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.

July 6, 2012

Philly archdiocese restores 4 accused priests, removes 2 others

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By David O’Reilly
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia has announced it is restoring to ministry four priests who were accused of sexual abuse or inappropriate conduct with a minor, and removing two.

The two priests who will not be returned to ministry are the Rev. John Bowe, 64 and the Rev. David Givey, 68.

Restored to ministry will be the Rev. Paul Castellani, 53, Msgr. John Close, 68, Rev. Steven Harris, 57, and Rev. Leonard Peterson, 70.

In an announcement issued Friday, the archdiocese said the allegations against the four had not been substantiated despite lengthy investigations.

Bowe and Givey were found to have violated the archdiocese’s Standards of Ministerial Behavior and Boundaries, which is considered a lesser allegation than sexual assault.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 St. Michael’s Pastor Cleared of Abuse Charges

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Patch

By James Boyle

A former Levittown pastor at St. Michael the Archangel, Rev. Msgr. John Close, is one of four priests cleared of sexual abuse and misconduct charges today by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. An internal investigation by the archdiocese ruled the claims unsubstantiated and cleared the priests for public ministry.

Rev. Paul Castellani, Rev. Steven Harris and Rev. Leonard Peterson have also been restored to public ministry. Rev. Msgr. Close served as pastor for St. Michael the Archangel from 1994 to 1996.

Rev. Msgr. Close and 25 other priests were placed on administrative leave by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia following an explosive February 2011 grand jury report that accused Catholic parishes throughout the Delaware Valley of covering up years of sexual abuses against minors.

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

Were Will Lynch Jurors Correct to Ignore Law?

CALIFORNIA
Opposing Views

By Michael Flood McNulty, Fri, July 06, 2012

Will Lynch admitted — in court and under oath — to beating a priest who, he says, molested him in 1975. But Santa Clara County, Calif. jurors overlooked this admission and found Lynch not guilty in a sensational trial that pitted sexual abuse victims against the Catholic church and its decades-long cover-up of clergy abuse.

Lynch was accused of assaulting Father Jerold Lindner in a Los Gatos, Calif. retirement home in 2010. Lynch has maintained that Lindner brutally raped him as a seven-year-old boy in 1975. Lynch assaulted the priest 35 years after the fact.

“I was wrong for doing what I did — in doing that I perpetuated the cycle of violence,” Lynch said outside the courtroom. “But if there is anything I want people [who have been molested] to take away from this — it is you can come forward, you can seek justice and you can find justice in many forms.”

According to the Mercury News, defense lawyers in California cannot ask a jury to “nullify,” which is a legal term for ignoring evidence of guilt because a conviction is seen as unfair. Yet, in closing arguments to the jury, Lynch’s attorney Pat Harris said: the prosecution had “overcharged the case” by filing felony charges.”There is a defense to that ‘overzealous’ decision by the prosecution,” Harris had said — “you,” looking at the jurors.

The argument apparently worked.

The Mercury News says: One juror called the rape of Lynch and his brother “heinous, absolutely heinous.” Despite the judge’s admonitions, “(the alleged assault) was a tough thing to disregard,” said the juror, a retired Silicon Valley accountant. “It played a big role in our decision.” The juror was one of the eight who voted to convict Lynch for misdemeanor assault. Lindner testified last month about what he called a “vicious” and painful attack, but the juror said his account was not a factor in their vote. Judge David A. Cena had instructed the jury to ignore Lindner’s testimony, including his denial of the alleged molestation, after the Jesuit refused to answer any more questions on the grounds it might incriminate him.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Wood Principal Cleared of Abuse Charges by Archdiocese

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Patch

By James Boyle

Former Archbishop Wood principal Rev. Msgr. John Close is one of four priests cleared of sexual abuse and misconduct charges today by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. An internal investigation by the archdiocese ruled the claims unsubstantiated and cleared the priests for public ministry.

Rev. Paul Castellani, Rev. Steven Harris and Rev. Leonard Peterson have also been restored to public ministry. Rev. Msgr. Close served as principal for Archbishop Wood from 1990 to 1994.

Rev. Msgr. Close and 25 other priests were placed on administrative leave by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia following an explosive February 2011 grand jury report that accused Catholic parishes throughout the Delaware Valley of covering up years of sexual abuses against minors.

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

2 Priests “Unsuitable,” 4 Can Work Again

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

By Karen Araiza

Friday, Jul 6, 2012

Archbishop Charles Chaput announced the fate of six more priests under investigation — four can stay and two were found “unsuitable” for ministry.

•Read Chaput’s Full Statement
•Background on Priests
•Priests Resolution Chart

These are the four priests who were investigated and will now be able to return to work because the allegations against them were found to “unsubstantiated”:

•Rev. Leonard Peterson
•Rev. Paul Castellani
•Rev. Msgr. John Close
•Rev. Steven Harris

The two priest found “unsuitable”:

•Rev. John Bowe
•Rev. David Givey

The two priests found unsuitable for their vocation were not involved in cases of alleged sexual abuse.

Father Bowe, 64, served at Saint Agnes in West Chester from 1973-1977; Saint Bridget in Philadelphia from 1977-1982; John W. Hallahan Catholic Girls’ High School from 1980-1982, Blessed Virgin Mary in Darby from 1982-1987, Chaplain for the Pa. National Guard From 1983-2004, Holy Martyrs in Oreland from 1987-1989, Saint Agnes in Sellersville from 1989-2005, Saint Joseph in Warrington from 2005-2011 until he was placed on administrative leave following the February 2011 Grand Jury report.

Father Givey, 68, served at Saint Katharine of Siena in Way from 1971-1973, Archbishop Carroll High School in Radnor from 1971-1973, The Catholic Standard and Times from 1973-1974, 1976, 1984-1991 Pontifical University in Rome from 1973-1976, Temple University from 1976-1978, Archbishop Prendergast High School in Drexel Hill from 1978-1984, Sisters of Mercy Convent in Merion from 1980-1984, Saint Agatha/Saint James in Philadelphia from 1994-1996, Our Lady of Peace in Milmont Park from 1996-2001 when he was placed on administrative leave.

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

2 Philly priests removed after abuse inquiry

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
July 06, 2012

PHILADELPHIA — Two Roman Catholic priests will be permanently barred from ministry after the Philadelphia archdiocese substantiated allegations of inappropriate conduct.

Archbishop Charles Chaput (SHAP’-yoo) said the two substantiated cases involved undisclosed “boundary” or “behavioral” problems, not sexual assaults.

Chaput also said Friday that four other suspended priests will return to ministry after allegations against them were found to be unsubstantiated. Another 12 cases remain under review.

Priests removed from ministry can agree to serve a life of prayer and penance in a church-run facility. Some might agree to leave the priesthood, while others may be laicized after a church trial. The priests can also appeal.

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

THE ARCHDIOCESE OF PHILADELPHIA ANNOUNCES ADDITIONAL RESOLUTIONS OF CASES OF PRIESTS ON ADMINISTRATIVE LEAVE

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia

Archbishop Chaput makes final decisions in six more cases of priests placed on administrative leave following the February 2011 Grand Jury Report

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia announced today that Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., has made final decisions in six additional cases of the priests who were placed on administrative leave following the February 2011 Grand Jury Report. Through a rigorous investigative process involving over 20 experts in child abuse four of the priests have been found suitable for ministry and two have been found not suitable for ministry.

In the cases of those found unsuitable for ministry none were due to a substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor and five were due to a substantiated violation of the Standards of Ministerial Behavior and Boundaries. The priests found unsuitable for ministry will have no public ministry in the Archdiocese. They do have the right to appeal the decision to the Holy See. For those found to have a substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor, if they do not appeal, or if their appeal is unsuccessful, they could be laicized (removed from the clerical state) or live a life of prayer and penance.

Archbishop Chaput said, “In making these decisions I relied on the counsel of numerous experts in two separate bodies-the Multi-Disciplinary Team and the Archdiocesan Review Board. They come from various professional disciplines and have dedicated their lives to child protection, to the investigation of sexual offenders and to support for victims of sexual violence. I’m grateful for their tireless efforts. The experience of these doctors, police officers, former prosecutors, victims’ advocates and others in dealing with the broad societal problem of sexual abuse was crucial to our work.”

Prior to conducting an investigation, each case was submitted to the appropriate local district attorney’s office. After receiving clearance, that investigation was conducted by the Multi-Disciplinary Team (MDT) led by veteran child abuse prosecutor Gina Maisto Smith. The results of the investigations were provided to the Archdiocesan Review Board (ARB), which provided a recommendation to the Archbishop, who made the final decision.

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

Philly diocese finds 2 more priests unsuitable for ministry

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

July 6, 2012
By Shannon McDonald

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia has found two more priests unsuitable for ministry following the investigation that was opened after the 2011 grand jury report detailing accusations of sexual abuse by four clergy members and a teacher.

The two, Rev. John Bowe and Rev. David Givey, were among six clergy members whose resolutions were announced today; They were part of an initial list of more than 20 priests being investigated for misconduct. Eight cases were resolved in May.

Revs. Paul Castellani, Msgr. John Close, Steven Harris and Leonard Peterson have been found suitable for ministry after the diocese determined misconduct claims against them are unsubstantiated.

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

Nothing sacred about celibacy

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

July 7, 2012
Opinion

Adele Horin

As the reputation of the Catholic Church sinks further into the mire with the latest allegations of sex abuse and cover-up, it is worth raising again the subject of priestly celibacy.

Celibacy cuts to the heart of what is wrong with the church – along with its homophobia and misogyny.

Father F, a focus of the Four Corners expose this week, admitted to interfering with five boys aged 10 and 11. He forced two of them to have oral sex regularly over a year, according to a letter written by one of the three priests who interviewed him in 1992.

But understandably overlooked in the outrage over the alleged paedophilia and cover-up is that Father F also admitted to two affairs with young women. This is also a grave offence in the church’s eye. For most people, it is the rank hypocrisy that is offensive.

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

Sex abuse and the study of religion

The Immanent Frame

posted by Kathryn Lofton

To think, write, or speak about the sexual abuse of children is to enter a terrain of bleak human experience. Even as I write that sentence, my regimented scholarly disposition makes me cautious of its potentially maudlin sentiment. Is this set of experiences more or less bleak than other grievous ones?

Physicians, psychologists, and criminal codes (e.g., Texas state law) largely agree on what constitutes the sexual abuse of children by an adult. It includes, but is not limited to, the sexual touching of any part of the body, clothed or unclothed; penetrative sex, including penetration of the mouth; encouraging a child to engage in sexual activity, including masturbation; intentionally engaging in sexual activity in front of a child; showing children pornography, or using children to create pornography; and encouraging a child to engage in prostitution.

What I want to tackle, immediately, is the fraught relationship between effect and affect in this subject for those of us who seek to interpret it. It is difficult to write or think about sex abuse without being affected by its circulating effects, without feeling that the very practices of academic analysis do something suffocating to its experience. To think about sex abuse in an academic context could suggest that we might wish to think away its awfulness; to write about sex abuse could suggest that we seek to argue away its visceral trauma.

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

Two accused clerics ousted, says Philly blogger – SNAP reacts

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Dorris on July 06, 2012

Two accused Philly predator priests are being permanently removed and four others are being put back on the job, according to noted Philly Catholic blogger Rocco Palmo.

Archbishop Charles Chaput continues to selfishly disclose decisions at his convenience with little or no regard for children’s safety.

