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.

April 12, 2016

Elizondo’s suicide note does not admit to 1983 allegations

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

By Elaine Ayala
April 11, 2016

Father Virgilio Elizondo calls himself a sinner and asks for forgiveness and mercy in a typewritten suicide note released Monday, but does not refer to last year’s accusation that he molested a young boy who came to him for help more than 30 years ago.

A month after his death from a self-inflicted gunshot, the one-page document was released to local media Monday by attorney Thomas J. Henry, who represents a man, known only as John Doe, who alleges he was abused as a boy by a former priest named Jesus Armando Dominguez. The lawsuit alleges that when the boy reported the abuse by Dominguez to Elizondo in 1983, Elizondo kissed and fondled him.

The typed, unsigned note, titled “Farewell,” said Elizondo hoped his death would “bring healing to anyone that I might have hurt” and said his life had been “dedicated to serving others.”

Elizondo, who was 80, notes his fatigue, failing health and feeling “empty.” He quoted the Gospel of John — “Greater love no one has, (than) to lay down his life for his friends” — and said he was “offering my life as a final gift.”

“I freely choose my moment and way of giving my life to others,” the note said. “This is not a suicide but a farewell gift. I pray that the gift of my life may bring healing to anyone that I might have hurt.” …

The Archdiocese of San Antonio did not comment but released a prepared statement Monday about the note.

“Out of respect for the privacy of the Elizondo family, the Archdiocese of San Antonio feels that it would be inappropriate for us to try to interpret or comment on the meaning of the message left by Father Virgilio Elizondo,” it stated. The statement also clarified that outside of this pending litigation, the archdiocese has not been made aware of any allegation against Elizondo of sexual abuse of a minor. …

David Clohessy, executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said that argument — that survivors who wait so long after their alleged abuse don’t remember it accurately — has been particularly hard on survivors.

Clohessy, a survivor himself, has worked for the organization for more than 25 years. He said he has read dozens of suicide notes written by accused priests.

He called Elizondo’s “typical. He essentially admits it, albeit somewhat obliquely.

“Sadly, few child molesters, even as they’re dying, summon the courage to tell the truth,” he said. “Often, they come very close, and I think that’s what Father Elizondo did here. It would have been extraordinarily quick and easy to say, ‘I didn’t do this.’ Yet he didn’t.”

“It’s horrifying on so many levels,” said Clohessy, which is why he said SNAP asked San Antonio church officials “to low-key” Elizondo’s funeral.

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.

April 11, 2016

SNAP plans to protest controversial pastor

KENTUCKY
The Courier-Journal

Matthew Glowicki, @MattGlo
April 11, 2016

The leader of a local church who had been associated with allegations of sex abuse cover-ups is scheduled to speak this week at a religious conference for preachers, drawing the criticism of a support group for clergy sexual abuse survivors.

C.J. Mahaney, the current senior pastor of Sovereign Grace Church in Louisville, is set to speak at the Together for the Gospel conference, a gathering expected to draw thousands to town Tuesday-Thursday at the KFC Yum! Center.

Leaders with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests plan to protest outside the conference Tuesday from noon to 2 p.m. by speaking out about the allegations against Mahaney and the church he formerly pastored, Sovereign Grace Ministries. It was a denomination comprised of a network of dozens of churches now known as Sovereign Grace Churches. The denomination moved its headquarters from Maryland to Louisville.

A 2012 civil lawsuit filed in Maryland accused Mahaney of helping to cover up sex abuse by both church leaders and members in the Maryland church, the Courier-Journal previously reported.

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.

Tolleson PD: Youth pastor Robert Jerez arrested for having sex with underage churchgoer

ARIZONA
ABC 15

Joe Enea
Apr 11, 2016

TOLLESON, AZ – A Tolleson youth pastor has been arrested for having a sexual relationship with an underage member of his church.

Court records show 35-year-old Robert Anthony Jerez had a three-month relationship with the female victim, during which they had sex more than 10 times and shared drugs and alcohol.

Tolleson police on Thursday got a call from an employee of Grace Community Church, near 78th Avenue and Lower Buckeye Road, saying a young female churchgoer told a friend that she had a sexual relationship with “Pastor Tony.”

The victim’s father was also told this information and he relayed to police that Pastor Tony and his daughter were in a relationship from October 2015 to December 2015. The father also provided police with his daughter’s cell phone which contained texted photos between the two that were sexual in nature.

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.

Effort to reform child sex abuse crime laws clears a hurdle in House

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

The laws that govern how long victims of child sex abuse have to bring their predators to justice came one step closer to being reformed on Monday.

A bill that would reform the statute of limitations cleared a hurdle in the House as lawmakers approved two amendments to House Bill 1947, which would eliminate civil and criminal statutes of limitations to most sex crimes, especially child sex abuse cases – all going forward.

The House agreed to attach an amendment introduced by Rep. Mark Rozzi (D-Berks) that would retroactively raise the age limit for civil lawsuits in sex abuse cases from 30 to 50.

Speaking before a House session that was notably boisterous with chatter all day, Rozzi brought the chamber to a hushed silence as he spoke about friends and victims who had either committed suicide or suffered decades of anguish after being sexually abused by priests.

Rozzi’s amendment would raise the age limit for victims to seek charges – retroactively — from 30 to 50.

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.

SD–Victims want bishop to help on abuse

SOUTH DAKOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, April 11, 2016

For more information: David Clohessy (314) 566-9790 cell, davidgclohessy@gmail.com, Barbara Dorris (314) 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org

Victims urge bishop to act on abuse
Group wants “outreach” about SD predator
He was just sued for child sex crimes in Texas
But he’s an SD native and worked here too

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is urging South Dakota Catholic officials to “aggressively reach out” to victims of a recently-sued predator priest.

Last month, Fr. Milton “Milty” Eggerling was accused for the first time in Texas sex abuse and cover-up lawsuit. In it, the victim charges that Eggerling lured him with special treatment, gifts of money, and outings before sexually abusing him. The abuse, which took place in the 1970s, began when the boy was 11 years old.

The lawsuit also says that Austin, Texas, church officials—including the bishop—knew or should have known about the abuse and did little to nothing to stop it.

[Statesman]

SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org)—the nation’s largest support group for men and women sexually abused in religious and institutional settings—wants Sioux Falls Bishop Paul J. Swain to reach out to anyone who may have encountered Eggerling during his time in the state.

The group fears that there may be more victims who are suffering in shame and silence. SNAP also wants to encourage witnesses and whistleblowers to come forward and share what they know.

Eggerling was a native of South Dakota, born and raised in the Sioux Fall Diocese. After his ordination into the priesthood, he worked at churches and schools in Lennox, Worthing, Howard, Marion, Aberdeen, and Sioux Falls, SD from the 1950s to the early 1970s.

[BishopAccountability.org]

“We’re concerned because our experience has shown us that Eggerling may have victims across the Sioux Falls Diocese,” said David Clohessy of SNAP. “Predators never have just one victim. Bishop Swain has a moral duty and the Christian obligation to reach out to anyone who may be hurting or who may have information about Eggerling in South Dakota.”

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.

Todd Pruitt from the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals Calls for C.J. Mahaney’s Removal from Together for the Gospel

UNITED STATES
Brent Detwiler

Sunday, April 10, 2016

The Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals is a coalition of pastors, scholars, and churchmen who hold the historic creeds and confessions of the Reformed faith and who proclaim biblical doctrine in order to foster a Reformed awakening in today’s Church.

The organization has a website called Mortification of Spin (i.e., the killing of deceit). Carl Trueman, Todd Pruitt, and Aimee Byrd are featured bloggers on the site.

It is significant, therefore, that Todd Pruitt called for C.J. Mahaney’s removal from Together for the Gospel yesterday (link). The conference starts on Tuesday. He said, “I appeal therefore to the organizers of T4G to remove C.J. Mahaney not only from the roster of speakers but also from the organization itself.”

Pruitt also called upon Mark Dever, Ligon Duncan, and Al Mohler to make “a humble statement asking forgiveness for not acting sooner” in the removal of Mahaney from Together for the Gospel and exhorted them to take a “posture of solidarity with the victims of the abuse in SGM churches.”

I’ve included his post below.

Mahaney used to be a Council Member on the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals along with the men listed below in 2011. That’s the year I sent out The Documents. The Council has since been disbanded but the Alliance remains active, influential and well connected in the Reformed Church.

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

NEW NY STATE ABUSE BILL

NEW YORK
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on a bill that will soon be introduced in Albany that will eliminate the statute of limitations for sexual abuse crimes against minors:

On April 1, I issued a news release that was critical of New York State Senator Brad Hoylman for sponsoring a bill that would exclude public institutions from legislation eliminating the statute of limitations for sexual abuse crimes.

I now commend him for pivoting. According to an exclusive by Ken Lovett of the Daily News (he has covered this issue better than anyone), Hoylman, and State Senator Andrea-Stewart Cousins, will submit a bill that covers all institutions equally, whether public or private. That is how it should be: justice demands that young victims of sex crimes be treated equally, independent of the venue of the offense.

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.

Vatileaks 2: Vallejo Balda’s secretary says he acted on orders

VATICAN CITY
Rome Reports

[with video]

2016-04-11

On Monday, the former executive secretary of the Cosea Commission, working under Monsignor Vallejo Balda, Nicola Maio made some declarations, as he has also been accused in the Vatileaks 2 case.

He acknowledged that he had access to all documents relating to the Cosea Commission and the Secretariat for the Economy but denies stealing the information and providing it to the two journalists, Fittipaldi and Nuzzi whom, he said he does not know. He further indicated that Francesca Chaouqui never asked him steal this information.

He assured that the only thing he felt pressured by was the responsibility of the work he was doing. He explained to the judge that the tasks entrusted onto him were that of the “will of the Pope.”

He said that he could not negate what Vallejo Balda asked him to do because he was his superior and only did what he asked. He explained that he had no way to checking if what Vallejo Balda was asking him to do was lawful or not because the chain of command was headed by Pope, then by Vallejo Balda and he was the last chain of command. “The only way to know the truth was to knock on the Pope’s door to find out and that was impossible,” 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.

Vatican secretary in leaks trial: ‘Who am I to say no?’

VATICAN CITY
CT Post

VATICAN CITY (AP) — A secretary on trial in the leaks of confidential Vatican documents has testified that he was compelled to do what his boss wanted because the monsignor reported directly to the pope and he was in no position to refuse.

Nicola Maio testified Monday that he did have legitimate access to documentation, given he was executive secretary of a papal reform commission. But he denied leaking it to two journalists, whose blockbuster books detailed waste, greed and mismanagement in the Holy See administration.

Maio said when his boss, Monsignor Angelo Lucio Vallejo Balda, asked him to get a document, he did so: “Who was I to say no?”

Vallejo has admitted he leaked the papers.

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.

IN–Victims want priest disciplined for defending accused molester

INDIANA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, April 11, 2016

For more information: David Clohessy 314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com, Barbara Dorris 314 503 0003 cell, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org

Notre Dame prof publicly discounts abuse allegations
Survivors urge his superior to denounce “this hurtful move”
University head should discipline the cleric, support group says
SNAP: “President should also use this opportunity to educate the rest of his staff”

A Notre Dame professor who is also a priest recently defended a fellow faculty member and a cleric who has been accused of child sexual abuse in Texas. A victims’ group wants the university’s president to discipline the professor for his “hurtful” public remarks.

Father Daniel Groody (574-631-3233, dgroody@nd.edu) is an Associate Professor of Theology at Notre Dame, as well as the Director of Immigration Initiatives at the Institute for Latino Studies. The priest spoke at the funeral of Father Virgilio Elizondo.

In a pending San Antonio lawsuit, Fr. Elizondo is of groping an orphan who confined in the priest that he had suffered long term abuse at the hands of another clergyman. However, Fr. Elizondo took his own life before he could give testimony in the case.

[The Observer]

[Daily Mail]

During a service last week, Fr. Groody claimed that Fr. Elizondo was accused of abuse “not because he was a serial abuser, but because he was a highly visible, accomplished, respected cleric. …” However, although Elizondo denied the allegations when he was alive, members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, believe that the suicide note Elizondo left suggested that he was indeed guilty.

[The Observer]

[Daily Mail]

Two SNAP leaders are writing to Father John I. Jenkins, the President of Notre Dame (574-631-3903 president@nd.edu), urging him to discipline Groody for his remarks, saying that they were not only extremely hurtful but could also deter other survivors from coming forward. The text of the letter, sent earlier today by email, is below.

“Many abusers tell their victims that no one will believe them over a respected man of the cloth,” said David Clohessy, SNAP’s director. “When clergy members dismiss out of hand allegations against other priests, it sends a very chilling message to those who have been abused and are considering coming forward.”

“While we understand that Fr. Groody and Fr. Elizondo were colleagues and may even have been friends, it is not appropriate for a clergyman to express public support for a credibly accused molester,” said Barbara Dorris of SNAP. “Not only does this discourage other victims from coming forward, it also rubs salt into the wounds of already damaged survivors. Ultimately, by discouraging other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers, it makes the church and schools less safe.”

Clohessy also said “Universities pride themselves on open-mindedness, yet here we have a university official trying to pass on his personal opinion as fact, in the absence of any evidence.”

Following Fr. Elizondo’s death SNAP had urged his supporters to show restraint and sensitivity, saying, “It will be tempting to publicly profess his innocence. … We as adults face a simple choice. We can either make it easier for child sex abuse victims to come forward, or harder. Publicly rallying around Fr. Elizondo makes it harder. It makes the church more dangerous.”

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.

AR–Priest in clergy sex case is getting new parish

ARKANSAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, April 11, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home,davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

An Arkansas priest once suspended after child sex crimes were reported is getting a new parish. We worry about this move and about Arkansas Bishop Anthony Taylor’s continuing secrecy about clergy sex crimes, sexual misconduct and cover ups.

[BishopAccountability.org]

As best we can tell, besides just one notice in 2011, Bishop Taylor has never updated parishioners or the public about Fr. Ruben Quinteros who was temporarily taken off the job and “threatened” after a man reported that a priest had molested his child.

[Bishop Accountability.org]

Now, Fr. Quinteros is being sent to Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in North Little Rock. http://www.arkansas-catholic.org/news/article/4647/Leadership-changes-coming-to-parishes-diocesan-offices#.dpuf

In 2011, Bishop Taylor says St. Joseph Parish in Fayetteville “received a phone call in Spanish to warn us that a priest was in danger of suffering bodily harm at the hands of a man who believed that his child had been touched improperly (in Springdale) by a priest” and that Fr. Quinteros was being “threatened” but Taylor believed it “may be a case of mistaken identity.”

