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 27, 2016

Pennsylvania Senate chair steps aside on child sex abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED | Monday, June 27, 2016, 2:54 p.m.
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HARRISBURG – The Senate Judiciary Committee at a meeting Monday did not consider a bill to extend the statute of limitations on filing child sexual abuse charges, and it didn’t set an alternative date.

The committee chairman, meanwhile, stepped aside to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest.

Advocates said they hope a vote will happen soon.

A Senate staffer close to the negotiations said it was too important to be brought up at an unscheduled “off the floor” meeting as originally thought.

If it receives a vote, the bill is expected to kill a provision allowing retroactive civil suits to be filed until the potential victim turns 50.

The House-passed bill would extend the age for filing civil suits from 30 to 50 and prevent organizations from claiming immunity if they act with gross negligence.

The House passed the bill following a statewide grand jury report in March that found widespread abuse by priests over several decades in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

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

Former Sen. Klitzkie proposes broadening of Bill 326

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Louella Losinio | Post News Staff

Former Sen. Robert Klitzkie, offering testimony in support of Bill 326-33 yesterday, said during a public hearing at the Guam Legislature that “broadening the measure is a good start toward providing justice to those who have been sexually abused by clergy and preventing such abuse in the future.”

The measure, authored by Sen. Frank Blas Jr., would amend current law relative to the statute of limitations in cases involving child sex abuse.

Klitzkie said he is a lawyer but was not representing anyone yesterday.

He said justice requires broadening the reach of the legislation to provide relief to those who have suffered at the hands of child sexual abusers and to include not only the abusers but also their enablers, aiders or abettors, those who are acting in concert with them and their religious institution or corporations.

“The Cs are referenced here – condonation, cover-up and conspiracy,” he said. “Recent history tells us that the three Cs are all too prevalent in the worldwide Catholic Church. The institutional hierarchy of the church condones, covers up and conspires to prevent victims of child sexual abuse from attaining justice,” he said.

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

Lifting of child sex abuse statutes of limitations urged

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Louella Losinio | Post News Staff

Alleged sex abuse victims of Archbishop Anthony Apuron and their supporters urged the passage of the Bill 326-33, authored by Sen. Frank Blas Jr. that would amend the law relative to the statute of limitations in cases involving child sex abuse, during a public hearing yesterday, June 27 at the Guam Legislature.

The bill strikes out a two-year statute of limitation for civil claims. “Child sexual abuse victims often need many years to overcome the pain of their abuse, and time for them to speak out about the abuse that they have suffered. Sadly, many victims of child sexual abuse are unable to proceed with civil claims against the perpetrator because those claims have been barred by the statutes of limitations,” Blas said.

Walter Denton, one of Apuron’s alleged victims, said the measure would give victims of sexual abuse within and outside the Roman Catholic Church the opportunity to be silent no more. “Now it gives them recourse to be heard,” he said.

“As it stands, the current law protects the predator from his past crimes. Once the statute of limitations kick in, it protects them from being sued and prosecuted,” he said, imploring the legislature to act on the measure immediately. “So that people like Apuron and any other person or institution who has aided him or covered up for him will be held accountable, eliminate any time limitations on the right to sue or prosecute no matter how long ago.”

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

EXCLUSIVE: Gay, black man who claimed he was attacked by Jewish security patrol gang sues city

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY GRAHAM RAYMAN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Monday, June 27, 2016

The far-too-cozy relationship between the NYPD, city officials, and Jewish safety patrols in Brooklyn led to the beating of a gay, black man in Williamsburg, an explosive new lawsuit to be filed in federal court Monday alleges.

Taj Patterson of Fort Greene, was walking down Flushing Ave. in Williamsburg in December 2013 when he was set upon by a gang of men linked to the Shomrim, a volunteer Orthodox Jewish security patrol. He was left battered, and lost eyesight in one eye.

In aftermath, as the Daily News first reported, cops with the 90th Precinct prematurely closed the case despite having four witnesses to the assault — delaying the investigation for 48 crucial hours.

In the lawsuit, obtained by the Daily News, lawyers for Patterson claim that the city and the NYPD created an atmosphere where the security patrols not only got official recognition and money, but could act with impunity.

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

Archbishop Hon ‘Deeply Moved’ but Protesters Want Apuron Defrocked

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

Protesters have changed their message from “Apuron Resign” to “Defrock Apuron.”

Guam- The number of Catholic protesters has been growing in the last few weeks. They were at it again yesterday, picketing in front of the Cathedral Basilica, but this time their message was different.

During previous protests, signs read “Apuron Resign.” But yesterday, picketers held signs that read, “Defrock Apuron.”

In the church setting, defrocking of a member of the clergy would essentially remove their title, rights and ecclesiastical status.

Mary Lou Garcia-Pereda, one of the protesters, says the message has changed because the Archdiocese of Agana has failed to take action since allegations of sexual abuse surfaced against Archbishop Apuron.

“We want him to be defrocked following the four accusations of sexual molestation and with the church’s inaction, I think it’s time that he pay the ultimate price and that he be defrocked so that he won’t hae the honor of being buried in the sanctuary of the cathedral when his time comes. We don’t want him to have any kind of semblance of respect or anything, considering what he has done to the children,” explains Garcia-Pereda.

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

Catholic bishop apologizes for ‘betrayal’ of sexual abuse

MISSOURI
Religion News Service

By Sally Morrow

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (RNS) A single chime rang out after each abuse victim’s statement was read over the speakers at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in downtown Kansas City, a solemn echo to enduring pain.

It was a simple, symbolic gesture but one that had an almost inexpressible resonance for those who had been abused, and for many Catholics in a diocese so identified with clergy abuse that its last bishop was forced to resign.

“The pain was so intense, I did not want to live,” said one person in testimony from victims that was read out during the special liturgy of penitence on Sunday (June 26).

At the “Service of Lament” other readers voiced similar messages of pain, and also accusations at the church itself:

“When I was brave enough to tell you the truth, you chose to side with my abuser.”

And:

“I had faith in my God, but you betrayed my faith.”

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.

Ken Starr’s Squalid Second Act

UNITED STATES
New York Times

Mimi Swartz JUNE 27, 2016

Houston — EDWIN EDWARDS, the colorful former governor of Louisiana, had a favorite quote often attributed to the Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu: “If you wait by the river long enough, the bodies of your enemies will float by.”

I thought of this again last week as Hillary Clinton absorbed a fresh attack on her record from Donald J. Trump. Amid that, I wondered whether she’d had a chance to savor the fall of the Clintons’ nemesis, Ken Starr, and appreciate its ironies. In a political campaign as relentlessly nasty as this one, it must be hard to steal a moment of peace, much less schadenfreude.

By the time of Bill Clinton’s presidency, the dependably Republican Mr. Starr had built a prestigious career as an attorney, appellate judge and solicitor general under President George H. W. Bush. Then, in 1994, a congressional committee made Mr. Starr a special prosecutor to investigate the Clintons’ involvement in the Whitewater real estate venture and, juicier, the death of deputy White House counsel Vince Foster, a Clinton confidant.

Mr. Starr aspired higher and wanted to go deeper. Soon, his brief had expanded to investigating the sex life of a young woman named Monica Lewinsky. Relying on covert recordings of her confessions, Mr. Starr’s report read at times like a steamy romance novel: “She unbuttoned her jacket; either she unhooked her bra or he lifted her bra up; and he touched her breasts with his hands and mouth …”

The result? Mr. Clinton survived impeachment, but soiled his legacy. Both he and his wife seemed like deceitful equivocators. Questioned in front of a grand jury about his sexual relationship with Ms. Lewinsky, Mr. Clinton tried to obfuscate: “It depends upon what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.”

For his part, Mr. Starr appeared like the Cotton Mather of his time: a prurient, punishing Puritan — a reputation that was hard to shake. He taught at several law schools, and worked, to his credit, to overturn some death penalty cases. Less admirably, he represented campaigners trying to roll back same-sex marriage in California in 2008.

In 2010, he returned to his home state of Texas as president of Baylor University, and was subsequently also appointed chancellor. It seemed a good match: a conservative son of a Christian minister at an august private Baptist university. With strong policies against drinking and premarital sex, Baylor has an enthusiasm for Jesus matched only by its passion for football.

The problem was that in its determination to dominate the Big 12 of college football, Baylor was willing to cover for several players dogged by accusations of sexual violence. In one particularly egregious case, a star player named Sam Ukwuachu was accused of sexually assaulting a female Baylor soccer player in 2013. But ambitious football programs apparently take a lenient view of such infractions.

A Baylor investigation didn’t even give Mr. Ukwuachu a slap on the wrist, allowing him back on campus to graduate. Only the prospect of his pending trial prevented him from taking the field. Finally, in August last year, Mr. Ukwuachu was convicted on felony counts and sentenced to six months in jail and 10 years’ probation.

The news from Baylor got worse. Another two football players and a former fraternity president were charged with some form of sexual violence. One, Tevin Elliott, is currently in prison for sexual assault. Eventually, five Baylor football players were accused of serious sexual assaults that took place between 2011 and 2015.

It was bad enough that the Waco police seemed less than interested in investigating the cases, but the university’s foot-dragging and subsequent stonewalling under Mr. Starr’s administration was stunning. Mr. Starr seemed to have trouble grasping the gravity of sexual misconduct charges — unless the accused happened to be the president of the United States. In 2013, the year Baylor’s scandal started brewing, Mr. Starr signed a letter urging community service rather than jail as punishment for a retired teacher named Christopher Kloman. Mr. Kloman had pleaded guilty to sexually molesting five female students in the 1960s and ’70s at the private school his own daughter had attended.

An independent investigation of Baylor found that the university authorities had consistently failed to protect its female students from sexual predators and neglected its Title IX responsibilities. Instead, administrators played down reports of abuse and discouraged women from bringing allegations of misconduct.

And where was President Starr? Ignoring the candlelight vigil for victims of sexual assault that Baylor students held outside his home. Ducking a media interview when the scandal broke. Issuing windy statements laced with legalese to the Baylor community about how much he cared. Refusing to comment on the situation until the external review was done. And releasing only a summary of that report, not the full document, to the public.

Finally, Mr. Starr was fired as president and later resigned as chancellor — “the captain goes down with the ship,” he told the sports channel ESPN earlier this month. But the university tossed him a pretty good lifesaver: He will continue as a professor at the law school.

As for Baylor’s pattern of protecting star athletes who abused women at the university, Mr. Starr claimed he “didn’t know what was happening.” Maybe it depends on what the meaning of the word “was” was.

Mimi Swartz, an executive editor at Texas Monthly, is a contributing opinion writer.

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.

Pope Francis has a long way to go if he wants to get lapsed Catholics back

UNITED STATES
She Knows

by Theresa Edwards

I like Pope Francis.

In our home, he goes primarily by his unofficial title: His Holiness Pope Coolpants. He reminds me of another old Catholic dude I was extremely fond of, my grandfather, and his willingness to say things that Catholics don’t really like to hear (gays are people/birth control pills — turns out they’re not the Devil’s Smarties) endears him greatly to me, an ex-Catholic who can still recite the Act of Contrition and has a box full of saint trading cards. I’m still looking for St. Tekakwitha, if anyone can hook a lapsie up.

Which is why it pains me to say that even when he comes out with more Coolpants fodder — like he did this weekend by saying Christians ought to apologize for the way they’ve treated the gay community and exploited women and children and poor people, and then throwing a scold in there over Brexit — I’m reminded all over again that his trousers will never be fully chill until he addresses the Catholic Church’s greatest shame.

I am talking, of course, about the decades-long child abuse scandal that spanned multiple countries and resulted — just in the United States — in more than 10,000 allegations made toward nearly 5,000 men of the cloth in the church I was raised in.

To be fair, Pope Francis has publicly announced that the church will no longer be tolerating pedophile priests and the bishops who shelter them, which whew — how refreshing. He’s also defrocked a few particular baddies and excommunicated a couple of monsters, which wow — super cool of him.

It’s still not enough.

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

Former senator testifies during child abuse statute public hearing

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Former Guam senator Robert Klitzkie shares his thoughts, during a public hearing, on the way the local Catholic church leadership is handling the child sexual abuse accusations against Archbishop Anthony Apuron. Rick Cruz/PDN

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

St. John Vianney: Sins of Omission or Downright Deception?

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholics4Change

BY KATHY KANE

Many people believe that the legislative battle in Pennsylvania right now is a matter of money. The belief that victims want civil suits for financial compensation and that the Church wants to protect its finances. What many do not realize is that victims/survivors often seek to bring civil suits for the truth that is revealed in the documents and records that are ordered to be disclosed. Along with the finances, the Church also wants to protect the evidence, but it makes for a more complicated sound bite.

The March 2016 Grand Jury report of clergy abuse in the Altoona Johnstown Diocese disclosed much previously unknown information. One thing I found in reading the document was a patient who was at the St John Vianney Treatment center in Sept /October 2012. The write up of this child predator priest, who actually was profiled by the FBI, was the complete opposite of my conversations with the Vianney staff in 2012 when I was making attempts to improve child safety after discovering one of their patients in a school parking lot. A C4C reader recently alerted me to the following video published in June 2013 which is an interview with Fr James Flavin who was the President of the facility at that time. This interview is pretty much verbatim to my conversations with Fr Flavin and other Vianney staff at the time. A total downplay of the fact that child predators stay at the facility. I heard instead about depressed nuns and overweight priests.

In the video Fr Flavin says pedophiles cannot be treated but instead it is a matter of containment and protection. Protection of whom exactly, the children or the predator? He also makes this startling claim about the facility ” we don’t really deal with the sexual issues, the serious sexual issues” . Well the internet, newspaper articles and GJ reports tell a different story and in the past we have highlighted some of the depraved men who have passed through those doors. What exactly is classified as serious or sexual if watching child pornography of 2 and 3 year old’s is not? Or molestation of childrens’ bodies..or child rape?

Please take some time to view the video. It will probably “disappear” from the internet soon. Take note of the conversation shortly after the 3 minute and 19 minute marks

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.

Greenleaf Recuses Himself

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

State Judiciary Committee Chairman Stewart Greeleaf, R-Montgomery, announced over the weekend that he will recuse himself from proceedings invovling House Bill 1947, the child sex abuse statute of limitations bill.

I wrote last week about the way Senate rules never result in findings of conflicts, including cases much more obvious than Greenleaf’s. At that time, what we knew was that the law firm for which he is a partner had represented a Catholic entity several years ago in its attempt to have Delaware’s similar statute of limitations law declared unconstitutional. A law firm that represented child sex abuse victims in Delaware accused Greenleaf of having a conflict, but the Senate parliamentarian ruled there was no problem.

