saw her severely punished by staff and nuns.

Ms Smith, who left the home in 1981, added: “(One of the sisters) would come in the morning, pull you out of bed and put you in a cold bath.

“Sometimes she would throw disinfectant over you and put her knuckles right into your head, that was sore – really sore.”

She added that children who wet their beds were made to carry their sheets up a hill so everybody knew what had happened, which meant they would be bullied.

Ms Smith also told how, from the age of six, she was woken up during the night and made to take tablets to stop bedwetting.

She added: “I (still) wake up every night. When I get to sleep I’m alright until 2am, then that’s me until 6am or 7am.”

In a statement she had previously submitted she said she was taking part in the inquiry so other children in care do not suffer similar experiences.

She added her later years were better as the nuns in charge were “nice”.

Another witness told how his time at Smyllum, which was run by the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul, means he avoids certain meals with his family.

He was moved to the home in 1974, aged around eight years old, and left in 1981 but said his time there still impacts his life.

Punishments included being beaten with “Jesus slippers” and being locked in a dark room, he told the inquiry.

The witness said: “What was put in front of you, you had to eat, we were getting force-fed.

“The sister would come behind you, hold your nose and ram it down you.

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

Catholic abuse report findings to be released

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press

December 11,2017

The prime minister and premiers must act now to ensure reforms recommended by the child sexual abuse royal commission are not shelved or lost in politics, a key Catholic Church adviser says.

The church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council CEO Francis Sullivan has called on Malcolm Turnbull and state and territory leaders to immediately set up a COAG committee to implement the recommendations in the inquiry’s final report, which will be released on Friday.

Mr Sullivan says once the report is in the public domain all participants including the Catholic Church need to implement the recommendations and it is up to Mr Turnbull to lead the way.

‘I think he has to show that this report is going to be taken 100 per cent seriously, it’s not going to be put in a drawer, it’s not going to be just one bit’s accepted and another bit’s not,’ Mr Sullivan told AAP.

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

Anglican Church slams move by Rescue Churchie on child abuse

QUEENSLAND (AUSTRALIA)
The Courier-Mail

December 11, 2017

By Peter Michael

The Anglican Church has slammed a move by Rescue Churchie to disband the School Council over child sex abuse payouts at one of Queensland’s most prestigious private schools.

Church leaders urged anyone with evidence of bogus child sex abuse claims to make an official report to police.

The Anglican Church Grammar School, known as Churchie, in East Brisbane is facing open revolt by a group of Old Boys over a reported $130,000 compensation payment to a convicted killer and conman.

“If anyone has evidence of fraud it should be reported to police,” an Anglican Church spokesman told The Courier-Mail.

“But it is important for survivors of abuse to continue to be encouraged to come forward to report abuse and that all allegations of abuse are taken with the utmost seriousness and investigated.”

Rescue Churchie yesterday launched a social media campaign to replace the Anglican Diocesan Council, the governing body of Churchie, with an autonomous school council.

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Op-Ed The evangelical slippery slope, from Ronald Reagan to Roy Moore

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Times

December 11, 2017

By Randall Balmer

When I was growing up in the evangelical subculture in the 1960s and 1970s, I heard a lot of warnings about slippery slopes, especially relating to the Bible. If you dared to interpret the many-headed beasts or the vials of judgment in the Book of Revelation as allegory, then pretty soon you’d read the creation accounts at the beginning of Genesis not as history but as stories. Slippery slope. Not long thereafter you’d question the miracles of the New Testament, trade in your King James Bible for Kahil Gibran’s “The Prophet” and become (I don’t know) a Druid, an Episcopalian or perhaps a coastal elite.

Many of the slippery slope scenarios I heard applied to behavior. A sip of beer would lead to wine, then the hard stuff and, inevitably, to a life of debauchery. A trip to the movie theater would lead to a pornography addiction. Playing poker with friends would lead to a gambling addiction. Slippery slope. Dancing, of course, placed you on the fast track to sexual intercourse.

I left the evangelical subculture, more or less, at the end of the 1970s. Little did I know that evangelicals were then stepping onto their own slippery slope that would lead to Donald Trump and now Roy Moore.

To say that I left the evangelical subculture is not quite accurate — and not only because evangelicalism is so stamped into my DNA that it is impossible to leave entirely. Evangelicalism really left me more than I left it. The religious tradition that shaped me was part of a long and noble movement that, in earlier generations of American life, took the part of those on the margins of society. Evangelicals, especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries, sought to educate those on the bottom rungs of society so they would have a better life. They worked for the abolition of slavery and advocated equal rights, including voting rights for women.

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Notary for Vatican tribunal quits amid allegations

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

December 11, 2017

By Mindy Aguon

The notary for the Vatican tribunal who came to Guam to investigate child sex abuse allegations against Archbishop Anthony Apuron has resigned from his position at the Vatican’s Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faithful.

Rev. Justin Wachs, the notary and recorder for the tribunal, resigned from his Vatican appointed position for “personal and professional reasons,” according to a letter from Sioux Falls, South Dakota Bishop Paul Swain’s letter to clergy dated Nov. 29.

The information about Wachs’ resignation came out after Keloland Media Group uncovered allegations of sexual harassment that had been filed against Wachs by the former secretary of the Sioux Falls Diocese where Wachs had previously served as priest.

The woman alleged Wachs inappropriately touched her and interacted with her in 2014.

According to the Keloland report, Wachs and the diocese tried to save the working relationship and establish professional boundaries between the woman and Wachs, but months later, he resigned from the parish and went on medical leave, Post files state.

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Cynthia M. Allen: Attitudes toward sex empower male abusers

COLUMBUS (OH)
The Columbus Dispatch

December 10, 2017

By Cynthia M. Allen

We are on the verge of some significant cultural change — at least we should be — if we are to effectively confront the deluge of sexual harassment and assault scandals that have swept up dozens of prominent men in news media, government and business.

In some ways, what’s happening is good.

By coming forward, women are unearthing systemic sexism that has permeated some workplaces for years, and many employers are responding appropriately, albeit belatedly.

And it is the first time in decades where there seems to be a growing consensus across the political spectrum that our past acceptance of such transgressions was flawed, and we now need to draw bright lines when it comes to sexual behavior.

While the actions of the accused covers a broad spectrum of behavior — rape is a far more serious crime than sending a lewd photo — the fact that many Democrats and Republicans are calling for the heads of their own no matter the degree of the crime, is a positive development.

In the weeks and months to come, more stories and accusers will surface, and prescriptions for “fixing” things — mandatory harassment training and better support for women — will be implemented. There also should be agreement on moral standards of conduct for people in high-profile jobs in the public and private sectors.

But these remedies will be Band-Aids only if we fail to understand how we came to a place and time where a man dropping his pants at the office could go unchecked for so long.

How did we get here?

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Pointing a Canon at the Catholic Church: How Civil Suits Against Pedophile Priests are Handled in Canada

CANADA
Forget the Box

December 11, 2017

By Samantha Gold

Quebec has a love-hate relationship with its Catholic heritage. The province began as a settlement ripped from First Nations by Catholic France before the British took the colony. Quebec owes its first schools, public records, and health care and social welfare facilities to the Catholic Church who set them up at time when secular governments stayed out of them.

During the Duplessis era from the mid 1940s to late 1950s, the Church cooperated with the near dictatorial government to try and keep the people of Quebec obedient and unquestioning of authority. The Quiet Revolution that followed emptied the churches as French Canadians embraced women’s liberation, free sex, and the right to question even the Pope.

Though the province now claims to be aggressively secular (see Bill 62), it is determined to hold on to Catholic symbols such as the crucifix in the National Assembly and the tacky cross currently adorning Mount Royal in the name of glorifying a heritage that credits Quebec society solely – and incorrectly – to its white, Catholic, French-speaking founders.

As any place with Catholic roots, Quebec is not immune to the scandals erupting from the sexual abuses of children carried out by priests, nuns, and friars working in the province’s many schools. At the end of November, The Quebec Court of Appeal approved a class action lawsuit by the victims of sexual abuse who are suing Montreal’s Saint Joseph’s Oratory and the Province Canadienne de la Congregation de Sainte-Croix for the molestation they endured while attending schools the defendants operated.

This article will look at how our legal system handles civil suits against religious authorities accused of participating in sexual abuse and the St Joseph’s case in a little more detail.

Courts in Canada are generally sympathetic to the young victims of sexual assault by Catholic clergy.

In 2004’s John Doe v. Bennett, the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal of the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of St. George’s in Newfoundland who had been found liable for the sexual abuse of boys by a priest operating under their authority for two decades. Though provinces have their own civil laws, the principles of this case are similar to such civil suits in Quebec.

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Sex offender priest dies same day he’s due in court on new charges

WINNIPEG (CANADA)
CBC News

December 8, 2017

‘Where’s the justice in that?’ says alleged victim

A Catholic priest and convicted pedophile from Winnipeg died this week, just as he was set to appear in court on new allegations.

An online obituary notice from family says Father Omer Desjardins died Dec. 4 at the St. Boniface Hospital in Winnipeg at the age of 85. He was due in court that same day.

News of Desjardins’ death doesn’t sit well with one of his alleged victims, who had been waiting for a trial to get underway — and for the ordained Oblate priest’s expected guilty plea — since breaking 28 years of silence and telling his story of abuse to police in November 2016.

Joe, who does not want his last name used, previously told CBC News he first met Desjardins in October 1988 when the priest was working as the night caregiver at Credo Home, a Winnipeg group home run by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a Roman Catholic religious community of priests and brothers commonly referred to as the Oblates.

Joe had just turned 15 and didn’t want to live with his mother and her boyfriend. He became a ward of Child and Family Services and was placed in the group home.

Joe says Desjardins soon began coming into his bedroom at night to talk.

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Reporting of suspected child abuse becomes mandatory

IRELAND
RTÉ

December 11, 2017

The Irish Association of Social Workers has criticised the HSE for failing to appoint designated liaison persons to oversee the handling of allegations of child abuse that are brought to its attention.

The criticism comes on the day mandatory reporting of concerns about child welfare has been introduced by the government.

Minister for Children Katherine Zappone says the Government’s introduction of mandatory reporting ends 20 years of stalling by Governments in the face of a series of reports on child abuse in church, State and voluntary organisations.

From today, thousands of professionals, such as teachers, doctors, nurses and gardaí, must report suspicions of child abuse to Tusla, the Child and Family Agency.