Bishop Taylor claims he “could not follow up on the call because the number was blocked” but that the priest was temporarily removed from ministry, the State Child Abuse Hotline was called, but neither church officials nor the police “were able to locate the alleged victim.” He also said a church panel “determined that the allegation against was not credible” and Fr. Quinteros resumed “his ministry in De Queen.”

Notice the wording in Bishop Taylor’s written 2011 message: The abuse of a child is portrayed as possible (“alleged”), but the threat to a priest is portrayed as real (“The priest being threatened is Father Ruben”), even though the source of both pieces of information is the same. That wording, we feel, shows the inherent bias that religious figures bring to clergy sex abuse and cover up cases.

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.

City Hall needs to take complaints about NYC yeshivas seriously

NEW YORK
New York Post

Editorial

Kids in New York’s public schools aren’t learning because the education model is broken. But students in ultra-Orthodox yeshivas aren’t learning, critics charge, because they just aren’t being taught.

State law requires private and parochial schools to provide instruction “at least substantially equivalent” to that in public schools.

But last week, parents and former students claimed 39 ultra-Orthodox day schools in Brooklyn and Queens don’t provide even the most basic instruction in subjects like English, math and science.

Students between the ages of 7 and 13, they charge, get only six hours a week of English and math — and no science or history at all. English instruction for boys stops completely after age 13, leaving them lacking in basic skills and unprepared for the workforce.

Last summer, the Department of Education agreed to look into the complaints, though not with on-site inspections. Instead, it agreed to query the yeshivas and evaluate the responses.

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.

Toronto pastor-activist pleads not guilty to Nova Scotia sex assault charge

CANADA
Daily Courier

KENTVILLE, N.S. – A prominent Toronto pastor has pleaded not guilty to decades-old sex-crime allegations in Nova Scotia.

Reverend Brent Hawkes is accused of indecent assault and gross indecency related to allegations of a sexual assault in the 1970s.

As expected, Hawkes did not appear in provincial court today in Kentville. Halifax lawyer Joel Pink appeared on behalf of Hawkes’ lawyer, Clayton Ruby.

Not guilty pleas were entered on the charges and trial dates set for seven days starting Nov. 14.

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.

Statute of Limitations Lobbying

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

Parishioner speaks out about bishop’s letter

I mentioned in Sunday’s column that I had heard from a woman who was dismayed at the letter inserted into her church bulletin two Sundays ago. Bishop John O. Barres was lobbying parishioners to contact their state legislators in opposition to bills that would extend the statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases.

She was not the only churchgoer I heard from about this. In fact, one of them wrote a letter to Barres and sent me a copy, hoping it could be published in some way.

It’s too long for a letter to the editor and kind of short for a Your View, so I agreed to use it here.

Before I get to it, I’ll remind you that the state House is expected to vote today on a bill that would eliminate the statute of limitations for criminal cases of child sex abuse and extend the age when civil suits can be filed from 30 years old to 50. A proposed amendment — a compromise with those who won’t accept a two-year window in which anyone can file a civil suit, even if they’re blocked by the statute of limitations at the time they were abused — would allow any victim to sue up until age 50.

This would give many more victims access to the courts to identify and expose their abusers, but it wouldn’t help older victims. As a practical matter, the compromise would affect 20 years worth of victims. Those who are older than the present age limi of, 30 would have until 50 to file suit under the amendment.

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: Jeremy Reichberg, Brooklyn bigwig in FBI corruption probe, allegedly used NYPD connections to help nephew escape assault charges

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KERRY BURKE, REUVEN BLAU NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Sunday, April 10, 2016

A Borough Park businessman at the heart of a police bribery probe leaned on his police buddies to squash two assault raps involving his nephew, according to the victims of a pair of attacks.

Borough Park business honcho Jeremy Reichberg is being investigated by the feds for allegedly plying NYPD brass and at least one officer in the 66th Precinct with gifts in return for favors, according to multiple sources.

His nephew, Shlomo Reichberg, was part of a gang of disassociated Hasidic teens called Grouplech, which means forks in Yiddish, community sources said. The Hasidic hooligans were involved in two reported violent attacks in 2012, according to the victims.

In one scary encounter, Micha Kaplan, 45, says a group of Hasidic teens put him in the hospital for several days after a severe beating. The alleged beatdown started after the teens cut him off as he was driving in Borough Park.

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.

Boys forced into pool to bathe: Mount Cashel civil trial witness

CANADA
Western Star

Barb SweetPublished on April 11, 2016

To save money on hot shower water, boys would be forced by the Christian Brothers into the orphanage swimming pool with a bar of Sunlight soap to wash up, a witness told the Mount Cashel civil trial this morning, while recounting how he was dragged onetime from the locker room into the pool.

The witness is the fourth former resident to testify among four test cases in a trial to determine whether the RC Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s is liable for physical and sexual abuse by some Christian Brothers at the orphanage during the period — 1940s to 1960s. There are 60 claimants in all represented by the test cases. (As well various other law firms, in have 20 similar cases in total.)

The witness said he would hide in the locker room to avoid the swimming pool bathing ritual and would cry out in anguish over why he was placed in the orphanage and why his father had to die. He told the court last week that his father died in a hit and run accident when the witness was a young boy. He was placed in Mount Cashel and girls in the family were sent to Belvedere orphanage.

The witness recalled some boys were whacked on the hands as many as 50 times a day in front of their class and the worst he saw it for harsh discipline at the orphanage was in the period 1946-50.

The witness is being cross-examined today by Chris Blom, one of the Ontario lawyers representing the Roman Catholic church, which contends it did not run the orphanage and therefore is not liable. It maintains the facility was solely operated by the lay order Christian Brothers.

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

Victims advocates rally at Capitol ahead of House hearing on statute of limitations reform law

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

Michele Gonsman hasn’t had the chance to take to court the man who sexually abused her when she was a child.

The statute of limitations on the crime had expired by the time she was ready to come forth.

Gonsman hasn’t given up hope of getting justice. On Monday — just two hours before the Pennsylvania House of Representative was scheduled to hold a hearing on a bill that would reform the law — she joined scores other victims of child sexual abuse and sex crimes to push for its passage.

Gonsman said the issue of reforming the law is not an issue of the Catholic Church— a grand jury report concluding that priests in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese abused hundreds of children is an impetus for the bill — but one that affects thousands of other victims across the county. Gonsman was abused by a neighbor.

“They have no idea how many people they are impacting,” she 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.

Roman Catholic Church Sex Abuse Survivors Slam Pope Francis For Inaction

UNITED STATES
News Everyday

By R. Siva Kumar(writer@newseveryday.com)

David Clohessy was lured to a Missouri trip and abused by a Roman Catholic priest. It was only after decades that he became the director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP.

Last Friday morning, he got frustrated after reading Pope Francis’ 264-page document—“Amoris Laetitia,” or “The Joy of Love,”—asking church leaders to open their arms in welcome to gay, lesbian, divorced or remarried followers, but not mentioning clergy abuse survivors.

The group is very upset over the Pope’s inaction. The members point out that Pope Francis tackles everything from climate change to Cuban diplomacy, but does not mention sex crimes and cover-ups in the church.

“It’s very tough for us to understand how seemingly every other issue takes precedence – especially because on everything else, the pope really is powerless,” said Clohessy, who lives in St. Louis. “But instead of taking real action that makes a real difference, he’s content to do, and, in fact is masterful at, these meaningless feel-good gestures that are essentially public relations maneuvers.”

“Amoris Laetitia” mentions the word “abuse” just six times, and does not refer to the sex scandal in the Catholic Church at all. The Pope merely mentions that “the sexual abuse of children is all the more scandalous when it occurs in places where they ought to be most safe, particularly in families, schools, communities and Christian institutions.”

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.

Information on the trial for dissemination of reserved information and documents, 11.04.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bollettino

Vatican City, 11 April 2016 – Today at 10.30 a.m. a new hearing began in the ongoing trial for the dissemination of reserved information and documents in Vatican City State Tribunal, according to information provided by the director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J. It was attended by the members of the Tribunal (Professors Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Piero Antonio Bonnet, Paolo Papanti-Pelletier and Venerando Marano), the Promoter of Justice (Professors Gian Pietro Milano and Roberto Zannotti), and the defendants Ángel Lucio Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, Nicola Maio, Gianluigi Nuzzi, with their respective legal representatives Emanuela Bellardini, Laura Sgrò, Rita Claudia Baffioni and Roberto Palombi. The defendant Emiliano Fittipaldi was absent, but was represented by his lawyer Lucia Teresa Musso.

The hearing was dedicated fully to the interrogation of the defendant Nicola Maio by the President, the Promoter of Justice, his lawyer and then the counsels for the defence of the other defendants. Finally, the report of the examination was read and approved. The hearing ended at approximately 1.20 p.m.

The next hearing will take place on Wednesday, April at 10.30 a.m

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

The Pope’s fourteenth meeting with the Council of Cardinals, 11.04.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican News Service – Bollettino

Vatican City, 11 April 2016 – This morning the fourteenth meeting of the Holy Father with the Council of Cardinals took place in Vatican City. The work of the “Council of Nine” will continue until Wednesday, 13 April.

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.

Katholischer Pfarrer unter Missbrauchsverdacht

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[A Catholic priest under suspicion of abuse in the Fulda diocese. The 36-year old priest was suspended by the diocese. According to prosecutors, the events occurred on the night of Good Friday in the youth room of the parish in Mittelkalbach. There was a written statement from Vicar General Gerhard Stanke relating to “to acts with young people in connection with alcohol consumption”.]

Die Staatsanwaltschaft Fulda ermittelt gegen einen katholischen Pfarrer aus dem osthessischen Kalbach wegen des Verdachts des sexuellen Missbrauchs. Es werde geprüft, ob „Delikte aus dem Sexualbereich“ vorliegen, sagte Staatsanwalt Harry Wilke am Montag. Der Pfarrer habe sich am Donnerstag selbst angezeigt und über seinen Anwalt eine schriftliche Erklärung abgegeben. Details zum Fall und den Betroffenen machte die Staatsanwaltschaft nicht, um die Opfer zu schützen.

Der 36 Jahre alte Pfarrer wurde wegen des Missbrauchsverdachts bereits vom Bistum Fulda suspendiert. Laut Staatsanwaltschaft ereigneten sich die Vorkommnisse in der Nacht zum Karfreitag im Jugendraum unter der Pfarrei in Mittelkalbach. Dort kam es einer schriftlichen Erklärung von Generalvikar Gerhard Stanke zufolge „zu Handlungen mit Jugendlichen im Zusammenhang mit Alkoholkonsum“.

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

Bishop Ronald Mulkearns takes secrets about Catholic child sex abuse scandal to his grave

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

April 11, 2016

Shannon Deery
Herald Sun

CATHOLIC bishop Ronald Mulkearns has been buried, taking dozens of secrets and unanswered questions about his handling of child sexual abuse to his grave.

As bishop of Ballarat between 1971 and 1997 Bishop Mulkearns facilitated the abuse of hundreds of kids by shuffling paedophile priests around large diocese.

Under his watch some of Australia’s worst Catholic paedophiles, including Fr Gerald Ridsdale and Br Robert Best, abused scores of innocent children.

Bishop Mulkearns admitted, just weeks before his death, that he had failed the children, and failed as a bishop.

The admission, in what turned out to be his deathbed confession, followed years of silence about his handling of abuse and allegations of a widespread coverup.

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Ronald Mulkearns, Bishop of Ballarat during time of sexual abuse by clergy, buried in common grave

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Charlotte King

The Catholic bishop who presided over the Ballarat diocese during some of its worst years of child sexual abuse by priests has been laid to rest.

Retired Bishop Ronald Mulkearns spent 26 years heading up the Ballarat diocese between 1971 and 1997, but his funeral went almost unnoticed.

Around 30 friends and family attended the small service at the chapel adjoining his Ballarat nursing home, Nazareth House.

The bishop died last week from cancer at the age of 85.

The clergy presence was purposefully minimal but Father John McKinnon, a close friend of the retired Bishop, emerged shortly after the service.

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Advocates prepare for rally in Harrisburg

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Altoona, Blair County, Pa.

The fight to abolish the statue of limitations for child sex abuse crimes continues. Tomorrow, a group will rally in Harrisburg as part of Crime Victim’s Advocacy Day.

“There’s no statute of limitations on murder because murder is heinous. and I don’t know anything more heinous than sex abuse.” Said Michele Gonsman.

She is a survivor of child sex abuse. Gonsman’s made it her mission to bring survivors together and to abolish the statute of limitations.

“My abuser goes free because of the statute,” she said.

Gonsman is contacted daily by other victims wanting to share their stories. On Monday, she and 30 others will take their fight to Harrisburg. There, they will rally for Crime Victim’s Advocacy Day.

Their bus will leave from Ebensburg, and stop at Logan Valley Mall, before traveling to Harrisburg. Gonsman says her fight is not with the Catholic church but rather with the institutions who cover up these crimes.

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EXCLUSIVE: N.Y. Senate Democrats to push bill to help child sex abuse victims seek justice against predators, public institutions

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF

Sunday, April 10, 2016

ALBANY — State Senate Democrats are introducing a bill that would not only eliminate the time limits for child sex abuse victims to bring criminal or civil cases, but also make it easier for them to sue public institutions like schools, the Daily News has learned.

Sponsored by Senate Democratic Minority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Sen. Brad Hoylman, the bill would be the most comprehensive in the Legislature in making it easier for victims and law enforcement to go after predators.

“This is a crucial step to ensuring that all victims of child sex abuse get their day in court and that the predators at fault are held criminally and civilly responsible,” said Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers). “We must protect victims no matter where or when the heinous crime took place.”

The legislation borrows components from several bills that are already out there to address the issue.

But it also goes further by doing away with a requirement that kids abused at public institutions like schools or the foster care system file an intent to sue the government entity within 90 days of the incident occurring.

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Bucks County DA David Heckler’s Mixed Signals on Pennsylvania’s Statute of Limitations for Child Sex Abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Verdict

11 APR 2016

MARCI A. HAMILTON

As the Pennsylvania House gets closer than it has ever been to meaningful statute of limitations reform for child sex abuse victims, it is interesting to watch how prosecutors across the state are acting. As I discussed in my last column, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office and Pennsylvania Attorney General have issued a series of scathing grand jury reports on seriatim and systematic child sex abuse in major trusted institutions, like Penn State, the Philadelphia Archdiocese, and the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese. In a related though not identical arena, the Montgomery County DA’s race became a referendum on failure to prosecute Bill Cosby for rape, with the win going to the candidate who sided with the rape victims.

Other Pennsylvania district attorneys have hewn to the increasingly outdated position that they owe allegiance to the Catholic bishops, with the Allentown DA most recently expressing this sentiment.

