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, 2012

Ex-judge to coordinate church abuse response

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Simon Lauder, staff

The Catholic Church has announced a national body to coordinate its response to the national royal commission into sexual abuse.

The Truth, Justice and Healing Council will be chaired by former Supreme Court judge Barry O’Keefe QC.

The group, which is yet to be fully announced, will provide support and expertise to the commission and identify institutional failures and find ways to stop child abuse happening in the future.

Mr O’Keefe says he recognises the job ahead will be difficult.

“But as a barrister of many, many years and a judge of many years and a commissioner of the Independent Commission Against Corruption, I learnt to face that which was unpalatable,” he said.

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

Church appoints former Supreme Court judge to commission

AUSTRALIA
My Daily News

APN Newsdesk
12th Dec 2012

A FORMER Supreme Court judge will head up a new Truth, Justice and Healing Commission to liaise with the Royal Commission into child sexual abuse on behalf of the Catholic Church.

The Australian Catholic Bishop’s Conference announced on Wednesday it would set up the next commission.

The church’s new commission will be led by retired judge Barry O’Keefe QC and Francis Sullivan, a long-time associate of the Australian Medical Association.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 commission to advise on child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Macquarie Port News

By Barney Zwartz
Dec. 12, 2012

The Catholic Church has set up a new Truth, Justice and Healing Commission to advise its bishops and run its dealings with the forthcoming royal commission on child sex abuse.

It will be headed by two laymen, a retired Supreme Court judge as chairman and a prominent layman as chief executive, Australian Catholic Bishops Conference Chairman Denis Hart said today.

Saying the church recognised it needed a sophisticated and coordinated response, Archbishop Hart has promised a new era of co-operation, transparency and honesty. So did both new appointments – Barry O’Keefe, QC, as chairman and Francis Sullivan as chief executive – whose first job will be to lift the commission’s membership to 10.

Archbishop Hart, the archbishop of Melbourne, said the new commission would also work with victims of clergy sex 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.

‘My childhood abuse horror’

IRELAND
Portadown Times

Published on Wednesday 12 December 2012

A RICHHILL man who claims he and several others were abused as children in a Protestant Church-funded orphanage in County Wicklow is heading a campaign for justice.

Sidney Herdman (48), a printer with a partner and two children, lived in the now notorious Westbank Home in Greystones during the late 1960s and early 1970s after his mother moved from Northern Ireland to Dublin to give birth to him.

He claims he and other young boys and girls were abused and wants a full investigation along the lines of the Ryan Report into abuse in the Catholic Church.

“There was terrible physical, sexual and mental abuse, the scars of which I still wrestle with every day,” said Sidney.

The home was run by an Adeline Mathers who came from Portadown – she died in 1999. And while she was not involved in sexual abuse, Mr Herdman said, “She often beat us with electric cable and injected us if we wet the bed – she was a tyrant of a woman, who claimed to be a born-again Christian. We lived in constant fear.”

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

Newark, Del., man cops plea to molestation in the 1980s linked to Delco church

DELAWARE
Daily Times

By ALEX ROSE
arose@delcotimes.com
@arosedelco

MEDIA COURTHOUSE — A former senior member of a controversial church pleaded guilty Tuesday to four counts of indecent sexual assault without consent and two charges of corrupting the morals of a minor for molesting four young female church members between 1981 and 1988.

Richard Bellingham, 58, of Newark, Del., was arrested in June after former members of the congregation came forward to describe physical and sexual abuse when they were between 4 and 15 years old.

The first victim alerted Pennsylvania State Police and the Delaware County District Attorney’s office to the abuse in January, telling them that Bellingham began molesting her in 1981 when he lived with her family.

That woman, now 39, said her family belonged to the Church of Our Savior at the time, where her father served as a high-ranking member. Bellingham was a close friend of her father.

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

Sex assault trial starts for former Saanich priest

CANADA
Sooke News Mirror

By Kyle Slavin – Saanich News

The first time the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria knew of Father Phillip Jacobs, they were also made aware of past allegations against the priest of “inappropriate behaviour” with a young male.

Michael Lapierre, a former longtime chancellor and vicar general with the diocese, said in the initial letter they received in 1995 requesting consideration for the then Ohio-based Jacobs to come and work for a Greater Victoria parish, the letter-writer mentioned the accusations.

“The letter … indicated there was an issue regarding Father Jacobs, and that had been looked into and dealt with,” Lapierre said Monday during the first day of Jacobs’ B.C. Supreme Court trial.

Jacobs, 62, is charged with sexual assault, two counts of sexual interference of a person under 14 and touching a young person for a sexual purpose. The incidents are alleged to have occurred in Saanich between 1996 and 2001.

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

Former altar boys recall being touched by priest

CANADA
CTV

VICTORIA – Day two in the trial of a former priest charged with sexually abusing children picked up where Monday left off.

Former St. Joseph the Worker altar boy, Chris Duggan, continued his testimony telling the court he knew Jacobs well. The 26-year-old testified that he witnessed contact between Jacobs and altar boys but was not a victim of sexual abuse.

Duggan also told the court that Jacobs would invite altar boys back to the rectory basement for movie nights after mass.

Following Duggan, Jacobs first accuser took the stand.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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, 2012

Chemical Thrown at Rabbi Who Helped Abuse Victims

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By SHARON OTTERMAN

Published: December 11, 2012

An outspoken advocate for child sexual abuse victims in the Satmar Hasidic community was injured by a chemical he believed to be bleach that was thrown in his face as he walked down the street in his Williamsburg, Brooklyn, neighborhood on Tuesday.

The advocate, Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg, who runs a Web site and telephone call-in line that publicizes claims of sexual abuse in the ultra-Orthodox community, said in an interview at the hospital where he was treated that he was walking on Roebling Street just after noon when a man came up behind him and tapped him on the shoulder.

“He has a cup of bleach,” Rabbi Rosenberg said, adding that he recognized the man. “And then he says ‘whoops’ and throws it in my face and walks off.”

A Police Department spokeswoman said on Tuesday evening that there had been an “ongoing dispute” between Rabbi Rosenberg and the man who threw the unidentified substance, but that no arrest had yet been made. Rabbi Rosenberg was taken to Woodhull Medical Center with burns to his face. According to a relative who was at the hospital, he had a corneal abrasion to his left eye and chemical burns around his eye. He was released after treatment and is expected to fully recover, his relative said.

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

Satmar crusader against molestation says bleach was splashed in his face…

NEW YORK
New York Daily Nes

Satmar crusader against molestation says bleach was splashed in his face, following Nechemya Weberman’s landmark sex abuse conviction

By Oren Yaniv / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

A Hasidic activist who has crusaded against perverts in the ultra-orthodox Jewish community said he was splashed with bleach by an enemy in a violent act of street retribution Tuesday.

Nathan (Nuchem) Rosenberg, 62, said the vicious attack was linked the the bombshell sex abuse conviction Monday of prominent Satmar sect counselor Nechemya Weberman.

Rosenberg attended every day of the trial to support the victim.

“Because of the Weberman case, everything is upside down,” he said. “Everybody is crazy.”

Rosenberg, who suffered an internal eye burn that limited his vision, runs an information phone line that often names alleged molesters. He said he was walking down Roebling St. in Williamsburg, Brooklyn around noon when he was approached by another man. …

The victim’s account was confirmed by Primo Santiago, 65, a liquor store owner who witnessed the attack from outside his store.

Santiago told the Daily News he saw someone run across the street with a cup, splash its contents and run away.

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

Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg Discharged from Hospital After Attack

NEW YORK
Examiner

December 11, 2012
By: Vicki Polin

Brooklyn, NY — Early today Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg was attacked on the street by the son of an alleged sex offender. According to reports the alleged assailant threw bleach into his face. Rabbi Rosenberg was immediately rushed to a local emergency room where he was treated and released.

The police took Rosenberg’s clothes as evidence and according to a reliable source, the police will be arresting the assailant shortly.

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

Bishop Robert Morlino cracks down …

WISCONSIN
Wisconsin State Journal

Bishop Robert Morlino cracks down on Madison nuns for espousing ‘New Ageism’ and ‘indifferentism’

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

Two longtime Madison nuns who lead an interfaith spirituality center have been banned by Madison Catholic Bishop Robert Morlino from holding workshops or providing spiritual direction or guidance at any Catholic churches in the 11-county diocese.

Sisters Maureen McDonnell and Lynn Lisbeth, both Sinsinawa Dominicans, have diverged too far from Catholic teaching, according to a confidential memo sent Nov. 27 to priests on behalf of Morlino. A copy of the memo was leaked to the State Journal.

Two other women connected to the interfaith center, called Wisdom’s Well, also have been banned as part of the same action.

The memo says Morlino has “grave concerns” about the women’s teachings, specifically that they “espouse certain views” flowing from such movements as “New Ageism” and “indifferentism.” The latter, according to the memo, is “the belief that no one religion or philosophy is superior to another.”

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

Wisconsin bishop bans materials, speakers from interfaith center

WISCONSIN
National Catholic Reporter

[Statement Directing Pastors and Rectors to Prohibit Individuals Associated with Wisdom’s
Well Interfaith Spirituality Center from Undertaking Activity at Parishes – Diocese of Madison]

by Joshua J. McElwee | Dec. 11, 2012

Madison, Wis., Bishop Robert Morlino has forbidden his diocese’s parishes and schools from using materials from an area interfaith spirituality center and banned the center’s staff members, including two Catholic sisters, from speaking at all diocesan events, according to a letter from the diocesan vicar general.

The blanket ban, first reported Tuesday by the Wisconsin State Journal, concerns Wisdom’s Well Interfaith Spirituality Center, which provides workshops and overnight retreats for people seeking spiritual direction.

Msgr. James Bartylla, Madison’s vicar general, states in a Nov. 27 letter to the diocese’s priests that even the center’s advertisements for centering prayer are no longer to be distributed on parish property. …

The letter specifically names four women in the ban, including Dominican Srs. Maureen McDonnell and Lynn Lisbeth, both members of the Sinsinawa Dominican Congregation, which is headquartered in Sinsinawa, Mich., about 90 miles southwest of Madison.

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

Indy pastor accused of child molesting

INDIANA
WLFI

INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) – A 70-year-old man is facing charges after a 29-year-old man told police he was molested starting when he was 12 years old.

The 70-year-old man, Otis Bernard Jetter, was identified by the victim as a pastor at The Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church in Indianapolis. Church officials said he has been removed from that position.

According to the man, Jetter would drive him to church in his van and engage in multiple sex acts when the boy was 12 and 13 years old. In some cases, the boy said he was given cash and told to keep it a secret.

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Local pastor accused of child molestation

INDIANA
Fox 59

By Dan Spehler

Indianapolis

An eastside pastor is charged with three felony counts of child molesting, after a parishioner accused 70-year-old Otis Bernard Jetter of molesting him when he was a child.

Jetter denied the allegations when confronted by police, but late last week, the Marion County prosecutor filed charges against Jetter.

The accuser, Arthur Stevens, spoke recently with Fox59 to share his story. Stevens said he had always enjoyed going to church at Pilgrim Chapel Missionary Baptist Church.

But at the age of twelve, things suddenly changed.

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Hasidic Sexual Abuse Is ‘Less’ Orthodox Not ‘Ultra’ Orthodox

NEW YORK
Huffington Post

Eliyahu Federman

Nechemya Weberman, a prominent member of the Satmar sect in Williamsburg, was convicted Monday of repeatedly sexually abusing a young teen he was entrusted to mentor.

The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, NY Post, NY Daily News, CBS and others have labeled Weberman and Satmar “ultra-Orthodox,” unwittingly conveying the assumption that the more Jewishly observant you are the more extreme you must be.

The descriptor “ultra-Orthodox” is reserved to convey the message that a particular group of Jews are extreme and fundamentalist but Orthodox refers to Jewish observance, not wearing fedoras, long coats and sporting bushy beards. So using the terms “ultra-Orthodox” implies that the more Judaism you observe the more extreme you become.