I argued that the appearance of a conflict can create credibility problems, even where there’s no direct financial interest involved. By then, Greenleaf already had stacked a Judiciary Committee hearing with witnesses who argued the Pennsylvania bill is unconstitutional, and his appearance of conflict made his conduct even more suspicious than it otherwise would have been.

As you’ll see in his statement below, he says he discovered another child sex abuse case in which his firm was involved, and although he continued to insist he had no conflict, he decided to recuse himself.

One of the lawyers who accused Greenleaf of the conflict, Stephen Neuberger, argued in response that the process already has been tainted by Greenleaf’s involvement, a reaction I’ve seen in several other emails since then from victims and their advocates.

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.

Before suicide, woman penned book about her ordeals in ultra-Orthodox world

ISRAEL
The Times of Israel

BY STUART WINER June 27, 2016

A formerly ultra-Orthodox woman, who was found dead in her car on Sunday after apparently taking her own life days earlier, had written a short autobiography describing the rigors of living within the Gur Hasidic sect and the pain she felt when her daughters cut ties with her over her choice to give up religion.

Esti Weinstein, 50, was discovered at the Hakshatot Beach in the coastal city of Ashdod, bringing to an end a week of searches after she went missing. In the car with her body police discovered a short note.

“In this city I gave birth to my daughters, in this city I die because of my daughters,” Weinstein, once a member of a prominent family in Gur, wrote.

Eight years ago Weinstein, who had seven daughters, chose to leave the ultra-Orthodox fold, in which she had grown up and which had seen her married at 17.

“I understand that I am sick and needy, and I don’t want to continue to be a burden on you,” she wrote. “Don’t make much effort for the ceremony, something modest with a lot of flowers, and remember that this is what I chose as best for me, and also if you say that I am selfish, I accept and understand your lack of understanding.”

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

FORMER TRUMP EXEC COREY LEWANDOWSKI IN TALKS WITH CNN

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

. . .While it’s been reported by the daily paper that 50 St. Louis area Catholic priests have been publicly accused of child sex crimes, they aren’t the only local Catholic clerics with this ignominious distinction. Others who face or have faced similar charges include seminarian Nicholas Pinkston, nun Judith Fisher and four brothers: John Woulfe, William Christensen, Gregory Sutton and Felix Bland. Said SNAP’s Barbara Dorris: “Hundreds of out-of-state child molesting priests, bishops and brothers have been sent here. . .

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

Catholic Church needs to be part of the solution to sexual abuse law reform

UNITED STATES
Irish Central

Tom Deignan @irishcentral June 27,2016

Earlier this month, Pope Francis translated his much-discussed “breath of fresh” air into action when it comes to cracking down on the sexual abuse crisis that has crippled the church in recent years. The pope changed church law so that bishops who may be looking the other way when it comes to predatory priests can more easily be removed.

As The Wall Street Journal noted, “The new document, entitled ‘Like a Living Mother,’ lays out a procedure for Vatican offices to initiate investigations of bishops suspected of negligence. While other sorts of negligence must be deemed ‘very grave’ by the Vatican to trigger removal, negligence of abuse cases need only meet the standard of ‘grave.’“

This does sound a little technical. Still, at least it can be counted as action taken towards attempting to solve a problem that has ruined so many lives.

Closer to home, however, a new front has been opened over fallout from the sex abuse scandals. Thus far, the response by American church authorities has not been encouraging.

For months, the New York Daily News has been railing against lawmakers in Albany who refused to pass reforms that would give sex abuse victims more time to identify and help prosecute individuals and institutions that failed to protect them. Currently, New York and other states have statutes of limitations which make it difficult for victims to get justice as the years go on.

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 Remains Silent on Child Sex Abuse Statute Bill as Dozens Show up to Hearing

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

When a similar measure was introduced in 2010, the Archdiocese of Agana heavily opposed the measure. Today, not a single member of the archdiocese submitted testimony on Bill 326.

Guam – Emotional testimony as dozens showed up to a public hearing on a bill that proposes to lift the statute of limitations on child sex abuse claims.

Testimony provided by victims and others were overwhelmingly in support of Bill 326 and noticeably absent were representatives of the Catholic Church.

For the four victims to accuse Archbishop Anthony Apuron of sexual abuse, it was another chance for them to be heard. One by one, Roy Quintanilla, Doris Concepcion, Walter Denton and Roland Sondia’s stories were detailed once again.

All of them spoke of the need for Bill 326, noting that as victims of child sexual abuse, there should be no time limit for a victim to come forward.

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.

Trinity

UNITED STATES
Videoviews

Director: Skip Shea
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Year: 2016
Rating: NR

A man accidentally bumps into the priest who abused him when he was a child at a local coffee shop, sending him on a twisted journey through his past.

“Trinity” tells the story of Michael, a young artist who was sexually abused as a child by a local priest. When he accidentally runs into the priest at his sister’s coffee shop it triggers a surreal trip through his past, with stopovers in three churches until he finally snaps back to the present moment and decides how to confront the monster that haunts him.

“Trinity” is a very personal film for Writer/Director, Skip Shea. The film is based on an event that happened in Shea’s life when he ran into the priest who had abused him when he was a child and who was now working in a local bookstore. That random encounter triggered a dissociative experience, which is at the heart of the film.

You can feel every once of pain and anger in every single frame of the movie. I am not going to go into plot details here so not to ruin the film for those waiting to see it but to be honest it would not do the film any justice because it really needs to be seen. “Trinity” is a mesmerizing film, It is a dark, surreal and nightmarish journey through one man’s fragile psyche. The story is so deep and it tells a story so horrific you will feel emotionally drained but the time the credits begin to roll and I mean that in a good way.

The film is also a brave one and it is an important one to tell because these kind of things happen way too often and nothing ever seems to be done about it. Shea does a terrific job telling his tale in a much different way than one might expect, I can say that I do not think it will be for everyone but Independent Cinema fans and even Art House fans should definitely love the film.

The film looks and sounds terrific and the score is both haunting and beautiful at the same time. And then there is the cast, everyone in the film does a fantastic job playing their roles including, David Graziano who plays the priest and Diana Porter who plays Michael’s sister. Other notable stars are Beatrice Di Giovanni, Aurora Grabill, Erica Jean and Lynn Lowry. But the real star or the film is Sean Carmichael who is absolutely sensational as Michael. The emotion he brings to the character is bar none and I see him winning many awards with this performance.

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

IL–Victims push for stronger child sex abuse laws

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims push for stronger child sex abuse laws
They predict: “Hastert will try to get out early”
Group says “Give us more time to expose predators”
It backs both new federal plan and state reform too
SNAP also honors one of Hastert’s victims who spoke up in court

WHAT:
Carrying signs and childhood photos, in the wake of Dennis Hastert’s imprisonment, abuse victims march through downtown Chicago and hold a news conference.

They will
–praise victims and others who helped get the ex-House speaker convicted, and
–urge correctional officials to look with “heightened skepticism” on what they say is a “likely move” by Hastert to seek early release for alleged health reasons

They will also
–announce their support for two federal proposals to reform the statute of limitations, and
–urge Illinois lawmakers to also relax the state’s “predator-friendly” abuse laws.

WHEN:
Sunday, June 26. Meet at 12:45 pm

WHERE:
In Chicago, meet at 12:45 pm at the Holiday Inn Chicago Mart, 350 West Mart Center Drive and walk to the Illinois State Office Building (James R. Thomson Center), 100 W. Randolf St., Chicago by 1:15pm. (The group will march down Wacker E. to Clark S. streets)

WHO:
A group of adults who were abused as kids by clergy, teachers and others and belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), which is holding its annual conference this weekend.

WHY:
1) On Wednesday, Hastert reported to prison. But SNAP predicts that he will seek an early release claiming ill health. The group wants correctional officials to scrutinize any such claim vigorously.

“In our experience, predators often try to ‘game the system’ and exploit any loophole they can to get special treatment, pretending to be sick or have poor memories or otherwise be virtually helpless and non-threatening,” says Barbara Dorris of SNAP. “We strongly suspect Hastert will do this too and we want prison officials to examine any claims like this very carefully.”

“Our focus is on deterring future crimes and cover ups, not on making Hastert suffer,” explained Barbra Graber of SNAP. “When we harshly penalize adults who hurt kids or hide crimes, we prevent more adults from hurting kids and hiding crimes. This is being prudent, not punitive.”

[Santa Cruz Sentinel]

2) To prevent future cases like Hastert’s, SNAP also wants the Illinois state legislature to pass a law letting anyone who was abused at any time to file civil suits to expose those who committed and concealed the crimes.

The group says “the archaic, arbitrary, predator-friendly statute of limitations is the single greatest obstacle to stopping child sex crimes and cover ups.” It notes that several states, including Pennsylvania, are debating relaxing their statutes and several have already done so using civil “windows” (Minnesota, Hawaii, California and Delaware).

3) Nevada Senator Harry Reid has introduced legislation authorizing the Secretary of Health and Human Services to give grants to states that eliminate statutes of limitations on laws involving child sexual abuse, giving victims more time to come forward and report their abusers.

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.

Who Blames the Victim?

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

[When and Why We See Victims as Responsible – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin]

By LAURA NIEMI and LIANE YOUNG JUNE 24, 2016

IF you are mugged on a midnight stroll through the park, some people will feel compassion for you, while others will admonish you for being there in the first place. If you are raped by an acquaintance after getting drunk at a party, some will be moved by your misfortune, while others will ask why you put yourself in such a situation.

What determines whether someone feels sympathy or scorn for the victim of a crime? Is it a function of political affiliation? Of gender? Of the nature of the crime?

In a recent series of studies, we found that the critical factor lies in a particular set of moral values. Our findings, published on Thursday in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, show that the more strongly you privilege loyalty, obedience and purity — as opposed to values such as care and fairness — the more likely you are to blame the victim.

These two sets of values have been the object of much scholarly attention. Psychologists have found that when it comes to morality, some people privilege promoting the care of others and preventing unfair behaviors. These are “individualizing values,” as they can apply to any individual. Other people privilege loyalty, obedience and purity. These are “binding values,” as they promote the cohesion of your particular group or clan.

Binding and individualizing values are not mutually exclusive, and people have varying degrees of both. But psychologists have discovered that the extent to which you favor one relative to the other predicts various things about you. For example, the more strongly you identify with individualizing values, the more likely you are to be politically progressive; the more strongly you identify with binding values, the more likely you are to be politically conservative.

Our animating insight was that these two clusters of values entail different conceptions of victims. Proponents of individualizing values tend to see a dyad of victim and perpetrator (a victim is hurt, a perpetrator does the hurting). Proponents of binding values, however, may see behaviors as immoral even when there is no obvious victim — for example, the “impure” act of premarital sex or the “disloyal” act of flag burning — and may even feel that doing the right thing sometimes requires hurting others (as with honor killings, to pick an extreme example). So we hypothesized that support for binding values would correlate with a greater tendency to blame victims.

We conducted several studies, involving 994 research participants. First we examined how their moral values related to their tendency to stigmatize victims versus to see victims as injured. We provided minimal descriptions of victims of various crimes — rape and molestation, stabbing and strangling — and asked the participants how much they considered the victims as “injured” or “contaminated.”

While we expected that all participants would be more likely to view sexual-crime victims than non-sexual-crime victims as contaminated (which is indeed what we found), we also found, surprisingly, that the more strongly people endorsed binding values, the more strongly they considered any victim to be contaminated — regardless of the nature of the crime.

Furthermore, the more people saw a victim as contaminated, the less they saw that victim as injured. Throughout, we controlled for other variables and found that it was moral values — binding values, in particular — and not political orientation, gender or religiosity that determined the results.

In another study, participants read descriptions of specific cases of rape and robbery and rated both the victim and the perpetrator on how “responsible” they were for the outcome, as well as how much a change in their actions could have changed things. We found that the more strongly people endorsed binding values, the more they strongly they attributed responsibility to victims and the more they saw victims’ behaviors as influencing the outcome. We found the opposite pattern for people endorsing individualizing values.

Can anything be done to change people’s perceptions of victims and perpetrators? In another study, we explored whether nudging people to focus on perpetrators versus victims could affect people’s moral judgments. We did so by placing either the perpetrator or the victim in the subject position in a majority of sentences in descriptions of sexual assault (e.g., “Lisa was forced by Dan” versus “Dan forced Lisa”). We then asked the participants to assign percentages of blame to the victim and perpetrator.

Consistent with our previous findings, the more participants endorsed binding values, the more blame they assigned to victims and the less blame they assigned to perpetrators. But we also found that focusing their attention on the perpetrator led to reduced ratings of victim blame, victim responsibility and references to victims’ actions, whereas a focus on victims led to greater victim blaming. This was surprising: You might assume that focusing on victims elicits more sympathy for them, but our results suggest that it may have the opposite effect.

Victim blaming appears to be deep-seated, rooted in core moral values, but also somewhat malleable, susceptible to subtle changes in language. For those looking to increase sympathy for victims, a practical first step may be to change how we talk: Focusing less on victims and more on perpetrators — “Why did he think he had license to rape?” rather than “Imagine what she must be going through” — may be a more effective way of serving justice.

Laura Niemi is a postdoctoral associate in psychology at Harvard. Liane Young is an associate professor of psychology at Boston College.

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North Yorkshire charity leads global network to tackle online sexual abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Darlington and Stockton Times

A NORTH Yorkshire charity is launching the world’s first global network of professionals to helping children who have suffered online sexual abuse.

The Marie Collins Foundation (MCF), based in Masham near Ripon, was set up in 2011 by chief executive Tink Palmer and works with children, young people and families to help them recover after sexual abuse involving technology. It also trains including social workers, police and teachers in supporting victims.

Now it is about to lead the world’s first global network of experts dedicated to helping child victims. The Global Protection Online Network is funded by investment from the global fund pledged at the #WePROTECT Children Online summit by former Prime Minister David Cameron in 2014.

The money will be used to provide support to child victims of technology-related violence, abuse and exploitation through the Global Protection Online Network.

It will also fund a report on international research relating to the recovery of children from online abuse and carry out a survey to map out work practices and lessons learned among professionals in 17 countries identified by UNICEF as priorities.

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Apuron accusers testify on bill that would lift time limit on molestation lawsuits

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News June 27, 2016

Individuals who recently accused Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron of sexually molesting them when they were altar boys in Agat in the 1970s testified Monday in favor of a bill lifting time limits on filing lawsuits against child molesters.

Another individual, Jonathan Diaz, also addressed senators at the Guam Legislature in Hagåtña, and said a seminarian who later became a priest sexually abused him when he was 13 and 16 years old. Diaz said nobody believed him when he came forward in 1991.

