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.

June 3, 2013

A Book Has Been Released By a Prominent Sydney Priest Alleging Catholic Hierarchy Knew of Widespread Sexual Activity and Abuse by Clergy and Did Nothing to Help Stop It

AUSTRALIA
PR Web

Sydney, NSW, Australia (PRWEB) June 03, 2013

Father Kevin Lee has been a Catholic priest for twenty years. For fourteen of those years he was chaplain to the NSW Police. For the last nine he was founding pastor of the Western Sydney parish of Padre Pio Glenmore Park.

Allegations by Father Lee are that widespread alleged sexual abuse of minors were covered up and not reported to the police by the Catholic Church during a period of over 20 years of his career.

Kevin’s book “Unholy Science” has information about alleged paedophilic priests within the church. These and other matters are of a concern of the current federal Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse in Australia. The final reporting date with over 5,000 witnesses was originally set down for the end of 2015, with another interim report due sometime next year.

Read more: [NEWS.com.au]

Kevin’s diaries were used as a key source for the Australian TV current affairs show “Four Corners”. The Logie Award nominated episode called “Unholy Silence” (1 July 2012) revealed the Church’s alleged knowledge of serial abuser “Father F” and highlighted their apparent inaction.

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.

June 2, 2013

Serbian Patriarchate Bishop Resigns Over Sexual Abuse

SERBIA
NFTU

Originally reported on in April 22, 2013, the Serbian Patriarchate has had to accept the resignation of Bishop Vasilije Kacavenda, a prominent Serbian Patriarchate Bishop in Bosnia. The resignation came after a graphic video surfaced of Bp. Vasilije engaged in immoral acts with men By the term of his formal resignation, Bp. Vasilije had already left off many clerical duties as allegations continued to emerge that he had used his office in, according to one source ,”engage in sexual orgies involving young girls and boys.”

According the Spera News article:

According to VOA news, Bojan Jovanovic said he witnessed numerous sexual orgies provided by the 74-year-old Bishop Kacavenda that were attended by fellow priests, along with prominent businessmen. Jovanic is a former theological student in Bijeljina, the seat of Kacavenda’s diocese. According to Jovanovic, Bishop Kacavenda personally asked him to provide young children for perverted sexual pleasure, while also calling on church officials to organize sexual liaisons with young theological students.

“They tried on many occasions to put me in a compromising situation myself or to pull me into their circle,” Jovanovic said. “[The bishop] also suggested that I should use the school where I was teaching science to bring him children up to the age of 10, but of course I refused. I was also a witness when abbots from other monasteries would bring theology students who would spend the night with the bishop.

“One morning, one of them called me and asked me to unlock the bishop’s room so he could get his things. I said, ‘What are your things doing in the bishop’s room?’ He said, ‘Come on, it’s not like you don’t know. Don’t pretend to be stupid.’”

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.

UN watchdog criticises Magdalene report for lack of independence

IRELAND
Irish Times

Ruadhan Mac Cormaic

The United Nations torture watchdog has criticised the McAleese inquiry into the Magdalene laundries, saying it lacked many elements of a “prompt, independent and thorough” investigation.

The UN Committee Against Torture wrote to the Government last month asking for information as to measures the State was planning to take “to ensure there is a full inquiry into all complaints of abuse”, as the committee had originally recommended.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny apologised to women who had spent time in Magdalene laundries after the inquiry, chaired by former senator Martin McAleese, found that the State played a significant role in sending thousands of young women to the institutions.

However, groups representing the women believe the report did not fully capture the prevalence of abuse and ill-treatment in the laundries.

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.

KENRICK-GLENNON GETS NEW TOPPER

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

According to the National Catholic Reporter, the U.S. bishops’ conference has picked a Jesuit from Kenrick-Glennon seminary to replace Capuchin Fr. Thomas Wienandy as head of their doctrinal office. The conference is headed by St. Louis native Cardinal Timothy Dolan who oversees the New York archdiocese. .

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

Department of Justicie reviewing report on Magdalene laundries redress

IRELAND
RTE News

The Department of Justice has confirmed that it has received the report prepared by Mr Justice John Quirke in relation to a redress scheme for survivors of the Magdalene laundries.

A spokesman said the report was being considered and would be submitted to Government shortly.
The department also confirmed that it has received a letter from the Rapporteur from the United Nations Committee Against Torture in relation to the report by Martin McAleese on the laundries.

A senior United Nations official has criticised the Report of the Inter-Departmental Committee to establish the facts of State involvement with the Magdalene Laundries (McAleese Report).
The UN official described it as limited and not sufficiently independent.

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.

Robert Waddington’s cycle of abuse stretches beyond 50 years

AUSTRALIA/UNITED KINGDOM
The Australian

[with video]

MICHAEL MCKENNA AND AMANDA GEARING From: The Australian June 01, 2013

THE Church of England banished serial pedophile priest Robert Waddington to Australia, where he abused children across a decade, after suspicions were raised about him molesting choirboys in his London parish.

In an alleged church cover-up spanning almost 60 years, Waddington was suddenly and unexpectedly sent to a small school in regional Queensland in 1956 amid claims he was molesting the son of an English politician.

Last month the Church of England ordered an independent inquiry into the handling of allegations against Waddington, after a joint investigation by The Australian and The Times of London.

But it can now be revealed that Waddington – who died in 2007, facing allegations he abused students in Australia in the 1960s and English choirboys in the 80s and 90s – was molesting children as soon as he joined the church in 1953. The latest allegations have been made by Ray Munn, 70, who was recruited by Waddington, then a curate at St John’s church in Bethnal Green, East London, to sing in the choir in 1953.

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.

Nazareth House, Wynnum: (Or: Nun on the Run)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

The Poor Sisters of Nazareth ran many Orphanages around the world, all called Nazareth House. Their crimes at their Wynnum facility, at the Brisbane suburb of Wynnum, were reported in the late 1980s by a very brave woman, “Bobby”. [Her last name is not given because of some vicious attacks on her character – see, for example, the ad2000.com ref. below].

There were the usual terrible incidents of all forms of abuse. There were all of the usual attempts to silence victims, including legal threats. There were the usual apologies to victims for having “unhappy memories” of Nazareth House. There were the usual pathetic payments to victims. There were, however, some new twists in the usual attempts to avoid culpability.

When the media tried to contact the main perpetrator, Sister Brendan Mary, her order refused to reveal her whereabouts. As the order’s Australian head said, “I just don’t think it’s fair to be telling people where she is at this stage”. Eventually, the Sister was tracked to Wellington in New Zealand by the “60 Minutes” television program last night, but she refused comment. In New Zealand, where she was the local head of the Order, she was involved in negotiations with victims at the Nazareth House there, but her order saw no problem with her involvement

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.

Other Nazareth Houses (Or: I Was Only Following My Order’s Orders)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

Nazareth House Aberdeen “carer”, Sister Alphonso (pictured above) found herself in court, and convicted, of “cruel and unnatural treatment of children” because of a comment she made to a former victim 20 years after the abuse. This was that “I was young at the time and I was just following orders.” This so outraged the victim, she went to police.

Following the brave efforts of “Bobby” in outing the abuses at the Nazareth House in Wynnum (see yesterday’s posting), cases arose around the world. Nazareth House is the generic name of all orphanages operated by the Sisters of Nazareth Order, from the 1820s until the 1980s.

In the U.K. alone, complaints have come from victims at the Nazareth Houses in Cardonald, Aberdeen, Glasgow, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Plymouth, Swansea, Manchester, Sunderland, Midlothian, Kilmarnock, Middlesbrough, Carlisle, Tyneside and Belfast. The facility at Christchurch in New Zealand is also under the cloud. While sexual abuses occurred, violence was the main complaint. It should be noted, all the same, that violence is often a way sexual abuses can be enabled, and covered up.

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

Why Judges Should Not Head Abuse Enquiries (Or: I Judge, Therefore I Am)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

A little bit of heresy today.

If the government had appointed a quiz-show compere to head the Royal Commission, it would seem silly. We would see lots of flashing lights, loud buzzers, and over-acting.

The head sets the tone and style. Judges automatically establish a court environment. That is not necessarily the best environment to tackle the tasks at hand. For victims, it is an intimidating environment. Lawyers, not victims, get to quiz people like Pell. Sometimes it is just a lawyer speaking on behalf of people like Pell. Sometimes it is just two lawyers facing off in front of the judge. The advantage is with the side which can afford the most lawyers. The victims can be forgotten in the quasi-judicial process.

Of the above reasons for not having a mock-up of a court, the most important one is that the abusers and their protective organisations are not confronted with the reality of their crimes. Does anyone really expect Justice McClellan to let a victim, or victims’ rights activist, to directly question Pell? Would Pell be able to keep his cool if questioned directly by victims, rather than through someone’s lawyer?

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.

Ridsdale’s Release (Or: Mates are Mates)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

Gerald Ridsdale, Australia’s worst clerical child sexual abuser, is eligible for parole from Ararat Prison (pictured below) later this month. Victoria’s Adult Parole Board chair, Elizabeth Curtain, and her board, will decide if he is to be freed. It would be expected that she would turn down Ridsdale’s parole application, but this cannot be guaranteed. Since the process is not transparent, however, we will not know the reasons for her board’s decision.

The Catholic Church’s insiders rag, CathNews, reports that Ridsdale “helps counsel and care for other paedophiles in Ararat Prison.” Apparently this will help with his parole bid. They further note that he “attends mass every Friday and organizes an annual Christmas dinner.” What further proof of rehabilitation could the CathNews require?

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.

On the Media

UNITED STATES
Catholic Whistleblowers

This week a group of Catholic nuns and priests joined forces to form Catholic Whistleblowers; their goal is to hold the church accountable for the ongoing child sex abuse scandal. Most of the founding members have themselves blown the whistle about abuse in the church. Brooke visits one of them, Sister Sally Butler, to talk about the role of truth-telling, transparency and honor among the faithful.

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 Fallacy Of The Apology (Or: So, What Else Do You Want?)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

Apologies serve a very valid purpose. They indicate the truth of the events. They indicate that the events were wrong and they are an indication of humility. They assume the wrong-doing will not be repeated.

Many apologies have been given, and many people have been encouraged by those apologies, as expressions of the points indicated above. It is usually assumed that the apology is sincere. If it is not, then the benefits do not exist.

It is hard to really tell when an apology is sincere. A lot of victims have not been convinced of the apologies they have received. Yet even an insincere apology is a statement of truth of an allegation, so it still has some point.

Admittedly, some clerics have tried to have it both ways by apologizing but still saying that the apology is not an admission of guilt. This kind does not rank as an apology at all. People who have made this kind of apology must still be pursued for a real apology.

These fake apologies fall into the category of criminals who say sorry, but are really feeling sorry for themselves at being caught.

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.

Most Americans Say Religion Is Losing Influence in U.S.

UNITED STATES
Gallup

by Frank Newport
PRINCETON, NJ — Over three-quarters of Americans (77%) say religion is losing its influence on American life, while 20% say religion’s influence is increasing. These represent Americans’ most negative evaluations of the impact of religion since 1970, although similar to the views measured in recent years.

Americans over the years have generally been more likely to say religion is losing rather than increasing its influence in American life. In addition to the previous peak in views that religion was losing its influence measured in 1969 and 1970, at least 60% of Americans thought religion was losing its influence in 1991-1994, in 1997 and 1999, in 2003, and from 2007 to the present.

Americans were more likely to say religion was increasing rather than decreasing its influence when the question was first asked in 1957, in 1962, at a few points in the 1980s during the Reagan administration, after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in late 2001 and early 2002, and in 2005. The high point for Americans’ belief that religion is increasing its influence, 71%, came in December 2001.

These perceptions of religion’s influence in American society are not related to Americans’ personal religiosity, as measured by church attendance or the self-reported importance of religion in one’s life. In general, highly religious Americans are neither more nor less likely to say religion is losing its influence than those who are not religious. There is, however, a modest relationship between Americans’ ideology as well as partisanship and their views of the influence of religion, with liberals and Democrats more likely than conservatives and Republicans to say religion’s influence is increasing in American society.