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

Orthodox rabbis laud conviction…

NEW YORK
Washington Post

By Lauren Markoe| Religion News Service,

Updated: Tuesday, December 11

The world’s largest group of Orthodox rabbis is lauding the process that led to the conviction of a Hasidic Jewish man on Monday (Dec. 10) on sexual abuse charges, and called on all segments of the Jewish community to cooperate with police in such cases.

“The RCA strongly advocates, as a matter of Jewish law, the reporting of reasonable suspicions of child abuse to the civil authorities and full cooperation with the criminal justice system,” reads a statement from the Rabbinical Council of America, which represents more than 1,000 rabbis in 14 countries.

The RCA is generally dissociated from Hasidic Jewish communities — fervently religious groups that follow the teachings of particular rabbis in almost all aspects of daily life. Hasidic Jews distinguish themselves by their Old World clothes, and they typically have little interaction with outsiders.

Concentrated in Israel and Brooklyn, Hasidic communities such as the Satmars, to which the convicted man belongs, have frustrated police with their unwillingness to work with civil authorities on sexual abuse cases. They have invoked Jewish law to justify their insistence that the community alone handle such matters.

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Colegio Cumbres: O’Reilly declarará este jueves por supuesto abuso sexual

CHILE
La Nacion

Este jueves declarará ante el Cuarto Juzgado de Garantía de Santiago el sacerdote John O’Reilly, acusado de abuso sexual por la madre de una alumna de 8 años del Colegio Cumbres.

La diligencia se realizará a petición de la defensa del sacerdote, que busca que O’Reilly entregue su versión de los hechos ante el tribunal y así, pueda acreditar su inocencia.

El requerimiento responde a que -según ha señalado el abogado del sacerdote, Luis Hermosilla- en 5 meses de indagatoria, el fiscal e investigador, Ignacio Pinto, se ha negado a tomar declaraciones del acusado.

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Juzgado autorizó a sacerdote John O’Reilly…

CHILE
Cooperativa

Juzgado autorizó a sacerdote John O’Reilly a declarar por acusaciones de abusos sexuales

En una decisión inédita, el Cuarto Juzgado de Garantía de Santiago autorizó al sacerdote John O’Reilly a entregar su testimonio aun si es formalizado en el caso por la acusación de abusos sexuales contra menores que se sigue en su contra.

La concesión la efectuó el tribunal a petición de la defensa, encabezada por el abogado Luis Hermosilla, quien argumentó para su solicitud que el fiscal Ignacio Pinto no ha recogido la versión del sacerdote.

O’Reilly fue alejado del colegio Cumbres en julio pasado luego de que los padres de una niña de seis años lo acusaran de abusar sexualmente de la pequeña.

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Alfonso Baeza: “Hay algo que no me calza” en el caso Precht

CHILE
Cooperativa

El sacerdote Alfonso Baeza se refirió en Lo Que Queda del Día a la condena por “conductas abusivas” contra el ex vicario Cristián Precht y aseguró que “hay algo que no le calza” en las acusaciones en su contra.

“Para mí lo que ha sucedido, si es que ha sucedido como lo dicen, no es un motivo para perder el cariño y el aprecio por lo que significa y lo que ha hecho Cristián Precht al servicio de la Iglesia, al servicio de los más perseguidos. En ese sentido, creo que hay una cierta injusticia en lo que ha sucedido y más injusticia sobretodo en algo que para nosotros los cristianos es muy importante”, señaló el sacerdorte.

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Sexual abuse survivor launches support group in Windsor

CANADA
Metro

By Luke Simcoe
Metro Windsor

When Brenda Brunelle was 13 years old, she claims she was sexually abused by a priest in her Catholic parish. The experience has haunted her for more than three decades.

“Your mind becomes formulated around guilt and self-blame,” she said. “I was entirely convinced that I had done something to deserve this and that I was going to hell.”

Brunelle alleges she was molested by Rev. Michael Fallona in the late 1970s. After years of seeking closure through church channels, she sued the diocese for $3 million in 2009, and finally settled out of court this July.

Now, she’s dedicated herself to helping others find support and healing.

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Priest’s fall from grace over fraud convictions

NEW ZEALAND
TVNZ

Wednesday December 12, 2012

In the space of 16 months, Father John William Fitzmaurice went from being a highly respected Catholic priest to a convicted fraudster.

His guilty pleas yesterday to six charges in the Christchurch District Court marked the sad end to an investigation that began in August 2011.

While serving as an administrator at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament and at Addington’s Sacred Heart Parish, Fitzmaurice defrauded the church of $127,650.

Just what Fitzmaurice did with all the money remains unclear, but yesterday Catholic Bishop of Christchurch Barry Jones told The Press : “I understand

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Defrocked priest who ran Reno halfway house says he’s guilty of fondling self on airplane

RENO (NV)
Reno Gazette-Journal

Written by
Jaclyn O’Malley

An elderly defrocked priest who moved to Reno and once ran a halfway house for parolees pleaded guilty in a Denver federal court to a charge that he masturbated on a commercial airline flight.

Daniel Drinan, 64, of Reno, pleaded guilty Monday to one count of indecent exposure on a plane related to his Sept. 8 arrest. In 1977 he was ordained as a Claretians priest, and later served in Texas before he was defrocked in 2002, after a child’s parents reported to police they didn’t like how he touched the child, according to news reports in Texas covering the case. Police later cleared him of any inappropriate behavior with the child, the reports said.

Attorneys agreed in court papers that they will reccomend to the judge that Drinan receive two years probation for the airplane fondling and be fined $2,500. A sentencing hearing had not yet been set.

Drinan was arrested after authorities said he was exposing his genitals while viewing pornography on his laptop during a Southwest Airlines flight from the Baltimore-Washington International Airport to Denver.

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Rabbinical Council of America on Guilty Verdict of Orthodox Child Molester

NEW YORK
Religion News Service

For Immediate Release

The Rabbinical Council of America (RCA), the world’s largest organization of Orthodox rabbis, is encouraged by the process that led to the conviction of Nechemyah Weberman, an Orthodox Jew who acted as an unlicensed counselor and was today found guilty for the sexual molestation of an adolescent girl. For many years the RCA has condemned the efforts of many parts of the Jewish community to cover up or ignore allegations of abuse, viewing these efforts as against Jewish law, illegal, and irresponsible to the welfare of victims and the greater community. The RCA strongly advocates, as a matter of Jewish law, the reporting of reasonable suspicions of child abuse to the civil authorities and full cooperation with the criminal justice system. The RCA decries any invocation of Jewish law or communal interests as tools in silencing victims or witnesses from reporting abuse or from receiving therapeutic and communal support, and strongly condemns those members of the Jewish community who use such tactics.

In light of the issues raised in this trial the RCA commits itself to increasing the training of its members who serve in all areas of the rabbinate, including pulpits, education, chaplaincy, and communal service, to know how to recognize, prevent, and respond appropriately to issues of child abuse. In addition, the RCA will help its members develop policies regarding prevention and response to issues of child abuse in their individual congregations and schools, as well as in their larger communities, and, where nonexistent, to support the creation of response teams that include mental health practitioners, law-enforcement personnel, and specially trained rabbis to respond to allegations of abuse and molestation.

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‘Now he’ll learn how to feel helpless,’ Victim of rabbi sex monster breaks her silence

NEW YORK
Daily Mail (United Kingdom)

By Daily Mail Reporter

The teenage victim of a Rabbi who subjected her to years of systematic rape and sexual abuse has described her joy at his conviction, declaring: ‘Now he’ll learn how it feels to be helpless.’

Rabbi Nechemya Weberman faces over 25 years in jail after he was found guilty of fondling the teen, forcing her to perform oral sex on him, and making her act out porn films, over the course of many years beginning when she was 12.

The girl’s parents, now 17, sent her to Weberman, an influential religious counselor in New York, for extra tuition after she broke various rules of their ultra-orthodox and secretive Satmar Jewish sect.

But instead the ‘master manipulator’ subjected her to a campaign of sadistic abuse convincing her parents that she was a ‘rebellious liar’ who needed strict re-education.

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Hermano de Cristián Precht…

CHILE
La Tercera

Hermano de Cristián Precht: “He escuchado a gente decir que esto es venganza del sector conservador de la Iglesia”

por Angélica Baeza Palavecino – 11/12/2012

El hermano del sacerdote Cristián Precht envió una declaración pública, en la que a parte de cuestionar a la Iglesia por la sentencia que le dieron al religioso, revela lo que cercanos han interpretado del hecho.

Precht recibió la sentencia de la Iglesia, en la que se le prohíbe ejercer públicamente su ministerio sacerdotal por un plazo de cinco años, debido a “conductas abusivas”.

Ante este hecho, el abogado Hernán Precht aseguró que “he conversado con mucha gente en estos días y he escuchado varias interpretaciones conspirativas para explicar lo sucedido. Hay quienes sostienen que esta es una venganza del sector conservador de la Iglesia, que vieron caer a Karadima, que era su ícono y baluarte, y que al hacer caer a un ícono del sector progresista de la Iglesia, establecen al menos un empate moral al interior de la institución”.

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Pope appoints English Archbishop as Nuncio to Australia

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Archbishop Paul Gallagher, the only English-born nuncio in the active service of the Holy See, is the new papal nuncio to Australia

Gerard O’Connell
Rome

Pope Benedict XVI has appointed Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher as the new apostolic nuncio to Australia.

The Vatican broke the news on December 11, after the Australian Government had given its agreement. Archbishop Gallagher succeeds the Italian Archbishop Giuseppe Lazzarrotto whom the Pope last August sent as nuncio to Israel, and simultaneous as nuncio to Cyprus and Apostolic Delegate to Jerusalem and Palestine.

A man of considerable diplomatic experience, the 58-year old Archbishop Gallagher is the only English-born nuncio in the active diplomatic service of the Holy See. At the time of his appointment to Australia he was nuncio in Guatemala, where he had served since February 2009.

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MA- Filipino priest extradited back to the USA to face child porn charges, SNAP responds

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

[Fitchburg Priest Charged in Child Porn Case Flees Country – Telegram & Gazette, Oct. 31, 2011]

Posted by Barbara Dorris on December 10, 2012

We are glad that Fr. Lowe Dongor surrendered to Filipino police, after more than a year on the run. Fr. Dongor is wanted for possession of child pornography and theft.

Fr. Dogor was the associate pastor at St. Joseph’s Parish in the diocese of Worcester in Massachusetts. He is accused of stealing money from the parish and possession of child pornography. He was arraigned in September 2011 for these charges, but fled the country in October 2011.

We are glad that Bishop McManus notified Catholic officials in the Philippians after Fr. Dongor fled the US. We are grateful that the FBI and Filipino authorities were able to work together to get Fr. Dongor extradited back to the US to face charges.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, (VIS) – The Holy Father appointed: …

– Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, currently apostolic nuncio in Guatemala, as apostolic nuncio in Australia.

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EDITORIAL: Hypocrisy rules at Delbarton

NEW JERSEY
Observer-Tribune

Posted: Friday, December 7, 2012

In 1988, a young man accepted a settlement from the Delbarton School for damages he suffered after he was sexually assaulted while a teenager by the Rev. Timothy Brennan who was then a monk at Delbarton.

At the time, the teen, referred to only as “John Doe,” signed a confidentiality agreement that barred him from ever talking about the settlement.

Now, 24 years later, the victim, now an adult, wants to purge the painful memories and speak publicly to help other victims reach peace.

But because of the confidentiality agreement, he must remain silent or risk being forced to pay back the settlement along with other penalties to Delbarton.

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Delbarton school …

NEW JERSEY
Observer-Tribune

Delbarton school gets heat for suit against former Mendham resident’s lawyer

By PHIL GARBER, Managing Editor

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

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

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

A terse statement from St. Mary’s Abbey was released.

“St. Mary’s Abbey will not have any comments regarding the legal case recently filed involving attorney Gregory Gianforcaro,” the statement said.

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Former Central Catholic Counselor Waives Hearing on Drug Charges

PENNSYLVANIA
Patch

By Heidi Dezayas
Email the author
December 10, 2012

A former Central Catholic High School guidance counselor is out of jail and has waived a preliminary hearing on heroin-related charges.

