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 4, 2016

Ronald Mulkearns takes his secrets – and his guilt – to the grave

AUSTRALIA
The Age

April 4, 2016

Konrad Marshall
Senior writer

He was born Ronald Austin Mulkearns, in Caulfield. He died on Monday one of the most reviled Catholic leaders in the country.

He came into the world in 1930, and was ordained as a priest in 1956 – a full six decades ago.

He is now dead but the damage he did is long done. Indeed the suffering caused is continuing.

He was the sixth Bishop of Ballarat, a man Most Reverend, a Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, and the singular soul in charge of the largest Catholic diocese in Victoria, throughout its most shameful and destructive era, from 1971 to 1997.

Only this year he faced questions about that period, and his own catastrophic negligence in failing to halt the egregious behaviour of the black-collar criminals under his watch.

He was sorry, he said.

“I didn’t do enough,” he was quoted as admitting.

And yet not doing enough is not even close to the reason the world hates former bishop Ronald Mulkearns. The depth of feeling against the man comes from the belief that he actually did … nothing.

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.

10 ways every church ought to combat sexual violence and domestic abuse

UNITED STATES
Baptist News

OPINION

KYNDALL RAE ROTHAUS | APRIL 4, 2016

Recently some colleagues of mine and I hosted a four-part series on Baylor University’s campus for survivors of sexual assault and their advocates. We created a space for lament, then silence, next anger, and finally hope. We acknowledged in each service that everyone’s pace of healing is unique, and that the stages of healing are never linear.

It was the first time many of us had ever experienced an intentional space crafted to address the anger we feel about these injustices and violations. It was one of the rare moments when religious leaders acknowledged publically in a liturgical context the cultural and institutional silence surrounding sexual violence.

The rarity of what we created strikes me as a sad failure of the church. When I think back over my long history as an active part of the church, I cannot remember a single instance when I heard a sermon on rape, aside from the ones I have preached myself.

It occurs to me that perhaps not all pastors realize that around one quarter of the women in their congregations have been (often silent) victims of sexual or interpersonal violence/abuse. Some of the men in their congregations have been victims too. Maybe the pastors who are aware of the horrifying statistics simply do not know what to do about it. I have compiled a list of concrete, easy things every pastor and/or church can (and ought) to do.

1. Every time (and I do mean every time) you preach or teach on marriage, divorce or relationships, always include a section where you acknowledge publically that some people do need to leave a relationship for their own safety or the safety of their children. I’m serious. Never talk about marriage or divorce again without that public caveat, even if it feels a little out of place. Maybe it is only one sentence in your whole sermon or Bible study lesson, but that one sentence could save someone’s life.

Do you know how many people stay in severely abusive situations because they’ve never heard their pastor say it was OK to leave? When you talk about forgiving your spouse, they might hear you saying that they have to keep being beat and accept it. Please, be clearer. If some other person in your congregation pushes back at you for saying divorce is an option, just take the heat and do not budge. It’s not your life that’s in danger. Let your words make someone else uncomfortable if it could save a life.

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.

After Nearly Six Decades, Woman Reveals Rape Allegation Against Priest

MICHIGAN
Deadline Detroit

Silence.

Judy Larson was silent for nearly 60 years. Then apparently, she couldn’t hold it in any longer.

Aftab Borka of the Oakland Press reports that Larson, 68, in January contacted the Archdiocese of Detroit alleging that Richard Lauinger, a priest in the 1950s at Our Lady of Sorrows in Farmington, had raped her when she was 10.

On March 28, the Archiocese reported that the allegations against Lauinger, now 85, were found to be credible, the paper reported. He moved out of Michigan in 1985.

“He (the priest) told me then that nobody would believe me. I believed it all my life,” Larson, recounting her days at the old church in Farmington, told the Oakland Press. “And now there are people who are saying ‘We believe you’.”

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.

Retired Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who appeared at child sex abuse inquiry, dies

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Retired Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who oversaw the Ballarat diocese during a notorious period of sexual abuse by clergy, has left a “catastrophic legacy”, an abuse survivor has said.

The Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne announced Bishop Mulkearns’ death from cancer at age 85 on Monday.

Bishop Mulkearns, who retired in 1997, was to be requestioned by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse after Cardinal George Pell said he was not briefed properly about abuse in Ballarat.

The retired bishop told a commission hearing in March he was not sure if he knew child abuse was a crime during his time in charge of the Ballarat diocese, but he knew it was wrong.

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.

Hotline response validates need to lift time limits

PENNSYLVANIA
Sharon Herald

Editorial

THE fact that 250 calls have been made to a child-abuse hotline since the recent report of decades-long sexual crimes across the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is tragic, but not surprising.

On March 1, the Office of Attorney General said priests and others associated with the diocese had been abusing children for decades across eight counties in Pennsylvania. The AG’s report directly named 35 alleged abusers, and said their crimes had been hidden by bishops who chose to move the priests from parish to parish rather than involve legal authorities.

A subsequent grand jury presentment on March 15 accused three former leaders of the Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, of allowing Brother Stephen Baker to work among local children knowing he had been accused of sexual assault previously in Ohio and Michigan.

As many as 100 former Bishop McCort High School students have said Baker abused them when they were students.

Past Franciscan group officials Giles Schinelli, Robert D’Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli were formally charged March 18 in Blair County with conspiracy and endangering the welfare of children.

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.

Paedophile priest protector Ronald Mulkearns dies

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

THE former Ballarat bishop who protected paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale has died.

Ronald Mulkearns, who had colon cancer, died on Monday morning, the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat said.

The child abuse royal commission has heard the 1971-1997 Ballarat bishop knew paedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale and others were sexually abusing children and moved them between parishes.

The commission also heard Bishop Mulkearns destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file.

Bishop Mulkearns was living in an aged care facility recently and was reported to be suffering from a range of illnesses.

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.

Diocese: Sexual misconduct alleged against the Rev. Martin Boylan, who served locally

PENNSYLVANIA
Times Leader

April 3rd, 2016

By Travis Kellar – tkellar@timesleader.com

SCRANTON — The Diocese of Scranton issued a statement on Sunday regarding an allegation of sexual misconduct that was made last week against a priest serving in the diocese.

According to a prepared statement, Diocesan officials received an allegation of sexual misconduct on Friday involving a minor against the Rev. Martin M. Boylan. The allegation is reported to have occurred when the accuser, now an adult, was a minor.

It was not made immediately clear as to when the alleged abuse happened.

In response to the allegation, the diocese immediately notified the District Attorney’s Office for Wayne County, which is where the alleged abuse is reported to have happened. The alleged incident was also reported to authorities via the Pennsylvania ChildLine.

As a result of the accusation, Boylan was removed from ministry and his faculties to exercise priestly ministries have been suspended pending an investigation of the accusation, the diocese 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.

Ronald Mulkearns, bishop accused of child sex abuse cover up, dies

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Ronald Mulkearns, who was bishop of Ballarat during some of the worst episodes of child sex abuse perpetuated by priests, has died aged 86.

Mulkearns, who had colon cancer, died on Monday morning, the Catholic diocese of Ballarat said.

The child abuse royal commission has heard that Mulkearns, who was bishop between 1971 and 1997, knew the paedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale and others were sexually abusing children and moved them between parishes. He also destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file, the commission heard.

One victim, Stephen Woods, who was abused as a child in Ballarat, said on Monday the church should not stage a high-profile funeral for Mulkearns.

“The most sensitive route for the Catholic church in Ballarat now is to have a very modest funeral, where it is recognised that the legacy of this man is one of trauma and devastation of individuals, of families and of communities,” Woods told Guardian Australia.

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.

‘Keeper of secrets’ bishop who protected vile pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale dies before he can finish giving evidence to royal commission into child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By FREYA NOBLE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

A Victorian bishop who moved pedophile priests as he tried to protect the Catholic Church’s reputation has died of cancer.

Retired Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns, 85, died on Monday morning after a battle with advanced colon cancer, the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat confirmed.

Bishop Mulkearns – know as the ‘keeper of secrets’ – was a bishop in Ballarat from 1971-1997, and knowingly moved pedophile priests, including Gerald Francis Ridsdale, between parishes.

He died before he could finish giving evidence to the child abuse royal commission.

Bishop Mulkearns appeared before the commission via videolink from his Ballarat nursing home in February, but his questioning finished after 90 minutes on doctor’s advice.

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.

A shameful past

MINNESOTA
Brainerd Dispatch

By Chelsey Perkins on Apr 3, 2016

Nearly 50 years ago, a dynamic priest left an impression on parishioners at St. Christopher’s Catholic Church in Nisswa.

“Father (Alfred) Longley was a priest who had attracted a bit of a following in that when he showed up at St. Christopher’s, he was a dramatic presence,” said Rick Herder, a former Lake Shore resident who attended the church as a boy. “He wore colorful garb when he said the Mass. … He tended to gather a flock of acolytes around him, because he was an outgoing, colorful personality and an intellect. A very bright guy and a raconteur.”

Longley was memorable for other, more sinister reasons as well, recorded in a series of documents released as part of a successful lawsuit against the Diocese of Duluth by a victim of sexual abuse. The documents, including official reports from the Crow Wing County Sheriff’s Office, detailed interviews with juveniles staying at Longley’s Gull Lake residence, describing wild parties and sexual advances by the priest. Letters to and from the Diocese of Duluth also show church officials were aware of Longley’s chronic alcoholism and apparent homosexuality, for which he received treatment at a psychiatric hospital. In one letter, Longley’s case was described as a “very long and involved one” by the bishop of the Duluth diocese.

Although Longley was permanently removed from the ministry in March 1968 by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Duluth diocese granted Longley permission to celebrate Mass through the early 1970s. He is described as “Father” in all of the released documents, dated between April 1971 and May 1972. Herder, who shared his own experience of a 1970 sexual advance from Longley with the Brainerd Dispatch, recalled Longley serving as a substitute priest at St. Christopher’s in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

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.

Ronald Mulkearns: Ex-bishop accused of abuse cover-up dies

AUSTRALIA
BBC News

A former Catholic bishop accused of covering up the sexual abuse of children in Ballarat, Australia between the 1970s and 1990s has died.

Retired bishop Ronald Mulkearns died aged 85, the Catholic Church confirmed.

Last month he was asked once again to testify before a child sex abuse inquest following evidence from Cardinal George Pell.

Cardinal Pell said the bishop deceived him about the activities of notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale.

Ridsdale committed more than 130 offences against young boys while working as a chaplain at Ballarat’s St Alipius school between the 1960s and the 1980s.

“I can’t nominate another bishop whose actions are so grave and inexplicable … His repeated refusal to act is, I think, absolutely extraordinary,” Cardinal Pell said of Bishop Mulkearns in March.

In February, Bishop Mulkearns told the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he was sorry for moving paedophile priests.

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

Former Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns dies at 85

AUSTRALIA
The Age

April 4, 2016

Jane Lee

Known as the “keeper of secrets”, a key bishop responsible for moving paedophile priests around Victorian parishes for decades, has died.

Ronald Mulkearns, who was the Catholic bishop of Ballarat for nearly 30 years, died on Sunday night at the age of 85 after a long battle with colon cancer.

The Catholic Diocese of Ballarat confirmed his death on Monday morning.

Bishop Mulkearns headed the Ballarat diocese between 1971 and 1997, when Catholic clergy, including teachers, abused hundreds of children.

Many clergy sex abuse survivors believe he could have stopped much of the horrific abuse that occurred in the region.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard the bishop moved priests, including serial child sex offender Gerald Ridsdale around the diocese despite being told they had abused children, and also destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file.

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 3, 2016

Priest Removed After Being Accused of Sexual Misconduct

PENNSYLVANIA
PA Homepage

SCRANTON-LACKAWANNA COUNTY(WBRE/WYOU)- The Diocese of Scranton has removed a priest after receiving reports of sexual misconduct.

Reverend Martin Boylan was most recently serving as pastor at Saint Patrick’s Parish in West Scranton.

But the alleged abuse happened in Wayne County.

The alleged abuse was reported on Friday and diocese officials say they immediately notified the Wayne County District Attorney.

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

Former Bishop of Grimsby denies disgraced vicar’s sex abuse was ‘swept under carpet’

UNITED KINGDOM
Grimsby Telegraph

A former Bishop of Grimsby claims the behaviour of a disgraced vicar who subjected a child to sex abuse was not swept under the carpet when it was first reported to him.

Stephen Crabtree, a former rector in East Lindsey, was jailed for three years by Lincoln Crown Court after admitting six counts of indecent assault on a 15-year-old victim.

In court, it was said the victim had reported the offences to the then Bishop of Grimsby, the Rt Rev David Rossdale.

Crabtree subsequently admitted the offences to the Bishop on two occasions but was only arrested in 2015 after the church carried out a review of past complaints and the matter was passed on to police.

Speaking to the BBC, the Rt Rev Rossdale said he was first made aware of the offence in 2000 by the victim and had tried to pursue it.

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.

Scranton priest removed from ministry after allegation of sexual misconduct with child

PENNSYLVANIA
Times-Tribune

JOE HEALEY
Published: April 3, 2016

SCRANTON — A longtime Diocese of Scranton priest was removed from his ministry after an allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor surfaced late Friday night.

The Rev. Martin M. Boylan most recently served as pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish in Scranton, and was the episcopal vicar for the Northern Pastoral Region of the Diocese of Scranton, according to a statement from the Diocese.

The alleged misconduct occurred when the accuser, now an adult, was a minor, according to the statement. The Diocese said it notified the Wayne County district attorney because the alleged abuse took place in that region.

The Rev. Boylan previously served as administrator and pastor of St. Rita’s in Gouldsboro, and pastor of St. John the Evangelist Parish in Honesdale, and St. Joseph Parish in White Mills, Texas Twp., all in Wayne County.