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.

Most Americans say religion is losing influence in US: Poll

UNITED STATES
Times of India

WASHINGTON: While most Americans say religion is losing influence in the country, 75 per cent say American society would be better off if more Americans were devout.

According to a new Gallup survey, over three-quarters of Americans (77 per cent) say religion is losing its influence on American life, while 20 per cent say religion’s influence is increasing.

These represent Americans’ most negative evaluations of the impact of religion since 1970, although similar to the views measured in recent years, Gallup said.

“It may be happening, but Americans don’t like it,” Frank Newport, Gallup’s editor in chief, said of religion’s waning influence. “It is clear that a lot of Americans don’t think this is a good state of affairs.”

According to the Gallup survey released this week, 77 per cent of Americans say religion is losing its influence. Since 1957, when the question was first asked, Americans’ perception of religion’s power has never been lower.

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.

Reports of abuse referred to UK

AUSTRALIA/UNITED KINGDOM
The Australian

SARAH ELKS From: The Australian June 03, 2013

NEW and “extremely concerning” allegations of child sexual abuse against serial pedophile priest Robert Waddington, who molested children in Australia for a decade, have been urgently referred to the Church of England’s Archbishop of York.

North Queensland Bishop Bill Ray said he phoned Archbishop John Sentamu at the weekend after the fresh claims — that the now-deceased senior clergyman began abusing children as early as 1953 — were revealed in The Weekend Australian.

“I think he should know that, and that it should be a part of his inquiry,” Bishop Ray said.

Last month, Dr Sentamu launched an independent inquiry into the allegations against Waddington and the church’s response to the abuse complaints.

The probe, which will be led by a retired judge, was sparked by a joint investigation by The Australian and The Times.

It revealed English church officials, including a former archbishop of York, and senior Australian Anglicans failed to report to police allegations of abuse made in Queensland in 1999 and England in 2003 by former students of Waddington.

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.

Call to widen historic abuse probe

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

02 JUNE 2013

Historic abuse allegations not covered by the remit of an ongoing public inquiry in Northern Ireland must still be thoroughly investigated, a UN body has urged.

The recommendation by the UN Committee Against Torture will add further pressure on the Stormont Executive to widen the remit of its Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry.

Clerical abuse victims and some former residents of Magdalene laundry-type institutions in the region have demanded to know why the crimes inflicted on them are not being examined by the Stormont commissioned investigation headed by retired judge Sir Anthony Hart.

The inquiry, which is currently gathering victim testimony, is examining alleged child abuse perpetrated inside residential institutions from 1922 to 1995.

However, the probe’s remit does not cover abuse inflicted on victims who were over 18 when they were inside residential facilities, such as woman forced into Magdalene style laundries, or clerical abuse committed outside of an institutional setting.

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.

Lay Catholics in Ireland form new group to reform and renew the Church

IRELAND
Irish Central

By PATRICK COUNIHAN, IrishCentral Staff Writer
Published Sunday, June 2, 2013

Irish Catholics have set up a new lay group for those committed to the reform and renewal of the Church in Ireland.

The Irish Times reports that 15p attended the launch of the Association of Catholics in Ireland (ACI).

The report says that new group intends to provide a voice for lay Catholics in the same way that the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) does for the clergy.

The group was initiated by the ACP along with organiser Noel McCann who has spent 12 months setting up a steering committee and website.

McCann told the paper that there is a realisation among many Catholics that the Church was in crisis and that the pews on Sundays were emptying of young people.

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

Relatives cry cover-up in 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen …

TEXAS
Daily Mail (United Kingdom)

Relatives cry cover-up in 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen as the main suspect, a priest, has never been charged and continues to live comfortably

The relatives of a beauty queen murdered in Texas in 1960 have said officials helped cover-up for a priest who has been a suspect in the murder since the initial investigation.

Former Miss South Texas, Irene Garza, was found lying in a canal in her hometown of McAllen after having disappeared the day before Easter. She had went to Sacred Heart Catholic Church to give confession to Rev. John Feit.

Feit, a then-27-year-old, priest was immediately a suspect in Garza’s death because less than a month earlier her had found guilty of attacking another young woman at a nearby church. He did not serve any jail time and was fined $500.

But Feit was never arrested in the case and was quietly transferred to a monastery before leaving the priesthood in the late 1960s.

He continues to live a comfortable life in a affable neighborhood in Phoenix. He has steadfastly denied ever killing Garza in interrogations with police and interviews by the media, including CNN.

But after the case was reopened in 2002, two witnesses came forward to investigators to say Feit allegedly confessed to them.

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Polnischer Priester wegen sexuellem Missbrauch von Kindern in der Dom-Rep angeklagt

DOMINIKANISCHE REPUBLIK
Dom-Rep

Santiago.

Ein Priester der Katholischen Kirche, der ursprünglich aus Polen stammt, wurde in der Dominikanischen Republik von mindestens 14 Familien angezeigt.

Wojciech Gil (Foto) wird vorgeworfen, dass er dutzende Kinder sexuell belästigt haben soll. Nur einige der Eltern von betroffenen Kindern haben sich zusammengefunden, um bei der Staatsanwaltschaft in Santiago de los Caballeros Anzeige gegen den Priester zu erstatten.

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Opferfonds der Bundesregierung und der Kirchen für ehemalige Heimkinder

DEUTSCHLAND
Helmut Jacob

„Freie Arbeitsgruppe JHH 2006“ fordert: Bezahlt die Opfer direkt
Behinderte Heimopfer erhalten keine Mittel aus dem Opferfonds

Von 2008 bis 2010 tagte der „Runde Tisch Heimerziehung“ (RTH) unter Vorsitz der Pastorin Antje Vollmer. Die meisten Opfer, die sich öffentlich zu Wort melden, fühlen sich von ihr und dem RTH „über den Tisch gezogen“ und erneut gedemütigt. 120 Millionen Euro wurden auf Empfehlung des RTH vom Bund, den Ländern und den Kirchen in den Opferfonds eingezahlt, 10% davon für die Verwaltung des Fonds wieder einkasssiert. Auch diese Lösung findet unter den Opfern nur geringe Zustimmung. Die Gruppe der behinderten Heimopfer war am „Runden Tisch“ unerwünscht und wurde schriftlich abgewiesen. Sie erhält aus diesem Fonds keine Mittel.

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Church millions should have been spent on other worthwhile projects

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

Terry Sweetman From: The Sunday Mail (Qld) June 02, 2013

IT IS a sad state of affairs when even the faithful send me jokes and cartoons reinforcing coarse images of priests as pedophiles and adulterers.

But that’s one measure of the harm done to the institution of the Catholic Church by its lax oversight of its servants, its infamous attempts to cover up their sins and its need to put its own reputation above the care of children and the delivery of justice.

Like many, I was pretty unimpressed with evidence and the demeanor of Archbishop George Pell before the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child sexual abuse.

Suffice to say, it will be interesting to see if he can demonstrate more conviction when he appears before the Federal Royal Commission with its powers of coercion.

Time (and cross-examination) will tell if the representatives of other institutions (including other churches) are any better at explaining the betrayal of children and others and their failure to properly atone or make amends.

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.

James Packer, John Howard and Cardinal George Pell part of secret Chartwell Society

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

YONI BASHAN STATE POLITICAL REPORTER THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH JUNE 02, 2013

MAJOR Australian personalities including James Packer, John Howard and Cardinal George Pell – plus a minor British royal – have been giving political pep-talks to Liberal MPs during secret luncheon meetings held across Sydney.

The exclusive gatherings, known as the “Chartwell Society”, have seen a cross-factional band of ambitious MPs taking tips from major figures on the world stage during regular, invite-only gatherings.

Among those who have addressed the Chartwell MPs – whose group is named after former British prime minister Winston Churchill’s country home – are former prime minister John Howard, former chief of army Peter Cosgrove and even Prince Richard, the Duke of Gloucester.

The most recent function was held on Friday at the Australian Hotels Association plush Macquarie St boardroom with Cardinal George Pell attending as the guest of honour at a gathering of 11 Coalition MPs.

The gatherings aim to “critically evaluate policy”, the group’s organiser David Elliott, a Liberal MP, told The Sunday Telegraph.

Separate gatherings have been held at universities, churches and corporate boardrooms.

The precise nature of the discussions are kept strictly confidential.

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

Church’s work is just beginning

AUSTRALIA
Sunday Herald Sun

EDITORIAL SUNDAY HERALD SUN JUNE 02, 2013

THE highly unusual confession from Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart of his personal feelings of shame and burden over the Catholic church’s handling of child sexual abuse cases, makes for compelling reading.

In an interview published in the Sunday Herald Sun, Victoria’s most senior Catholic frankly admits his faith has been tested – but ultimately reaffirmed – as the church finally faces up to decades of child abuse within its ranks.

Archbishop Hart reveals he feels sad, hurt and betrayed by members of his fellow clergy and their sins of the past in either abusing children or covering up the crimes that stole the innocence of countless children and teens.

He also admits he made some mistakes with his own personal response to the crisis, despite being horrified from the moment he, after being promoted to vicar general in 1996, realised his predecessors had systematically shielded paedophiles and that he had inherited a mess.

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

Inquiry into Catholic clergy in Australia’s abuse of kids

AUSTRALIA
3News

[with video]

By Rachel Morton
Australia Correspondent

Melbourne’s Catholic Church has released the names of 29 priests it acknowledges are guilty of child sex abuse.

It comes the same week as an inquiry heard there was a systematic cover up of child sexual abuse, which went on for decades.

Cardinal George Pell is Australia’s most senior Catholic, and this week he fronted a Victorian inquiry into sex abuse, confessing to the sins of the Church.

He says the systemic cover up allowed paedophile priests to prey on innocent children. He says the fear of scandal led to the cover up, but in some cases where the Church should have acted, it did.
Cardinal Pell was the last witness at the inquiry into sex abuse within the Church and non-governmental organisations. He spent four-and-a-half hours giving evidence, during which time he acknowledged the cover up went on for decades.

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June 1, 2013

Father Greeley, Defender of the Faithful

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Published: May 31, 2013

The Rev. Andrew Greeley, who died this week in Chicago, gained fame and lots of money writing best-selling novels combining Catholicism, Irish America and sex.

Time has dimmed the appealing novelty of a priest writing pulpy lines about lusty seminarians and nuns with secret sorrows. What made Father Greeley a writer of influence and heroism was far more serious: his early effort to raise an alarm about what he called the gravest crisis in the Catholic Church since the Reformation, the sexual abuse of children.

From the mid-1980s to the early 1990s, years before the scandal metastasized in Boston and engulfed the church worldwide, he sounded a prophetic warning about predator priests and bishops who protected them. He wasn’t alone: parents and victims had been battling the church hierarchy for years by then, and journalists like Jason Berry had done much to expose those crimes. But Father Greeley was among the first and most effective critics from within, defying his fellow priests on behalf of the betrayed laity. He had a pulpit, a column in The Chicago Sun-Times, and he used it often.

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

New lay Catholic association set up to stem “crisis” within the Church

IRELAND
Irish Times

Ronan McGreevy

Some 150 people turned up this morning to the launch of a new lay organisation for Irish Catholics.

The Association of Catholics in Ireland (ACI), a new group for Irish Catholics committed to reform and renewal in the Church, was formally launched today having been in the offing for a year.

The organisation aims to provide a voice for lay Catholics in the same way that the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) does for the clergy.

The idea of it for came from the ACP and from organiser Noel McCann who has spent the last year setting up a steering committee and website.

Mr McCann said there was a realisation among many Catholics that the Church was in crisis and that the pews on Sundays were emptying of young people.

He said lay people had “very good reasons not to be happy” but he was hopeful that Pope Francis could signal a different approach which would involve the laity in the way envisaged by Vatican II.

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“Stunningly cruel”

UNITED STATES
Stop Baptist Predators

David Clohessy, the national director of SNAP, took Southern Baptist leaders to task for publicly throwing their support behind pastor C.J. Mahaney, who was accused in a lawsuit of covering up numerous sex crimes against children.