Last week, Kelly Scherer, 36, waived a preliminary hearing on charges of conspiracy; two counts of intent to possess a controlled substance; and four counts of manufacture, delivery or possession of a controlled substance before District Justice Thomas Caulfield.

Forest Hills police are accusing Scherer of dealing heroin and selling it to an undercover police officer from her Sumner Avenue apartment.

According to a criminal complaint filed by the Forest Hills Police Department, Scherer was being investigated back in 2011. A neighbor tipped off police, saying he suspected Scherer was dealing drugs from her apartment.

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Review: Compass

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Pam Casellas, The West Australian
December 11, 2012

In tonight’s special edition of Compass, Geraldine Doogue investigates the child sexual abuse crisis in Australian churches, from the groundbreaking 1992 Compass program The Ultimate Betrayal to Julia Gillard’s recent Royal Commission announcement.

When Compass lifted the lid on clerical sexual abuse in Australia with the shocking film The Ultimate Betrayal it was dismissed by many as unthinkable.

Two decades and several groundbreaking documentaries later, Compass charts the full saga of the child sexual abuse crisis in Australian churches that led to the Royal Commission announcement.

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Fugitive Pinoy priest in pornography scandal surrenders, repatriated to US

PHILIPPINES
GMA News

A fugitive priest wanted in the United States for more than a year for possession of child pornographic materials has surrendered to Philippine officials and is now on his way back to the US to face the charges against him.

According to a report of the Iloilo-based news site The Daily Guardian on Tuesday, Father Lowe Dongor, fled the US and returned to the Philippines last year but turned himself in to the National Bureau of Investigation after months of negotiations.

Dongor, 36, had fled the US in October 2011 after entering a “not guilty” plea on charges of possession of child pornography.

The Daily Guardian said the priest, a native of Barotac Nuevo in Iloilo, is accused in the US District Court of the District of Massachusetts of Unlawful Flight to Avoid Prosecution (UFAP).

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‘Fugitive’ priest issues public apology

PHILIPPINES
Sun.Star

By Florence F. Hibionada

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

A FILIPINO priest, who was suspended after being charged with theft and possession of pornographic materials, issued a public apology.

Reverend Father Lowe Dongor, in his letter, made a plea to critics and media to spare his family from incessant media attention.

Dongor opened up after a year of silence since he fled to US that had the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) charged him with one count of felony act of Unlawful Flight to Avoid Prosecution (UFAP).

Dongor, in a handwritten “My Apology” letter, said: “My heart is in grief and I know that yours as well. I am so sorry. I want to apologize to all the people who has believed and supported me for the damaged I have done to you all, to the church and to myself.”

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Live chat with the PM: Questions and answers

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

This afternoon The Sydney Morning Herald hosted a live Facebook Q&A with Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

The questions to which the Prime Minister responded are below.

Question from Justin Luke Jack Reiss:
Prime Minister, when will the Royal Commission into Sexual Abuse of Children begin? Would the government be committed to establishing a secondary Royal Commission if the upcoming one is to uncover systemic Child sex abuse within the Catholic church.

Julia Gillard:
We will announce the terms of reference before the end of the year and the commission will get underway next year. The Royal Commission is about child sexual abuse in institutional contexts. It isn’t aimed at any one institution.

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For the record

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

Priest abuse files: An article in the Dec. 8 Section A about the upcoming release of the personnel files of priests in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles accused of sexually abusing children referred to Roger M. Mahony as a former cardinal. He stepped down as archbishop last year, but he retains the title of cardinal.

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Priest given Sooke post to avoid kids, court hears

CANADA
Vancouver Sun

By LOUISE DICKSON, timescolonist.com

A Catholic priest charged with four counts of sexual offences against three former altar boys at St. Joseph the Worker’s parish in Saanich was first appointed to the parish of St. Rose of Lima in Sooke because it would limit his access to children.

That admission was heard Monday at Father Phil Jacobs’s judge-alone trial in B.C. Supreme Court. Jacobs, 63, who was parish priest at St. Joseph’s from 1997 to 2002, is charged with sexual assault, two counts of sexual interference with a person under 14 and sexual touching. The incidents are alleged to have occurred between September 1996 and June 30, 2001.

Jacobs, a tall man with receding grey hair and a trim beard, sat in the prisoner’s box as prosecutor Clare Jennings read the admissions into the court record.

The admissions show allegations of sexual misconduct were made against Jacobs when he was ministering in the Catholic Diocese of Columbus, Ohio. No criminal charges were laid or civil suits filed as a result of the Ohio allegations.

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Jury finds Nechemya Weberman, Satmar Hasidic leader, guilty of molesting teenage girl he was paid to counsel

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

By Oren Yaniv , Simone Weichselbaum AND Ginger Adams Otis / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, December 10, 2012

A prominent Hasidic counselor was convicted yesterday of sexually abusing a young girl in a bombshell trial that caused deep rifts in Brooklyn’s insular Satmar sect.

Ultra-Orthodox counselor Nechemya Weberman, 54, was convicted on all 59 counts of abuse, including sustained sex abuse of a child and endangering the welfare of a child. He faces a maximum of 117 years in prison.

Weberman sat silently in the Brooklyn courtroom as the results were read, before being led from the court room in handcuffs.

The victim – who testified that she “wanted to die rather than live with herself” as the monster violated her during the closed-door molestation sessions – cried tears of joy when she got the news, she told Daily News.

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‘Guilty!’ Nechemya Weberman emotionless as jurors send him away on 59 counts of sexual assault

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Joanna Molloy

The jurors made an error of form Monday as they announced their verdict in the Nechemya Weberman child-molestation case, and it was a telling one.

“Guilty!” the eight women and four men repeated in unison several times, as the court clerk began reading each the 59 counts of sexual abuse of a minor he was charged with.

“No, ladies and gentleman,” Judge John Ingram admonished. “Just your foreman is supposed to deliver your verdicts.”

They’d only needed 90 minutes Monday to deliberate, and they seemed resoundingly united in their certainty.

Weberman, a 54-year-old man who’d touted himself in the Satmar ultra-Orthodox community as the go-to rabbinical counselor for rebellious teenage girls, sat stone-faced as the word “guilty” tolled like a funeral bell 59 times as Hasidic men davened in the pews.

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Abuse Verdict Topples a Hasidic Wall of Secrecy

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By SHARON OTTERMAN

Published: December 10, 2012

Sexual abuse in the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community has long been hidden. Victims who came forward were intimidated into silence; their families were shunned; cases were dropped for a lack of cooperation.

But on Monday, a State Supreme Court jury in Brooklyn delivered a stunning victory to prosecutors and victims’ advocates, convicting a 54-year-old unlicensed therapist who is a prominent member of the Satmar Hasidic community of Williamsburg of repeatedly sexually abusing a young girl who had been sent to him for help.

“The veil of secrecy has been lifted,” said Charles J. Hynes, the Brooklyn district attorney. “The wall that has existed in parts of these communities has now been broken through. And as far as I’m concerned, it is very clear to me that it is only going to get better for people who are victimized in these various communities.”

The case against the therapist, Nechemya Weberman, was a significant milestone for Mr. Hynes, whose office has been criticized for not acting aggressively enough against sexual abusers in the borough’s large and politically connected ultra-Orthodox community.

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Satmar Hasidic leader found guilty in child sex abuse case

NEW YORK
CNN

By Nina Melendez, CNN

updated 12:40 AM EST, Tue December 11, 2012

New York (CNN) — A counselor in Brooklyn’s Orthodox Jewish community was found guilty Monday of sexually abusing a girl over a period of three years in a case that one victim’s advocate described as marking “a new era.”

Nechemya Weberman, 54, was found guilty on all 59 counts he was facing, including sexual conduct against a child. He faces a possible sentence of 117 years in prison, the Kings County District Attorney’s office said.

The abuse began in 2007, when the girl’s parents hired the unlicensed counselor to help their then-12-year-old daughter; it continued — mostly in his office — until 2010, the district attorney’s office said in a news release. The victim, who testified at trial, is now 17, it said.

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Equal protection under the law wins a big victory in Brooklyn

NEW YORK
New York Daily Nes

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

The conviction of a prominent member of Brooklyn’s Satmar Hasidic community on 59 counts of sexually abusing a schoolgirl stands as an important use of the criminal law in a defiantly insular culture.

A jury credited her description of Nechemya Weberman as a predator, and it rejected his claim that she had accused him in revenge for a scheme to have her boyfriend charged with statutory rape.

Based on the evidence, the finding appeared a well-justified conclusion for which punishment must, and will, be severe. That said, had the jury acquitted Weberman, the case would still have been a landmark. On its own, trying him established that the law will be equally and fairly applied to all.

Weberman’s young victim showed enormous courage in pursuing the prosecution.

When she was but 12, teachers and administrators at her Orthodox Jewish school became concerned that she had grown rebellious, a quality not surprising for her age but deemed in her world to require remediation. School leaders insisted her parents send the girl to Weberman, who was highly regarded as a youth counselor although he had no secular credentials as a counselor or therapist.

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Christian camp sued for failure to ensure camper safety

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily America

JUDY D.J. ELLICH Daily American Staff Writer
10:12 p.m. EST, December 10, 2012

SOMERSET COUNTY—

Three women have filed a lawsuit against Christian Camps of Pittsburgh Inc., Summer’s Best Two Weeks and the Vienna Presbyterian Church in Somerset County court claiming a student ministry director molested and sexually abused them.

The lawsuit claims the camp and the church failed to follow protocol when hiring Eric DeVries and failed to take action when the allegations surfaced. According to the lawsuit, the assaults took place in Pennsylvania and Virginia between 2003 and 2005 when the plaintiffs were between 13 and 17 years old. DeVries is not listed as a defendant in the lawsuit.

“Between 2001-2005, VPC provided DeVries with a breeding ground of young girls who he psychologically and spiritually manipulated, groomed and ultimately sexually assaulted,” attorney Benjamin D. Andreozzi of Harrisburg wrote in the lawsuit.

Many of the sexual assaults occurred during church outings to the camp and Seven Springs Mountain Resort, according to the lawsuit.

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$35 million in parish investment funds off the table in sex abuse case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

Creditors in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy cannot sue to recover more than $35 million in parish investment funds that the archdiocese moved off its books in 2005, a federal judge ruled Monday.

It was the second major victory for the archdiocese and its parishes in recent days.

In a 23-page decision, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley said, “arguably there was something ‘fishy’ about the transfer” at a time when the archdiocese was being sued for sexual abuse by priests and had started a mediation program for survivors.

But Kelley said the money never belonged to the archdiocese, that the parishes took the funds back or invested them elsewhere in good faith, and that the high cost of litigation would undermine the archdiocese’s ability to develop a reorganization plan.

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Former volunteer at Turlock church in court in sex abuse case

CALIFORNIA
Modesto Bee

By Rosalio Ahumada
rahumada@modbee.com

TURLOCK — A man who worked as a volunteer at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Turlock appeared in court Monday for the first time since he was arrested last week on suspicion of sexually abusing two boys.

Eduardo Arellano Sanchez, 34, has been charged with two counts of continuous sexual abuse of a child younger than 14.

He briefly appeared without an attorney for his arraignment hearing Monday afternoon. Stanislaus County Superior Court Judge Valli Israels entered a not guilty plea on Sanchez’s behalf.

Church officials say there is no indication the claimed incidents occurred at the church. Officials have notified parishioners of the arrest and asked them to call Turlock police if they have any information about the case.

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Church to name abuse inquiry council head

AUSTRALIA
9 News

The Catholic church will on Wednesday name the head of its specially convened council to work with the federal government’s royal commission into child sexual abuse.

The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and Catholic Religious Australia announced last month they would establish a 10-member council of lay people and members of the clergy.

Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge and Maitland Bishop William Wright have already been appointed and are considered among the likely contenders to head the council.

The other members are due to be announced this month.

Conference president Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart and Sister Annette Cunliffe, chair of Catholic Religious Australia, will announce the council’s chair and chief executive on Wednesday.