“You didn’t believe me. Believe them,” Diaz told senators, while pointing to the four other accusers of Apuron seated in the public hearing room of the Legislature.

Apuron hasn’t been charged with any crime.

Arizona resident Walter G. Denton, who accused Apuron of “raping” him, flew back to Guam from the mainland on Sunday just to testify in favor of Bill 326-33.

“Give us Agat boys a chance to achieve some measure of justice and closure in our lives,” he said.

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Alleged sex abuse victims speak-up to support bill

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 27, 2016

By Krystal Paco

“Justice shouldn’t have an expiration date” – that’s the sentiment echoed from supporters of Bill 326, who rallied in full force for three hours at Monday’s public hearing. the proposed legislation would lift the statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases. The bill’s introduction comes in the wake of accusations of rape and molestation made against Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

And alleged victims are speaking up and asking senators for more time to confront their perpetrators and bring them to court.

Joseph “Sonny” Quinata may not be alive today, but his mother, Doris Concepcion, still seeks justice on his behalf. She said, “Apuron accused me of being a liar. If you pass this bill, want to take Apuron to court. I have nothing to gain. I want Apuron to go to court so the truth can come out.”

Concepcion was joined by other accusers of the archbishop – Walter Denton, Roland Sondia, and family of Roy Quintanilla, who testified on Monday in support of Bill 326. All the victims were altar boys at Mount Carmel Church in Agat when they allege they were molested or raped by Apuron. Each of the victims waited decades before coming forward and as a result, cannot seek legal action because Guam law provides only a two -year window to do so.

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Bistum zahlt Missbrauchsopfern 30.000 Euro

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

[The Hildesheim diocese has paid 30,000 euros to abuse victims.]

Oft vergehen Jahrzehnte, bevor Opfer sexueller Gewalt über das Erlebte sprechen. Die Täter sind dann oft schon tot und können nicht mehr zur Verantwortung gezogen werden. So etwa im Fall eines mittlerweile 70-Jährigen, der dem verstorbenen früheren Hildesheimer Bischof Heinrich Maria Janssen vorwirft, ihn Ende der 1950er-Jahre missbraucht zu haben. In Fällen wie diesen bietet die Diözese seit 2011 eine finanzielle “Anerkennung des Leids” und eine Kostenübernahme für die Therapie an. Im vergangenen Jahr sind beim Bistum Hildesheim fünf entsprechende Anträge eingegangen, darunter auch der des 70-Jährigen. Insgesamt 30.000 Euro hat es den mutmaßlichen Opfern seither ausbezahlt, 10.000 davon gingen an den Rentner. Üblich sind 5.000 Euro.

Interne Aufarbeitung: Noch keine Gutachter benannt

Die interne Aufarbeitung der Missbrauchsvorwürfe ist unterdessen noch nicht vorangeschritten. Einem Bistumssprecher zufolge sind bislang noch keine Gutachter benannt worden, die sich mit den Anschuldigungen gegen den verstorbenen Bischof Janssen und den ehemaligen Priester und verurteilten Missbrauchstäter Peter R. auseinandersetzen sollen.

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Studie über Missbrauch und Gewalt

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutschlandradio

[A study commissioned by Caritas shows that children with mental illness and disabilities who lived in Catholic institutions were subjected to violence, abuse and ill-treatment.]

In Einrichtungen der katholischen Kirche für Kinder mit Behinderungen oder psychischen Erkrankungen gab es bis in die 70er-Jahre hinein Gewalt, Missbrauch und Misshandlungen. Das ergab jetzt eine Untersuchung im Auftrag der Caritas.

Anne Francoise Weber: Sie wurden geschlagen, zum Essen gezwungen, zur Strafe in den dunklen Keller eingesperrt oder zu sexuellen Handlungen genötigt. Und es waren Kinder, die sich besonders schlecht wehren konnten, weil sie durch Behinderungen oder psychische Krankheiten beeinträchtigt waren. Erst langsam wird bekannt, wie viele Gewalterfahrungen Kinder bis in die 1970er-Jahre hinein in Einrichtungen der Behindertenhilfe gemacht haben.

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Sexueller Missbrauch – Schon 1700 Opfer haben sich gemeldet

DEUTSCHLAND
WAZ

[A total of 1,700 people have applied to the Catholic Church in Germany to be recognized as victims of sexual abuse by priests or other church employees and they are asking for financial compensation. Victims can receive up to 5,000 euros or possibly higher amout due to the circumstances.]

Berlin. Seit zwei Jahren arbeiten Forscher den sexuellen Missbrauch durch katholische Priester auf. Nicht überall erhalten sie Unterstützung.

Die Zahl wird fast täglich größer: Knapp 1700 Personen haben inzwischen bei der Katholischen Kirche in Deutschland beantragt, als Opfer sexuellen Missbrauch durch Priester oder andere Kirchenmitarbeiter anerkannt und dafür finanziell entschädigt zu werden. Dies teilte jetzt die Deutsche Bischofskonferenz (DBK) in Berlin mit. Opfer erhalten jeweils bis zu 5000 Euro, in begründeten Einzelfällen werden auch höhere Summen gezahlt.

Die Aufarbeitung des Missbrauchsskandals, der in der Kirche seit seiner Aufdeckung 2010 für Erschütterungen sorgt, kommt offenbar voran. „Wir rechnen damit, Ende 2017 belastbare und solide Daten liefern zu können“, erklärte der Mannheimer Psychiater Harald Dreßing jetzt in Berlin. Dreßing leitet das Forschungskonsortium, das im Auftrag der DBK den Missbrauch in der Kirche aufarbeiten soll. Dazu sichtet das Gremium seit Juli 2014 Tausende Personalakten von Priestern, führt Interviews mit Opfern und zieht Strafakten der Justiz zu Rate.

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Metaanalyse zum sexuellen Missbrauch an Minderjährigen im Rahmen der katholischen Kirche

DEUTSCHLAND
Springer Link

Zusammenfassung

Der vorliegende Beitrag befasst sich mit einem Forschungsprojekt über sexuellen Missbrauch an Minderjährigen im Kontext der katholischen Kirche. Neben der Skizzierung der einzelnen Teilprojekte werden erste Ergebnisse des Teilprojekts der methodenkritischen Metaanalyse dargestellt. Die Metaanalyse gibt einen Überblick über die bisherigen empirischen Befunde zu Art und Umfang sexueller Missbrauchstaten an Minderjährigen in der katholischen Kirche und in anderen Institutionen. Hierzu wurden bisher 40 Studien über die katholische Kirche und 13 Studien über Einrichtungen, die nicht in katholischer Trägerschaft stehen, untersucht. Es werden Ergebnisse zu den Methoden der Studien sowie zu den Merkmalen von Tätern und Opfern und zu den Delikten dargestellt.
Schlüsselwörter

Sexueller Missbrauch Kindesmissbrauch Katholische Kirche Metaanalyse
Meta-analysis on sexual abuse of minors within the Roman Catholic Church

Preliminary results
Abstract

The article deals with a research project on sexual abuse committed against minors in the context of the Roman Catholic Church. In addition to outlining the individual partial projects, the article presents the first results of the partial project on the method critical meta-analysis. The meta-analysis gives an overview of the existing empirical evidence on the nature and extent of sexual abuse committed against minors in the Roman Catholic Church and in other institutions. A total of 40 studies about the Roman Catholic Church and 13 studies about institutions outside the realm of the Roman Catholic Church have so far been examined. Preliminary results concerning the methods of the studies as well as descriptive data on offenders, victims and offences are presented.

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Abuse survivor advocates push for national redress scheme in lead-up to election day

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Emily Bourke

Advocates for survivors of child sexual abuse are ramping up their campaign for a national redress scheme ahead of this weekend’s federal election.

The establishment of a national redress scheme was a key recommendation handed down by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The Commission stated that a national redress scheme could help compensate 60,000 child abuse victims.

But one of the peak organisations representing abuse victims has said only the Greens and Labor parties have put forward any funding commitments for such a scheme.

The Coalition has said it supports a national, consistent approach as recommended by the Royal Commission, but has not yet made any formal funding commitment.

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Bishop offers Service of Lament to begin healing for victims

MISSOURI
Kansas City Star

BY MARY SANCHEZ
msanchez@kcstar.com

There was a time when the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph hid from responsibility for the child sex abuse done by some of its priests.

On Sunday, that attitude of contempt was put to rest.

Bishop James V. Johnston Jr. laid out his vision for the diocese during a Service of Lament at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.

A “visible, permanent reminder” will be dedicated to the victims, a marker that will be decided upon by a remembrance committee, comprised partly of survivors of the abuse.

A new team will assess best practices for reporting and dealing with suspected abuse. The diocese already has a set of strict protocols, but they will be measured for effectiveness and reassessed for any changes necessary to improve.

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Silent Struggles: Church wields heavier hand, but even tougher stances sought

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

The way Catholic leaders respond to allegations of sexual abuse of children by clergy or lay people has changed since the mid-2000s, local church leaders say.

And they said, the culture and process victims faced when confronting church leaders about the abuse in the past is not the same as today.

In the Philadelphia Archdiocese, which includes the Pottstown area, all reports of abuse are now immediately forwarded to law enforcement, spokesman Kenneth A. Gavin said.
At the same time, the victim is put in touch with a services coordinator who can help line up church funding for therapy, medication and related transportation and child care costs, he said.
And after the legal investigation is complete, the church conducts its own, separate canon-law review, he said.

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Archdiocese in shambles

GUAM
Saipan Tribune

By John S. Del Rosario Jr. | Posted on Jun 27 2016

The grassroots movement in the Archdiocese of Agana seeking removal of Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron has blown up into a towering inferno. It deals with four victims alleging the archbishop sexually molested them years ago. Troubling!

Initially, I dismissed it as a war of accusations and denials. The narrative shifted as more former altar boys came forward with accusations. It came right in the midst of the resignation of board members—a group under the archdiocese—responsible for investigating reported priestly pedophilia. Wasn’t this issue a national scandal in recent past?

I asked for additional information from my cousin, David J. Sablan, vice president of the Concerned Catholics of Guam, Inc., just to secure a clear history of the entire nine yards and to do justice to the issue.

Appalling the calculated agenda by Apuron who allegedly corralled money and property belonging to the Archdiocese of Agana to the Neocatechumenal Way organization headed by people from without the island. It begins to show why Apuron allegedly wanted control of the seminary property in Yona (worth about $75 million) where he thought he could silently impose command, control, and disposition without notice and consent of the faithful.

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Outrage as Catholic Church honours Genocide convicts

RWANDA
The New Times

By: STEVEN MUVUNYI
PUBLISHED: June 27, 2016

Genocide survivors and relatives of victims have expressed dismay at a decision by Catholic Church to celebrate silver jubilee in honour of two priests convicted for their role in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.

Emmanuel Rukundo and Joseph Ndagijimana are among six priests whose ordination and jubilee ceremony is slated to take place on July 16 at Kabgayi Diocese.

Emmanuel Rukundo was convicted and handed a 25-year sentence by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in 2009, while Joseph Ndagijimana was convicted and handed life sentence by Gacaca in the same year.

Ndagijimana is serving his sentence in Mpanga Prison in Ruhango District.

Speaking to The New Times yesterday, Prof. Jean-Pierre Dusingizemungu, the president of Ibuka, an umbrella of Genocide survivors associations, strongly condemned the celebration of the jubilee and called it a form of negation as well as provocation.

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Robert L. Steadman, 90, former state Superior Court top judge

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By J.M. Lawrence GLOBE CORRESPONDENT JUNE 27, 2016

In a New Bedford courtroom, Massachusetts Superior Court Judge Robert L. Steadman weighed the unfathomable crimes of pedophile former priest James R. Porter against claims that the Catholic Church hierarchy had enabled Porter’s sexual abuse of dozens of children in the 1960s.

The depths of the church sex abuse scandal had yet to be exposed on that December day in 1993 as Judge Steadman heard 22 of Porter’s victims describe shattered childhoods, suicide attempts, and lost faith. Prosecutors asked the judge to sentence Porter to serve 36 to 50 years in prison. The defense argued Porter was a repentant sex offender who needed treatment, not jail.

“The defendant stands before me today as an effigy, representing all the other named and unnamed child abusers,” Judge Steadman said, according to a New York Times account. “Yet justice requires that James Porter, the symbol, be cast aside and that James Porter, the man, be judged.”

Porter had shown “complete disregard of the physical, spiritual, and psychological impact” of his crimes, said the judge, who ordered Porter to serve 18 to 20 years for sexually assaulting 28 boys and girls.

Judge Steadman, who spent 17 years on the Superior Court bench and was named chief justice in 1988, died June 14 in the Pat Roche Hospice Home in Hingham from complications of a recent fall. He was 90 and lived in Hanover.

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June 26, 2016

Hon: All documents sent to Holy See

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Jojo Santo Tomas, jsantotoma@guampdn.com June 27, 2016

In an announcement released Sunday afternoon, Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai stated that all relevant documentation has been sent to those who will render a final decision.

Hon, appointed by Pope Francis as apostolic administrator for the Archdiocese of Agana on June 6, arrived in Guam in early June to oversee church operations.

His arrival comes in the wake of allegations of sexual misconduct against Archbishop Anthony Apuron made by former altar boys who served in Agat almost 40 years ago.

Apuron remains Guam’s archbishop and has not been charged with any crime.

In the June 26 announcement, Hon collectively names accusers Walter Denton, Doris Concepcion, Roy Quintanilla and Roland Sondia, who made his accusations a week after Hon arrived. Hon also offered his personal prayers for all parties involved.

“… all of the relevant documentation received by the Church related to these allegations has been duly sent to the Holy See, which has final authority in cases related to Bishops,” said Hon in the statement. “I would further like to assure everyone that I have recognized the issues raised by all those concerned and, being deeply moved by the way they expressed themselves, am earnestly praying for them, without prejudice to both the alleged victims and the accused and ask for the prayers and support of the entire Church community.”

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Sex Abuse Survivors Call For End To Statutes Of Limitations On Child Sex Crimes

ILLINOIS
CBS Chicago

CHICAGO (CBS) — While many in Chicago joined the annual Pride Parade on the North Side on Sunday, others marched downtown to call on lawmakers to eliminate all statutes of limitations on child sex crimes.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests rallied outside the Thompson Center, many holding up signs reading “protect our children, not their predators.”

“To stop sexual violence of children, it’s time to hold sexual perpetrators accountable,” SNAP President Barbara Blaine said.

The way to do that, Blaine said, is for lawmakers across the country to change child sex abuse laws to “step up, and reform the statutes of limitation once and for all.”

“All statutes of limitation for child sex crimes should be eliminated,” she said.