SNAP is the largest international support organization for people who were sexually abused by religious authority figures – i.e., by priests, preachers, ministers, deacons, nuns and others. Clohessy himself is widely recognized as one of the world’s top experts on the subject of clergy sex abuse. He has appeared on numerous television news programs, including the Oprah Winfrey Show, Sixty Minutes, the Phil Donohue Show, and Good Morning America. In 2002, People Magazine named Clohessy as one of the “25 Most Intriguing” people of the year. (Also included in that 2002 list were such other prominent names as Jimmy Carter, George Clooney, and Pat Tillman.)

So suffice it to say that Clohessy is the world’s number 1 go-to-guy for reliable information about the dynamics of clergy sex abuse and church cover-ups.

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Fellow blog post: Emran Hossain – How does Holy See fail to see a 15-year protest over claim of priest

WASHINGTON (DC)
Alfred Friendly Press Partners

By Emran Hossain

He stutters and cannot speak English fluently. Yet, whenever the 70-year-old man comes across a priest of the Vatican’s United States Embassy, he introduces himself: “My name is John Wojnowsky. What is your name?”

Wojnowsky cannot say how many times he’s asked that question in the last 15 years, when he has spent a part of each of his days, weekends and holidays included, in front of the Holy See’s diplomatic mission, known as Apostolic Nunciature, in Washington, D.C.

Not a single priest, he says, will give Wojnowsky his name, just as the Vatican’s U.S. envoys never have replied to the letter he sent in August, 1997. His letter seeks a church investigation of his claim that a Catholic priest overseas molested him when he was age 15.

Though the issue of Catholic clerics’ sexual abuse of children has dominated headlines across the Western world, resulted in giant settlements and won accolades for U.S. media organizations, Wojnowky waited more than six months for a reply to his letter. Then one morning he decided to picket the Washington embassy. That is how his one-man protest began.

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UN anti-torture body criticises Magdalenes report

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

[the letter]

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

In a letter to Irish UN representative Gerard Corr, the vice-chair of UN Committee Against Torture (Uncat) hit out at the inquiry headed by former senator Martin McAleese.

Felice Gaer said the probe was not independent and failed adequately to examine allegations of physical abuse, forced labour, and arbitrary detention. She also called on the Government to ensure that “that there is a full enquiry into all complaints of abuse”.

“However, the committee also noted that while the inquiry conducted by the McAleese Committee had a broad mandate ‘to establish the facts of State involvement with the Magdalene Laundries’, it lacked many elements of a prompt, independent and thorough investigation as recommended by the committee in its concluding observations,” Ms Gaer wrote.

“Specifically, the committee has received information from several sources highlighting that the McAleese Report, despite its length and detail, did not conduct a fully independent investigation into allegations of arbitrary detention, forced labour or ill-treatment.”

Ms Gaer hit out at the Government’s response to Uncat, which encouraged victims to report any evidence of wrongdoing directly. She said that the Government had already been presented with “extensive survivor testimony” by the Justice for Magdalenes group and was “aware of the existence of possible criminal wrong-doings, including physical and psychological abuse”.

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Open letter to my priest abuser: ‘I thought it was my fault and I never told my mam’

IRELAND
The Journal

A survivor of abuse tells a priest it is time he comes forward and tells the truth.

A FORMAL INQUIRY into child sex abuse by clergy of the Catholic Church in Australia heard from a number of survivors this week who say their lives have been blighted by the offences against them and the organisation’s response to it. The following letter was written and sent to a Catholic priest earlier this year. The writer is a woman pleading with the recipient to tell the truth about an alleged historic rape. She outlines the difficulties she has had in later life. She has granted TheJournal.ie permission to reproduce it here, with some details changed and omitted to ensure anonymity.

Dear Fr. X,
As I write this I wonder if you remember me. My father befriended you while you were visiting our parish.

My family invited you into our home; you played sport with my dad. You swam with my sister and brothers. My sister remembers your car fondly.

Let me try to help you remember me. My dad got very ill…I believe he went to the hospital on a Sunday. Monday, I came home to find no one home. I called the hospital and they said he was “still in surgery” and that made me very upset. I knew my mother would call for a priest so I ran to the rectory hoping to get a ride to the hospital and see my dad. The monsignor was surprised to see me when he answered the door.

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Roman Catholic Jacuzzi: The Pink Elephant in the Vatican

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Michael Bullock

“All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead is purely coincidental.”

This is the standard phrase that most publishers use to protect themselves against lawsuits. For my book Roman Catholic Jacuzzi, a story recounting my accidental discovery of a retreat for closeted gay Catholic priests, Brendan Dugan, owner of independent book publisher Karma (a name that could not be a better match), decided that it was important to do the exact opposite, proudly proclaiming “a true story” on the cover. Since the book launch last month, that is the question I’m asked the most: “Is it really true?” I explain that the only embellishment is in my in portrayal of the priests as both more attractive and more likeable than they were in reality.

In October 2010 I discovered the secret retreat where these priests meet in private once a year to let their hair down and be openly gay together for the week. I was not on a mission to find and expose such a retreat; I booked a cabin with the aim of being alone to concentrate on writing, and it happened to be at the same place and time as the priests. The disorganized resort allowed my stay without realizing what else they were hosting. As a gay former Catholic altar boy, I could not believe both the luck and horror of this discovery: Here I was, in the heart of the hypocrisy of the Catholic Church, face to face with gay men whose teachings give a moral backbone to homophobia and discrimination against their fellow gay and lesbian brothers and sisters, men who uphold a value system that made me feel terrible as a teenager and made the process of admitting to myself that I’m gay torture because of its unbearable moral dilemma: Repress your sexuality or be damned! I immediately knew how politically important this retreat was and wrote down my experience with the priests as it was happening. Roman Catholic Jacuzzi is the document of my weekend with these men, which resumed in their disco-drag party, during which I witnessed the hilarious irony of watching gay priests freak out on the dance floor to every Lady Gaga and Madonna hit, including “Like a Prayer.”

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Missbrauch in Kirche: Richter treten zurück

DEUTSCHLAND
Hamburger Abendblatt

Ahrensburg. Es ist ein einmaliger Vorgang in der Nordkirche: Die Disziplinarkammer des Kirchengerichts tritt geschlossen zurück. Der Reinbeker Amtsgerichtsdirektor Bernd Wrobel hat den Vorsitz bereits niedergelegt, drei seiner Kollegen sind ebenfalls gegangen. Das fünfte Mitglied der Kammer hat diesen Schritt angekündigt.

Auslöser ist das Disziplinarverfahren gegen den Ruhestandsgeistlichen Friedrich H. im Zuge des Ahrensburger Missbrauchsskandals. Friedrich H. hatte von den sexuellen Übergriffen seines Kollegen Dieter K. auf Jugendliche gewusst. Die Kirche wollte Friedrich H. wegen “erheblicher Amtspflichtverletzungen” aus dem Dienst entfernen, doch Wrobels Kammer stellte das Verfahren ohne Anhörung von Zeugen ein.

Daraufhin legte das Landeskirchenamt Rechtsmittel ein und lehnte sämtliche Richter aus “Besorgnis der Befangenheit” ab. Bernd Wrobel äußert nun den Verdacht, das Landeskirchenamt habe ihn und seine Kollegen gegen willfährige Richter austauschen wollen, um den Fall in gewünschter Weise zu lösen – mit H.s Entfernung aus dem Dienst. Für das Landeskirchenamt sind diese Vorwürfe unhaltbar. “Alle Entscheidungen basieren auf dem Kirchenrecht und sind demokratisch legitimiert”, sagt Mathias Benckert, stellvertretender Sprecher der Nordkirche.

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Rörig für längere juristische Verfolgung

DEUTSCHLAND
Katholisch

Der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der Bundesregierung, Johannes-Wilhelm Rörig, hat sich für eine verlängerte strafrechtliche Verfolgbarkeit bei sexuellem Missbrauch ausgesprochen. Dafür solle die sogenannte Ruhensregelung geändert werden, sagte Rörig am Mittwoch in Berlin. Er plädierte dafür, das Alter, ab dem die Verjährungsfrist läuft, auf mindestens 28 Jahre anzuheben.

Im Gesetz zur Stärkung der Rechte von Opfern sexuellen Missbrauchs, das im April vom Bundesrat verabschiedet wurde, war diese Frist vom 18. auf das 21. Lebensjahr des Betroffenen verlängert worden. Diese “Mini-Veränderung” sei keine Antwort auf die Forderungen der Betroffenen, so Rörig weiter.

Notwendig sei eine umfassende Verlängerung dieser Frist. Er begründete dies damit, dass die Betroffenen lange bräuchten, bis sie über das an ihnen begangene Unrecht sprechen könnten. Häufig sei das erst in der Lebensmitte der Fall. Am 6. Juni beschäftigt sich ein Hearing in Berlin mit dem Thema einer Verlängerung der strafrechtlichen Verfolgbarkeit.

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Bischof Ackermann: “Denn wir brauchen die Impulse von außen” – aber nicht von Betroffenen, denn sie sind unerwünscht

DEUTSCHLAND
MissBiT

“Unser Ausgangspunkt war die Idee, einen Beirat zu gründen, der die Umsetzung der Präventionsordnung begleitet.“ Daraus sei dann die Idee entstanden, ein Fachnetzwerk mit den vielen Akteuren innerhalb des Bistums und über den Rand der Kirche hinaus zu knüpfen. Das hat der Trierer Bischof Dr. Stephan Ackermann beim ersten Netzwerktreffen am 24. Mai in Trier erklärt. „Denn wir brauchen die Impulse von außen”.

Rund 30 Expertinnen und Experten unterschiedlichster Institutionen wie etwa der Polizei, des Gesundheitsamtes, Fachberatungsstellen für Opfer, aber auch Psychiater und kirchliche Verbands- und Berufsgruppenvertreter hatten sich angemeldet, um mit dem Bistum und der gastgebenden Fachstelle Kinder- und Jugendschutz zum Thema Prävention ins Gespräch zu kommen.

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Katholische Kirche bricht ihre Kultur des Schweigens

DEUTSCHLAND
Berliner Morgenpost

Von Philip Volkmann-Schluck und Ulla Reinhard

Es ist ein Fall, der so klar erscheint, dass er wütend macht. Trotzdem wirft er schwierige Fragen auf nach dem richtigen Umgang. Das Erzbistum Berlin hat vor einem verurteilten Missbrauchstäter gewarnt, der auf Bewährung auf freiem Fuß ist.

Einerseits könnte er versuchen, im Umfeld der katholischen Gemeinden der Stadt erneut Kontakt zu Minderjährigen zu finden. Andererseits ist der Mann seit seiner letzten Verurteilung im vergangenen Jahr offenbar nicht mehr auffällig gewesen. Nach Informationen der Berliner Morgenpost wurden keine Strafanzeigen gegen den etwa 80-Jährigen erstattet.

Auch ermittelt die Staatsanwaltschaft seit seiner Verurteilung nicht mehr gegen den Mann. Ebenso ist im Umfeld des Erzbistums zu hören, der verurteilte Täter habe sich seitdem nicht erneut verdächtig aufgeführt.

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Funeral arrangements announced for Chicago priest, best-selling author Rev. Andrew Greeley

CHICAGO (IL)
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
June 01, 2013

CHICAGO — Funeral arrangements have been announced for the Rev. Andrew Greeley, who died this past week at his Chicago home.

His longtime publicist, June Rosner, says a wake will be held Tuesday from 3-8 p.m. at Christ the King Church, where Greeley spent his first years as a priest.

Visitation will be Wednesday at 9:30 a.m., followed by a funeral Mass at noon at the church in the South Side neighborhood of Beverly.

Greeley was an outspoken Roman Catholic priest, best-selling author and longtime Chicago newspaper columnist who even criticized the hierarchy of his own church over the child sex abuse scandal.