Just last year, prosecutors concluded that 37 accused Philly priests were still on the job. So it’s very hard to have any faith whatsoever in secretive internal church procedures run by a few Catholics hand-picked by complicit church officials.

The real and urgent remedy is still eliminating Pennsylvania’s archaic, arbitrary, predator-friendly statutes of limitations. When the courthouse doors, long slammed in victims’ faces, are cracked open, the truth about these abuses and cover up reports can be better revealed and children can be better protected.

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

Fear Makes Men Cover for Child Predators

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Philly Post

By Kevin Cirilli

Waiting for Monsignor William Lynn’s hearing to start yesterday morning, I felt like I was back in Monday morning chapel at prep school: It was too early and too hot, and I couldn’t follow a damn thing.

There was also a nun. She comforted Lynn’s friends and family, rubbing backs, offering prayers. They showed up to see if Lynn would be let out of jail and put on house arrest while he awaits sentencing. Lynn is the highest-ranking church official to be found guilty of endangering children for his role in covering up Catholic priests’ sexual abuse of children.

The prosecution said last week that if he were let out of jail, he might flee to the Vatican. Defense attorney William Bergstrom said in court that Lynn wouldn’t screw his family out of the $100,000 they had posted for his bail money. “The family didn’t put up $100,000,” said prosecutor Patrick Blessington. “It was $10,000.” Judge M. Teresa Sarmina bought it, sending Lynn, 61, back behind bars while he awaits his July 24th sentencing hearing.

The nun burst into tears, dabbing her eyes with a tissue, her fingers intertwined with a silver rosary. “I just called the Vatican and told them to give up his room,” Bergstrom sarcastically quipped as he left the courtroom. Lynn was taken back to jail.

Perhaps the most hellish detail to emerge from Lynn’s trial was that his own records stated that he suggested to a pedophile priest that the priest was “seduced into it” by an 11-year-old altar boy. (You can read Lynn’s report here.) The sentiment blames the boy. And it’s a blame one of the young men whom Jerry Sandusky abused told jurors last month that he felt when he came forward. No one believed him.

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

Exclusive: Man accused of raping a teen has been working at a Brooklyn yeshiva

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

By Reuven Blau / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Thursday, July 5, 2012

A Borough Park man accused of raping a young boy has been working at a Brooklyn yeshiva for troubled teens – and the city’s Probation Dept. never barred him from contact with minors.

Moshe Pinter, 28, was arrested and charged with a trying to molest a 13-year old boy in 2007, but pled down the top felony charge to a misdemeanor child endangerment offense after the victim declined to testify against him, according to court records and sources.

Pinter was sentenced to three years of probation, but was not barred from working with minors.

For the past year Pinter has been working at Ohr Hameir Yeshiva in Borough Park chaperoning Hasidic teens on weekend getaways while parents had no idea of his criminal past – which also includes two theft convictions.

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

Inglewood pastor arrested for alleged sex with 14-year-old girl

INGLEWOOD (CA)
LA Daily News

By Larry Altman, Staff Writerdailynews.com
Posted: 07/05/2012

A 50-year-old pastor of an Inglewood church has been arrested on suspicion of engaging in “substantial sexual acts” with a 14-year-old girl, deputies said Thursday night.

The Rev. Gordon Solomon allegedly met the girl through his involvement as senior pastor at Christ’s Community Church, 234 Hindry Ave., deputies said.

“An ongoing affinity developed and continued for approximately the past two years,” sheriff’s Sgt. Dan Scott of the department’s Special Victims Bureau said in a statement.

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

Inglewood pastor held for sex with girl, 14

INGLEWOOD (CA)
Mercury News

The Associated Press
Posted: 07/06/2012

INGLEWOOD, Calif.—The pastor of an Inglewood church has been arrested on suspicion of having a two-year sexual relationship with a girl that began when she was 14.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department says 50-year-old Gordon Solomon was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of committing lewd acts on a child. He remains jailed on $3 million bail.

Investigators contend that Solomon, who’s married, met the girl through his position as pastor of Christ’s Community Church.

Authorities say the girl’s mother contacted authorities after discovering an explicit text message that Solomon allegedly sent to her daughter.

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

Police seek more victims in Inglewood pastor sex abuse case

INGLEWOOD (CA)
Los Angeles Times

Investigators were looking Friday into whether the sexual misconduct charge against an Inglewood pastor should be expanded beyond one alleged victim, a teenage girl who was a congregant, authorities said Friday.

Gordon Solomon, 50, of Christ’s Community Church was arrested this week on suspicion of engaging in sexual acts with a minor, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. Solomon allegedly had a two-year relationship with a teenage congregant that started when the girl was 14, officials said. …

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Special Victims Bureau at (877) 710-5273 or specialvictims@lasd.org. To remain anonymous, call L.A. Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477, text the letters TIPLA plus your tip to CRIMES (274637) or go to lacrimestoppers.org.

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

Kein Strafverfahren gegen Overbeck

DEUTSCHLAND
Humanistischer Pressedienst

ESSEN. (hpd) Gegen den katholischen Soldatenbischof Franz-Josef Overbeck wird es keine Anklage geben. Im Mai hatte der Bischof zwar während einer später auch über das Internet übertragenen Rede erklärt, dass es ohne Religion und religiöse Praxis kein Menschsein gebe. Die Justiz sieht deshalb aber keinen Handlungsbedarf.

Insgesamt vier Strafanzeigen wurden nach dem Bekanntwerden der Rede des Bischofs erstattet. Die scharfe Kritik an der auch im Netz veröffentlichten Rede des Bischofs hat sich nicht nur daran entzündet, dass er das „Menschsein“ denjenigen absprach, die ohne Religion und religiöse Praxis leben. Auch weitere Äußerungen des einflussreichen Geistlichen stießen auf Empörung und teils großes Entsetzen.

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

Von Mesner missbraucht: Prozess zeigt die Leiden des Opfers

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

Was sexueller Missbrauch in Kindheit und Jugend aus einem Menschen machen kann, zeigt sich im Prozess gegen den ehemaligen Mesner einer katholischen Gemeinde im Kreis Kitzingen. Der Mann steht wegen sexueller Übergriffe auf einen Ministranten vor dem Würzburger Landgericht. Zu Prozessbeginn gab er zu, den Messdiener missbraucht zu haben, seit dieser zwölf Jahre alt war.

Am zweiten Verhandlungstag spricht der Vorsitzende Richter Lothar Schmitt das Missbrauchsopfer, an, das als Nebenkläger auftritt. Er wisse, „wie schwer“ es für den 20-Jährigen gewesen sei, vor Gericht von seinem Martyrium zu berichten, sagt Schmitt. Und er wisse auch, wie schwer es ihm falle, die Verhandlung durchzustehen. Dass er trotzdem anwesend sei, „verdient Respekt“.

Der 20-jährige nickt kaum merklich. Der gut aussehende Mann mit der sportlichen Figur wirkt tieftraurig und in sich gekehrt. Wenn er während der Pausen mit seiner Familie zum Durchatmen vors Gerichtsgebäude geht, raucht er schweigend.

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

Regensburg und die große heilige Inquisition

DEUTSCHLAND
Der Schockwellenreiter

[mit Video]

Der Herausgeber von regensburg-digital, Stefan Aigner, wurde vom Bistum Regensburg 2010 wegen dieses Kommentars, der sich mit der Verquickung des Papstbruders Georg Ratzinger und des Regensburger Bischofs Gerhard Ludwig Müller im Regensburger Mißbrauchsskandal befaßte, abgemahnt, verklagt und vom berüchtigen Landgericht Hamburg verurteilt. Eineinhalb Jahre später hob das Oberlandgericht Hamburg diesen kirchlichen Maulkorb wieder auf. regensburg-digital darf nun wieder behaupten, daß die Diozöse im Fall des pädophilen Priesters Peter K., der nach einem ersten bekanntgewordenen Mißbrauchsfall wieder auf Kinder losgelassen wurde und mindestens einen Ministranten 23 mal mißbraucht hatte, sich beim Vertuschen des Falls ausgesprochen kreativ verhielt:

Ein Opfer des pädophilen Pfarrers von Riekofen erhielten Geldzahlungen, die nicht nur in den Augen unserer Redaktion den Beigeschmack einer Schweigegeldzahlung hat. Das Bistum Regensburg hat das stets bestritten. Es habe keinen kausalen Zusammenhang zwischen der Zahlung und dem vereinbarten Schweigen gegeben, behauptet das Bistum. »Es geht Ihnen nicht um die Opfer, sondern vor allem darum, daß nichts an die Öffentlichkeit kommt«, sagte eines der Opfer dem SPIEGEL.

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

Kinderpornos: Seelsorger musste gehen

DEUTSCHLAND
MissBiT

“… und das Generalvikariat habe im Zuge der Ernennung des Pfarrers zum Krankenhaus-Seelsorger nicht über diese Vorgeschichte informiert, teilt das Gemeinschaftsklinikum auf Anfrage mit.”

Der Seelsorger des Mayener St.-Elisabeth-Krankenhauses ist 2010 verurteilt worden, weil er mehr als 130 kinderpornografische Bilder auf seinem Computer hatte. Erst jetzt hat das Klinikum davon erfahren – und die Konsequenzen gezogen.

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

CA – Jesuits & Catholic officials must act on Lindner, SNAP says

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Joelle Casteix on July 06, 2012

After yesterday’s Bay Area jury verdict, now attention rightfully shifts from William Lynch to the prosecutor and Catholic officials. The prosecutor should file perjury charges against Fr. Lindner.

San Jose Bishop Patrick McGrath should insist that the Jesuits move Fr. Lindner out of his diocese.

And the Jesuits should, at a bare minimum, put Fr. Lindner to a remote, secure, independently-run treatment center not run by the church. (He’s now at a Jesuit facility in Los Gatos where the LA Times says “he is free to travel and tutor seminarians and has collected a living allowance from the order.”)

They should also publicly discipline and denounce him.

The Catholic hierarchy now knows Fr. Lindner is both a serial child molester and a perjurer. (Even Fr. Lindner’s mom, in today’s LA Times, says she’s convinced he’s a child molester.)

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

GERALD NOCE & CHILD SEX ABUSE

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

July 5, 2012 5:15 pm | Author: Jerry Berger
For the second time in a few months, barrister Gerald Noce has failed to stop a child sex abuse and cover up lawsuit against the Marianists and Brother William Mueller. This week the Mo. Supreme Court ruled against Noce and in favor of Clayton attorney Ken Chackes and Florida attorney Adam Horowitz. who represent the alleged victim. (Two other men who also say Mueller molested them at St. Mary’s lost the statute of limitations. They were represented by a K.C.lawyer.) Mueller now lives in San Antonio.

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

Priest’s attacker acquitted after harrowing testimony

UNITED STATES
WA Today (Australia)

Terry Collins, San Jose
July 7, 2012 Read later

A US jury has acquitted a man who bashed a priest he says brutally raped him as a child more than three decades ago.

William Lynch acknowledged punching Jerold Lindner several times in 2010 at a retirement home, but he pleaded not guilty. He said the abuse had left him with tormented memories that led to alcohol abuse and depression.

Lynch said he hoped to use the case to publicly shame Lindner and to highlight abuse in the Catholic Church.

Even though the Jesuits have doled out millions of dollars to settle cases brought by Lindner’s alleged victims, the priest was never prosecuted because Lynch and others reported the abuse after the brief window of opportunity set by the statute of limitations at the time slammed shut.

Lynch, who faced up to four years in jail, said the verdict surprised him. ”I honestly thought I was going to jail,” 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.

Patch’s Poll: Has the Catholic Church Done Enough to Protect Children in its Parishes?