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Klitzkie: Hon wasted his opportunity, turned back on survivors

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Robert Klitzki
June 26, 2016

Justice requires broadening the reach of Bill 326-33 to provide relief not only to those who have suffered at the hands of child sexual abusers, but others, to include not only the abusers but also their enablers, aiders or abettors, those acting in concert with them and their religious institutions or corporations sole.

The three C’s are referenced here: condonation, cover-up and conspiracy. Recent history tells us that the three C’s were all too prevalent in the worldwide Catholic church. The institutional hierarchy of the church condoned, covered up and conspired to prevent victims of child sexual abuse from attaining justice.

When allegations of these heinous acts first surfaced on our island, my inclination was that whoever may have committed those acts should be made to pay but that the institution, i.e. the archdiocese or corporation sole, need not be held liable in order that justice be available to victims whose claims had been barred by the running of the statute of limitations. If the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse were eliminated prospectively and reopened retroactively, the hierarchy and processes of the church would be sufficient to “clean up” the church so that child sexual abuse would become no more than a bad memory, I thought.

I was wrong. Very wrong.

Scandal now saturates the church — scandal so egregious that the pope has sent an apostolic administrator, Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, to take over the archdiocese in the stead of Anthony Apuron, who still retains the naked title of archbishop. Hon came here with tremendous potential to do good. Hon came on personal appointment of the pope to clean up the mess that befalls our church.

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Prospects of justice are dim

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Bill Pesch June 26, 2016

Justice denied. That just about sums up the possibility in Guam of pursuing traditional legal remedies against persons in position of trust who committed sexual crimes against minors years ago. This is the unfortunate reality facing the men who are accusing Archbishop Anthony Apuron of molesting them decades ago.

Why is the prospect of legal justice so dim? There are two main reasons. The first is an expired statute of limitations and the second is the lack of a “deep pocket.” Let’s look at both of these factors in some detail.

Those who molest minors face the possibility of both criminal and civil charges. The criminal charges can land the accused in jail, while a civil case can cost the suspect money. However, under the law, both criminal and civil actions must be filed within a specific period of time. This is known as the statute of limitations. With only a few exceptions, if you fail to file an action within the stated time, you forever lose the opportunity to pursue the matter.

The reason for statutes of limitation is based on common sense. With time, a case goes stale — witnesses forget or die, memories fade and evidence is lost or tainted. There is also the fact that victims, suspects and witnesses need to move on with their lives.

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‘Spotlight’ film pushed victim to speak out against Hastert

ILLINOIS
Chicago Sun-Times

Mitch Dudek
@mitchdudek

Scott Cross, who was hailed as a hero for speaking out about the sexual abuse he suffered as as teenager at the hands of former House Speaker Dennis Hastert, was lauded for his courage during an award ceremony Sunday in downtown Chicago honoring survivors of abuse.

Phil Saviano, whose abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest was an integral part of the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight,” handed Cross a plaque before several hundred people who’d gathered for an annual conference hosted by Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests at a downtown hotel.

“The movie ‘Spotlight’ was a very powerful movie for me as I struggled talking to my wife about this,” Cross told the audience after accepting the award.

Cross first opened up publicly about being abused at the age of 17 by Hastert, who was his wrestling coach at the time at Yorkville High School, while speaking in court at Hastert’s sentencing in late April.

“There were several reasons I thought about telling my story in a very open format that scared the hell out of me,” he said, according to a video of his remarks provided to the Sun-Times.

“As I was getting close to my decision to come forward, my wife had been encouraging me to go see the movie ‘Spotlight,’” he said.

“I just sat there by myself watching that movie, and it was a very powerful, powerful decision to come forward on top of Coach Hastert making some phone calls to my brother about a letter of support,” Cross said in reference to the audacious move by Hastert to seek a letter of support from Cross’s brother, former Republican ally and House Minority Leader Tom Cross.

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Catholic bishop in Kansas City apologizes at special service for church sex abuse victims

MISSOURI
Kansas City Star

BY MATT CAMPBELL
mcampbell@kcstar.com

Betrayal, regret, healing and forgiveness were key words at a special Service of Lament on Sunday at Kansas City’s Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception for victims and survivors of sexual abuse within the church.

Bishop James V. Johnston Jr. went straight to the point in his homily before a full congregation that included most if not all priests from the nearly 100 parishes in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.

“I am here to confess, apologize and repent for the sins of those who held a sacred trust in the church and who betrayed that trust,” Johnston declared, saying he was speaking “for the priests and bishops and anyone in the service of the church whose actions or inactions harmed the lives of children entrusted to their care.”

This diocese, like many others, has been rocked by accounts of sexual abuse of children. It has settled multimillion-dollar legal cases involving scores of victims and their families. Former Bishop Robert Finn was charged with a criminal offense for failing to report suspected child sexual abuse. He lost his bishopric.

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Defrocking of Apuron urged

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

John O’Connor | Post News Staff

More than two weeks have passed since the arrival of Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, apostolic administrator of the Archdiocese of Agana, but protests have continued in front of the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral Basilica in Hagåtña despite Archbishop Anthony Apuron having been removed from local church matters amid sexual abuse allegations against him.

For months, the Concerned Catholics of Guam have protested at the cathedral, demanding that Apuron resign from his position as archbishop. But yesterday morning, that message had changed, and more than a dozen protestors holding signs stated plainly in red letters that they are now calling for Apuron’s laicization from the church. Laicization, or defrocking, is the removal of a bishop, deacon or priest from his status as a member of the clergy.

Jose Martinez, a member of CCOG, said the credibility of the church and confidence in its leadership has been damaged by Apuron’s actions.

Mockery

“The allegations are serious enough that he should have stepped down a long time ago,” Martinez said. “It’s getting to the point where it’s almost a mockery to be hidden so far away and not address any of the situations going in the church.”

Apuron’s last official communication to the people of Guam was a video message sent from Rome in which he stated that the pope had granted his request for an apostolic administrator, sede plena, meaning Hon would be in charge of pastoral duties while Apuron remained archbishop of the archdiocese.

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Former Philadelphia DA Lynne Abraham speaks on HB 1947

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

By Kathleen E. Carey, Delaware County Daily Times

POSTED: 06/25/16

As a bill that extends the time childhood sexual abuse victims could file a suit against organizations that harbored their abusers sits in the state Senate Judiciary Committee, victim advocates, including former Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham, say the entirety of the bill should be law.

Describing herself as the first prosecutor in the United States to “name names” in a priest-related childhood sexual abuse case, Abraham was Philadelphia’s lead prosecutor when the 2005 grand jury was convened against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. Their findings, combined with another grand jury in 2011, found more than 60 priests in the diocese with evidence of abusing dozens of victims. Many of them had ties to Delaware County.

The bill, passed in the House by a 180-15 vote in April, removes the criminal statue of limitations for childhood sexual abuse cases; increases the statute of limitations from 30 years to 50 years for the filing of civil lawsuits for plaintiffs; and removes immunity for organizations found to be grossly negligent.

“I am very concerned because they are going to strip it of the retroactivity,” Abraham said of the Senate Judiciary Committee. “It’s not unconstitutional to have it back to 30 now. What’s the difference? Somebody has to tell me that.”

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Silent Struggles: Mark Berkery

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

As state lawmakers debate a plan to make it easier for victims of childhood sexual abuse to seek justice, abuse survivors are coming forward to tell their stories.

When Mark Berkery was a boy, he was raped by a family friend, and afterward his parents knew he’d need good counseling to heal.

So they introduced him to the man they trusted most to help, the Rev. Stanley Gana, a priest at Ascension of Our Lord Church in Kensington.

The Berkerys were Catholic and lived in that north Philadelphia neighborhood, and Gana convinced them he could help the boy more than a private counselor.

Gana’s archdiocese bio included “youth counseling” among his talents and interests.

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Berry Street lecture takes on clergy sexual misconduct among UU ministers

UNITED STATES
UU World

ELAINE MCARDLE | 6/24/2016

With an emphasis on power dynamics and the critical need for scrupulous honesty and truth, the Rev. Gail Seavey on Tuesday night took on the painful topic of clergy sexual misconduct and exhorted her fellow Unitarian Universalist ministers to stop keeping secrets so that UU congregations and the faith can thrive and grow in a healthy manner.

“I have seen smart people, good people, fail to understand the impact of sexual misconduct, how pervasive and systemic it is, not just among us but throughout our culture,” said Seavey, speaking at the 196th Ministerial Conference at Berry Street, known as the Berry Street lecture. “For years the system at the UUA and in many of our congregations has been to protect the privileged instead of the vulnerable.”

In her talk, “If Our Secrets Define Us,” Seavey gave an historical context of clergy sexual misconduct in UU congregations, including the reluctance of UU ministers to criticize their colleagues. Some who did, she noted, were censured. Estimating that one-third to one-half of UU congregations in the U.S. have been affected by clergy sexual misconduct within recent memory, Seavey described the psychological trauma to individuals and the severe damage to congregational health, and noted the problem isn’t limited to male ministers. Facing the issue head-on rather than concealing it is not only the moral thing to do, but also results in healthier congregations and a healthier denomination, Seavey said.

“Keeping secrets about the times we fall short of our ideals stops us from developing an ever more nuanced power analysis with others who have also suffered from intersecting cultural secrets,” said Seavey, senior minister at First UU Church of Nashville, Tennessee, a congregation that suffered from ministerial misconduct before she arrived there. Since then, First Nashville became a denominational leader in addressing the problem through the creation of UU Safety Net, which seeks to effect changes in policies and procedures around clergy sexual abuse in Unitarian Universalism.

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Church child abuse discussions in Bendigo

AUSTRALIA
Bendigo Advertiser

Adam Holmes
@AdamHolmes010

June 26, 2016

THE Catholic Church will meet with members of the Bendigo community on Monday night to answer questions about the church’s history of child sexual abuse.

The chief executive officer of the church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council, Francis Sullivan, will hold a “Spirituality in the Pub” event at the Queens Arms Hotel in Quarry Hill.

The sessions will help form the Catholic Church’s response to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Mr Sullivan said hearing the concerns of parishioners and the wider community was an important step in the healing process.

“It is always encouraging to come to community meetings such as this one and hear how ordinary people on the streets and in the pews are responding to the Royal Commission and to the changes being made in the church,” he said.

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High price for lost credibility

PENNSYLVANIA
The Times-Tribune

BY THE EDITORIAL BOARD / PUBLISHED: JUNE 25, 2016

Pennsylvania’s Catholic bishops recently appealed to their congregations to help defeat a bill that enhances the ability of sexual abuse victims to sue. But the church’s credibility issue that gave rise to the legislation in the first place likely will be difficult to overcome.

The reforms to criminal and civil child sex crime laws are aimed at all private institutions that deal with children, rather than just the Catholic Church alone. But the legislation clearly is inspired by a blistering report by the state attorney general’s office relative to an investigation of child sexual abuse by priests and its cover-up in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

The bill, which easily has passed the House, would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations regarding sex crimes against children. It also would raise 20 years, from 30 to 50, the age by which victims must file civil litigation.

Church leaders contend that provision unfairly would expose the institution to far greater liability and ignores reforms that they have implemented.

But four Catholic state representatives who support the bill — Patrick Harkins and Ryan Bizzaro of Erie, Mark Rozzi of Berks County and Madeline Dean of Montgomery County — countered that the church helped create the liability and the need to increase the statutory deadline to file suit.

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Silent Struggles: Decades later, sexual-assault victims tell their stories, pursue justice

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

Editor’s note: This story contains explicit content.

The harrowing stories are each unique. They’re set in different neighborhoods. They revolve around different characters. They outline different circumstances.

But a common thread binds them together.

Each begins with a child whose youth and innocence, they say, was ripped away by a man they trusted above all others and who wielded incredible power over their lives. And each ends with an adult, who decades later, is still grappling with the pain.

As Pennsylvania and neighboring states consider whether to partially reopen a window for people sexually abused as children to seek legal justice, more abuse survivors are stepping out of the shadows to tell their stories.

They seek to remind politicians that the wounds and scars left by abuse are very much part of the present.

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Diocese of New Ulm working to heal damage of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
The Journal

June 26, 2016

From The Most Reverend John M. LeVoir – Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of New Ulm, Minn.

On behalf of the Diocese of New Ulm, I want to thank the victims and survivors of sexual abuse by priests who shared their heartbreaking stories with The Journal over the past few weeks.

I hope through courageously sharing their experiences, they are helped in their healing journey. I hope in hearing their stories, awareness is raised about the scourge of sexual abuse.

I offer a sincere apology to victims and survivors of past abuse and a solemn pledge to continue to do everything I can to prevent abuse of children and young people in the future.

The Church, in partnership with parents, parish and Catholic school leadership, is working to foster a safe environment for children and young people within Church ministry and throughout our broader community.

All priests and others who work or volunteer with children in Catholic parishes or schools undergo a background check and adhere to a strict Code of Conduct. Over the past decade, thousands of local people, including all priests, have participated in abuse awareness education. Thousands of local children have received age-appropriate personal safety lessons.

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Announcement of the Apostolic Administrator from the Chancery Office of the Archdiocese of Agaña

GUAM
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Agana

I would like to reassure the faithful and all people of good will that Church has taken into serious consideration the allegations made against Archbishop Anthony Apuron, OFM Cap., in recent months by Mr. Walter Denton, Mrs. Doris Concepcion, Mr. Roy Quintanilla, and Mr. Paul Lizama Sondia, and that all of the relevant documentation received by the Church related to these allegations has been duly sent to the Holy See, which has final authority in cases related to Bishops. I would further like to assure everyone that I have recognized the issues raised by all those concerned and, being deeply moved by the way they expressed themselves, am earnestly praying for them, without prejudice to both the alleged victims and the accused and ask for the prayers and support of the entire Church community.

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, SDB
Apostolic Administrator
Archdiocese of Agaña

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Archbishop Hon Reassures that allegations against Apuron Under Investigation

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Jun 25, 2016
By Sabrina Salas Matanane

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai issued a statement Sunday afternoon to reassure the island community that sexual abuse allegations against Archbishop Anthony Apuron are under investigation by the Vatican. In recent weeks several former altar boys alleged Apuron sexually molested them when he was a priest at Mt. Carmel Church in Agat.

Amid the allegations, Archbishop Hon was appointed the Apostolic Administrator of the Archdiocese of Agana by Pope Francis. Apuron was relieved of his pastoral duties but he retains his title as Archbishop.