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Abuse survivor reflects on royal commission’s damning findings into Newcastle’s Anglican Diocese

AUSTRALIA
ABC Newcastle

December 10, 2017

By Robert Virtue and Paul Turton

A survivor of child sexual abuse at the hands of the Anglican Church in the 1960s is calling for the Federal Government to fully implement the final findings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The call comes in the wake of the royal commission delivering a damning assessment of the Newcastle Anglican Diocese’s responses to abuse cases, when it handed down its findings last week.

The commission found there had been a “distinct lack of leadership” from bishops Alfred Holland and Roger Herft, and a “cumulative effect of … systemic issues was that a group of perpetrators was allowed to operate within the diocese for at least 30 years”.

Paul Gray said he had been abused by a number of perpetrators when he was aged 10 to 14, including Father Peter Rushton, who died in 2007 without being charged.

Mr Gray said lawmakers needed to act to ensure children were kept safe.

“How about we make sure we get consensus in the Parliament to instigate the findings of the royal commission and keep our children safe?” he said.

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Pope’s Personal Income: Billions and Very Secret

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle

December 10, 2017

By Betty Clermont

In 2013, the first year of Pope Francis’ pontificate, Catholics around the world put €378 million (over $515 million) in the collection basket for the annual Peter’s Pence donation, the fund for the pope’s charitable works. This information was provided by Emiliano Fittipaldi in his book, Avarice: Documents Revealing Wealth, Scandals and Secrets of Francis’ Church.

That same year, as in every year before, the Vatican Bank financial statement noted that profits were “offered to the Holy Father in support of his apostolic and charitable ministry.” In 2013, that was “a sum of €50,000,000” (over $68 million). A declaration that profits were given to the pope has been omitted in subsequent statements.

Beginning in March 2016, the “messages of Pope Francis published daily on Twitter and Instagram together with photos and reflections” include a link for making donations to the Peter’s Pence fund for “all people who want to help those most in need.” The papal Twitter accounts in nine languages have over 40 million followers and his Instagram account is close to 5 million, according to the Vatican Secretariat for Communications, the new department created by Pope Francis to make sure “what the pope says and does is made known to the world as quickly as possible.”

Additionally, the Peter’s Pence fund was given its own web site in November 2016 to increase the opportunity for more online contributions.

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This Is Survival

UNITED STATES
The Players’ Tribune

December 7, 2017

By Aly Raisman

Everyone is a survivor of something.

Everyone is battling something.

Everyone goes through ups and downs in their lives. The hard parts are scary and uncomfortable to talk about, but they are part of the fabric of our lives. The tough times make us stronger and make us who we are.

I’ve chosen to open up about my experience because I want change. It is very hard and uncomfortable to talk about. I have learned that everyone copes differently. There’s no map that shows you the path to healing. Some days I feel happy and protected for sharing my story. Other days I have bad anxiety and either feel traumatized from Larry Nassar’s abuse or I fear something else will happen in the future. When I have these scary thoughts, I try my best to find things to help me manage my fears. I go for a walk outside. I read a book. I meditate and practice my breathing exercises. I take a hot bath. I draw. I hang out with family and friends. And I remind myself I am in control and that I will be O.K.

I also want people to understand that abuse is never O.K. One person is too many and one time is too often. We must protect the survivors and people who are suffering in silence. We must support those who come forward, whether it is today, tomorrow, in three months, one year from now, 10 years from now. Whenever it is, everyone must show support. Victim shaming must stop. There are those who ask tough questions. Why didn’t you speak up? Why are you just speaking now? Are you nervous this will define you? To them I ask that they consider how complicated it is to deal with abuse. Abusers are often master manipulators and make their survivors feel confused and guilty for thinking badly of their abusers. And the abusers also often make everyone around them stand up for them, leaving the survivor afraid that no one will believe them. That needs to stop. Those who look the other way must stop and help protect those being hurt. Abusers must never be protected.

The power needs to shift to the survivors.

Sexual abuse isn’t just in the moment. It is forever. Healing is forever.

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BREAKING NEWS: Former abbot, 74, who withdrew £182,000 from his Vatican bank account and went on the run in Albania is found guilty of abusing boys at Catholic school

ENGLAND
Daily Mail

December 6, 2017

By Richard Spillett

– Andrew Soper, 74, raped and groped pupils at St Benedict’s School in Ealing
– He later used £182,000 from Vatican bank account to flee justice to Albania
– Soper was convicted of several counts of sexual and indecent assault on boys
– Victims said they had breakdowns because they ‘would not be believed’

A Roman Catholic priest who sexually abused children at an abbey school which became one of Britain’s most notorious dens of paedophilia is set to die behind bars.

Andrew Soper, 74, raped and groped pupils at St Benedict’s School in Ealing in the 1970s and 80s and used £182,000 from his Vatican bank account to flee to Albania when victims came forward decades later.

Former headmaster father David Pearce and former maths teacher John Maestri had been jailed for abusing children at the £12,000-a-year private school.

Soper flew to the UK to be interviewed by police about the claims in July 2004, June 2009 and September 2010, and was allowed to return to Rome, Italy, on police bail until 11 March 2011.

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Gerald Elias: Sexual predators know the difference between right and wrong — they abuse because society has tolerated it for so long

SALT LAKE (UT)
The Salt Lake Tribune

December 10, 2017

By Gerald Elias

When drunken frat boys and campus sports heroes rape female students, we wring our hands but chalk it up to bad upbringing or aberrant behavior or extra testosterone or the reason-numbing effects of binge drinking. We decry it but can, to some degree, understand it.
But when such crimes are committed or tolerated by revered university profes­sors and administrators, how do we explain that away? Misunderstandings? If a professor or administrator can’t discern the difference between right and wrong, who can? Is it that difficult?
We are now engaged in a raging national debate regarding sexual misconduct that goes far beyond the college campus. High-profile men in the entertainment industry, in the media, in government, have been outed for sexual misconduct ranging from an unwanted kiss to pathological pedophilia. Even this is but the tip of the iceberg. Below the surface, sexual misconduct in the workplace — in offices, in hotels, in factories, in athletics, in the armed forces — has yet to be fully exposed. And it goes even beyond the workplace. Women do not feel safe from harassment or being groped simply walking down the street, sitting in a bus or going to a park.

When students and former students have come to me with stories of being victimized by members of my profession, the most important thing I can do is help them regain their ability — which has been so violently compromised — to trust someone, anyone. I try to provide that trust and support. In a society that has no difficulty talking about violence but is unable to openly discuss sex, especially sexual predation, it is no wonder that women are only now coming forward and with such difficulty and with such courage.

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Archdiocese pays 3 local men $250K each after priest-abuse claims

KINGSTON (NY)
Times Herald-Record

December 10, 2017

By Paul Brooks

KINGSTON – Three Hudson Valley men abused by a Catholic priest decades ago will receive $250,000 each in compensation from the New York Archdiocese, according to their Kingston lawyer.

Joe O’Connor of Mainetti, Mainetti & O’Connor confirmed the payouts Friday.

The money from the Archdiocese was authorized after a review of the claims the three men filed with the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program.

The Archdiocese has paid out more than $40 million under the program, it said in a report released Thursday.

The claims of the three local men outlined details of the sexual abuse suffered at the hands of Gennaro “Jerry” Gentile, a priest who spent time in nine different parishes in the Hudson Valley between 1970 and 2002, according to church records.

The three men filed their claims with the IRCP in October, then told their stories to the program’s two-person staff, who had authority to evaluate the claims and determine what to pay victims.

Victims had to waive their right to otherwise sue the Archdiocese, but could speak freely of their abuse.

The law firm’s Michael Kolb played a major role in assisting the victims, O’Connor said.

Two of the victims he represents have declined to discuss their abuse publicly. One is still considering that step, O’Connor said.

Gentile abused them while he was at the Holy Name of Mary church in Croton-On-Hudson. He was a pastor there from April 1987 to 2000, church records show. Their families were parishoners at the church, O’Connor said.

The three were between the ages of 9 and 15 at the time, and the abuse by Gentile went on for at least six years in all three cases, O’Connor said.

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Royal commission condemns Wimmera Catholic authorities

AUSTRALIA
The Wimmera Mail Times

December 7, 2017

By Erin Witmitz

THE Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has released a scathing final report into Catholic authorities in the Wimmera.

The report found the Diocese of Ballarat had an secretive and abusive culture that prioritised reputation above child welfare and failed to stop the crimes.

The commission was particularly scathing of the actions of former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, saying he failed to take action to have (infamous paedophile priest Gerald) Ridsdale referred to police and to restrict Ridsdale’s contact with children.

In July 1986 Bishop Mulkearns appointed Ridsdale as assistant priest at Horsham.

The commission said Ridsdale should never have been appointed to Horsham because Bishop Mulkearns knew about sexual allegations against Ridsdale at the time.

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Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse | Abuse impacts families following of the Catholic church

AUSTRALIA
The Wimmera Mail Times

December 10, 2017

By Brendan Wrigley

IT WILL come as no surprise to anyone who has followed the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse to hear Anne Levey has not stepped foot inside a Catholic church for more than two years.

Her son Paul’s tale of being sent to live with notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale in Mortlake in the 1970s was among the most harrowing heard across more than two years of testimony.

Despite her best efforts to have her teenage son removed from Ridsdale’s control, disgraced former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns claimed he could not fulfill her wish despite knowing of the priest’s abusive history.

Now living in Albury, Ms Levey said her once devout commitment to the cross had evaporated after hearing countless cases of rampant sexual abuse and systematic cover-ups.

“I was totally devastated when I went to the commission. I thought it was just Ridsdale,” Ms Levey said upon hearing of the volume of paedophile priests operating throughout the Ballarat diocese, including towns across the Wimmera.

“I used to go to church every Sunday but I just couldn’t go down to the church now and look a priest in the face.”

While many parishioners such as Ms Levey have chosen to abandon the organisation, others with an intimate understanding of the abuse have found comfort in their faith. However in the wake of the scandal there is a clear, growing groundswell calling for major reform of the Catholic Church’s governance.

Nowhere clearer was the commission’s damning effect on a once mighty institution of western Victoria felt than in the 2016 census, which delivered a blunt critique of the Catholic Church’s standing within Ballarat.

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December 10, 2017

The Reckoning, a major new podcast series on the child sexual abuse royal commission, launched by Guardian Australia.

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

December 10, 2017

[Press release from The Guardian Australia]

In his first podcast series, David Marr investigates the story of Australia’s world-first royal commission into how institutions concealed child abuse

A powerful podcast series on Australia’s royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse is launched today by Guardian Australia, investigating faith, money, abuse and power.

In his first podcast series, Guardian Australia’s award-winning writer and broadcaster David Marr examines how the commission came to investigate decades of child abuse, hidden by the Catholic church and other institutions.