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Sexuelle Freizügigkeit schuld an Missbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
shz

Der Zwischenbericht über die Missbrauchsfälle von Ahrensburg liegt vor. Darin wird die Nordkirche aufgefordert, klare Regeln aufzustellen, die sexuellen Kontakt im Rahmen der Seelsorge strikt untersagen.

Hamburg. Die seit dem Jahr 2010 in Ahrensburg bekannt gewordenen Fälle sexuellen Missbrauchs sind “eindeutig bestätigt”. Das geht aus dem Zwischenbericht der “Unabhängigen Kommission zur Untersuchung von Missbrauchsfällen in der Evangelisch-Lutherischen Kirche in Norddeutschland” hervor, der Freitag in Hamburg der Öffentlichkeit vorgestellt wurde.

Der Bericht erhebt schwere Vorwürfe an die Adresse der ehemaligen Nordelbischen Evangelisch-Lutherischen Kirche. In der Kirche hätten Seelsorger “unter dem Deckmantel einer fortschrittlichen Sexualität oder der Ausnutzung der emotionalen Bedürftigkeit junger Menschen” sexuelle Beziehungen zu Jugendlichen begonnen, um ihre sexuellen Fantasien auszuleben. “Die ehemalige Nordelbische Kirche hat sich immer als progressiv und modern verstanden”, so Kommissionsmitglied Dirk Bange. Dies haben einzelne Täter ausnutzen können, um sich hinter einer “Maske der Liberalität” zu verstecken.

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Missbrauchsfall in den Johannesanstalten: Opfer erzählt seine Geschichte

DEUTSCHLAND
Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung

Von Diana Deutsch

Mosbach. Am schlimmsten, sagt Stefan Wagner, waren nicht die Schläge. Am schlimmsten waren auch nicht die Vergewaltigungen und der Hunger. Am schlimmsten war, sagt Stefan Wagner, dass man keine Ausbildung bekam. “Obwohl ich einen Intelligenz-Quotienten von 108 habe, durfte ich nur eine Schule für geistig Behinderte besuchen.” Das Schicksal eines Heimkinds in den Sechziger Jahren. In den Mosbacher Johannes-Anstalten ist Stefan Wagner aufgewachsen. Unter schrecklichsten Bedingungen, wie er behauptet und deshalb seit Jahren um Wiedergutmachung kämpft (wir berichteten).

Am kommenden Dienstag nun will die Johannes-Diakonie eine Studie vorstellen, die den Missbrauchs-Vorwürfen auf den Grund geht. Im Vorfeld erzählen wir die Geschichte aus Stefan Wagners Sicht.

Der Bahnhof von Mosbach im Jahr 1961. Mit einer Mitarbeiterin des Jugendamts und einem Köfferchen kletterte der fünfjährige Stefan Wagner, der in Wirklichkeit anders heißt, aus dem Zug von Freiburg.

Seine Eltern hatte der Junge nie kennengelernt, so wenig wie seine beiden Brüder. “Das Jugendamt entzog meinen Eltern schon früh das Sorgerecht und brachte uns Brüder in verschiedenen Heimen unter”, erzählt Wagner, der heute 57 Jahre alt ist. Seine ersten fünf Lebensjahre hatte er in einem Freiburger Säuglingsheim verbracht. Dann schickte man ihn nach Mosbach.

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McAleese Report into Magdalene Laundries criticised by UN

IRELAND
The Journal

[Read the letter]

THE UNITED NATIONS committee that put pressure on the Irish government to investigate the Magdalene Laundries system and provide redress to survivors has criticised Martin McAleese’s investigation and subsequent report.

The UN Committee Against Torture (UNCAT) said it was pleased that an inquiry was finally established and a report published. It also noted that the government had made a full and public apology to residents of the laundries, acknowledging the State’s involvement in their incarceration.

However, UNCAT’s rapporteur for follow-up on concluding observations said the probe “lacked many elements of a prompt, independent and thorough investigation as recommended by the committee”.

“Specifically, the committee has received information from several sources highlighting that the McAleese Report, despite its length and detail, did not conduct a fully independent investigation into allegations of arbitrary detention, forced labour or ill-treatment,” wrote Felice Gaer in a letter to Gerard CORR, the Irish UN representative.

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The McAleese Report: ‘Incomplete And Not Independent’

IRELAND
Broadsheet

The UN Committee on Torture has responded to the investigation by Martin McAleese (centre) in to the Magdalene Laundries.

The McAleese report, warmly received by religious commenters here, stated that no evidence exists that abuse took place in the laundries.

This despite hundreds of pages pf testimony documenting incidents of of physical and mental cruelty available to Mr McAleese and his team.

Felice Gaer (top) head of the UN Committee on Torture in a letter, revealed in today’s Irish Examiner (above, not available online), to the UN representative in Ireland, writes:

The report lacks many elements of a prompt, independent and thorough investigation…specifically the committee has recieved information from several sources highlighting that the McAleese Report despite its length and detail did not conduct a fully independent investigation into allegations of arbitary detention, forced labour or ill treatment.

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The Roman Catholic Hierarchy, Homosexuality, Hypocrisy and Heresy

UNITED STATES
Minnesota SNAP

By Vinnie Nauheimer

Can a person unschooled in Roman Catholic theology take a noted 20th century theologian and 21st century Pope’s letter deriding homosexuality and turn it into a stinging rebuke of today’s hierarchy simply by changing key words and adding direct quotes from Jesus as found in the Gospels? If so, can the hierarchy honestly accept one version and deny the other? Only at the expense of their own integrity and by denying the words preached by Jesus Christ in three of the four Synoptic Gospels! The ramifications of this revised document are enormous because they speak to homosexuality, hypocrisy and heresy.

On October 1, of 1986, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI, promulgated a letter of instruction to the bishops of the world in his official capacity as Prefect of the Congregation of Catholic Faith, “Letter To The Bishops Of The Catholic Church On The Pastoral Care Of Homosexual Persons1” In that letter, he called homosexuality, “Objectively Disordered.”

What follows is a parody of that letter, which maintains Benedict’s structure, logic and reasoning. However unlike Benedict’s version this version uses Sacred Scripture quoted directly from Jesus himself. Benedict XVI could not and can never use the words of Jesus to admonish homosexuality because these words were never spoken by Him in the Gospels. The revised letter uses several direct quotes from Jesus because they exist and have been recorded by the three out of four evangelists. The direct quotes from Jesus make a stronger case for the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church being “Objectively Disordered,” sacrilegious, heretical and hypocritical than all of Ratzinger’s arguments against homosexuality. Admonitions against child abuse have a strong biblical linkage going all the way back to Exodus and continuing on from Jesus to Paul and throughout the Church’s own Catechism and Canon Law. Using the noted theologian Cardinal Ratzinger’s logic, this extended linkage makes the admonitions for and penalties against child abuse ironclad. The Prefect of the Congregation of the Faith’s has been hoisted upon his own petard. Read the revised text and judge for yourself.

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Archbishop Denis Hart begs forgiveness for church mishandling child abuse

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Shannon Deery
From: Sunday Herald Sun
June 02, 2013

EXCLUSIVE: ARCHBISHOP Denis Hart says he feels personally shamed and burdened over the Catholic Church’s handling of child sexual abuse.

The state’s most senior Catholic said in a frank interview his faith had been tested, but had not wavered, in the wake of shocking revelations of decades-long child abuse within the church.
He is now vowing to do whatever it takes to tackle the evil scourge.

The Archbishop said he was horrified to learn of the widespread extent of the clergy abuse crisis after becoming vicar general in 1996 when he realised his predecessors had systematically protected paedophiles.

In his most wide-ranging interview since giving evidence at the Victorian parliamentary inquiry – in which he conceded sexual attacks were covered up and the church’s reputation was put ahead of victims – Archbishop Hart said he:

TOOK responsibility for the church’s handling of abuse complaints

FELT betrayed and let down by members of the church who had abused children and by those who had covered up their “heinous crimes”

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Editorial: Newark shows need for transparency

NEW JERSEY
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Editorial Staff | Jun. 1, 2013

Five people have resigned in New Jersey in the wake of revelations that a priest who was supposedly on a supervised lifetime ban from ministering to minors was indeed ministering to youth and wasn’t being monitored. Fr. Michael Fugee is out on bail after his arrest for violating terms of an agreement he signed with the local county prosecutor when investigators found that he had been attending youth group events, including an overnight pilgrimage to Canada.

Fugee had confessed to groping a 14-year-old boy, and a jury had convicted him of sexual assault in 2003. That conviction was overturned on a technicality, and Fugee entered into the agreement with the prosecutor to avoid a retrial.

As the local newspaper, The Star-Ledger, revealed all this, Fugee resigned his assignment in the Office of Continuing Education and Ongoing Formation of Priests. The pastor and two lay ministers who had invited Fugee to help with youth ministry resigned their positions. Now “as a result of operational failures,” the vicar general, Msgr. John Doran, “has resigned his post and will no longer hold a leadership position with the Archdiocese,” said a letter that Newark Archbishop John Myers sent to pastors to read at Mass Memorial Day weekend. “The strong protocols we presently have in place [to handle cases of sexual abuse of minors by clergy] were not always observed,” Myers wrote.

This chain of events raises serious questions about accountability and transparency in Newark.

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Catholic Church’s Rome guest house is ‘pilgrim chic’

ROME
NEWS.com.au

Angus Hohenboken
From: Sunday Herald Sun
June 02, 2013

FATHER Brendan Arthur takes a swig of his beer. “It’s plush isn’t it,” he says, his gaze sweeping across the courtyard of the grand Domus Australia, a boutique guesthouse in Rome.

The priest, who is residing at the former seminary while on holiday from his parish of Dandenong North, is enjoying a nightcap after a day accompanying Pope Francis on the annual Corpus Domini procession through the streets of Rome.

After sharing stories and a quick cigarette with a group of Australian travellers, Father Brendan bids the party goodnight and climbs the marble stairs to his room, his soft footsteps fading below the trickle of an ornate fountain featuring a gold mosaic of Mary.

This is Domus Australia, the dwelling Cardinal George Pell, Australia’s most prominent Catholic, uses as his “holiday” home or his “casa per ferie”.

The $30 million residence has been drawn into the Catholic Church’s child sex abuse scandal, with Victorian MP Andrea Coote suggesting the church sell its “splendid residence” to help pay compensation to victims.

The cost of the Rome property could have been enough to provide $75,000 – the cap the church places on compensation – to 400 abuse victims, she said.

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‘Beauty & The Priest’ – Anderson Cooper Special Report debuts tonight at 10:00pm ET and PT

TEXAS
CNN

May 31st, 2013
CNN’s Gary Tuchman reports the remarkable case of Irene Garza, a young school teacher and beauty queen was brutally raped and murdered 53 years ago in McAllen, Texas. Today, the one man who local and state police still believe is her murderer, remains free and living a normal life in Arizona.

Years ago, a controversial grand jury session failed to lead to an indictment of the man, who, at the time of the murder, was a Catholic priest. He is believed to be the last person to have seen Irene Garza alive, when he heard her confession on the day before Easter. Garza’s short, accomplished life which was an inspiration for many – her death, and the lingering questions are examined in this one-hour Anderson Cooper Special Report documentary.

Anderson Cooper Special Report: Beauty & The Priest debuts on CNN at 10:00pm ET & PT on Friday, May 31. This program encores on Saturday, June 01 at 8:00pm and 11:00pm ET & PT.

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Shefford orphanage priest John Ryan ‘most brutal man’

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

By Nic Rigby
BBC News

Three ex-residents of a former Catholic orphanage have spoken out about their “brutal” treatment at the hands of a priest, who is at the centre of a police investigation.

The men were residents at St Francis Boys Home, in Shefford, near Bedford, in the 1950s and 1960s.

The three allege physical abuse by Father John Ryan, who died in 2008.

The Catholic church says it “deeply regrets” any hurt caused, but stresses the “claims are not proven”.

The home, which closed in 1974, was run by the Catholic Diocese of Northampton.