CONNECTICUT
Patch

[with poll]

In response to the recent arrest of a priest on child porn possession charges, a spokesman for the Catholic Church in Connecticut maintains that the Church still has a thorough background check process for priests in place.

By Julian McKinley

The Catholic Church in eastern Connecticut was rocked this week after one of its parish priests, the Rev. Dennis Carey of St. Paul in Chains parish in Waterford, was arrested on a felony charge of possession of child pornography.

Carey has since posted a $150,000 bond and remains at liberty while his case is pending.

There is no evidence, however, that Carey had any inappropriate contact with any children of the parish, which is an assertion made by his attorney and supported by the police and state’s attorney’s office. He reportedly said he was addicted to child porn over the past two years and that, since his arrest, he will seek help.

Meanwhile, Waterford Patch published a story today in which a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Norwich asserts that Roman Catholic Church is still a “model” institution for protecting children.

Since 2001, when sex scandals plagued the church in the U.S. and worldwide, the institution enacted a strict screening process, during which both priests and lay workers are subjected to background checks.

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

Ex-judge assists victims of residential schools

CANADA
Canada.com

Members of the Blood Tribe in southern Alberta say a retired B.C. judge’s visit has renewed some faith in the settlement process for Indian residential school survivors.

Ian Pitfield met with members of the tribe this week to reassure them that their compensation claims for sexual and physical abuse will be dealt with properly. “The integrity of the system has to be restored,” Rick Tailfeathers, a Blood Tribe spokesman, said Thursday.

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

Man acquitted of beating of priest he said sexually abused him

SAN JOSE (CA)
WLS

SAN JOSE, Calif. (WLS) – William Lynch, the California man who admitted he pummeled a priest who he said abused him as a boy, has been found not guilty of felony assault and elder abuse charges.

The jury of nine men and three women could not reach a verdict on a lesser charge of misdemeanor assault for the 2010 attack at a retirement home.

The jury began deliberations late Monday after hearing impassioned closing arguments from both sides.

The defense’s strategy had long been to prove to the jury that the wrong man was on trial. However, prosecutor Vicki Gemetti urged jurors to focus on the assault.

“Two wrongs don’t make a right,” she said in her closing arguments on Monday.

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

L.A. Priest Blamed for Legacy of Pain

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

Ten, including relatives, say the Jesuit molested them. He denies it and has not been charged.

[Note: This article was published December 14, 2002.]

Glenn F. Bunting | Times Staff Writer

During 16 years at Loyola High School, Father Jerold Lindner was admired as an energetic teacher exceptionally devoted to his students. Superiors lauded him as the model of “a Christian educator.” A colleague in the English department nominated him as “chairman for life.”

Others outside the school say they knew a different Lindner. Ten men and women portray the Jesuit as a molester who haunted their childhoods, abusing them on Sundays after Mass, during holiday gatherings and on Catholic family camping trips — nearly always while wearing his clerical collar.

These encounters allegedly began in the 1950s, continued through the 1970s, when Lindner was entering the priesthood, and persisted into the 1980s, while he was teaching at Loyola High, a private, all-boys prep school west of downtown Los Angeles.

Jesuit leaders say they first learned about Lindner’s past a decade ago, when his brother told them that the priest had sexually abused three nieces, a nephew and a younger sibling. After sending Lindner for a psychiatric evaluation, Jesuit superiors deemed the allegations not credible and put him back in the classroom.

Fresh charges surfaced in 1997, when two brothers asserted in a lawsuit that Lindner sodomized them years earlier during weekend retreats in the Santa Cruz Mountains. The Jesuits then removed the priest from Loyola and negotiated a secret $625,000 settlement with the brothers. As before, Lindner’s superiors did not inform law enforcement authorities, parents or teachers about the allegations.

In a sworn deposition, Lindner denied ever abusing anyone. In a statement to The Times, he said: “I have devoted my life to helping people, and I insist that the accusations against me are not true.” He said the Catholic sex-abuse crisis has “created an atmosphere where people like me are presumed guilty until proven innocent.”

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Vatican allows Bishop Logan to step down

SCOTLAND
The Scottish Observer

— Approval given on Bishop of Dunkeld’s wish to retire early on health grounds; administrator to be appointed

Pope Benedict XVI has accepted the resignation of Bishop Vincent Logan of Dunkeld on health grounds with immediate effect. The appointment of Mgr Basil O’Sullivan, parish priest of Holy Family Church, Dunblane, as administrator—chosen by senior priests of the diocese—was made after the SCO went to press.

Bishop Logan, 71, who celebrated 30 years as Bishop of Dunkeld last March, said in December 2010 that he ‘deeply regretted’ having to offer his resignation but felt he had ‘no choice.’

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Margate priest on rape charge

UNITED KINGDOM
Isle of Thanet Gazette

A PRIEST from Margate has been accused of raping a 28-year-old woman.

Reverend John Taylor, 48, of Canterbury Road appeared at Margate Magistrates’ Court last Thursday morning.

Mr Taylor, who is an Old Roman Catholic priest, was chaplain at the court until last year, often visiting prisoners in the holding cells.

The offence is alleged to have happened on the evening of February 22 this year.

Mr Taylor stood in the dock as details of the charges were read out by prosecutor Julie Farbrace. He spoke only to confirm his name and address.

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Former priests’ appeal: Judgement on October 26

MALTA
Times of Malta

The judgement on the appeals of two former priests convicted of child abuse will be delivered on October 26.

The final submissions by both the prosecution and the defence were heard in court this morning as the accused stood in the dock and two of the victims fidgeted as they heard the proceedings.

During today’s hearing, the sitting was stopped for 20 minutes while the judge, the prosecution and the defence watched a video in which victim Laurence Grech stripped a 12-year-old boy naked.

The two former priests Godwin Scerri and Charles Pulis, both members of the Missionary Society of St Paul, were sentenced to five and six years in prison respectively for sexually abusing boys in their care.

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The Mutineers of the Barque of Peter

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

With the leaking of confidential documents, the pact of loyalty that binds together the members of the Vatican curia has been broken. The consultations for a change of government have begun. A letter from the pope to Cardinal Bertone

by Sandro Magister

ROME, July 6, 2012 – The critical point of this pontificate is not the opposition, sometimes bitter, that rains down uninterruptedly on it in various areas. But it is the rupture that has taken place with that pact of loyalty within the Church which is manifested in the leaking of confidential documents, from its highest offices.

Pope Joseph Ratzinger does not allow himself to be intimidated by opposition. It is not something that he endures, but rather in crucial cases he intentionally provokes it. And he does not retreat by even one step when the reaction becomes exaggerated and fierce, beyond what is to be expected.

The memorable lecture in Regensburg was the first demonstration of this. Benedict XVI laid bare the burden of violence present in Islam with a clarity that astonished the world and scandalized in the Church the lovers of the embrace among the religions. He invoked for Muslims the revolution of the Enlightenment that Christianity has already experienced. Years later, the springtime of freedom that sprouted and immediately withered in the city squares of the Arab world confirmed that he had seen correctly, that the future of Islam really is played out here.

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Lynn denied house arrest; sentencing moved up

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter

by Brian Roewe on Jul. 05, 2012 NCR Today

Denied a house arrest request, Msgr. William J. Lynn will remain in jail until his sentencing.

Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina ruled Thursday morning against a plan that would have moved Lynn into the home of his sister’s stepmother until his sentencing date. While the convicted monsignor will stay jailed, his time there will be shorter after Sarmina granted his lawyers’ request to have the sentencing date moved up, from Aug. 13 to July 24.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that the rescheduled sentencing will allow Lynn’s defense to appeal the case sooner and reapply to release Lynn on bail.

Lynn was convicted of child endangerment for leaving defrocked priest Edward Avery in ministry despite knowledge of past abuse.

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Diocese: Roman Catholic Church The “Model” Institution For Protecting Kids

CONNECTICUT
Patch

By Paul Petrone

Monday, the Rev. Dennis Carey, formerly the pastor of Waterford’s St. Paul in Chains Rectory, was arrested for first-degree possession of child pornography. Court documents would later show that while there are no allegations of Carey sexually abusing children, the priest admitted to police he was addicted to child porn for the last two years.

For many, it seemed like another of many cases of a priest in the Roman Catholic Church being charged with a crime against children. But Michael Strammiello, director of communications for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich, said Thursday nothing could be further from the truth, calling the Roman Catholic Church “the model institution” when it comes to protecting children.

“There is no institution in America that has done more to protect young people than the Catholic church,” Strammiello said. “No institution has done more, invested more.”

Strammiello said the screenings of priests and the way child abuse allegations are handled has completely changed since 2001, when allegations of priests sexually abusing children began pouring in nationally. He said the church is constantly working on how to guarantee safety for children, and has done a better job than anybody of doing that.

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Will Lynch Not Guilty in Priest Beating Trial

SAN JOSE (CA)
Reuters

By Andrew Lu at FindLaw.com

Thu Jul 5, 2012

Two wrongs don’t make a right, at least not always. Will Lynch was found not guilty in the priest beating trial where he was accused of attacking 67-year-old retired priest Rev. Jerold Lindner.

Lynch did not deny attacking the Catholic priest. However, the jury let him off anyway, perhaps due to Lynch’s special motivation for the attack.

Over 30 years ago, Will Lynch says that the Catholic priest raped him and his brother when they were both just children, reports NBC. Linder was never officially tied to the rape though the church did pay Lynch and his brother $187,000 to settle a civil case without admitting wrongdoing.

Obviously not feeling vindicated, Lynch decided to take matters into his own hands in 2010. He showed up at the Northern California retirement home of Lindner and punched him repeatedly in the face and body, reports NBC. Unlike Lindner and his alleged acts of child rape, Lynch showed some mercy by requesting that Lindner remove his glasses before the beating.

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Herhold: The victim and defendant in the Lynch case switched roles

SAN JOSE (CA)
Mercury News

By Scott Herhold
The Mercury News mercurynews.com
Posted: 07/05/2012

The trial of Will Lynch offered mirrors within mirrors, ironies within ironies. Nothing made that clearer than the words of juror No. 12, a grizzled, retired accountant who said the turning point came when the jurors were instructed to ignore the testimony of the Rev. Jerold Lindner.

“The thing that struck me was that the victim in this case disappeared, or his testimony did. I had to ask myself, if you don’t have a victim, do you have a crime?” said the burly juror, who explained that jurors were ready to acquit on all charges until Lynch testified to the attack.

In my view, the jury still got it wrong: We don’t operate as vigilantes in America. But you could understand how they got there. In the courtroom, the defendant became Lindner, not Lynch. And the crime happened 35 years ago, not two years past.

How did we get to the place where a man can go to a Jesuit retreat center, bloody the priest who assaulted him years ago, and then emerge to cheers after a near clear-cut victory in court?

The quick answer is that powerful forces and feelings trump a prosecutor’s brief. Emotions, and yes, the memory of years of abuse by priests, matter more than the cold litany of charges. Call it jury nullification, but it is both simpler and more complex than that.

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$6.4 million going to Seattle Catholic-school sex-abuse victim

SEATTLE (WA)
The Seattle Times

Posted by Alexa Vaughn

A man who, as a child, was sexually abused by a Seattle Catholic school official has won a $6.4 million in court, one of the largest such awards in state history.

The jury at King County Courthouse found the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a worldwide Catholic order of priests, guilty of ignoring the plaintiff’s sex-abuse complaints when he attended St. Benedict School in Seattle’s Wallingford neighborhood.