As the royal commision prepares to deliver its final report after five years, Marr and Melbourne bureau chief Melissa Davey talk to victims, experts and participants in the royal commission to investigate: why was it necessary? What did it uncover? And what comfort can it give to the victims?

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Most senior Catholic priest to be convicted of sex crimes in the UK found guilty on 19 charges

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sun

December 11, 2017

By Oliver Harvey

Andrew Soper, 74, a former Abbot of Ealing Abbey who abused boys during the ’70s and ’80s, is the fifth person related to St Benedict’s School to be convicted of sex crimes

THE implements on Father Laurence Soper’s desk looked like something from a medieval torture chamber rather than a master’s study at a leading Catholic school.

Led to his office on trumped- up misdemeanors, schoolboys blanched in horror at the sight of the “sadistic” monk’s cat-o’-nine-tails whip, canes and a leather strap.

Outwardly pious, Soper “cunningly” used corporal punishment as an excuse to pull down the boys’ trousers and sexually abuse them.

He even hoisted up his priestly robes to rape a 12-year-old boy over his desk at West London’s £5,368-a-term St Benedict’s School — then run by monks from Ealing Abbey.

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Why Australia’s royal commission on child sexual abuse had to happen – explainer

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

December 10, 2017

By Melissa Davey

The inquiry which investigated decades of sexual abuse in institutions delivers its final report on 15 December

What is the royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse?

The royal commission delivers its final report to the Australian governor general, Sir Peter Cosgrove, on 15 December, after five years’ work.

In 2012 the then prime minister, Julia Gillard, announced a royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse, something survivors and their advocates had been seeking for years after allegations in Australia and in other countries, notably the US and Ireland. “There has been a systemic failure to respond to it,” Gillard said. “The allegations that have come to light recently about child sexual abuse have been heartbreaking. These are insidious, evil acts to which no child should be subject. There have been too many revelations of adults who have averted their eyes from this evil.”

While successive prime ministers said a royal commission was not needed because state inquiries and investigations had been held, Gillard ordered the commission after explosive allegations made by Peter Fox, a detective chief inspector within New South Wales police. In a letter to the Newcastle Herald, he wrote that victims of historical abuse were coming forward in increasing numbers.

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Former Priest Sentenced to Life in 57-Year-Old Murder Case

EDINBURG (TX)
KRGV-TV, Channel 5

December 8, 2017

[Video]

A former priest convicted in a 1960 murder will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

The decision, the harshest sentence the jury could give 84-year-old John Feit, was unanimous just after four hours of deliberation.

On Friday, 21,055 days after Irene Garza was last seen alive, the Hidalgo County 92nd District Court was packed.

A jury was about to send a former priest to prison for life.

It took authorities 56 years to arrest Feit and another year to bring him to trial.

The night before the rare burst of snow fell on Deep South Texas, it had taken a jury, in a predominately Catholic region, just six hours to convict the former priest of murder.

It would take another four hours for the few family members Garza has left to hear a foreperson from the jury say, “For a term of life.”

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Former Student of Irene Garza Speaks Out

McALLEN (TX)
KRGV-TV, Channel 5

December 9, 2017

[Video]

A former student of Irene Garza spoke to CHANNEL 5 NEWS.

Garza was murdered in 1960. John Feit, a former priest, was convicted Thursday in her murder and sentenced to live in prison.

Garza’s former student Maria Olivares now lives in California. She spent her early years in McAllen, where Irene Garza taught her in elementary school.

“She was kind, generous, and she did help all of us that she went down the aisle, making sure our work was done,” said Olivares.

The former student said Garza would even buy students shoes when they needed them.

Olivares said she was devastated because she had a special bond with Garza since they both spoke Spanish.

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Priest gets life sentence in cold-case murder of Texas beauty queen

EDINBURG (TX)
Reuters

By Jim Forsyth

December 8, 2017

A retired Catholic priest convicted of murdering a former beauty queen who came to him for confession was sentenced to life in prison by a jury in south Texas on Friday, local media reported, ending a cold case that has troubled the community for nearly 60 years.

John Feit, a visiting priest in McAllen, Texas, when the second-grade teacher came to him for confession during Holy Week in 1960, was convicted on Thursday of premeditated murder in the death of Irene Garza, then 25.

It was the maximum sentence possible for Feit, who was 27 at the time of the murder and is now 85, KRGV TV and The Monitor of McAllen reported.

Garza’s murder still haunts the communities that line the Rio Grande, across the river from Mexico.

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Editorial: Let’s have constructive conversations about sexual misconduct

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

December 10, 2017

Amid the tsunami of sexual harassment and assault allegations, our community should have constructive conversations about what all of these revelations mean.

The national media has put a spotlight on the pervasive problem in the entertainment industry.

Time magazine’s Person of the Year cover honors individuals who reported sexual misconduct. The cover features singer Taylor Swift who countersued a DJ who groped her. Swift appears next to actress Ashley Judd, one of the first women to publicly accuse Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein of sexual harassment.

The conversations should focus on changing the mindset. It’s not OK for people in positions of power to abuse others.
In addition, the Time article includes early evangelists of the #MeToo movement that led to a worldwide discussion about sexual misconduct.

Here on Guam, the local media has chronicled church sex abuse lawsuits. Once-admired priests are now pariahs.

As more people share their stories, it’s getting easier to talk about sexual harassment and assault. We must keep up the momentum and steer the dialogue in a positive direction.

The conversations should focus on changing the mindset. It’s not OK for people in positions of power to abuse others. We must hold perpetrators accountable, and we must encourage victims to seek justice.

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Ex-priest gets life in prison for 1960 parishioner slaying

EDINBURG (TX)
Associated Press

December 9, 2017

A jury on Friday sentenced an 85-year-old former priest to life in prison for the 1960 killing of a schoolteacher and former beauty queen who was a member of the parish he served.

The same jurors in Hidalgo County in South Texas found John Bernard Feit guilty of murder Thursday night. Prosecutors asked jurors Friday for a 57-year prison term — one year for each year he had walked free since killing Irene Garza after she went to him for confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, Texas.

The 25-year-old Garza disappeared April 16, 1960. Her bludgeoned body was found days later. An autopsy revealed she had been raped while unconscious, and beaten and suffocated.

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Women tell of assaults, harassment in #ChurchToo

PITTSBURGH
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

December 10, 2017

By Peter Smith

When United Methodists’ Council of Bishops met recently, it held break-out discussions on the topic of sexual harassment and misconduct in their churches.

The discussion had been scheduled before the Harvey Weinstein scandal unleashed a tsunami of revelations of sexual misconduct in media, politics and other fields, but the news of the day underscored the gravity of the discussions, said Pittsburgh Area Bishop Cynthia Moore-Koikoi.

“We had an opportunity to share our own stories,” Bishop Moore-Koikoi said. “For me to be able to say to my colleagues, ‘Me too,’ was valuable to hear.”

In both her previous career as a school psychologist and as a minister, “there have been times I have had unwanted advances from people who were my superiors.”

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Call for immediate action on abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press, appearing in the Daily Mail

December 10, 2017

The prime minister and premiers must act now to ensure reforms recommended by the child sexual abuse royal commission are not shelved or lost in politics, a key Catholic Church adviser says.

The church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council CEO Francis Sullivan has called on Malcolm Turnbull and state and territory leaders to immediately set up a COAG committee to implement the recommendations in the inquiry’s final report, which will be released on Friday.

Mr Sullivan says once the report is in the public domain all participants including the Catholic Church need to implement the recommendations and it is up to Mr Turnbull to lead the way.

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

Why ‘Silence Breakers’ are key in any abuse crisis

UNITED STATES
Catholic News Agency

December 10, 2017

By Mary Rezac

This week, TIME Magazine announced a group of women and men as their collective Person of the Year.

What do these people have in common? They are what TIME called “The Silence Breakers” – people who have blown the whistle on sexual assault and abuse within the workplace, largely in the industries of film, politics, and media.

In recent months an avalanche of abuse allegations have been brought to light against powerful figures, starting most notably with a piece in the New York Times in which several women accused Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault. This sparked a flood of men and women coming forward with other allegations of abuse against numerous people in positions of power.

“These silence breakers have started a revolution of refusal, gathering strength by the day, and in the past two months alone, their collective anger has spurred immediate and shocking results: nearly every day, CEOs have been fired, moguls toppled, icons disgraced. In some cases, criminal charges have been brought,” TIME reported.

Not long ago, the Catholic Church in the United States was reeling from its own sex abuse crisis. In the early 2000s, reporters at the Boston Globe broke the story of a former priest who was accused of molesting more than 100 boys over 30 years, which led to a large-scale uncovering of thousands more allegations of abuse in dioceses throughout the country.

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Rescue Churchie: Parents, alumni outraged by sex payout

QUEENSLAND (AUSTRALIA)
The Courier-Mail

December 10, 2017

By Peter Michael

One of Queensland’s most prestigious private schools is facing public revolt after it secretly apologised and paid out $130,000 to a convicted killer and conman over alleged historic child sex abuse.

Rescue Churchie, a group of about 1000 parents and alumni of Anglican Church Grammar School in East Brisbane, will this week launch a push to disband the school’s governing church council.

Some of Australia’s corporate titans including Qantas chairman and former Rio Tinto chief Leigh Clifford are behind the move to “end the dark ages” of church-appointed school governance.

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Victims fear abuse royal commission report will be shelved

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press, appearing in news.com.au

December 10, 2017

By Megan Neil, AAP

Child abuse victims fear the $500 million royal commission’s final report later this week will be shelved and they may face a battle to get governments to act.

While survivors are grateful their voices have finally been heard and cover-ups exposed, there are concerns over what happens after the five-year institutions sexual abuse inquiry ends on Friday.

There is a lot of hope but also much anxiety and a real lack of certainty, survivor and activist Dr Cathy Kezelman says.

“The inquiry has provided a place where survivors felt that they had people who were looking after their interests,” the Blue Knot Foundation president said. “When the commission goes, who is going to take that position? Who will be able to keep ensuring that there are real changes to institutions, that institutions change in culture and structure and children are safe?

“We’re just hoping that a whole lot of people who put their hearts and souls on the line are not going to be let down.”

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States and churches face $4bn abuse redress pressure

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

December 11, 2017

By John Ferguson

The states and churches will be told to sign up to the commonwealth’s $4 billion sex abuse ­redress scheme this week as the royal commission hands down a landmark final report that will back overhauling the way offending against children is handled.