Here is the statement released by Archbishop Hon:

“I would like to reassure the faithful and all people of good will that Church has taken into serious consideration the allegations made against Archbishop Anthony Apuron, OFM Cap., in recent months by Mr. Walter Denton, Mrs. Doris Concepcion, Mr. Roy Quintanilla, and Mr. Paul Lizama Sondia, and that all of the relevant documentation received by the Church related to these allegations has been duly sent to the Holy See, which has final authority in cases related to Bishops. I would further like to assure everyone that I have recognized the issues raised by all those concerned and, being deeply moved by the way they expressed themselves, am earnestly praying for them, without prejudice to both the alleged victims and the accused and ask for the prayers and support of the entire Church community.”

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Silent Struggles: Craig Gribbin

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

As state lawmakers debate a plan to make it easier for victims of childhood sexual abuse to seek justice, abuse survivors are coming forward to tell their stories.

After years of suffering in silence, Craig Gribbin mustered the courage to ask for an apology.

It was early 2002. He was about 50 and finally ready to take the last step in confronting the sexual abuse he said he suffered as a teen at the hands of a priest and teacher at Roman Catholic High School in Philadelphia.

Through years of self-reflection, Gribbin had started to come to peace with what happened to him. He’d become a born-again Christian, was ordained as a nondenominational minister and began helping couples through marriage counseling.

By ministering to others, he began the painful process of confronting the demons in his own past. And by the late 1990s, Gribbin knew he had a final step to take before putting his abuse behind him: Confronting the people on whose watch it happened.

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Silent Struggles: Thomas Humma

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

As state lawmakers debate a plan to make it easier for victims of childhood sexual abuse to seek justice, abuse survivors are coming forward to tell their stories.

The day is seared into Thomas Humma’s memory.

It was the moment, he said, that he finally broke free of the priest who snaked into a central role in his life only to sexually molest him.

Though Humma hasn’t told his story publicly until now, parts of it have been recounted in media reports, at press conferences, even during state legislative sessions.

His story is intertwined with that of his childhood friend Mark Rozzi, who’s since become a state lawmaker representing part of Berks County and an advocate for abuse victims.

Their alleged abuser, Edward R. Graff, died in 2002 while awaiting trial in Texas on charges he abused a 15-year-old boy there.

Humma, who grew up in Reading and now lives on the West Coast, figures Graff pushed his luck the day he took both boys together into the rectory at Holy Guardian Angels in Muhlenberg Township. At the time, Humma was 12, and Rozzi was 13.

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June 25, 2016

Sen. Greenleaf recuses himself from child sex-abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Jonathan Lai, STAFF WRITER

The chairman of the Pennsylvania Senate Judiciary Committee said Saturday he will recuse himself from all matters regarding a contested bill that would expand the ability of child sex-abuse victims to sue individuals and private institutions decades later.

State Sen. Stewart J. Greenleaf (R., Montgomery) said he had recently learned of his law firm’s involvement advising a Catholic clergyman serving as a witness in child sex-abuse suits. Neither that nor his firm’s previous representation of a Catholic religious order sued by an abuse victim represent conflicts of interest, Greenleaf said, but he will no longer participate in proceedings regarding the measure to reassure the public.

“Perception and appearance in ethical matters are important – especially public perception of what legislators do in Harrisburg,” Greenleaf said in a statement Saturday. “In order to project a positive perception, I voluntarily will no longer participate in any further proceedings regarding H.B. 1947, nor will I vote on the bill.”

Greenleaf had not taken a public position on the bill. As head of the Judiciary Committee, he led a hearing earlier this month on the constitutionality of the legislation to extend the statute of limitations for child sex-abuse victims.

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Jehovah’s Witnesses and Tax Deductible Crime

UNITED STATES
The News Hub

William H Bowen

This summer over eight million Jehovah’s Witnesses will attend their conventions to be informed this just might be the last meeting they will attend. You see, they have a version of the zombie apocalypse called the “Great Tribulation” in which members are taught the police and local authorities are going to be taken over by Satan to attack JW men, rape JW women, and kill JW children. Members are told to prepare a go-bag with survival materials so they on a moments notice can flee to bunkers till God delivers them. This message is somewhat consistent as it is the same one that has been told for over one hundred years. Each year members believe this is the very last time they will have a summer convention and they go home in a form of mental hysteria to discard material possessions and simplify their lives so they can sell more books for one of the wealthiest per capita tax deductible publishing corporations in the world.

The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society produces over one billion pieces of literature each year and by declaring they are a religion can use slave labor to sell their books and pay not one dime in taxes. They go one step further by each year giving all members a piece of paper to write down the exact amount of donations they are willing to provide each month to keep God’s work moving forward. Each congregation is required to send in a specified donation each month or they will be disbanded.

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Escándalo en la iglesia de Santa Fe: denuncian a un obispo por encubrir a un sacerdote acusado de pedofilia

ARGENTINA
La Nacion

[Scandal in the Church of Santa Fe: A bishop is denounced for harboring a priest accused of pedophilia.]

Los padres de la víctima de tres años apuntaron al jefe de la diócesis de Reconquista, Ángel José Macín, y a la asesora legal del obispado por encubrimiento

SEGUIRJosé E. Bordón
PARA LA NACION
SÁBADO 25 DE JUNIO DE 2016

SANTA FE.- Escándalo en la iglesia de Reconquista, el norte de esta provincia. El sacerdote Néstor Monzón, de 47 años, acusado del delito de “abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante” en perjuicio de una nena de 3 años, que visitaba la Parroquia “María Madre de Dios”, en el barrio Hospital de esa ciudad, vecina a la vivienda de sus abuelos, fue liberado tras 60 días de prisión preventiva domiciliaria. Los padres de la víctima denunciaron penalmente por encubrimiento al obispo de la diócesis, Ángel José Macín.

La causa, además, involucra a la asesora legal del obispado, Gabriela Contepomi, a quien los defensores de la familia de la menor denunciaron porque en una escucha telefónica que se incorporó al expediente, la profesional dialoga con el cura Monzón y le señala que por orden del obispo Macín debe “borrar” todos los mensajes enviados o recibidos en su teléfono móvil. El diario Reconquista Hoy publicó el audio entre la abogada y el cura en su portal.

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State politicians seek cover for gutting statute reform

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

Politicians seek political cover while gutting child sex abuse law
I wanted to begin this column with a great rant about politicians from an old “Monty Python” episode.

It’s presented in the guise of an apology for some previous content and scrolls down the screen as a very-proper narrator reads it and “Pomp and Circumstance” plays.

I didn’t have space for the whole thing — you can find it on YouTube — but here’s an excerpt:

“We would like to apologize for the way in which politicians are represented in this programme. It was never our intention to imply that politicians are weak-kneed, political time-servers who are concerned more with their personal vendettas and private power struggles than the problems of government … nor to imply that they are squabbling little toadies without an ounce of concern for the vital social problems of today …”

I won’t endorse some of the specific language in the rant — I wouldn’t call anyone “crabby ulcerous little self-seeking vermin” — but the general sentiments fit my disgust with the state Senate Judiciary Committee, which has been hard at work fashioning an appropriate excuse for gutting a bill that would reform statutes of limitations for child sex abuse survivors. I’d have added something about subservience to powerful special interests.

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Victorian government should change law to allow Catholic Church to be sued

AUSTRALIA
The Age

June 25, 2016

Judy Courtin

An international spotlight is shining starkly on Australia this weekend as representatives from the United Nations, Germany, Switzerland, Poland, Chile, the UK, the US and Australia are gathering in Chicago for a three-day conference on sexual assault and the Catholic Church.

As the Australian speaker at this conference I am, inter alia, highlighting the fact that Australia continues to be the only country in the common law world in which there is no legal entity for the Catholic Church (and some other religious organisations) that can be sued by victims for the historical sex crimes of its clergy. This burdensome barrier to justice holds firm, despite the royal commission making a sound and easily implemented recommendation that, unless a proper defendant with sufficient assets to meet its liability is nominated by the church authority, then the property trust (the only legal entity that does exist) can be sued.

This recommendation, the implementation of which is the responsibility of our state and territory governments, was made by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in its report on redress and civil litigation, published in September 2015. Critically, and unlike a recommendation of the earlier Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child abuse, the royal commission’s recommendation has both prospective and retrospective effects, meaning it would apply not only to future victims, but also to existing victims.

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Hon lays groundwork to reorganize church

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News June 25, 2016

The archbishop Pope Francis sent to temporarily administer the Archdiocese of Agana has started laying the groundwork for the reorganization of the Catholic church in Guam.

But the Concerned Catholics of Guam said the two more urgent tasks should have been: reaching out to those who have said they are victims of sex abuse by Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron; and the permanent removal not only of Apuron but also three other individuals.

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai announced the formation of four ad hoc committees that could lead to a reorganization of the embattled Catholic church in Guam.

Hon also named the Rev. Patrick Castro as the new contact person “for those coming forward with allegations of having been sexually abused by a member of the clergy of the Archdiocese of Agana.”

Monsignor Brigido “Bibi” Arroyo, who also got special assignment from Hon as spokesperson for the archdiocese, said on Friday the formation of the four committees are part of the task of promoting unity, and that the church is listening to the people.

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The Devil Is in the Details: How Insurance and Catholic Lobbyists Are Trying to Help Child Predators and Supportive Institutions Behind the Scenes

UNITED STATES
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

Professor Marci A. Hamilton
Jun 25, 2016

Here is what the rumor mill says some Pennsylvania Senators are considering, with a guide to help you understand it….

When it comes to behind-the-scenes chicanery against child sex abuse victims, no one holds a candle to the insurance and Catholic Conference lobbyists and bishops. They have pulled out all the stops against victims’ access to justice, especially when states have considered windows or revival bills that permit survivors with expired statutes of limitations (“SOLs”) to go foreard despite the SOL. One or more have pulled some stunners in various states, with the result that they shut victims out of court and preserved the secrets of predators and the institutions engaged in self-protection.

As I discuss in Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children, in Colorado, Bishop Chaput put to work a public relations strategy to mislead Catholics in the pews into thinking a window is “anti-Catholic” and succeeded even though that is false. In Ohio, the night before a window would have passed in the House, the bishops persuaded members to strip out the window portion of the bill and replace it with a useless and unconstitutional “civil registry,” which has done zero for survivors.

In every state to consider revival legislation, the bishops have also trotted out lawyers with little knowledge of constitutional law to argue that a window or revival legislation is “unconstitutional.” Then when the bill passed, they challenged its constitutionality and lost in court—in California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, and Massachusetts.

In the latest Pennsylvania chapter, the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Stewart Greenleaf, put together no less than 5 people to testify that it is supposedly unconstitutional to revive an expired SOL in Pennsylvania. To quote survivor Michelle Gonsmann in her published letter to the Altoona Mirror: “Greenleaf lined up a parade of attorneys, most of whom had no true constitutional expertise but were deeply involved in the Catholic church or Catholic universities. These experts were clearly biased toward the Catholic church.”

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Bistum Trier: causa Freisen – “Die Verantwortung des Diözesanbischofs bleibt bestehen”

DEUTSCHLAND
MissBiT

The responsibility of the diocesan bishop remains”

Entgegen der Behauptung des Bistums Trier, dass Bistum habe erst jetzt (2016) von den Vorwürfen aus dem Jahr 2006 erfahren, konnte inzwischen belegt werden, dass das Bistum Trier bereits 2006 von der Staatsanwaltschaft informiert wurde. In der bischöflichen Personalkommission, in der die Meldung der Staatsanwaltschaft 2006 bekannt gegeben wurde, saßen sowohl der damalige Trierer Bischof Reinhard Marx als auch der heutige Bischof Ackermann. Damals fand auch ein Gespräch mit dem ehemaligen Freisener Pfarrer statt. Dieser versicherte dem Bistum gegenüber schriftlich, dass die Vorwürfe ihm gegenüber nicht zutreffend seien. Hätte das Bistum Trier den Verdacht gegen den ehemaligen Priester als unbegründet angesehen, hätte das Bistum Trier laut Leitlinien allerdings “die notwendigen Schritte unternehmen müssen, den ‘guten Ruf der Person’ wiederherzustellen”

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Kritische Auseinandersetzung mit eigener Geschichte

DEUTSCHLAND
Caritas

BERLIN, 23.06.2016 // In einer heute in Berlin vorgestellten Studie setzt sich der Fachverband Caritas Behindertenhilfe und Psychiatrie (CBP) mit der Situation auseinander, dass Kinder und Jugendliche mit Behinderung in den Anfangsjahren der Bundesrepublik in katholischen Einrichtungen Gewalt, Missbrauch und Leid erfahren haben.

Die Studie “Heimkinderzeit. Eine Studie zur Situation von Kindern und Jugendlichen in Einrichtungen der katholischen Behindertenhilfe in Westdeutschland (1949 – 1975) wurde im Auftrag des CBP vom Institut für Angewandte Forschung, Entwicklung und Weiterbildung (IAF) in Freiburg durchgeführt. Mitfinanziert und mitgetragen wird sie von der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz (DBK), dem Deutschen Caritasverband (DCV), der Deutschen Ordensobernkonferenz (DOK) und der Veronika-Stiftung.

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Studie: Gewalt in katholischen Behinderten-Heimen war Alltag

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutsche Welle

[Study: Violence in Catholic disabled homes was common.]

Das Leben von behinderten Kindern und Jugendlichen in katholischen Heimen zwischen 1949 und 1975 war geprägt von Isolation, Unterordnung und Gewalt. Zu diesem Ergebnis kommt eine erste umfassende Studie zu dem Thema.

“Weinen war nicht erlaubt. Und wenn doch, gab’s auch dafür Schläge”, erinnert sich die Bewohnerin eines katholischen Behindertenheims. Und ein anderer berichtet: “Da wurden wir in einen dunklen Raum gesperrt (…) das war für mich das Schlimmste, was es gab.”

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Whom Do You Feel Bad For?

UNITED STATES
The Times of Israel

JUNE 24, 2016

Michael J. Salamon

In the last few days, following the ruling by a Beit Din in Israel, a ruling that received support from a number of prominent rabbis in Israel and the United States who represent all shades of Orthodoxy, several highly personal articles have appeared. These intimate articles describe the pain inflicted upon them by a Rabbi Meir Pogrow who was supposed to be their educator, mentor, and spiritual advisor but was in effect their abuser. The Beit Din ruling was clear: “It is forbidden,” the Beit Din wrote, for him to have any contact with women and women were warned to have no contact with him; women should not even go to his Torah website and were instructed to avoid any contact with a woman who was and seems to still be his booking agent.

The implication was clear in their ruling that this woman solicited for him and in the Beit Din’s words “functions as his agent for sin, and in this way they have knowingly (ensnared and) lowered girls into the lowest spiritual depths”.