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Sex assault trial starts for former Saanich priest

CANADA
Sooke News Mirror

By Kyle Slavin – Saanich News

Published: December 10, 2012

The first time the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria knew of Father Phillip Jacobs, they were also made aware of past allegations against the priest of “inappropriate behaviour” with a young male.

Michael Lapierre, a former longtime chancellor and vicar general with the diocese, said in the initial letter they received in 1995 requesting consideration for the then Ohio-based Jacobs to come and work for a Greater Victoria parish, the letter-writer mentioned the accusations.

“The letter … indicated there was an issue regarding Father Jacobs, and that had been looked into and dealt with,” Lapierre said Monday during the first day of Jacobs’ B.C. Supreme Court trial.

Jacobs, 62, is charged with sexual assault, two counts of sexual interference of a person under 14 and touching a young person for a sexual purpose. The incidents are alleged to have occurred in Saanich between 1996 and 2001.

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Priest sex abuse trial begins in Victoria

CANADA
CBC

The trial of a Roman Catholic priest charged with sexual offences against three teens in the late 1990s is underway in Victoria.

Father Phil Jacobs was a priest in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria at the time of the alleged abuses in the late 1990s.

Jacobs found work in B.C. despite previous allegations involving boys in the U.S.

He resigned his position in Victoria in 2002 after it was made public that he was dismissed from a church in Columbus, Ohio during the mid-1990s following allegations of misconduct there.

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December 10, 2012

Local childhood sexual abuse victim lunches support group

CANADA
The Windsor Star

Dave Battagello
Dec 10, 2012

A Windsor woman who was the victim of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest in the late 1970s is set to open a local chapter of a global organization dedicated to helping others who suffered the same fate.

Brenda Brunelle, who alleged she was abused by Rev. Michael Fallona, sued the church for $3 million three years ago and settled out of court in July.

Now she wants to offer a venue for others to find support and heal.

Brunelle has been given approval to open a Windsor chapter of the Survivours Network of those Abused by Priests — a Chicago-based organization founded in 1988. It has 60 chapters worldwide, mostly in the U.S.

“I feel with my matter resolved, I wanted to give back in some way for all the support I received over the years,” she said. “There really is no place for survivors to gather and support one another despite the high number of complaints and allegations made against the church.

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Trial begins for priest facing sex abuse charges

CANADA
CTV

VICTORIA – The trial of former Catholic priest, Phil Jacobs, began Monday.

Jacobs was arrested at Victoria International Airport in August 2010 and charged with one count of sexual assault, two counts of sexual interference, and one count of sexual exploitation.

The accusations date back to 1996 when Jacobs began serving as a priest in Victoria. The charges involve three Greater Victoria children under the age of fourteen.

On Monday, former Victoria Chancellor Monsignor Michael Lappiere testified that the Catholic Diocese of Victoria was fully aware of Jacobs’ history. A past that included misconduct allegations filed against Jacobs that dated back to his time at a church in Columbus, Ohio.

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Sex inquiry hears Catholic church trying to limit financial accountablity

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By TOM MCILROY
Dec. 10, 2012

THE Catholic Church and orders including the Christian Brothers are reverting to unaccountable practices, seeking to limit financial accountability to victims of sexual abuse, an inquiry has heard.

Academic Dr Tom Keating told the Victorian inquiry into the handling of sexual abuse that the Catholic leaders had sought to wind back reforms introduced after Vatican II and that response mechanisms established by the church in Victoria sought to protect its financial and legal liabilities.

He said his own experience negotiating for compensations from the Christian Brothers, some of whose members were responsible for abuse in Ballarat schools, showed the order “had little regard for victims”.

“The effects (of abuse) become a part of the person,” he said.

“They can’t be compartmentalised, or put to one side. They are not amenable to rational persuasion.”

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Wagga Bishop hopes Commission will rebuild trust

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Bishop of Wagga Wagga is moving to reassure Catholics and non Catholics the church is making a genuine response to the national inquiry into institutionalised child sexual abuse.

Bishop Gerard Hanna attended the recent Australian Catholic Bishops Conference which discussed the Royal Commission.

Terms of reference are yet to be released, but the Bishop says the church will co-operate fully.

Bishop Hanna says the inquiry has probably been needed for a long time.

“There was this general feeling that this is good, it has to happen,” he said.

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Priest admits taking money from church

NEW ZEALAND
Christchurch Court News

By David Clarkson

A former Catholic parish priest has admitted defrauding the church of about $128,000, more than a year after he was suspended by the Bishop of Christchurch.

Father John William Fitzmaurice committed the offences while he was the parish priest at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament and at Addington’s Sacred Heart Parish.

He was suspended by Bishop Barry Jones in September 2011 and the bishop issued a pastoral letter to be read at all masses.

The bishop told parishioners: “It is now with great sadness that I inform you that I have placed the matter with the police. I took this step because of financial irregularities in areas for which (Fitzmaurice) has been responsible. The police will follow their own procedures and make their own investigations.”

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Files on accused Los Angeles priests could become public next month

LOS ANGELES (CA)
KPCC

Erika Aguilar | December 10th, 2012

Files the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles kept on dozens of priests accused of sexual child abuse could become public next month.

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge ordered Monday that the Archcdiocese turn confidential files over to her by the end of this month so she can review objections to redacted issues. Plantiffs and the Los Angeles Times have filed objections to the redactions.

Plaintiffs and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles agreed to release the files. They’re believed to contain letters, psychological reports, notes and other documents about the accused priests as part of a $660 million settlement in 2007 to close more than 500 alleged abuse cases.

“We’ve waited for five years,” plaintiffs’ attorney Ray Boucher said in court Monday. “We need to end this process.”

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Judge: Turn over LA priest files to court

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Seattle PI

By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press

Updated 3:11 p.m., Monday, December 10, 2012

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A judge on Monday ordered the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles to turn over to the court the top-secret files it has kept for decades on dozens of priests accused of sex abuse, bringing the documents closer to public scrutiny.

The order by Superior Court Judge Emilie Elias came five years after more than 550 alleged victims reached a record-breaking, $660 million settlement with the archdiocese that also called for the public unsealing of the confidential files.

Individual priests have been fighting to keep the records closed, but the California Supreme Court declined to intervene earlier this year after a lower court decision in a related case cleared the way for the release of the documents.

Elias gave the archdiocese until Dec. 27 to give her the files on 69 priests to review and then set a hearing for early January to consider arguments from priests who want to keep their files private.

The judge will also hear objections to a previous order that allows the archdiocese to black out the names of some clerics and the church officials who handled the priests. The Los Angeles Times has filed court papers objecting to the order and had an attorney in court Monday.

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Satmar Abuse Case Ends With Guilty Verdict

NEW YORK
Tablet Magazine

By Adam Chandler|December 10, 2012

In what’s being characterized as a rare victory in a case against a member of the very insular Satmar community, Nechemya Weberman was found guilty on 59 counts of sexual abuse and child endangerment by a Brooklyn jury this afternoon.

Prosecutors portrayed Weberman as an unlicensed counselor who served as a “power broker” who used his status in the community to gain access to young girls who were deemed problems for not following strict Satmar rules.

While his attorney says they plan to appeal the conviction, Weberman could face up to 25 years in prison when he is sentenced on January 9 of next year.

Little is known about the tight-knit Satmar community, which is frequently accused of keeping criminal matters from secular authorities. Back in June, four men were charged for reportedly trying to intimidate and bribe the accuser in the Weberman case into remaining silence.

Luzer Twersky, who grew up in a Satmar family in Brooklyn, spoke with Vox Tablet several years ago about his controversial decision to leave the community at age 23. Today, he responded to the news of Weberman’s conviction, sharing his own disturbing account of childhood sexual abuse by a respected figure in his community:

To a broken and unloved child of a family of 12, he seemed like a godsend. He told me what I’ve always believed — that I was special. “Your parents don’t understand you,” he’d tell me. “They think you’re a bad kid. The truth is you’re just too creative for them.” He gave me an exercise that I will never forget. He asked me to take a piece of paper and write about myself, my fears, my joy, things that made me happy and things that made me sad. I only managed to write down one sentence: “I’m a child who loves to be special and I love special things.” That was all I wrote.

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Bishop discusses abuse allegations

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Dec. 8, 2012

Second in a two-part series

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent

GALLUP — Less than a month after Bishop James S. Wall took the helm of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup, he made national news with the issuance of just one news release.

More than three years later, during a one-hour interview Nov. 16, Wall offered some surprising revisions to that statement.

On May 12, 2009, Wall issued a news release announcing he was “undertaking an evaluation process of files of all priests who are, or have, conducted ministry in the diocese.” One of the purposes of the review, it stated, was to determine whether or not the Gallup Diocese had the “necessary information on its priests,” including current background checks and “information that pertains to credible and verifiable accounts of abuse of children, youth, and vulnerable adults.”

Under the heading “Informing the Public of Action Taken,” the release stated, “Upon the conclusion of this current review process of priest personnel files, the diocese will post on its Web site a list of priests, if any, who have been removed from ministry. Information posted and provided to the public may contain the name of the priest removed and past assignments.”

That seemed straightforward enough at the time, and it made headlines across the country.

New assertions

However, during his recent interview, Wall made some new assertions that seemed to contradict those statements made in 2009.

Wall was asked why he has yet to post the names of sexually abusive priests on the diocesan website.

“I never said that I would,” Wall said. “But the names, as you know, that are out there in the public are the names that the diocese has already released.”

To the contrary, there are 19 diocesan and religious order priests who have worked in the diocese who have been publicly accused of the sexual abuse of minors. Only eight of those names were first released by Gallup diocesan officials. The other 11 were identified through police reports, court records, media investigations and other Catholic dioceses.

And exactly what clergy members were removed from ministry and who was formally laicized by the Catholic Church is still unknown because that complete information has not been released.

Boland’s removal

One priest who was very publicly removed from ministry was the Rev. John Boland. His removal in early 2009 by Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted, Gallup’s temporary apostolic administrator, sparked the review of the diocesan personnel files after Olmsted discovered Boland had been arrested in Winslow on a sex abuse allegation in 1983.

Boland eventually signed a plea agreement to a lesser charge and returned to ministry. But after Olmsted removed him, Boland’s guilt or innocence continues to be debated within the diocese. Wall, however, said he believes the initial allegation was credible.

“I do because he’s out of ministry,” Wall said.

When asked about three other alleged victims in Winslow who have reportedly leveled abuse allegations against Boland in recent years, Wall would only talk about the 1983 case because he said he is not free to discuss ongoing litigation.

The Diocese of Gallup doesn’t make announcements when new abuse allegations are filed or when it negotiates out-of-court settlements with victims, so Catholics in the pews and the general public are left in the dark as to the real numbers of abuse allegations, like those newer ones against Boland.

Wall said the release of that information is up to the alleged victims and their attorneys.

“I don’t think that’s been our policy in the past to do that,” he said. “If somebody does make a settlement, I mean they’re free to make those announcements. That hasn’t been ours.”

Proper authorities

Wall said alleged victims can also take their allegations to law enforcement officials.

“If it’s an ongoing allegation, … people are free to bring those forward to the proper authorities,” Wall said. “When we’re dealing with a case, we have to help discern whether this is a credible accusation or not as well.”

Although Wall repeatedly said the diocese turns over credible accusations to the authorities, no police report, court record or law enforcement agency has ever indicated the Gallup Diocese has reported a sex abuse allegation.

Navajo County in Arizona is home to many alleged abuse victims, particularly in Winslow. When contacted this week, Navajo County Sheriff K.C. Clark and Lt. Jim Sepi of the Winslow Police Department verified they have never received abuse allegation information from the diocese. Navajo County Attorney Brad Carlyon answered similarly when contacted in 2010.

Wall said he would not be willing to allow prosecutors in Arizona or New Mexico to go through diocesan personnel files because it would be unfair to the many good priests who have had no credible accusation made against them.

“I wouldn’t, and I think it’s … unfair and unjust for anyone to do that,” Wall said. “If … it were court ordered or the authorities said we had to then we would have to. We would have to comply with the law. But I just think that’s unfair.”