Social Services Minister Christian Porter said yesterday he was hopeful the states and institutions would sign up “in the not-too-­distant future’’ and that as many as possible would agree to opt in to the national scheme.

The royal commission will hand its final report to the ­Governor-General on Friday, but a formal government response will probably not be known for months. The government has not announced when the report will be made public, but when that happens there will be immense pressure applied to the states and institutions to sign up to provide victims with another layer of ­financial and counselling support.

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How child abuse royal commission happened

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press

December 9, 2017

THE EARLY DAYS OF THE CHILD SEX ABUSE ROYAL COMMISSION

The Royal Commission is announced

Then prime minister Julia Gillard said there had been a systemic failure to respond to “vile and evil” child sexual abuse and a national response was appropriate.

“There have been revelations of child abusers being moved from place to place rather than the nature of their abuse and their crimes being dealt with,” she said on November 12, 2012.

“There have been too many revelations of adults who have averted their eyes from this evil.”

What was the lead-up?

Several inquiries investigated specific aspects of abuse, but none had looked at the problem across all institutions nationally.

NSW

NSW announced its own special commission of inquiry three days before the federal government said it was setting up a royal commission.

It followed Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox’s call for a royal commission into allegations of child sex abuse at the hands of Catholic Church clergy in the Hunter region and cover-ups by police and the church.

It ultimately found no evidence to show senior police officers tried to block child abuse investigations.

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Church reform not over after abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press, appearing in the Daily Mail

December 9, 2017

The Australian Catholic Church must do more to atone for the widespread child sexual abuse within its ranks and its cover-up despite facing influential pockets of resistance, its key royal commission adviser argues.

The need for reform and change in the church is far from over despite the end of the five-year inquiry that exposed “a massive concealment exercise”, Truth Justice and Healing Council CEO Francis Sullivan says.

“Church leaders can apologise until they’re blue in the face but until they demonstrate by their actions that they sincerely want to atone for what’s happened, no one will listen to them,” Mr Sullivan told AAP.

“It will be on their heads if they don’t step up and demonstrate that they are going to take the church in a direction that resonates with what the community and the royal commission believes to be a sensible and prudent approach.”

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Former priest gets life in prison for killing Rio Grande Valley beauty queen

EDINBURG (TX)
San Antonio Express-News

December 9, 2017

By Aaron Nelsen

Jurors sentenced former priest John Feit to life in prison Friday for killing 25-year-old Irene Garza, bringing an end to a controversial case that languished for more than 50 years.

The sentence means Feit, now 85, likely will die behind bars.

Feit was convicted of murder with malice aforethought Thursday after a short trial that brought day after day of explosive testimony, including allegations that the then-district attorney struck a deal with the Catholic Church to stop investigating Feit to avoid a scandal that threatened to affect John F. Kennedy’s race for president. Kennedy became the first Catholic elected president later that year.

Garza was last seen going to confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen. Feit first denied, then admitted, that he had heard Garza’s confession on April 16, 1960, in the church rectory.

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Photo Gallery: Life Sentence and Final Statements in John Feit’s Murder Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor (McAllen TX)

December 8, 2017

Eighteen photos from the sentencing phase of John Feit’s trial for the 1960 murder of Irene Garza in the 92nd state District Court Friday, December 8, 2017, at the Hidalgo County Courthouse in Edinburg.

See also the Monitor’s displays of previous daily photo galleries from the trial: Day 6 (closing arguments and guilty verdict), Day 5, Day 4, Day 3, Day 2 and Day 1.

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Former DA: No regrets about Feit case

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor (McAllen TX)

December 9, 2017

By Naxiely Lopez-Puente

The former Hidalgo County district attorney who refused to take the Irene Garza case to trial said Thursday he wasn’t surprised the jury found John Feit, a former priest, guilty of the 1960 murder of the McAllen schoolteacher and beauty queen.

“I was not surprised,” Rene Guerra said shortly after the jury returned with a guilty verdict Thursday evening. “I found him guilty when the judge started admitting all sorts of hearsay evidence in the case — testimonials and all that kind of stuff.”

Guerra, the longest-serving district attorney in Hidalgo County history, alleged state District Judge Luis Singleterry admitted evidence that won’t hold up in an appeals court.

“I was surprised that the jury took that long,” he said about the jury’s deliberation. “I don’t know that it will hold up in an appeal, but only God knows what’s going to happen.”

Guerra has long been haunted by the case, which likely contributed to his election loss in 2014, when current DA Ricardo Rodriguez Jr. unseated him after promising to pursue the case.

Rodriguez, who has now successfully brought the case to trial, equated Guerra’s decision to not try the case with a lack of compassion at a news conference Friday.

“If my predecessor had an ounce of sympathy in all his 30 years as DA he would have seen that the evidence was compelling enough to convict,” Rodriguez said. “It was right under his nose all this time; he just didn’t care.”

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Ex-priest gets life in prison for 1960 parishioner slaying

EDINBURG (TX)
The Associated Press

December 8, 2017

[Note: See also: the original of a stunning letter presented at trial that showed church-state collusion involving the Bishop of Austin and the Provincial of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate in the Southwest; and the McAllen TX Monitor’s 12/6/2017 article about the letter.]

A jury on Friday sentenced an 85-year-old former priest to life in prison for the 1960 killing of a schoolteacher and former beauty queen who was a member of the parish he served.

The same jurors in Hidalgo County in South Texas found John Bernard Feit guilty of murder Thursday night. Prosecutors asked jurors Friday for a 57-year prison term — one year for each year he had walked free since killing Irene Garza after she went to him for confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, Texas.

The 25-year-old Garza disappeared April 16, 1960. Her bludgeoned body was found days later. An autopsy revealed she had been raped while unconscious, and beaten and suffocated.

Prosecutor Michael Garza, who is not related to the victim, had asked the jury not to view the now elderly and weak Feit as he is today, but to try to imagine him as a 28-year-old man capable of subduing the woman.

The jury deliberated just over four hours Friday before deciding on the maximum sentence. Afterward, Garza said at a news conference that he wished that he could take credit for the conviction and sentence, “but it was God-driven.”

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Pastor, Christian festival founder abused minors for 16 years, authorities say

NEW JERSEY
nj.com

December 7, 2017

By Amanda Hoover

A church pastor is accused of sexually assaulting four minors over a 16-year period.

Harry L. Thomas, 74, of Medford Township, faces charges of aggravated sexual assault, sexual assault and endangering the welfare of a child, according to the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office.

The alleged assaults came to an end two years ago. Thomas is currently the pastor of Come Alive Church in Medford. He is also a co-founder of the Creation Festival, said to be the nation’s largest Christian rock festival, first held in Pennsylvania in 1979.

Authorities said the assaults took place between 1999 and 2015 in Medford.

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New Jersey pastor accused of sexually assaulting four kids

NEW JERSEY
Fox News

December 7, 2017

By Nicole Darrah

A church pastor in New Jersey has been accused of sexually assaulting children during a 16-year period.

Harry Thomas, 74, the pastor of Come Alive Church in Medford Township, was arrested Wednesday, NJ.com reported.

Thomas has been accused of sexually assaulting four children in Medford between 1999 and 2015, the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office said.

No further information was released about the cases in order to protect the victims’ identities.

Thomas is being held in a medical facility for treatment, according to NJ.com.

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Men came forward to abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press, appearing in the Daily Mail

December 9, 2017

AN INSIGHT INTO THE VICTIMS OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTIONS

(Based on survivors who told their stories to the abuse royal commission in private sessions)

[See also the narratives of victims who told their stories to the Royal Commission in private sessions.]

GENDER

* Most male (64 per cent)

* Outside of institutional settings, girls make up a higher proportion of victims

* 70 per cent of survivors of abuse in religious institutions male; 66 per cent for institutions managed by secular organisations; 55 per cent for government institutions

* More girls than boys abused in child care and health settings

* More boys than girls abused in places of worship, out-of-home care, social support services, juvenile justice and detention, educational, recreation, sports and clubs, armed forces and youth employment settings

AGE

* 10-14 most common age of first abuse (46 per cent of victims)

* 28 per cent abused when aged five to nine; five per cent aged under five

* 10 per cent abused when 15-17

* Female victims tended to report that abuse began at younger age than male victims

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Inquiry shone spotlight on child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
9.com.au

December 10, 2017

Gabrielle Short hopes Australia doesn’t forget. But more than anything she hopes it never happens again.

She is one of the tens of thousands of children sexually abused in more than 4000 Australian institutions.

The children who were not believed or were too scared to tell anyone, often for decades, if ever.

The organisations that turned a blind eye to the abuse as they put their reputation ahead of the protection of children.

The crimes. The cover-ups. The denials. The inaction or inadequate and unjust responses.

A national tragedy perpetuated over generations within many of Australia’s most trusted institutions, to use the words of the judge who led the five-year child abuse royal commission.

This is not a case of a few “rotten apples”.

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Hundreds of charges from abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press, appearing in the Daily Mail

December 9, 2017

Hundreds of people may be charged with child abuse thanks to a royal commission that advocates say has already helped victims achieve some justice by uncovering the truth.

The five-year inquiry has referred 2559 matters to the authorities, mostly the police.

So far 204 prosecutions have been commenced.

Hundreds more are currently under investigation and hundreds are awaiting investigation.

However, the royal commission has cautioned that in many cases the matters may not result in prosecutions because the offender has died or there are other difficulties in commencing criminal proceedings.

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Diocese scores low on openness

BROWNSVILLE (TX)
The Brownsville Herald

December 9, 2017

By Steve Clark

New website in development

[Read VOTF’s full report, Measuring and Ranking Diocesan Online Financial Transparency, and read VOTF’s press release summarizing the results.]

The Catholic Diocese of Brownsville was among the lowest scoring U.S. dioceses in terms of online financial transparency, according to a study released Nov. 7 by Voice of the Faithful, a nonprofit group originally formed to support survivors of clergy sexual abuse but which also advocates for “accountability and transparency” in how the church handles its financial resources.

However, a spokeswoman for the diocese said an initiative was already underway to make more financial information available online.

The Brownsville diocese scored 10 out of 60 possible points in the study conducted by the VOTF Finance Working Group, which surveyed all 177 U.S. diocese websites and found “a level of openness well below what could be reasonably expected of an organization anywhere near the size of the U.S. Catholic Church.”