Pogrow, often referred to as a brilliant and charismatic Torah, scholar taught at Yeshiva University High Schools in Los Angeles, Michlahlah seminary in Jerusalem, and at the Kollel of Aish HaTorah in Jerusalem and Austin, Texas. He first appeared on my radar about eight years ago when Riva (not her real name) a woman in her early twenties came to therapy following some time at the seminary in Israel. She was anxious, depressed, and afraid that she could never get married or ever trust men. She described a relationship with a rabbi at the seminary who was challenging but also extremely demanding. She complained, “He got into my head somehow and it messed me up.” As we worked through Riva’s anguish and concerns, she described how a man of prominence used his position and his intellect to groom her, manipulate her, and ultimately have her do his bidding. With time, she told me his name.

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Judge sanctions Jehovah’s Witnesses

CALIFORNIA
San Diego Reader

By Dorian Hargrove, June 24, 2016

A San Diego Superior Court judge has ordered the Church of Jehovah’s Witnesses, also known as the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, to pay $4000 a day for every day that it fails to produce documents requested in a civil lawsuit brought by former parishioner, Osbaldo Padron, who claims a church elder sexually abused him when he was seven years old.

In a June 23 ruling, expected to be made final today, judge Richard Strauss admonished the church for willfully ignoring a court order to produce all documents associated with a 1997 Body of Elders letter that church leaders sent to parishes around the world in a quest to learn about sexual abuse of children by church leaders.

Over the course of the past year, the Watchtower Society and its lawyers have fought hard to keep the letter confidential, claiming that turning over the documents would infringe on the privacy of those mentioned in the letter that were not associated with the case.

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Psychiatrist insists abuse wasn’t sexual sadism

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on June 24, 2016

Philadelphia forensic psychiatrist Robert Toborowsky Friday refuted claims that some of a Christian Brother’s actions at Mount Cashel in the 1950s amounted to sexual sadism.

“No? countered Will Hiscock, a lawyer for four John Does in the Mount Cashel civil trial. “What was it? Was he loving?”

“It wasn’t loving and it wasn’t sadistic,” replied Toborowsky, a expert witness for the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s, which disputes claims it should be held liable for the sexual and physical abuse perpetrated by certain Christian Brothers at the orphanage during the era late 1940s to early 1960s.

“How was it not sadistic?” demanded Hiscock.

“What happened was not sexual sadism,” Toborowsky replied.

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June 24, 2016

Police Arrest Former Pastor Paul Cunningham

NEW MEXICO
Los Alamos Daily Post

By CAROL A. CLARK
Los Alamos Daily Post

Police arrested former Los Alamos Pastor Paul Cunningham last Friday evening on San Ildefonso Road and charged him with two counts of sexual exploitation of children.

According to court documents obtained by the Los Alamos Daily Post, investigators executed a search warrant at Cunningham’s home, at 4732 Brisa Del Bosque, and found more than 400 explicit images of children and nine pornographic videos on computers belonging to Cunningham.

Twenty-two of the images had been shared through several social media sites.
Cunningham, 54, was caught after authorities received information in February from a detective working in the Westminster Police Department in Colorado. He was investigating a case in his jurisdiction related to child pornography and in the process found that an IP address belonging to Cunningham was suspected of sending child pornography related material to a subject in Colorado.

The detective provided a zip drive of the material to Los Alamos Sheriff Marco Lucero and Deputy Sheriff John Horne who turned it over to Los Alamos police. Police launched an investigation, which led to the former pastor’s arrest.

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Lawmakers take step toward eliminating statute of limitations for sex crime prosecutions

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

PATRICK MCGREEVY

The state Senate approved a measure on Wednesday that would end the statute of limitations for rape and several other sex crimes in California.

The measure by Sen. Connie Leyva (D-Chino) would allow the indefinite criminal prosecution of rape, sodomy, lewd or lascivious acts, continuous sexual abuse of a child, oral copulation and sexual penetration.

Currently, prosecution of rape must take place within 10 years, unless DNA evidence is discovered afterward.

“SB 813 will help to prevent rapists and sexual predators from evading legal consequences in California simply because the statute of limitations has expired,” Leyva said. “Regardless of when a rape or sexual assault is reported, survivors must have an opportunity to pursue justice in a court of law for the unthinkable crimes committed against them.

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Catholic priests in Montreal banned from being alone with children

CANADA
The Gaurdian (UK)

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent
@harrietsherwood
Friday 24 June 2016

Catholic priests in Montreal will be banned from being alone with children to provide a “safety net” against allegations of abuse.

Archbishop Christian Lepine has issued a decree to implement the policy, which also covers lay workers and volunteers.

According to the decree, the move was to “ensure the safety and integrity of the people to whom we bring the Gospel message and offer our pastoral care”. But, it added, it was also “to preserve the integrity, security and good reputation of God’s people”.

In an accompanying letter, Lepine said: “Recent events brought to light the horrific reality of abuse of minors and vulnerable people by members of the church. These intolerable situations have shocked and shaken the Universal Church as well as the entire population.”

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New bishop, new healing after Kansas City diocese’s sex abuse scandal

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Kansas City Star

BY MARY SANCHEZ
msanchez@kcstar.com

Nearly incomprehensible suffering preceded where the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph will humbly place itself on Sunday.

The diocese seeks reconciliation.

The new bishop, installed last fall, will make a public apology for decades of sexual abuse committed by diocesan priests.

Bishop James V. Johnston Jr. will lead a Service of Lament at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. Johnston has asked every priest in the diocese to attend. He has requested that they bring purple vestments, a sign of penance.

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Child Sex Abuse Victim Got Help

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

California man demonstrates importance of court access for child sex abuse victims

I got an email this morning from a San Diego man who wanted people in Pennsylvania to know how his state’s statute of limitations reform bill helped him and that the tactics being used to fight a statute bill here are similar to those he has seen elsewhere.

California legislators in 2002 voted to open a one-year window for all child sex abuse victims to file suits, even if they were blocked by the statute of limitations. Paul Livingston and his brother — abused as small children by the same Catholic school custodian — were among the victims who filed suit, and the court settlement with the Los Angeles Archdiocese helped Paul finally get help with the aftermath of his abuse.

This reinforces one of the most important points in these efforts to give more victims access to the civil courts. When they’re blocked by statutes of limitations, the cost of treating their problems — and the social cost of leaving the damage untreated — must be borne by the victims and by society at large. The people responsible are left unscathed.

These bills — including House Bill 1947 in Pennsylvania, now being considered by the state Senate after overwhelmingly passing in the House — have the potential to change that.

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I’m still on the Vatican commission, says abuse survivor Peter Saunders

UNITED KINGDOM
Catholic Herald

Saunders says he hopes to lead a ‘victims and survivors’ consultative panel’ to assist the commission

British campaigner Peter Saunders has insisted he is still part of the Vatican’s commission on protecting children from abuse.

In a letter published in today’s Catholic Herald, Saunders says that, although he was encouraged to resign after his strong criticisms of the speed of Vatican reforms, he is only on a “leave of absence”.

He says he hopes to lead a “victims and survivors’ consultative panel” to assist the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. This was suggested by the commission president, Cardinal Seán O’Malley, who had consulted the “C8” group of cardinals.

Saunders, the founder of NAPAC (National Association for People Abused in Childhood), had been an outspoken member of the Vatican commission until February, when he went on leave after questioning Pope Francis’s commitment to reform.

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Will sex abuse claims lead more Minn. dioceses to bankruptcy?

MINNESOTA
MPR News

Martin Moylan Jun 24, 2016

Minnesota Catholic Church leaders in St. Cloud, Crookston, New Ulm and Winona are weighing what to do as their dioceses face the financial fallout from hundreds of sex abuse claims between them.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Duluth sought bankruptcy court protection after being overwhelmed by clergy sex abuse claims. Soon, some of the state’s smaller dioceses will be forced to choose.

Experts are divided on the path they might take.

“It’s unlikely that they’re going to bankruptcy, based on national trends,” said Charles Zech, director of the Center for Church Management at Villanova University.

“Every diocese in the country virtually has had some abuse cases. And only 13 have felt the need to go to bankruptcy,” he said. “So, the odds are, it probably won’t happen.”

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Heated cross-examination at Mount Cashel trial

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on June 24, 2016

It was a fiery exchange at the Mount Cashel civil trial this morning when a Philadelphia psychiatrist was challenged for not giving more weight to the impact of childhood sexual abuse on the lives of two men.

The men are among four John Does who say the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corp. should be held liable for physical and sexual abuse by certain members of the lay order Christian Brothers.

The church contends it did not run the orphanage.

The heat came mostly from the Does’ lawyer Will Hiscock who asked Robert Toborowsky, an expert called by church lawyers, if the fact one man’s low sex drive and single status of 60 years was a red flag.

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Vatican letter asks Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet to Rome for ‘prayerful conversation’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter – Global Sisters Report

by Dan Stockman Jun. 23, 2016

The Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet are among the recipients of letters from the Vatican asking congregations to explain matters learned during the apostolic visitation.

In addition to the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet, the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Loretto Sisters also received letters from the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life (CICLSAL).

The Sisters of St. Joseph said in a statement their letter invited them to Rome for a “prayerful conversation” about “a few points mentioned in the letter.” The statement did not say what those points were, and congregational leaders declined to say anything beyond the issued statement.

A copy of the subsequent letter sent by leadership to Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet sisters was obtained by Global Sisters Report. It says that all CSJ Province Leadership Teams received the same letter from CICLSAL and quotes from it on five matters “voicing the following concerns”:

• Your desire to help bring about an ’emerging new form of religious life’;

• Your Congregation’s policy regarding members of the community who are known to hold positions of dissent from the Church’s moral teaching or approved liturgical practice;

• We also urge you to evaluate your efforts to promote ‘communion with creation’, especially in light of Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato si, a comprehensive presentation on the responsible care of creation, in view of integrating its principles enunciated in the encyclical into your current efforts in this area.

The congregation’s statement said the letter was presented as a follow-up to the on-site visit to the order in St. Paul, Minnesota, in late 2010. The congregation’s leadership team discussed whether to accept or decline the summons, but decided the “benefits outweigh the challenges of expense and some inconvenience.”

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Archbishop Hon Appoints Point of Contact for Sex Abuse Victims

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

Archbishop Hon also created four new ad hoc committees in his continuing efforts of “promoting unity.”

Guam – Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai is making some major changes within the archdiocese. This morning he issued a protocol for shuffling around of clergy and priests and he also appointed a new spokesperson and a new point of contact for sex abuse victims.

Another major move from the new apostolic administrator of the archdiocese Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai—it appears now he’s looking to implement some major changes in the leadership roles within the church. Today, he issued Protocol Number 2016-009 in which he appointed a new spokesperson, Msgr. Bibi Arroyo, as well as a new point-of-contact for sex abuse victims, Father Patrick Castro, who currently heads the St. Fidelis Friary.

Archbishop Hon also created four ad hoc committees for developing strategies. The four are Scenario of the Archdiocese, which will develop a scenario of what the situation should be once the new archbishop’s mandate is fulfilled. The second is Ongoing Formation which is to draw up a plan for formation of clergy members. Next is Proposal for Repositioning of Priests which focuses on a shuffling of leadership roles and priests that would quote result in a more unified Archdiocese. The final ad hoc committee will be Seminary Visitation which is to get more information on all the major seminaries on Guam.

The members appointed to these new committees are:

For scenario of situation: Fr. Adrian Cristobal (chairperson), Msgr. Arroyo, Father Jeffrey San Nicolas, Msgr. David C. Quitugua and Father Patric Castro.

For ongoing formation, Father Mike Crisostomo (chairperson), Father Lito Abad, Msgr. David I. A. Quitugua, Father Joe English and Father Gus Gumataotao.

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The bishops who helped a paedophile priest with his thesis on another paedophile priest

AUSTRALIA
Crikey

Paedophile priest John Joseph Farrell wrote a masters thesis on another paeodphile priest, who served the same diocese. And two bishops helped him write it, writes freelance writer Kate Doak.

New documents show two Catholic bishops helped paedophile priest John Joseph Farrell with his postgraduate thesis on another paedophile priest, Crikey can reveal.

The current bishops of the Dioceses of Maitland-Newcastle and Wagga Wagga, William Wright and Gerard Hanna respectively, assisted Farrell with his postgraduate masters of letters thesis at the University of New England between 1988 and 1991.

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Montreal Catholic archdiocese forbids priests from being alone with children

CANADA
Toronto Star

By GIUSEPPE VALIANTEThe Canadian Press
Thu., June 23, 2016

MONTREAL—Priests and anyone else in “the orbit of the church” will be forbidden from being alone with children and other vulnerable people as part of a pilot project, the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Montreal said Thursday.

The goal is to create a “safety net” for everyone associated with the Catholic Church in Montreal, canon François Sarrazin said in an interview.

“Imagine if you are alone in a room and a child accuses you of hitting them, how will you react?” Sarrazin asked. “Whether it’s true or not, you need a witness. Not being in the room alone with someone who is vulnerable is simply being prudent.”

He said the policy will be introduced in a handful of churches across the city, starting in September.

For Carlo Tarini, a spokesman for an association of victims of priests, the new rules are “too little too late.”

He said the policy is just a way for the church to protect itself against lawsuits stemming from child-abuse scandals that have rocked the city’s diocese and the Roman Catholic Church across the globe.

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Church must apologise to gay people, pope’s adviser declares

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

A leading cardinal has said the Catholic Church should apologise to the gay community for its scandalous and terrible treatment of them, which had not changed until “very recently”.

Speaking in Dublin, Cardinal Reinhard Marx said: “The history of homosexuals in our societies is very bad because we’ve done a lot to marginalise [them].”

As church and society “we’ve also to say ‘sorry, sorry’ ”.

The German cardinal is a member of the council of nine cardinals chosen by Pope Francis to advise him.

Until “very recently”, the church, but also society at large, had been “very negative about gay people . . . it was the whole society. It was a scandal and terrible,” he told The Irish Times after speaking at a conference held in Trinity College.

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Downsizing the Roman Curia is not reform

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Jun. 23, 2016

With the election of Pope Francis, hopes were raised that the Vatican bureaucracy would finally be reformed. Sadly, that does not appear to be happening, except perhaps in the area of finances. Instead, the offices created after Vatican II are being downsized and reorganized while the older pre-Vatican II congregations and tribunals have been left untouched.

There is a good argument for this reorganization. The hope of the Council of Cardinals advising the pope is that the reorganization will make these offices more efficient and encourage better coordination. But if this “reform” was being done by any other pope, say Benedict, it would be portrayed as regressive, as an attempt to de-emphasize the issues that came out of the Second Vatican Council.

The truth is that the Vatican old guard never liked these offices and did not think much of them. The “real” Roman Curia, in their view, were the older congregations that dealt with doctrine, liturgy, clergy, religious, bishops, oriental churches, the missions, education, and making saints. The prefects or heads of these congregations have to be cardinals.