Sadly for the vast majority of sex abuse survivors, the DAs’ discussions about whether to prosecute or to change the statute of limitations have mostly been about the Catholic bishops’ cover up. I say “sadly,” because there are other institutions putting children at risk, and they get swept away in the loud and persistent denunciations of SOL reform by the Catholic Conference.

For this reason, I will examine the strange position Bucks County DA David Heckler has taken with respect to child sex abuse and sex assault victims. His office has a pending grand jury that, if a report were issued, would make the case for SOL reform for child sex abuse victims beyond the Church. Yet the grand jury, which was initiated in the fall of 2014, has yet to issue a report, leaving many victims wondering why.

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Courage in Albany: Senate Democrats step up to protect New York’s kids

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Thanks to some long-overdue moral fortitude by Senate Democrats, maybe, just maybe, time is running out on New York’s absurdly restrictive statute of limitations covering sexual abuse of minors.

New York is a national outlier — and moral disgrace — with respect to abused minors being able to seek justice in either criminal or civil courts. Under current law, the criminal and civil statutes of limitations for a young man or woman to pursue justice expires when they turn 23.

Which gives people haunted by crimes committed against them as children far too little time to reckon with the horror of being victimized.

For a victim seeking redress against an institution that enabled a predator, the deadline is even earlier: The victim must act by the time he or she turns 21. Reform has been blocked thanks to a dastardly pair of only-in-Albany excuses: The Republican-controlled Senate won’t move, they say, because the Democratic-controlled Assembly refuses to do away with a crazy rule protecting public institutions alone from these suits unless notice to sue is filed within 90 days.

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April 10, 2016

FUGITIVE RABBI UNDER STRICT POLICE GUARD IN STATE HOSPITAL

SOUTH AFRICA
Eyewitness News

Mia Lindeque

JOHANNESBURG – Fugitive rabbi, Eliezer Berland, is recovering in a Johannesburg hospital after he was rushed to a doctor from the Sandton police station.

The rabbi is wanted in Israel for a number of sex crimes, and has been on the run for over four years.

He was arrested this week, when he was admitted to hospital due to his medical condition.

Rabbi Berland is under strict police guard in hospital.

ER24 could not confirm the identity of the man whom they treated at the Sandton Police Station, saying only that a suspect suffered from a medical condition and needed urgent attention.

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NT’s Yirara College subject of child abuse royal commission information request spanning 23 year

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Exclusive by Sally Brooks

The royal commission into child sexual abuse has requested more than two decades of information from the Lutheran Church about an Aboriginal boarding school in Alice Springs.

Yirara College of the Finke River Mission is ultimately run by the Lutheran Schools Association, a mission arm of the Lutheran Church of Australia, located in North Adelaide.

Indigenous secondary students from remote Northern Territory communities and other jurisdictions travel hundreds of kilometres to board at the school.

In a statement, the Lutheran Schools Association for South Australia, the Northern Territory and Western Australia said the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse had asked for information spanning 23 years.

“We confirm that the royal commission has sought information about Yirara College for the period 1992-2015,” the association’s executive director John Proeve said.

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Pédophilie/Délai de prescription : donnons le temps aux victimes d’obtenir justice!

FRANCE
Change.org

[A petition is being circulated online in France to change the statute of limitations so that victims have a chance to seek justice.]

Séverine MAYER France

Aujourd’hui en France, il existe un délai de prescription concernant les violences faites aux enfants : tortures physiques et/ou psychologiques, viols, violences incestueuses. Nous ne pouvons plus tolérer que des faits d’une gravité insupportable ayant des conséquences sur la vie entière des victimes puissent être prescrits et que donc, les coupables puissent ne jamais avoir à répondre de leurs actes.

On ne peut pas décider de quand une victime est prête à parler, à entamer une action en justice, c’est-à-dire devoir revenir sur les faits, dans leurs moindres détails, et replonger dans la douleur. Parce que les victimes sont cassées psychologiquement et qu’il faut des années pour parvenir à se reconstruire, des années pour trouver la force de parler, la force d’affronter le déni des autres (familles, entourage), voire même des années pour être capable de ne pas juste s’effondrer en larmes ou avoir envie de hurler : « NON ». Parler d’abord, prendre conscience ensuite, et envisager un jour de porter plainte : des étapes différentes qui prennent du temps.

J’ai mis bien plus de 20 ans pour être prête à parler vraiment. Des années de souffrance, de solitude, de peurs, de cauchemars, de séquelles… Une partie de ma vie foutue en l’air. Trop de temps, estime la justice, pour pouvoir traîner mon bourreau devant un tribunal. Comme pour des milliers de victimes. Aujourd’hui celui qui a brisé mon enfance, mon adolescence et une partie de ma vie est mort. C’était un monstre, mais sans condamnation, il s’est éteint en laissant le doute dans l’esprit de ses proches, il est mort sans jamais avoir eu le courage et la décence de reconnaître les faits. Ce n’est pas juste.

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Las malas nuevas de monseñor

ARGENTINA
MDZ

[One of Argentina’s most influential national newspapers on April 6 interviewed Sergio Buenanueva, bishop of San Francisco, Cordoba. He headed the ministries commission that integrated with the Argentina Episcopal Conference. He was talking about the scourage of clergy sexual abuse in general and in particular that protocol the bishops developes and applied one its was reliably informed of sexual abuse. The tenor of the interview should not go unnoticed. The Catholic Church continues its poliicies that violate the rights of victims.]

El 06 de abril pasado uno de los diarios nacionales de mayor influencia entrevistó al obispo de San Francisco, Córdoba, Sergio Buenanueva, responsable de la Comisión de Ministerios que integra la Conferencia Episcopal Argentina (1).

El motivo de la nota fue hablar sobre el flagelo de los abusos sexuales del clero en general, y en particular, del protocolo que la CEA elaboró y que se aplica una vez que se tiene noticia fehaciente del abuso sexual.

El tenor de la entrevista no debe pasar desapercibido, no sólo por haber ratificado que la iglesia católica continúa con su política violatoria de los derechos de las víctimas sino por el tremendo fariseísmo del preboste.

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Preventing Abuse in Jewish Organizations that Serve Youth: Ten Policies to Create Safer Environments

UNITED STATES
Jewish Philanthropy

By Shira M. Berkovits

It is critical for leaders of youth-serving organizations (YSOs) to adopt child-protection policies proactively, before they are faced with a problem. Policies clarify acceptable and unacceptable behaviors that guide adults to model safe interactions with children. When a policy is well communicated, it becomes integral to institutional culture and its violations are easily identifiable, making it possible for bystanders to intervene and institutions to respond. Without policies, leaders may forget or dismiss important response steps, become more susceptible to pressure, and introduce their organizations to increased liability. Having a policy provides organizations with a plan to act on before a situation escalates. Finally, a good policy can function as a deterrent, sending a clear message to potential abusers: Abuse is not tolerated here and will be reported immediately.

The following are ten recommendations for inclusion in an organization’s policy. This list is meant as a starting point for conversation, and is not exhaustive. Organizations should consult with child protection experts when considering these suggestions, as guidelines that reduce risk in one organization or setting may increase risk in another.

1. Screen prospective employees and/or volunteers.

Individuals who sexually abuse children do not end up in YSOs by accident; they work hard to get there. This makes sense – YSOs provide easy access to children and give a respectable cover to perpetrators. However, many YSOs do not screen prospective hires and volunteers – or do so only minimally. When possible, screenings should include a criminal background check; a check of the state’s central registry for perpetrators of child abuse and neglect; Internet/social media searches of an individual’s names, nicknames, screen names, and email addresses; an interview; and reference checks. An organization’s policy developers should consider instituting screening measures for employees and volunteers; lay leaders; subcontractors (e.g., bus drivers, catering staff, course instructors); hosts with- in or without the community (e.g., shabbaton hosts); visitors who request Shabbat hospitality; and others who have repeated interactions with children (e.g., “candy men”) or hold the keys to communal spaces (e.g., mikveh attendants). Not all screening measures are appropriate or practical for all individuals, but organizations should try to anticipate the various categories of individuals who will come in contact with children and determine which screening mechanisms to employ.

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La Iglesia vive su propio calvario judicial en Galicia

ESPANA
El Pais

[The Church lives its own judicial ordeal in Galicia.]

SILVIA R. PONTEVEDRA
Santiago de Compostela 27 MAR 2016

Desde que en 2012 la investigación por el robo del Códice Calixtino revolvió las entrañas de la catedral de Santiago y sacó a la luz secretos insospechados del corazón de la Iglesia católica gallega, los casos judiciales se suceden y salpican a varias diócesis de la comunidad. Hay, en estos momentos, cuatro causas en marcha con 17 personas investigadas, de las que cuatro son monjas; otra, un fraile; y 12 más, miembros de la Orden eclesiástica y Mandato de San Miguel Arcángel, una secta que hasta finales de 2014 medró como asociación de fieles amparada por el Obispado de Tui-Vigo.

La primera investigación que se abrió, y probablemente la última que se cierre, por la demora que han provocado hasta tres cambios de juez instructor, es la conocida como Operación Bebé de Lugo, en la que, además de varios funcionarios del servicio de Menores de la Xunta, trabajadores sociales y personal sanitario, en las últimas semanas han tenido que prestar declaración en calidad de imputadas tres hermanas terciarias franciscanas del Rebaño de María vinculadas al Hogar Madre Encarnación. La denuncia partió de un puñado de abogados de oficio que descubrieron las semejanzas existentes entre varios casos de retiradas administrativas, supuestamente irregulares, de niños a sus madres biológicas para su entrega en acogimiento y posterior adopción. Poco a poco, en los juzgados fueron recalando episodios similares hasta juntarse como víctimas en unas mismas pesquisas una docena de familias afectadas. Varios de los menores reclamados por sus progenitores desde hace años pasaron por esta casa religiosa de acogida concertada por la Xunta antes de que fueran entregados a terceros y de que sus parientes perdieran definitivamente su rastro.

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En Guyane, un prêtre soupçonné de pédophilie placé en garde à vue

GUYANA
Le Monde

[A priest was arrested in Guyana and is facing allegations of sexual abuse of minors.]

Par Laurent Marot (Cayenne, correspondance)

Il a été signalé par son propre évêque. Vendredi matin, à 8 heures (heure de Guyane), un prêtre de 65 ans, curé à Macouria, en Guyane française, a été placé en garde à vue à la gendarmerie de Kourou. Le père H. est soupçonné d’attouchements sexuels sur un mineur de 14 ans. Une enquête avait été ouverte à la suite du signalement de ce prêtre par l’évêque de Cayenne, Mgr Emmanuel Lafont, et plusieurs plaintes ont été déposées contre lui.

« Selon le jeune garçon, les faits présumés se seraient passés au dernier trimestre 2015 », explique au Monde Eric Vaillant, procureur de la République. « Le jeune en a parlé à sa mère il y a quelques jours, qui l’a dit à des membres du clergé, puis à l’évêque », précise le procureur. « Lundi soir, la mère et l’enfant sont venus me voir à l’évêché », confie au Monde Mgr Laffont. Selon eux, les faits présumés ont eu lieu « chez le prêtre », précise le prélat. « Le lendemain, il était convoqué à l’évêché : il a nié les faits. Je lui ai demandé de quitter sa paroisse, et de se rendre à la gendarmerie », poursuit Mgr Laffont.

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Detenido un párroco de Cáceres por abusos a menores

ESPANA
El Pais

[A Caceres priest was arrested Friday on allegations of child sexual abuse.]

Madrid 9 ABR 2016

El párroco de Arroyomolinos (Cáceres) ha sido detenido este viernes por un supuesto delito contra la libertad sexual de los menores, fuentes de la Policía Nacional citadas por Europa Press. El Obispado de Coria-Cáceres ha apartado al religioso de Arroyomolinos hasta la “conclusión del proceso judicial”. El caso está bajo secreto de sumario y el sacerdote está detenido en los calabozos a la espera de pasar a disposición judicial.

En un comunicado, el obispado ha expresado su “profunda consternación” por el hecho de que un sacerdote “haya podido cometer algún delito, sea del carácter que sea, cuando se espera de él una conducta ejemplar conforme al Evangelio que predica”. El Obispado de Coria-Cáceres ha ofrecido su “completa disposición” a colaborar con la justicia “en lo que sea necesario y en las formas que esta estime oportunas”.

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El dolor de una de las víctimas del cura acusado de pedofilia

ARGENTINA
La Nacion

[The pain of the victims of the priest accused of pedophilia in Argentina.]

Jorge Riani
PARA LA NACION
DOMINGO 10 DE ABRIL DE 2016

PARANÁ.- Luis Schunk es docente y directivo de una escuela barrial de nivel secundario en Paraná. Está casado y tiene dos hijos. Antes de repartir sus horas entre la familia y el trabajo, como lo hace ahora, su vida discurría en parroquias, sacristías y confesionarios. Luis fue cura durante cinco años.

Un día sintió la necesidad de contar una historia que le pesaba, que le hacía daño, que le quemaba en su interior. Llamó al obispo de Paraná. Estuvo cuatro horas delante del prelado intentando una y otra vez contar lo que le había sucedido, el daño que le habían hecho.

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Mappa italiana dei preti molestatori, altri 30 casi

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[A few weeks ago we published the first release of the map showing sexual abuse committed in Italy by members of the clergy against minors and adolescents. The map showed117 priests have been convicted and about 60 are currently under investigation or into hiding following complaints.]

Poche settimane fa avevamo pubblicato il primo rilascio della mappa degli abusi sessuali commessi in Italia da membri del clero nei confronti di minorenni e adolescenti. La mappa contava 117 sacerdoti condannati in via definitiva e circa 60 attualmente sotto indagine o resi irreperibili a seguito delle denunce.

Avevamo ancora una riserva di circa 60 nominativi dei quali però non riuscivamo a trovare alcun riscontro, almeno sul web. Avevamo quindi pensato di chiedere alle vittime sparse sul territorio italiano di attivarsi e controllare nelle rispettive zone, presso gli archivi delle Regioni e dei giornali, pezze giustificative che permettessero di ricostruire i casi mancanti.

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Sexueller Missbrauch Minderjähriger?

DEUTSCHLAND
Osthessen News

[Shock, grief, horror: Pastor Jens Clobes (36) is “suspended from duty”. This Catholic priest allegedly sexually abuse minors.]

Schock, Trauer, Entsetzen: Pfarrer Jens CLOBES (36) “vom Dienst suspendiert”

Der Schock bei den Einwohnern von Kalbach (südlicher Kreis Fulda) sitzt tief. Ihr katholischer Pfarrer Jens Clobes (36) ist vom Dienst suspendiert worden. “Es ist zu Handlungen mit Jugendlichen im Zusammenhang mit Alkoholkonsum gekommen”, heißt es in einer offiziellen Erklärung des Bistums Fulda, unterzeichnet von Generalvikar Prof. Dr. Gerhard Stanke. Nach Informationen von OSTHESSEN|NEWS soll es sich um sexuellen Missbrauch von Minderjährigen, in der Nacht von Gründonnerstag auf Karfreitag im Pfarrheim von Mittelkalbach, handeln. Über nähere Details – ob einmalig oder wiederholt – gibt es allerdings keine Informationen.