Therapy dispute

Wall was asked about the public dispute between Phoenix attorney Robert E. Pastor and the diocese over the payment of therapy fees for three of Pastor’s clients, all alleged clergy abuse victims. Pastor said Deacon Jim Hoy, the diocese’s chief financial officer, had written a letter putting a $2,000 cap on therapy funds for his clients.

“It is the policy of the Diocese of Gallup to help with counseling for individuals but the Diocese does not have the financial resources to make open-ended commitments to pay for counseling,” Hoy wrote in the letter dated May 21. “Due to its financial constraints, the Diocese has had to put a cap of $2,000 per claimant on what it can contribute toward the cost of counseling.”

“We don’t have a therapy limit as in terms of policy,” Wall said. “But what we request, through our victim assistance coordinator, is that they give us good feedback, they provide us with information pretty much how the progress of therapy is going. And … we don’t have a lot of money to be able to spend. And we want to be able to make sure that we can use those resources well, so if we do have any future alleged victims that we are able to also reach out and minister to them as well.”
Wall did strike a conciliatory note with abuse victims.

“I think … child abuse, whether it’s within the church or it’s outside the church, is horrific,” he said. “And it … shatters people’s lives. And when it takes place within the church, and perhaps it’s at the hands of a priest — somebody who’s trusted — it can do a lot of damage, an awful lot of damage. And I just think that’s a horrible, tragic situation. And unfortunately, you see people’s lives kind of spiraling out of control because of the abuse at the hands of someone else.”

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Nechemya Weberman Convicted in Sex Case

NEW YORK
Forward

A Brooklyn rabbi who acted as a therapist was convicted of sexually abusing a Brooklyn girl, authorities said Monday.

Nechemya Weberman, an unlicensed therapist, was found guilty of 59 separate counts of abuse and faces up to 117 years in prison.

“The victim showed great courage to come forward in a very difficult time. Hopefully, this verdict will lead to the understanding for other women that they can come forward as well,” said Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes.

Weberman faced 88 counts of sexual misconduct for alleged sexual encounters between him and the female accuser, whose parents sent her for therapy sessions to the unlicensed therapist at the recommendation of the child’s school. The incidents allegedly took place while the accuser was between 12 and 15 years old.

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Nechemya Weberman Convicted for Sexually Abusing A Young Girl Over A Period Of Years

NEW YORK
Brooklyn News Corp

Brooklyn DA Charles J. Hynes today announced the conviction of Nechemya Weberman, 54, for sexually abusing a young girl over a period of years.

District Attorney Hynes said, “The victim showed great courage to come forward in a very difficult time. Hopefully, this verdict will lead to the understanding for other women that they can come forward as well.”

Weberman was convicted on one count of Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child in the First Degree, 12 counts of Criminal Sexual Act in the Second Degree, two counts of Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree, 18 counts of Sexual Abuse in the Second Degree, 25 counts of Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree, and one count of Endangering the Welfare of a Child. The top count of Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child in the First Degree carries a maximum penalty of 25 years in prison. He faces a total of 117 years. Weberman was remanded and he will be sentenced before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice John Ingram on January 9 at 10:00 AM.

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BREAKING: Weberman Convicted On Most Serious Counts

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Nechemya Weberman, the unlicensed therapist charged with sexually abusing a young Satmar chasidic girl he was counseling, faces 117 years in jail after being convcited of more than 60 charges in the case. A jury delivered the verdict Monday afternoon in state Supreme Court, the first full day after deliberations began on Friday.

Weberman faced a total of 88 counts brought by prosecutors, all related to the same victim.

The abuse took place over the course of several years, beginning when she was 12 and ending in 2010, and shed light not only on the apparent reluctance of some chasidic Jews to expose and punish abusers, but on the inner workings of an insular community in which self-appointed “modesty committees” act to punish those deemed to be violatiing strict halachic standards of behavior. The girl’s family was forced to send her to Weberman because she was defying the community’s dress code, communicating with boys and asking questions about the existence of God, court testimony suggested.

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Nechemya Weberman convicted on 59 counts of sexual abuse

NEW YORK
JTA

By Adam Soclof · December 10, 2012

NEW YORK (JTA) — Nechemya Weberman, a member of the Satmar Chasidic community in Brooklyn who practiced therapy without a license, was found guilty on 59 counts of sexual abuse.

Weberman, 54, was convicted Monday by a New York State Supreme Court jury for encounters he had with a female patient when she was between the ages of 12 and 15. He was charged initially on 88 counts, but the number was consolidated by Justice John Ingram, who presided over the case.

No physical evidence was presented during the trial, effectively leaving the prosecution to make the case based on the credibility of the accuser’s testimony.

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Diocese of Gallup named in another clergy abuse lawsuit

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Dec. 10, 2012

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent

FLAGSTAFF — The Diocese of Gallup was named as a defendant in another clergy sex abuse lawsuit in late September but was apparently just notified of the case late last week.

Phoenix attorney Robert E. Pastor filed the lawsuit (CV2012-00649) in Arizona’s Coconino County Superior Court on behalf of an Arizona man identified in court documents as only John “G.H.” Doe of Navajo County. According to the complaint, Pastor’s client claims he was sexually abused as a minor by two Gallup Diocese priests, the late Clement A. Hageman and Raul Sanchez, in the 1970s when he served as an altar boy in Winslow, Ariz. This lawsuit names Sanchez, the Diocese of Gallup, Madre de Dios Church and Hageman’s estate as defendants.

This is the second clergy sex abuse lawsuit Pastor has filed against the Gallup Diocese. The first case (CV2010-00713) was filed in 2010 in Coconino County Superior Court on behalf of another Arizona man who claims he was sexually abused by Hageman while serving as a altar boy at Holbrook’s Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church. That case is ongoing.

Pastor was contacted after a review of court files indicated the Diocese of Gallup had not yet been officially served notice. In a telephone interview Wednesday, Pastor admitted he had not yet notified the diocese of the second lawsuit.

“It is public, it’s filed,” he said. “We just haven’t served the diocese.”

Under Arizona law, Pastor said, he had until Jan. 20, 2013 to serve notice on the diocese. He said work load issues and his transfer to a new law firm had delayed the notification. Pastor, who is now with the firm Montoya, Jimenez & Pastor, said he planned to contact the Diocese of Gallup’s attorneys by Friday.

Pastor tipped his hand earlier this summer when he included a chart of alleged sexually abusive priests in court documents filed in the first case. The chart included the names of Sanchez and Samuel Wilson, two Diocese of Gallup priests who had never been previously named as alleged abusers. Wilson is deceased. Sanchez is still listed as a current Diocese of Gallup priest; however, in a recent directory he is listed as “absent on leave.” When contacted about the names then, Pastor said he had clients who claimed they had been sexually abused by Sanchez and Wilson, and he said diocesan attorneys were aware of those allegations.

In an interview with Gallup Bishop James S. Wall on Nov. 16, Wall was asked about allegations against Sanchez. According to the bishop, he was unaware of any credible allegations.

According to the legal complaint, “To cope with the trauma of sexual abuse John G.H. Doe involuntarily and unconsciously blocked the memories of sexual abuse from his mind. In or about February 2011, John G.H. Doe began to discover memories of clergy sexual abuse.”

As Pastor has argued in the first lawsuit, the complaint asserts diocesan officials “fraudulently concealed” the sexual abuse of Catholic children in the diocese and therefore cannot use the statue of limitations as a defense. The complaint includes eight counts, including sexual assault, abuse or molestation; breach of fiduciary duty; intentional infliction of emotional distress; intentional/negligent misrepresentation; negligent supervision/retention; endangerment; child abuse; and assault and battery.

The Official Catholic Directory indicates Sanchez only served as a parish priest in Winslow for about one year in the mid-1970s. He then studied for three years in Rome, where he earned a doctor of canon law degree. When he returned to Gallup, he served as the chancellor of the diocese from 1980 to 1986. He worked as an Air Force chaplain from 1987 to 2007. His current whereabouts are unknown; however, sources in the diocese believe Sanchez is now living in Mexico.

Pastor was asked if his client has filed a police report with law enforcement officials in Winslow since Sanchez is still living.

“He has not,” Pastor said. “I don’t know if he’s going to. Part of that is finding Sanchez.”

Lt. Jim Sepi of the Winslow Police Department is one of the police officers whose investigation of James M. Burns led to the successful criminal prosecution of the former Gallup priest in 2004 on charges related to the sexual abuse of a Winslow boy in the 1980s. In an email Thursday, Sepi said, “We encourage any victim of a crime occurring within the City Limits of Winslow to come forward and make a report. We will use whatever resources that are available to locate suspect(s) in a sex offense within the boundaries of the United States, but in another country might be difficult but we would certainly explore every avenue.”

Pastor was also asked how the status of his first lawsuit might affect this second case. According to court documents, Pastor has been conducting settlement talks with diocesan attorneys.

“They don’t seem to be taking the situation very seriously,” Pastor said, adding that the Diocese of Gallup has a history of “settling on the cheap” with other attorneys representing abuse victims.

“We’ll discuss settlement,” Pastor said, “but they have to face the facts … and the facts are awful.”

Reporter Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola can be contacted at (505) 870-0745 or ehardinburrola@yahoo.com.

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Gallup’s bishop discusses divisive, financial issues

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Dec. 7, 2012

First of a two-part series.

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent

GALLUP — Although Gallup Bishop James S. Wall would have preferred to talk about the Roman Catholic Church’s recently initiated Year of Faith, he agreed to sit down for a one-hour, no-holds-barred interview Nov. 16.

During the interview, Wall fielded a variety of questions, ranging from divisive issues affecting Gallup clergy to the ongoing legal quagmire of clergy sex abuse allegations. The bishop pledged to try to improve the Gallup chancery’s relationship with the news media but expressed frustration over some assumptions that he feels the media has made during his tenure and that of the late Bishop Donald E. Pelotte.

“I would say this though … I think our relationship with the media could have been better in the past,” Wall said. “I think it’s difficult at times, I think it’s contentious at times. But that’s one of the reasons why I’ve brought Father Tim Farrell onboard, and he’s graciously accepted to serve as our media liaison because I want to make sure that we’re responding to those things as best as possible.”

Divisive issues

Responding to a need for healing among priests in the diocese, Wall said he held a gathering this past spring to address such concerns.

“This past March we held our first convocation, and the convocation was entitled “Healing and Hope,” Wall said. “And it was with intent of looking back over our past and making sure that we have good, healthy, honest discussion. … If there are any hurts, any issues that needed to be addressed, that we were able to do that. And that we can do that looking forward with a great sense of hope. Because the primary reason is so that we can announce the Kingdom of God, that we can bring people into a closer relationship with Christ and his Church.”

Wall was asked about the unequal punishment — and seemingly unequal Christian forgiveness — that has generated discontent through the years. Wall was presented with a list of priests “in good standing” in the diocese who have been publicly or privately accused of a variety of misconduct. Some of the alleged misconduct involved improper relationships with adult men, boundary violations, sexual assault and sexual harassment. In addition, two priests were criminally convicted in Arizona’s Navajo County in the 1990s. One was convicted of aggravated assault and DUI, and the other pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of possession of marijuana after he had the drug mailed to his church rectory in Winslow.

“I look at each priest on a case-by-case basis,” Wall said of the list. “I try to work with each priest on a case-by-case basis. And I try to help each priest to be active in ministry to the best of their ability.”
The actions of one priest, however, have not yet merited forgiveness — much to the concern of some fellow priests. The Rev. Gil Mangampo, who has claimed that he was twice sexually harassed by other Gallup clergy, left the diocese without permission in 2010 after learning chancery officials were building a possible criminal case against him for alleged embezzlement of church funds. Mangampo has yet to be criminally charged, but Wall described the allegations against Mangampo as “an ongoing legal situation.”

Forced from ministry

Conversely, Wall was asked about four well-respected priests who were forced out of ministry in the diocese because they came into conflict with Pelotte and his chancery officials over incidents and policies they believed were immoral, unjust, unethical or un-Christian. With their ouster, the Gallup Diocese — which is struggling with a priest shortage — lost the full-time ministry of the Rev. Pat Universal, the Rev. Jerry Mesley, the Rev. Dan Hussey and the Rev. Oliver Curran.