The Diocese suspended the Rev. Boylan’s “faculties to exercise priestly ministries within the Diocese” pending an investigation of the accusation, according to the statement.

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

STATEMENT REGARDING REVEREND MARTIN M. BOYLAN

PENNSYLVANIA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton

Posted on: 04-3-2016

Late Friday evening, April 1, 2016, Diocesan officials received an allegation of sexual misconduct involving a minor against the Reverend Martin M. Boylan. The allegation is reported to have occurred when the accuser, now an adult, was a minor. In response to the allegation, the Diocese of Scranton immediately notified the Wayne County District Attorney’s Office, the county where the abuse is reported to have taken place; reported the incident through Pennsylvania ChildLine; removed the accused cleric from ministry and suspended his faculties to exercise priestly ministries within the Diocese pending an investigation of the accusation. The Diocese of Scranton will cooperate fully with all civil authorities in their investigation of this matter.

Ordained in 1980, Father Boylan was serving as pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish, Scranton, and Episcopal Vicar for the Northern Pastoral Region of the Diocese of Scranton at the time of the accusation.

Prior assignments were as follows: Assistant Pastor at St. Jude Parish, Mountaintop, St. Gabriel Parish (now Annunciation Parish), Hazleton, St. Patrick Parish, Scranton, St. Peter’s Cathedral Parish, Scranton, and St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception Parish (now Our Lady of Fatima Parish), Wilkes-Barre; Chaplain at Bishop Hannan High School, Scranton and Marywood College (University), Scranton; Residence at St. Clare Parish, Scranton and St. Luke Parish, Stroudsburg; Administrator at Blessed Sacrament Parish, Wilkes-Barre and St. Rita Parish, Gouldsboro; and Pastor, St. Rita Parish, Gouldsboro, St. John the Evangelist Parish, Honesdale, St. Joseph Parish, White Mills, SS. Peter and Paul Parish, Towanda, St. Michael Parish, Canton, St. John Nepomucene Parish, Troy, and St. Aloysius Parish, Ralston.

The Diocese of Scranton encourages anyone who has been sexually abused by a member of the clergy or anyone else, to immediately notify local law enforcement authorities; and to contact Joseph DeVizia, Victim’s Assistance Coordinator, at (570) 862-7551; or Monsignor Thomas M. Muldowney Vicar General of the Diocese of Scranton at (570) 207-2269. We also urge anyone to report incidents of child abuse immediately to Pennsylvania ChildLine. The toll-free number is 1-800-932-0313.

The Diocese of Scranton is committed to protecting children and to providing support to victims of sexual abuse. In acknowledging the pain suffered by survivors of abuse, the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, Bishop of Scranton, requests the faithful of the Diocese to join him in praying for the healing of all who have been harmed by abuse, for the countless lives affected by such actions, and for the many priests of the Diocese of Scranton who have been faithful to their vocation and the people they serve.

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

Catholic Priest Accused of Sexually Abusing Child in Wayne County

PENNSYLVANIA
WNEP

APRIL 3, 2016, BY BILL MICHLOWSKI

SCRANTON — A Catholic priest is off the job after church officials say allegations arose that he sexually abused a child in Wayne County.

The district attorney says the accusations against Father Martin Boylan are under investigation after the Diocese of Scranton made prosecutors aware of the allegations.

The Diocese suspended Boylan after learning of the allegations Friday from the alleged victim, who is now an adult.

Boylan was pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish in Scranton, but served at several parishes in Wayne County over the years.

Any suspicions of child abuse can be reported to Pennsylvania ChildLine at 1-800-932-0313 as well as to police.

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.

Laicos de Osorno marcharon hasta Valdivia en protesta contra Barros

CHILE
Bio Bio

[About 60 members of the Lay Movement of Osorno reached Valdivia demanding the resignation of Bishop Juan Barros after walking more than 40 kilometers from Osorno.]

Cerca de 60 integrantes del Movimiento de Laicos de Osorno llegaron hasta Valdivia exigiendo la renuncia del obispo Juan Barros tras haber caminado más de 40 kilómetros desde Osorno.

Los miembros del movimiento de Osorno llegaron hasta la capital de Los Ríos durante la mañana de este domingo luego de trasladarse desde Paillaco en buses para comenzar su caminata hasta la catedral valdiviana.

El vocero del movimiento, que inició su marcha el viernes desde Osorno, Juan Carlos Claret, señaló que si bien con esta manifestación se espera que en la nueva asamblea de la Conferencia Episcopal se trate el tema de Osorno y una posible solución a la permanencia del Obispo Juan Barros, también indicó que se busca el despertar de los Laicos para que su parecer sobre las decisiones de la jerarquía católica sea tomada en cuenta.

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.

PA–Victims applaud federal probe of Catholic officials

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 1, 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)

We’re grateful that a US attorney in Pennsylvania is talking about using RICO laws against Catholic officials.

[CBS Pittsburgh]

This law, known as RICO, the Racketeering Influence and Corruption Organization Act, usually applies to criminal organizations. But we believe it can and should be used against bishops and other church staff who repeatedly endanger kids, deceive parishioners, move predators, hide evidence and refuse to call law enforcement about known and suspected clergy child sex crimes and cover ups.

We agree with U.S. Attorney David Hickton who said that people have “a hollow sense that there is justice that has not been dispensed” in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases. That “sense” is based on reality. Despite more than 6,400 accused child molesting US Catholic clerics, only two US Catholic officials have been convicted for concealing their crimes.

We urge others in law enforcement to consider RICO and other charges – endangering kids, obstructing justice, destroying evidence, intimidating victims, threatening whistleblowers and failure to report abuse – against current and former Catholic officials who put their comfort and careers ahead of the safety of innocent kids and vulnerable adults.

And we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions – especially in Altoona– 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.

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

Police Drop Sex Abuse Probe into Italian Bishop

ITALY
Outlook (India)

April 3

Italian police are dropping an investigation into a bishop for the alleged sexual abuse of seminarists, media reports said today.

Prosecutors in Cassino, south of Rome, had opened a probe into monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo after receiving a letter from a seminarian accusing the bishop of sexually molesting him and others.

But prosecutor Luciano d’Emmanuele today released a statement saying no charges would be brought, La Repubblica daily said.

Antonazzo had been quoted yesterday stressing “how utterly unfounded the accusations are”.
Sex abuse scandals have dogged the Catholic Church in recent years with alleged victims breaking their silence in the United States, Ireland, the Netherlands, Australia France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Mexico and Poland.

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.

Feds May Seek Racketeering Suit for Clergy Abuse in Diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PITTSBURGH — Apr 3, 2016

A federal prosecutor may file a racketeering lawsuit against a Roman Catholic diocese where a state grand jury found two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by more than 50 clergy over a 40-year period.

The ongoing investigation of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese grew out of the prosecution of the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr., U.S. Attorney David Hickton said Friday.

The 71-year-old Somerset County priest was convicted last year of molesting two street children during missionary trips to Honduras. He was sentenced to nearly 17 years in prison, fined $50,000 and forced to pay his victims $10,000 each.

Hickton said the ongoing investigation concerns whether diocesan officials engaged in a pattern of criminal activity that would fall under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, commonly referred to as RICO.

The statute of limitations has lapsed on criminal racketeering charges, but there is no time limit for filing a RICO lawsuit, Hickton said. KDKA-TV first reported that Hickton was considering such a lawsuit. A diocesan spokesman didn’t immediately comment.

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.

Pennsylvania lawmakers: Victims of child sexual abuse deserve to have their day in court

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

Editorial

THE ISSUE

The movie “Spotlight,” which won the Best Picture Oscar this year, detailed the Boston Globe’s tenacious reporting on the sexual abuse scandal and cover-up in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, under Cardinal Bernard Law. In 2002, the Globe wrote some 600 stories on the subject of abusive priests, and the church’s system of covering up the priestly abuse. A similar pattern of cover-up took place in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, according to Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane. A statewide investigating grand jury determined that hundreds of children in that diocese were sexually abused over a period of at least 40 years by at least 50 priests or religious leaders. “Evidence and testimony reviewed by the grand jury also revealed a troubling history of superiors within the Diocese taking action to conceal the child abuse as part of an effort to protect the institution’s image,” Kane’s office said in a March 1 statement.

If only “Spotlight” was a fictional creation of Hollywood, and not the all-too-real story of the Catholic Church’s systematic pattern of hiding priestly child sexual abuse.

If only the story told by The Boston Globe pertained only to Boston, and not to Philadelphia, and Milwaukee, and Los Angeles, and Altoona-Johnstown, and dioceses across the globe.

Unfortunately, wishing doesn’t make it so.

“Spotlight” highlighted just how essential newspaper journalism can and should be. It showed how the unglamorous work of poring through documents, filing Right-to-Know requests and doggedly pursuing sources can yield a story that changes institutions and, more importantly, people’s lives.

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.

Pittsburgh: Federal police seek ‘organised crime’ suit for Catholic paedophilia cover-up

PENNSYLVANIA
International Business Times

By Joe Gamp
April 3, 2016

A federal prosecutor in the US may file a racketeering lawsuit against a Roman Catholic diocese after a state grand jury found two bishops guilty of covering up the abuse of hundreds of children.

Reports suggest that more than 50 clergy abused hundreds of children over a 40-year period at the Altoona-Johnstown diocese – based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – following the conviction of Reverend Joseph Maurizo.

According to Press Association, 71-year-old Somerset County priest Maurizo was last year convicted of molesting two street children during missionary trips to Honduras. He was sentenced to nearly 17 years in prison, fined $50,000 and forced to pay his victims $10,000 each.

US Attorney David Hickton said on 1 April that the ongoing investigation over whether diocesan officials engaged in a pattern of criminal activity that would fall under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), normally used to prosecute organised crime.

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.

Christian School Principal Arrested For Horrific Case Of Child Rape (VIDEO)

WASHINGTON
Addicting Info

April 2, 2016

It really is beginning to seem like some church communities are full of child molesters. Then again, those of us not brainwashed by propaganda already knew that. Here’s another case of two children’s lives being ruined by a devout ‘Christian’ in a position of authority.

Douglas J. Allison is the 55-year-old principal at a small Christian school that is an arm of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in Port Angeles, Washington. He is one of two teachers, as well as the principal of Mountain View Christian School. Detectives heard the creepy old man confess to raping one of his young victims — the girls were ten and eleven, respectively — on a taped conversation. He also never tried to say he was not guilty of what he was being accused of when officers arrived at his house to take him away for his horrific crimes. In fact, this monster confessed to raping those little girls again – to the arresting authorities.

Allison is in jail on $100,000 bail, and hopefully no one pays it. He is charged with eight counts of molestation and four counts of child rape. Detectives are also working with authorities in California, as Douglas worked in a school there as well. There are likely more victims of his horrible and gross behavior.

Associate Pastor Collette Pekar says of the situation:

“We are very, very sad. Our congregation is grieving. We love our kids, we love our families. We’re praying for complete healing, for complete justice.”

The thing is, though, this sort of thing is all too common in religious communities. Some Christian cultures teach complete submission, and those in positions of authority, and often the churches are more concerned about their images and their collection plates than they are about the victims. It’s disgusting and despicable, but true. That is why sexual predators are allowed to run rampant in those communities.

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“Nobody offered a way forward” – Bishop knew of child sex-attack by ex-vicar 15 years ago

UNITED KINGDOM
Lincolnshire Echo

A senior clergyman claims the behaviour of a disgraced vicar who subjected a child to sex abuse was not swept under the carpet when it was first reported to him.

Stephen Crabtree, former rector of Washingborough and Heighington until 2014, was jailed for three years by Lincoln Crown Court after admitting six counts of indecent assault on a 15-year-old victim.

In court, it was said the victim had reported the offences to the then Bishop of Grimsby, the Rt Rev David Rossdale.

Crabtree subsequently admitted the offences to the Bishop on two occasions but was only arrested in 2015 after the church carried out a review of past complaints and the matter was passed on to police.

Speaking to the BBC, the Rt Rev Rossdale said he was first made aware of the offence in 2000 by the victim and had tried to pursue it.

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Mark Ruffalo knew Spotlight would hit right notes

UNITED KINGDOM
Film News

Mark Ruffalo knew that his Oscar-winning movie Spotlight would resonate with the world.

The 48-year-old actor stars as real life reporter Mike Rezendes in the true tale about how a group of Boston Globe journalists blew the lid of a Catholic priest paedophile ring.

The Tom McCarthy-directed feature also stars Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Liev Schreiber, and scooped two Academy Awards, a BAFTA and a SAG at the 2016 awards shows.

“I’m in the entertainment business, and we get to make different kinds of movies,” Mark pointed out to Cover Media. “Some are just purely for entertainment and then sometimes you make a movie that culturally will push the culture to a particular place. I read the script and I immediacy felt this is a story that we have heard, but it’s time to revisit it again and the culture is ready to revisit it and we have this new Pope and there’s a space open for this to really resonate in the world.”

Mark worked closely with Mike before shooting began, and got to study the journalist as he went about his job. The three time Oscar-nominated star has a healthy respect for the press, but none more so than Mike.

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La Iglesia enfrenta a su peor fantasma

URUGUAY
El Pais

PAULA BARQUET
03 abr 2016

La película Spotlight volvió a poner sobre el tapete el abuso sexual en la Iglesia Católica. ¿Ocurrió en todo el mundo y no aquí? Las autoridades uruguayas, obsesionadas por la transparencia, revelan en este informe los casos que llegaron a sus manos.