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Funeral Mass at Nursing Home for Bishop Mulkearns

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Catholic

Catholic Communications, Sydney Archdiocese,
8 Apr 2016

Bishop Ronald Mulkearns will be a small, private funeral mass on Monday

A private funeral mass will be held on Monday in the Nazareth House Nursing Home chapel in Ballarat for Bishop Ronald Mulkearns.

The former Victorian bishop died before completing his evidence to the child abuse Royal Commission about the Catholic Church’s handling of pedophile priests during his 1971-1997 years in charge of the Ballarat diocese.

Bishop Mulkearns,85, died from cancer in the nursing home on Monday.

Current Ballarat Bishop Paul Bird said the small gathering would be for family and close friends and Bishop Mulkearns would not be be interred in the crypt of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Ballarat where all former Ballarat bishops have been laid to rest.

The Royal Commission heard during his time as bishop, numerous pedophile priests, including Gerald Ridsdale, were moved across the region. The bishop gave evidence in February via videolink from the nursing home but said he could not remember much of what had taken place during his time although he acknowledged he had made some tragic mistakes during his time as bishop and expressed sorrow for these mistakes.

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Pope Francis: No “Joy of Love” for Abused Children, Women or LGBTQ People

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on April 10, 2016 by Betty Clermont

The pope’s “apostolic exhortation, Amoris Laetitia (Latin for Joy of Love) On Love in the Family” was presented on Friday. The document is more than 60,000 words. Jesus spoke 2026 words in Gospels and the four Gospels combined are 64,766 words. The pontiff stated his own conclusions based on two synods (meetings) of bishops from around the world held in October 2014 and October 2015. Both were closed to the public and the press.

In his exhortation, Pope Francis urged that his prelates and priests be more “welcoming” to those who are in what the Church refers to as “irregular” unions – that is not married by a priest. He changed no doctrine. Due to the “invincible ambiguity that characterizes the pronouncements of Pope Francis … anyone will be able to dig out from among the 200 pages of the document the passage that he likes most, and act accordingly,” wrote veteran Vatican reporter, Sandro Magister. Another Vatican insider: “the pope’s studied ambiguity [leads] each to find something in the pope’s text to back up his thesis.” Another experienced Vatican reporter, John L. Allen Jr., stated the document “changes little on the ground.”

For example, Pope Francis recently extended the Holy Thursday foot-washing ritual to include women which was already being done for decades if the pastor approved. The pope’s appointed prefect in charge of liturgy announced soon after Pope Francis’ statement that no priest was obligated to include women.

Disregarding the suffering and deaths in families caused by Catholic officials, both synods concentrated on the question of whether divorced and civilly remarried Catholics should be allowed to receive communion, an issue left unsettled by the pope in “Joy of Love.” According to New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, most divorced Catholics who ignore their Church’s imperative that they must obtain an annulment before remarrying have either left the Church or receive communion anyway. The comparatively few who broke the remarriage prohibition yet obey the communion rule have learned to live with it.

Pope Francis Can, but Won’t, Prevent Further Child Sex Abuse

Within the first six months of his pontificate, Pope Francis found the allegations of child sex abuse by two of his bishops credible enough to secretly dismiss them from their positions without notifying the civil authorities or the public.

Bishop Gabino Miranda Melgarejo of Ayacucho, a poor Andean region in southern Peru, is still at large as best as I can tell.

Archbishop Josef Wesolowski, the pope’s ambassador to the Dominican Republic, accused of oral sex abuse of poor street boys, remained a free man for over a year during which time he acquired more than 100,000 computer files of pornography with disturbing photos of children who were likely victims of human trafficking. The Italian newspaper, Il Corriere della Serra, reported that Wesolowski was not brought inside the Vatican until “there was a serious risk that the ambassador would be arrested on Italian territory at the request of the Dominican authorities and then extradited.” Wesolowski died mysteriously just before a Vatican trial would have brought the above facts to public attention.

Other than meeting with a handful of his Church’s more than 100,000 sex abuse victims, Pope Francis has done nothing to console the survivors or prevent the sexual assault of thousands of children in the future. The commission he formed in response to rare media criticism in December 2013, dismissed the only member who expressed any criticism. The pope still hasn’t provided adequate funding for the commission.

During the in-flight interview from Mexico back to Rome on Feb. 16, Pope Francis said that a bishop who moves a pedophile priest to another parish should resign. Since then, a French cardinal and Italian bishop said this meant that they were under no obligation to report the clerical child sex abuse which happened under their watch to civilian authorities. Under Pope Francis’ leadership, pedophile priests are still being moved from the United States and Europe to less-developed countries.

By his most recent remarks, Pope Francis signaled his prelates around the world that he would continue to do nothing to prevent them from, or hold them accountable for, aiding, abetting and covering-up these crimes and then persecuting the victims and families.

This was the sickening and systemic pattern revealed not only by the movie, Spotlight, but also by grand jury reports in Philadelphia, Westchester County and Suffolk County (NY) and attorney general reports in New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Maine. The Pennsylvania Attorney General released a grand jury report on March 1 2016, on an investigation of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese showing the same appalling tactics as the prior reports.

All stated that revising the statutes-of-limitations would be the most effective way to prevent future child sex abuse because many victims do not speak up until later in life, citing shame or fear, to expose their tormentors.

When Pope Francis was in the US in September, he praised his bishops for their “courage” in handling the scandal, and consoled them for how stressful it had been. The pope ignored “the litigation and legislative tactics of his bishops” which have denied all American victims of child sex abuse access to justice. “It is the bishops who have blocked any kind of meaningful reform,” said Marci Hamilton, a professor at the Cardozo School of Law in New York who studies statutes of limitations. “The bishops and the pope have a lot of explaining to do as to why it would be in their mission to keep all of these victims from seeking justice.”

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Four more footnotes to Francis’ family manifesto

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Editor April 10, 2016

To be sure, there’s plenty of text in Pope Francis’ sweeping new document on the family, titled Amoris Laetitia, which was released by the Vatican on Friday. It runs to 60,000 words and 264 pages in the English version, making it a whopper.

Yet from a news point of view, perhaps the most fascinating – and certainly the most controversial – parts of the document come not in the text, but in the footnotes.

Numbers 336 and 351 in Amoris Laetitia may go down as among the most famous footnotes in papal history, since that’s where the key language occurs about how discernment in cases of divorced and civilly remarried Catholics could lead to a change in their ability to receive the sacraments.

If the devil is always in the details, in the case of Amoris Laetitia, one might say, the fireworks are in the footnotes. …

Abuse scandals

Given the way that clerical sexual abuse scandals in various parts of the world have damaged the Church’s image and moral authority, precisely in terms of its care for children and families, it’s striking that there’s only one clear reference to those scandals in Amoris Laetitia.

“The sexual abuse of children is all the more scandalous when it occurs in places where they ought to be most safe, particularly in families, schools, communities and Christian institutions,” the pope writes in paragraph 45.

Sexual exploitation of children comes up five other times in the document, but in the context of abusive parents or wider social ills rather than anything specifically to do with the Church.

Critics already skeptical of Pope Francis’ resolve on the anti-abuse front may find that a worrying omission.

Others, however, may conclude the pontiff is indirectly suggesting that abuse hardly occurs only in the Church, and that an undue focus on its failures can become a distraction from addressing the wider social challenges.

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Adelaide’s retiring Anglican Archbishop Jeffrey Driver calls for greater ‘connection’

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

Nigel Hunt and Michael McGuire
The Advertiser

GRIEF and satisfaction were the overriding emotions for departing Anglican Archbishop Jeffrey Driver on Sunday when he told his flock the time had come for him to retire.

The satisfaction came from a job well done over an 11-year tenure, the grief from the fact that so much of that time was spent dealing with the problem of child sexual abuse perpetrated by members of the Anglican Church.

Archbishop Driver was elected in 2005 at a time when the church was deeply demoralised following the damaging Brandenburg child abuse scandal that cost former Archbishop Ian George his job.

“I saw that was something that needed to be done, not just because it was a problem, but because God calls on us to act well in those sort of circumstances,’’ Archbishop Driver said yesterday.

“We had huge issues relating to abuse, child sexual abuse. That’s doesn’t just affect the immediate survivors but whole communities are affected as well, and related to that there is a loss of morale and confidence in the church.’’

Archbishop Driver’s first major task was to grapple with a multimillion-dollar class action launched by more than 70 abuse victims and the subsequent financial impact it had on the diocese.

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What Kathleen Kane’s legacy could be

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED | Saturday, April 9, 2016

HARRISBURG

Attorney General Kathleen Kane might end the year wearing an orange jump suit as a state inmate or celebrating an amazing turn-around of her fortunes with an acquittal in criminal court that proves her critics wrong.

Either way, the crowning achievement of her final months in office might be the no-holds-barred grand jury report detailing sexual abuse of children by Roman Catholic priests and a series of diocesan cover-ups in the Altoona-Johnstown region.

Don’t be surprised if that investigation is expanded to other dioceses — if there’s probable cause for search warrants established from 250 phone calls to a hotline established following the March 1 grand jury release.

When Kane began as attorney general in 2013, she resisted using grand juries, perhaps out of stubbornness, after criticizing former Attorney General Tom Corbett’s lengthy investigation of serial pedophile Jerry Sandusky through use of a statewide grand jury. Sandusky is behind bars for life.

Professional prosecutors in her office persevered. She eventually relented and to her credit approved the use of the grand jury, perhaps because, in her mind, it was different from the Sandusky grand jury because no one was charged.

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‘We have to make it right’: Rep. fights to end time limits for reporting sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By John Finnerty
jfinnerty@cnhi.com

HARRISBURG – Amid outrage over hundreds of cases of child sexual abuse committed by priests, lawmakers are now divided over how much time victims should have to seek justice.

A proposal to lift the time limit for prosecution of sex-abuse crimes, in current form, only looks to the future but does nothing for victims of long-ago crimes.

Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks, calls it a “slap in the face.”

Rozzi, himself a survivor of sexual abuse by a priest, has led efforts to eliminate statutes of limitations.

He plans a proposal to allow victims of old crimes to sue their abusers, he said, which will bring forward victims “from every corner of the state.”

Debate is unfolding in the aftermath of a grand jury’s finding that priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Roman Catholic Diocese abused hundreds of children, over four decades – actions that the report says were covered up by church leaders.

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April 9, 2016

Few attend funeral for priest who was a serial sex offender

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

JASON MAGDER, MONTREAL GAZETTE

Only about a dozen people, gathered around John Edward Sullivan’s open casket Saturday afternoon in a small room on the second floor of the Magnus Poirier funeral complex on Sherbrooke St. E., near Langelier Blvd.

Standing at the door of the visitation room was a family member who told a journalist he was not welcome to speak to any of the well-wishers, and sternly asked the journalist to leave the funeral home. The priest officiating the funeral services declined to comment about Sullivan.

Sullivan, who died on Easter Sunday at age 90, is a convicted sex offender; his crimes dating back to the 1960s.

His obituary, which was published in the Montreal Gazette, said Sullivan “carried out his priestly ministry in various parishes throughout the Diocese until his appointment to the Matrimonial Tribunal.”

He was in the spotlight this past week, when the Sault Ste. Marie Diocese settled a lawsuit filed by a man who said the church covered up years of sexual abuse suffered at Sullivan’s hands, and moved him from parish to parish, knowing full well he had molested children.

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Sex-abuse bill lobbying in Catholic churches over the top

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Bill White

Lobbying over child sex abuse bills reaches church bulletins

“We were dismayed to find this letter inserted in our church bulletin this past Sunday,” wrote a local Catholic who contacted me last week about a letter from Allentown Diocese Bishop John Barres.

Barres’ letter outlined the diocese’s child sex-abuse prevention efforts — and then lobbied against state legislation that would change the statutes of limitations for such cases, asking parishioners to contact their legislators about its “detrimental effects.”

This appeal to a captive audience fits right in with the church’s furious lobbying effort, largely focused on blocking bills that would open a two-year window for civil suits by victims who are blocked by the state’s restrictive statutes. Such a window has been recommended by the Pennsylvania grand juries that exposed decades of rampant child sex abuse and official cover-ups within the church.

I wrote recently that the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, which has played a big part in keeping statute-of-limitations legislation bottled up for years in legislative committees, spent $3.5 million on lobbying in Harrisburg between 2010 and 2015, according to Department of State records.

The Catholic Conference’s website now includes an Action Alert with a proposed email you can send to your legislators, urging them to oppose the proposed two-year window. It includes standard talking points, including complaints that sovereign immunity statutes unfairly shield public entities such as public schools.

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Scrap time limit in sex abuse victim compo claims, urges MP

AUSTRALIA
PerthNow

April 9, 2016
DANIELLE LE MESSURIER
PerthNow

SCRAPPING the time limit on when sex abuse victims can sue for compensation has won Barnett Government support.

The move could open the floodgates for scores of massive damages claims.

Under the statute of limitations, survivors of child sexual abuse are unable to claim damages after six years from the date of the alleged offence.

A private member’s Bill proposed by Liberal MP Graham Jacobs seeks to remove the limitation period completely for personal injury, including psychological injury suffered by victims of child sexual abuse.

Attorney-General Michael Mischin said the Government was sympathetic and supportive of the aims of the Bill.

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Justice for sex-abuse victims dividing lawmakers

PENNSYLVANIA
Sharon Herald

By JOHN FINNERTY CNHI Harrisburg Correspondent

HARRISBURG – Amid outrage over hundreds of cases of child sex abuse committed by priests, lawmakers are now divided over how much time victims should have to seek justice.

A proposal to lift the time limit for prosecution of sex-abuse crimes, in current form, only looks to the future but does nothing for victims of long-ago crimes.

Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks County, calls it a “slap in the face.”

Rozzi, himself a survivor of sex abuse by a priest, has led efforts to eliminate statutes of limitations. He plans a proposal to allow victims of old crimes to sue their abusers, he said, which will bring forward victims “from every corner of the state.”

Debate is unfolding in the aftermath of a grand jury’s finding that priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese abused hundreds of children, over four decades – actions that were covered up by church leaders.

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Roman Catholic Church Sex Abuse Survivors Disappointed By Pope Francis’ ‘Amoris Laetitia’

UNITED STATES
International Business Times

BY JULIA GLUM @SUPERJULIA ON 04/09/16

When David Clohessy was young, his Roman Catholic priest would regularly take him on overnight trips to go camping, skiing or canoeing in Missouri. And then, once the sun had set and Clohessy was sleeping, the priest would assault him.