“The Oblates tried to point the finger at everyone except themselves, but the jury didn’t accept this and rightly held them accountable for their actions,” said Michael Pfau, an attorney for the plaintiff, in a statement. “The evidence was overwhelming that this religious order was more concerned with protecting its reputation and avoiding scandal than doing the right thing and protecting children.”

The plaintiff — identified as “S.O.” — testified that he was abused on a weekly basis between 1961 and 1964 by Daniel Adamson, a former teacher and principal at the school, who was not a member of the clergy. The plaintiff said he asked the Oblate pastor, Father Henry Conrad, twice for help but was ignored.

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Jury awards Catholic school sex-abuse victim $8M

SEATTLE (WA)
KOMO

By Lindsay Cohen

SEATTLE — A King County jury has awarded $8 million to a victim of sexual abuse at a Seattle Catholic school. The sum is believed to be the largest ever against the Catholic Church in Washington state.

The jury found the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a Catholic order of priests, guilty of ignoring the plaintiff’s complaints of sexual abuse at St. Benedict School in Wallingford. The plaintiff testified in court that he was abused on a weekly basis between 1961 and 1964 by a former teacher and principal, Daniel Adamson.

“This wasn’t minor abuse. This was three years of the worst crimes you can imagine on a child,” said the plaintiff, Stephen O’Connor. “What sexual abuse and sodomy and rape of a 12-year-old child is minimal?”

O’Connor, who grew up in Seattle but now splits his time between Western Washington and Spokane, said he hid the memories of sexual abuse for nearly 50 years but that a 2008 reunion at St. Benedict – to mark the school’s 100th anniversary – triggered an onslaught of feelings.

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Another man alleges Church abuse ignored

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

AAP
July 06, 2012

Police are expected to be informed of fresh allegations of sexual abuse at a Catholic school that weren’t passed on to authorities, a former victim says.

ROBERT Lipari told AAP he was sexually abused by a former teacher at a Catholic school in NSW during the 1970s.

An internal Catholic Church report dated August 2011, and obtained by AAP, substantiated Mr Lipari’s allegations of indecent and sexual assaults between 1976 and 1977 when he was a student at the school.

The allegations included being assaulted in a caravan, on a boat during a fishing trip and in a classroom.

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Nigeria: Alleged Sexual Abuse – Police Arraign Abuja Pastor

NIGERIA
allAfrica

Daily Trust

By John Chuks Azu, 6 July 2012

A pastor of a new generation church in Nyanya, Abuja, was yesterday arraigned by the police before an Abuja Chief Magistrate Court sitting in Karu for allegedly molesting young female members of his church.

Pastor Basil Princewill, the general overseer of Mountain Movers Fire Ministries International, Nyanya, Abuja, was arraigned with Ms Paulyn Ode, the church’s coordinator on charges of alleged conspiracy, criminal impersonation, criminal intimidation, and criminal force and assault.

The pastor was accused of having carnal knowledge of two 14-year-old female members of the church under pretences of offering prayers for them in July, 2011 and later aborted the pregnancy of one the girls this year at the Fountain Health Clinic, Nyanya, Abuja after telling doctors he is her father.

According to the charge, which was transferred from the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) where parents of the victims lodged initial complaints, the pastor also impersonated as a lawyer with an LL.B certificate.

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Church shuttered inquiry into abuse

AUSTRALIA
Advertiser

LINTON BESSER, JOANNE MCCARTHY

06 Jul, 2012

THE church prematurely terminated an investigation last year into the alleged failure of a top Catholic education official to take action over the sexual assault of an 11-year-old boy in the 1970s by a lay teacher.

A former principal of St Patrick’s at Sutherland, Brother Anthony Peter Whelan, had been accused by Robert Lipari of failing to take action against a science teacher, Thomas Keady, after he reported being molested by the man at a caravan park.

Shortly before being employed at the school, Keady had completed a three-year jail term in Victoria for child sex offences.

The church commissioned an investigation by the former NSW Police assistant commissioner, Norm Maroney, who substantiated the 1976 assault, and the fact it was reported it to another senior teacher at the school, Brother John Vincent Roberts.

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D.A.: Pastor assaulted boys during sleepovers

CALIFORNIA
The Orange County Register

By PETER LARSON and VIK JOLLY / THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

SANTA ANA – A Laguna Hills pastor molested five boys – as young as 9 years old – from his church during sleepovers and visits he arranged, a prosecutor told a jury Thursday.

Defendant Oscar Perez, 69, asked one of the victims’ parents to bring the boy to his Lake Forest apartment because he wasn’t feeling well, Deputy District Attorney Jennifer Walker said in her opening statement.

The boys’ parents trusted him, she said. Their sons assisted Perez with services at Iglesia Antigua, a church that rented space at a Laguna Hills Episcopal Church, where he represented himself as a Catholic and Apostolic pastor and bishop, Walker said.

Perez is charged with 22 counts of lewd acts upon a child under 14, four counts of lewd acts on a child, and faces sentencing enhancement allegations for lewd acts against multiple victims.

The first victim’s mother reported the sexual assault last July to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, the prosecutor said. Continued investigation revealed the other four. She said the victims believed the church would be ruined and they would go to hell if they told anyone.

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Alleged Abuse Was Actually ‘Sex Education,’ Accused Pastor Says

LAGUNA HILLS (CA)
Patch

The pastor of a Laguna Hills church molested five boys in his congregation who ranged in age from 9 to 15 years old as they slept over or visited his Lake Forest apartment, a prosecutor told jurors Thursday.

Oscar D. Perez Perez’s attorney, however, said the accusations were the result of “misunderstandings,” and that his 69-year-old client was actually giving the boys sex education and tips on hygiene.

Perez is charged with 22 felony counts of lewd acts on a child younger than 14, four felony counts of lewd acts on a child and faces sentencing enhancement allegations for lewd acts on multiple victims.

Perez claims to be a bishop and pastor of Iglesia Antigua, or Old Church, which at the time of his arrest rented space at St. George’s Episcopalian Church in Laguna Hills. Perez’s church is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church or the Diocese of Orange.

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Inglewood pastor arrested on suspicion of sexual abuse of a minor

INGLEWOOD (CA)
Los Angeles Times

A pastor at an Inglewood church has been arrested on suspicion of engaging in sexual acts with a minor, authorities said Thursday.

Gordon Solomon, 50, of Christ’s Community Church allegedly had a two-year relationship with a teenage congregant that started when the girl was 14, according to a statement released by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Solomon and the victim allegedly exchanged emails and texts of a sexual nature and met at various locations. The victim’s mother stumbled upon one of the explicit text messages from Solomon that was sent to the girl, authorities said, and immediately called police.

Solomon was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of felony lewd acts upon a child. He is being held in lieu of $3-million bail.

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Inglewood pastor arrested on child sex abuse charges

INGLEWOOD (CA)
KABC

[with video]

Amy Powell

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (KABC) — A local pastor has been arrested on child sex abuse charges. Authorities say he met the alleged victim at church.

Gordon Solomon, 50, was arrested Wednesday for felony lewd acts on child. Police said the alleged victim is a 14-year-old girl who Solomon met through Christ Community Church, and relatives said the girl was 12 when the abuse began.

“The case was discovered after the mother reported the incident to authorities,” said Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Dep. Benjamin Grubb. “Apparently she found text messages on her daughter’s phone regarding her and the suspect.” …

Investigators said they have reason to believe there may be other victims. Anyone with information should call the Los Angeles Police Department Special Victims Bureau at (877) 710-5273.

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Nigeria: Alleged Sexual Abuse – Police Arraign Abuja Pastor

NIGERIA
allAfrica

Daily Trust

By John Chuks Azu, 6 July 2012

A pastor of a new generation church in Nyanya, Abuja, was yesterday arraigned by the police before an Abuja Chief Magistrate Court sitting in Karu for allegedly molesting young female members of his church.

Pastor Basil Princewill, the general overseer of Mountain Movers Fire Ministries International, Nyanya, Abuja, was arraigned with Ms Paulyn Ode, the church’s coordinator on charges of alleged conspiracy, criminal impersonation, criminal intimidation, and criminal force and assault.

The pastor was accused of having carnal knowledge of two 14-year-old female members of the church under pretences of offering prayers for them in July, 2011 and later aborted the pregnancy of one the girls this year at the Fountain Health Clinic, Nyanya, Abuja after telling doctors he is her father.

According to the charge, which was transferred from the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) where parents of the victims lodged initial complaints, the pastor also impersonated as a lawyer with an LL.B certificate.

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Lucas: no cause to refer ‘Father F’ to police in 1992

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

Tony Eastley reported this story on Friday, July 6, 2012

TONY EASTLEY: After an ABC Four Corners program was aired on Monday the Catholic Church has reopened inquiries into what has been seen as a botched investigation into allegations of sexual abuse of boys by a priest in the 1980s.

The priest, known as Father F, was accused of sexually abusing altar boys in Moree and Parramatta in New South Wales. One of the priest’s alleged victims, Damien Jurd, later committed suicide.

Three senior priests investigated the claims, but no evidence was forwarded to police despite the fact Father F made admissions of serious criminal behaviour in a 1992 meeting with the three officials.

One of those officials was Father Brian Lucas who’s now the general secretary of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference.

Father Brian Lucas, thanks for joining us on AM. What happened at that meeting in 1992 at St Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney when you, John Usher and Wayne Peters met with now known as Father F?

BRIAN LUCAS: I think to understand the context of that meeting we have to understand that Father F, as we are calling him, had been charged with respect to an offence involving Damien Jurd and that case had been dismissed.

Following that he was then working in the Parramatta diocese and there other rumours and innuendo and there was a still a fair bit of notoriety around the Armidale area with respect to the dismissal of that court case.

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Formerly accused priest wants diocese to release names

DAVENPORT (IA)
Quad-City Times

Brian Wellner

A priest exonerated by the Vatican of child molestation charges said his diocese should release all names of priests accused of sexually abusing children, regardless of whether their charges were dropped.

The Rev. Drake Shafer spoke Thursday both as a former vicar general once accused of abusing a teenager in the 1970s and as a victim himself of a sex abuse crime he said happened more than 50 years ago when he was a minor.

His alleged abuser was a priest.

“I can certainly understand why victims want the names to be presented,” said Shafer, pastor of St. Ann’s Catholic Church in Long Grove. “And I can personally understand it, as a victim.”

A judge’s recent ruling allows the Diocese of Davenport, which is coming out of bankruptcy over the clergy sex abuse scandal, to withhold the names of 18 priests whose accusers received financial settlements.

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Man who attacked priest in revenge is not guilty of felonies

SAN JOSE (CA)
Los Angeles Times

By Maria L. La Ganga, Los Angeles Times

July 6, 2012
SAN JOSE — A jury has found a San Francisco man not guilty of felony assault and felony elder abuse, despite his admission that he attacked the priest accused of molesting him nearly four decades ago.

The 10-man, two-woman panel also said Thursday that William Lynch was not guilty of misdemeanor elder abuse in the 2010 attack on Father Jerold Lindner. The 67-year-old Catholic priest has been linked to more than a dozen alleged victims — including his own nieces, nephew and sister — but never has been brought to trial because the statute of limitations in every case had run out.

The jury was split on a final charge against Lynch: misdemeanor assault. Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge David Cena declared a mistrial on that count. Dist. Atty. Jeffrey Rosen said his office would decide in the coming days whether to retry Lynch.

After the verdict was read, Lynch said he had felt certain that he would be going to jail — and was pleasantly surprised that he would not. But he also spoke haltingly, and with deep emotion, about justice and responsibility.