Wall said Universal is serving with the St. James Society in Boston. Mesley, he said, is a retired priest who is “able to serve anywhere throughout the diocese,” but splits his time between a diocese in Louisiana and part-time ministry here. Both are still Diocese of Gallup priests. Wall said Hussey and Curran officially joined the Diocese of Reno in Reno, Nev., but he couldn’t remember if he ever asked them to return to ministry in Gallup before their incardination into the Reno Diocese.

“You know, I can’t remember if I had or not,” Wall said. “I really couldn’t tell you. I mean, I could have or I couldn’t have. I don’t know, but it’s kind of a moot point now because they’re both serving happily and very well in the Diocese of Reno. And I understand they’re enjoying their ministry too.”

Wall said he also couldn’t remember if Universal and Mesley were invited to participate in the reconciliation program of the “Healing and Hope” convocation in the spring.

“I can’t remember if the invitation went out to Fathers Universal and Mesley or not,” Wall said. “I just really couldn’t tell you.”

Several priests who attended the convocation expressed concern that the two priests had been excluded.

Financial concerns

Wall was also asked about another subject of clergy concern — the reported lack of information regarding the state of diocesan finances. The bishop said he plans to start sharing that information with clergy in upcoming annual meetings.

“Well, what I plan on doing … is to have a yearly meeting, and possibly that could be one large meeting or possibly could be a couple meetings to make it a little easier for everybody to speak or share concerns or insights that they might have.” Wall said. “This was something that I was part of when I was in the Diocese of Phoenix, and this is something I want to continue here. And I think it’s a good idea. I think it’s a good idea to be transparent. We ask our pastors to be very transparent with their parishioners, and I think it’s important that the diocese is very transparent as well.”

Wall also defended his chief financial officer, Deacon James Hoy. Through the years, many Gallup clergy have raised concerns about Hoy’s financial policies, his transparency and his professional expertise.

Wall said under the requirements of church canon law, diocesan financial officials have to receive proper approval and endorsement, and Hoy has received both.

“And I think he’s doing a good job,” Wall added. “And it’s a hard job. Especially it’s a hard job doing this in a diocese which is very, very poor.”

Wall was asked about Hoy’s professional qualifications — a question that has been posed twice before to the diocese. A 2011 diocesan newspaper article stated Hoy has a number of degrees and certification, but the article did not state from what educational institutions.

“You should ask him,” Wall said. “I know he has a financial background, a financial background in those degrees. But you should ask him yourself.”

On Monday, an email requesting that information was sent to Hoy via Farrell, the diocese’s media liaison. Hoy has yet to respond to the request.

NEXT: Bishop James S. Wall discusses issues surrounding the Diocese of Gallup’s ongoing clergy abuse allegations.

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Files on accused LA priests could soon be public

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Associated Press

By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Confidential files of dozens of priests accused of sex abuse must be turned over by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles to a judge by the end of the month.

The order issued Monday doesn’t mean the files will be made public immediately, however.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Emilie Elias will hold another hearing on Jan. 7 to hear objections from individual priests and to decide a dispute over redactions made to the documents.

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Brooklyn Rabbi Convicted Of Sexually Abusing Young Girl

NEW YORK
NY1

[with video]

An Orthodox Rabbi who served as a religious counselor was convicted Monday of sexual abuse.

Nechemya Weberman was found guilty in Brooklyn court of sustained abuse of a child and endangering the welfare of a child.

His accuser, now 18, told investigators Weberman repeatedly abused her for a period of three years beginning when she was 12 years old.

The 54-year-old was not a licensed counselor, but worked as such within his Brooklyn community.

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Hasidic leader convicted after repeatedly forcing himself on girl he was counseling

NEW YORK
New York Post

By JOSH SAUL
Last Updated: 4:11 PM, December 10, 2012

A once-revered ultra-orthodox Jewish leader was convicted in Brooklyn today of sexually abusing a young girl in his care from the time she was just 12 years old.

Jurors found Satmar Hasidic leader Nechemya Weberman guilty on all 59 counts against him, including the top charge of prolonged sexual conduct against a child.

Weberman, who was immediately cuffed after the verdict, faces up to 25 years behind bars on the top count alone.

Other counts included sexual abuse and child endangerment.

Weberman sat stoically as the guilty verdicts were read out loud.

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Hasidic Leader Found Guilty Of Sexually Abusing Brooklyn Girl

NEW YORK
Gothamist

A Hasidic leader and counselor was found guilty on 59 counts of sexual abuse by a Brooklyn jury. Nechemya Weberman, 54, a powerful figure in the Satmar community, was remanded into custody.

The graphic accusations against Weberman were brought forth by a 17-year-old who said the abuse started when she was 12 years old. She said that he forced her to perform oral sex and inappropriately touched her between March 2007 and March 2010. The teenager was ostracized by her community because she asked questions about God’s existence and wore thin tights: “You had to wear tights that are very thick so there’s no way anybody can see your legs,” she said. “I was sent to the principal’s office every day because my tights weren’t thick enough.”

Her school made her see Weberman, who is not a licensed therapist, for counseling. Weberman had insisted he never touched the girl, insisted she was rude (he says she told him “Why should I trust you? Why should I talk to you? You look like a Hasidic f–k. You look like my father”), adding that “There are people who are better than her.”

Weberman’s lawyer compared the trial to the Salem witch trials, and a dismissed juror told the Post that she’d acquit, “I didn’t have enough evidence to nail the person. No video, no DNA. There wasn’t enough evidence for me. Both sides were a little shady.”

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After Nechemya Weberman, Hasidic Satmar sect considers sending rebel teens away

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

By Simone Weichselbaum / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, December 10, 2012

Embarrassed by the sex abuse trial of a Hasidic counselor, leaders of Williamsburg’s pious Satmar sect are considering a different way to deal with rebellious teens: shipping them out of the country for treatment.

The idea comes as the jury weighs charges against the counselor, Nechemya Weberman, who prosecutors said molested a then-12-year-old girl referred to him because she wore supposedly indecent clothing, read People magazine and questioned God’s authority in a religious school class.

Without addressing the allegations against Weberman, a Satmar official told the Daily News that leaders are considering ways to avoid similar accusations by victims.

“This was a wakeup call; nobody denies that,” said Gary Schlesinger, who heads a nonprofit tied to Satmar leader Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum.

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Counselor Found Guilty in Orthodox Abuse Trial

NEW YORK
The Wall Street Journal

By Pervaiz Shallwani

A prominent ultra-Orthodox Jewish counselor was found guilty Monday of sexually abusing a teenage girl over a three-year span — a rare win for prosecutors in an insular Brooklyn community they have long accused of keeping members quiet.

In a packed courtroom, the jury of four men and eight women found Nechemya Weberman, 54 years old, guilty on 59 counts of sexual abuse and child endangerment — the most serious that he sexually assaulted the young woman over a sustained period of time from when she was 12 to 15 years old.

Weberman faces up to the 25 years in prison on the most serious charges. His lawyers have said they plan to appeal the decision.

He was sent to prison awaiting sentencing on Jan. 9.

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NYC Orthodox Jewish counselor guilty of child sex abuse

NEW YORK
CBS News

It took the jury about one day of deliberations to issue its verdict in the sexual abuse case of a prominent Brooklyn ultra Orthodox Jewish leader, CBS New York reports.

Nechemya Weberman, 54, was found guilty on all 60 charges against him for allegedly molesting a girl he was counseling over a three-year span beginning when the girl was 12, WCBS 880?s Irene Cornell reported.

The charges include sexual conduct with a child and criminal sexual acts, CBS 2’s Tony Aiello reported.

Weberman showed no emotion as the verdict was read, Cornell reported. He was handcuffed and taken into police custody after the verdict was read, where he will remain until sentencing.

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Hasidic Man Found Guilty of Sexually Abusing Girl

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By SHARON OTTERMAN

Published: December 10, 2012

Nechemya Weberman, an unlicensed ultra-Orthodox Jewish counselor in Brooklyn’s tight-knit Satmar Hasidic community, was convicted on Monday of repeatedly sexually abusing a girl in his care.

A State Supreme Court jury found Mr. Weberman guilty on multiple counts — all the charges he was facing after a judge had consolidated the 88 charges brought by Mr. Hynes’s office. He faces at least 25 years in prison, according to The Associated Press.

The verdict was a significant victory for Charles J. Hynes, the Brooklyn district attorney, whose office has been criticized for not acting aggressively enough against sexual abusers in the borough’s large and politically connected Hasidic community. The case was a difficult one, because there was no physical evidence; the trial hinged on the credibility of Mr. Weberman and his accuser.

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Nechemya Weberman was convicted of 60 counts

NEW YORK
The Awareness Center

Nechemya Weberman was convicted of 60 counts, including sustained sex abuse of a child, endangering the welfare of a child and other counts. He faces 25 years in prison on the top charge and two to seven years on the lesser charges.

The Awareness Center wants to thank the teenage survivor for her courage to come forward and speak the truth and her family for not caving into the political pressures that surrounded this case. Both the survivor and her family members should be seen as heroes. When ever they walk into a room everyone should stand up and applaud them for their heroic efforts. Fund also need to be raised to assist the survivor and her family members heal.

The Awareness Center also wants to thank the hundreds of people who supported this young brave woman during this important time of her life.

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Ultra-Orthodox Counselor Convicted of Sex Abuse

NEW YORK
The Daily Beast

For one man it is not a happy Chanukah. A religious counselor in New York’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community was found guilty Monday of “sustained sexual abuse” of a girl who initially approached him with questions about her faith. Nechemya Weberman, 54, looked down silently as the guilty verdict convicting him on 59 counts of sexual abuse of a child and endangering the welfare of a child was read. Weberman faces 25 years in prison.

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NY Orthodox counsellor convicted of sex abuse; accuser says she was molested from age 12

NEW YORK
The Vancouver Sun

By Colleen Long, The Associated Press
December 10, 2012

NEW YORK, N.Y. – A religious counsellor in New York’s ultra-orthodox Jewish community was convicted Monday of the sustained sexual abuse of a girl who came to him with questions about her faith.

The courtroom was silent as Nechemya Weberman was convicted of 59 counts, including sustained sex abuse of a child, endangering the welfare of a child and other counts. He faces 25 years in prison on the top charge and two to seven years on the lesser charges.

The 54-year-old defendant and his relatives stared down at the ground as the verdict was pronounced. Some of the accusers’ supporters smiled quietly.

The accuser, now 18, told authorities Weberman abused her repeatedly from the time she was 12 until she was 15.

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Jury finds Nechemya Weberman, Satmar Hasidic leader, guilty of molesting teenage girl he was paid to counsel

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

By Oren Yaniv / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, December 10, 2012, 3:06 PM

Guilty 59 times over.

A Brooklyn jury found Nechemya Weberman – a prominent figure in the Satmar Hasidic community – guilty Monday of sexually abusing a rebellious young girl he was paid to counsel.

The verdict came after an explosive two-week trial, where customs of the strict Williamsburg-based sect were aired in Brooklyn Supreme Court.

He is facing a maximum of 25 years on prison of the top count alone, prolonged sexual conduct against a child.

The main evidence against the 54-year-old counselor was testimony from the victim, who turned 18 last week. During four brutal days of testimony and cross-examination, the striking young woman recounted how she was forced to perform oral sex and reenact porn scenes during closed-door counseling sessions that started in 2007, when she was 12.

Her yeshiva referred her to Weberman because she flouted her sect’s strict modesty rules and asked probing questions about the existence of God.

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What the Catholic church wants to redact

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

After years of delays and legal wrangling, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is set to make public the confidential personnel records of all priests accused of molesting children. Victims said the files would provide accountability for church leaders who let pedophiles remain in the ministry, but the documents have been scrubbed of those identities, which many regard as the most important information.

Below are examples of what will be removed before the documents’ public release if the court upholds the current plan to redact church officials’ names.