Decades later, Clohessy doesn’t want any child ever to be in that situation. That’s why he’s fighting for justice as the director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, nicknamed SNAP, and that’s why he was so frustrated Friday morning after reading the newest statement from Pope Francis.

In keeping with his modern image, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church issued a 264-page document called “Amoris Laetitia,” or in English “The Joy of Love,” urging church leaders to be more welcoming toward followers who may be gay, lesbian, divorced or remarried. But there’s one group of people still waiting for that kind of recognition: clergy abuse survivors. They said Francis, who’s been hailed for tackling everything from climate change to Cuban diplomacy, again skipped over the international scandal that’s implicated thousands of suspects in sex crimes and cover-ups. Before writing policy documents, they argued, he needs to solve the ongoing crisis in the church.

“It’s very tough for us to understand how seemingly every other issue takes precedence — especially because on everything else, the pope really is powerless,” said Clohessy, who lives in St. Louis. “But instead of taking real action that makes a real difference, he’s content to do, and, in fact is masterful at, these meaningless feel-good gestures that are essentially public relations maneuvers.”

“Amoris Laetitia” mentions the word “abuse” only six times. It’s linked with the church once, to say that “the sexual abuse of children is all the more scandalous when it occurs in places where they ought to be most safe, particularly in families, schools, communities and Christian institutions.” The Catholic Church’s sex scandal is otherwise left out.

The worldwide crisis includes more than 17,200 Americans who have alleged they were abused by more than 6,400 clerics from 1950 to 2013, according to a review of data by BishopAccountability.org, a website and nonprofit that tracks reports of sexual misconduct in the church. An award-winning 2002 Boston Globe investigation is widely credited with exposing the U.S. part in the scandal, which resurfaced this past November with the release of “Spotlight,” a movie that showcased the reporting process and recently won the Oscar for Best Picture.

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Thomas H. Maguire

MASSACHUSETTS
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston

Category: A. Cases That Have Been Concluded Canonically, Either By Dismissal or Sentence to Life of Prayer and Penance, or Criminally, Either By Plea or Conviction.

Year Of Ordination: 1976
Status
Dismissed (2016)

Assignment History:

Administrative Leave
10/24/12

Pastor
Saint Helen Mother of the Emperor Constantine
Norwell 09/10/01 – 10/24/12

Pastor
St. Jeremiah
Framingham 03/30/98 – 09/10/01

Temp. Parochial Vicar
St. Joseph
Needham 02/01/98 – 03/30/98

Priestly Renewal Program
01/16/97 – 02/01/98

Temp. Parochial Vicar
St. Thomas Aquinas
Bridgewater 06/04/96 – 01/12/97

Parochial Vicar
St. John Evangelist
Canton 06/15/89 – 06/04/96

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Ex-Midland Beach pastor will not face charges in child porn case, Manhattan DA says

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Maura Grunlund | grunlund@siadvance.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — A former Midland Beach pastor will not face charges from the Manhattan district attorney’s office after child pornography was allegedly found on his computers.

The Rev. Keith Fennessy was barred from priestly ministry and booted from his position as pastor of St. Columba’s R.C. Church in Manhattan on June 15, 2015, by Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York.

An archdiocesan review board determined that Father Fennessy had images of minors on his personal and office computers that violated the church’s Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. Dolan accepted the board’s recommendation that Father Fennessy no longer be allowed to serve as a priest, according to Catholic New York and Joseph Zwilling, communications director for the archdiocese.

The archdiocese referred Father Fennessy’s case to the district attorneys’ offices in both Staten Island and Manhattan. A Staten Island source with knowledge of the investigation said that the case was handled by the Manhattan district attorney’s office.

“This matter was referred to our office in mid-2015,” said Joan Vollero, director of communications for the Manhattan district attorney’s office. “The investigation has concluded and no criminal charges were brought.”

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In Bernard Hebda, a healing shepherd is found for Twin Cities Catholics

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Editorial Board Star Tribune APRIL 8, 2016

Catholics in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis finally have the intelligent, healing leadership they deserve in newly named Archbishop Bernard Hebda, who, after first serving as interim, has been appointed to the post permanently by Pope Francis.

Hebda’s formal installation mass next month will mark a new chapter in a community that has suffered deeply in recent years, both from the botched handling of numerous cases of priest-involved child sex abuse and from the bitter and costly fight over same-sex marriage launched by the previous archbishop.

Hebda brings skills that have served him well in the nine months since his arrival. At 56, he has a broad, sophisticated worldview shaped by degrees in political science and law from Harvard and Columbia, and by years spent practicing law before he became an ordained priest at age 30. He has served at many levels in the church — as a parish priest, a diocesan leader, an interpreter of canon law at the Vatican and, finally, as a coadjutant archbishop for Newark, N.J., where he had fully expected to return as archbishop. That Francis instead redirected him to St. Paul and Minneapolis speaks to the depth of the crisis in this archdiocese and the urgent need for a new vision.

Those who have worked with him as an interim administrator say Hebda’s interest in people and diverse viewpoints, his humor, and his incisiveness have been warmly welcomed in a church community wearied to exhaustion from the struggles of the last decade. “He is very attentive and approachable, and wants to hear from everyone, not just people with one point of view,” said Paula Ruddy of the Catholic Coalition for Church Reform. “I am very hopeful that he will be able to bring people together and heal the divisions we’ve been experiencing.”

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Die Mauern des Schweigens aufbrechen

DEUTSCHLAND
hpd

From Evelin Frerk

[Break the walls of silence. Zero tolerance against sexual abuse in area church as well as in the global Catholic Church is the objective of Peter Wensierski. He is putting his footprint in Germany with his journalistic work. His scope is impressive.]

Von Evelin Frerk

8. APR 2016

BERLIN. (hpd) “Null-Toleranz” gegenüber sexuellen Missbrauch im Raum der Kirchen, auch der weltweit agierenden katholischen Kirche, ist das formulierte Ziel von Peter Wensierski. Mit seiner journalistischen Arbeit setzt er dazu in Deutschland seinen Fußabdruck. Seine Beiträge leistet er selbstverständlich und ohne jeden Wirbel. Der Umfang ist beeindruckend.

Die Besonderheit seiner Arbeit ist hier referiert anhand der Anzeige von Alexandra Wolf: Am 26. März 2016 macht der Spiegel die Anzeige ihres Missbrauchs erstmals öffentlich. Zugrunde liegt die Recherche von Peter Wensierski. Die ging an den Behörden nicht vorbei, die Staatsanwaltschaft Würzburg nahm am erst möglichen Arbeitstag nach der Veröffentlichung ihre Ermittlungen auf.

In dem Missbrauchsvorwurf gegen den von 2002 bis 2010 im Bistum Würzburg eingesetzten Missbrauchsbeauftragten hatte zuvor die Katholische Kirche ihre Akten geschlossen. Das Signal dazu kam aus Rom von der Kongregation für die Glaubenslehre am 12. Dezember 2015 mit der Begründung: “Der Missbrauch könne nicht bewiesen werden.”

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Missbrauchsvorwurf in der Diözese Würzburg: Rede und Gegenrede

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

[Abuse allegation in the Diocese of Würzburg: An exchange of words.]

Karl-Peter Büttner ist der Vorsitzende des Würzburger Diözesanrats. In der aktuellen Ausgabe des „Würzburger Katholischen Sonntagsblatts“ ist sein Leserbrief abgedruckt. Er habe ihn als Privatmann verfasst, er sei an den „Spiegel“, die „Main-Post“ sowie an den Bayerischen Rundfunk gerichtet.

Büttner habe sich veranlasst gesehen, zum „Spiegel“-Artikel „So ein bisserl liebevoll“, der am Ostersamstag, 26. März, erschienen ist, Stellung zu nehmen. Darin erhebt die 44 Jahre alte Alexandra Wolf aus dem Raum Würzburg schwere Vorwürfe gegen den ehemaligen Missbrauchsbeauftragen der Diözese. Er habe sie 1988 in einem Raum des Exerzitienhauses Himmelspforten in Würzburg zum Oralverkehr gezwungen (wir berichteten).

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EXCLUSIVE: Sheldon Silver accused of blocking bills to aid sexually abused kids after Catholic group hired his longtime aid as a lobbyist

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Saturday, April 9, 2016

ALBANY — Disgraced ex-Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver was all about pay to play — and sexually abused kids were the ones to pay the price.

Silver stopped pushing for a bill to aid victims of predators after the state Catholic Conference hired his former long-time aide as a lobbyist, says a controversial former lawyer who has taken on the Church.

John Aretakis, of upstate Troy, made the alarming charge in a scathing letter he sent to a judge who in May will sentence Silver on an unrelated federal corruption conviction.

“Mr. Silver met with and looked into the eyes of many victims of clergy sexual abuse, and he promised his continuing support. … As soon as money lined his pockets, or the pocket of his trusted and loyal allies, he dropped us,” he wrote.

Aretakis, who as a lawyer and victim’s advocate represented a host of clients who sued the Catholic Church over abuse cases, wrote that Silver had been a supporter of a bill to extend the age that an adult who was sexually abused as a kid could bring a case.

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Unsubstantiated sex claims ruin the life’s work of good men

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

APRIL 9, 2016

Gerard Henderson
Columnist

I write in defence of the memory of the Australian Jesuit priest Patrick Stephenson and in support of my friend Charles Moore’s campaign to honour the life of the British Anglican bishop George Bell. Both men have been accused, decades after their deaths, of sexual impropriety with unnamed ­minors.

I knew, but did not like, Father Stephenson (1896-1990) when I was a student at Xavier College, Melbourne, in the late 1950s and early 1960s. I always regarded the Irish-born “Stevo”, as we all called him, as a bit of a snob with undue admiration for judges, surgeons, lawyers, doctors and the like. Moreover, he was a truly dreadful teacher. Stevo’s geography classes, which we termed “townography”, consisted of teaching and learning the names of countries, states, cities, rivers and so on throughout the known world. They are accurately, and wittingly, described in Paul Henderson’s 2005 book Xavier Behaviour.

Yet, unlike some of his Jesuit colleagues, Stephenson was a gentle man. He was committed to good works focusing on the less successful Xavier students as well as the poor and the oppressed outside the college’s gates. Perhaps because he was neither a scholar nor a sportsman, Stephenson devoted his life on the Xavier campus to counselling students. He invited students to his room for discussions about how they were faring and showed genuine interest in them and their families.

I have never been into “deep and meaningfuls” with priests or psychologists and soon ignored Stephenson’s invitations “to come up and see me sometime, boy”. What’s more, I did not much like the fact that he sat on a chair and grabbed the top of my knee during the discussions.

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Dojo Pizza’s Loren Copp Appears in Court in Child Porn Case as Support Fades

MISSOURI
Riverfront Times

By Doyle Murphy on Fri, Apr 8, 2016

Dojo Pizza owner Loren Copp arrived handcuffed and shackled at the ankles on Friday in federal court for his first appearance since his arrest on child pornography charges.

His attorney had dropped him overnight. Some of his strongest supporters have backed away now that the FBI says it has photographic proof he sexually abused a girl over the course of several years, starting with a stomach-churning snapshot of the two of them in a sex act when she was just twelve years old. …

Tauna Cowin, whose two oldest daughters lived with Copp most of their lives, says she cried all night after reading the newly revealed allegations.

“If he did do this, I hope he rots in jail,” she told the Riverfront Times. “I’m sorry, but I hope he rots in jail.”

Cowin knew Copp, a former pastor, through her kids’ school and church. When she was losing her home about a decade ago, she sent a son and the two girls to live with him and his wife at the time. The boy eventually moved on, but the girls stayed and began calling Copp “Dad” even though he wasn’t their biological father.

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Waiting for justice: The effort to reform statute of limitations

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

By the time Mike Berkery was in high school, Stanley Gana, then a priest in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, had raped him hundreds of times.

Gana, a spectacled man of 300 pounds, began grooming Berkery in 1978 when the boy, whose family attended Ascension Church in Philadelphia, was in eighth grade.

Gana sodomized the boy repeatedly, forcing him to have oral and anal sex in locations around Philadelphia and New Jersey, and as far away as Disney World, Notre Dame University, New York and Canada.

In textbook grooming, Gana alienated Berkery from his friends and family. He bought him gifts and gave him money, and put him in charge of the animals at his farm in northeastern Pennsylvania. By the time Berkery was 16, Gana had given him the keys to a new car.

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April 8, 2016

St. George’s Victims’ Lawyer Questions Disclosure of Faculty Member’s Suspension

RHODE ISLAND
GoLocalProv

Friday, April 08, 2016
GoLocalProv News Team

St. George’s School sent out a letter to the school community this week announcing that a faculty member under investigation had been placed on administrative leave back in January, prompting victims’ lawyer Carmen Durso to ask why the school took so long in disclosing the move.

The communication marks the latest development in the ongoing investigation into claims of sexual abuse at the Middletown prep school. In December, GoLocal reported “St. George’s…which reports assets of over $200 million, has admitted that after decades of denial that at least 23 students were molested by multiple faculty and staff.” In January, Rhode Island State Police Colonel Steve O’Donnell told GoLocal that the State Police investigation was expanding although he would not comment on the number of individuals being investigated for sexual assault.

The letter sent by St. George’s on April 6 states that “longtime faculty member Bob Weston has been on leave from his position as Associate Head for External Affairs since January of this year” — and Durso raised questions as to why the letter was just sent out.

READ: See the letter from St. George’s to the school community BELOW

“Back in January we received info that Weston, who had once been a dorm parent, had been removed from that position because there were complaints that he would come into girls’ rooms when they were in a state of undress,” said Durso. “This is what we got, and along with that, he at some point was removed from that position.”

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Child Abusers Find Refuge in Israel

ISRAEL
The Daily Beast

SHIRA RUBIN

The case of Malka Leifer, accused of molesting eight girls in Australia and holded up in a religious community in Israel, is just one of many.

TEL AVIV — A years-long delay in the extradition of an ultra-Orthodox educator, who fled to Israel from Australia after being accused of abusing her female students, has child protection advocates worried that Israel has become a haven for international sex offenders.

Malka Leifer, a dual Israeli-Australian citizen who from 2003 to 2008 served as principle of the Adass Israel Girls School in Melbourne, was accused of sexual abuse eight years ago. Only hours after the first accusations came to light, Leifer reportedly received funds and logistical help from members of her insular ultra-Orthodox community in Melbourne, which enabled her to fly to Israel in the dead of night along with her husband and five children.

Miriam Friedman, the director of Magen, an NGO which defends children at risk of sexual abuse in religious towns in Israel, said that alleged sex offenders from the international Jewish community have for years been taking advantage of Israel’s reputation for lax extradition practices.