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December 9, 2017

Catania. Ragazzini abusati durante riti religiosi, le madri: «E’ una purificazione». Arrestato un santone

CATANIA (ITALY)
Il Messaggero

December 8, 2017

[Google Translate: Catania: little boys abused during religious rites, mothers: “It is a purification.” A holy man arrested. The Catania Public Prosecutor has issued a notice concluding investigations of the “12 apostles” investigation for alleged sexual abuse of minors consumed within a Catholic-inspired community. …]

La Procura di Catania ha emesso un avviso di conclusione indagini dell’inchiesta “12 apostoli” per presunti abusi sessuali su minorenni consumati all’interno di una comunità di ispirazione cattolica. Sono sette le persone raggiunte dal provvedimento, che si proclamano innocenti. Tra loro il ‘santonè Piero Alfio Caruana, bancario in pensione di 73 anni, alla guida della comunità che avrebbe abusato di ragazzine di età compresa tra 13 e 15 anni, in alcuni casi con la complicità delle madri delle vittime, sostenendo che il rapporto sessuale non era un abuso, ma un atto purificatorè compiuto da un ‘Arcangelò reincarnato.

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KCK priest accused of inappropriately touching young girl to stand trial

KANSAS CITY (KS)
KSHB-TV, Channel 4

December 8, 2017

A district judge ordered a KCK priest who is accused of inappropriately touching a young girl to stand trial.

Father Scott Kallal was in his mid-30s when prosecutors say he inappropriately touched a then 11-year-old girl. The alleged incident happened in 2015 in the gym at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church.

The now 13-year-old girl was in court Friday. She said Kallal tickled her and touched her breasts. She told him to stop and ran out of the gym and into the bathroom. The girl said Kallal followed her, pushed open the door to the bathroom stall and carried her out to her mother.

On Friday, Kallal’s defense attorney said during questioning it’s possible to start tickling someone and by mistake touch them inappropriately.

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Church of England faces a new sex abuse cover-up row as vicars refuse to scrap confessional secrecy

ENGLAND
Daily Mail

December 9, 2017

By Jonathan Petre

Centuries-old laws prevent vicars revealing sins heard in privacy of confession

Applies if dangerous offender admits to crime and then refuses to tell the police

But group will tell bishops this week ancient ‘seal’ of the confessional must stay

Critics say this does not go far enough as clergy will be barred from reporting

The Church of England is facing a new sex abuse row – by refusing to scrap the secrecy of the confessional.

Centuries-old laws prevent vicars revealing the sins they hear in the privacy of confession, even if a dangerous offender admits to a serious crime and then refuses to tell the police.

Following claims that the Church has repeatedly covered up abuse, senior figures have called for clergy who hear of such crimes to be required to report them.

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Creating a comfortable climate at home for kids to talk about sexual assault

UNITED STATES
Chicago Tribune

November 21, 2017

By Danielle Braff

When she was 15, Michelle Forbes’ high school teacher reached up her skirt between her legs.

Shortly after, the same teacher brought her to a secluded area in the woods and taught her how to perform oral sex on him. And on her 17th birthday, he had intercourse with her for the first time.

When a false rumor started going around school that Forbes was pregnant with the teacher’s child, he called her into his office and berated her, saying, “‘I thought you were mature enough for this: Do you want me to lose my job? If you tell, I’ll humiliate you.’”

It wasn’t until two years ago that Forbes, now 46, told her parents the details of the sexual abuse she endured.

She’s not alone. The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey found that 8.5 million women and 1.5 million men experienced sexual violence before the age of 18. According to Darkness to Light, a nonprofit organization committed to preventing child sex abuse, only 38 percent of child victims disclose their abuse, and many of those tell a friend, not a parent.

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Report into Anglican Diocese of Newcastle released

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

December 7, 2017

A redacted version of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse’s report into Case Study 42 – The responses of the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle to instances and allegations of child sexual abuse was released.

The report follows a public hearing held in August 2016 in Newcastle and in November 2016 in Sydney. The hearing inquired into the experiences of survivors of child sexual abuse perpetrated by clergy and lay people involved in or associated with the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle.

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Missionary from Stuarts Draft charged with abusing Haitian boys

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Associated Press, appearing in WHSV.com

December 8, 2017

Federal authorities have arrested a Christian missionary from Stuarts Draft who allegedly told a counselor and investigators that he had sexual contact with boys in Haiti.

If the allegations are proven, James Arbaugh, formerly of the Virginia town of Stuarts Draft, would be only the latest missionary to take advantage of Haiti’s extensive poverty and anemic rule of law to abuse vulnerable youngsters.

A federal affidavit filed by a special agent with Homeland Security Investigations says a counselor in Virginia reported Arbaugh to authorities in September after he allegedly disclosed sexual contact with boys. The affidavit alleges he told investigators in subsequent interviews that he “groomed” or had sexual contact including oral sex with at least 21 boys. One 5-year-old boy he allegedly molested was the son of a pastor in Jeremie, a city devastated last year by Hurricane Matthew.

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Broken Faith: NC steps in on child abuse cases involving controversial church

NORTH CAROLINA
Associated Press, appearing in the Lakeland (FL) Ledger

December 8, 2017

By Mitch Weiss and Holbrook Mohr

Spindale, North Carolina — In an unprecedented move, North Carolina’s state child welfare agency will participate in reviewing every new allegation of abuse and neglect involving a controversial church that has been the focus of an Associated Press investigation exposing years of physical and emotional mistreatment of congregants, including children.

Under North Carolina’s child welfare system, county agencies are responsible for investigating abuse allegations. The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services provides oversight and training, but generally does not get involved in a county agency’s daily operations.

The state would not say what prompted the move, but it follows a series of AP stories that have cited dozens of former Word of Faith Fellowship members who say congregants are regularly beaten to “purify” sinners. Founded in 1979, the evangelical sect has grown to about 750 congregants in North Carolina and a total of nearly 2,000 other followers worldwide.

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Betsy DeVos and the Bishops

UNITED STATES
First Things

December 8, 2017

By Thomas G. Guarino

Recently, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos made significant changes to the way universities are to handle complaints of sexual assault. DeVos made clear that in no way will such assaults be tolerated, for “one rape is one too many.” But she also accented the rights of the accused, insisting that “one person denied due process is one too many.”

DeVos’s policy changes make sense: Both the accused and the accuser must enjoy clearly defined rights—rights that must be equitably balanced so that the truth of an accusation may be determined and justice served. This procedure has been at the heart of American jurisprudence for centuries.

I invoke DeVos’s astute and courageous changes because similar adjustments are necessary in the Charter for the Protection of Young People (commonly called the Dallas Charter) enacted by the American bishops in 2002 in the wake of the sex-abuse crisis in the Catholic Church. The Charter has caused serious problems—of theology, justice, and morale—which continue to bedevil and undermine the Catholic priesthood in the United States.

Under the Dallas Charter, when an accusation of priestly abuse is made, the priest is immediately suspended from public ministry, regardless of the accusation’s merit. Some will reply that the claim of “immediate suspension” is inaccurate; a review board must first determine an accusation’s “credibility.” But author after author, from Avery Cardinal Dulles (in First Things and America) to David Pierre (in Catholic Priests Falsely Accused), has shown that “credibility” is a laughably low standard. Evidence is barely required. Indeed, almost every accusation is deemed “credible” unless the accused can prove that thirty years ago (and most accusations are from decades long past) he was on a different continent when the alleged abuse occurred. In other words, “credible” has come to mean “not entirely impossible.” With such a standard, accused priests are placed in an untenable situation.

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In 1960, a Texas woman went to confession and vanished. Now an ex-priest has been convicted of murder.

UNITED STATES
The Washington Post, appearing in The Denver Post

December 8, 2017

By Samantha Schmidt

For more than five decades, the black-and-white image of Irene Garza has haunted the town of McAllen, Texas, her story painfully recounted again and again.

She was a 25-year-old dark-haired former beauty queen, her high school’s first Latina drum majorette, the first in her family to graduate from college. She was named Miss All South Texas Sweetheart, and worked as a teacher for disadvantaged children.

But at the center of Garza’s life was her devout Catholic faith. In a letter to a friend in April 1960, she wrote about how she was no longer afraid of death. “You see, I’ve been going to communion and Mass daily and you can’t imagine the courage and faith and happiness it has given me,” she wrote in the letter, according to Texas Monthly.

And so when Holy Week came, the most sacred time of year for Catholics, Garza decided to go to confession.

On the eve of Easter, she drove to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen.

She never came home. Two days later, her beige, high-heeled shoe was found inches from the curb near the church. The following Thursday, her body was found floating in an irrigation canal.

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December 8, 2017

Sentencing phase in Feit trial begins today

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 8, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

A jury found ex-priest John Feit guilty of the April 1960 murder of schoolteacher Irene Garza on Thursday night.

Today, that same jury will determine the 85-year-old’s sentence, bringing an end to a cold case that has captivated the Valley for decades.

Feit asked that the jury decide his punishment.

The state is expected to ask the jury to sentence Feit to 57 years in prison, one year in prison for every year since Garza’s murder.

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Assignment History– Rev. William Authenrieth

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: William Authenrieth was ordained for the Diocese of Brooklyn in 1962. He was an associate priest at St. Vincent Ferrer until 1973, when he moved to the Diocese of Orlando, Florida.

Authenrieth’s time in Florida was marked by numerous transfers, due to allegations that he had sexually abused children. In 1978, after a parishioner at All Souls in Sanford reported to the diocese that Authenrieth had touched his son’s genitals, the priest was quietly moved to St. Mary’s in Rockledge. In 1983 a St. Mary’s parishioner told its pastor that his three young altar-boy sons had been fondled and sodomized by Authenrieth. The pastor told the parishioner to pray, and nothing was done. The family later sued. A fourth young man alleging abuse by the priest at St. Mary’s during the same time-period also sued in the mid-1980s. Authenrieth admitted to fondling the four boys, and the cases were settled. In a deposition related to the litigation, Authenrieth stated that he had brought more than one-hundred men to St. Mary’s for sex. He also testified that his reason for leaving Brooklyn was that a young male parishioner, “about 18”, threatened to reveal that the two of them had engaged in sex. In October 1985 Authenrieth was removed from ministry and sent to the House of Affirmation in Massachusetts for treatment.

A 2002 lawsuit claimed that Authenrieth had sexually abused a boy in the parish rectory during his time at St. Vincent Ferrer’s in Brooklyn. Further accusations emerged along with lawsuits in 2012, 2013 and 2014 regarding sexual abuse of young males by Authenrieth in Rockledge and Sanford.

Authenrieth is last known to have been living in a retirement community in Massachusetts.

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Tom Roberts, longtime NCR editor, retires

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

December 8, 2017

By Dennis Coday

Tom Roberts, who has served the mission and readers of NCR for nearly 24 years, is retiring.