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Alleged sexual abuse victim cleared in priest attack

SAN JOSE (CA)
San Francisco Examiner

By:Bay City News | 07/05/12

A jury in San Jose acquitted William Lynch on Thursday of two felony counts in connection with his 2010 attack on the Jesuit priest he said molested him during a camping trip more than 30 years ago.

Three female and nine male jurors found the 44-year-old not guilty on felony charges of assault causing great bodily injury and elder abuse, but were hung on the lesser charge of simple assault.

The charges stemmed from Lynch’s May 10, 2010, assault at the Los Gatos retirement home of the Rev. Jerold Lindner, then 65. Lynch said the Jesuit priest raped him at the age of 7 and also forced him to perform sexual acts with his brother, who was then 4 years old.

Taking the stand last week, Lynch described how the abuse and Lindner’s alleged threats against reporting the molestation ruined his life, driving him to alcohol abuse and depression.

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Priest contradicts church on abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Tom Nightingale, ABC
July 6, 2012

There are calls for police in New South Wales to open an investigation into three senior priests of the Catholic Church who failed to inform police of a priest’s apparent admission of child sex abuse.

This week the a priest known as Father F met with three church leaders and admitted in that meeting to serious criminal behaviour involving altar boys in Moree and Parramatta dating back to the 1980s.

After the meeting he was suspended from the priesthood, although he remained a lay member of the church for 13 years after that.

The church responded to the Four Corners claims by denying there was any admission during the 1992 meeting with Father Brian Lucas, Father John Usher and Father Wayne Peters.

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Updated: Jury Acquits William Lynch of Priest Beating

SAN JOSE (CA)
Patch

[video]

By Sheila Sanchez

A jury has acquitted a San Francisco man accused of beating a priest at the Los Gatos Sacred Heart Jesuit Center in May 2010.

On Thursday afternoon, the panel found William Lynch, 44, not guilty of one count of felony assault with intent to cause great bodily injury and one count of elder abuse under circumstances likely to produce great bodily harm or death. He had pleaded not guilty to both charges.

The jury hung 8-4 on a lesser misdemeanor crime of an assault on Father Jerold Lindner and it’s not clear if the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office will refile charges related to that lesser offense or appeal.

Outside the San Jose Hall of Justice, Lynch said he was happy with the verdict and surprised by the outcome of the highly emotional trial.

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William Lynch Not Guilty of Revenge Assault on ‘Sex Abuse Priest’

SAN JOSE (CA)
International Business Times

By Ewan Palmer | July 6, 2012

A man who admitted attacking a 67-year-old priest who allegedly abused him as a child has been found not guilty of assault and “elder abuse”.

William Lynch, 44, stood trial accused of assaulting Rev Jerold Lindner at a retirement home for priests in Los Gatos, California on May 2010.

Lindner sustained minor injuries.

Lynch had claimed that Lynch had sexually abused him and his younger brother on a camping trip more than 35 years ago.

Supporters of Lynch wept and hugged each other in court as the verdict was read out. The defendant and his attorneys received a rousing cheer as they left the courtroom.

“I honestly thought I was going to jail,” Lynch said. “It turned out better than I expected.”

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July 5, 2012

Church board recommends priest be stripped of holy orders

AUSTRALIA
ABC Newcastle

Updated July 06, 2012

The Newcastle Anglican Diocese Professional Standards Board has recommended a Hunter priest be stripped of his holy orders over alleged sexual acts with a 19-year-old man in 1984.

The Board has heard evidence from the the man allegedly involved in the incident that he claimed took place at a motel during an Anglican conference in Narrandera, in southern New South Wales.

At a public hearing in Newcastle this week the board has concluded that Reverend Bruce Hoare breached the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle’s professional standards ordinance and code of conduct.

Reverend Hoare has denied the allegations made against him and no police charges have been laid.

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Jury awards $8 million in Catholic sexual abuse case

SEATTLE (WA)
Q13 Fox

Web reporter
Q13 Fox News Online

3:48 p.m. PDT, July 5, 2012
SEATTLE—
A jury has awarded $8 million to a former student of St. Benedict School in Seattle in a lawsuit against the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a worldwide Catholic religious order of priests.

It is believed to be the largest monetary judgment against the Catholic Church in Washington state, the plaintiff’s attorneys said in a statement.

The jury found the plaintiff, identified only as “S.O.,” was sexually abused on a weekly basis between 1961 and 1964 by Daniel Adamson, a former teacher and principal at the Catholic school. S.O. testified that he twice asked the Oblate pastor, the Rev. Henry Conrad, for help, but the priest ignored him.

At the time, St. Benedict was owned by the Seattle Archdiocese and run by Oblate priests. S.O. filed suit against both entities, but settled with the Seattle Archdiocese last year.

The jury also heard from two other students who testified that they also told Conrad that Adamson was abusing them, but the Oblate priest allegedly told them to stay quiet.

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Man Acquitted of Assaulting Former Priest He Alleges Abused Him as a Child

SAN JOSE (CA)
KRON

By: Brian Shields – Thu, 05 Jul 2012

SAN JOSE (KRON) — A jury has acquitted William Lynch of all felony charges in the attack on a priest he says molested him as a child.

A jury deliberated for two days before returning the verdict.

Lynch admitted attacking Father Jerold Lindner during his testimony in the case. The defendant says the former Catholic priest molested him and his little brother during a visit to a camp over Memorial Day weekend in 1974.

Prosecutors had charged Lynch with two felonies including assault and elder abuse. The attack on Lindner happened at a Los Gatos nursing home where the former priest was living. The jury couldn’t agree on a misdemeanor charge of simple assault in the case.

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Will Lynch found not guilty of beating priest

SAN JOSE (CA)
Mercury News

By Tracey Kaplan
tkaplan@mercurynews.commercurynews.com

Posted: 07/05/2012

A jury today acquitted a San Francisco man of felony charges that he beat up and abused the cleric he says brutally raped him decades ago.

The jury found Will Lynch not guilty of felony elder abuse and felony assault for a confrontation with Rev. Jerold Lindner two years ago. It also found Lynch not guilty of misdemeanor elder abuse, but deadlocked 8-4 in favor of a conviction on misdemeanor assault.

The verdict was a triumph for Lynch, now 44, and his supporters, who faithfully picketed outside and packed the Santa Clara County courtroom as the assault trial — normally a brief event — stretched over three weeks. From accusations of prosecutorial misconduct to a confrontation in the hallway between the priest and one of his alleged molestation victims, the trial was roiled by disruptions.

“I was wrong for doing what I did — in doing that I perpetuated the cycle of violence,” Lynch said outside the courtroom, referring to the two blows to the head he delivered to Lindner at the Sacred Heart retirement home in Los Gatos. “But if there is anything I want people to take away from this — it is you can come forward, you can seek justice and you can find justice in many forms.”

District Attorney Jeff Rosen said he was “disappointed” by the verdict. He said he’ll carefully evaluate whether to retry Lynch on the misdemeanor assault charge.

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San Jose Man Acquitted Of Beating Priest Who Allegedly Molested Him

SAN JOSE (CA)
CBS San Francisco

[with audio]

SAN JOSE (CBS SF)— A San Jose man was acquitted Thursday of assaulting a retired priest who he claims molested him decades ago as a boy.

44-year-old William Lynch was accused of assaulting 67-year-old Rev. Jerold Lindner at a Los Gatos retirement home in May 2010.

The jury found him not guilty of felony assault and felony elder abuse, and deadlocked on a lesser charge of simple assault. When the verdicts were read Thursday afternoon, Lynch appeared relieved, smiling and receiving hugs from his attorneys.

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Bishop says sexual abuse charges thrown out

ZIMBABWE
Nehanda Radio

By Esther Gomo

Nearly two years ago Bishop Daniel Gwedegwe was dragged to court facing charges that he had touched his 24 year old sister-in-laws private parts.

The complainant sensationally claimed that Gwedegwe would sometimes kneel and touch her private organ and kiss her breasts. This was said to have started sometime in 2005 when the Bishop’s wife was in the United Kingdom.

The Bishop from the Pentecostal Revival Ministries International in Harare has now set the record straight with Nehanda Radio telling us the case was thrown out on the 27th of January 2011 at the Rotten Row Magistrates Courts.

Bishop Gwedegwe said “this case should not have passed the Public Relations Desk at the police Charge Office where I was the complainant turned accused. The Public Prosecutor should have seen the dubious nature of the charges.”

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Man Acquitted of Assaulting Retired Priest in CA

SAN JOSE (CA)
ABC News

By TERRY COLLINS Associated Press

SAN JOSE, Calif. July 6, 2012 (AP)

A jury acquitted a man Thursday of assaulting a priest he says molested him more than three decades ago during a camping trip and left him with tormented memories that led to alcohol abuse, depression and suicide attempts.

The verdict came after defendant William Lynch took the witness stand during the two-week trial and acknowledged punching Jerold Lindner several times on May 10, 2010.

While previously pleading not guilty, Lynch said he hoped to use the case to publicly shame Lindner and bring further attention to the Catholic Church clergy abuse scandal. Lynch said the verdict surprised him.

“I honestly thought I was going to jail,” he said after the verdicts were read. “It turned our better than I expected.”

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CA- Jury finds Lynch not guilty of assaulting priest

SAN JOSE (CA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Dorris on July 05, 2012

Violence is always wrong. Still, we are grateful for this verdict. The odds that Lynch would ever reoffend are infinitely small.

We hope this case prods lawmakers to reform predator friendly laws that prevent child sex abuse victims from exposing predators in civil and criminal court.

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Man acquitted of assaulting priest he said molested him as a boy

SAN JOSE (CA)
Pasadena Star

Associated Press
Posted: 07/05/2012

SAN JOSE – A jury acquitted a man Thursday of assaulting a priest he says molested him more than three decades ago during a camping trip and left him with tormented memories that led to alcohol abuse, depression and suicide attempts.

The verdict came after defendant William Lynch took the witness stand during the two-week trial and acknowledged punching Jerold Lindner several times on May 10, 2010.

While previously pleading not guilty, Lynch said he hoped to use the case to publicly shame Lindner and bring further attention to the Catholic Church clergy abuse scandal.

Lynch has said memories of the priest have tormented him for years, and he struggled through nightmares, divorce and other problems. He tried to commit suicide twice.

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Alleged rape victim acquitted of beating priest

SAN JOSE (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

Kevin Fagan

(07-05) 14:47 PDT SAN JOSE — A jury in San Jose found a 44-year-old man not guilty Thursday of two felony counts stemming from an alleged attack on a retired Catholic priest who he says raped him on a camping trip in 1975.

William Lynch was acquitted of felony assault and elder abuse for allegedly beating Jerold Lindner in a Los Gatos retirement center in 2010. The jury hung on a count of misdemeanor assault.

If convicted, Lynch could have gone to prison for four years.

The nationally watched trial threw a spotlight on the issue of sexual abuse by Catholic priests, as Lynch sought

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Man acquitted of assaulting retired priest in CA

SAN JOSE (CA)
The Fresno Bee

By TERRY COLLINS – Associated Press

Thursday, Jul. 05, 2012 | 02:52 PM

SAN JOSE, Calif. — A jury has acquitted a man charged with assaulting a retired priest he says molested him more than three decades ago in California.

The jury of nine men and three women returned its verdict Thursday against William Lynch after starting deliberations Monday in San Jose.

Prosecutors say Lynch acted as a vigilante when he pummeled Jerold Lindner with his fists in the 2010 attack. They said Lynch’s testimony about his alleged sexual abuse by Lindner was no excuse for beating up the priest years later.