“When an investigation is opened or suspicions start to circulate, abusers suddenly make aliyah—Jewish immigration to Israel—and Israel’s law of return makes it easy for them to pass under the radar, because nobody asks questions about why they are coming,” said Friedman. Since 1950 the law has entitled every Jew worldwide to apply for Israeli citizenship.

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IN–Priest’s damning suicide note is revealed; Victims respond

INDIANA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 8, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A suicide note strongly suggests that a high profile accused predator priest who worked at Notre Dame is guilty of child sex crimes.

[Daily Mail]

[SNAP]

According to the Daily Mail Online, Father Virgilio Elizondo “left a chilling suicide note in which he claims he took his own life as ‘a final gift’ to anyone he ‘might have hurt.’” The publication says the note “appears to be a veiled admission of guilt.”

A child sex abuse and cover up lawsuit filed in San Antonio, where Fr. Elizondo also lived and worked, says Fr. Elizondo sexually assaulted a boy when the boy went to him to report abuse by another priest, Father Jesus Armando Dominguez, a fugitive from justice believed to be in Mexico.

We agree with Thomas J. Henry, the lawyer representing Fr. Elizondo’s alleged victim, who says Fr. Elizondo’s not is “self-serving and manipulative.” It’s also hurtful to victims, many of whom will almost certainly think “Why speak up? Predators always duck, dodge and deny, right up until the end, and many still think they’re innocent.”

No matter what lawmakers or church officials do or don’t do, we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions – especially at Notre Dame – to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Witness breaks down at Mount Cashel civil trial

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on April 08, 2016

Man also says he told priest in confession of sexual incidents

A former Mount Cashel orphanage resident broke down this morning in testimony at Newfoudland Supreme Court as he shook and covered his face.

“I don’t know why I am doing this,” said the 77-year-old Avalon Peninsula man, who is retired from the military.

The man had said he loved band, but when his lawyer Geoff Budden began asking him about the band instructor, the witness stopped and began shaking.

Subsequently in his testimony in the Mount Cashel civil trial, he said he was molested one night by the bandleader, a Christian Brother he initially liked.

The man is the fourth claimant among four test cases that have been brought before the civil court, representing about 60 former residents at the orphanage from the 1940s to the 1960s. They say the RC Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s should be held liable for the sexual and physical abuse of boys by certain Christian Brothers during that period.

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Kincora abuse inquiry bid ‘premature and misconceived’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

A judge has rejected a bid to overturn a decision to exclude the Kincora Boys’ Home in east Belfast from a child abuse inquiry at Westminster.

Mr Justice Treacy told Belfast High Court the timing of the judicial review was wrong.

He said: “The court considers that the application is premature and misconceived. Therefore the application for judicial review must be dismissed.”

There have been allegations of a paedophile ring linked to British intelligence services at Kincora.

The legal action was taken by Gary Hoy, a former resident abused by two men who were subsequently convicted.

He was challenging the decision not to bring Kincora under the remit of an independent inquiry established by Home Secretary Theresa May and chaired by Justice Lowell Goddard, which covers England and Wales and has the power to compel witnesses.

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GA–Victims blast “misleading comments” by Atlanta archbishop

GEORGIA
Surivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 8, 2016

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003 cell,bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

Atlanta’s top Catholic official is misleading his flock instead of protecting it.

He refuses to post predator priests’ names on church websites. He’s making deceptive claims about his dealings with pedophiles. And despite repeated pledges to be “open” about predator priests, he’s refusing to answer questions about six of them who were “outed” for abuse elsewhere but worked or spent time in his archdiocese.

Two days ago, in response to questions from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) Archbishop Wilton Gregory claimed “Our archdiocese has one of the most stringent safe environment policies in the country, including zero tolerance for abuse.” We challenge him to prove this. We strongly believe this isn’t true.

We’ve asked Gregory twice to protect kids by warning his flock about these predators and posting their names on church websites. We’ve asked him to aggressively reach out to anyone else they may have been hurt, because many victims are suicidal, agoraphobic, addicted, depressed and trapped in silence, shame and self-blame.

Gregory ignores us. And when the AJC asks him questions about these child molesting cleric, he rebuffs them.

And honestly, even if Gregory’s archdiocese does have stronger policies, that’s virtually meaningless. Church abuse policies are rarely followed. Bishops adopt them for selfish reasons, because church public relations staff and defense lawyers and insurers tell them they’ll look good with written abuse protocols on the books.

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MO–Victims blast KC bishop over more “healing” events

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 8, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home,davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

KC Catholic officials keep holding self-serving “healing” events when they should be focused on protecting vulnerable kids, not winning back upset parishioners. (There’s one set for April 21.)

Their priorities are backwards.

[Kearney Courier]

Such services are nothing more than public relations. They don’t protect a single child, expose a single predator, punish a single concealer or deter a single cover up.

Notice the slogan or tag line for this program: “Healing our Parishes Through Emphathy.” That’s their goal: restoring parishioners faith in church officials. Not stopping abuse. Not helping victims. “Healing parishes.”

Instead, Bishop James Johnston should take tangible steps so that the church no longer will need to hold such events. The goal should be no more victims.

For example, 30 US bishops have posted names of predator priests on their websites. That both protects the vulnerable, heals the wounded and deters the cover ups. That’s what Bishop Johnston should do.

Victims can heal from clergy sex crimes with or without bishops’ words. Kids, however, cannot protect themselves from predator priests without bishops’ actions. Johnston should warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about two priests who molested in Kansas City are still priests now but live out West, unsupervised, among unsuspecting families.

They are

–Fr. Thomas Cronin of Nevada, who is reportedly involved with a homeless women’s shelter despite a civil lawsuit in Kansas City (now settled) that charges him with sexually violating a young woman.

[BishopAccountability.org]

–-Bishop Joseph Hart of Wyoming who, as a priest in KC, molested at least six boys. (They have sued and those suits have settled.)

Johnston should take immediate steps to alert police, prosecutors, parishioners, parents and the public about Cronin and Hart. These two predator priests could be assaulting kids and young people today. They could be in Kansas City today or this weekend, visiting old parishioners and hurting their kids.

With real outreach by Johnston, Cronin and Hart might even be prosecuted, convicted and imprisoned, sparing others decades of devastating pain.

Presumably, Bishop Robert Finn’s resignation was intended to bring healing to Kansas City Catholics and victims. But wounded adults can heal themselves, with or without action by bishops. Innocent kids and vulnerable adults, however, cannot protect themselves from predators without action by bishops.

Johnston should put announcements in every parish bulletin at the first opportunity, begging those who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by Cronin or Hart to step forward and call police.
No matter what church officials do or don’t do, we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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MD–Reform of child sex bill fails; Victims respond

MARYLAND
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 8, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

It’s heartbreaking that a Maryland legislator has been betrayed three times, first by a pedophile, then by a predator-friendly justice system and now by his timid colleagues.

We commend Maryland Delegate C.T. Wilson (D-Charles) for his courage and compassion. We are very sad that his hard, brave work to help protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded has ended in vain, at least for now.

We’re even more sad because more Maryland children will be hurt in the months and years ahead because lawmakers won’t stand up to the self-serving lobbying efforts of corrupt Catholic officials and enable more child sex abuse victims to expose child molesters in court.

We urge Mr. Wilson to continue his battle. We are confident that he will succeed, hopefully sooner than later.

No matter what lawmakers or church officials do or don’t do, we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions in Maryland to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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CA–Cardinal Mahony removed from event; Victims respond

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 8, 2016

Statement by Joelle Casteix of Orange County, SNAP volunteer western regional director, 949 322 7434, jcasteix@gmail.com

We are glad that an archbishop is forcing his corrupt predecessor to withdraw from a church service. And we are deeply grateful to concerned parishioners who are speaking out against honoring a prelate who ignored and concealed heinous sex crimes against kids.

[Signal SCV]

Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez is reversing himself and not letting Cardinal Roger Mahony preside over confirmations at Saint Kateri Catholic Church on April 29.

This is a step forward. But the broader question is why do Catholic officials let their disgraced and complicit colleagues keep ministering in public and ignore their horrific and deceitful wrongdoing? Why do they let men like Mahony keep rubbing salt into the already deep and still fresh wounds of thousands of clergy sex abuse victims and hundreds of thousands of betrayed parishioners?

Gomez could and should have done more sooner to prevent Mahony from presenting himself in churches as an honorable person. Still, we are glad Gomez is acknowledging the pain of St. Kateri Catholics by removing Mahony.

Disciplining those who conceal child sex crimes deters others from concealing child sex crimes. But it takes courage to do this, and sadly, precious few in the Catholic hierarchy seem to be able to summon such courage.

We urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions in the LA area protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Victims accused of lying as church ‘protected pedophile priest’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

APRIL 9, 2016

Dan Box
Crime reporter
Sydney

The victims of a pedophile Catholic priest have told a court he was protected by the church, who accused the children of lying about their abuse, allowing him to keep committing crimes.

John Joseph Farrell, also known as ‘‘Father F’’, appeared in Sydney’s District Court yesterday, after being found guilty of 62 offences involving sexual ­assaults on 12 victims during the 1980s.

Farrell operated “with complete immunity as an ongoing representative of, and with the protection and facilitation from, the Australian Catholic Church”, one victim told the court. “In fact, the church denied the allegations against Farrell, protected Farrell … and stated the allegations were completely preposterous and outright lies.

“I was made to feel as if it was all my fault. Meanwhile, I had lost my innocence, my youth.”

The majority of those Farrell assaulted were altar boys in the Moree parish in northern NSW, the court heard.

Farrell left the parish after senior church officials were warned of his behaviour and was appointed as a priest elsewhere. In the early 90s, he was appointed to a parish in western Sydney, where he abused an altar boy.

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Sieben Jahre Haft für Ordensmann wegen Missbrauchs von Jungen

SCHOTTLAND
cath.ch

[A Scottish monk was sentenced to seven years is prison for sexual abuse of minors.]

London, 8.4.16 (kath.ch) Ein vorbestraftes Mitglied des katholischen Männerordens der Schulbrüder (»De-La-Salle-Brüder») ist in Schottland unter anderem wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs von Jungen zu sieben Jahren Gefängnis verurteilt worden. Wie die BBC und schottische Zeitungen (8. April) berichteten, war der als Bruder Benedict bekannte Michael Murphy Lehrer am St. Joseph’s im schottischen Tranent nahe Edinburgh, einer Schule for straffällige Jungen.

Der 82-Jährige wurde vom Obersten Gericht in Edinburgh wegen insgesamt 15 Fällen von Körperverletzung und sexuellem Missbrauch an acht Jungen in der Zeit von 1971 bis 1981 verurteilt.

Damalige Opfer, die heute 40 oder 50 Jahre Jahre alt sind, beschrieben den Angaben zufolge, wie Murphy Jungen Elektroschocks versetzte und dabei gelacht habe. Dabei habe ein Junge Verbrennungen an den Händen erlitten; ein anderer sei in Ohnmacht gefallen, hiess es. Ein Jugendlicher wurde den Angaben zufolge von Murphy und einem Komplizen in der Dusche vergewaltigt. Dem Teenager wurde gedroht, er würde seine Eltern nie wiedersehen, wenn er jemandem von dem Missbrauch erzählte.

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Lyon : les affaires d’abus sexuels qui empoisonnent le diocèse

FRANCE
L’Obs

[Lyon: The sexual abuse cases that poison the diocese.]

Celine Rastello

“On a ouvert une boîte de Pandore”, estime le président de l’association “La Parole Libérée” François Devaux, victime présumée, comme d’autres, du père Bernard Preynat quand il était enfant. Depuis la révélation des accusations de pédophilie visant cet ancien chef scout de la banlieue huppée de Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, les affaires s’enchaînent. Plusieurs prêtres du diocèse de Lyon sont mis en cause -ou l’ont été- dans différentes affaires d’agressions sexuelles. A la tête de l’évêché depuis 2002, le cardinal Philippe Barbarin, entre autres responsables, est accusé d’avoir eu connaissance de faits et de ne pas les avoir dénoncés. On lui reproche aussi d’avoir maintenu des prêtres dans leurs fonctions. De quelles affaires parle-t-on ? Où en sont-elles ? “L’Obs” fait le point.

Barbarin, le cardinal qui aimait la lumière

1. L’affaire Preynat

Révélée par des victimes du père Bernard Preynat, cette affaire est celle par laquelle tout commence. Fin janvier, l’ancien chef scout est mis en examen pour agressions sexuelles sur mineurs de moins de 15 ans pour des faits présumés entre 1986 et 1991, puis placé sous contrôle judiciaire. En garde à vue, il reconnaît les faits, ainsi que trois viols, pour lesquels il est placé sous le statut de témoin assisté. “La Parole Libérée” assure avoir reçu une soixantaine de témoignages de victimes sur la période allant de 1970 et 1991, quand l’abbé encadrait les jeunes scouts. Sur la quinzaine de plaintes déposées, une dizaine reposent sur des faits trop anciens, d’emblée prescrits.

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Un prêtre du diocèse de Lyon déplacé avant sa condamnation pour abus sexuel

FRANCE
France 3

[A priest in the Lyon diocese who sexually assaulted a young adult in 2008 was simply moved to another parish before being sentenced in 2010 to a six-month suspended sentence.]

Un prêtre du diocése de Lyon qui avait commis à Longes (Rhône) une agression sexuelle sur un jeune majeur en 2008 a été simplement déplacé dans une autre paroisse avant sa condamnation en 2010 à 6 mois de prison avec sursis.

C’est une nouvelle affaire embarrassante pour le diocèse de Lyon. L’un de ses prêtres s’en prend dans la nuit du 10 au 11 janvier 2008 à un jeune majeur que nous appellerons Thomas, afin de préserver son anonymat ..

Les faits se déroulent à Longes (Rhone). Il est fait état “d’une atteinte sexuelle commise par surprise ou sous la contrainte” sur le jeune homme, des faits établis par la justice. Thomas en sort très perturbé. Il dépose une plainte que la justice va mettre deux ans à instruire.

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Bischöfe setzen Maßnahmen gegen sexuellen Missbrauch

OSTERREICH
Bischofs Konferenz

[Austrian bishops at their spring plenary assembly at St. Polten have decided on further regulations regarding sexual abuse allegations and said concern for victims must come first.]

Frühlingsvollversammlung der Bischofskonferenz in St. Pölten beschließt Schaffung österreichweiter Regelungen – Sorge um Opfer muss an erster Stelle stehen

Wien, 5.3.10 (KAP) Österreichs Bischöfe wollen mit zusätzlichen Maßnahmen einen noch wirksameren Umgang der kirchlichen Verantwortungsträger mit Fällen von sexuellem Missbrauch sicherstellen. Bei ihrer Frühlingsvollversammlung in St. Pölten wurde von der Bischofskonferenz daher eine österreichweite innerkirchliche Regelung in Auftrag gegeben, wird in einer am Freitag veröffentlichten Presseerklärung mitgeteilt.