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L.A. Times asks judge to stop redaction of priest abuse records

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

December 10, 2012 | 12:01pm

A Los Angeles County judge is set to meet today with lawyers for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and victims of clergy sex abuse.

The hearing before Superior Court Judge Emilie H. Elias comes three days after the L.A. Times filed a motion opposing the redaction of the names of high-ranking church officials in confidential church files set to be made public in coming weeks. The records, all pertaining to priests accused of sexual abuse, are being released as part of a 2007 settlement with more than 500 alleged victims.

“The public is entitled to know which members of the hierarchy had information about the widespread molestation of children and what they did about it,” lawyers for the newspaper wrote. “Without this information, the public will not be able to assess the extent of institutional or individual knowledge of the abuse.”

DOCUMENTS: What the Catholic Church wants to redact

A retired judge tasked with overseeing the file release ordered church lawyers last year to black out the names of all employees of the archdiocese. The judge, Dickran Tevrizian, said he was impressed with the church’s reforms and feared the files would result in “guilt by association” against church officials who had contact with abuser priests.

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Vatican finds Chilean priest guilty of abusive conduct

CHILE
Catholic News Agency

Santiago, Chile, Dec 10, 2012 / 12:03 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has found Chilean priest Father Cristian Precht guilty of abusive conduct and has suspended him from all priestly functions for a period of five years.

According to a statement by the Vicar General of Santiago, Msgr. Cristian Contreras Villarroel, the abuse took place over 20 years ago.

Fr. Precht is known in Chile for his defense of human rights during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. He was one of the founders of the Vicariate of Solidarity, an institution created to help victims of the regime.

In response to the confirmation of the accusations against the priest, Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati decided to issue a decree prohibiting Fr. Precht from “exercising priestly public ministry for a period of five years, leaving to the bishop to power to extend the indicated period for the time he considers appropriate.”

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Priest facing child pornography case deported to US

PHILIPPINES/UNITED STATES
Inquirer

By Nestor P. Burgos Jr.
Inquirer Visayas
1:54 am | Tuesday, December 11th, 2012

ILOILO CITY, Philippines—A Filipino Catholic priest wanted in the United States for theft and possession of child pornography has surrendered to Philippine authorities after more than a year as a fugitive.

“I am so sorry. I want to apologize to all the people… for the damage I have done to you all, to the Church and to myself,” Fr. Lowe Dongor said in an interview in Iloilo.

A native of Barotac Nuevo town in Iloilo, Dongor was flown to the US Monday evening, more than a month after he surrendered to the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) Western Visayas office on Nov. 2.

Dongor, 36, was accompanied by NBI investigating agent Arnold Diaz and will be turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to face various charges including unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.

Dongor agreed to the interview on condition that the news report would be released after he had left the country.

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German Church Study Says Sex Abuser Priests Rarely Pedophiles

GERMANY
Worldcrunch

DIE WELT (Germany)

BERLIN – A forensic analysis of the psychiatric and psychological profiles of 78 German Catholic priests accused of child abuse between 2000 and 2010 shows that only nine were pedophiles. Four showed homosexual tendencies towards adolescent boys. Of the remaining 65, 54% were heterosexuals, 37% were homosexual, and nine were bisexual.

Bishop Stephan Ackermann told Die Welt that it was hoped the study, which was mandated by the Catholic Church, would help the Church to better understand and deal with priests accused of child abuse, and that it would constitute a further step towards transparency.

Norbert Denef, the founder and head of netzwerkB, a German network for victims of “sexualized violence,” called for an independent commission to investigate the sexual abuse cases in the Catholic Church. This was the only way to ensure justice for victims, he said. “You wouldn’t ask the Mafia to investigate their own crimes,” he said.

Reporting abuse to authorities should be mandatory, and there should be no statute of limitations in child abuse cases because it sometimes took decades for victims to come to terms with the events and speak out, Denef said.

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David Clohessy and SNAP: Ten Years After Gaining Celebrity

UNITED STATES
Riverfront Times

By Chad Garrison
Mon., Dec. 10 2012

Ten year’s ago this month David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), was named one of the world’s “25 Most Intriguing” by People magazine.

Included in that 2002 class were actors and performers such as George Clooney and Britney Spears, world leaders the likes of Saddam Hussein and Jimmy Carter, athletes Serena Williams and Pat Tillman (the football player who’d recently left the NFL to serve in the Army but had yet to die of friendly fire) and a few Regular Joes such as Clohessy.

Last week Daily RFT caught up with Clohessy, to discuss what the People magazine designation meant at the time, what SNAP has accomplished since then, and what challenges still lie ahead for the St. Louis-based organization that continues to garner international headlines for exposing child sex abuse.

Daily RFT: SNAP has been around since 1988. But what changed in 2002 that even a celebrity magazine such as People had to write about you?

David Clohessy: 2002 was a crazy, crazy year. The Boston Globe had done this huge investigative series — literally hundreds of stories — about child sex abuse within the Catholic Church. And all of the sudden the topic became the burning, Page One story in newspaper after newspaper after newspaper all across the county. And that is only reason why someone from SNAP was in People magazine.

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The rise of American power in the Curia

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The Bishop of Phoenix, Olmsted, will soon be officially announced as the new Secretary of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life

Marco Tosatti
Rome

The official announcement of the appointment of the Bishop of Phoenix (Arizona) Thomas J. Olmsted, as Secretary of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life is expected any day now. Olmsted should replace fellow American, Tobin, who occupied this delicate position for a very short period. Tobin heads the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. Olmsted’s approach in the Congregation is expected to be far closer to the sensibilities of American bishops with regard to issue of the LCWR (Leadership Conference of Women Religious)’s rebellious stance towards Catholic bishops and the Holy See. The number of nuns in the United States dropped by over two thousand members in just one year, from 57.113 to 55.045.

Olmsted’s arrival will further strengthen the U.S.’s growing influence within the Catholic Church’s central government, the Assessor to the Secretariat of State, Peter Brian Wells, being the U.S.’ foremost point of reference.

This had been James Harvey’s role up until about a week ago when he was still Prefect of the Papal Household. Harvey was recently created cardinal and appointed archpriest of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls. So a promotion and the biretta. But this removal from the Apostolic Palace may have been directly or indirectly linked to the case involving the Pope’s disloyal former butler.

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Van misbruik verdachte pastoor mag mis weer opdragen

NEDERLAND
Trouw

De Maastrichtse pastoor Jan Schafraad mag vanaf maandag de mis weer opdragen. Bisschop Frans Wiertz van Roermond schorste Schafraad enkele maanden geleden omdat hij werd beschuldigd van seksueel misbruik van kinderen. Wiertz liet Schafraad donderdagmiddag tijdens een gesprek weten dat hij weer terug mag zolang er geen nieuwe klachten tegen hem komen. Dat maakte het bisdom Roermond bekend. .

Het misbruik zou hebben plaatsgevonden toen Schafraad nog als broeder werkte op jongensinternaat Bleijerheide in Kerkrade. De klachtencommissie voor seksueel misbruik in de RK Kerk wees klachten tegen hem echter af. Wel zijn twee klagers nog in hoger beroep, maar in afwachting daarvan mag Schafraad terug de kansel op.

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Court Notebook: Priest sex-abuse lawsuit against Syracuse diocese can proceed

SYRACUSE (NY)
The Post-Standard

By Jim O’Hara, The Post-Standard
on December 10, 2012

Syracuse, NY – A lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse – involving allegations four young boys from Montgomery County were sexually abused by a priest – can go forward in its abbreviated fashion, a state appeals court has ruled.

The state Supreme Court Appellate Division in Rochester recently upheld rulings Syracuse Justice Brian DeJoseph made last year in the case of the Rev. John Broderick.

DeJoseph dismissed part of the lawsuit seeking to hold the diocese responsible as Broderick’s employer, noting the courts in New York have clearly concluded sex abuse is not within the scope of a priest’s employment to hold any employer liable.

DeJoseph also had ruled the diocese had no fiduciary relationship with the victims’ family and that the victims’ father had shown no specific harm to him to justify his personal claims in the lawsuit.

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Iglesia en caos: Sacerdote Cristián Precht es suspendido por cinco años

CHILE
El Observatodo

DECLARACIÓN DEL OBISPO VICARIO GENERAL DE SANTIAGO

Santiago de Chile, jueves 6 de diciembre de 2012

Por especial encargo de monseñor Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, actualmente en viaje a Roma para participar de un encuentro convocado por el Papa Benedicto XVI, con ocasión de 15º aniversario de la Exhortación Apostólica “La Iglesia en América”, me es un deber comunicar lo siguiente:

1. El pasado 28 de junio de 2012, el Arzobispo de Santiago, monseñor Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, comunicó el resultado del proceso administrativo penal contra el presbítero Cristián Precht Bañados.

2. En dicho proceso se constataron noticias verosímiles de conductas abusivas con mayores y menores de edad. Esto exigía enviar las actas del proceso a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, única entidad competente para examinar los “delitos más graves”, incluso cuando están prescritos para la legislación canónica al haber transcurrido 20 años desde que las eventuales víctimas cumplieron 18 años de edad (cfr. Declaración Arzobispo de Santiago, 28 de junio de 2012).

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El sacerdote que luchó contra Pinochet y hoy es condenado por el Vaticano

CHILE
BBC Mundo

Rodrigo Bustamante
Chile, para BBC Mundo

Existe pesar en el mundo ligado a la defensa de los derechos humanos en Chile luego que el Vaticano apartara del sacerdocio a Cristián Precht, quien fue uno de los íconos de la oposición al régimen de facto de Augusto Pinochet.

La Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe comprobó la acusación de “conductas abusivas con mayores y menores de edad” contra el religioso, y le prohibió por cinco años el ejercicio público del ministerio sacerdotal y la potestad de confesar y dirigir espiritualmente a jóvenes y menores.

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Monseñor Contreras por cura Precht: “Hemos dado la cara”

CHILE
Terra

El obispo auxiliar de Santiago, Monseñor Cristián Contreras, lamentó los últimos hechos corroborados por el Vaticano contra personeros de la Iglesia en Chile por casos de abuso sexual y manifestó las intenciones de acompañar a las víctimas en estos procesos.

Recordar que la Santa Sede confirmó los casos de abuso sexual en contra del sacerdote Cristián Precht, lo que provocó que el Arzobispado de Santiago alejara de sus funciones al párroco, informó Cooperativa.

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Secret files …

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Washington Post

Secret files on Los Angeles archdiocese priests accused of sex abuse could soon become public

By Associated Press

Updated: Monday, December 10

LOS ANGELES — Secret files kept for decades by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles on priests accused of sexually abusing children could soon become public as a five-year legal battle over their release reaches its endgame.

A judge will hear final objections Monday from accused priests and is also expected to begin hashing out a timeline for the release of thousands of pages of top-secret church documents on abusive clerics. Plaintiff attorneys have been trying to gain access to the files since a $660 million settlement in 2007 called for their disclosure.

Earlier this year, the California Supreme Court declined to intervene after a lower court ordered the release of some of the files, setting the stage for a larger disclosure.

Both attorneys for the church and the plaintiffs said they expected the documents would be made public within a month and no later than February after Monday’s critical hearing. Private files on Franciscan friars accused of abuse were released earlier this year after a similar legal fight.

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Irish feature documentary on sexual abuse in the Catholic Church shortlisted for an Oscar

IRELAND/UNITED STATES
Irish Central

By
ANTOINETTE KELLY,
IrishCentral.com Staff Writer

Published Sunday, December 9

A new Irish documentary has just made the 2013 Oscars shortlist. ‘Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God’ has been shortlisted in the Best Documentary Feature lineup.

An Irish/American co-production, Oscar winning director Alex Gibney helmed the documentary, which was shot all over Ireland, the US and part of Italy.

The film revisits the abuse scandal in the Irish Catholic Church, with first-hand accounts from victims. It has also reportedly uncovered a number of scandals that went beyond the abuse, including cover ups in the Church and the Vatican.