Hace más de 10 años que la Iglesia Católica comenzó a transitar el camino de la “tolerancia cero” a la pederastia. Desde que inició su papado, en 2005, Benedicto XVI dejó de quejarse de campañas mediáticas contra los curas y pasó a hablar de “suciedad clerical”. Él, que había dirigido el órgano dedicado a sancionar los pecados —la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe—, sabía bien que la postura oficial había sido ocultar esa “suciedad”.

Con Benedicto XVI el Vaticano instó a las autoridades de la Iglesia en todo el mundo a elaborar protocolos de actuación ante denuncias de abuso sexual infantil. Si bien Francisco tomó la posta —por ejemplo, con la creación de la Comisión Pontificia para la Tutela de Menores, dedicada a la prevención del abuso—, el grueso de la “limpieza” fue durante el papado del alemán. Entre 2004 y 2013 hubo unas 6.000 denuncias. De esas, más de 3.000 fueron “casos creíbles”, según datos oficiales difundidos hace poco por El Diario, un medio español. En total, 848 religiosos fueron reducidos al estado laical, la máxima sanción posible dentro de la Iglesia. Del período de Francisco no hay todavía información disponible.

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Norbert Baumann, OLG-Richter gibt “Tipps”, wie man Missbrauchsverdacht gegen Kirchenfreund vertuscht?

DEUTSCHLAND
martindeeg

Und wieder: die strukturellen Probleme im Raum Würzburg….

“Bei der momentanen Praxis würde ich jedem Opfer abraten, auf diese Institution zu hoffen. Stattdessen würde ich raten: Macht die Taten öffentlich, schreit sie heraus und schließt euch zusammen – nicht nur gegen Täter, sondern gegen ihre Helfer, die Vertuscher in den Institutionen, übrigens nicht nur in den Kirchen.”….

Dr. Norbert Baumann, der ehemalige Vorsitzende des 1. Strafsenats des OLG Bamberg ist – Thema im Blog hier – einer der für die Freiheitsberaubung im Amt gegen mich hauptverantwortlichen Täter, als solcher angezeigt und geltend gemacht.

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Auch ein medienethisches Drama

DEUTSCHLAND
Herder Korrespondenz

Kann eine ganze Stadt Missbrauchsvorfälle an Kindern über Jahre vertuschen? In Boston scheint das lange der Fall gewesen zu sein. Faktisch nahm 2001 der Missbrauchsskandal in der katholischen Kirche in den Vereinigten Staaten dort seinen Anfang. In Boston leben mehr als 50 Prozent Katholiken, Kirche und Gesellschaft sind in der Stadt eng miteinander verwoben. Anzeichen und Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen Priester hat es über Jahre hinweg immer wieder gegeben. Nur wurden sie nicht öffentlich benannt, maximal in einer Randspalte der Zeitungen erwähnt. Dies ändert sich, als der „Boston Globe“ 2001 einen neuen Chefredakteur bekommt: Marty Baron.

Damit nimmt der Film „Spotlight“, der in diesem Jahr den Oscar für den „besten Film“ erhalten hat, seinen Lauf. Die Enthüllung des Systems Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche Bostons behandelt der Film dabei sehr emotional. Baron (Liev Schreiber), selbst Jude, hat als Außenstehender keine Bedenken, sich mit den Schattenseiten der katholischen Kirche auseinanderzusetzen; keine Zugehörigkeit verpflichtet ihn zu Loyalität. Auch der katholische Katechismus, den er von Kardinal Bernhard Law persönlich geschenkt bekommt, vermag ihn nicht „in die Spur zu holen“. Marty beauftragt das Spotlight-Team der Redaktion mit der intensiven Recherche und Aufklärung eines erneuten Missbrauchsfalls des Priester John Geoghan.

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Lowell Goddard: my child abuse inquiry is not just targeted on the famous

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Saturday 2 April 2016

A number of commentators have in past weeks spoken out, inaccurately, about the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which I chair and the way in which the inquiry will conduct its work. I’d like to correct those inaccuracies, specifically that the inquiry relates to individuals of public prominence.

The inquiry is unprecedented in both size and scope. Let’s remember that it came about as a result of catastrophic failures of institutions to recognise and address the extent of child sexual abuse in England and Wales. Those failures destroyed the lives of children and left them growing up in a society that let them down.

We know of high-profile cases where abusers, such as Jimmy Savile, used their positions of trust to gain unfettered access to children. And in towns such as Rotherham, Oxford and Rochdale, we know that organised networks have targeted vulnerable children for sexual abuse. We also know that the widespread sexual abuse of children has taken place – outside the media spotlight – in the care system, in residential schools, in custody and in other institutional settings. And we know from recent research by the Children’s Commissioner that only about one in eight children who are sexually abused are ever identified by statutory agencies.

I have been asked to investigate institutions in England and Wales to identify the failures that may have contributed to the abuse of children. To discharge the challenging mandate in a timely manner, I have announced 13 investigations to date. Most do not relate to individuals of public prominence.

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Hospital Funds Diverted to Cardinal’s Villa

ROME
The Daily Beast

Barbie Latza Nadeau

A top Vatican cardinal is defending a glitzy renovation to his private apartments, apparently funded by money meant for a children’s hospital.

ROME—It is hard to imagine two men more different than frugal Pope Francis and the Vatican’s former spendthrift secretary of state Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone. The Pope lives in a spartan 750-square-foot apartment inside the Vatican’s modest Santa Marta guesthouse. Cardinal Bertone, meanwhile, is caught up in a spending scandal surrounding lavish renovations for his penthouse apartment nearly 10 times that size.

Bertone—who served in the Vatican’s No. 2 position as secretary of state from 2006 until Francis essentially retired him in 2013—decided to combine two vacant Vatican-owned rooftop apartments for himself and his three service nuns at an estimated cost of around half a million euro, which was discounted by 50 percent, according to official estimates published by the Italian newspaper Il Tempo.

But despite the considerable savings, the renovations were apparently paid for twice, meaning the discount was likely down to creative—or corrupt—accounting, which is being investigated by a Vatican Tribunal that opened a criminal dossier into the matter last week.

According to journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi, who first broke the news of Bertone’s lavish penthouse being funded by a children’s hospital in his book Greed last year, the renovation cost was funneled through a London-based holding company run by Bertone’s personal friend. “The money destined for sick children was in actuality used for the renovations and then sent on to London,” Fittipaldi wrote. “Bertone’s name is not cited in the magistrates’ document but the Holy See will find it hard to overlook his direct involvement in the scandal.”

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Illegal Jewish schools: Department of Education knew about council faith school cover-up as thousands of pupils ‘disappeared’

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Siobhan Fenton @siobhanfenton

A London council’s education authority destroyed evidence of children being educated in illegal faith schools at the request of religious institutions, The Independent can reveal.

The Department for Education has been aware of the problem since 2010 but does not appear to have taken any steps to act against the destruction of these records.

An investigation by The Independent also found that more than 1,000 children are missing from schools in London and are at risk of abuse in illegal faith schools. The schools are ultra-Orthodox Jewish faith schools at which boys are placed from the age of 13, and where they receive no education beyond studying religious texts. A number of pupils leave school with little or no ability to speak English, and few – if any – qualifications or skills which equip them to work, or live independently.

Former pupils, campaigners and whistleblowers say that the schools have been operating in plain sight without government action for more than 40 years, despite the fact that running a non-registered school is a criminal offence, and physical violence and sexual abuse of children is alleged to have taken place inside the schools.

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‘My childhood was stolen from me’: Pupil of illegal Jewish faith school reveals physical abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

I was a pupil at illegal ultra-Orthodox Jewish schools in Hackney and was left alone and vulnerable in schools, while authorities failed to protect me. Because life inside these schools was all I knew, I didn’t even realise how wrong my experiences were until I left aged 18. Now I can see how my childhood was stolen from me – both by these illegal schools and by authorities who have no grasp on or interest in protecting children like me.

My school was a cabin. The roof was falling in with water and there were two toilets for 300 children. There was no concept of health and safety as our teachers told us, ‘God will protect you’ from anything bad happening. There was no playground, just a large concrete space. We spent break times playing with the wheels of old cars, or would kick around plastic bottles as makeshift footballs.

Other than occasional short breaks, we would spend entire days studying religious texts, normally starting at 6am and finishing at around 10pm or 11pm. Lessons were only in Yiddish and I left aged 18 unable to speak more than a few sentences of English. You sit in one seat all day, being taught pretty much the same thing every day. For young children, it’s very hard. But you have to do it, out of fear.

I was beaten physically by teachers and saw children beaten on a daily basis. We were hit with all sorts of objects. They had sticks which were colour coded for different types of bad behaviour and we would be hit with them; a red stick for one transgression, a yellow stick for another. I saw children really quite badly hurt. One got their knuckle broken. Others were marked with bruises. There is an internal first aid centre in Stamford Hill for Orthodox Jews. Children would be brought there to be tended to quietly so that it wouldn’t come out.

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Officials hunting 1,000 London boys in illegal schools

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Chris Cook
Policy editor, Newsnight

As many as 1,000 boys from strictly Orthodox Jewish families may be pupils at a network of between 12 and 20 illegal private schools in east London.

These schools are not registered with the authorities, which makes them illegal, and they offer a narrow, religious syllabus.

The Department for Education is working with Ofsted to find and shut them.

Some of the illegal schools, however, are registered as charities, gaining them an advantaged tax status.

These private schools serve the small so-called Charedi community – a grouping that contains within it a wide variety of strictly Orthodox Jewish traditions. Hackney council estimates there are around 30,000 Charedi Jews in the borough.

Charedi parents are more likely to want a relatively mainstream education for their girls. There is demand, however, from parts of the community for a narrow education for boys, one that is largely focused on religious education and delivered in the Yiddish language.

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Goddard inquiry ‘will not ignore false abuse claims’

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The public inquiry into child sexual abuse will not ignore the damage done to prominent people who were falsely accused, Justice Lowell Goddard says.

The judge, who chairs the inquiry, said in an article in the Observer it must strike a balance between the rights of accusers and the accused.

But she also dismissed claims it would mainly focus on famous people.

The inquiry is examining how public bodies handled their duty of care to protect children from abuse.

In the article she said a number of commentators “have in past weeks spoken out, inaccurately, about the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which I chair and the way in which the inquiry will conduct its work. I’d like to correct those inaccuracies.”

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Local woman shares the story, impact of her son’s sexual assault

TEXAS
Seguin Gazette

Posted: Sunday, April 3, 2016

Jennifer Luna jennifer.luna@seguingazette.com | 0 comments

EDITOR’S NOTE: The names of the victim and his mother have been altered to protect their identity.
***

In Seguin’s working-class neighborhoods, Joy raised her family promoting education, tolerance, and above all else, follow the word of Christ, she said. Joy has a close relationship with her son, James, and described herself as James’ anchor.

When James was a boy, he was active with his church. That’s where he met 18-year-old, church youth group volunteer Christopher Wayne Brown — the man who would eventually sexually abuse him. The two hit it off, becoming friends, James’ mother said.

At one point, Joy had to have back surgery that’s when Brown worked his way into their home. He helped around the house, aiding the family in a time of need.

“He befriended us, pulled himself into our family, so that we would trust him implicitly,” Joy said. “And I did, I trusted him implicitly.”

After gaining their trust, Brown started sexually assaulting James when he was on 12 years old, Joy said.

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Mirror, mirror on the wall

MALTA
Times of Malta

Sunday, April 3, 2016 by Fr Joe Borg

Had Pope Francis been a political leader he would have cracked open a bottle or two of Dom Perignon White Gold, one of the most exclusive champagnes by Moët et Chandon, to celebrate with his Council of Nine helping him reform the Roman Curia.

Costing around €13,000 per bottle, the good pope would not order too many, but given the nature of the good news, he might consider it. Mind you, I am not referring to Easter. There was grander news in the air. Malta Today told us that a whopping 92.9 per cent of Maltese “judge positively” the way Francis is leading the Church.

Alas, Archbishop Charles Scicluna would have to settle for good old Mass wine. The approval rating for his leadership is only 47 per cent; a measly D-grade by university standards. Quite naturally, Scicluna would find some solace, had he been the type to find solace in such things, in the fact that a Malta Today poll gives 37 per cent trust ratings to the Prime Minister and 33.5 per cent to the leader of the Nationalist Party.

The study by Malta Today is interesting but at least two questions beg for an answer.

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Should dioceses use grand jury probes?

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

In the past 11 years, grand juries in Pennsylvania have investigated two Roman Catholic dioceses and issued reports with the same narrative line:

Dozens of priests molested hundreds of children across the latter decades of the 20th century as their bishops and other higher-ups ignored or downplayed credible evidence of their offenses and even kept predators in ministry assignments with access to children.

That’s what grand juries reported about the Archdiocese of Philadelphia in 2005 and 2011 and the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown last month.

Because those investigations largely delved far into the past, they yielded thick reports but few prosecutions due to the statute of limitations.

They did, however, yield a rarity: Four of the five Roman Catholic officials ever charged in the United States for covering up the sexual abuse of a subordinate, as opposed to committing the abuse themselves, have been accused as a result of these grand jury probes.

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Salesian priest charged with string of sex offences

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

April 3, 2016

A PRIEST who worked at schools linked to one of the state’s most notorious paedophile rings has been charged with sex offences, decades after allegations first surfaced.

Salesian priest Father Frank De Dood has been charged with a string of offences, including the rape and indecent assault of young boys, between 1978 and 1983.

Police claim five people fell victim to offences committed at Chadstone and Sunbury, where Fr Dood worked at the order’s Salesian College, ­Rupertswood. So far, at least five former Rupertswood staff, including principals, have been jailed for child sex crimes.

The Salesians have admitted paying out thousands of dollars to victims.