The official record will note that Roberts joined NCR in January 1994 serving as managing editor, editor and editor at large. The simplicity of those words do not convey the true meaning of what Roberts has done for this news organization and for those of us who have had the privilege, honor and pleasure to have worked with him.

Tom’s greatest gift to NCR and what he has shared daily with NCR staff and readers is his love for journalism. He lives journalism as a craft and a vocation. He practiced and honed his skills as a reporter, writer and editor for more than four decades, and he likes nothing better than taking on an apprentice to pass on that craft. He always had time to talk over ideas, offer advice on how to approach a source or how to unclog a writer’s block.

More than the mechanics of journalism, Tom knows and models journalism as a pledge to public service that must be lived with deliberateness and integrity. Many of us are better writers and editors because of Tom’s mentorship and concern. I know too that many of us are better people for having worked with him.

NCR publisher Caitlin Hendel has observed that Tom “led NCR’s editorial coverage during a tumultuous time, for the nation, the world and the Catholic Church.” He joined NCR at the apex the John Paul II papacy, watched its last years and was in Rome for election of Pope Benedict XVI. For the election of Pope Francis, he was in the newsroom in Kansas City so I could be in Rome. Tom had a special love for Central American coverage, and he traveled to Iraq in the late 1990s when its people were suffering under years of economic sanctions. That experience guided NCR’s coverage of the debacle of the 2003 invasion of Iraq that still plagues our nation. Tom led the newsroom through the shock of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. He reported and edited more stories about clergy sex abuse than any one person should endure.

“Tom’s steady demeanor and passionate regard for the truth combined to hold institutions accountable and to put the voiceless front and center,” Hendel told me. “That is a legacy we inherit from Tom and pledge to continue.”

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South West Centre Against Sexual Assault the trauma of abuse is ongoing

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

December 8, 2017

By Clare Quirk

THE trauma of Warrnambool children abused by the Catholic Church is ongoing and should never be forgotten, according to the boss of the South West Centre Against Sexual Assault.

The comments by centre manager Mary Clapham come after the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Assault released a scathing report which condemned the church’s Ballarat diocese leaders, who were responsible for parishes across the region.

Ms Clapham said the horrific abuse which occurred in Ballarat was also experienced in south-west communities, including Warrnambool and Mortlake

“Those same priests were located here,” she said.

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Archbishop Philip Wilson sent $1000 to abuse victim’s parents

ADELAIDE (AUSTRALIA)
9News

December 8, 2017

More than 30 years after Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson ignored an altar boy’s claims he’d been abused by a pedophile priest he sent $1000 to the parents of another boy abused by the same priest, a court has heard.

Wilson, accused of concealing sexual abuse by the now-dead priest James Fletcher in the NSW Hunter region when told about it in 1976, sent the cheque in 2009, Newcastle Local Court was told on Friday.

The family of the abused boy refused to accept Wilson’s cheque and sent it back.

The abused boy’s sister, who cannot be named, told the court Wilson had been a family friend who had officiated with Fletcher at her wedding.

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Ex-priest with NM ties convicted of murdering Texas woman

EDINBURG (TX)
Albuquerque Journal

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

An ex-priest who once headed the Servants of the Paraclete retreat house in Jemez Springs was convicted of murdering a 25-year-old Texas schoolteacher and beauty queen on Thursday in Edinburg, Texas, more than 57 years after Irene Garza went to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen intending to go to confession.

Garza’s bludgeoned body was found days after her April 16, 1960, disappearance. An autopsy revealed that she had been raped while unconscious and had been beaten and suffocated.

A Hidalgo County jury deliberated 6½ hours before returning its verdict in the murder trial of John Bernard Feit, an 85-year-old former priest, after hearing five days of testimony.

Feit, who was 28 at the time of her death, came under suspicion early on, telling police that he heard Garza’s confession — in the church rectory, not in the confessional — but denying he killed her.

This week, prosecutors presented evidence that elected and church officials suspected Feit killed her but wanted to avoid prosecuting him because it might harm the church’s reputation and elected officials politically. Most elected officials at the time in Hidalgo County were Catholic, and Sen. John F. Kennedy, a Catholic, was running for president that year.

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Pastor at Come Alive Church accused of juvenile sex crimes

MEDFORD (NJ)
Courier Post Online

December 7, 2017

By Jim Walsh

MEDFORD – A 74-year-old pastor active in promoting Christian music festivals is accused of sexually assaulting four minors here over a 16-year period, authorities said Thursday.

Harry L. Thomas, who preached at Come Alive Church in Medford, allegedly assaulted his victims between 1999 and 2015, according to the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office.

It did not name the victims or describe their relationship with Thomas, a Medford resident who played a prominent role in a sensational child-abuse case more than a decade ago.

The prosecutor’s office asked anyone “who may have experienced inappropriate contact” with Thomas to contact investigators.

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Perth archbishop Roger Herft should face charges: Abuse victims

PERTH (AUSTRALIA)
The West Australian

December 7, 2017

By Nick Butterly

Victims of abuse by priests say former Perth Anglican Archbishop Roger Herft should face criminal charges for failing to report suspected criminal clergy to police.

Abuse survivors are also calling for Archbishop Herft to be defrocked and to hand back his Order of Australia, saying the saga has caused immeasurable pain to victims.

A report from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse which investigated the Anglican Church’s diocese of Newcastle detailed how systemic issues inside the Church allowed a group of perpetrators to operate for at least 30 years.

The report noted seven clergy and others associated with the Newcastle diocese had been convicted of child-sex offences. Father Peter Rushton, who has since died, is accepted by the church to have been a notorious abuser, but he was never charged.

The royal commission heard horrific testimony from victims of how they were taken on camps as children by Father Rushton, then chased through the bush and raped.

It was told Archbishop Herft was made aware of allegations Father Rushton had sexually abused boys in 2002 and again in 2003, but no action was taken.

Perth-based victims group Survivors and Friends, which deals mostly with cases in the Anglican Church, said the Anglican diocese of Perth needed to review any abuse cases that fell under the time Archbishop Herft led the Church.

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Jury Delivers Guilty Verdict in John Feit Murder Trial

EDINBURG (TX)
KRGV

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG – A jury just reached their decision for a former priest on trial for the 1960 murder of Irene Garza.

The jury reached a guilty verdict minutes ago.

Eighty-four-year-old John Feit was the prime suspect in Garza’s death.

The school teacher’s body was found in a canal in Apr. 1960. She was last seen at confession at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen.

Feit was arrested last February in his Arizona home in connection with the death.

Now jurors will decide how long the former priest will spend behind bars.

Sentencing is scheduled for Friday at 10 a.m.

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John Feit found guilty of murder in death of beauty queen Irene Garza

EDINBURG (TX)
CBS 4 News

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Jurors on Thursday night found former priest John Feit guilty of murder in the 1960 killing of beauty queen Irene Garza.

Jurors deliberated for nearly seven hours before reaching the verdict. Earlier Thursday, jurors requested to end deliberations at 4:30 p.m.

Judge Luis Singleterry denied their request.

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FEIT FOUND GUILTY

EDINBURG (TX)
The Monitor

December 7, 2017

By Molly Smith

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Emotions run high as jury convicts ex-priest in 1960 murder of Irene Garza

EDINBURG — Six hours of deliberation ended 57 years of speculation Thursday night when a jury found ex-priest John Feit guilty of the April 1960 murder of schoolteacher Irene Garza.

Feit showed no emotion as the verdict was read, appearing almost defiant as he learned of his conviction for murder with malice aforethought, or premeditation. The 85-year-old defendant also didn’t offer anything in the form of remarks while being led out of the courtroom, as defense attorney O. Rene Flores said Feit wouldn’t speak to the media.

In contrast, members of Garza’s family, who were present in the courtroom when the verdict was read, were visibly emotional and embraced each other following news of Feit’s fate, which ends a nearly six-decade wait for justice in the death of the 25-year-old.

Also on hand was McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez, who has worked on the case since 2002 and long believed there was sufficient probable cause to charge Feit with the murder.

Rodriguez was also among the many who testified in a trial chock-full of compelling testimony — this including accounts from women who detailed encounters with Feit in 1960 that included the then-priest asking to take photos of one at a cemetery and warning another that she was “next, honey.”

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Ex-priest convicted of 1960 Texas teacher murder

EDINBURG (TX)
The Associated Press via KHOU

December 07, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas (AP) – A former priest has been found guilty of murder in the 1960 slaying of a South Texas teacher and one-time beauty queen who was a member of the parish he served.

A Hidalgo County jury deliberated 6½ hours after hearing five days of deliberations before returning its verdict in the murder trial of 85-year-old John Bernard Feit. He was accused of strangling 25-year-old Irene Garza to death in McAllen, Texas.

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‘Wolf in Priest’s Clothing’ John Feit Convicted Of Murder

EDINBURG (TX)
Courthouse News

December 8, 2017

By Erik De La Garza

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas (CN) — A Texas jury convicted former Catholic priest John Feit of murder Thursday evening for the Easter weekend 1960 killing of schoolteacher Irene Garza, closing a case that took 57 years to bring to trial and featured allegations of a church cover-up.

The seven-woman, five-man jury deliberated for just over six hours before rejecting Feit’s decades-old claim that he had nothing to do with the disappearance and suffocation of the 25-year-old McAllen schoolteacher and former Miss South Texas.

Feit, 85, sat emotionless as the verdict was read at 8:17 p.m. in the same courtroom where he pleaded no-contest in 1962 for attacking another South Texas woman, 20-year-old college student Maria America Guerra. Feit was fined $500, but served no jail time in that case.

He will be sentenced by a jury Friday morning for first-degree murder, followed by a victim impact statement expected from her nephew.

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Ex-priest found guilty in 1960 murder of Texas teacher, beauty queen

EDINBURG (TX)
Fox News

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

A former priest will finally pay for his sins.

John Bernard Feit, 85, was convicted Thursday in the decades-old murder of Irene Garza, a Texas teacher and beauty queen who had visited his church for confession.

The jury handed down its ruling Thursday evening after deliberating for about 6 1/2 hours at the Hidalgo County Courthouse in Edinburg.

Feit was accused of strangling the 25-year-old woman on April 16, 1960 after she visited Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen.

Garza never returned home. Her body turned up five days later in a canal, The Monitor reported.

An autopsy determined that Garza, who was Miss All South Texas Sweetheart 1958, was beaten and raped while unconscious and asphyxiated.

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Former priest found guilty of murder in case that haunted South Texas for decades

EDINBURG (TX)
San Antonio Express-News

December 7, 2017

By Aaron Nelsen

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG — Former priest John Feit was convicted Thursday of murder with malice aforethought in the killing of a beauty queen in 1960 and now faces a sentence of up to 99 years.