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Jury reaches a verdict in the Lynch priest assault case

SAN JOSE (CA)
KTVU

KTVU And Wires

SAN JOSE, Calif. —

After more than three days of deliberations, a jury has reached a verdict in the case of a man charged with beating a priest he claimed molested him as a youth.

The verdict was expected to be read in San Clara County Superior Court around 2:30 p.m.

William Lynch testified last Friday that he punched the priest after memories of the alleged sexual abuse came flooding back across the decades and were so vivid that he felt threatened.

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Verdict Expected in LG Priest Beating Case

SAN JOSE (CA)
NBC Bay Area

By Lisa Fernandez and Arturo Santiago

| Thursday, Jul 5, 2012

A Santa Clara County jury on Thursday is expected to return a verdict on whether a man who beat a priest who he said sexually abused him years ago is guilty or not of felony assault.

If found guilty, William Lynch could face up to four years in prison when he is sentenced.

Lynch, 44 of San Francisco never denied the 2010 assault on Rev. Jerold Lindner, a Catholic priest living at the Sacred Heart retirement home in Los Gatos. But he testified he did so because Lindner allegedly raped him and his brother when they were children in the 1970s.

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Holy See budget shows major loss despite rise in donations

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The Holy See sustained its largest budget deficit of the past decade in 2011 as a result of global financial trends, the Vatican said July 5. But Vatican City State, which includes the income-generating Vatican Museums and Vatican post office, ended 2011 with a surplus of 21.8 million euros ($27 million).

The budget of the Holy See, which includes the offices of the Roman Curia and its communications outlets such as Vatican Radio, recorded a deficit of 14.9 million euros ($18.4 million) at the end of 2011. It was the largest budget deficit recorded in the past decade and reversed the 2010 surplus of 9.8 million euros ($12 million).

Total expenditures for the Holy See in 2011 were 263.7 million euros ($326.4 million) with 248.8 million euros ($308 million) in revenues.

A brief summary of the Vatican’s financial report released to the press blamed the deficit on “the negative trend of global financial markets, which made it impossible to achieve the goals laid down in the budget.”

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Vatican reports it’s nearly $19 million in the red

VATICAN CITY
MSNBC

By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

If you were seeking confirmation that the current economic crisis really is evil, look no further than the Holy See.

The Vatican reported on Thursday that its tiny state wasn’t spared by the global economic downfall. With its budget deficit hitting $19 million, 2011 was one of the Holy See’s worst financial years on record.

With lines for entering Vatican museums and Saint Peter’s Basilica consistently as long as the Vatican wall, last year alone tickets for attractions like the Sistine Chapel filled the Vatican’s coffers with more than $90 million. If to that you add the almost $70 million the pope received in charitable donations, it’s difficult to believe that the smallest state in the world, with its 0.2-square-miles territory, could ever go in the red.

The sheer cost of employing almost 3,000 people to run the Vatican, its radio and newspaper services, plus the especially bad real estate market affecting some of Italy’s most prestigious palazzos owned by the Vatican, mean it spent more, much more, than it earned.

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Assignment Record- Rev. Edward F. (Eddie or Ed) Fitz-Henry

CALIFORNIA
BishopAccountability.org – Assignment Record

Summary of Case: Ordained in Ireland, Fitz-Henry spent his career in the Monterey, CA diocese. He was removed from active ministry in February 2011 when accused of having sexually abused a 14 year-old boy in 2005. The abuse is said to have included the priest asking the boy questions and making comments of a sexual nature during confession. An investigation revealed an allegation from 1992 as well. That incident may have involved two boys, who were brothers. The family received a settlement from the diocese, and Fitz-Henry was sent to Servants of the Paraclete in New Mexico for treatment in May 1992. In 1995 he was made pastor of a Monterey parish.

Born: Sept. 18, 1958 in Dublin, Ireland
Educated: Colaiste Eoin, Finglas, Ireland (1972-1976); Holy Cross College, Dublin, Ireland (1977-1980); All Hallows College (Seminary), Drumcondra, Dublin, Ireland (1981-1984); Baccalaureate in Divinity.
Ordained: 1985

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Feeling Under Siege, Catholic Leadership Shifts Right

UNITED STATES
NPR

[with audio]

by Barbara Bradley Hagerty

July 4, 2012

The Catholic Church is drawing a line in the sand.

Perceiving its core beliefs to be under threat from popular culture, the White House and even Catholics themselves, the Vatican and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops are pushing back.

In recent months, the church leadership has been cracking down on liberal theologians, disciplining nuns and emphasizing a more orthodox theology.

The most recent example is the bishops’ response to the new health care law. After the Obama administration announced that religious universities, hospitals and charities must offer insurance plans that cover birth control, the bishops swung into action. …

Reese says today’s church leaders remind him of parents of teenage children.

“They realize they’re losing control,” he says, “and they think the solution is simply to shout louder, and to say, ‘No, you can’t do that,’ or, ‘Not in my house, you won’t,’ or, ‘Because I said so!’

“That’s simply not going to work with an educated laity,” Reese says.

‘Maybe Our Time Has Come’

Reese believes that top-down approach, combined with the bishops’ handling of the sex abuse crisis, has alienated many of the faithful.

Polls show that one-third of people raised Catholic no longer attends church.

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Denunciante de Karadima: silencio es piedra angular de abuso

CHILE
Terra

El presidente de la Fundación para la Confianza, José Andrés Murillo, llamó a la población a no callar y dar a conocer los casos de abusos sexuales u otros tipos de delitos relacionados.

“No hay que olvidarse nunca que la piedra angular del abuso es el silencio. En estos casos, el silencio es tremendamente efectivo, gracias a que esta persona (el abusador) es importante, o tiene poder o es significativa”, afirmó uno de los denunciantes del sacerdote Fernando Karadima a Radio ADN.

Asimismo, indicó que el caso en contra del religioso Cristián Precht y los relacionados a diversos establecimientos educacionales, están demostrando que se está perdiendo el temor a hacer público este tipo de hechos.

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Australia: New inquiries launched into paedophilia cases

AUSTRALIA
Vatican Insider

Australian police in collaboration with the Catholic Church, have launched a new inquiry into cases of paedophilia

Vatican Insider staff
Rome

The Australian Catholic Church has launched a new inquiry into cases of sex abuse against minors which occurred in two parishes in New South Wales in the early 80’s. This is after the publication of a detailed document, which states that three of Australia’s most distinguished prelates failed to report a series of serious paedophilia cases which a priest – known only as Fr. F – had admitted to in person. Apparently they did not report him to authorities for legal reasons.

Meanwhile, State police is investigating into the affair in order to establish whether the three prelates committed a crime which could be punishable with a two year prison sentence, for not reporting the cases to the police.

Fr. F was arrested in 1987 on charges of committing acts of paedophilia in the Catholic parish of Moree. He was put on trial but the judge dismissed the case before allowing the jury to examine him, claiming that the credibility of one of the victims, who was 15 at the time, could not be set against that of a priest. Fr. F therefore continued his ministry in the parish of Paramatta, in Sydney, where he sexually molested two altar boys.

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Peter’s Pence and Vatican Museums save the day for Church’s financial statements

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The Holy See financial statements for 2011 have been published. They show a deficit of almost fifteen million Euro

Giacomo Galeazzi
Vatican City

In times of crisis, admission tickets to museums and offerings to the Pope become the Vatican’s financial pillars. The Holy See’s consolidated financial statements for 2011 close with a deficit of 14,890,034 Euro. Not all Vatican administrations however have published their financial statements; the accounts are therefore only partial.

The Governorate and the Peter’s Pence Collection have faired well but the Holy See is in the red. The Holy See has promised “contained spending without cutting back on jobs.” The cardinals of the Council for the examination of the Holy See’s organisational and economic problems gathered yesterday and Tuesday in the Vatican for a meeting chaired by the Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone. Participants gave “numerous” speeches and “made clear their appreciation at the completeness and transparency of the information they had been given,” while “recognition was expressed for the commitment to the ongoing improvement of the administration of the goods and resources of the Holy See.”

The Vatican Press Office reported that “a call was made for prudence and limiting costs, though while maintaining jobs.” “The result – the Council of cardinals informed – was affected by the negative trend of global financial markets, which made it impossible to achieve the goals laid down in the budget.”

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Brother’s hope for justice

AUSTRALIA
The Armidale Express

JANENE CAREY

06 Jul, 2012

AMID calls for a Royal Commission into Catholic Church cover-ups of child sexual abuse cases, Armidale resident Peter Jurd, who featured in Monday night’s Four Corner’s expose, spoke to The Express about how the program has sparked hopes of finally seeing justice for his brother Damian and other victims.

Mr Jurd, a mature-aged student who moved to Armidale four years ago to study law at the University of New England, said he only found out for sure that he was living in the same town as his brother’s alleged abuser, Father F, when his family was contacted by the Four Corners investigation team.

“We had heard he might be here but we didn’t know,” Mr Jurd said. “It’s only in the last couple of months that I’ve been made aware he was definitely here in Armidale. But because Four Corners was investigating him, I didn’t want to interfere in that. It was hard at times – it would have been nice to go and confront him.”

Father F, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is a defrocked Catholic priest originally from the Armidale Diocese accused of sexually molesting a string of altar boys in Moree and Sydney during the 1980s, including 11-year-old Damian Jurd.

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Church urges defrocking over sex

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

BY BEN SMEE

06 Jul, 2012

AN Anglican church professional standards board has recommended a Hunter priest be defrocked for his involvement in a sexual encounter with a 19-year-old and another priest, and for breaching a long-repealed law that banned homosexuality in NSW.

The priest, who cannot be named, did not attend the hearings this week but said through a lawyer that he could not afford to retain legal counsel and denied the allegations.

The three-person board unanimously upheld four allegations relating to an alleged encounter at a church synod in 1984.

They included that the priest committed the offences ‘‘indecent assault’’ and ‘‘outrage on decency’’ in a motel room with the complainant, who was 19 at the time, and another priest.

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House Arrest Denied for Convicted Pa. Monsignor

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
ABC News

By JOANN LOVIGLIO Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA July 5, 2012 (AP)

A Roman Catholic official convicted of child endangerment will remain behind bars until his sentencing later this month, a judge ruled Thursday, denying a defense request for house arrest.

Monsignor William Lynn has been in custody since a jury convicted him June 22 of the charge, which stemmed from his handling of sex abuse claims at the Philadelphia archdiocese.

Lynn, 61, is the first U.S. Catholic church official convicted in the cover-up of child sex-abuse complaints. He faces 3 1/2 to seven years in prison.

“After due consideration, the motion is denied,” Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina, who presided over Lynn’s three-month jury trial, said at the brief hearing that was packed with the monsignor’s friends and family. She did approve a defense request to move up Lynn’s sentencing date from Aug. 13 to July 24. …

A national support group for sexual abuse victims praised the judge’s decision to keep Lynn in prison.

“Some may view this decision as harsh. We consider it just and smart,” said Barbara Blaine, president of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “And we hope it will help end current cover-ups and deter future cover-ups by Catholic officials across the country.”

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Judge Denies House Arrest For Monsignor Lynn

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog

Ralph Cipriano

Judge M. Teresa Sarmina denied a defense motion today that would have granted house arrest to Msgr. William J. Lynn.

The judge’s decision means that Lynn will continue to reside at Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility, known as CFCF, on State Road in Northeast Philadelphia. According to his attorney, Jeff Lindy, Lynn is in protective custody there, and leading a contemplative life.