In 2008, the Salesians made a confidential payment to a former Rupertswood student who complained of being abused in the 1980s. The ex-­student claimed that “as a result of such assaults, he has sustained loss, damage and injuries that may require specialist counselling and therapy”.

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April 2, 2016

Jesus wept: There were 12 reported incidents of Christian pastors molesting kids — in just the last month<

UNITED STATES
Raw Story

TOM BOGGIONI
02 APR 2016

The arrest of a Christian school principal in Port Angeles, Washington for sexually assaulting two pre-teen girls brings to light, once again, what appears to be an epidemic of sexual predators in Christian churches and schools.

According to the Crimes Against Children Research Center, 1 in 5 girls and 1 in 20 boys is a victim of child sexual abuse. The exact number of actual sexual assaults is unknown since many victims never speak up or, in some cases like Florida, the sexual assault is hushed up.

Sexual abuse within the Christian community that either ignores it or attempts to sweep in under the rug became a hot topic in 2015 after it was revealed that popular Christian celebrities Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar attempted to hide the fact that their son Josh had molested several of his sisters when they were younger. The resulting scandal forced the family’s popular reality show off the air after sponsors fled.

According to Christian writer Tom Challies, sexual predators gravitate to churches because Christians are taught to submit to authority in an atmosphere that encourages trust. Church programs also offer easy access to the children of parishioners.

Quoting from writer Deepak Reju’s On Guard: Preventing and Responding To Child Abuse At Church, Challies writes: “Many Christians don’t know how to distinguish likability and trustworthiness. They confuse the two categories, assuming that if someone is courteous and nice, they must also be trustworthy. Moreover, some Christians behave as though the problem doesn’t exist, and some look with suspicion on reports of abuse. They believe children are lying and are more prone to take an adult’s word. Sexual predators know that these dynamics operate in churches, and they know they can get away with a lot on account of it”

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‘Confidential archives’: Experts divided on impact of Canon Law in Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown child sexual abuse scandal

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

The Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General knew the Code of Canon Law required the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown to keep a “secret archive” and other closely guarded documents that only the bishop and – in some cases – a few other high-ranking officials could access.

When investigators finally obtained the private information, as part of a grand jury investigation, it provided a trove of details about an alleged decades-long coverup – orchestrated by former Bishops James John Hogan and Joseph Victor Adamec – to keep silent allegations of child abuse made against at least 50 priests and other religious leaders.

Finding that archive was one of the key turning points in the entire two-year process.

And the discovery shined a light on the importance of the church’s Code of Canon Law, which was comprehensively codified for the first time in 1917 and revised in 1983.

“I don’t know if I would go as far as to say that canon law made it possible to cover up,” Deputy Attorney General Daniel Dye said. “But we looked at Canon law in the course of the investigation.”

Use of the “secret archive” description took on an almost sinister connotation, considering what kind of information was reportedly revealed in the more than 115,000 diocesan documents examined by the attorney general’s office.

“I don’t like that translation. It makes it sound like more than it was,” said Prof. Nicholas P. Cafardi, dean emeritus for the Duquesne University School of Law. “I would call it ‘confidential archives’ that very few people in the church have access to.”

‘Foulest crime’

The Crimen sollicitationis is a 1922 document – later amended in 1962 – that codified procedures to be used when priests or bishops were accused of using the sacrament of penance to make sexual advances toward penitents. The document also dealt with “crimen pessimum” – “the foulest crime” – described as “any external obscene act, gravely sinful, perpetrated or attempted by a cleric in any way whatsoever with a person of his own sex” or “pre-adolescent children (impuberes) of either sex or with brute animals (bestialitas),” according to a translation on the Vatican’s website.

Section 11 of Crimen sollicitationis has been cited by individuals and organizations that allege the Catholic Church has systemically covered up child abuse.

It states: “Since, however, in dealing with these causes, more than usual care and concern must be shown that they be treated with the utmost confidentiality, and that, once decided and the decision executed, they are covered by permanent silence (Instruction of the Holy Office, 20 February 1867, No. 14), all those persons in any way associated with the tribunal, or knowledgeable of these matters by reason of their office, are bound to observe inviolably the strictest confidentiality, commonly known as the secret of the Holy Office, in all things and with all persons, under pain of incurring automatic excommunication, ipso facto and undeclared, reserved to the sole person of the Supreme Pontiff, excluding even the Sacred Penitentiary.

“Ordinaries are bound by this same law, that is, in virtue of their own office; other personnel are bound in virtue of the oath which they are always to swear before assuming their duties; and, finally, those delegated, questioned or informed (outside the tribunal), are bound in virtue of the precept to be imposed on them in the letters of delegation, inquiry or information, with express mention of the secret of the Holy Office and of the aforementioned censure.”

In a 2010 article in Commonweal magazine, titled “The Scandal of Secrecy,” Cafardi wrote: “In fact, No. 11 of Crimen does say that the church’s internal legal process regarding crimes reserved to the Holy Office is covered by the Holy Office secret, now called the pontifical secret. But that’s all the secrecy requirement covers: the internal church legal process, not the crime itself. It does not prevent victims, their families, or even church officials from reporting a civil crime to the civil authorities or to the media.”

Commonweal is an independent Catholic opinion publication.

During an interview, Cafardi said that in his view those rules do not prohibit the church from involving law enforcement when sex abuse allegations are made.

“Canon law doesn’t say take it to law enforcement, but it also doesn’t say that you can’t,” Cafardi said. “It doesn’t say one way or another.”

‘Kept secret’

Crimen sollicitationis frequently cites canon law. And, according to Cafardi, Crimen sollicitationis was part of canon law from 1922 until 2001 when it was replaced by Sacramentorum sanctitatis tutela, which dealt with several issues, including sexual abuse.

Also, canon law explains that “a criminal action is extinguished by prescription after three years, except for: 1) offences reserved to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith; 2) an action arising from any of the offences mentioned in cann. 1394, 1395, 1397, 1398, which is extinguished after five years,” creating a self-imposed statute of limitations.

All of those different laws combined to create what some outspoken critics of the diocese have described as a veil of secrecy that blocked child abuse within the church from public view.

“Canon law states that sex abuse matters should be kept secret,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston attorney who represented more than 30 of the victims who were abused by Brother Stephen Baker during his time at Bishop McCort High School.

Crimen sollicitationis, which was to be “kept carefully in the secret archive of the Curia for internal use,” and “not to be published or augmented with commentaries,” per its own text, was discussed openly in 2001, according to Cafardi. The practice then came to the forefront during an investigation into child sexual abuse and a coverup within the Archdiocese of Boston.

Garabedian played a major role in that case, obtaining a $10 million settlement for 86 victims of Rev. John Geoghan or their survivors and, along with other lawyers, getting an $85 million settlement against the archdiocese for victims and survivors of more than 40 different priests.

Gaining access to the archdiocese’s secret documents was key to that case, according to Garabedian.

“In those files is usually the most damaging information for the church,” Garabedian said.

Sin or crime?

The AG’s office has not pointed to any direct connection between adhering to canon law and Crimen sollicitationis and the diocese allegedly perpetrating the Altoona-Johnstown coverup.

Except for one press conference held by Bishop Mark Bartchak, the diocese has declined to comment on the matter, since the attorney general’s office considers the investigation to be ongoing.

Adamec defended himself in a statement released through his attorney that stated between 1987 and 2002, the former bishop learned about allegations made against 14 living diocesan priests and one living member of a religious order with nine of the priests being suspended from public ministry or retiring “many with the imposition of conditions prohibiting public ministry.”

But Rev. Kevin Annett, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee who recently visited western Pennsylvania, described the alleged Altoona-Johnstown Diocese coverup as an example of how the church views child abuse as a sin and not a crime, in his opinion.

“It’s setting themselves outside the law of the land under their own rules,” Annett said.

He concluded: “Their main concern – from my experience – is not the children. It’s the financial impact on the church.”

Dave Sutor is a reporter for The Tribune-Democrat. He can be reached at (814) 532-5056. Follow him on Twitter @Dave_Sutor.

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Frank Brennan, S.J. on the Sex Abuse Scandal in Australia

AUSTRALIA
America

Bill McGarvey | Apr 2 2016

As a lawyer, professor and human rights activist, Frank Brennan, S.J. occupies a unique position in Australian civil and religious society. He is well known throughout the country, both inside and outside the church, for his decades-long work as an advocate in the areas of law, social justice and reconciliation with Aboriginal Australians.

For services to Aboriginals, He was named an Officer of the Order of Australia and the National Trust has classified him as a Living National Treasure. In addition to his work in his native Australia, Father Brennan recently held the Gasson Chair at Boston College’s Law School.

On a recent trip to Australia just before Holy Week, I sat down with Father Brennan in Melbourne to discuss the state of the church in Australia in light of the ongoing Royal Commission on child sexual abuse and the unprecedented 20 hours of testimony from Cardinal Pell that was televised nationally.

The following interview is being published in partnership with Eureka Street, an online journal of politics, religion and culture sponsored by the Australian Jesuits.

America: What sense do you have regarding the sex abuse scandal here in Australia and how it compares to the US?

Frank Brennan, SJ: In Australia we are not as litigious as you are in America and damages are usually not as high as they are in the United States. But having said that I have no doubt there will be further developments in the law here in Australia. Particularly in light of much of the evidence that many of the bishops have given that seems to indicate that prior to 1996 it would be very difficult to argue that the best interests of the child was the highest priority. Prior to 1996 there was a great lack of awareness among the senior church leaders and there was a lack of action by senior church leaders.

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NSPCC criticises Church of England over abuse case ‘reported to Bishop of Grimsby’

UNITED KINGDOM
Grimsby Telegraph

Leading children’s charity NSPCC has criticised the Church of England over the abuse of a 15-year-old by a minister.

The victim of the “appalling abuse” at the hands of the minister told the then Bishop of Grimsby of the offences, as reported.

Stephen Crabtree carried out the offences in the early 1990s after forming “an inappropriate relationship” with the 15-year-old victim following the breakdown of his marriage.

Crabtree, 59, who now lives in Bradford, West Yorkshire, admitted six charges of indecent assault on dates between 1992 and April 1993. He was jailed for three years and placed on the sex offenders’ register for life.

Lincoln Crown Court heard the victim later told the then-Bishop of Grimsby what happened between them and was advised to report the matter to police.

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Presunte molestie sessuali a otto seminaristi: indagato vescovo di Cassino

ITALIA
La Repubblica

ROMA – Il vescovo della diocesi di Cassino-Sora, monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo, sarebbe indagato – secondo quanto riporta l’Agi – per presunte molestie sessuali a carico di 8 seminaristi. La procura precisa che “non è stato emesso alcun avviso di chiusura indagini”.

L’inchiesta era stata avviata nello scorso dicembre quando alla Procura di Casino era arrivata una lettera firmata da un giovane seminarista che raccontava delle presunte molestie che lui e altri 7 ragazzi, tutti maggiorenni, avrebbero subito parte del vescovo. Del procedimento è titolare il procuratore capo Luciano d’Emmanuele che nei giorni scorsi ha concluso le verifiche e ha chiesto il rinvio a giudizio. Gli atti sono stati inviati alla Santa Sede, per il vaglio di eventuali provvedimenti da adottare nei confronti del vescovo Antonazzo.

L’alto prelato in una nota fa sapere di essere “sorpreso e sconcertato” dopo la notizia dell’indagine a suo carico. “Sento il dovere di dichiarare la totale infondatezza delle accuse che mi vengono attribuite” dice Gerardo Antonazzo. “Posso, inoltre, assicurare – aggiunge il monsignore – che ad oggi non ho ricevuto alcuna comunicazione da parte delle autorità competenti circa l’esistenza di un’indagine a mio carico”. Secondo alcune fonti vaticane le accuse sarebbe state mosse da persone respinte dal seminario perché considerate non adatte. Ma intanto l’inchiesta sugli abusi prosegue.

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Cassino, Monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo indagato per presunte molestie sessuali su otto seminaristi

ITALIA
L’Huffington Post

Otto presunte molestie sessuali sui seminaristi. Monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo, vescovo della diocesi di Sora-Cassino-Aquino-Pontecorvo, sarebbe indagato per presunte molestie sessuali a carico di otto seminaristi. Lo riportano alcune agenzie di stampa.

L’inchiesta era stata avviata nello scorso dicembre quando alla Procura di Casino era arrivata una lettera firmata da un giovane seminarista che raccontava presunte molestie che lui insieme ad altri giovani seminaristi avrebbe subito da parte del vescovo sessantenne. Il sacerdote avrebbe ricevuto nei giorni scorsi l’avviso di conclusione indagini.

Sul caso indaga il procuratore capo Luciano d’Emmanuele che nei giorni scorsi ha concluso le verifiche e ha chiesto il rinvio a giudizio. Gli atti sono stati inviati alla Santa Sede, per il vaglio di eventuali provvedimenti da adottare nei confronti del vescovo.

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Indagato per molestie sessuali monsignor Antonazzo, vescovo di Cassino

ITALIA
Secolo di Italia

Un altro scandalo nell’Abbazia di Cassino, dopo quello dell’abate che rubava i fondi per festini e viaggi all’estero. Molestie sessuali ai seminaristi: con questa accusa il vescovo della diocesi di Cassino-Sora, monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo, sarebbe indagato per presunte molestie sessuali a carico di 8 seminaristi. L’alto prelato, di origini salentine, avrebbe ricevuto nei giorni scorsi l’avviso di conclusione indagini. ‘inchiesta era stata avviata nello scorso dicembre quando alla Procura di Casino era arrivata una lettera firmata da un giovane seminarista che raccontava delle presunte molestie che lui e altri 7 ragazzi, tutti maggiorenni, avrebbero subito parte del vescovo. Gli atti sono stati inviati alla Santa Sede, per il vaglio di eventuali provvedimenti da adottare nei confronti del vescovo Antonazzo. Monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo è nato a Supersano (Le) il 20 maggio 1956, ed è stato ordinato sacerdote a Supersano (Le) il 12 settembre 1981.