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Timeline: The killing of Irene Garza

TEXAS
CNN

[Police: Evidence in killing of former beauty queen points to ex-priest]

(CNN) — The killing of former Texas beauty queen and schoolteacher Irene Garza has remained unsolved for more than 50 years. Investigators and the Garza family say all evidence points to a former Catholic priest named John Feit, who told CNN he did not kill Garza.
Below is a timeline of key events surrounding the case:

Garza’s body and key evidence were found in this canal.

March 23, 1960: John Feit, a Roman Catholic priest, attacks Mara Guerra, a 20-year-old woman, in a church. Feit pleads no contest. He is found guilty of aggravated assault and pays a $500 fine.

April 16, 1960: McAllen, Texas, schoolteacher and former beauty queen Irene Garza, 25, visits Sacred Heart Catholic Church to offer confession on the day before Easter.

Easter Sunday, April 17, 1960: Garza’s father files a police report alerting authorities about his missing daughter.

In 2002, then-Texas Ranger Lt. Rudy Jaramillo reopened the Garza case.

April 21, 1960: Police find Garza’s body face down in a McAllen canal, along with a candelabra from Sacred Heart and a Kodak slide photograph viewer that police say belongs to Feit.

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Police: Evidence in killing of former beauty queen points to ex-priest

TEXAS
CNN

[timeline]

By Scott Bronstein and Gary Tuchman, CNN Special Investigations Unit

McAllen, Texas (CNN) — All evidence pointed police to one conclusion: A priest had killed a beautiful 25-year-old schoolteacher.

Searchers had found the lifeless body of former Miss South Texas, Irene Garza, face down in a canal in her hometown of McAllen. She’d disappeared on the day before Easter after going to Sacred Heart Catholic Church for confession.

An autopsy determined Garza had been raped while in a coma, and then had died from suffocation. Near Garza’s body investigators found items that belonged to the church, including a candelabra.

One item, a metallic Kodak slide photo viewer, belonged to a 27-year-old priest who was assigned to the church: the Rev. John Feit.

To say the scandal rocked McAllen is an understatement.

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UN watchdog attacks McAleese laundries probe

IRELAND
Irish Independent

COLM KELPIE – 01 JUNE 2013

THE United Nations’ torture watchdog has criticised the McAleese inquiry into the Magdalene Laundries and has called on the Government to set out plans for a full-scale independent investigation.

The United Nations Committee Against Torture said it received information from several sources that the inquiry, chaired by former Senator Dr Martin McAleese, did not conduct a “fully independent investigation into allegations of arbitrary detention, forced labour or ill treatment.”

In a letter to Gerard Corr, Ireland’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, the Committee questioned whether the state would set up an independent inquiry.

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„Bodem van ontkerkelijking is nog niet in zicht”

NEDERLAND
Reformatorisch Dagblad

De kerkverlating in Nederland gaat in een hoog tempo door. Op dit moment behoort ongeveer 30 procent van de bevolking nog tot een kerk. Onderzoeker Jos Becker verwacht dat percentage in 2025 is gehalveerd. „De bodem is echt nog niet in zicht.”

Hoe gaat het met de kerken, de religieuze betrokkenheid en het christelijk geloof aan het begin van de 21e eeuw in Nederland? Deze vragen stonden vrijdag centraal tijdens het symposium ”Ontkerkelijking: nou en? Oorzaken en gevolgen van secularisatie in Nederland” op de Radboud Universiteit in Nijmegen. De organisatie ervan was in handen van deze universiteit en het tijdschrift Religie en Samenleving.

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DIOCESAN PARTICIPATION IN TRC EVENTS

CANADA
Anglican Diocese of New Westminster

All around the Diocese of New Westminster communities are praying, learning, and organizing in anticipation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian Residential Schools National Event in September.

St. Hilda’s By the Sea and St. John’s Sunshine Coast (United Church of Canada), together with survivors of the Sechelt and St. George’s Lytton schools and leaders of the Sechelt band learned about the history and legacy of the Indian Residential School in Sechelt through the Project of Heart, a community based collaborative art project.

In late May, Vancouver School of Theology hosted the Regional Advisory Council to the TRC as they met with Chief Commissioner Justice Murray Sinclair to plan events for September. Church involvement includes an archival display, words and gestures of reconciliation from our leaders, a birthday party for former students, and a church listening area.

Churches in the North Vancouver deanery have taken part in a Sunday morning program which includes liturgy, Sunday school curriculum, music, guest speakers and educators from the Indian Residential School Survivors Society, the NFB film Muffins for Granny, the travelling resource library and time for reflection and sharing.

St. James’, Vancouver reconciliation group is promoting a free showing and discussion of the film We Were Children, June 11, 7pm, 149 West Hastings.

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Anti-child abuse program developed in county is going national

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

By JOAN KERN
Correspondent

When the Rev. Deb Helt’s granddaughter was born 26 months ago, the pastor vowed that little Emma would be safe — and know about her body.

So two years ago she helped lead the yearlong Safe Church Project: Protection of Children and Youth from Sexual Abuse at Hosanna! A Fellowship of Christians, in Lititz, where she serves as pastor of congregational life. Hosanna was among nine congregations in that first Safe Church Project.

Last year Helt shadowed Linda Crockett, director of education and consultation at the Samaritan Counseling Center, who developed and designed the project, as Crockett led nine more congregations and the Warwick Released Time Program through the project. In those two years, Safe Church reached 3,000 children and 3,800 adults.

Now this year, Helt will take over for Crockett locally while Crockett takes the project on the road to three locations across the country.

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May 31, 2013

The language of shaming: Pope Francis urges profound change to global economic system

ROME
GlobalPost

Jason Berry
May 30, 2013

Analysis: In his candid speeches and sermons, the new pope “forges a moral vocabulary on economics” to remind church leaders — and followers — of their responsibility to the poor.

“The globalization that makes everything uniform is essentially imperialist and instrumentally liberal, but it is not human. In the end, it is a way to enslave nations.”

Those blunt words from spoken by Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio in 2010 speak to the plight of millions who are jobless in Spain and Greece, their economies yoked to a European Union bank system meshed with globalized finance.

The statement appeared in On Heaven and Earth, a dialogue book with Buenos Aires Rabbi Abraham Skorka, which is now available in English.

In the two months since the cardinals’ conclave in Rome elected the little-known Argentine and the first Jesuit pope, Francis has taken to his pastoral role as Bishop of Rome. Refusing to live in the Apostolic Palace, he has made his home in a religious hotel in Vatican City, and he has replaced the pope’s golden throne with a wooden chair. He has dispensed with the ornate red stole with filigrees of gold that Pope Benedict wore, instead presenting himself in white, wearing a metal cross without the customary papal jewels and regalia. Benedict wore red shoes; Francis’s are black and workmanlike.

This pope has also fashioned a symbolic language of shaming, and the candor in his statements and sermons aim to remind the clerical establishment — accustomed to lordly status — of the church’s core commitment to the poor. He has yet to make major personnel changes in a Roman Curia whose scandals riveted media coverage at the conclave, yet his rhetoric is that of a world leader endorsing purgative change.

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Andrew Greeley-1928-2013

UNITED STATES
Kelly Clark – O’Donnell, Clark and Crew, LLP

I learned yesterday of the passing of Rev. Andrew Greeley, 85, a Chicago priest, sociologist, newspaper columnist, and novelist. Greeley was one of the first American priests to speak out publicly against the sexual abuse of minors in the Catholic Church. While I didn’t always agree with him, his insights and advocacy for abuse survivors and the marginalized will be an important part of his legacy.

As a priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago, Greeley often tangled with his bosses at the Chancery, particularly Cardinal John Cody. His writings concerning the sexual abuse of minors remain prescient and the institutional Church was slow to heed the warnings contained in Greeley’s commentary. Father Greeley was not afraid of the hierarchy or the court of popular opinion. He was one of the earliest supporters of the survivor advocacy group Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

His novels remain widely read and his newspaper columns for the Chicago Sun-Times reflect a liberal political bent reflective of his upbringing in Chicago and the times in which he lived and ministered as a priest.

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Father Greeley’s secret

CHICAGO (IL)
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler May 31, 2013

Matt Abbott reminds readers on the Renew America site that in his book Furthermore! Memories of a Parish Priest–published in 1999, well before the sex-abuse scandal reached its peak—the late Father Andrew Greeley made a sensational charge. Some priests in the Chicago area were involved in a “ring of predators,” Father Greeley charged. And not only that:

They are a dangerous group. There is reason to believe that they are responsible for at least one murder and may perhaps have been involved in the murder of the murderer.

The irrepressible Father Greeley said that he personally was not afraid of this nefarious crowd. Why?

They know that I have in safekeeping information which would implicate them. I am more of a threat to them dead than alive.

Now Father Greeley is dead. Is he a threat to that cabal? Will the information that he claimed to have withheld come to light after his death? Or was he exaggerating things: either the extent of a conspiracy among child-molesters, or the importance of his own evidence against them, or both?

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Sacramento’s Nonprofit Shakedown

CALIFORNIA
The Wall Street Journal

REVIEW & OUTLOOK
May 30, 2013

Democrats and the tort bar target the Catholic Church.

Democrats have a supermajority in the California legislature, and one fear is that they’ll use it to punish their political enemies. Consider the bill moving fast in the legislature to suspend California’s statute of limitations on child sex abuse torts and expose nonprofits to unlimited litigation.

The main targets are two liberal betes noires:the Boy Scouts and the Catholic Church, which is still paying off debts from claims filed in 2003 when the legislature suspended the statute of limitations for a year. Nearly 1,000 claims were subsequently filed against the Church, which resulted in damage awards of $1.2 billion. Attorneys in many cases skimmed off more than half in fees.

The claims gusher has since dried up, so lawyers want the legislature to open it again next year. This is necessary, attorneys say, because some adult victims need decades to make a “causal connection” between their childhood abuse and psychological afflictions.

Helping the plaintiffs make these connections will be lawyers like Irwin Zalkin, who thanks to a 2007 settlement with the Archdiocese of Los Angeles have got their hands on 30,000 pages of unredacted files that concern efforts to conceal clergy abuses. Mr. Zalkin is lobbying the legislature to scrap the statute of limitations.

Under current law, plaintiffs can file claims against individuals or non-government employers until they’re 26 years old, or alternatively, three years from whenever they discover or “reasonably should have discovered” that their psychological problems were caused by childhood sex abuse.

Democrats now want to give adults who exceed this statute of limitations another chance to file claims next year. All those claims thrown out after the 2003 window because they were stale would also be fair game. This sets up a minefield for nonprofits that aren’t insured against such claims.

Mr. Zalkin told the legislature that nonprofits needn’t worry because most insurers covered claims during the one-year suspension in 2003. However, those claims spiked nonprofit liabilities, so many now self-insure. A couple of stale claims now could bankrupt small, self-insured nonprofits and inflate premiums for commercially insured institutions.

That is why the proposal would exempt government entities including city recreational leagues, public schools and state universities. In other words, private USC or Stanford could be sued if a Jerry Sandusky molested kids in their locker-rooms, but UC-Berkeley and UCLA couldn’t be held liable.

Another kicker: The one-year suspension wouldn’t apply to claims against the actual perpetrators of abuse. So a teacher who committed a heinous abuse 15 years ago couldn’t be sued. But if the abuse occurred at a Catholic school, the Church could be hit up. Public unions wanted immunity for their members, and attorneys figured this was a small concession.

Statutes of limitations exist to protect defendants from miscarriages of justice since witnesses and evidence can disappear with time. Plaintiffs attorneys who claim to be seeking justice for victims are merely seeking to line their own pockets by exploiting public sympathies for victims of horrific abuses. The ultimate victims of this legal shakedown will be nonprofits in California and the people they serve.

The bill squeaked through the Senate this week. Governor Jerry Brown says he’s going to exert some adult supervision on his party, and this would be a good issue to start.