Sentencing begins today with victim impact statements.

Jurors deliberated about six hours Thursday before deciding Feit, now 85, committed murder in the death of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old schoolteacher, whose death during Holy Week that year has haunted South Texas.

Feit, who was 27 at the time of the killing, sat stone-faced as the verdict was read. He declined to comment as deputies escorted him out of the courtroom.

“Justice was served,” Noemi Sigler, Garza’s cousin, said after the proceedings. “Irene finally got her day in court. Now she can rest — her story has been told.”

Members of Garza’s family lingered in 92nd state District courtroom after the verdict was read, tearfully embracing McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez, a witness during the trial, and District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez, who fulfilled a 2014 campaign pledge to reopen the case.

“Today pigs are flying, a little bit of snow, but pigs are flying,” said Lynda de la Vina, another Garza cousin. “We’ve spoken truth to the power of the Catholic Church, and to the former political leaders of Hidalgo County.”

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Former priest, 85, is convicted of murdering Texas beauty queen who vanished after confession in 1960

EDINBURG (TX)
New York Daily News

December 8, 2017

By Jessica Chia

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

A former priest was convicted Thursday in the brutal murder of a Texas beauty queen who was raped, beaten, and suffocated more than 57 years ago.

A jury found John Bernard Feit, 85, guilty of murdering Irene Garza after more than six hours of deliberations in Hildalgo County on Thursday.

Gaza’s family members burst into tears in the courtroom, relieved that justice had been served decades after the 25-year-old teacher and beauty queen was found dead in a canal.

In April 1960, Garza disappeared after she went to confession at the Sacred Heart Church in McAllen, where Feit was a visiting priest.

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Former priest found guilty of murder in case that haunted South Texas for decades

EDINBURG (TX)
My San Antonio

December 7, 2017

By Aaron Nelsen

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG – A former priest accused of killing a Rio Grande Valley beauty queen in 1960 was found guilty of murder with malice aforethought Thursday after a jury deliberated for about six hours.

John Feit, now 85, sat stone-faced and showed no emotion as he was convicted of killing Irene Garza, a 25-year school teacher, when he was 27 and serving as a fill-in priest in the Valley. Family members of the victim hugged each other after the verdict was read.

Garza was last seen going to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen where Feit heard her confession. Her body was found five days later in a canal. Autopsy results showed she had been raped while unconscious and died of asphyxiation, likely from suffocation.

Garza’s grisly killing during Holy Week 1960 haunted South Texas for decades and was the subject of a 48 Hours television special.

Feit’s conviction brings an end to one of the oldest cases in the Hidalgo County judicial system, but leaves unresolved allegations of a deal cut between the district attorney and church leaders to stop the investigation into Feit and avoid a scandal.

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Ex-priest convicted of murdering Texas woman in 1960

EDINBURG (TX)
The Associated Press

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

EDINBURG, Texas – An ex-priest was convicted of murdering a 25-year-old Texas schoolteacher and beauty queen on Thursday, more than 57 years after Irene Garza went to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen intending to go to confession.

Garza’s bludgeoned body was found days after her April 16, 1960, disappearance. An autopsy revealed that she had been raped while unconscious and had been beaten and suffocated.

A Hidalgo County jury deliberated 6½ hours before returning its verdict in the murder trial of John Bernard Feit, an 85-year-old former priest, after hearing five days of testimony.

Feit, who was 28 at the time of her death, came under suspicion early on, telling police that he heard Garza’s confession — in the church rectory, not in the confessional — but denying he killed her.

This week, prosecutors presented evidence that elected and church officials suspected Feit killed her but wanted to avoid prosecuting him because it might harm the church’s reputation and elected officials politically. Most elected officials at the time in Hidalgo County were Catholic, and Sen. John F. Kennedy, a Catholic, was running for president that year.

Feit later spent time at a treatment center in New Mexico for troubled priests and after that became a supervisor and had a part in clearing priests for assignments to parishes. Among the men Feit helped keep in ministry was child molester James Porter, who assaulted more than 100 victims before he was ultimately defrocked and sent to prison.

Feit left the priesthood in 1972, married and went on to work at the Catholic charity St. Vincent de Paul in Phoenix for a number of years, training and recruiting volunteers and helping oversee the charity’s network of food pantries.

Among the evidence that pointed to Feit as a suspect over the years: His portable photographic slide viewer was found near Garza’s body. Two fellow priests told authorities Feit confessed to them. And one of them said he saw scratches on Feit soon after Garza’s disappearance.

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In 1960, she went to confession and vanished. Now we know the priest murdered her.

EDINBURG (TX)
The Washington Post

December 8, 2017

By Samantha Schmidt

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

For more than five decades, the black-and-white image of Irene Garza has haunted the town of McAllen, Tex., her story painfully recounted again and again.

She was a 25-year-old dark-haired former beauty queen, her high school’s first Latina drum majorette, the first in her family to graduate from college. She was named Miss All South Texas Sweetheart, and worked as a teacher for disadvantaged children.

But at the center of Garza’s life was her Catholic faith. In a letter to a friend in April 1960, she wrote about how she was no longer afraid of death. “You see, I’ve been going to communion and Mass daily and you can’t imagine the courage and faith and happiness it has given me,” she wrote in the letter, according to Texas Monthly.

And so when Holy Week came, the most sacred time of year for Catholics, Garza decided to go to confession.

On the eve of Easter, she drove to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen.

She never came home. Two days later, her beige, high-heeled shoe was found inches from the curb near the church. The following Thursday, her body was found floating in an irrigation canal.

An autopsy would later determine she had been beaten, suffocated, and raped while unconscious.

Authorities found few clues and struggled to piece together the moments before her death. But one fact soon became clear. Among the last to see her was a 27-year-old priest with horn-rimmed glasses — the Rev. John Feit.

The young priest admitted he had heard Irene’s confession that night, in the rectory instead of the confessional. But he denied killing the young woman. The priest avoided criminal charges, decade after decade. As the years passed, witnesses died, detectives changed and the investigation into Garza’s murder stalled.

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Both sides rest in trial of former priest accused of murder

EDINBURG (TX)
McAllen Monitor

December 7, 2017

By Lorenzo Zazueta-Castro

[Note: See also a PDF of the original Pawlicki letter and See also South Texas DA Refuses to Pursue Ex-Priest, by Brooks Egerton, Dallas Morning News, November 21, 2004.]

Both sides in the trial of former Priest John Feit rested Wednesday, bringing an unexpectedly short ending to the proceedings.

Feit, who is accused of murder in the 1960 death of 25-year-old Irene Garza, considered testifying in his own defense but told the court outside the jury’s presence that he decided against it on the advice of his attorneys.

“It’s a wrestling match between my vanity and common sense,” he said.

After five days of testimony, the state rested shortly after the court returned from recess at 1:30 p.m. The prosecution had been expected to spend up to two weeks presenting its case.

For its part, the defense rested after one witness, investigator Rudy Jaramillo, a member of the Texas Rangers cold case unit assigned to the Garza slaying in 2002. Jaramillo had been called earlier as a prosecution witness and detailed how his unit reviewed the cold case.

Also Thursday, Hidalgo County forensic pathologist Norma Jean Farley testified that, based on files and medical records she reviewed, Garza died of asphyxiation, most likely from being suffocated. The defense had no questions.

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Amid a sex abuse crisis, a new conservative Christian vision for womanhood?

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

December 7, 2017

By Jonathan Merritt

In times of cultural crisis, societies have no choice but to enter a period of rethinking.

America has crossed the rubicon with the recent tidal wave of sex abuse scandals. Dozens of influential men have lost their jobs and reputations due to their offensive, predatory, and often illegal behaviors. These allegations have torn down the facade of respectability these men had carefully constructed, but they’ve also unmasked the lies some have believed for too long.

We can no longer pretend that sexism is a thing of the past. Or that powerful men can be trusted to behave with decorum and respect in the workplace. Or that women are safe and protected in our “enlightened” age. Amid this cultural crisis, religious communities must now enter a period of rethinking.

Julie Roys, a popular conservative Christian radio show host, believes that this must include a critical discussion about popular notions of womanhood. In her book, “Redeeming the Feminine Soul: God’s Surprising Vision for Womanhood,” she rejects the “feminist distortion” and “fundamentalist caricature” of womanhood. I’ve known Roys for years, and while we often disagree, I’ve always found her to be fair-minded and thoughtful. So I decided to invite her to share her vision for womanhood with the “On Faith and Culture” audience.

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John Cleary paid the price for speaking out in Newcastle Anglican diocese

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Newcastle Herald

December 8, 2017

By Joanne McCarthy

JOHN Cleary is the former banker who looked back fondly on his banking years while drowning in Newcastle Anglican Church’s dark child sex history for more than a decade.

“There were days when I thought, ‘Oh gee I miss the banks’,” said the former Newcastle Anglican diocese registrar who became a whistleblower before severing ties with the church in February.

“People bag the banks for doing the wrong thing but look what the Royal Commission’s shown us about what happened in churches. Is there a lot of difference?” he said as the long-awaited final report into the Hunter Anglican history was released.

Mr Cleary settled a legal case against the diocese after alleging he had been “marginalised, bullied and ostracised” by senior church officials for his stand on behalf of victims of abuse and attempts at reform.

Although it is nearly one year since he left the diocese to work at a Hunter aged care facility, Mr Cleary said the “horrific and graphic abuse of children” he discovered, exacerbated by the diocese’s “cover-up culture”, caused real damage.

“I don’t know if I can every truly switch off from it,” Mr Cleary said.

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Clergy sex abuse at Mortlake tests mum’s faith

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

December 8, 2017

By Brendan Wrigley

It will come as no surprise to anyone who has followed the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse to hear Anne Levey has not stepped foot inside a Catholic church for more than two years.

Her son Paul’s tale of being sent to live with notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale in Mortlake in the mid-1970s was among the most harrowing heard across more than two years of testimony.

Despite her best efforts to have her teenage son removed from Ridsdale’s control, disgraced former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns claimed he could not fulfill her wish despite knowing of the priest’s abusive history.

Now living in Albury, Ms Levey said her once devout commitment to the cross had evaporated after hearing countless cases of rampant sexual abuse and systematic cover-ups.

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Melbourne archbishop prioritized church interest over clergy abuse victims, Royal Commission finds

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Christian Daily

December 7, 2017

By Lorraine Caballero

The former Melbourne Catholic Archbishop had prioritized the interest of the church over the welfare of its clergy abuse victims and covered up the allegations by transferring offending priests to other locations, the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse has found.