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Italian bishop in sex abuse probe: media

ITALY
Business Standard

AFP | Rome
April 3, 2016

An Italian bishop is being investigated for the alleged sexual abuse of eight student priests, media reports said today.

Prosecutors in Cassino, south of Rome, opened a probe into monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo after receiving a letter from a seminarian accusing the bishop of sexually molesting him and seven other adults, La Repubblica said.

“I must stress how utterly unfounded the accusations are,” Antonazzo was quoted as saying, adding that he had not been informed that he was under investigation.

Prosecutors said the probe was ongoing, refuting earlier reports that they were ready to arrest the bishop.

“The documents (on Antonazzo) have been sent to the Holy See, so it can evaluate eventual measures to be taken,” the online newspaper Il Tempo said.

Sex abuse scandals have dogged the Catholic Church in recent years with alleged victims breaking their silence in the United States, Ireland, the Netherlands, Australia France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Mexico and Poland.

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Priest alleged to have not reported abuser was on board of church’s insurance company

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

April 3, 2016

Rory Callinan
Investigative journalist

The Catholic Church’s insurance company, which is keeping secret an archive of clergy child abuse records, had a long-standing director who allegedly failed to report a paedophile priest.

Last week, Fairfax revealed Catholic Church Insurance Limited , which provides insurance cover to the church, had amassed hundreds of files on paedophile clergy.

But lawyers for victims of the paedophiles say they are struggling to get access to the documents, which could prove vital to obtaining compensation, bringing perpetrators to justice and exposing cover-ups.

It has now emerged that up until September last year, one of the directors of CCI was Father Brian Lucas, a senior clergyman who has been criticised over his handling of child abuse complaints involving notorious priest Denis McAlinden​ in NSW in the 1990s.

McAlinden was an Irish priest who transferred to Australia in the late 1940s. He abused numerous children over decades but when complaints surfaced in the 1970s, top-level clergy transferred him to other parishes without warning and despite him making admissions.

He spent most of his time in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese in NSW but was briefly transferred to Western Australia and to New Zealand and Papua New Guinea after complainants came forward.

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Do Not Be Afraid?

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

04/01/2016

Jennifer Haselberger

That is the message the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis is trying to communicate in advance of an avalanche of lawsuits about to be filed against parishes. As was mentioned here in an earlier post, in the absence of a mediated agreement regarding the resolution of victims’ claims, attorneys representing victims of sexual abuse by clergy have been planning to file lawsuits against individual parishes as a means of preserving their clients’ claims prior to the May 2016 deadline established by the Minnesota Child Victims Act.

The Archdiocese is anticipating that the suits against parishes will be filed in the next two to six weeks, and so it has begun to prepare pastors and parish staff to respond. Parishioners of impacted parishes can expect to receive letters from Archbishop Hebda and others this weekend, and parish staff have been given ‘talking points’ for responding to calls from angry or worried parishioners. Parishes that are sued have been advised to consult an attorney, meaning that significant costs could accrue to parishes as a result of the lawsuits.

Significantly, MPR reported yesterday that the Archdiocese told a federal bankruptcy judge that it hopes to file a reorganization plan by the end of May, but that would be after the deadline. Moreover, attorneys for victims made it clear that the Archdiocese has not shared the proposed plan with nor secured the support of the unsecured creditors committee, which represents victims of sexual abuse.

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Diocese investigation: One month later

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY LAUREN HENSLEY FRIDAY, APRIL 1ST 2016

Friday marked one month since the grand jury reported sexual assault at the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

Reports said religious leaders allegedly sexually abused hundreds of child victims and incidents were covered up by diocese leaders.

“The church needs to come clean and be honorable and be truthful. That is what we need to do for these victims,” Rosalind Merrits, of Hollidaysburg, said.

6 News received a statement from U.S. Attorney David Hickton that said there may be a federal investigation after a loophole was found in the system that may result in charges.

“While we cannot discuss the specifics of an active investigation, we can affirm that our investigation is ongoing. We have been and will continue to consider all resources available under federal law, including civil and criminal Racketeering Influence and Corruption Organization Act, to address the type of widespread misconduct alleged in the state grand jury report,” Hickton said.

The act allows leaders to be tried for crimes in which they ordered others to do or assisted in doing.

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CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN COMMUNITY RAMPANT, AUDIENCE TOLD

CANADA
Canadian Jewish News

By Ron Csillag – April 1, 2016

Jews must put aside fear of shaming their community, their families and themselves, as well as perceived prohibitions of turning to secular authorities, to fight a growing wave of child sexual abuse, speakers told an audience at Shaarei Shomayim Congregation.

Speakers addressing a packed sanctuary on March 31 made blunt, often harrowing assessments of childhood sexual abuse in Jewish communities, saying the problem is rampant and is too often ignored or denied outright.

There was a large Orthodox contingent in attendance, and speakers stressed that Orthodox and chassidic communities offer much resistance to dealing with the sexual abuse of children. It is time to end the silence, they said.

MC Benny Forer, a graduate of Ner Israel Yeshiva north of Toronto, and now a deputy district attorney in Los Angeles, recounted how his best friend had been sexually abused and killed himself on Yom Kippur in 1993.

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Residential school doc tells story of how early whistleblower was ignored

CANADA
CBC News

By Liam Britten, CBC News Posted: Apr 01, 2016

In 1907, Peter Bryce wrote a report documenting the inhuman and unsanitary conditions of residential schools.

On Friday, a short documentary was released about his vocal criticism of the residential school system from his great-grandson, Victoria filmmaker Andy Bryce.

Finding Heart tells the story of how Peter Bryce, as a medical inspector for the Department of Indian Affairs, made a direct link between the conditions in residential schools and a deadly tuberculosis epidemic in First Nations children just after the turn of the century.

“About 24 per cent of all students in residential schools were suffering from tuberculosis or had died from tuberculosis,” Andy Bryce told All Points West guest host Khalil Akhtar.

“In one school, which was File Hills in Saskatchewan, the rate was about 75 per cent.”

Peter Bryce’s report was leaked to the media, but didn’t get much attention, Andy Bryce said, and none of the report’s recommendations were immediately implemented.

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Catholic church against notice-of-claim law for sex abuse reporting

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Friday, April 1, 2016

ALBANY — One of the biggest obstacles to the push for justice for sex abuse victims is the 90-day window victims have to notify public schools or government entities of an intent to sue.

There’s no such requirement for filing a so-called notice of claim — the first step in a lawsuit — against religious organizations or nonprofit groups. Critics say that creates an uneven playing field where victims can sue the Catholic church, or the Boy Scouts, for example, until the accuser turns 23.

“What we’re seeing with the 90-day limit is the creating of two classes of victim, depending solely on where the abuse occurred,” said Dennis Poust, spokesman for the state Catholic Conference. “By any stretch of the imagination, that’s just inherently unfair.”

Eliminating the 90-day window would require legislative action, a change in the notice-of-claim law.

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Churches come up short when dealing with domestic and sexual abuse

UNITED STATES
Lancaster Online

EARLE CORNELIUS | Staff Writer

SPEAK OUT CAMPAIGN

How do churches deal with issues of domestic or sexual abuse within their congregations?

“Not well,” says Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz.

Amstutz is a longtime restorative justice coordinator with Mennonite Central Committee. Most of her career has been devoted to resolving issues between crime victims and offenders and helping churches in conflict.

Lately, however, her work has expanded to include aiding church members who are victims of domestic and/or sexual abuse and helping churches whose members are dealing with those issues. It is part of a three-year campaign — titled “We Will Speak Out” — begun in 2015 by a movement of faith-based groups.

The goal of the campaign, Amstutz explained to a gathering at the Parish Resource Center last week, is to raise awareness, care for victims, encourage law enforcement, change the culture of tolerance and inaction and ultimately provide resources to church leaders to help them support and assist those within their congregations who have been abused.

Anne Winslow, 53, of Lancaster, understands what it means to be a victim. A survivor of sexual and domestic abuse, the student at Biblical Theological Seminary in Hatfield, Montgomery County, says her goal is to help people who have been victimized and to raise awareness within the church.

‘Nobody wants to talk about it’

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A new Catholic clergy sex-abuse scandal comes into the spotlight

PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Post

by Mary Kane April 1

Mary Kane is a freelance reporter who lives in Arlington.

Like many longtime reporters, I celebrated the Oscar victory for “Spotlight” and the fearless journalism that exposed the Catholic Church’s clergy sex abuse scandal.

I would soon see the story, and the scandal, from a very different perspective.

Two days after the Oscar ceremony, news broke about another widespread church coverup. I found myself poring over a grand jury report outlining in sickening detail the abuse of hundreds of children by at least 50 priests and religious leaders in western Pennsylvania’s Altoona-Johnstown Diocese — in my hometown.

I moved away long ago, but I still have family there. I visit regularly, and my mom was a devoted parish volunteer during her lifetime. I figured I might recognize a few of the accused or some of the churches. I quickly realized things stretched far beyond that.

The names of priests and parishes from my childhood appeared, one after another, all familiar. My grade school priest. Not one but two pastors from my neighborhood parish, a half block from my childhood home. The principal, vice principal and music director from my high school. A priest I once met with to consider officiating my wedding. The priest at the church my four nieces and nephews attended. The chaplain of the nearby Catholic hospital, where my mom volunteered.

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Former altar boy in Sudbury suing priest, church

CANADA
The Sudbury Star

By Harold Carmichael, The Sudbury Star
Saturday, April 2, 2016

A now retired Roman Catholic priest preyed on him when he served as his altar boy, a Sudbury man alleges in a $3-million lawsuit that goes to trial on Monday.

The plaintiff, known only as “P.J.J.,” is seeking damages for pain and suffering, emotional and/or mental distress and aggravation from Rev. John Edward Sullivan and the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie,

The plaintiff alleges the sex abuse occurred when he served as an altar boy under Sullivan’s guidance.

None of the allegations contained in the lawsuit have been proven in a court of law.

Sullivan, who at one time served at the long-closed Falconbridge Canadian Forces Base in the Hanmer area, is a convicted sex offender.

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Priest abuse revelations spur Pa. House panel to action on statute of limitations

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED | Friday, April 1, 2016

HARRISBURG — After a grand jury report last month detailing widespread child molestation by priests, a state House panel next week will consider legislation to eliminate the statute of limitations in criminal child abuse cases and expand the time limit for civil litigation.

The statewide investigative grand jury under state Attorney General Kathleen Kane found that hundreds of children were molested for more than four decades by as many as 50 priests in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown. But no one was charged with crimes because many had died and laws that limit the amount of time that elapses between an alleged crime and an indictment barred prosecution.

Meanwhile, U.S. Attorney David Hickton, whose office convicted a Somerset County priest sentenced last month to 16 months in prison, is reviewing whether his office can use the Racketeering Influenced Corruption Organized Act — created by Congress to go after mob leaders — for civil lawsuits to provide compensation to victims.

It would be the first civil use of the RICO law in the nationwide priest abuse scandal, said Marci Hamilton, an expert on statutes of limitations. The Tribune-Review reported two weeks ago that state Rep. Mike Vereb, R-Montgomery County, a former law enforcement agent, wrote to Hickton asking him to explore use of the RICO statute.

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MN priests to remind parishes of deadline for abuse victims

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

(KMSP) – When Twin cities Catholics go to church this weekend they will get more than just their weekly mass, they will also get a reminder of an upcoming deadline in the ongoing church abuse scandal.

Sources tell Fox 9 the new Archbishop Bernard Hebda has ordered parish priests to help parishioners remember the May 25 deadline for the Minnesota Child Victim’s Act, which lifts the statute of limitations for people who say they were sexually abused, to prepare them in case their parish is sued.

“We anticipate that some parishes will have lawsuits commenced against them and we have been working to make sure communications are clear and accurate and anticipate that parish leaders will address the possible legal action this weekend,” the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said in a statement.

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April 1, 2016

SNAP, Others ‘Protest’ Mahaney Speaking at T4G’s ‘We are Protestant’ Conference

UNITED STATES
The Wartburg Watch

“It’s reckless and callous when clergymen give prominent positions to colleagues who face charges of concealing child sex crimes. It actually makes churches more dangerous. It discourages other church members and staff who see, suspect or suffer child sex crimes from speaking up. It emboldens those who commit and conceal child sex crimes.”

David Clohessy, Director of SNAP (statement from recent press release)

Today may be April Fool’s Day, but it’s no joke that the ‘protest’ against C.J. Mahaney speaking at the upcoming T4G conference is growing by the day. Mahaney, who moved the Sovereign Grace Ministries Churches headquarters from Gaitherburg, Maryland to Louisville, Kentucky, plans to deliver a message entitled Sustained in Suffering by the Saga of Job. As senior pastor of Sovereign Grace Church of Louisville, Mahaney did a series on Job from which his talk will most likely be taken. I have listened to a number of those messages, and it sounded to me like he was playing the victim card.

With the recent arrest of an alleged pedophile at Covenant Life Church (CLC), attention is once again focused on Mahaney, who served as CLC’s senior pastor for 27 years. It hasn’t been that long since Nate Morales, a former youth group leader at CLC, was convicted of sexually abusing young boys and sentenced to 40 years in prison. Mahaney, who was named in a lawsuit that was dismissed on a technicality, has never been exonerated. To be clear, Mahaney has not been accused of pedophilia but of concealing pedophiles/failing to report them to the proper authorities at his former church.