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Kincora Boys Home to remain part of Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

Allegations of child sexual abuse at Kincora Boys’ Home in Belfast will remain part of the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry in Northern Ireland, a judge has ruled.

An application by a Kincora victim for a judicial review was dismissed by the High Court in Belfast as “premature and misconceived”.

The challenge was taken by Gary Hoy against Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers and the HIA inquiry.

A separate independent review in England and Wales is led by Justice Lowell Goddard.

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EXCLUSIVE: The final insult – ‘child molester’ Catholic priest who committed suicide to evade justice said it was a ‘gift’ to his victims – after a life ‘serving others’

UNITED STATES
Daily Mail (UK)

[with copy of the suicide note]

By EMMA FOSTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

A Catholic priest who shot himself in the head after he was accused of molesting a young boy left a chilling suicide note in which he claims he took his own life as ‘a final gift’ to anyone he ‘might have hurt’.

In the note – which appears to be a veiled admission of guilt – Father Virgilio Elizondo, 80, said he had lived a life ‘totally dedicated to serving others’.

The Notre Dame professor left it near where his body was found, at his San Antonio, Texas, home.

Apparently unconcerned by the feelings of his alleged victim, he thanked God for his entire life – ‘especially’ his 52 years of priesthood – during which time his accuser claims Fr. Elizondo sexually assaulted him when he went to him to report abuse by another priest.

The letter – obtained by Daily Mail Online – goes on to describe how Fr. Elizondo felt ‘fatigued and empty’ and was suffering various ailments affecting his kidneys, eyes and knees.

Only in the last paragraph of the carefully typed-out note – discovered on a table just yards from where Fr. Elizondo committed suicide – does the priest ‘beg forgiveness and mercy from those he has hurt or offended.’

Last night the lawyer representing Fr. Elizondo’s alleged victim called priest self-serving and manipulative.

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Prosecutors ask 14 years for priest

ROME
ANSA

(ANSA) – Rome, April 8 – Prosecutors on Friday requested a 14-year prison sentence against a priest they say repeatedly abused a little boy who had been entrusted to him by his parents.

Vito Beatrice, 71, is a priest at Sant’Alessio Church in Rome’s tony Aventino neighborhood.

The priest is charged with sexual assault on a child aggravated by abuse of authority while he was the alleged victim’s spiritual tutor between Easter 1995 and October 2004.

The alleged victim, now 28, tried to kill himself by jumping out a nightclub window into a river in February 2010. He then told his girlfriend and his parents about the abuse, finally reporting the priest in 2011.

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Monk Michael Murphy, who carried out horrific abuse at St Joseph’ School, Tranent, jailed for seven years

SCOTLAND
East Lothian Courier

A CATHOLIC monk who carried out a catalogue of brutality and degrading abuse against pupils at a residential school during “a regime of fear” has been jailed for seven years.

Michael Murphy, 82, was jailed this morning (Friday) following a hearing before Lord Uist at the High Court in Edinburgh.

The pervert, was known as Brother Benedict or Brother Ben to children in his care at St Joseph’s List D School in Tranent, where he perpetrated indecency and violence against youngsters.

Irish-born Murphy denied a string of charges against him during his trial at the High Court.

He said: “I should not be here in this court at all.”

But a jury convicted him on Thursday of 15 charges of assault and indecent assault involving eight boys spanning the decade up to 1981. Murphy was acquitted of a further two charges.

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Kincora Boys Home Belfast: Sexual abuse victims will not be part of UK-wide Goddard inquiry, court rules

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Alan Erwin
PUBLISHED
08/04/2016

An abuse victim has lost his High Court battle to have claims that senior politicians, businessmen and high-level British state agents connived in a paedophile ring at a notorious Belfast care home examined by a Westminster inquiry.

Dismissing Gary Hoy’s bid to judicially review the decision to keep the probe into the Kincora scandal within the remit of a Stormont-commissioned body, Mr Justice Treacy said: “The present application is premature and misconceived.”

Mr Hoy’s lawyers had argued that the ongoing Historical Instiutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry sitting in Banbridge is powerless to properly scrutinise a “closed order” surrounding the home.

With MI5 accused of covering up the sexual abuse throughout the 1970s to protect an intelligence-gathering operation, it was claimed that the current arrangements cannot compel the security services to hand over documents or testify.

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Embattled Riverdale Rabbi Leaving Pulpit Next Week

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Gary Rosenblatt
Editor And Publisher

After an often-contentious four-and-a-half hour congregational meeting on Wednesday night, the membership of the Riverdale Jewish Center voted overwhelmingly in favor of a board-recommended retirement agreement for Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt. He will end his 31-year-tenure as spiritual leader of the Modern Orthodox synagogue next week.

The vote was 352-75 in favor of the rabbi stepping down from the pulpit. He will be compensated with a retirement package spread out until 2032 and valued at about $2.1 million. As a private citizen he will have no title in the synagogue, where he will be given a life membership.

It is believed that it will be at least a year before a new rabbi is hired.

Rabbi Rosenblatt (no relation) has been the center of controversy for his unusual practice over the years of inviting teenage boys, and later young men, to engage in close conversation with him unclothed in the sauna after playing racquetball. Critics said such behavior was highly inappropriate, though not illegal, and unbefitting a rabbi; defenders insisted his reputation was being unfairly tainted for an innocent, if odd, means of seeking to connect as a mentor to young men.

Some members of the congregation opposed the deal because they supported the rabbi and wanted him to remain in his post until his contract ends in August 2018. Others opposed the deal for a different reason; they wanted the rabbi out but felt he was being overly compensated, especially since the synagogue’s membership and reputation have been adversely affected.

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Covenant Life Church member arrested for abuse

MARYLAND
World Magazine

The day before Easter, members of Covenant Life Church learned police had arrested one of their former children’s ministry volunteers on charges of child sexual abuse. The news cast a familiar pall over the Gaithersburg, Md., congregation already struggling under the cloud of past child sex abuse allegations within its membership.

On March 16, Montgomery County, Md., authorities charged Larry Ellis Caffery, 66, with nine counts of child sexual abuse and two counts of false imprisonment. His arrest comes as the threat of a new class-action lawsuit looms over Covenant Life Church (CLC) founder C.J. Mahaney and leaders within Sovereign Grace Churches (SGC,), formerly Sovereign Grace Ministries, over allegations they covered up accusations of child sexual abuse involving church members decades earlier.

A 2012 civil lawsuit alleged Mahaney, CLC, SGC, and others covered up sexual abuse in SGC churches, including CLC, the former flagship church of the SGC coalition, of which it is no longer a member. A Montgomery County judge dismissed the case in 2013 on technical grounds but did not rule on the merits of the case. Mahaney denied the charges against him. In 2014, a Maryland jury convicted former CLC youth ministry volunteer Nathaniel Morales on five counts of sexual molestation related to events in the 1980s and 1990s.

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IL–Ex-Chicago pastor beaten while molesting boy in TX

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 8, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A former Chicago minister who was attacked last week by bystanders while molesting a child, has been charged with child sex crimes and is accused of abusing three boys.

[Raw Story]

He is Rev. Willie Lee Bell Jr., who was a youth pastor at New Covenant M.B. Church in Chicago from 2009 to 2014. He is also CEO of WILBE Productions, LLC in Chicago. He also reportedly worked in Jackson, Tennessee from 2008 to 2010.

[Facebook]

Bell has been a youth minister at First United Methodist of Cedar Hill Texas since November 2015. He was reportedly let go from his job at the church the day after his arrest.

Bell, now 29, is accused of sexually assaulting two little boys behind their apartment in the Dallas area in February. And last week, he was reportedly caught in the act of molesting a third boy. The mom says bystanders attacked Bell to stop him.

In a statement, First United Methodist Church said it has no knowledge of any criminal acts happening at the church,” according to Fox 4 News. But that, in our view, is designed to breed complacency when just the reverse – vigilance and action – are needed now.

Every current and former church employee or member who spent any time at either church – in Chicago or Dallas – should be beating the bushes and shouting from the rooftops, finding anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered Bell’s crimes and begging them to call police.

Now is the time for Methodist staff and congregants in Illinois and Chicago to step up and resist the natural but irresponsible temptation to be passive.

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FUGITIVE ISRAELI RABBI ARRESTED IN JOHANNESBURG

SOUTH AFRICA
Eyewitness News

Mandy Wiener

JOHANNESBURG – A fugitive rabbi, who has repeatedly evaded arrest in South Africa, has finally been taken into custody in Johannesburg.

Rabbi Eliezer Berland has been on the run from Israeli authorities for four years.

He is wanted for sex offences.

Eyewitness News understands that the 80-year-old rabbi was finally arrested by police yesterday after being hospitalised.

He has twice evaded arrest in South Africa, once last year when police raided his hideout at a hotel in Midrand and also during a high-speed car chase.

He has been spotted in several countries, including Zimbabwe, Switzerland and the Netherlands, always accompanied by a group of extremely devout followers.

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Calls for urgent inquiry into sexual abuse of Jewish children in illegal schools

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Siobhan Fenton @siobhanfenton

An urgent inquiry must be launched into the sexual abuse of Jewish children following an investigation by The Independent, campaigners have said.

Kol v’Oz,a global organisation dedicated to preventing abuse of Jewish children, has formally written to the UK’s investigations body for child abuse urging action. In a letter to the Independent Inquiry for Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), Chief Executive Manny Waks wrote: “The IICSA notes that it will investigate a wide range of institutions, including those who fall under the category of ‘other religious organisations’. I would like to take this opportunity to encourage the IICSA to seriously consider including at least a segment of the Jewish community in its investigations.

“In the past few years there have been numerous reports of troubling incidents within the Jewish community; more specifically, within the Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) community in the UK, including a series of reports by The Independent which note that child sexual abuse is alleged to have occurred in illegal Jewish ultra-Orthodox schools and that authorities turned a blind eye to these schools due, in part, to the fear of being accused of anti-Semitism,” Mr Waks added.

An investigation by The Independent revealed that thousands of Jewish children are missing from full time education records in the London borough of Hackney and are feared to be attending illegal, ultra-strict faith schools. The schools teach only religious scripture and all lessons are in Yiddish; meaning that many children with no qualifications and unable to speak English. Physical beatings and sexual abuse is also alleged to take place at some schools.

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Kol v’Oz urges UK Inquiry to also investigate Jewish community

UNITED KINGDOM
Kol v’Oz

On 7 April 2016, Kol v’Oz sent the following letter to the UK Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse:

Hon. Dame Lowell Goddard DNZM
Chair
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse
contact@iicsa.org.uk

Dear Dame Goddard,

Firstly, I would like to commend the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse(IICSA) for its ongoing work in addressing the issue of child sexual abuse in England and Wales.

The IICSA notes that it will investigate a wide range of institutions, including those who fall under the category of ‘other religious organisations’. I would like to take this opportunity to encourage the IICSA to seriously consider including at least a segment of the Jewish community in its investigations.

While child sexual abuse occurs in every segment of society, the context of the abuse, the response by the institution and community, and other factors differ to some degree.

In the past few years, there have been numerous reports of troubling incidents within the UK Jewish community; more specifically, within the Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) community there. Some examples include:

* In 2016, in a series of reports, The Independent noted that child sexual abuse is alleged to have occurred in illegal ultra-Orthodox schools and that the authorities turned a blind eye to these schools due, in part, to the fear of being accused of anti-Semitism.

* In 2015 Todros Grynhaus was convicted and jailed for sexually abusing two children. A number of unique aspects were raised in this case such as the Israel’s Law of Return, the high regard in which a rabbi and the son of a rabbi is held, and the ostracisation the victims encountered by their communities as a result of coming forward.

* In 2013, Menachem Mendel Levy was convicted and jailed for sexually abusing a child. The victim and her family were ostracised (including being driven from their synagogue and kosher shops refused to serve them) and rabbis ignored her suffering, advised her not to go to the police and publicly supported the perpetrator.

* In 2013, the Channel 4 Dispatches program aired an undercover investigation that revealed that ultra-Orthodox rabbis forbade or discouraged alleged victims of child sexual abuse from going to the police.

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Archdiocese reports operating losses for parishes, central operations

CHICAGO (IL)
Crain’s Chicago Business

The Archdiocese of Chicago has tightened its belt considerably over the past few years, but the Catholic Church’s central operations here still report a negative net worth of more than $45 million, according to its fiscal 2015 report.

Its finances reflect the church’s myriad challenges, including funding underattended parishes and schools, increased pension obligations for retired priests and the ongoing cost of settling sex abuse lawsuits.

The archdiocese said its main services division reported a $4.6 million ongoing operating loss for its fiscal 2015. The division, called the pastoral center, includes administrative functions for the archdiocese and financial support to needy parishes in the city and suburbs.

The archdiocese’s 351 parishes, which span Cook and Lake counties and report their budget separately, recorded a combined $58.8 million loss in 2015, up from a $49.9 million loss in 2014. Parish collections declined slightly in 2015, to $214.4 million, from $215.9 million in 2014.

(See the reports below.)

The pastoral center loss has narrowed significantly over the past several years. In 2012, the ongoing operating loss was $75.6 million.

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Francis’ exhortation a radical shift to see grace in imperfection, without fearing moral confusion

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Apr. 8, 2016

VATICAN CITY
In a radical departure from recent pastoral practice, Pope Francis has asked the world’s Catholic clergy to let their lives become “wonderfully complicated” by embracing God’s grace at work in the difficult and sometimes unconventional situations families and marriages face — even at risk of obscuring doctrinal norms.

The pontiff has also called on bishops and priests globally to set aside fears of risking moral confusion, saying they must avoid a tendency to a “cold bureaucratic morality” and shift away from evaluating peoples’ moral status based on rigid canonical regulations.

In a substantial and already hotly debated document addressing church teaching on family life, Francis says that Catholic bishops and priests can no longer make blanket moral determinations about so-called “irregular” situations such as divorce and remarriage.

Writing in his new apostolic exhortation, titled Amoris Laetitia (‘The Joy of Love’), the pope strongly advocates for the worth of the traditional, life-long Christian marriage but speaks respectfully of nearly all models of family life.

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Amoris Laetitia (‘The Joy of Love’)

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

POST-SYNODAL APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION AMORIS LAETITIA OF THE HOLY FATHER
FRANCIS TO BISHOPS, PRIESTS AND DEACONS CONSECRATED PERSONS CHRISTIAN MARRIED COUPLES AND ALL THE LAY FAITHFUL ON LOVE IN THE FAMILY

DOWNLOAD PDF

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‘Amoris Laetitia,’ start with chapter 4

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Apr. 8, 2016

If you are a layperson and want to read the pope’s apostolic exhortation on the family, skip the first three chapters and start with chapter 4. If you are a priest, moral theologian, or divorced Catholic, read chapter 8.