The newer councils were seen as peripheral and less prestigious. These councils dealt with ecumenism, interreligious dialogue, laity, family, migrants, healthcare workers, charity, culture, mass communications, and justice and peace. The presidents or heads of these councils do not need to be cardinals, although many of them have been.

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Advocates for child sex abuse victims work to save bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

As state senators mull possible changes to a proposed overhaul of Pennsylvania’s child sexual abuse laws, victims groups are ratcheting up their calls to preserve what they say is the most important part of the plan.

Specifically, supporters of the plan want to see it include a provision that would allow victims to move forward with now-expired lawsuits against their abusers and organizations that shield them.

The calls come after reports Wednesday that the Senate Judiciary Committee plans to remove that part of the bill and replace it with a provision to give victims a way around the limits if they can prove an extreme cover-up.

John Salveson, founder of the Delaware County-based Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse, said Thursday that move would be more window dressing than substance.

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Dixons Mills pastor indicted on sexual abuse, rape charges

ALABAMA
West Alabama Watchman

A Marengo County grand jury has indicted Gregory Lucy, 59, on five counts of first degree sexual abuse and attempted rape. Lucy was arrested following the indictment.

Lucy is the pastor of the El Shaddai AOH Church of God in Dixons Mills, Ala.

According to authorities, the charges in the case involve underage church members. Lucy is out on a $375,000 bond.

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Former camp counselor arrested for child molestation

PENNSYLVANIA
Standard Speaker

BY AMANDA CHRISTMAN / PUBLISHED: JUNE 24, 2016

A Hazle Township man who volunteered in greater Hazleton, admitted to molesting a minor at a church camp nearly six years ago, police say.

Zachary M. Lee, 24, was arrested Monday and charged with felonies for unlawful contact with a minor, corruption of minors, unlawful restraint and one misdemeanor count of indecent assault with a person less than 16 years old.

He was arraigned by Magisterial District Judge Daniel O’Donnell, Sugarloaf Township, who released him on $25,000 unsecured bail.

O’Donnell ordered him to not have any contact with the victim, the victim’s family or any minors.

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PA SENATE TO REJECT ‘DANGEROUS’ CHILD SEX ABUSE PROVISION

PENNSYLVANIA
Church Militant

by Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • June 23, 2016

HARRISBURG, Pa. (ChurchMilitant.com) – A Pennsylvania senate committee is set to scrap a provision within proposed reforms to the current child sex abuse statute of limitations that would apply the amendments retroactively.

According to two sources in the legislative process, the Republican-controlled state senate Judiciary Committee is preparing to remove, potentially as soon as this week, the controversial clause in House Bill 1947 (HB 1947) that allows alleged child sex abuse victims to file lawsuits over decades-old molestations, amid criticism from the Pennsylvania Catholic Church and local businesses.

In a letter distributed to parishes earlier this month, Philadelphia archbishop Charles Chaput outlined the issues with the proposed legislation, which he described as posing “serious dangers” for local parishes and a “clear attack on the Church.”

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Kristen Pfautz Woolley: Pa. Senate committee has chance to help sexual abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Why PA should change statutes of limitation on sex abuse crimes

I am not Catholic.

I am a survivor of child sexual abuse. From the ages of 10-12, I was repeatedly violated by a man my parents trusted. My abuse only ended when my abuser became engaged to be married. I remember feeling relief that my nightmare was over. I didn’t understand at age 12 that it was not over, nor would it ever be over.

At the age of 17, I ran into him at a local town carnival. He was pushing his newborn daughter in a stroller. He creepily proceeded to tell me how much he enjoyed changing her diapers because he found it fascinating to look at her anatomy.

I summoned the courage to report my abuse at the age of 25. I learned I had waited too long. I lost my criminal rights at age 14 and my civil rights at age 18 because of Pennsylvania’s statutes of limitations at that time. To my horror, I also learned that he now had more daughters and was employed as a school janitor.

Legally I knew I couldn’t just accuse him without the very real threat of a slander or defamation lawsuit. I needed incontrovertible proof.

I hired a private investigation firm, contacted my abuser and arranged to meet him. He didn’t know we were surrounded by private detectives, who clearly heard him confess that he had molested me and then apologize for what he had done to me as a 10-year-old girl.

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Press watchdog clears weekly over Bishop sex abuse claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Hold The Front Page

by David Sharman Published 24 Jun 2016

A claim that newspapers should not be allowed to report on the sexual abuse of children by a long-dead bishop has been rejected by the press watchdog.

Last year the Bishop of Chichester issued a former apology following the settlement of a civil claim against one of his predecessors, George Bell, who was alleged to have abused a young woman while leading the Diocese.

Marilyn Billingham wrote to the Independent Press Standards Organisation over the Chichester Observer’s coverage of the story, arguing that the press should only report historic allegations as fact in circumstances where a court has found this to be the case.

But IPSO rejected the complaint, saying the newspaper had been entitled to rely on the information provided by the Church in an official press release.

The Observer had reported Bell, pictured above left, had “abused a young victim while leader of the diocese”, and that this news would “come as a great shock to people who regarded him as a hero”.

In February, HTFP reported that the victim had spoken exclusively to Brighton daily The Argus seven decades on from her ordeal.

Ms Billingham claimed the Observer’s report had breached Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code of Practice, stating it was inaccurate to report as fact that Bell had sexually abused a child, because he had not been found guilty in a court of law of such offences and there was no further evidence to corroborate the allegations.

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New guidelines forbid Montreal Catholic priests, lay workers to be alone with children

CANADA
National Post

Graeme Hamilton | June 23, 2016

MONTREAL – Invoking past sexual abuse scandals and the need to create a “healthy and safe environment” in its churches, the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Montreal has announced new guidelines to ensure priests and lay workers are never alone with children.

“Recent events have brought to light the horrific reality of abuse of minors and vulnerable persons by members of the Church,” Christian Lépine, archbishop of Montreal, wrote in a message to the faithful dated Wednesday.

“These intolerable situations have shocked and shaken the Universal Church as well as the entire population to whom we wish to proclaim the Good News of Christ.”

A pilot project to begin this fall in 10 parishes and eventually extend to all 194 in Montreal will prohibit priests, staff and volunteers from being alone with minors. Following the lead of other organizations like amateur sport associations and the Scouts, the archdiocese will institute police screening of new hires and volunteers working with children or the vulnerable.

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June 23, 2016

Indictment claims North Aurora pastor ‘begged’ for sex from teen girl

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Dan Campana
Aurora Beacon-News

A three-count indictment issued against the pastor of a North Aurora church includes an allegation that the 39-year-old “begged” to have sex with the teen girl he has been accused of sexually assaulting.

Ralphael Robinson “grabbed (the girl) by the wrist … and begged her to have sex with him,” the indictment states in connection to the charge of attempted aggravated criminal sexual abuse, which was added to single counts of criminal sexual assault and sex abuse on which Robinson was arrested in April.

Authorities have said Robinson fondled and inappropriately touched the teen girl, who later confronted him about the incident April 18 at Kingdom Church on South Lincolnway Street. Robinson, a registered sex offender, remains held in Kane County Jail on $107,500 bond. He appeared in Kane County Court Thursday for a hearing during which his arraignment was scheduled for July 14.

Robinson is described as Kingdom Church’s “senior leader” on the bio page for the Ralphael Robinson Ministries website. Although the church’s website was taken down shortly after Robinson’s arrest, the ministries’ site features several photos of Robinson as it touts “prophetic advisement” and credit repair among its offerings. Robinson, who has been in jail since April 22, is also featured in a graphic for an event called “Manifesting Your Prophecy” which was scheduled for May 21.

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GA church hires youth pastor accused of child sexual abuse — only to have him allegedly do it again

GEORGIA
Raw Story

BETHANIA PALMA MARKUS
23 JUN 2016

Questions are being raised in Marietta, Georgia, as to how a man charged with sexually abusing a child when he worked as a youth pastor in 2013 could be hired as a youth pastor this year, in a position where he is again accused of sexual abuse, 11Alive reports.

Alexander Edwards has been charged in two cases, one from 2013 and one from this year.

He worked as a youth pastor at Providence Baptist Church in downstate Leesburg, where he was charged with two felony counts for making sexual advances on a 13-year-old boy in 2013.

Yet the case wasn’t prosecuted at the time, and Edwards was hired by another church as a youth pastor, this time at Cobb County’s Eastside Baptist Church, 11Alive reports. This despite a $5,000 bond with limitations requiring that he not have any contact with children under 18 years old.

He was arrested in April on suspicion of molesting an 11 year old in Cobb County.

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Jurors deliberate in trial of Passaic priest accused of molesting 14-year-old girl

NEW JERSEY
The Record

BY KIBRET MARKOS
STAFF WRITER | THE RECORD

Jurors in Paterson started deliberating Thursday in the trial of a former Passaic priest who is accused of sexually molesting a 14-year-old girl three years ago.

Passaic County prosecutors said during a trial in Superior Court in Paterson that the Rev. Jose Lopez took the girl to his private living quarters inside the St. Mary’s Church on Market Street, placed her on his lap and touched her inappropriately.

Witnesses for the prosecution testified that the girl told them Lopez tried to rape her but she ran out of his suite. They also said he admitted that he took the girl into his suite and that he went “too far.”

Lopez was removed from the church after the allegations were reported to the Catholic diocese and later to authorities in 2013. Lopez maintains that he is innocent and that he never touched the girl in a sexual manner.

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Ex-priest promises to repay $33,000

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

By Frank Juliano Published Thursday, June 23, 2016

A priest charged with stealing thousands of dollars from his Seymour church has applied for pre-trial probation, a program for first offenders, the Valley Independent Sentinel reports.

If the Rev. Honore Kombo’s application for accelerated rehabilitation is accepted, the felony charge of first-degree larceny could be dismissed. He was arrested in late February, eight months after he was relieved of his duties at St. Augustine Church by the Archdiocese of Hartford.

Kombo, 50, said during an appearance Tuesday in Milford Superior Court that he intends to repay the nearly $34,000 by his next court date on July 26, the Valley Indy reports.

The former St. Augustine pastor, now living in Weston, allegedly embezzled at least $20,000 willed to the parish as well as checks written to the church. He is free on a $10,000 bond.

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Local priest cleared of accusations

IOWA
Clinton Herald

DAVENPORT — A local priest has been cleared of accusations that he inappropriately touched minors three decades ago.

The Diocese of Davenport through a press release announced that Father John Stack will be assigned to priestly ministry and service to the Diocese.

According to the release, the Diocese received a report in 2013 that stated Stack, then a chaplain at Mercy Medical Center in Clinton, inappropriately touched minors in approximately the 1980s. The Diocese reported this to the Scott County Attorney’s Office in compliance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the Diocese and the county attorney. Stack was removed from ministry while this matter was investigated.

As a result of the investigation and with the recommendation of the Diocesan Review Board, Bishop Martin Amos petitioned the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican, requesting the case be brought to trial. The trial process could have resulted in one of three judgements: innocent, guilty or that the accusations of sexual abuse of minors were not proven.

The three judges, all from outside of the Diocese of Davenport, found that the accusations of sexual abuse of minors by Stack were not proven. There was not a finding of innocence or guilt. In order to assure the rights of all, the decision was appealed for further review. The Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith concurred with the finding of the judges.

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Fight over child abuse bill turns rancorous

NEW YORK
The Legislative Gazette

By Simon Rosenbluth, Gazette staff writer on June 23, 2016

Victims vow to hold lawmakers accountable, Catholic League calls legislation a ‘sham’

Child abuse victims and their advocates are going on the offensive after the Legislature failed yet again to pass the Child Victims Act (S.7296/A.9877) a bill that would make it easier for child abuse victims to seek justice.

Specifically, the omnibus bill would eliminate the criminal and civil statutes of limitations for future victims of child sexual abuse and create a one-year window for previous victims of childhood sexual abuse to file civil legal claims against their attackers and culpable institutions such as schools and churches.

An outspoken advocate for the bill, Melanie Blow, highlighted the importance of eliminating the statute of limitations for victims saying, “It takes an average of 21 years for a victim to come forth,” explaining that, by the time a victim has the courage to take legal action, it is often too late.

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KS–Sex offending church workers -1 from Canada-are “outed”

KANSAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, June 23, 2016

For more information: David Clohessy (314-566-9790 cell, davidgclohessy@gmail.com), Barbra Graber (540-214-8874, mennonite@snapnetwork.org), Stephanie Krehbiel (734-678-2185, stephaniekrehbiel@gmail.com)

Five names added to list of sex-offending Mennonite church workers
Each admitted to sexual misconduct but none have been charged
Four live in Kansas; One, a Canadian, is a painter on cruise ships
Group demands that Mennonite Church USA end its practice of keeping secret files on clergy with sexual misconduct charges

A support group for survivors of sexual abuse is announcing the addition of five new names to their Mennonite Abuse Prevention (MAP) list. To be placed on the MAP list, offenders must have been named elsewhere through established media sources, internal institutional documents, court records, or any combination of the above.

http://www.snapnetwork.org/mennonite_map

SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, says that each of these five men admitted to sexual misconduct, one of them with a teen-aged girl. However, none have faced criminal charges. Four of them live in Kansas. The fifth, a Canadian, is a painter on cruise ships. Brief histories of these predators are set forth below. Documentation and photos can be found at the associated links.

However, MAP list researcher and SNAP Mennonite member Stephanie Krehbiel of Lawreence, Kansas added, “We’ve learned recently that the Mennonite Church USA keeps sealed files on pastors who have had charges of sexual misconduct against them. We’ve even learned about pastoral search committees who have hired pastors without being informed that the pastor in question has charges of sexual misconduct against him in previous jobs. This is unacceptable. Have we learned nothing from watching the Catholic church quietly move abusive priests from one diocese to another? We demand transparency about how the church keeps track of sexual misconduct charges against individuals.”

SNAP Mennonite leader Barbra Graber of Harrisonburg, Virginia, chimed in, “There’s absolutely no place in a faith community for sealed files concerning a church leader’s sexual misconduct.”

The survivors group called on Anabaptist/Mennonite officials to publicly release the names, photos, whereabouts and work histories of each and every abusive church worker.

David Clohessy, a Saint Louis, Missouri, man who is the long-time Executive Director for SNAP, also wanted to remind people that sexual predators are not just a danger within a religious group.

“Churches are quite often too quick to forgive, and when church officials keep the identity of men – or women — who abuse kids and vulnerable adults ‘in-house’ instead of reporting to the authorities, it’s not just members of the faith community who are endangered. Anyone, including members of the public, can be at risk. Wounded victims should not have to bear the burden of warning police, prosecutors, parents and parishioners!”