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Villanova Professor Facing Child Pornography Charges

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

By Mark Abrams and Walt Hunter

RADNOR, Pa. (CBS) — Police say Villanova professor Christopher Haas, 60, has been charged with possessing child pornography.

Haas allegedly had over 400 images of child pornography on his computer. Authorities say the investigation began in 2012.

Radnor Township Police say Haas is in Delaware County Prison following his arrest on charges related to a nearly four-year investigation by federal homeland security officials of his computer activity at home.

Radnor Township Lt. Andy Block said “Dr. Haas was charged with 415 counts of sexual abuse of children and the possession of child pornography falls under that section of the crimes code, the Pennsylvania Crimes Code.”

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Radnor police: Villanova University professor facing child porn charges

PENNSYLVANIA
Mainline

By Richard Ilgenfritz
rilgenfritz@21st-centurymedia.com
@rpilgenfritz on Twitter

Radnor police say a Villanova professor has been charged with possession of hundreds of child pornography images after investigators were alerted to his alleged activities by university officials.

Police say Christopher Haas, 60, of Paoli was arrested Monday and then charged with hundreds of counts.

David Tedjeske, director of public safety at Villanova University, outlined some details of the case during a press conference with Radnor police Thursday afternoon.

“The university takes the security of its electronic systems very seriously and monitors Internet activity across campus for inappropriate use of those resources,” Tedjeske said. “Our security alerted us to a suspicious condition involving Internet access in late March of this year. The subsequent investigation revealed that a faculty member in the History/Classical Studies department had accessed child pornography from a computer in a common area of an office in the [St. Augustine] center.”

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Villanova professor faces child pornography charges

PENNSYLVANIA
CNN

(CNN) A Villanova University history professor is out of the classroom and behind bars on 415 counts related to child pornography.

Christopher Haas, 60, was arrested in his campus office Monday after the university notified local police that a computer in a common area had been flagged for visits to a child porn site, said Lt. Andy Block with the Radnor, Pennsylvania, police.

A search at Haas’ residence as part of a separate federal investigation also found more than 400 images of child pornography on a personal computer, Block said.

“It’s a very disappointing investigation or case when you get this, that someone is in the academic field and has the ability to shape students’ minds and then they’re engaged in this type of behavior,” Block said.

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Child sex abuse inquiry: Campaigner who claims Kenneth Clarke ‘failed to act’ loses bid for key status

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

David Barrett, home affairs correspondent
1 APRIL 2016

A victims’ campaigner who claims Kenneth Clarke failed to act on child sex abuse warnings has been denied a key role in the Government’s official inquiry, The Telegraph can disclose.

Nigel O’Mara, a leading figure in the sex abuse survivors’ organisation WhiteFlowers, applied last month to Justice Lowell Goddard to become a “core participant” in the inquiry.

However, his case has been rejected by Justice Goddard, the inquiry chairman, in a move described as “astonishing” by Mr O’Mara’s legal team.

Justice Goddard ruled the whistle-blower’s evidence will not have a “direct and significant role” in her examination of abuse allegedly committed by Lord Greville Janner, the late Labour peer, and Sir Cyril Smith, the late Liberal MP.

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Norfolk Police criticised over Stephen Crabtree sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A former Bishop of Grimsby has said he is “disappointed” with police for not investigating a clergyman for child sex abuse 16 years ago.

Stephen Crabtree, 59, was jailed on Thursday for abusing a 15-year-old girl in Lincolnshire between 1992 and 1993.

The Rt Rev David Rossdale said the matter was reported to Norfolk Police in 2000 but no action was taken.

The force said “no formal complaint was ever made to us and therefore would not be recorded”.

Former Church of England minister Crabtree, from Bradford, was jailed for three years at Lincoln Crown Court after admitting six counts of indecent assault, which took place in the East Lindsey district area.

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Jessica Beraldin, Ottawa teacher, accused of sexually assaulting student

CANADA
CBC News

A 30-year-old Ottawa teacher has been charged with sexual assault, sexual exploitation and making sexually explicit material available to a child, police say.

Jessica Beraldin was charged Thursday and appeared in court Friday, where she was released after a surety posted $1,000.

Police allege a “sexual relationship” began between Beraldin and one of her students while Beraldin was employed by the Ottawa Catholic School Board.

The court ordered her to have no contact with the alleged victim in person, electronically or through social media. She also can’t go near parks or anyplace where children under 16 are present unless her surety is with her.

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Clergy sex victims group raps plan for forgiveness ritual

LOUISIANA
The Times-Picayune

By Kim Chatelain, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune

An international non-profit organization for victims of clergy sexual abuse has taken issue with Archbishop of New Orleans Gregory Aymond’s plan for a special ritual seeking forgiveness from people hurt by the Roman Catholic Church. The group says tangible steps are needed more than “words, gestures and apologies.”

Aymond has set “a ritual of forgiveness and resurrection” as part of the annual Divine Mercy Sunday Mass that he will celebrate April 3 at St. Joseph Church in New Orleans. The rite “seeks forgiveness and reconciliation with those who have been hurt or alienated by the church either through institutional or individual offenses,” the archdiocese said.

In announcing what it called a historic and important Mass in the life of the local church, the archdiocese did not mention the series of lawsuits, criminal prosecutions and scandals since the mid-1980s over sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in the United States. It says only that “we as individuals, as members of the archdiocese and society as a whole have let people down.”

David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said Friday (April 1) that such apology services often sound good but are largely self-serving public relations events. “They don’t protect a single child, expose a single predator, punish a single concealer or deter a single cover-up,” Clohessy said. “The archdiocese should take tangible steps so that the church no longer will need to give apologies. The goal should be no more victims.”

He said Aymond should warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about two abusive priests who at some point in their careers were in the New Orleans area and have been convicted of sex crimes elsewhere:

* Mark Broussard, a former Lake Charles priest who on March 11 was sentenced to two life terms in prison, plus 50 years, for sexually abusing altar boys in the late 1980s and early ’90s.

* Robert Poandl, who lived in New Orleans in the early 1970s and was sentenced to prison after taking a Cincinnati boy to West Virginia and assaulting him in 1991. In 2010, Aymond heeded the advocacy group’s call to alert New Orleans area Catholics to allegations made against Poandl.

Clohessy also called attention to the Rev. Maurice Nutt, director of the Institute for Black Catholics Studies at Xavier University. In 2003, two St. Louis police officers reached a confidential settlement in their lawsuits alleging that Nutt, while a member of the St. Louis Police Board, sexually harassed them. Nutt has publicly denied any wrongdoing in the case and has never been charged with a crime.

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NY STATE ABUSE BILL PROPOSAL

NEW YORK
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on New York State Senator Brad Hoylman’s response to my suggestion that his bill, which would eliminate the statute of limitations for the sexual abuse of minors, cover the public schools as well as private schools:

Ken Lovett of the New York Daily News asked Sen. Hoylman yesterday about my request to amend his bill, and he said that while he supports treating private and public schools alike, “it would be wrong to hide behind the issue to block legislation from being passed.”

Accordingly, the Catholic League will contact every member of the New York legislature today asking them to submit a bill that would suspend the statute of limitations for the sexual abuse of minors, with one caveat: that it cover only the public schools. If anyone objects, all they need do is take a page from Sen. Hoylman and say that private and public schools should be treated the same, “but it would be wrong to hide behind the issue to block legislation from being passed.”

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Peter Saunders, víctima de abusos: “Hay muchas personas en el Vaticano que no quieren que se actúe contra la pederastia”

LONDRES
el Sexta

[Peter Saunders, who was abused by a priest said there are many people in the Vatican who do not want action against pedophilia.]

Gonzo ha viajado a Londres para entrevistar a con Peter Saunders, fundador de la Asociación Nacional de Personas que sufrieron abusos en la Infancia. Saunders, que sufrió abusos cuando era menor, fue llamado a formar parte de la comisión asesora de los casos de pederastia en la iglesia católica que inició el papa Francisco. Sin embargo, fue expulsado por denunciar públicamente la lentitud de esta comisión.

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Harrisburg lawmaker’s bill would change statute of limitations on sex crimes

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

A bill that would have eliminated criminal and civil statutes on sex crimes going forward will not be taken up by the House Judiciary Committee next week.

Instead, Autumn Southard, spokeswoman for committee chairman Rep. Ron Marsico, on Friday told PennLive that the Dauphin County Republican planned to introduce his own legislation on Monday. That legislation will likely eliminate criminal statute of limitation, she said.

Southard said changes to the civil components of the law could be part of Marsico’s legislation, but the specifics are not clear. She said committee members were discussing the specifics.

“We’ll know Monday the specifics of that portion of the bill,” she said.

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Too Silent for Too Long

UNITED STATES
Jewish Philanthropy

It’s time for the Jewish community to take a stand against child sexual abuse.

By Joshua Avedon, Dr. Shira Berkovits and Rochel Leah Bernstein-Deitcher

For a people that takes pride in creating community-wide systems to preserve tradition and ensure the future, we seem to have a major blind spot when it comes to one threat to our children: sexual abuse. Our children have always been a primary concern for the organized Jewish community. Millions of charitable dollars are invested in programs focused on raising the next generation of committed and engaged Jews. These places and programs, which are supposed to be safe and encouraging settings, have made transformational progress in ensuring the wellbeing of children with different backgrounds, orientations, identities, and abilities. Now they must do a better job of protecting all our children from sexual predators.

Movies such as Best Picture Oscar-winner Spotlight have told the story of how predators exploit relationships with families and children wherever adults work closely with kids. But the sexual abuse of minors isn’t a religious problem; it’s a human one. Experts agree that any organization that provides regular interaction between adults and children will attract sexual predators. Child molesters seek out these settings to gain access to their victims. In the Jewish world, those settings include Jewish schools, camps, youth groups, and synagogues.

Recent scandals in the Jewish media and in broader society have begun to focus attention on this issue. Yet despite the outrage that accompanies each new revelation, no systemic solution has been proposed or implemented to dramatically change the organizational landscape with regard to this issue. There are numerous advocates and organizations that have focused on child sexual abuse and done excellent work in areas such as training, education, victim-support, and advocacy. But they have largely been operating on their own, exerting herculean efforts with minimal resources, and helping one victim, one organization, at a time. Over many years, their hard work and persistence has shifted the conversation about what can and should be done in every organization that works with children, across the entire communal system.

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Paedophile priest allowed to practice after admitting abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Fri 01 Apr 2016
By Hannah Tooley

A Church of England minister was allowed to keep practicing after admitting sexual offences to his bishop.

Stephen Crabtree, 59, admitted to his bishop that he committed sexual offences against a girl, but was allowed to continue practicing for ten years after no information was passed onto police.

The offence dates back the early 90’s, Crabtree assaulted a 15-year-old following the breakdown of his marriage.

Lincoln Crown Court heard that the victim told Rt Revd David Rossdale, who was then Bishop of Grimsby, in 2000 and he visited Stephen Crabtre.

The vicar admitted that he was guilty, however no further action was taken.

In 2008 Crabtree said he was remorseful, but no action was taken, according to The Daily Telegraph.

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Claudia Vercellotti commentary: Statute of limitations on sexual abuse needs a fix

OHIO
Columbus Dispatch

Supposedly to give child sex-abuse victims a chance to expose their perpetrators, Ohio legislators passed a unique law in 2007. It’s called a “civil registry” for those found in a civil proceeding to have molested kids. There is just one problem: It doesn’t work.

We know this because recently The Dispatch was the first news outlet in seven years to follow up on the measure. It reported that the registry has never once been utilized.

I predicted it never would be because the registry was unfunded, complicated and likely unconstitutional. I also know how child sex-abuse victims think. That’s because I am one. The “ grooming” started when I was 12; the sexual abuse ended when I left for college. For years, I had silently suffered from shame, guilt and self-destructive behavior. And I had shouldered a quiet burden. I believed — and still believe — that if I didn’t speak up and another kid got hurt by the church leader who molested me, I was somehow responsible.

In 1996, I learned the man who assaulted me was still on the diocesan payroll and was taking young girls to the same places where he abused me. Consumed with fear, I went to my bishop in Toledo and painfully spared him no graphic detail. He didn’t tell me that 12 months prior, four other victims had already reported being abused by the same church official. I went to the police but was told that the statute of limitations had expired, and my perpetrator couldn’t be criminally charged. Like many, I had no recourse.

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Compromise and deal-breaker loom as lawmakers take up statute of limitations reform

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

Just one month after a grand jury report shed light on the latest systemic child abuse case in a Pennsylvania Catholic diocese, the Legislature may be poised to reform some of the laws that extend rights to victims of sexual abuse to seek legal recourse.

The legislation likely to come out of the General Assembly may not be the overhaul reform advocates have been looking for, but the final product could just be a workable compromise.

According to state Rep. Mark Rozzi, (D-Berks), the House Judiciary Committee could next week advance on to the House floor for a vote a bill that would eliminate all criminal and civil statutes of limitations going forward.

The committee’s chairman, Rep. Ron Marsico, has, according to Rizzo, placed HB 655 on the calendar for Tuesday. PennLive made several attempts to speak to Marsico but requests for interview were denied. A representative from his office told PennLive that the Dauphin County Republican planned to put a written statement with regards to the statute of limitations.

The bill on the calendar for Tuesday, which is sponsored by Rep. Ed Gainey, D-Allegheny,would eliminate all civil and criminal statutes of limitations on sex crimes here on out. The bill would have no retroactive component, meaning that adults who were sexually abused as children would still get no recourse under the law.

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Murdoch Broadcasts TV Bio of Pope Francis

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on April 1, 2016 by Betty Clermont

“The Rebel Pope,” produced by FOX Telecolombia for National Geographic, was released on March 20. Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation bought a controlling interest in FOX Telecolombia in 2007. Murdoch bought the National Geographic’s media in September 2015.