The 263-page exhortation, Amoris Laetitia (“The Joy of Love”) was released at noon today at the Vatican, 6 A.M. Eastern Time.

The opening chapter is a scriptural reflection, but frankly it comes off as a collection of Scripture references that don’t really hang together well.

It is not that the chapter is bad; there are some good passages. For example, it is nice to see a positive exegesis of Genesis’s description of Eve as a helper fit for Adam. Later in chapter 4 he deals with St Paul’s wives “be subject to your husbands.”

The second chapter examines “the actual situation of families, in order to keep firmly grounded in reality.” This chapter, like the first chapter of the pope’s encyclical on the environment, reflects the pope’s insistence that facts matter.

I think it gives a realistic description of the state of family life, but there are few surprises.

One remarkable feature of this chapter is its call for “a healthy dose of self-criticism” in the church.

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St. George’s administrator on leave after allegations of ‘boundary issues’

RHODE ISLAND
Boston Globe

By Bella English GLOBE STAFF APRIL 08, 2016

A top administrator at the embattled St. George’s School has been on paid leave since January pending an investigation of allegations about “boundary issues” with students, headmaster Eric Peterson and board chair Leslie Heaney told the St. George’s community in an e-mail on Wednesday.

Robert Weston, the associate head for external affairs, served along with his wife as longtime “dorm parents” in a girls’ dormitory. “The Board of Trustees and the Administration were advised of second-hand allegations concerning Mr. Weston observing appropriate boundaries with students,” the letter said. “These allegations relate specifically to his work as a dorm parent at St. George’s in the late 1990s.”

Through his lawyer, Weston rejected the allegations and expressed frustration with what he had thought would be a brief leave. Lawyer Paul V. Kelly told the Globe that Weston “served as dorm parent at the school for 16 years — without a single student complaint or expression of concern.”

“He was a loyal and good soldier for the school and agreed to what he understood would likely be a very short period of administrative leave while the independent investigator reviewed the specious allegation against him. It has now been four months, and unfortunately he is still in limbo,” Kelly said.

Since December, more than 40 alumni of the elite Episcopal prep school in Middletown, R.I., have told lawyers that they were victims of sexual abuse there from faculty or other students, mostly in the 1970s and 1980s. In January, Martin Murphy was appointed by the board and the victims to investigate abuse allegations.

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Pinwheels point to church’s child abuse prevention efforts

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic Philly

BY MATTHEW GAMBINO

Archbishop Charles Chaput led about 150 Catholic school children in an event Thursday, April 7 observing April as National Child Abuse Prevention Month and explaining the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s work of abuse awareness and prevention.

The students and the archbishop displayed the blue and silver pinwheels, which he called “symbols of a carefree childhood,” at the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center in center city Philadelphia.

Due to expected rain in the morning, the event was moved inside but organizers for the archdiocese plan to display the pinwheels publicly outside the center’s doors on 17th Street.

In his remarks Archbishop Chaput noted that all children in Catholic schools and Parish Religious Education Programs in the Philadelphia Archdiocese receive safe environment training, which can enable them to spot potential child abusers and guard against abusive behavior.

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A Maryland lawmaker raped as a child can’t get his bill for sex assault survivors passed

MARYLAND
Washington Post

By Petula Dvorak Columnist April 7

For the second year in a row, he put it all out there: the shame, the fear, the self-loathing, the pain, the dark details of his horrific, repeated rape.

An Army veteran and attorney, Maryland Del. C.T. Wilson (D-Charles) stood before his colleagues in Annapolis, confessed that he “really, really” didn’t want to be there and told them why he doesn’t sleep much at night. Why he hoped his children would never be boys. Why he knows he is “a monster on the inside.”

Petula is a columnist for The Washington Post’s local team who writes about homeless shelters, gun control, high heels, high school choirs, the politics of parenting, jails, abortion clinics, mayors, modern families, strip clubs and gas prices, among other things. View Archive

And for the second year in a row, lawmakers in the state legislature put all that in a drawer. And closed it.

“It’s usually the case when we tell our stories,” Wilson said. “Nobody wants to hear this. And we want to be heard.”

Wilson wants his fellow delegates to understand what the adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse endure. And what recourse they have years and years later. And for two years, he has sponsored legislation aimed at helping them.

As it stands, a criminal case against an abuser can be pursued anytime, no matter how long ago the abuse happened.

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Bishop Mullally has ‘clear mandate’ on dealing with response to abuse survivors

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by Hattie Williams

Posted: 08 Apr 2016

THE Bishop of Crediton, the Rt Revd Sarah Mullally, has said that she has been given a “clear and un­­am­biguous mandate” from the Arch­­bishop of Canterbury to make significant changes in the Church’s response to survivors of sexual abuse.

Bishop Mullally, who is leading the C of E’s implementation of the safeguarding reforms, was speaking on Monday at a meeting with “Joe” (not his real …

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Mahony ousted from Saint Kateri confirmation

CALIFORNIA
Signal SCV

By Martha Garcia
Faith Editor

Posted: April 8, 2016

After heightened media attention and backlash from the community, the L.A. Archdiocese has replaced retired L.A. Cardinal Roger Mahony at Saint Kateri Catholic Church’s April 29 confirmation ceremony.

Auxiliary Bishop Alexander Salazar, who conducted the ceremony at Our Lady of Perpetual Help last week, will conduct the ceremony, Saint Kateri officials said.

“We want to focus on the confirmation candidates and celebrate the rite of confirmation,” explained Renee Fields, Director of Operations at Saint Kateri. “We want them to have a joyous experience as they complete their initiation into the Catholic Church.”

Some parishioners were outraged over Mahony’s proposed involvement in the ceremony.

As the head of the L.A. Archdiocese for many years, Mahony was one of the Catholic Church officials at the center of the molestation and sexual abuse allegations over many decades. While he did not take part in the abuse he often protected the priests doing the abusing, gaining the ire of many parents and Catholics alike.

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Pope Francis’ Apostolic Exhortation on The Joy of Love

VATICAN CITY
news.va

(Vatican Radio) The Vatican on Friday published Pope Francis’ eagerly-awaited Apostolic Exhoratation on the family, drawing together almost three years of consultations with Catholics in countries around the world.

The lengthy document, entitled ‘Amoris Laetitia’, or The Joy of Love, affirms the Church’s teaching that stable families are the building blocks of a healthy society and a place where children learn to love, respect and interact with others.

At the same time the text warns against idealizing the many challenges facing family life, urging Catholics to care for, rather than condemning, all those whose lives do not reflect the teaching of the Church.

In particular the document focuses on the need for “personal and pastoral discernment’” for individuals, recognizing that “neither the Synod, nor this Exhortation could be expected to provide a new set of general rules, canonical in nature and applicable to all cases”.

The text of the official summary of the Apostolic Exhortation ‘Amoris Laetitia’ or The Joy of Love can be found below. The full, unabridged text, can be found here on the Vatican website.

Summary of Amoris Laetitia: On Love in the Family

It is not by chance that Amoris Laetitia (AL), “The Joy of Love”, the post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation “on Love in the Family”,was signed on 19 March, the Solemnity of Saint Joseph. It brings together the results of the two Synods on the family convoked by Pope Francis in 2014 and 2015. It often cites their Final Reports; documents and teachings of his Predecessors; and his own numerous catecheses on the family. In addition, as in previous magisterial documents, the Pope also makes use of the contributions of various Episcopal Conferences around the world (Kenya, Australia, Argentina…) and cites significant figures such as Martin Luther King and Erich Fromm.The Pope even quotes the film Babette’s Feast to illustrate the concept of gratuity.

Introduction(1-7)

The Apostolic Exhortation is striking for its breadth and detail. Its 325 paragraphs aredistributed over nine chapters. The seven introductory paragraphs plainly set out the complexity of a topic in urgent need of thorough study. The interventions of the Synod Fathers make up [form] a “multifaceted gem” (AL 4), a precious polyhedron, whose value must be preserved. But the Pope cautions that “not all discussions of doctrinal, moral or pastoral issues need to be settled by interventions of the magisterium”. Indeed, for some questions, “each country or region … can seek solutions better suited to its culture and sensitive to its traditions and local needs. For ‘cultures are in fact quite diverse and every general principle… needs to be inculturated, if it is to be respected and applied’” (AL 3).This principle of inculturation applies to how problems are formulated and addressed and, apart from the dogmatic issues that have been well defined by the Church’s magisterium, none of this approach can be “globalized”.In his address at the end of the 2015 Synod, the Pope said very clearly: “What seems normal for a bishop on one continent, is considered strange and almost scandalous – almost! – for a bishop from another; what is considered a violation of a right in one society is an evident and inviolable rule in another; what for some is freedom of conscience is for others simply confusion.”

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Pope Francis urges compassion for all in landmark statement on family values

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

Rosie Scammell in Vatican City
Friday 8 April 2016

Pope Francis has called for the Catholic church to revamp its response to modern family life, striking a delicate balance between a more accepting tone towards gay people and the defence of traditional church teachings on issues such as abortion.

In a landmark papal document entitled Amoris Laetitia (Joy of Love), Francis outlined his vision for the church on family issues, urging priests to respond to their communities without mercilessly enforcing church rules: “Each country or region, moreover, can seek solutions better suited to its culture and sensitive to its traditions and local needs,” he wrote.

The apostolic exhortation concludes a two-year consultation that saw bishops twice gather in Rome to debate issues affecting the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

In comments likely to be welcomed by some LGBT organisations, Francis urged the church to “reaffirm that every person, regardless of sexual orientation, ought to be respected in his or her dignity and treated with consideration, while ‘every sign of unjust discrimination’ is to be carefully avoided, particularly any form of aggression and violence.”

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Retired Pastor Charged With Sexual Abuse, Released From Jail

OKLAHOMA
Texoma Homepage

STEPHENS COUNTY

A retired pastor and principal who police say is facing charges for sexually abusing a child has been released from a Stephens County Jail on $100,000 bail.

71-year-old Jody Hilliard is charged with two counts of lewd or indecent acts to a child.

According to the Duncan Banner, Duncan Police began investigating Hilliard on March 11.

A few days later, they received an incident report out of Cole County, Missouri in which a 10-year-old girl told officers that Hilliard had touched her and made her touch him.

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Minister takes stand in molestation trial

INDIANA
Times Herald

Mike Grant
Times Herald

A minister accused of abusing a young member of his church presented his tearful version of the events that led to his arrest. Armando Bruno Morales, 56, of Washington is on trial on two counts of Class A felony child molesting and two counts of Class C felony child molesting in Daviess Superior Court.

The second day of testimony opened with Washington Detective Daniel Christie on the stand. Christie had testified about his investigation into the case that reportedly began in 2008 when the victim was 8 years old.

During cross examination by the defense a 30-minute recording of a interview Christie conducted with the boy who was the alleged victim in the case was presented. During that interview the boy again detailed events surrounding his abuse.

“I was scared,” the boy said during the interview. “He would come to my bed at night and would do it to me.”

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Buena Park ex-pastor faces life sentence for molesting girl

CALIFORNIA
My News LA

POSTED BY HOA QUACH ON APRIL 7, 2016

A former pastor of a non-denominational Christian church in Buena Park is expected to receive a life sentence Friday for molesting an 8-year-old female friend of his daughter’s and possessing videos and images of child pornography on his computers.

Christopher Raymond Olague, 44, who was also convicted Nov. 3 of kidnapping the victim to commit a child molestation and attempting to dissuade a witness from cooperating with authorities.

Olague was acquitted of lewd acts on another victim, who is a relative, and using a minor for sex acts. Jurors also found true a sentencing enhancement for kidnapping a victim during a molestation, but denied a sentencing-enhancing allegation of multiple victims.

Just before the trial began, charges related to a third alleged victim were dropped because she did not want to testify, Deputy District Attorney Lexie Elliott said.

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Mass remembers theology professor Fr. Elizondo

INDIANA
The Observer

Catherine Owers | Friday, April 8, 2016

Notre Dame faculty, staff and students gathered in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart for Thursday afternoon for a Mass in memory of theology professor Fr. Virgilio Elizondo, who died March 14 in San Antonio.

Elizondo, the University of Notre Dame professor of Pastoral and Hispanic Theology, is widely considered the founder of U.S. Latino theology and received the 1997 Laetare Medal. University President Fr. John Jenkins celebrated the Mass, and Fr. Daniel Groody, director of immigration initiatives for the Institute for Latino Studies, delivered the homily.

Groody said Elizondo was a man who was devoted to relationships, gave generously and “greeted people with open arms.”

“Wherever he went, he often could be found around a table, gathering people together, forming new relationships, discussing new ideas,” he said. …

In his homily, Groody spoke on the allegations of sexual abuse made against Elizondo last year.

“In May of last year, a man came forward with allegations that he was sexually, repeatedly abused by a priest more than 30 years ago. If such allegations are true, it’s an egregious injustice against this human being. That priest, however, was not Virgil Elizondo,” he said. “These allegations [were] against another priest who fled the country and was never heard from again. Virgil later became connected to the allegations through one disputed incident of the plaintiff, which Virgil completely denied. He was brought into this case not because he was a serial abuser, but because he was a highly visible, accomplished, respected cleric. … This one accusation put the spotlight entirely on Virgil.”

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Mulkearns denied crypt burial

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Caleb Cluff and Matthew Dixon
April 8, 2016

Ronald Mulkearns will be the first Ballarat bishop not to be interred in the crypt of St Patrick’s Cathedral.

Ballarat Diocese Vicar-General Justin Driscoll said it was not appropriate in light of the revelations from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse to grant Bishop Mulkearns a position inside the Cathedral.

“That is correct; he will be the first bishop not to be placed in the crypt. It really is a direct response to the revelations of the Royal Commission. It was not appropriate for the former bishop to be buried there,” he said.

During his time as bishop, numerous paedophile priests were moved across the region while they were abusing children.

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Pedophile NSW ex-priest awaits sentence

AUSTRALIA
Cairns Post

AAP

Pedophile NSW ex-priest awaits sentence

A disabled girl repeatedly raped by a pedophile priest thought the abuse was “OK with God”.

The girl was one of 12 children groomed and molested by former Catholic priest John Joseph Farrell, 62, in a decade-long period of abuse at Moree and Tamworth, in NSW’s north, during the 1980s.

She was abused from the age of 10 by Farrell, who had been moved from one parish after a “scandal that he had been sexually abusing the altar boys”, the victim, who can’t be identified, said in a statement tendered to Sydney’s District Court on Friday.

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