A version of this article appeared May 31, 2013, on page A12 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Sacramento’s Nonprofit Shakedown.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Edward Thomas Burke, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: A California Province Jesuit ordained in 1956, Burke taught high school in Phoenix AZ, Los Angeles CA and San Jose CA until his placement at the Sacred Heart Jesuit Center in Los Gatos CA in 1978. In 2000 Burke admitted to a superior that he had engaged in “sexual misconduct” with a mentally disabled adult male who worked as a dishwasher at the Jesuit Center. The Jesuits had been notified of sexual misconduct at the Center in 1995, but did nothing. Police launched an investigation in 1997 when a local shopkeeper, who had befriended this Burke victim and another mentally disabled adult male Sacred Heart worker, reported that the two men told her they had been abused there by priests. The men were too afraid to speak, so the investigation was closed. Due to the persistence of the shopkeeper, the investigation was re-opened in 2000, and the two men disclosed the abuse. The sexual abuse by Burke occurred over at least a five year period, and included sodomy. In 2002 Burke pleaded guilty to committing a lewd act on a dependent adult, and was sentenced to two years in state prison. He died at the Sacred Heart Jesuit Center February 27, 2009.

Ordained: 1956
Died: Feb. 27, 2009

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Order suspends priest accused of sexually assaulting minors(Update)

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

UPDATE Santiago.- The Office of the Archbishop of Santiago on Friday announced the suspension of the priest Gil Wojciech (Alberto), accused of sexually abusing of minors.

It said they received a missive notifying the suspension of the priest native of Poland, from the Superior de la Delegation of the Caribbean, of the order of priests the Miguelitas.

FIEL. The Santiago Province Office of the Prosecutor has launched an investigation into the sexual assault allegations against Polish Catholic priest Gil Wojciech (Alberto) , 36, of three minors residents of Juncalito, Janico township (north-central).

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Services Set For Chicago Priest, Novelist Greeley

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

By Mary Ann Ahern | Friday, May 31, 2013

Funeral arrangements have been scheduled for Rev. Andrew Greeley who passed away this week at age 85.

Greeley’s wake begins at noon through 7 p.m. Wednesday at Christ the King Parish, his first parish at 9235 S. Hamilton Ave., in Chicago followed by a 7 p.m. mass.

The prolific priest, sociologist and long-time NBC analyst who wrote best-selling novels and a weekly newspaper column was remembered as a genuine Chicagoan and a dedicated servant of the church with a prophetic voice.

“Our hearts are heavy with grief,” his family said in a statement, “but we find hope in the promise of Heaven that our uncle spent his life proclaiming to us, his friends, his parishioners and his many fans. He resides now with the Lord of the Dance, and that dance will go on.”

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MORTAL SINS and Michael D’Antonio west coast dates are SET!

CALIFORNIA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on May 31, 2013

MARK YOUR CALENDARS
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael D’Antonio is coming to the west coast to talk about his new blockbuster MORTAL SINS.

D’Antonio and a panel of experts—including local-area advocates and survivors—will present a gripping discussion on the clergy sex abuse crisis in the United States.
Publishers Weekly calls MORTAL SINS “The definitive history of the Catholic Church’s ‘most severe crisis since the Reformation’” and Booklist hails the book as a ”gripping and affecting to the last word.” This is a MUST SEE event.
All dates are free and open to the public.

SAN DIEGO, CA
Wednesday, June 26, 2013 at 7 pm
Alliant University, Green Hall
Co-sponsored by IVAT, the Institute on Violence Abuse and Trauma
Panelists will include church expert A.W. Richard Sipe, attorney Irwin Zalkin, former priest/now advocate Patrick Wall, and others.

FULLERTON, CA
June 27, 2013 at 7 pm
Fullerton Public Library – Presented as a part of Gustavo’s Awesome Lecture Series
Panelists will include attorney Jeffrey Anderson, Patrick Wall, and Joelle Casteix

SAN FRANCISCO, CA
Saturday, June 29 at 2:30 pm
Mission Cultural Center Theater
Panelists will include Bay Area survivor Tim Lennon, attorney Jeff Anderson, and Patrick Wall

SEATTLE, WA
Sunday, June 30 at 7:30 pm
Town Hall Seattle
Panelists will include Seattle-area survivor Mary Dispenza, attorney Jeff Anderson, and Patrick Wall.

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Fiscalía profundiza investigaciones sobre sacerdote vinculado a violaciones sexuales

REPUBLICA DOMINICANA
Diario Digital

SANTIAGO.-La Fiscalía de este Distrito Judicial investiga la denuncia de agresión sexual de un sacerdote católico polaco contra tres adolescentes residentes en la comunidad de Juncalito en el municipio de Jánico.

Una fuente del Ministerio Público informó esta mañana que las investigaciones contra el cura Alberto Gil Nojache, de 36 años la realizan fiscales adjuntos de la Unidad de Violencia de Genero.

Mientras tanto, residentes en ese paraje, perteneciente al municipio serrano de Jánico, negaron esta mañana que planifiquen atacar el templo religioso de allí, aunque dijeron que no aceptarán que el sacerdote oficie misas allí, hasta tanto el asunto sea aclarado

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Mountain town says catholic priest sexually assaulted minors

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santiago.- The Santiago Province Office of the Prosecutor has launched an investigation into the sexual assault allegations against Polish Catholic priest Alberto Gil Nojache, 36, by three minors residents of Juncalito, Janico township (north-central).

A Justice Ministry source quoted by elnacional.com.do Friday morning said the Domestic Violence Unit investigates the allegation against the priest ??.

Meanwhile, residents of the village in the Central Mountains affirmed they’ll not accept another priest in their town until the case is clarified.

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The dirty linen from the Magdalene Laundries must be aired

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

30 MAY 2013

As recently as the 1980s, new-born babies were being forcibly taken from their mothers and given up for adoption by nuns in Northern Ireland’s Magdalene Laundries. That’s the allegation I have now heard from a number of women, who were forced into the laundries in Belfast and Newry after they became pregnant.

If true, it is just the most heartbreaking of a whole range of human rights violations alleged by the forgotten women of Northern Ireland’s Magdalene laundries.

The publicity surrounding the publication of Martin McAleese’s report into Magdalene Laundries in the Republic has prompted a number of women who were in similar institutions in Northern Ireland to approach Amnesty International.

Like their counterparts in the Republic, they appear to have suffered a range of serious human rights abuses including inhuman and degrading treatment, arbitrary deprivation of liberty and forced labour.

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Safety the priority with pedophile release: church

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

STUART RINTOUL From: The Australian June 01, 2013

MELBOURNE Archbishop Denis Hart says “community safety” should be given priority in any decision to parole one of Australia’s worst pedophiles, former priest Gerald Ridsdsale, who could be freed from jail within a month.

Asked what the church’s position was on Ridsdale’s release and what support the church would give him if he he was parolled, Archbishop Hart said: “I think the community will look very carefully at what he’s done, what is best all over, because I think safety in the community has to be a priority.”

Archbishop Hart did not go so far as to say he opposed Ridsdale’s release, saying: “I’d leave that to the authorities, I think.”

Ballarat Bishop Paul Bird said that as a defrocked priest of the Ballarat diocese, the diocese had no obligation to provide Ridsdale with any support and had no intention of doing so.

“When we first heard the possibility of his release that question came up and that is clearly our policy,” Bishop Bird told The Weekend Australian.

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Minimising crimes: how the church is playing with words

AUSTRALIA
The Age

June 1, 2013

Chris Goddard

There are 80 lights in the five chandeliers in the Committee Room of the Parliament of Victoria. The windows, ornate mirrors and high ceiling give a sense of light and space. The darkness created by the rape of children, however, is inescapable.

This is where the Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Organisations has been sitting. The committee and its members have grown in stature. They have attempted to illuminate the shadowy world of criminal priests and their accomplices, and to give hope to surviving victims.

It was in this room that Cardinal George Pell spent all last Monday afternoon, for the first time subject to the glare of accountability. Pell was greeted by the committee chairwoman, Georgie Crozier: ”I welcome your eminence.” A survivor muttered: ”I have waited 30 years for this.” Pell introduced his support team, the business manager, lawyer, secretary and media adviser: ”All of them married people with children”, he adds, as if this was central to their job descriptions.

Crozier stressed at the very start that ”the evidence is quite clear, the criminal sexual abuse of children occurred under the watch of the Catholic Church and it was covered up … these facts are not in dispute”.

The battle over words such as ”power” and their meanings, over actions and inaction and their consequences, started immediately. Pell acknowledged that he is one of the better known public faces of the Catholic Church in Australia, but stressed that he had ”very, very limited” powers. Pell attempted to underline the limitations of his authority: ”I am not the Catholic Prime Minister of Australia”, he insisted, although no one had suggested he was. The cardinal explained that, in spite of all his titles, the Catholic Church is ”an interesting example of a flat organisation”. The chairwoman disagreed, stating that ”many witnesses” had described the church as ”a structure of convenience”.

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Time for ‘Catholic spring’ and Vatican III: bishop

AUSTRALIA
The Age

June 1

[Bishop Robinson’s petition site]

Barney Zwartz

The bishop who designed Australia’s Catholic clergy sex abuse response wants a ”Catholic spring”, a people-power movement to force the Vatican to tackle the abuse crisis at its source.

Retired Sydney bishop Geoffrey Robinson has launched a petition for ordinary Catholics to seek another global church council like the 1960s reforming Vatican II council. But at ”Vatican III”, he says, there must be as many lay people as bishops to make sure the hard questions get asked.

He believes that only a ”Catholic spring” like the revolutions that ended the Marcos regime in the Philippines, totalitarian governments in the Arab world and communism in eastern Europe will move the Vatican to make the changes that are needed.

Bishop Robinson, 75, was the architect of the Towards Healing protocol introduced in every diocese except Melbourne in 1996. Abused as a child, he headed the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference professional standards committee for a decade until he retired in 2004 because he was so disillusioned.

On Tuesday, his new book For Christ’s Sake: End Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church … for Good, will be launched in an inner-Sydney church. The petition, at www.change.org/forchristssake, was opened in Australia a fortnight ago without any publicity, and already has more than 10,000 signatures. Backed by two other progressive Australian bishops, the recently retired Pat Power of Canberra and Bill Morris of Toowoomba, it will be launched in Europe and the US soon.

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Our View: Abuse victims have chance to seek justice

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Posted: Friday, May 31, 2013

In a resounding display of bipartisanship, the Minnesota Legislature has allowed childhood sexual abuse victims a chance to seek justice that was once denied.

The Child Victims Act, which passed the Senate unanimously and the House by an overwhelming 123-3 vote, lifts the civil statute of limitations that prevented anyone 24 or older from filing a lawsuit over sexual abuse that occurred while they were children.

That gave childhood sexual abuse victims just a six-year window to file a civil lawsuit after becoming an adult. The six-year limit is the same time frame that applies to fraud and product liability lawsuits. We strongly believe that childhood victims — who take years, often decades, to come to terms with the sexual abuse they suffered — deserve more consideration than that.

Most Minnesotans agree. A survey by the National Center for Victims for Crime found that 63 percent of Minnesota residents believe child sex-abuse victims should, at any time, be able to sue their abuser or the organization that employed them.

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Priest to face child indecency charges

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

June 1, 2013

Michael Inman, Peter Jean and Christopher Knaus

A Canberra Catholic priest has been charged over historical acts of indecency on a child in the 1990s.

Father Edward Evans, 83, of Braddon, will face the ACT Magistrates Court next week to answer allegations he groped the girl, aged between 10 and 16 years, three times.

The elderly priest has pledged to fight the charges.

The three offences allegedly occurred between 1995 and 1997 at Father’s Evans’ Braddon home, according to police.

Father Evans has a long association with Canberra’s German Catholic community. He has worked as a German-language chaplain for the German community in Canberra, and represents the country’s Catholic mission.

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Vatican Bank President Ernst von Freyberg’s Priority Is Clean Up Reputation Of Institute for Religious Works

VATICAN CITY
Huffington Post

AP

VATICAN CITY — The head of the Vatican bank says his main priority is to clean up the bank’s reputation, saying the institution hasn’t served the pope well enough but still provides valuable services to the Holy See and its clients.

Ernst von Freyberg was named president of the Institute for Religious Works in February, replacing Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, who was ousted by the bank’s board last May.