Judge Sarmina did grant one defense request, to move up Lynn’s sentencing date from Aug. 13 to July 24, provided the monsignor was willing to waive a pre-sentence report. The theory was, after Lynn has been the object of grand jury scrutiny and a decade of investigation, there was nothing new out there to be dug up by an investigator that would affect his sentence. Lynn agreed to the request.

The 61-year-old monsignor is facing a sentence of three and a half to seven years after being convicted on one count of endangering the welfare of a child, a third-degree felony. Assistant District Attorney Patrick Blessington surprised nobody in the courtroom when he said he would be asking for the maximum sentence.

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Judge denies convicted monsignor’s bid for house arrest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Msgr. William J. Lynn lost a bid today to get out of jail before being sentenced for child endangerment but persuaded a judge to move his sentencing hearing up by three weeks.

After barely 10 minutes of discussion, Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina sided with Philadelphia prosecutors who said Lynn, the first Catholic church supervisor convicted for enabling clergy sex-abuse, should stay in prison because he is a flight risk.

The former secretary for clergy for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia faces up to seven years in prison. Sarmina moved up his sentencing to July 24, from Aug. 13.

Lynn’s relatives and supporters packed the courtroom for the bail hearing, the second since Lynn was convicted and jailed on June 22. A few gasped when the judge announced her decision.

Lynn, sitting at the defense table in black priestly garb without a clerical collar, didn’t appear to react. One of his lawyers, Jeffrey Lindy, patted the monsignor’s back.

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Monsignor’s Request for House Arrest Is Denied

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Wall Street Journal

By PETER LOFTUS

A Philadelphia judge denied a request that a Roman Catholic monsignor recently convicted of child endangerment be released from jail to house arrest while awaiting sentencing.

Judge M. Teresa Sarmina did, however, agree Thursday to a request by Msgr. William Lynn’s defense attorneys to move up his sentencing hearing to July 24 from Aug. 13. The 61-year-old faces 3½ years to seven years in prison.

Msgr. Lynn, who served as secretary for clergy in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia from 1992 to 2004, was jailed June 22 after a jury found him guilty of one count of child endangerment for allowing a priest to take a new assignment involving contact with children even after learning of allegations that he had engaged in inappropriate contact with at least one minor.

It was the first conviction of a U.S. Catholic official related to allegations of covering up sex-abuse complaints. His lawyers have said they are likely to appeal the conviction.

Defense attorneys had requested that Msgr. Lynn be released from jail to live with a relative until his sentencing date. Msgr. Lynn offered to waive his right to contest extradition, to alleviate concerns raised by Philadelphia prosecutors that he was at risk of fleeing to the Vatican while on house arrest.

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PA – SNAP applauds denial of house arrest for convicted cleric

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Blaine on July 05, 2012

Given the Catholic hierarchy’s ongoing protection of those who commit and conceal child sex crimes, we believe Judge Sarmina has made a prudent choice. If Msgr. Lynn is behind bars, there’s virtually no way that he can flee the country, destroy evidence, deceive victims, mislead parishioners or take other steps to further cover up wrongdoing.

Some may view this decision as harsh. We consider it just and smart. And we hope it will help end current cover ups and deter future cover ups by Catholic officials across the country.

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No House Arrest for Cardinal’s Aide Convicted of Endangering Children

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The New York Times

By JON HURDLE

Published: July 5, 2012

PHILADELPHIA — A former cardinal’s aide, found guilty last month of endangering children, must remain in jail until he is sentenced, instead of being released on house arrest.

On Thursday, Judge M. Teresa Sarmina ruled that Msgr. William J. Lynn, 61, of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, should not be given special treatment, essentially agreeing with prosecutors who said others convicted of a similar felony crime would not be allowed to remain at home pending a sentencing hearing, as his defense team had requested. He is the first senior official in the Romanc Catholic Church in the United States to be convicted of covering up sexual abuses by priests under his supervision.

Monsignor Lynn, who faces up to seven years in prison, is scheduled to be sentenced July 24, a date that was moved up by Judge Sarmina on Thursday from the previously scheduled date of Aug. 13.

On June 22, after a three-month trial, a jury conviced Monsignor Lynn of a single count of endangering children, but acquitted him of conspiracy and a second count of endangerment.

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Judge denies Philadelphia priest’s bid for house arrest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Reuters

By Dave Warner

PHILADELPHIA | Thu Jul 5, 2012

(Reuters) – Monsignor William Lynn, the first senior U.S. Roman Catholic Church official to be convicted of covering up child sex abuse, was sent back to prison on Thursday after a judge rejected his bid for house arrest.

Family members sobbed in the court gallery after Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina denied Lynn’s request to be released to the home of a distant relative in Philadelphia.

The judge did, however, grant his request to move up his sentencing to July 24 from August 13. Lynn, 61, faces up to seven years in prison.

The former secretary of the clergy for the Philadelphia Archdiocese, who was in effect personnel manager for 800 priests, was convicted in June of child endangerment for covering up sex abuse allegations, often by transferring priests to unsuspecting parishes.

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God’s bankers

VATICAN CITY
The Economist

FEW things annoy Vatican officials more than lurid novels that depict the papacy as the secretive heart of a global conspiracy. Pope Benedict XVI’s most senior official, his secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, this month accused journalists of trying to imitate the American writer, Dan Brown, author of the preposterous—and bestselling—“The Da Vinci Code”. But it was not reporters who put the papal butler, Paolo Gabriele, in a four-by-four-metre cell, accused of leaking a stream of confidential letters. Nor was it they who, the next day, fired the head of the Vatican Bank, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, and published a blistering statement accusing him of failing to do his job. An Italian police investigation, in which documents were seized from Mr Gotti Tedeschi on June 5th, has stoked fears of more scandal. He has since been quoted as saying he fears for his life.

Behind the rows is an intense and vituperative power struggle to determine the nature of the next papacy. It is largely waged in and around the Vatican’s financial institutions. The Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), to give the Vatican bank its formal title, is no stranger to controversy. In the 1980s it was accused of involvement in financial skulduggery and responsibility for the still-mysterious death of a prominent Italian banker, Roberto Calvi.

Now it is seeking to clear its name of involvement in money laundering. According to La Repubblica, a newspaper, a draft report of the Council of Europe gives the Vatican a clean bill of health on all but eight of 49 criteria. More than ten objections would expose the Vatican to the risk of being blacklisted by the Financial Action Task Force, a body that polices banks. (A Council of Europe meeting in Strasbourg on July 4th reviewed the report; the Vatican now has a month to respond.)

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IWR, 49 million to the Pope for ministry and charity

VATICAN CITY
AGI (Italy)

(AGI) Vatican – The Vatican Bank gave 49 million euro to the Pope in 2011 for the apostolic ministry and charity. A press release from the Vatican press office announced: ‘The Institute for Works of Religion, as every year offered the Holy Father a substantial sum in support of his apostolic ministry and charity. This came to 49 million euro for the year 2011′. At the meeting of the Council of Cardinals for the Study of the Organisational and Economic Problems of the Holy See, commander Paolo Cipriani, director of the IWR presented the bank’s economic situation’. . .

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Vatican reports worst deficit in years: $18.4 million

VATICAN CITY
Los Angeles Times

By Tiffany Hsu

July 5, 2012.
The effects of the euro zone debt crisis has reached into some of the holiest of halls, pushing the Vatican into one of its worst budget deficits in years.

The Holy See on Thursday reported a shortfall of 14.9 million euros, or $18.4 million.

“The result was affected by the negative trend of global financial markets, which made it impossible to achieve the goals laid down in the budget,” according to a statement from the Catholic Church’s governing body.

Administrators also blamed the gulf on the cost of paying the Vatican’s 2,832 employees and spreading the Catholic faith via its various communications outlets, which include a newspaper and radio and television channels.

In 2010, the Holy See enjoyed a surplus of nearly 9.9 million euros (about $12 million) after a string of deficits.

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Vatican posts 2011 loss, but donations up

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

ROME, July 5 | Thu Jul 5, 2012

(Reuters) – The Roman Catholic Church lost 14.9 million euros last year as “the negative trend of global financial markets did not allow targets to be met,” the Church said, but donations from the faithful around the world were up.

The donations, known as Peter’s Pence, rose 3 percent to 69.7 billion euros in 2011. Donations from dioceses to support the central structure of the Church also rose, gaining 17 percent to $32.1 million.

The Vatican has posted annual losses in four out of the five past years – all but 2010.

The Vatican bank, which has been in turmoil since May 24 when its president Ettore Gotti Tedeschi was dismissed by the board, handed 49 million euros over to the Vatican in 2011, the Church’s daily bulletin said.

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Judge closes bankruptcy case against Iowa diocese

DAVENPORT (IA)
National Catholic Reporter

Jul. 05, 2012
By Barb Arland-Fye, Catholic News Service

DAVENPORT, Iowa — The Davenport Diocese’s bankruptcy case is closed nearly six years after its attorneys filed a Chapter 11 petition and four years after the diocese reached a $37 million settlement with creditors.

Bankruptcy Judge Lee Jackwig entered the final decree June 15 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Iowa, following a teleconference call between attorneys for the diocese and victims of clergy sexual abuse, who were the major creditors in the bankruptcy case. Jackwig noted that the diocese has met the requirements of the bankruptcy plan, but must continue to comply with ongoing nonmonetary terms as set forth in the plan.

Among the ongoing nonmonetary terms are posting on the diocesan website the names of all credibly accused perpetrators, providing outreach to survivors of clergy sexual abuse and publishing announcements about training for prevention of abuse.

“I am certainly pleased we are finally able to bring this to conclusion,” Davenport Bishop Martin J. Amos said. “The bankruptcy process provided the best opportunity for healing and for the just and fair compensation of those who have suffered sexual abuse by priests in our diocese. The settlement also provided the best way to continue the church’s mission in our diocese.

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OR- Insurer requires church to take unusual abuse prevention steps

OREGON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on July 05, 2012

An insurance company is insisting that an Oregon church

–disclose to its members the identity of sex offenders who attend,

–let those offenders attend only one predetermined service each week,

–assign them an escort while they’re at the church, and

–bar them from participating in any child or youth programs.

We applaud the company’s decision. We urge other companies to do likewise. And we urge other institutions – religious and secular – to do likewise.

Let’s start with the tragic fact that one in four girls and one in eight boys will be sexually abused in childhood. Given those devastating figures, it should be clear that the status quo is extraordinarily risky for kids.

(Imagine what adults would do if one in four cars were stolen or one in eight homes were burglarized.)

Obviously, something must be done. What better place to start than in churches? The rest of the week, parents must worry about teachers, babysitters, neighbors, relatives, coaches, tutors, day care employees and those giving music, chess, or ballet lessons. Shouldn’t parents have an hour or two on Sunday morning where they can be assured that their kids are safe?

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Editorial: Questions about religious liberty campaign’s finances not personal

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Jul. 05, 2012
By An NCR Editorial

When a reporter recently asked Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore what groups and individuals were funding the U.S. bishops’ religious liberty campaign — including their vaunted Fortnight for Freedom campaign, which many see as a thinly veiled campaign against President Barack Obama — he acted as if the question were a personal affront.

Lori, who heads up the bishops’ religious liberty effort, has gone to great lengths to argue that the campaign is not partisan, that it is not intended to bring down a president and that it is in service of far more high-minded ideals than election-year politicking.