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Priests, catholic volunteers will no longer be alone with children

CANADA
CTV

CTV Montreal
Published Thursday, June 23, 2016

The archdiocese of Montreal is implementing a plan that would forbid priests and church volunteers from being alone with children.

Final details of the plane are still being worked out as the Catholic Church looks for ten parishes in and around the city to implement the pilot project later this year.

Canon Francois Sarrazin said that given the scandals that have rocked the Catholic Church, the plan makes sense.

“There is a time for everything,” he said, pointing out the idea has been in the works for several years.

“The diocese of Montreal has been working on a plan to ‘filter’ volunteers, to investigate parish staff, and not just the priests, but all people who are involved in the parish.”

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Estimated lost income potential for orphanage boys in millions

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet

Published on June 23, 2016

The potential lost income for two John Does because of the effect on their lives from their Mount Cashel experiences might have hit as high as roughly $3.5 million combined.

The figures given for the two men differ because one man is retired from the military and the other is a retired teacher, but that figure is sum total based on testimony today in the Mount Cashel civil trial.

Calgary forensic psychologist Cara Brown was called to testify by Paul Kennedy, one of the lawyers for four John Does who claim that the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s should be held liable for physical and sexual abuse they say they suffered at the hands of certain members of the lay order Christian Brothers during the era late 1940s to early 1960s.

The church contends it did not oversee the orphanage.

Many complicated factors go into the potential loss income calculations – from earnings statistics to psychological reports on the men. Brown explained the bottom line figures are based on various scenarios of the men’s’ potential earnings if they had no impairment (due to their experiences.)

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Bully pulpit

PENNSYLVANIA
The Economist

ABOVE the announcement for confessions on Tuesday at 7pm, the weekly bulletin for St Rose of Lima’s church near Philadelphia had an unusual notice for parishioners with the heading, “JUST SO YOU ARE AWARE”. It stated that Nick Miccarelli voted in favour of House Bill 1947. The legislation would abolish the criminal statute of limitations for future child sexual abuse cases, including rape, incest and statutory sexual assault. In addition to sitting in the statehouse, Mr Miccarelli is a member of the parish.

Many states are revising their statutes of limitations for assault. Delaware has done so—a wave of lawsuits followed—as has California. New York’s statehouse considered a bill this month that would have extended its statute of limitations by five years. Pennsylvania’s bill would allow civil cases for child sexual abuse to be filed against public and private institutions, and extend the statute of limitations for civil cases from 30 to 50 years (the average male victim does not come forward until he is in his late 30s, women come forward even later on average). The state senate’s judiciary committee is considering whether to send the bill to the floor for a vote.

Mr Miccarelli, the lawmaker and parishioner, was not the only representative singled out by the church for supporting the bill. Martina White, who represents a district in Philadelphia, has been disinvited from several church events. Another was told by a priest that he had betrayed his faith. Earlier this month a letter written by Charles Chaput, the Archbishop of Philadelphia, was distributed at Sunday services saying the bill was a “clear attack” on the church and “poses serious dangers” for parishes, charities and schools. Archbishop Chaput helped defeat a similar bill in Colorado when he was Denver’s Archbishop.

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Statute of Limitations Developments

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

Amid reports that the fix is in to gut House Bill 1947, the bill that would reform statute of limitations laws in cases of child sex abuse, a group of current and former Philadelphia district attorneys issued a press release supporting the bill in its current form.

I don’t ordinarily run press releases, but I’ll make an exception, because these are people whose investigations into predators in the Philadelphia Archdiocese led to two damning grand jury reports.

I’m hearing that there’s a chance the Senate Judiciary Committee will vote on the bill this week. Here’s a Philadelphia Inquirer story reporting some of the same things I’ve been hearing about the bill’s likely fate.

I’ve also heard from a West Philadelphia woman who wanted people to know that many Catholics don’t support the lobbying efforts of Catholic officials who strongly oppose the bill. Below the D.A. release, I’ll share her email, with links to some excellent comments she received in the midst of gathering 3,000 signatures.

Finally, I want to recommend that you read a great op-ed column that will appear on the mcall.com website this evening and in The Morning Call Friday. It’s by Kristen Pfautz Woolley of York, a strong advocate for the bill and a victim of abuse by a family friend when she was a child. I wrote about her a few years ago.

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Friends testify on behalf of Passaic priest accused in sex case

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Ben Horowitz | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

on June 23, 2016

PATERSON — Friends and relatives of a Passaic priest accused of inappropriately touching and kissing a 14-year-old girl spoke on his behalf during his trial Wednesday, depicting him as a moral and caring person, according to an account in The Record.

As reported by The Star-Ledger, the Rev. Jose Lopez, now 37, was charged in 2013 with luring the girl to his church residence and kissing her. He is charged with attempted sexual assault, criminal sexual contact, luring and child endangerment, The Record said.

Seven character witnesses testified on Lopez’ behalf in Superior Court in Paterson, including church member Cindy Negrete, who said she had known Lopez “a long time” and called him “an amazing person … I know he would never, ever do something like this,” The Record reported.

Gloria Shope, a retired school administrator, said she had known Lopez at a Morris County church she attended, according to the newspaper. “He is a loyal friend, trustworthy and very responsible, caring and one of the holiest priests I know,” she said.

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Victims feel cheated after priest facing sexual assault charges dies before going to trial

CANADA
Windsor Star

TREVOR WILHELM, WINDSOR STAR

Victims of an alleged pedophile priest, whose trial was repeatedly delayed, say his death this week has robbed them of the chance to confront him.

Linus Bastien died June 19 at home in Petrolia after his case dragged on with repeated delays for five years. He was 89.

One of Bastien’s alleged victims from St. Mary church in Maidstone said he was disappointed when he learned of the priest’s death.

“I knew it meant the end of the court case,” said the 52-year-old man whose identity is covered by a publication ban. “A sense of loss and knowing that me and the 11 other witnesses, we’ll be denied that sense of closure that the criminal court case would have given us.”

Bastien served at many churches throughout Essex County, starting with Most Precious Blood in Windsor in 1951.

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Bankruptcy judge confirms reorganization plan

NEW MEXICO
Gallup IndependentI

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., June 22, 2016

Bishop apologizes

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE – The Diocese of Gallup’s Chapter 11 case took a dramatic and emotional turn during a confirmation hearing at U.S. Bankruptcy Court Tuesday.

The first hour of the hearing was devoted to walking the court through all the legal details that comprise the diocese’s plan of reorganization, which will be funded in excess of $21 million. However, the second hour of the hearing featured an apologetic statement by Gallup Bishop James S. Wall to survivors of clergy sex abuse, followed by emotional remarks by several abuse survivors from Arizona and New Mexico.

“I want to first begin by acknowledging the reason why we’re here today, and the reason is because bad people, bad men committed bad and sinful acts against good people,” Wall told the small group of abuse survivors in the courtroom. “And there’s no excuse for that. There never was and there never will be an excuse for that.”

“These are men who are supposed to represent Jesus Christ and draw people into a deeper relationship with him,” Wall added. “And they did the complete opposite. So I want to start by saying I’m sorry for that.”

Wall, who repeatedly referred to clergy sex abuse survivors in the Gallup Diocese as “our survivors,” thanked the abuse claimants in the courtroom.

“Thank you for your courage to stand up, to come forward to tell your story,” he said. “I know it wasn’t easy. I know it was very difficult, but I’m grateful for your courage, so thank you very much.”
The bishop said he wanted to do all that he could do to heal past abuse, harms and hurt. He also said he was “personally looking forward to having healing services” throughout the diocese, as well as writing letters to abuse survivors.

“And the reason why I want to do that is I want to bring the light of Christ into this in order to help our survivors heal,” he said

Generational crime

Attorney James Stang, legal counsel for the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, which represents the interests of abuse claimants in the case, asked for and received permission from Judge David T. Thuma to allow abuse survivors to gather around a table usually reserved for attorneys so they could support one another as they made statements to the court.

Stang noted that this has not been a regular bankruptcy case where the claims are paid, the ledgers are cleared and people simply move on.

“These folks will live with this experience, obviously, the rest of their lives. And I refer what happened to them as a generational crime,” he said, explaining the lifelong impact clergy sex abuse has on the survivors, their parents and their children.

“I want to apologize,” Stang added. “I want to apologize because our system doesn’t do justice to these folks.”

Four of the abuse claimants, two women and two men, stood to deliver remarks to the bishop and the court. All agreed to be publicly identified.

Prudence Jones, of Gallup, who was molested as a child on the Navajo Nation by Brother Mark Schornack, a Franciscan friar, was the first to speak.

“Bishop Wall, I want you to know that I accept your apology,” an emotional Jones said. “But I also want you to know that the amount of suffering I endured because of Brother Mark is immeasurable and lifelong. The pain he caused me reverberated through my family, and sadly my daughters were raised in the shadow of that pain.”

Jones told the bishop he could further her healing process by releasing the files of abusive clergy — something Wall has declined to do.

“I had been opposed to approving the reorganization plan because the non-monetaries did not include releasing these documents,” Jones said. “Bishop Wall, the first time we met, I told you I forgave Brother Mark because it was the right thing to do. And I asked you to do the right thing. I’m still waiting.”

‘Unrepentant criminals’

“The misdeeds of the clergy and the suffering to those we represent is not illusory, it is real,” Criss Candelaria said. “I have seen it. People must believe that it is true because it is true.”

Candelaria, an attorney in Pinetop, Arizona, is a former longtime Arizona prosecutor. He has been public in the past about being targeted as a child for grooming by the Rev. James Burns. During Tuesday’s hearing, Candelaria called clergy abusers “unrepentant criminals.”

Candelaria, who has served as chairman of Stang’s committee, said he was disappointed that Gallup diocesan officials rejected some of the non-monetary provision proposals the committee made that would enhance the protection of children and vulnerable adults. Candelaria asked the diocese to reconsider those recommendations.

“Please do more, not less,” he said.

Candelaria, however, gave credit to some in the diocese.

“And I’d like to thank some clergy — almost all unknown — who took action to protect children and vulnerable people through the years,” Candelaria said, specifically citing the Rev. Tim Farrell, the pastor at Sacred Heart Parish in Farmington, who was not in attendance at the court hearing.

JoAnn Stoltenberger, a resident of the Farmington area, also credited Farrell’s support.

“He helped me through this whole process,” she said. “If it wouldn’t have been for him, I don’t know what I would have done.”

Stoltenberger, who was abused as a child by the Rev. Julian Hartig, a Franciscan friar, talked about her healing process.

“But through all this I’ve learned forgiveness, especially toward myself,” she said. “I felt so much guilt over the years even though I knew it wasn’t my fault. And Father Julian, I forgive you. You can’t have another day of my life.”

Plan approved

Phoenix resident Larry Hellman was the final abuse survivor to speak. Hellman shared how his abuse by the Rev. Clement Hageman, which started with a horrific rape when he was 11, destroyed his childhood dream of becoming a priest, left him with post-traumatic stress disorder and set him up for years of self-sabotaging behavior.

More recently, he said, the Diocese of Gallup reneged on its commitment to pay for the psychological counseling that was assisting him.

“The Catholic Church promised to cover the cost of these visits,” Hellman said. “Ultimately, I was released because guess what? The Catholic Church refused to pay the bill. I know how it feels to be violated 50 years after the first assault.”

In spite of those criticisms, Susan Boswell, the lead bankruptcy attorney for the diocese, reported to the court that the abuse survivors in the case voted to approve the diocese’s plan of reorganization. From the 57 claimants, Boswell said, 50 “timely ballots” were filed by the voting deadline. Of those, 46 claimants voted to approve the plan. Four claimants did not vote either way so their ballots were not counted. Three more ballots arrived after the voting deadline. Although those ballots weren’t counted, the claimants had voted to accept the plan. The remaining four claimants who didn’t cast a vote signed certifications and releases.

At the conclusion of Tuesday’s hearing, Thuma agreed to confirm the plan, which is slated to have an effective date in July.

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Sisters’ Lawsuit Against Pennsylvania Diocese Claims Sex Abuse by Priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Insurance Journal

Andrew G. Simpson | June 23, 2016

Two sisters have sued a Catholic priest, his central Pennsylvania diocese and two ex-bishops who supervised him, saying the cleric molested them repeatedly as girls — including one at her first Communion party.

The younger sister, who is now 47, said she met the Rev. Charles Bodziak at St. Leo Church in Altoona, where he was the parish priest, when she was in second grade. At the party her parents threw after her first Communion, Bodziak groped her buttocks and gave her an open mouth kiss, according to the lawsuit.

Bodziak, now 74, repeatedly molested the girl until she was in sixth grade, taking her on school trips where she was fondled, kissed and assured “that what he was doing was ‘OK’ because he was a priest,” her lawsuit said.

The lawsuit filed by her older sister, now 49, makes similar allegations against Bodziak, covering the time when she was 8 to 14 years old. She said Bodziak gave her wine on several occasions before molesting her. Bodziak assaulted her in the rectory after summoning her from school and molested her while she practiced the organ in church, according to her lawsuit.

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Jail for Vic ex-priest over rape in office

AUSTRALIA
4BU

A predatory ex-Catholic priest has been jailed for drugging and raping a student after inviting the boy to play computer games in his office.

Michael Scott Aulsebrook, 60, was the boarders’ co-ordinator at Salesian College Rupertswood when he attacked the boy in the 1980s.

He lured the boy to play on his computer after lights-out and gave his victim a soft drink spiked with a sedative.

After raping him, Aulsebrook said: “Get out of my sight. You disgust me”. He was found guilty of the rape, but also pleaded guilty to three counts of indecent assault against two other victims, one male and one female.

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Tourisme sexuel: un Français condamné à 16 ans de prison pour avoir abusé d’au moins 66 garçons

FRANCE
BFM

[Darantiere Thierry, a French citizen, 52, former director of a Catholic retirement home, was sentenced Wednesday to 16 years in prison for raping and sexually abusing at least 66 boys in at least 3 different countries.]

Thierry Darantière, un Français de 52 ans, a été condamné ce mercredi à 16 ans de réclusion criminelle pour avoir violé ou agressé sexuellement au moins 66 garçons dans au moins 3 pays différents.

Après plus de 5 heures de délibérations, le verdict est tombé. Thierry Darantière, un Français âgé de 52 ans, a été condamné à 16 ans de réclusion criminelle pour avoir violé ou agressé sexuellement au moins 66 garçons au Sri Lanka, en Tunisie et en Egypte. Une peine assortie d’une injonction de soins dans le cadre d’un suivi socio-judiciaire de dix ans, qui est inférieure aux réquisitions de l’accusation qui réclamait 18 ans de réclusion. L’avocat général a parlé d’un dossier “hors norme” de pédophilie.

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