According to the Irish Film and Television Network, Northern Irish production company Below the Radar co-produced with Gibney’s Jigsaw Productions and Wider Film Projects

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‘Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God’ Shortlisted For Oscar

IRELAND/UNITED STATES
Irish Film and Television Network

By Eva Hall

Another Irish production has made the Oscars shortlist for 2013, with documentary ‘Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God’ being shortlisted in the Best Documentary Feature documentary.

The Irish/American co-production joins short animation ‘Head Over Heels’, which was produced by Irish woman Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly, and made the shortlist last month.

Oscar winning director Alex Gibney helmed ‘Silence in the House of God’, which was shot all over Ireland, the US and part of Italy. The feature documentary revisits the abuse scandal in the Catholic Church, with first-hand accounts from victims.

The documentary uncovered a number of scandals that went beyond the abuse, to cover ups in the Irish Catholic Church to the Vatican.

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Assistance scheme urged for clergy sex abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Victorian Government’s inquiry into sexual abuse by religious and other organisations has been told a financial assistance scheme is needed for abuse victims.

The inquiry held a hearing in Ballarat on Friday.

Peter Blinkiron is a survivor of clergy sexual abuse and told the inquiry a scheme similar to that for injured soldiers should be set up.

He says many abuse victims are struggling to survive.

Mr Blinkiron says the Catholic Church could afford to fund the scheme.

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The problem with “normal” when it comes to sex abuse in Germany

GERMANY
U.S. Catholic

By Bryan Cones

News that psychological profiles of German priests who abused young people are by and large “psychologically normal” is raising eyebrows overseas. While 12 percent of abusive priests could be classified as pedophiles (compulsively sexually attracted to prepubescent children) and 5 percent as ephebophiles (attracted to teenagers), more than 80 percent showed no signs of a psychological disorder. (If you are wondering, 54 percent identified as heterosexual, 37 as homosexual, and 9 as bisexual.) Victims advocate Norbert Denef of Netzwerk B blamed the results on the fact that the German bishops provided the statistics. “You wouldn’t ask the mafia to investigate its own crimes,” he said, according to Reuters.

The German church will doubtless have failed in many ways when the truth is fully revealed, but a piece of me isn’t surprised that most of the priests turned out to be “normal”–normal, that is, because the sexual abuse of young people is still fairly commonplace, and perpetrators are not likely to all be suffering some diagnosable psychological disorder. The problem with “normal” is that some adults, many of them men, think it is “normal” to have sex with someone underage when given the right place and time. In fact, it is so “normal” that as many as 1 in 4 woman and 1 in 7 or 8 men in the U.S. experience some form of inappropriate sexual contact before they are 18.

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Former nun speaks out on church abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

For 40 years many boys placed in institutions run by the order of St John of God were molested, raped and physically assaulted by some of the men who were supposed to care for them. Now a former nun who worked for the order speaks out about what she says is a culture of collusion within its ranks.

Lisa Whitehead

Transcript

EDITOR’S NOTE: There is an issue with the video for this story that will be rectified on Monday 10 December, apologies for any inconvenience.

CHRIS UHLMANN, PRESENTER: Among the litany of accusations that led to the recent announcement of a Royal commission into the institutional child sex abuse, none have been more shocking than those surrounding the Catholic order St John of God. For 40 years boys placed in the order’s care were molested, raped and physically assaulted. The story has hit the headlines this week with the arrest in New Zealand of a former brother accused of molesting 35 children in a home for intellectually disabled boys. Tonight a former nun who worked for the order speaks out about what she says is a culture of collusion within its ranks. In a moment I’ll be joined by the head of the order, Brother Timothy Graham, but first this report by Lisa Whitehead.

LISA WHITEHEAD, REPORTER: This is former Catholic Brother Bernard McGrath. He’s now facing possible extradition to Australia on 252 sex abuse charges. He’s accused of abusing 35 children.

The alleged offences occurred at the Kendall Grange boys’ home in Morisset, south of Newcastle. It belonged to St John of God, an order of the Church that’s accused of covering up decades of allegations of abuse of vulnerable children in its care.

WAYNE CHAMLEY, BROKEN RITES: It’s behaviour that’s endemic within the order and it’s been allowed to go on for decades.

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Jewry accused of hiding sex-abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Age

December 11, 2012

Barney Zwartz

TWO paedophiles – one reportedly the youngest person ever put on the Victorian Sex Offenders Register – were ”roaming the Jewish community” with most members utterly unaware, the state inquiry into how religious groups handled child sex abuse was told on Monday.

Community leader and abuse whistleblower Manny Waks said there was overwhelming evidence that child sexual abuse was endemic in the Jewish community and ”the appalling way in which it has been mishandled”, including credible claims of continuing cover-ups.

He said that in the few months since his written submission there had been more serious allegations of child sexual abuse. ”Worse, in all of these new cases, those in positions of authority attempted to cover up these crimes.”

Mr Waks, a former vice-president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, last year became the first Jewish victim to publicly tell the story of his abuse, at Yeshivah College in Melbourne more than 20 years ago. He gave evidence with his father, Zephaniah Waks, but Family and Community Development committee chairwoman Georgie Crozier suppressed Mr Waks senior’s testimony.

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December 9, 2012

Abusing priest profile same as lay offenders

GERMANY
Irish Times

DEREK SCALLY

Germany’s Catholic Church has presented a report saying that only 12 per cent of priests who abused minors could be classified as paedophiles.

The report, commissioned in 2010 after a wave of abuse revelations, examined 78 abuse cases dating back to the 1960s. “There are no significant differences to results found in the general population in Germany,” said Dr Norbert Leygraf, one of the experts asked to review study results.

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Is Boston willing to prepare the way of the Lord?

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Catholic Insider

The Gospel today is a favorite of BCI and also has particular applicability to the Boston Archdiocese. This passage from Luke 3: 1-6 is the one that has always been powerful for BCI.

A voice of one crying out in the desert:
“Prepare the way of the Lord,
make straight his paths.
Every valley shall be filled
and every mountain and hill shall be made low.
The winding roads shall be made straight,
and the rough ways made smooth,
and all flesh shall see the salvation of God.”

During this season of Advent, in what ways in our own lives do we prepare the way of the Lord and make straight His paths? What things in our lives need to be straightened out? What mountains and hills should be lowered? What “winding roads” should be made straight? What rough ways made smooth?

Then there is the Boston Archdiocese. As discussed in “Is Boston Archdiocese Violating ‘Motu Proprio’ on Charity?” as of Monday, December 10, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, will be in violation of the new Motu Proprio issued by Pope Benedict XVI for paying salaries to 17 lay executives which are nowhere near “in due proportion to analogous expenses of his diocesan Curia.” As we know from “Bloated Payroll” and numerous other posts, seventeen people at the Pastoral Center are paid salaries ranging from $150K to $325K today–about 4X-8X more per person than clergy are paid. In aggregate, they are paid somewhere close to $3.5M a year in salaries alone. This is about 6 times more than was paid in 2006 in $150K+ salaries.

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New Orange Bishop installed tomorrow, victims respond

ORANGE COUNTY (CA)
The Worthy Adversary

Statement by Joelle Casteix of Newport Beach, SNAP Volunteer Western Regional Director

As the fourth bishop of the Diocese of Orange, Bishop Kevin William Vann will preside over a transparent cathedral. It is now time for him to create a transparent church as well.

Bishop Vann steps into a legacy fraught with sex abuse and cover-up. While Catholic leaders will boast about former Bishop Tod Brown’s purchase of the Crystal Cathedral, we must also remember and reflect upon the other “accomplishments” of Brown’s tenure in Orange County.

After he nailed his “Covenant of the Faithful” on the front door of Holy Family Cathedral in 2004, Tod Brown has:
•Posted only a partial list of proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics on his website
•Refused to keep the list up permanently or put in in parish bulletins
•Concealed his own sex abuse allegation, saying it was “embarrassing,”
•Sent a high-ranking church official to Canada to avoid a deposition, and
•Was held in contempt of court in 2007.

This is a legacy that must end. Bishop Vann has the opportunity and the mandate to enforce real change to protect children in the Diocese of Orange. In order to restore faith in the diocese’s claims of child safety, Bishop Vann must, immediately:

•Remove all priests accused of abuse, such as Fr. Timothy Raemakers, from positions where they will encounter children,
•Remove all priests who actively enabled sex abusers to remain in ministry and fostered continued abuse, like Msgr. John Urell,

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PA Task Force on Child Protection, post-Sandusky

PENNSYLVANIA
Radio Times

The Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection has been meeting for 10 months with experts in all facets of child care and protection, tasked with reviewing the commonwealth’s laws and procedures protecting children, and where and why they fail. Formed in response to the crime spree of child sexual abuse perpetrated by Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky and what’s been called the “conspiracy of silence” by other Penn State administrators, the panel is recommending (link to pdf) that Pennsylvania create and fund a children’s advocacy center within a two-hour drive of every child in the state, among other reforms. Joining us to discuss the task force and its findings are its governor-appointed chairman, Bucks County District Attorney DAVID HECKLER and Dr. CINDY W. CHRISTIAN, director of the “Safe Place” program at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and another appointee to the task force of Governor Tom Corbett. Plus, we’ll hear from DAVID CLOHESSY, executive director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, about what he feels the Task Force left out of their recommendations.

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The Great and the Good Defenders of Children

PHILIPPINES
Preda

by Fr. Shay Cullen
Email: shaycullen@preda.org

(Fr. Shay’s columns are published in The Manila Times,in publications in Ireland, the UK, Hong Kong, and on-line.)

It’s great to have the good news of the rescue of children from sexual exploitation. The rescue this week of six trafficked and commercially exploited children by police of the Criminal Investigative Detection Group(CIDG) from a sex bar in Isabela, Quirino, a remote town in the Philippines, just shows that police can make a difference.

It also shows just how widespread the sexual exploitation of children is. Not only in the red-light districts of many cities but in small towns and beach resorts, it is a money-making business. The trafficking of children and women is a multi-billion dollar business world-wide. Over two million are trafficked each year and most never get back home, they are lost forever.

Good that CIDG Director Samuel D. Pagdilao Jr. and his team are serious minded about saving children from this horrific, life destroying experience. The rape and murder of a 7 year old child in Laguna this week is like that of 7 year-old Mykie Prado, raped and murdered in Aklan over two years ago and whose suspected murderer is still at large ought to cause public outrage. But it does not.

These heinous crimes are becoming more frequent due to the depravity of the abusers influenced by child pornography, the laxity of enforcement, the influx of big paying sex tourists and the bad influence it has on local communities. If the foreigners can do it without being arrested local men may say, then it’s OK for us. Government must review the permissiveness of local authorities that give permits and licences to dens of prostitution and the havens of child traffickers. It’s a blight and a shame on the dignity and respect of our nation.

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Bischof Ackermann: Missbrauchstäter nicht aus der Kirche verstoßen

DEUTSCHLAND
Radio Vatikan

Katholische Priester, die Minderjährige missbrauchen, sind in den seltensten Fällen in klinischem Sinne pädophil. Das geht aus dem Abschlussbericht der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz zur Analyse forensisch-psychiatrischer Gutachten hervor. Der Bericht wurde an diesem Freitag der Presse vorgestellt. Darin wurden die Fälle von 78 Priestern untersucht, die durch sexuelle Übergriffe auf Minderjährige aufgefallen waren. Ein weiteres wichtiges Ergebnis der Studie: Die Beweggründe für sexuelle Übergriffe ließen sich überwiegend dem „normalpsychologischen Bereich“ zuordnen – genau wie bei nicht-geistlichen Tätern. Der Beauftragte der DBK zu den Missbrauchsfällen, der Trierer Bischof Stephan Ackermann, erläutert, welche Aufgabe die forensischen Gutachten haben, die in der Studie untersucht wurden:

„Die Gutachten sollen den Entscheidungsträgern, d.h. in diesem Fall den Bischöfen, helfen, eine Entscheidung darüber treffen zu können, wo kann – wenn überhaupt – jemand, der sich des sexuellen Missbrauchs schuldig gemacht hat, in der Seelsorge noch eingesetzt werden. Natürlich ist das nur ein Aspekt. Es geht doch aber um die Frage der Gefährlichkeitsprognose.“

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