His appointment was part of efforts to shed the bank’s image as a secretive tax haven linked to scandals.

In an interview Friday with Vatican Radio, Von Freyberg said he had hired a leading anti-money laundering consultancy and a New York law firm to ensure that the bank complied with anti-money laundering and anti-terror financing standards. He also hired some public relations experts.

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Zero tolerance for suspect accounts; Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
RTE News

The Vatican bank is checking the account of every client including Holy See employees.

It’s new President said it’s part of a campaign to root out any money laundering.

Ernst von Freyberg’s predecessor was dismissed for poor management, and the Vatican’s financial watchdog said last week it was investigating six possible attempts to use the Holy See to launder money in 2012.

In an interview published in Corriere della Sera, Freyberg said the Institute for Works and Religion – the bank’s formal name – was reviewing each of 18,900 clients to verify their right to an account and bare any suspicious aspects.

The IOR was combing through about 1,000 accounts a month, he said, to pinpoint owners and who has signature authority.

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New Vatican bank head vows zero tolerance with suspect accounts

VATICAN CITY
euronews

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – The Vatican bank is checking the account of every client including Holy See employees, its new chief said, in a campaign to root out any money-laundering at an institution prone to scandals for decades.

Ernst von Freyberg’s predecessor was dismissed for poor management, and the Vatican’s financial watchdog said last week it was investigating six possible attempts to use the Holy See to launder money in 2012.

In an interview published in Corriere della Sera on Friday, Freyberg said the Institute for Works and Religion – the bank’s formal name – was reviewing each of 18,900 clients to verify their right to an account and bare any suspicious aspects.

The IOR was combing through about 1,000 accounts a month, he said, to pinpoint owners and who has signature authority.

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JOANNE MCCARTHY: Rumble on the fault line

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

May 31, 2013

IN evidence at the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse on Monday this week, Cardinal George Pell talked about “gossips” and how he wasn’t one.

If he had been, and if other Catholic Church leaders had been “gossips”, maybe they “would have realised earlier just how widespread this awful business was”, he said, referring to the Church’s child sex abuse crisis.

He seemed to be saying that if only the cardinal and a few brother bishops had had a nice old chin-wag in the tearoom after formal proceedings at, say, the twice-yearly Australian Bishops Conferences, the Catholic Church might have acted much sooner to arrest a national tragedy.

If only they’d traded the latest rumours about priests A, B and C and their tendency to invite young children to their private quarters with the doors shut at odd times, maybe the penny might have dropped, Pell seemed to be saying.

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The media’s double-standard in coverage of clergy sex abuse: Opinion

UNITED STATES
NJ.com

By NJ Voices Guest Blogger/For NJ.com
on May 31, 2013

By Bill Donohue

The anger that practicing Catholics feel when they hear stories about priestly sexual abuse is palpable. The anger is directed at the offending priests and his enabling bishop. Fortunately, this a problem that is practically nonexistent in the Catholic church today. The numbers don’t lie.

The timeline for the lion’s share of abuse cases is not in doubt: the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s. This was when the sexual revolution hit our culture like a tidal wave, engulfing even Catholic seminaries; it ended soon after the discovery of AIDS in 1981.

Here’s the good news: According to the Annual Reports on the Implementation of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, prepared by CARA, a Georgetown University research institute, over the past 10 years, the average number of credible accusations made annually against approximately 40,000 priests has been in the single digits. In the 2012 Annual Report, there was a total of six. Too bad there was a media blackout of this story.

There is no organization in the nation today that has less of a problem with sexual abuse of minors than the Catholic church. But one would never know that by listening to late-night talk show hosts, and the likes of Bill Maher. They would have the audience believe that nothing has changed. To top things off, the media often fail to adequately report on this problem in the non-Catholic population.

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Archbishop Denis Hart calls for law to report sexual misconduct by priests

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

DAVID HURLEY HERALD SUN MAY 31, 2013

MELBOURNE Archbishop Denis Hart has called for a new law to require all Catholic dioceses in Victoria to report to authorities allegations of sexual misconduct by priests.

Archbishop Hart said Victoria should consider adopting the system used in NSW.

Speaking at a gathering of religious leaders in Melbourne, the Archbishop also pledged to ensure no new cases of child sex abuse would emerge from the Catholic Church under his leadership.

Discussing a change to the law, Archbishop Hart said it would give the community “effective oversight” of the church’s processes.

He said: “The NSW Ombudsman Act imposes reporting requirements on organisations that work with children in that state.

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Vatican attention for a Scottish church in trouble

SCOTLAND
BBC News

By Robert Pigott
Religious affairs correspondent, BBC News

At first glance the retirement after more than three decades of service of Joseph Devine as the Roman Catholic Bishop of Motherwell is a routine event.

Bishop Devine tendered his resignation last year, in line with Church convention, at the age of 75.

But his replacement by an administrator, appointed by the Vatican, rather than a permanent replacement is the latest sign that all is not well in the Scottish Catholic Church.

Bishop Devine has stayed in post, despite ill health, for 10 months beyond his 75th birthday, and might have expected to hand over to a younger successor with the calibre to lead a diocese in challenging times.

Instead a fourth vacancy has been created in a church with only eight dioceses.

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Sex abuse victim branded a ‘fantasist’ by Catholic bishop Joseph Devine says he’s delighted cleric has retired

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

By Chris Clements

31 May 2013

A MAN who says he was molested by priests yesterday welcomed news that a ­Catholic bishop who called him a fantasist has retired.

Pat McEwan, 63, was branded an alcoholic and accused of “living in a fantasy world” by Bishop Joseph Devine after he came forward with ­allegations that he was raped as a boy between 1958 and 1961.

Pat said he was elated that the senior churchman had quit.

He added: “I’m delighted that he is gone. But his claim that I’m a fantasist is still there.

“He lacks compassion and is a very arrogant man. I do think his leaving now has a lot to do with my case.”

The bishop tendered his resignation last August when he turned 75 but he was asked to remain as the church looked for his replacement.

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Church won’t help Vic priest up for parole

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

A Victorian bishop say the Catholic Church will give no support to an ex-priest jailed for child sex abuse, Gerald Ridsdale, if he is released on parole.

The Catholic Church will give no support to a former priest jailed over child sex abuse if he is released next month, a Victorian bishop says.

Former Victorian Catholic priest Gerald Ridsdale is eligible for parole from late next month after serving a long prison sentence for abusing 30 boys between 1961 and 1987.

Ballarat Bishop Paul Bird said the church was under no obligation to provide support and would not be providing support to Ridsdale, as he was laicised in 1993.

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‘Priests should urge abusers to confess’

UNITED KINGDOM
Lancashire Evening Post

The diocese of Lancaster has spoken out after it was reported a retired schoolteacher made two confessions to priests that he had sexually abused children – years before being brought to justice.

John Davis, 75, of Fensway, Hutton, was sentenced to six years in prison at Preston Crown Court after pleading guilty to nine counts of indecent assault on several young girls.

After the case one of his victims said: ““I think it is absolutely disgusting that somehow he feels he can speak to a priest and that makes it all right.”

Adding: “I will have to live with this till the day I die. To me it is typical of the Catholic church and I feel utterly let down.”

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National Review Board chair disputes John Jay report, links homosexuality to clerical abuse

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

The chairman of the National Review Board, a lay body that advises the US bishops in combating clerical sexual abuse, has disputed a 2011 John Jay College of Criminal Justice study that found no link between homosexuality and clerical abuse.

A journalist said to Al Notzon III, who is ending his term as chairman in June:

While the majority of clergy sex-abuse victims are post-pubescent boys, the researchers who completed the second John Jay Report concluded that same-sex attraction was not a significant factor in the crisis.

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The secret that died with Andrew Greeley; Homosexuality and clergy abuse

UNITED STATES
Renew America

By Matt C. Abbott

Father Andrew Greeley has died at the age of 85.

I’ve mentioned him a number of times in this column over the last several years. I was no fan of his, to say the least. He even sent me a cryptic email a while back.

Out of Christian charity, we should pray for his soul. But I do want to remind readers of the following excerpts in Father Greeley’s non-fiction book Furthermore! Memories of a Parish Priest – something he never (to my knowledge) revealed while living:

[Next comes a passage from the book discussing a “ring of predators” among clergy in Chicago.]

From Catholic World News (May 29):
The chairman of the National Review Board, a lay body that advises the U.S. bishops in combating clerical sexual abuse, has disputed a 2011 John Jay College of Criminal Justice study that found no link between homosexuality and clerical abuse.

A journalist said to Al Notzon III, who is ending his term as chairman in June: ‘While the majority of clergy sex-abuse victims are post-pubescent boys, the researchers who completed the second John Jay Report concluded that same-sex attraction was not a significant factor in the crisis.’

Notzon replied: ‘The majority of victims are still post-pubescent males … When you hire an independent researcher [group], they reach their own conclusions. I don’t agree with their conclusion in this instance – when 83% of cases are male on male.’

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From the Editor’s desk

AUSTRALIA
Bay Post

The Royal Commission into child sex abuse hasn’t even begun but it is already obvious how much the political and social landscape has shifted, and how exposed some institutions may be as a result.

This week’s appearance at the Victorian child sex abuse inquiry by Catholic Cardinal George Pell was especially revealing.

Gone was the bluster and confidence of the past, and in its place was a subdued church leader who appeared uncharacteristically uncertain.

True, his critics wasted no time writing off his apologies and contrition as “a cynical exercise in damage control”, but that overlooks the extraordinary reality that the church has, at last, been put on the spot by a more powerful secular authority and forced to face some hard facts.

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Yoga at the SNAP Conference

UNITED STATES
Stop Baptist Predators

Christa Brown

I’ll be facilitating a yoga session at the annual SNAP Conference in Washington D.C. this summer. If you can, please come join me!

Who: Survivors of clergy sex abuse
What: SNAP conference 2013
When: July 26-28, 2013
Where: Washington D.C.

SNAP, the Survivors’ Network of those Abused by Priests, is the largest international support group for women and men who were sexually abused by religious authority figures – i.e., by priests, preachers, ministers, deacons, nuns and others. It is a nonprofit organization that is independent of any religious group and that carries no connections to any church or denominational entity.

The conference takes place from Friday July 26 to Sunday July 28, and the yoga session will be one of the breakout events at the conference. It will be a come-as-you-are chair yoga session that anyone can participate in even if they’ve never done yoga before. No mat needed. So come one, come all!

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Cardinal George Pell told that Hell awaits him

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

PATRICK CARLYON HERALD SUN MAY 27, 2013

CARDINAL George Pell was told that Hell awaits him after he finished four hours of evidence to the parliamentary inquiry into child abuse yesterday.

He didn’t seem fazed: he has, after all, had almost two decades to perfect his explanation for what he describes as the Catholic Church’s “imperfect” response to paedophile priests.

Cardinal Pell played chess as a kid. Through the afternoon he struck the pose of a master pondering his next move – elbows on the arms of his chair, fingers steepled in front of him.

Yet his opening play was the obvious one, a thoroughly modern tact adopted by corporations keen to be seen to accepting responsibility for perceived wrongdoings.

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Former Catholic school principal Frank Klep on new rape charges

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

SHANNON DEERY From: Herald Sun May 31, 2013

FORMER Salesian College Rupertswood principal Frank Klep has been charged with raping students after alleged victims came forward.

Police have charged the former principal with 20 new offences.

The 69-year-old former priest is now facing 31 charges of sexual abuse of boys between 1974 and 1984.

He appeared at the Melbourne Magistrates Court for a brief administrative hearing this morning.

The new charges include two counts of rape of a child under the age of 14 and a child under the age of 16.

The Salesians have previously denied allegations they moved Klep to Samoa after investigations into sex assault allegations began.

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New abuse charges for former priest

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

May 31, 2013

Fresh charges have been laid against a former Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing boys after new complainants came forward, a Melbourne court has heard.

Former Rupertswood College principal, Frank Gerard Klep, 69, of Burwood, appeared for a committal mention on Friday facing 31 charges of sexual abuse against 11 victims.