In a recently released report, the Royal Commission shared how the late Archbishop Frank Little went to certain lengths to hide the sexual abuse allegations against priests under him. The investigating body made the conclusion after it heard the accusations against seven ministers in the Melbourne Archdiocese, ABC News relayed.

In addition, the commission found that Archbishop Little had transferred Father Peter Searson from the Sunbury Parish after accusations – including those of sex abuse and rape – had surfaced in the years leading to 1984. Even after he was transferred to Doveton Parish, similar complaints still followed him there.

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Little legacy lost after school wipes former archbishop’s name from school building

VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA)
The Age

December 6, 2017

By Melissa Cunningham

Former Melbourne Archbishop Frank Little will have his name removed from a building at his old school for his role in orchestrating a culture of secrecy that allowed scores of children to be sexually abused by Catholic clergy.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse delivered a withering assessment of the Melbourne archdiocese’s handling of clerical abuse on Tuesday, with much of its opprobrium reserved for Archbishop Little.

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Archbishop Philip Wilson faces landmark trial on allegations he failed to report child sex allegations

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Newcastle Herald

December 8 2017

By Sam Rigney

CONCERNED about the “acts of punishment” that Hunter priest Jim Fletcher had been subjecting him to, a young Peter Creigh reached out to someone he thought he could trust.

It was 1976 and Mr Creigh, then a 15-year-old boy, sought out the “young, fun” priest who organised the youth group activities at St Joseph’s Church, East Maitland.

That man, he claims, was Philip Wilson, then a junior Maitland-Newcastle priest, now the Archbishop of Adelaide and the most senior Catholic cleric in the world to be charged with concealing child sex allegations involving another priest. He denies the allegation.

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Brouillard named in 149th Sex abuse lawsuit against Catholic church

GUAM
Pacific News Center

December 8, 2017

By Jolene Toves

The cases against Father Louis Brouillard continue to roll in as another alleged victim shares details of the the sexual abuse he endured nearly 39 years ago.

Guam – His father gave consent without the slightest of doubt, “not realizing that he was send the victim J.Q.M.and his brother to be sexually abused by a predator disguised in the robes of the clergy,” states a complaint filed in District Court this week.

Why? Well, according to court documents, J.Q.M.’s father was decieved by Brouillard just as the Catholic community at large on Guam had been inculcated by a deep-seeded trust in the Catholic Church. Brouillard has been named in a multitude of sexual abuse cases filed against the Archdiocese of Guam.

In this particular case, the victim J.Q.M. was around the age of ten or 11 years old when he was repeatedly sexually abused and raped. Like the other cases against Brouillard, it details the retired priest’s M-O, targeting young boys who served as altar boys and boy scouts, sexually abusing and raping them on “outings” and then rewarding them by taking them to restaurants. He shares that during these outings, Brouillard would swim naked and instruct the boys to do the same so as to fondle and grope them.

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

DISGRACED EX CHURCH OF ENGLAND BISHOP WANTS TO BECOME CATHOLIC

ENGLAND
The Tablet

December 7, 2017

By Bernadette Kehoe

‘We love the Church of England but would like to end our days in a church where we can live and worship in anonymity and without constant fear’

Clifton diocese has confirmed that a former Church of England bishop jailed for sex offences and his twin brother have said they are looking to become Catholics “to live and worship in anonymity.”

A spokesman for the diocese told The Tablet : “We confirm that Peter and Michael Ball have been in contact with the Clifton Diocese expressing an interest in becoming members of the Catholic Church. This matter is subject to discussions with the Statutory Authorities, who are the lead with regards to Peter Ball’s risk management in the community. The Church of England authorities including their Safeguarding Team are aware of this request.”

The former Bishop of Lewes and of Gloucester, Peter Ball was jailed for 32 months for offences against 18 teenagers and men. He was released in February after serving 16 months. He carried out the abuse between the 1970s and 1990s. Ball’s identical twin, Michael Ball, the former Anglican Bishop of Truro, said in an email that “the events of the last years and rightly or wrongly the battering by the Church have totally wearied and reduced us.”

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Disgraced former Anglican Bishop becoming Catholic to ‘live and worship in anonymity’

CLIFTON (ENGLAND)
Herald Malaysia

December 8, 2017

Peter Ball is reportedly in discussions about joining the Catholic Diocese of Clifton

CLIFTON: An Anglican bishop who was jailed for sexually abusing 18 young men is converting to Catholicism to “live and worship in anonymity”.

Peter Ball, who was Bishop of Lewes and of Gloucester for the Church of England, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 for offences dating back to the 1970s.

A spokesman confirmed that he has been in talks to join the Catholic Diocese of Clifton, although he is unlikely to take Holy Orders.

The Daily Mail reports that his identical twin brother Michael, who served as an Anglican bishop, sent an email to friends and relatives revealing the plan.

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

Victims of abuse in the Catholic Church find help locally

MEMPHIS (TN)
WMC Action News 5

December 7, 2017

By Janeen Gordon

In the wake of the hashtag #MeToo Movement initiated by “The Silence Breakers,” women who spoke out against sexual abuse and assault and the allegations of sexual misconduct that spans from the United State Senate, to prominent journalists, to Hollywood, one local diocese is offering help to local victims abused by a member of the Catholic Church.

For decades the Catholic Church has been plagued by allegations of sexual abuse and protecting the church rather than the victims.

One local church wants to change that. In a weekly bulletin posted by St. Augustine Catholic Church, “The Catholic Diocese of Memphis encourages all victims, or parents of minors who are victims of sexual abuse by a priest, deacon, or diocesan employee or agent, to report such abuse…” The church encourages victims to contact the Tennessee Child Abuse Hotline.

The Diocese of Memphis also is said to offer abused victims spiritual and psychological assistance.

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Catholic Archdiocese of New York Pays $40M to sexual Abuse Victims

NEW YORK (NY)
USA Herald

December 8, 2017

By Marivic Cabural Summers

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The Archdiocese of the Roman Catholic Church in New York paid $40.05 million to sexual abuse victims.

According to the archdiocese,189 sexual abuse victims received payments through the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP). The administrators of IRCP are still processing compensation for additional victims.

Last year, the New York archdiocese launched the IRCP, an outreach program to reach out to the victims of its clergy. More than 200 individual participated and submitted their claims through program, which ended on November 1.

Around 40 priests committed sexual abuse

In 2016, the New York Times reported that around 40 priests were accused of sexual abuse. The archdiocese did not and will not release the names of the priests.

During the launching of the IRCP, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of New York expressed hope to bring a measure of peace and healing” to the victims.

Atty. Ken Feinberg, a well-known mediator and his associate Camilline Biros served as administrators of the IRCP. They had full independence in evaluating the claims of the victims and determining the amount of compensation for them.

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New York Catholic Church Paid $40 Million to Sex Abuse Victims

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

(NEW YORK) — The Archdiocese of New York says it has paid just over $40 million in compensation to 189 people who identified themselves as victims of clergy sexual abuse.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program ended Nov. 30, but some additional claims are still being processed.

Mediators evaluated claims and determined the amount of compensation.

A spokesman for the Roman Catholic archdiocese did not have a breakdown on the various amounts of payments to each recipient. Some of the victims’ claims date back decades.

The archdiocese also issued an eight-page report detailing efforts it is making to prevent future cases of abuse.

U.S. Catholic leaders have grappled with a clergy sexual abuse crisis since 2002.

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Archdiocese Of New York Pays $40 Million To Sexual Abuse Victims

NEW YORK (NY)
The Huffington Post

December 7, 2017

By Antonia Blumberg

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The compensation payments were made to nearly 200 survivors.

The seat of the Roman Catholic Church in New York says it has paid roughly $40 million in compensation to victims of sexual abuse.

In a press release posted on the archdiocese’s website Thursday, media liaisons Joseph Zwilling and Mercedes Lopez Blanco said the payments were made to 189 abuse survivors.

The payments mark the end of a reconciliation program to evaluate claims by alleged abuse victims. In 2016, the New York Catholic Church launched its Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program to assess abuse claims by more than 200 people who said they’d been victimized by members of the archdiocese’s clergy.

The cases involved roughly 40 priests, The New York Times reported last year. Zwilling told HuffPost the archdiocese will not be releasing the names of the clergy members involved in the claims.

The program was headed up by Kenneth Feinberg, a lawyer who also mediated in the compensation fund for victims of the Sept. 11 attacks. In administering the archdiocese’s reconciliation program, Feinberg and his colleague, Camille Biros, “were given total independence to evaluate claims and determine compensation,” the release said.

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NYC Sex Abuse Victims Get $40M From Catholic Church

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York City Patch

December 7, 2017

By Noah Manskar

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program made payments to 189 people who were abused by priests.

NEW YORK, NY — Some 189 people who were sexually abused by Catholic priests got more than $40 million from a new victims compensation fund as of Nov. 30, the Catholic Archdiocese of New York announced Thursday. The payments were the first from the archdiocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Fund, a pool of money created last year to repay survivors of abuse.

More than 200 victims of abuse applied for compesnation before the Nov. 1 deadline, the archdiocese said. The average amount paid out so far is about $211,904.

“Throughout the process, victim-survivors made clear they are not just interested in money, but instead are seeking some tangible sign of the Church’s desire for healing and reconciliation,” the archdiocese wrote in its report released Thursday.

The report does not include information about any individual cases. But one of those who got payments was former priest Stephen Ryan-Vuotto, who has said the well known Greenwich Village priest Rev. Robert Lott sexually abused him as a teenager. Ryan-Vuotto told reporters he reached a $500,000 settlement with the compensation fund.

Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros, two high-profile attorneys specializing in mediation, are in charge of evaluating victims’ applications for compensation, the archdiocese says. An independent panel that includes former NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly oversees their work.

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

New York Catholic Church pays $40M to clergy sex abuse victims

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

December 7, 2017

[Note: See also a PDF of the Report on the Archdiocese of New York’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program]

NEW YORK — Just over $40 million in compensation has been paid to 189 people who identified themselves as victims of clergy sex abuse, the Archdiocese of New York said in a report released Thursday. The archdiocese noted that the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program ended Nov. 30, but some additional claims are still being processed.

Money for the payouts came through a long-term loan.

Mediators Ken Feinberg and Camille Biros evaluated victim claims and determined compensation.

Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said he did not have a specific breakdown of how much each recipient received; some of the victims’ claims date back decades. The payouts averaged $211,600.

The eight-page report also summarized efforts by the church to combat sexual abuse.

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