All of that may be correct, but the question, not an affront, stands: Who’s paying for this extravaganza? …

The fact of the matter is that Supreme Knight Carl Anderson took up residence in one of the most extreme corners of the Republican Party, as a legislative aide to North Carolina Sen. Jesse Helms, during the 1970s and 1980s. He spent 1983-87 in various capacities in the Reagan White House. It is logical, then, to presume that conservative Republican views still inform his political outlook. It is a presumption with contemporary evidence. In a recent issue of the organization’s magazine, Columbia, Anderson showed a taste for rather imprudent hyperbole when he compared the situation in the United States today to the virulent and bloody anti-Catholic period of the Cristero War in Mexico. That the comparison is absurd is not the important point. That the U.S. bishops would align themselves so closely with such absurdity is the deeper concern.

The Knights, of course, can hire whomever the organization wishes. They can print in their magazine whatever they’d like. They can do with their money whatever they wish. They spend a great deal of it on charitable work, and they spread quite a bit of it around to aid bishops (Lori, who is the Knights’ supreme chaplain, one year received more than $250,000 while he was bishop of Bridgeport, Conn.) and millions have been sent to the Vatican.

The organization is not bashful at all about announcing such donations. The Knights should be as forthcoming about what kind of support they’re giving the bishops’ campaign. For in this case, they are well beyond the bounds of their membership and those whose insurance premiums fill the organization’s coffers. They are helping to make a public case.

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Admission too limited to report to police, says priest

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Leesha Mckenny, Bianca Hall
July 6, 2012

ONE of the most senior clergymen in the Australian Catholic Church says it was not the church’s responsibility to tell police about a priest who admitted to repeatedly sexually abusing five children as young as 10.

After returning from overseas this week, the general secretary of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, Father Brian Lucas, told the Herald yesterday admissions from a priest in a 1992 meeting with him and two other senior clergy did not include ”sufficient specific detail” to report him to secular authorities.

”The first responsibility to report crime is by the victim. Our responsibility is to get him out of ministry, which is what we did,” Father Lucas said. ”We did not have the detail that would be useful to the police.”

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Judge denies Lynn’s bid for house arrest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

A judge today denied a bid by Msgr. William J. Lynn to be freed on house arrest until his sentencing on child endangerment charges.

Common Pleas Court judge M. Teresa Sarmina ordered the cleric to remain in jail but agreed to move his sentencing date up to July 24 from Aug. 13.

Lynn, a former ranking administrator for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, has been jailed since his June 22 conviction on child endangerment charges.

After a three-month trial, a jury found he endangered children when he left the then-Rev. Edward Avery in active ministry in the mid 1990s despite knowing the priest had previously abused a minor. Avery later sexually assaulted a 10-year-old altar boy at a Northeast Philadelphia church.

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Judge Denies House Arrest for Convicted Priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

The high-ranking official in the Philadelphia Archdiocese will remain behind bars while he awaits sentencing.

On Thursday morning a judge shot down Monsignor William Lynn’s request to release him to house arrest as he awaits sentencing on felony child endangerment.

A jury convicted Lynn of the felony last month. They also found him not guilty of two other charges.

Lynn faces three and half to seven years in prison when he’s sentenced. His attorneys asked a judge to release him from custody until his sentencing.

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Catholic Church men divided over scandal

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From:The Australian
July 06, 2012

TWO senior clerics at the centre of the latest sex scandal to engulf the Catholic Church have given conflicting accounts of a meeting 20 years ago where a priest admitted abusing young boys.

Brian Lucas, secretary-general of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, was one of three church officials who interviewed the priest in 1992, when he allegedly confessed to groping and performing oral sex on altar boys.

Yesterday, Father Lucas said the priest, known as Father F for legal reasons, “made no admissions of a specific nature”.

“He was very careful about not naming any names and, on that basis, we didn’t have anything we could take to police,” Father Lucas said.

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House arrest denied for convicted US monsignor

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Asbury Park Press

Written by
JOANN LOVIGLIO, Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — A Philadelphia monsignor convicted of child endangerment for sending a priest suspected of abuse to a new parish will remain behind bars until he’s sentenced.

Judge M. Teresa Sarmina agreed Thursday with prosecutors who say Monsignor William Lynn should be treated like any other felon and remain jailed until his sentencing hearing.

Lynn’s attorneys say their client isn’t a flight risk and argued for his release on house arrest. But prosecutors say other defendants in Lynn’s situation wouldn’t be accommodated the same way.

Sarmina did approve a defense request to move sentencing up from Aug. 13 to July 24. Lynn faces 3½ to seven years in prison.

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Vatican posts $19 million deficit, worst in years

VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Businessweek

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Vatican has registered one of its worst deficits in years, plunging back into the red with a €15 million ($19 million) deficit in 2011 after a brief respite of profit.

The Vatican on Thursday blamed the poor outcome on high personnel and communications costs and adverse market conditions.

Not even a €50 million gift to the pope from the Vatican bank and increased donations from dioceses and religious orders could offset the expenses and poor investment returns.

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Child Abuse Reporting

UNITED STATES
Journal of the American Medical Association

Susan C. Kim, JD, MPH; Lawrence O. Gostin, JD; Thomas B. Cole, MD, MPH

The general public has been bewildered by the magnitude of sex abuse cases and the widespread failure by pillars of the community to notify appropriate authorities. The crime of sexually abusing children is punishable in all jurisdictions. However, what is the duty to report suspected cases by individuals in positions of trust over young people, such as in the church or university sports?

Since the mid-1980s, law enforcement has been investigating allegations of sexual crimes committed by Catholic priests against young boys and girls. These sexual abuse scandals and lawsuits have cost the Church an estimated $2 billion in settlements.1 A 2004 US Conference of Catholic Bishops report found that law enforcement was contacted in only 24% of cases of suspected abuse.2 In other cases, the church hierarchy responded internally or not at all: priests may have been counseled, evaluated, provided treatment, suspended, or limited in their priestly duties.2

In late 2011, prosecutors accused a retired assistant football coach at Penn State University of making inappropriate sexual advances or assaults on boys from 1994 to 2009. The coach allegedly interacted with these children through a charity, which he founded as a group foster home to help troubled boys.3 During this period, several junior employees at Penn State reported to their immediate supervisors that they had observed the coach engaged in sexual activities with children. However, these observations apparently were never reported to law enforcement authorities.

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Holy See financial statement for 2011 shows nearly 15 million Euro deficit

VATICAN CITY
Independent Catholic News (United Kingdom)

The Council of Cardinals for the Study of the Organisational and Economic Problems of the Holy See met in the Vatican on Tuesday and Wednesday 3 and 4 July, under the presidency of Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone SDB. Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, president of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, presented the consolidated financial statements of the Holy See for 2011, then those of the Governorate of Vatican City State.

The consolidated financial statements of the Holy See for 2011 closed with a deficit of EUR 14,890,034. The most significant items of expenditure were those relative to personnel (who as of 31 December 2011 numbered 2,832) and to the communications media considered as a whole.

The result was affected by the negative trend of global financial markets, which made it impossible to achieve the goals laid down in the budget.

The administration of the Governorate is autonomous, and independent of contributions from the Holy See. Through its various offices, it supervises requirements related to the administration of the State. The consolidated financial statements for 2011 closed with a surplus of EUR 21,843,851. As of 31 December 2011, the Governorate employed a staff of 1,887. A particularly significant contribution to the result came from the Vatican Museums, which produced a revenue that passed from EUR 82,400,000 in 2010 to EUR 91,300.000, for a total of more than five million visitors. According to specialised rankings, these figures place the Vatican Museums among the most prestigious and important such institutions in the world.

Peter’s Pence – i.e., donations made by the faithful to support the Holy Father’s charity – rose from USD 67,704,416.41 in 2010 to USD 69,711,722.76. Contributions made pursuant to canon 1271 of the Code of Canon Law – ie, the economic support offered by ecclesiastical circumscriptions throughout the world to maintain the service the RomanCuria offers the universal Church – rose from USD 27,362,258.40 in 2010 to USD 32,128,675.91. Further contributions to the Holy See made by institutes of consecrated life, societies of apostolic life and foundations rose from USD 747,596.09 in 2010 to USD 1,194,217.78. Thus the overall increase with respect to 2010 was of 7.54 per cent.

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Council of Europe´s MONEYVAL Committee adopts report on the Holy See

VATICAN CITY
Moneyval

The Council of Europe MONEYVAL Committee today adopted, during its 39th plenary meeting, the first evaluation report on the Holy See (including the Vatican City State).

All States evaluated by MONEYVAL have the opportunity to check the accuracy of the amended version of the report after it has been adopted, and to provide any comments for publication. The state should provide its response within one month of receipt of the amended report.

The Holy See report will now be finalised in line with plenary decisions and sent to the Vatican authorities. Once any comments are provided, MONEYVAL will publish the report as adopted today and any comments from the Holy See on its website.

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COMMUNIQUE ON THE PLENARY MEETING OF MONEYVAL

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, (VIS) – The Holy See Press Office yesterday released the following English-language communique:

“From 2 to 6 July, the plenary meeting of MONEYVAL (the Council of Europe’s department responsible for the evaluation of member States with respect to anti-money laundering systems) is taking place in Strasbourg. The Holy See is taking part in this meeting with a delegation led by Msgr. Ettore Balestrero, under secretary for Relations with States.

“The report relating to the Holy See and to Vatican City State was adopted today. According to usual MONEYVAL procedure, in the near future an amended version of the report, based upon today’s plenary session, will be forwarded to the Holy See for possible further comment to be submitted within one month. The report is expected to be published on the MONEYVAL website”.

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HOLY SEE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR 2011

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, (VIS) – The Council of Cardinals for the Study of the Organisational and Economic Problems of the Holy See met in the Vatican on Tuesday 3 July and Wednesday 4 July, under the presidency of Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone S.D.B.

Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, president of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, presented the consolidated financial statements of the Holy See for 2011, then those of the Governorate of Vatican City State.

The consolidated financial statements of the Holy See for 2011 closed with a deficit of EUR 14,890,034. The most significant items of expenditure were those relative to personnel (who as of 31 December 2011 numbered 2,832) and to the communications media considered as a whole. The result was affected by the negative trend of global financial markets, which made it impossible to achieve the goals laid down in the budget.

The administration of the Governorate is autonomous, and independent of contributions from the Holy See. Through its various offices, it supervises requirements related to the administration of the State. The consolidated financial statements for 2011 closed with a surplus of EUR 21,843,851. As of 31 December 2011, the Governorate employed a staff of 1,887. A particularly significant contribution to the result came from the Vatican Museums, which produced a revenue that passed from EUR 82,400,000 in 2010 to EUR 91,300.000, for a total of more than five million visitors. According to specialised rankings, these figures place the Vatican Museums among the most prestigious and important such institutions in the world.

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Cover-up of sex abuse in Australia

AUSTRALIA
Pannone Blog (United Kingdom)

The Roman Catholic Church is again embroiled in claims of a cover-up over its handling of child sexual assault allegations involving priests. This time in Australia. I have reported in the past abuse cases there, but recently our attention has focused on the Lynn case in the USA.

The ABC’s Four Corners program has revealed the church apparently failed to pass on abuse admissions by a priest to police.

Four Corners says it obtained documents showing a New South Wales priest, who is accused of abusing young boys, made clear admissions during a meeting with three senior priests, but they never referred the matter to police.

The programme also detailed several cases in which priests were merely moved on when the church was made aware of sexual abuse claims against them. This is a familiar practice identified in both the UK and US.

The argument is that the allegations should have been referred to police immediately, and the question is whether members of the clergy who failed to do so have broken the law?

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