Klep’s lawyer Tony Hargreaves told Melbourne Magistrates Court he would need more time to prepare his client’s case after the new charges emerged.

“There’s a raft of new complainants and serious charges,” Mr Hargreaves said.

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Interview with IOR President, Ernst von Freyberg

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The Vatican’s Institute for Religious Works, known by the acronym of its Italian title IOR, is not a bank. It neither lends money nor makes direct investments and all of its clients are named.

The mission of its newly appointed president, Ernst von Freyberg, is to restore its reputation as a transparent financial institution in line with international norms at the service of the Holy Father and its 19 thousand customers worldwide, most of whom are nuns and clergy. He believes communication is a key part of this mission and members of the Church and the society at large must be informed of the IOR’s activities.

In an interview with Vatican Radio’s Fr. Bernd Hagenkord S.J., von Freyberg dispels some myths about the IOR and reveals the challenges facing the institute, which has attracted keen media attention in recent years. And he confesses to having a ‘dream’: “My dream is a very clear one. My dream is that our reputation is such that people don’t think of us any more, when they think about the Vatican, but that they listen to what the Pope says.”

My first question: Do you like your job, coming from Frankfurt down to Rome, working inside the Vatican?

“It is a great privilege to work here; it is the most inspiring environment you can imagine: working at the Vatican. And it is a great challenge to serve the pope in re-establishing the reputation of this institute.”

What did you imagine your work to be, prior to starting here?

“Different from what it is. When I came here I thought I would need to focus on what is normally described as cleaning out and dealing with improper deposits. There is – until now – nothing I can detect. That doesn’t mean that there isn’t anything, but it means that it is not our biggest issue.
Our biggest issue is our reputation. Our work – my work – is much more communication than originally thought. And it is much more communication inside the Church. We haven’t done enough of that in the past. It starts a home, with our own employees, with those who work for the Church in Rome, with those in the Church around the world. To them we owe first of all transparency and a good explication of what we do and how we try to serve.”

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God’s new banker brings Teutonic thoroughness to Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Financial Times

By Guy Dinmore and Rachel Sanderson in Vatican City

On his last full day of a troubled papacy, Benedict XVI bade farewell to his household staff lining up in the Vatican, greeting cleaners, drivers and gardeners, before stopping to exchange just a few words with a newly arrived fellow German.

“I got a rosary. He wished me strength,” recalls Ernst von Freyberg, who two weeks earlier had been named head of the Vatican bank in the Pope’s last major appointment before his historic abdication in February.

Mr von Freyberg will need plenty of prayer and strength as he sets out to rescue the scandal-torn reputation of the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), as the bank is formally known, and help bring the Holy See in line with international financial norms, particularly in combating money laundering.
But what comes across in a lengthy interview in his office, adjacent to the medieval bastion housing the bank, is a Teutonic thoroughness that the lawyer and financier has applied in 25 years of managing in Germany’s Mittelstand, its backbone of small and medium enterprises.

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Vatican Bank Looks to Shed Its Image as an Offshore Haven

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By RACHEL DONADIO
Published: May 30, 2013

VATICAN CITY — From the cheerful ease with which the newly minted president of the Vatican Bank fielded questions on a recent morning, it could be easy to forget how the bank has long been a mystery wrapped in an enigma, tangled up in some of the most opaque scandals in Italy.

“Our mission is to serve and shine,” the bank’s president, Ernst von Freyberg, said with a smile. “Our first pillar is transparency.” He spoke from an office in the medieval tower that houses the bank inside the Vatican, beneath a painting depicting the Gospel lesson, “Render unto Caesar, what is Caesar’s, and to God, what is God’s.”

Appointed in February by Pope Benedict XVI in one of his last acts before retiring, Mr. von Freyberg, 54, a German aristocrat, industrialist and Roman Catholic with a friendly manner and a subtle sense of self-irony, will have a lot of shining to do.

After the ouster of the previous president of the Vatican Bank, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, in a boardroom coup last year, Mr. von Freyberg was brought in with the help of an outside headhunting firm — revolutionary by the standards of the insular Vatican — and is the bank’s first non-Italian president since its founding in 1942.

In recent years, the Vatican Bank has been under increasing pressure from European officials and the Bank of Italy to shed its reputation as an offshore haven and bring its practices in line with European norms to curb money-laundering and terrorist-financing as a condition for using the euro. Until it is deemed fully compliant, the Vatican will face higher costs and difficulties in finding banks to do business with it.

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Abuse raids illegal

BELGIUM
The Tablet (UK)

30 May 2013

The country’s highest appeals court ruled on Tuesday that evidence seized in police searches of church offices, its sexual abuse commission and the flat of Cardinal Godfried Danneels in June 2010 could not be used to prosecute the Church for covering up the abuse scandal.

The Cour de Cassation ruling came after lower courts had issued contradictory rulings on the legality of the searches, which included a bizarre visit to the crypt of Mechelen cathedral to search the tomb of a deceased cardinal for documents wrongly said to be hidden there.

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Hart pledges to stamp out clergy abuse

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

AAP

MELBOURNE Archbishop Denis Hart has pledged to ensure no new cases of child sex abuse emerge from the Catholic Church.

He says this commitment is shared by all bishops and religious leaders.

“I take responsibility for ensuring there is no re-emergence of child sexual abuse in the church,” Archbishop Hart said on Friday.

“I speak on behalf of my fellow bishops and religious institute leaders when I say that we all share this commitment.”

Speaking at a gathering of religious leaders in Melbourne, Archbishop Hart reiterated his apology to victims of clergy abuse and his faith in the church’s processes for dealing with abuse in the archdiocese, the Melbourne Response.

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Archbishop blames cultural changes for number of sex offenders within church

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart, says the cultural changes of the 1960s and 1970s were a major factor in the large number of child sex offenders within the church.

The Archbishop was speaking at a special diocesan leadership luncheon today as a follow-up to the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into institutionalised child abuse.

Citing research conducted in the United States, Archbishop Hart said a number of organisational, psychological and situational factors led to a high rate of offending amongst priests ordained prior to the 1970’s.

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Pastor G posts bond, released from Texas jail

TEXAS/VIRGINIA
NBC 12

By Rachel DePompa

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) –
Geronimo “Pastor G” Aguilar of the Richmond Outreach Center is out of a Texas jail after posting $200,000 bond, according to Tarrant County District Attorney’s office.

A bond hearing set for Friday at his attorney’s request has been canceled. Prosecutors have six months, under Texas law, to present the case to a Grand Jury.

Prosecutors in Texas charged Aguilar with seven felony counts in two child sex abuse cases dating back to 1996. Four of the counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child under 14, are first degree felonies that could carry life in prison.

Texas authorities took over custody of Aguilar from the Richmond Sheriff’s Office Friday morning. Aguilar temporarily stepped down from his positions as President of the Board and Pastor at the Richmond Outreach Center last week due to the charges.

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Paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale interviewed over new abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Samantha Donovan

One of Australia’s most notorious paedophile priests, Gerald Ridsdale, is being interviewed by detectives about more abuse allegations.

AM understands Victorian police successfully applied for permission to interview 79-year-old Ridsdale yesterday.

He is currently in jail for the abuse of dozens of children between the 1960s and the 1980s.

In 1994 he pleaded guilty to more than 40 charges of sexual abuse involving 21 children. He was convicted again 12 years later over charges involving 10 boys.

Stephen Woods was a 14-year-old schoolboy when Ridsdale raped him.

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New abuse charges for former priest

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Fresh charges have been laid against a former Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing boys after new complainants came forward, a Melbourne court has heard.

Former Rupertswood College principal, Frank Gerard Klep, 69, of Burwood, appeared for a committal mention on Friday facing 31 charges of sexual abuse against 11 victims.

Klep’s lawyer Tony Hargreaves told Melbourne Magistrates Court he would need more time to prepare his client’s case after the new charges emerged.

“There’s a raft of new complainants and serious charges,” Mr Hargreaves said.

Magistrate Gerard Lethbridge adjourned the matter to July 5 and extended Klep’s bail.

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Former Catholic priest faces new abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By court reporter Sarah Farnsworth

Police have laid new charges of child sexual abuse against former Catholic priest Frank Klep.

The former principal of the Salesian College Rupertswood faced the Melbourne Magistrates Court today on 31 charges.

The 69-year-old is accused of abusing 11 boys between 1974 and 1984.

He was initially facing six charges of indecent assault, which were laid in February.

The new charges include 29 counts of indecent assault and two counts of rape of a child under the age of 14, and a child under the age of 16.

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New Minnesota law spawns fresh lawsuits over decades-old priest sex abuse

MINNESOTA
Press TV (Iran)

A Minneapolis-St. Paul man has stepped forward to file the first lawsuit of sexual abuse by a priest since Gov. Mark Dayton (DFL) signed the Child Victims Act into law.

The 51-year-old man who has chosen to remain anonymous filed the law suit against ex-priest Thomas Adamson on Wednesday alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse in the 70s, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported.

“He was suffering in the shadows. There are going to be many more [suits] to come, as they should. Now is the time for reckoning,” said St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson who is representing the plaintiff.

In the past, the statute of limitations on sex prevented adults over 24 to sue for childhood abuse. Now that the statute is lifted by The Child Victims Act, adults can sue for any abuse during their past including the school or church.

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Hart promises no more clergy abuse

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Melbourne’s Archbishop Denis Hart has made a commitment to ensure no more cases of child sex abuse emerge from the Catholic Church.

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart has pledged to prevent any new cases of child sex abuse emerging from the Catholic Church, saying it has been “hit like a brick” by the scandal.

He said the church had had trouble coming to terms with the horror of so many priests and religious offending, but it was resolute in its commitment to addressing it.

“I take responsibility for ensuring there is no re-emergence of child sexual abuse in the church, that victims are treated fairly and compassionately, and that offenders are removed from contact with children,” Archbishop Hart said on Friday.

“I speak on behalf of my fellow bishops and religious institute leaders when I say that we all share this commitment.”

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Pell hopes worst of abuse scandal is over

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Daniel Fogarty and Genevieve Gannon, AAP
May 31, 2013

Cardinal George Pell hopes and prays that the worst of the sexual abuse scandal is behind the Catholic Church.

He says the church is making recompense for the decades of abuse and there have been very few recent cases.

Victims and advocates disagree and say recent revelations are just the tip of the iceberg.

For Stephen Woods, who endured sexual abuse at the hands of pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale, Cardinal Pell’s evidence to the Victorian parliamentary inquiry on Monday did nothing other than demonstrate that Australia’s most senior Catholic and other church hierarchy still don’t get it.

Mr Woods, like many fellow victims and advocates, believes that only new leadership and a change of attitude can bring real healing.

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May 30, 2013

Administrator takes charge of Scots diocese

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Martin Williams
Senior News Reporter

Bishop of Motherwell Joe Devine submitted his resignation having turned 75 last year, but had continued in his role until replacements were found.

It has been claimed appointments were held up in the wake of the scandal involving Cardinal Keith O’Brien.

It is understood Bishop Devine’s departure means that of the eight dioceses in Scotland, only three have full-time bishops in post who are not waiting to leave – in Glasgow, Oban and Aberdeen. …

Last month Bishop Devine backed down from moves to sanction a serving priest over claims the Church had covered up a culture of sexual bullying.

He issued a notice stating no action would be taken against Father Matthew Despard, who alleged sexual misconduct had been rife for decades in seminaries training teenage priests.

Father Despard, parish priest of St John Ogilvie’s in High Blantyre, South Lanarkshire, had written a book on the allegations.

The book names serving priests and claims senior figures in the Church refused to confront abuse and bullying complaints.

Last month, Bishop Devine’s office was hit by allegations questioning how he handled abuse cases.

Alan Draper, a former child protection consultant for the Scottish Catholic Church, claimed he had stopped working for Bishop Devine because his advice was consistently ignored.

In March, after revelations Mr Draper knew of 20 abuse cases where no action was taken, the Church issued a statement dismissing his remarks.

It said the number of cases reported in Scotland each year was “small” and “have only very rarely involved a member of the clergy”.

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