The “Rebel Pope” will be broadcast internationally by the National Geographic Channel in 170 countries and 45 languages.

Additionally, Greg Burke, former US Fox News correspondent in Rome, was named vice director of the Vatican Press Office in December. He was identified as “Vatican spokesman” in March.

Connections Go Around and Come Around

The week before he was appointed by Pope Francis as one of his principle advisers in April 2013, Australian Cardinal George Pell attended a “Gala Dinner” to honor Murdoch who “owns or controls print, cable and film outlets in so many places that his cultural and political views are fast becoming a feature of global geography.”

Robert Thomson, chief executive of News Corp, attended a January 17-18, 2016, conference along with Pope Francis’ secretary of state, foreign minister and president of the Vatican Bank. “The Global Foundation conference discussed a new governance model for the world economy.” Pell was the headliner. “If we are to truly mobilize the global economy in a sustainable fashion, it will require business, not regulators, to take a leading role,” Pell told the assembled business leaders.

Murdoch and Pell are both supporters of Australia’s right wing former prime minister, Tony Abbott, and are said to be two of the “three most influential people in Abbott’s political life.”

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Missbrauchs-Skandal im Bistum Würzburg: “Ich fühle mich wie erneut missbraucht”

DEUTSCHLAND
inFranken

[Interview with Alexandra Wolf of Germany, who alleges she was abused by a priest, who later became abuse officer, in the Wurtsburg diocese. She is speaking out.]

1988 sei sie als Teenager zum Sex gezwungen worden – von einem Priester, sagt Alexandra Wolf. Im “Spiegel” machte sie ihre Geschichte öffentlich. Nun spricht sie über die Reaktionen und darüber, wie sehr die Kirche sie verletzt habe.

Ihr Vater bereitete sich in einem Kurs im Exerzitienhaus Himmelspforten auf die Weihe zum Diakon vor. Seine 17-jährige Tochter begleitete ihn. Was dann geschehen sein soll, erzählte sie über ein Vierteljahrhundert später dem Spiegel-Redakteur Peter Wensierski. Er übermittelte die Fragen dieser Redaktion an Alexandra Wolf. Im Herbst 2012 erfuhr der Würzburger Bischof Friedhelm Hofmann erstmals von den Vorwürfen. Im Dezember 2015 wurde der Fall zu den Akten gelegt.

Was war der Auslöser, sich im Januar 2016 an Claudia Adams zu wenden, die in Trier den Missbrauchs-Blog ,MissBit’ betreibt?
Alexandra Wolf: Ich war in einer sehr ohnmächtigen und hilflosen Situation, die mich bewog, einen Weg an die Öffentlichkeit zu suchen. Ich habe Frau Adams Blog schon viele Monate still beobachtet und dachte mir, da wäre jemand, der sich auskennt und dem ich vertrauen kann. Sie wusste dann, dass es jemanden im ,Spiegel’ gibt, der sich schon seit Jahren mit Missbrauchsfällen befasst. Ich hab noch etwas überlegt, mich dann aber gemeldet, und es war eine gute Entscheidung. So etwas ist nicht so einfach für jemanden, der das, was er erlebt hat, eigentlich für immer verdrängen wollte.

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Weitere Klage gegen Erzbischof von Lyon

FRANKREICH
katholisch

[The Archbishop of Lyon, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, is facing further action. As the French radio station Europe 1 reported on Thursday a fifth suit was filed against Barbarin for failure to report an offense. The “Primate of Gaul” is alleged not to have suspended two priests who were accused of sexual abuse of minors.]

Fünfte Klage wegen Nichtanzeige einer Straftat eingereicht

Paris – 01.04.2016

Der Erzbischof von Lyon, Philippe Barbarin, sieht sich einer weiteren Klage gegenüber. Wie der französische Sender Europe 1 am Donnerstag berichtete, wurde gegen Barbarin eine fünfte Klage wegen Nichtanzeige einer Straftat eingereicht. Dem “Primas Galliens” wird zur Last gelegt, zwei Priester nicht suspendiert zu haben, denen sexueller Missbrauch von Minderjährigen vorgeworfen wird.

Bisher bezogen sich die Missbrauchsvorwürfe nur auf einen Priester. Nun wird ein zweiter Geistlicher aus der Erzdiözese Lyon des Missbrauchs beschuldigt. Ein mutmaßliches Opfer dieses Mannes reichte nun dem Bericht zufolge am Dienstag Klage gegen Barbarin wegen Nichtanzeige einer Straftat und Gefährdung anderer Kinder ein. Obwohl das Opfer Barbarin alarmiert habe, sei der zweite beschuldigte Priester erst im März dieses Jahres suspendiert worden, heißt es bei Europe 1.

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La diócesis de Ciudad Real denuncia un presunto caso de abusos sexuales

ESPANA
ABC

[Officials of the Ciudad Real diocese in Spain have gone to the public prosecutor with a new case of alleged sexual abuse of minors.]

La diócesis de Ciudad Real, a través del rector del seminario diocesano, ha puesto este jueves en conocimiento del Ministerio Fiscal el resultado de la investigación interna llevada a cabo sobre ciertos comportamientos de un sacerdote encargado de un grupo de alumnos de la ESO, por si fueran constitutivos de un delito de abusos sexuales. En un comunicado de prensa, la diócesis de Ciudad Real manifiesta su apoyo incondicional y la unión en el sufrimiento con las supuestas víctimas y sus familias.

Desde el inicio del proceso abierto en el ámbito eclesiástico, y siguiendo el procedimiento previsto para estos casos por la disciplina canónica, han indicado, «se ha estado en permanente contacto con los familiares, poniendo a su alcance no sólo toda la información de que se disponía sino también el apoyo y la ayuda de profesionales».

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Un autre prêtre soupçonné d’abus sexuels

FRANCE
24 Heures

[In Lyon, tongues wag: Justice is investigating a new priest suspected of sexual assault while the diocese and its bishop, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, are in turmoil since the other cases revelation.]

A Lyon, les langues se délient: la justice enquête sur un nouveau prêtre soupçonné d’agressions sexuelles alors que le diocèse et son évêque, le cardinal Philippe Barbarin, sont dans la tourmente depuis la révélation d’autres affaires.

Une source proche du dossier a confirmé jeudi soir à l’AFP qu’une enquête ouverte concernant ce prêtre il y a quelques années avait été «réactivée» il y a quelques jours, comme l’annonçait le site M6info.

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El Obispado de Ciudad Real denuncia ante la Fiscalía a un sacerdote por presuntos abusos sexuales

ESPANA
Religion Digital

[The Ciudad Real diocese in Spain has turned over to the public prosecutor a complaint of alleged child sexual abuse by a priest. This follows an internal investigation by church officials. The abuse allegedly happened at the diocesan seminary.]

La Diócesis de Ciudad Real ha denunciado ante la Fiscalía el resultado de una investigación interna sobre presuntos abusos sexuales a menores llevada a cabo a un sacerdote del Seminario Diocesano de Ciudad Real. Una actitud ejemplar que contrasta con la que, por desgracia, se siguen llevando a cabo en otras diócesis de nuestro país. “Con profundo dolor la diócesis de Ciudad Real manifiesta de manera firme y contundente su condena de cualquier delito de abuso de menores”, apunta el comunicado.

Así lo ha confirmado este jueves el propio Obispado a través de un comunicado en el que relata que la investigación interna se abrió ante “ciertos comportamientos del sacerdote encargado del grupo de alumnos de la ESO” ya que existían las sospechas de que podrían ser constitutivos de un delito de abusos sexuales.

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La Policía investiga un nuevo caso de abuso sexual en la diócesis de Lyon

FRANCIA
Religion Digital

[French police are investigating a new complaint of abuse in the Lyon diocese.]

La policía francesa investiga un nuevo caso de agresión sexual en la diócesis de Lyon, en el este de Francia, presuntamente cometido por un párroco contra una adolescente, indicaron hoy medios locales.

Se trata de un nuevo caso abierto en esa misma diócesis, en la que la justicia investiga las presuntas agresiones sexuales cometidas por el cura Bernard Preynat sobre varios «scouts» entre 1986 y 1991.

Según la web «M6info», la nueva investigación se refiere a un sacerdote que oficia en el distrito 2 de Lyon.

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HUNDREDS OF SEX ABUSE TIPS RECEIVED IN PENNSYLVANIA HOMOSEXUAL CLERGY COVER-UP

PENNSYLVANIA
Church Militant

by Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • March 31, 2016

ALTOONA, Pa. (ChurchMilitant.com) – A hotline for reporting clerical sex abuse in a Pennsylvania diocese is receiving hundreds of phone calls.

According to the state attorney general’s office, the phone line, established amid a growing scandal involving the systematic protection of actively homosexual clerics, has taken more than 250 calls reporting past molestations by diocesan priests and others. The line was set up in early March following the release of a state grand jury report, sourcing secret diocesan records, incriminating two of the Altoona-Johnstown diocese’s former bishops for sheltering dozens of homosexual priests and religious for nearly four decades as the predators sexually assaulted and raped hundreds of children.

The diocesan records are part of a series of classified chancery documents obtained by authorities through a search warrant in August revealing Bp. James Hogan, who led the Altoona-Johnstown diocese from 1966 to 1987, was aware of dozens of actively homosexual priests within his jurisdiction who had been molesting or were continuing to molest minors — the vast majority being post-pubescent males.

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AG: No court action needed for church records

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Jasmine Stole | Post News Staff

The attorney general yesterday issued a response to the Department of Land Management reaffirming the course of action taken to correct land records for the controversial Redemptoris Mater Seminary property in Yona.

Attorney General Elizabeth Barrett-Anderson, in a letter to DLM Director Michael Borja, stated that a court petition was not necessary because there was no objection from the title holder, Archbishop Anthony Apuron, to the changes needed to be made in the four certificates of title. The letter was dated March 31.

At issue is the memorials in the certificates of title that the AG, DLM and former Sen. Robert Klitzkie agree were erroneous. The titles printed in the U’Matuna Si Yu’os late last year did not show a Declaration of Deed of Restriction, which Klitzkie pointed out to DLM in December last year. The Declaration of Deed Restriction was then added to the certificates in favor of the archbishop.

Klitzkie noted that the certificates of title needed to be added in favor of the Redemptoris Mater Seminary as a nonprofit organization. DLM agreed that the certificates were done in error and in January, Borja wrote to Klitzkie and said a court petition would be filed to correct the certificates.

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Survivors of ​​abuse in Salvation Army to protest at Lucy Turnbull’s launch of Red Shield A

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Friday 1 April 2016

Survivors of abuse in Salvation Army institutions plan to protest outside the hotel where the prime minister’s wife will launch the Salvos’ annual Red Shield Appeal.

Former Sydney lord mayor Lucy Turnbull will launch the charity’s major annual fundraising drive at the Westin Hotel in Sydney’s Martin Place on Wednesday 6 April at an event attended by NSW premier Mike Baird and other high-profile supporters of the Salvation Army.

Child sex abuse survivors’ support organisation Care Leavers Australia Network (Clan) announced on Friday it would hold a silent protest outside the hotel to draw attention to the Salvos’ failure to fully back a national redress scheme for abuse survivors.

Clan executive Leonie Sheedy says there is great sadness that “the wife of Clan patron prime minister Malcolm Turnbull is launching the Red Shield appeal while we are still waiting for a firm commitment from the Salvation Army” on a national redress scheme.

Clan represents hundreds of people who were physically and sexually abused as children when they were housed in now notorious institutions such as the Riverview training farm in Queensland, where boys were allegedly locked in a cage and made to eat food donated by townspeople for animals.

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Police probing ‘a NUMBER’ of church sex abuse claims in Lincolnshire after SICK ex-vicar jailed

UNITED KINGDOM
Lincolnshire Echo

Police probing a number of church sex abuse claims in Lincolnshire after an ex-vicar was jailed at Lincoln Crown Court.

Stephen Crabtree, who served as the rector of Washingborough and Heighington until 2014, was jailed for three years after admitting six counts of indecent assault on a 15-year-old girl.

He admitted the charges when he appeared before Lincoln Crown Court at an earlier hearing.

The offences were said to have occurred in the 12 months between April 1992 and April 1993.

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N.Y. Senate GOP too busy to fix child-rape law as No. 2 Republican says changing statute is unfair to perverts

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Thursday, March 31, 2016

ALBANY — The roadblock to justice for countless sex abuse victims in New York is the continued handiwork of Senate Republicans more concerned about the rights of pervs than their accusers — or too busy to even consider reforms.

Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan through his staff wouldn’t even discuss the matter this week despite repeated requests from the Daily News.

“We aren’t going to discuss it until after the (state) budget is settled,” Flanagan spokesman Scott Reif said in an email.

But several Senate GOPers told The News this week they have little appetite to change the law requiring child victims of sex abuse to seek legal recourse before their 23rd birthday.

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Horrific new child sex trends emerge in SA

SOUTH AFRICA
IOL

01 April 2016
By: Kamini Padayachee

Durban – Sexual predators “live-streaming” incidents of child sexual abuse and being able to place online orders for the types of abuse they want to view are some of the disturbing trends emerging in child pornography.

Different types of child pornography were discussed at a lecture held at the University of KwaZulu-Natal on Thursday.

The speakers said while recent statistics were not available, their research had shown that the sharing of child pornography was prolific in the country.

Recently the police have made arrests under Operation Cloud Nine, working with their international counterparts to catch offenders.

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Local youth pastor charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse of minors

CALIFORNIA
Lompoc Record

Gina Kim gkim@leecentralcoastnews.com

A local youth pastor and coach has been charged with seven felony counts of sex crimes with a minor female, as well as using force to dissuade his wife from reporting his alleged actions to authorities, according to the Santa Barbara County District Attorney’s Office.

Daniel James Moreno, 25, was arrested at an undisclosed location at 12:40 a.m. Monday in Santa Maria.

Authorities allege Moreno attempted to prevent his wife Katrina Moreno, a witness to the suspected crimes, from making a report to authorities, according to a felony complaint filed against him Wednesday by the District Attorney’s Office.

The victims are identified only as “Jane Doe” due to their ages.

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Federal investigators look into local catholic abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

By John Clay | jclay@wtajtv.com
Published 03/31 2016

Federal investigators are looking into the sexual abuse claims within the Altoona Johnstown Catholic Diocese.

The PA Attorney General’s investigation identified 50 priests and religious leaders for the crimes, but most were outside prosecution because too much time has passed. U.S. Attorney David Hickton tells KDKA that RICO, the Racketeering Influence and Corruption Organization Act is not bound by time limits, and could lead to civil penalties. He says those penalties are unlikely to include financial awards.

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U.S. Attorney: Clergy Accused Of Sexual Abuse Could Face Consequences Under Civil RICO Statute

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburgh

March 31, 2016 By Andy Sheehan

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — The grand jury report sent shockwaves through the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese with revelations that 50 priests and religious leaders allegedly sexually abused hundreds of child victims.

But because of the statute of limitations, no criminal charges were filed.

“It leaves people with a hollow sense that there is justice that has not been dispensed or justice denied,” said U.S. Attorney David Hickton.

But now, Hickton says a federal investigation may go further than state prosecutors in seeking justice.

He tells KDKA that his office may address the findings in the grand jury report with a law that usually applies to criminal organizations, known as RICO, the Racketeering Influence and Corruption Organization Act.

“It would be appropriate in this instance if the evidence supported it,” Hickton said.

Because of a similar statute of limitations, it’s too late to prosecute anyone criminally under RICO, but Hickton says there is also a civil RICO statute with no time limit, which would carry civil penalties.

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Real action is necessary on sex abuse crisis

UNITED STATES
Tribune-Democrat

The movie “Spotlight” was awarded an Oscar for the best motion picture of 2016, and it more than deserves such recognition. It brings a new level of attention to this outstanding film and the problems it addresses, especially the abuse of authority in the Roman Catholic Church.

It is a wake-up call for people in the United States and in countries around the world to recognize the egregious damage done to children and deal with the epidemic, the pandemic really, that is childhood sexual abuse.

“Spotlight” concerns heinous crimes of sexual abuse perpetrated upon innocent children by rogue priests in a powerful religious denomination while it addresses one institution’s corruption played out in Massachusetts by Cardinal Bernard Law, the archbishop of Boston.

Law covered up and protected such priests while supposedly “saving the church from scandal.”

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Vatican’s new anti-abuse expert says pope ‘not wavering’

ROME
Crux

By Ines San Martin
Vatican correspondent April 1, 2016

ROME – A former colonel in the Illinois state police and former official of the U.S. bishops’ conference, recently tapped by the Vatican to help develop anti-sex abuse policies around the Catholic world, says she has “no doubt at all” that Pope Francis is personally committed to the cause.

“If the pope was wavering, I don’t think he’d give the commission the support he’s been giving it,” said Teresa Kettelkamp, referring to the Vatican’s Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, established by Francis in 2014 to advise him on anti-abuse measures.

Kettelkamp, a veteran law enforcement professional who headed the U.S. Bishops’ Child Protection Office from 2005 to 2011, was hired in January by the commission to develop a template for anti-abuse guidelines and a set of “best practices” for use by bishops’ conferences around the world, especially in places such as Africa, Asia and Latin America that have not yet developed strong policies.

Kettelkamp spoke in an exclusive interview with Crux on Thursday, her first since assuming her new Vatican position.

Of late, some critics have questioned Francis’ seriousness about reform on the Church’s clerical abuse scandals, pointing, among other things, to his appointment of a bishop in Chile known as an apologist for that country’s most notorious abuser priest.

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Editor’s note on day one of ‘Crux 2.0’

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor April 1, 2016

Today marks the first day of Crux’s new partnership with the Knights of Columbus, after 18 months as a site sponsored by The Boston Globe. Internally, we’ve been referring tongue-in-cheek to our new incarnation as “Crux 2.0”, and above all else I want to thank our readers for sticking with us during this transition.

If we did this right, most of you won’t have noticed any dramatic changes today.

We’re still breaking news, such as our exclusive first interview with the Vatican’s new anti-sex abuse expert, Teresa Kettelkamp, a former Illinois police colonel and then head of the U.S. bishops’ child protection office. I’ve also got an analysis unpacking why it’s a welcome bit of good news for Pope Francis on the sex abuse front.

We’re still featuring exclusive pieces by some of the most influential voices in the Catholic conversation, such as today’s contributions by Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia; Carolyn Woo, president of Catholic Relief Services; and Tom Williams, a Rome-based theologian and commentator on religion and Catholic affairs (not to mention one of the city’s finest mixologists, but that’s for another time).

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New hire is good news for Pope Francis on anti-abuse effort

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor April 1, 2016

Let’s face it: Pope Francis may be a smash hit in plenty of other areas, but in the eyes of many survivors of clerical sexual abuse and their most prominent advocates, his track record so far leaves something to be desired.

In that context, news that the pope’s Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors has hired Teresa Kettlekamp, the former executive director of the U.S. bishops’ Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection, to help lead the Vatican’s own anti-abuse effort, is a badly needed dose of good news.

Kettlekamp spoke to Crux on Thursday, marking her first interview since taking her new Vatican position.

Anyone who knows the global situation of the Catholic Church with regard to the sexual abuse issue realizes two things:

* First, whatever its shortcomings, the Catholic Church in the United States has adopted tougher and more sweeping policies than most nations in the world, and for sure has invested greater resources in developing cutting-edge abuse prevention and detection programs.

* Second, Kettelkamp is clearly a reformer on the abuse issue, a former Illinois police colonel who has no tolerance for law-breakers or lax enforcement procedures.

The fact that Kettelkamp has been taken on by the Vatican is thus another sign that reformers are in the ascendant in Rome, and deniers are on the run.

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.

Boston-area priest dismissed for abusing minor, archdiocese says

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Andy Rosen GLOBE STAFF MARCH 31, 2016

The Vatican has defrocked a priest after a church investigation found he was guilty of abuse of a minor, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston said Thursday.

Thomas H. Maguire, who was ordained nearly 40 years ago, had in the past bemoaned the personal and spiritual effect the church sexual abuse scandal had taken on his colleagues and the archdiocese.

Maguire had been removed from public ministry since 2012, when he faced an allegation of inappropriate sexual conduct in the presence of minors.

At that time, Maguire was pastor at St. Helen Mother of the Emperor Constantine in Norwell, and church officials said the alleged behavior had happened near the time he was removed from ministry.

Law enforcement reviewed the case, and could not substantiate the accusations against Maguire, the archdiocese said. But church officials said other accusers came forward with reports of “inappropriate sexual conduct which had occurred in the mid-1990s and before.”

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.

Crime, Justice and Mercy in Vatican City

VATICAN CITY
Wall Street Journal

By JAVIER MARTÍNEZ-BROCAL and ADAM O’NEAL
March 31, 2016

Mercy has been the animating force of Pope Francis’ three-year pontificate. And the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, which the Catholic Church has been celebrating since December, is the greatest expression of the pope’s interest. Millions of Catholics are taking the opportunity to renew their faith and receive plenary indulgences during what Francis has called “a true moment of encounter with the mercy of God.”

Vatican City’s judicial system, however, is not taking the year off. Msgr. Lucio Ángel Vallejo Balda has spent the Jubilee in a Vatican City jail cell, and he could face up to eight years behind bars for crimes against the Vatican City State. He and his co-defendants won’t be the first to be prosecuted by the world’s smallest state.

There are two types of courts within the Vatican: religious and civil. Religious courts punish heretical priests, for example, and their jurisdiction extends beyond the Vatican’s walls. Penalties follow the principle of salus animarum, the salvation of souls. They come in the form of invitations to repentance, expulsion from the priestly state or, in severe cases, excommunication.

The Italian civil code of 1929, however, is the foundation of the Vatican City State’s civil law. Various popes have updated the code with prohibitions against new crimes like drug trafficking and financing terrorism. Francis overhauled the laws in 2013 to strengthen punishments against child sexual abuse and leaking confidential documents.

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.

March 31, 2016

Pennsylvania one of lowest reported child abuse rates in country

PENNSYLVANIA
Your4State

[with video]

ERIE, Pa.

Child abuse is an ever growing problem, especially in Pennsylvania, where it’s believed to go vastly under reported.

The “Protect our Children” committee said the commonwealth has one of the lowest rates of reported child abuse in the nation.

“There are predators out there who have focused on children and had multiple victims. It was kept quiet,” Janet McKay, executive director of the Victims Resource Center in Wilkes-Barre said.

Advocacy groups allege Pennsylvania has developed a culture of cover-ups. High-profiles cases like in Altoona-Johnstown, where a grand jury found Diocese members abused hundreds of children, and a similar scenario involving Penn State’s football coach Jerry Sandusky highlight the issue.

In both cases, people high up in the organization allegedly knew of the child abuse and did what they could to conceal it from law enforcement and school administrators.

The cases have inspired a recent push for legislative change in the commonwealth. Advocates hope to change the statute of limitations on child sex-abuse claims.

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.

Twin Cities Archdiocese close on reorganization plan

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Martin Moylan St. Paul · Mar 31, 2016

An attorney for the bankrupt Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Thursday that the church has developed a broad outline of a reorganization plan.

Attorney Richard Anderson told a federal judge that the church hopes to bring the plan forward before the end of May. He indicated it would include financial contributions from the archdiocese, insurers and other parties, but he did not offer details.

The church could file a plan without the support of the unsecured creditors committee, which represents sex abuse victims, Anderson said.

Mike Finnegan, an attorney for sex abuse victims, criticized the archdiocese for not sharing the plan with victims.

“It’s alarming abuse survivors have not seen any part of a plan of reorganization yet,” Finnegan said. “And it’s very, very concerning to us that the archdiocese would broadcast that they might be filing a plan without the survivors’ consent.”

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.

Join us Monday for a live chat on the statute of limitations in cases of child sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

Join us at noon on Monday for a live chat with state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Democrat from Berks County, who has been fighting to reform the Pennsylvania civil statute of limitations in cases of child sexual abuse.

As a teenager, Rozzi was abused by a Roman Catholic priest. He noted recently that the pattern of priestly abuse and cover-up has been seen in Boston, Philadelphia and, more recently, in the Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

“The only way this ends is if we make it loud and clear to child rapists and those who harbor them, that they can no longer hide,” he said.

You can send questions for Rozzi to scassidy@lnpnews.com or @SuzCassidyLNP. You also can leave questions in the comments section of this post.

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FULL SHOW POST: Rod Matthews Parole & Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal

MASSACHUSETTS
WGBH

Nearly 30 years after the 14-year-old beat a classmate to death with a baseball bat in the Canton woods, Rod Matthews is asking to be set free. The mother of the victim, Shaun Ouillette, says she forgives but opposes his the killers release. Northeastern University Criminology Professor James Alan Fox (@jamesalanfox) and Canton Police Chief Kenneth Berkowitz (@ChiefBerkowitz) both testified at the hearing yesterday, on two different sides.

The numbers continue to climb in the Catholic clergy sex abuse scandal, with more than a dozen new names involved in settlements just made public. Attorney Mitchell Garabedian joins survivor Allan Bruce, speaking out in his first TV interview.

And why those of us in Massachusetts don’t have to look to the south to find bigotry and hate.

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.

National Child Abuse Prevention Month: Honoring Our Most Innocent Victims

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Ross Ellis
Founder and CEO, STOMP Out Bullying; National bullying and cyberbullying prevention expert

This April marks the 33rd anniversary of National Child Abuse Prevention Month. It is a time dedicated to child abuse education, awareness and prevention.

The issue, which is in the media every day causes one to shiver at the thought of what happens to our children, yet it is the most ignored issue because it’s so ugly.

Well it’s even uglier for the children who are being abused.

Just this week, a foster parent on Long Island was accused of sexually abusing the kids in his care. A 17-count indictment earlier this month alleges that 59-year-old Cesar Gonzales-Mugaburu sexually abused seven foster boys in his care and even had sex with his dog. Now investigators suspect there are far more victims. Gonzales-Mugaburu fostered some 140 boys there over 20 years.

Social worker Debi Edwards had alerted the authorities about this, but nobody would listen. And that’s not too uncommon either.

Full disclosure: As the founder and CEO of Love Our Children USA, I have seen this happen time too often.

Just last month, the movie Spotlight won the Academy Award for Best Picture along with Best Original Screenplay. For those of you who haven’t seen it, the film follows The Boston Globe’s “Spotlight” team, the oldest continuously operating newspaper investigative journalist unit in the country and its actual investigation into cases of widespread and systemic child sex abuse in the Boston area by numerous Roman Catholic priests.

According to fellow child abuse expert Roger Canaff, “The newest miserable chapter of the Roman Catholic clergy abuse crisis has come to light. A particular diocese- Altoona-Johnstown, in southwest Pennsylvania has been revealed as shrouded in darkness for decades, with predictably abysmal results. We don’t know this because the Church took it upon itself to publish a candid and self-reflective report. Instead, we know it because of a civil grand jury armed with a search warrant. Last week, the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office released the deeply disturbing report of that investigative body, detailing the sexual abuse of children at the hands of mostly diocesan priests (priests who serve within a geographical area). In many cases, either written admissions of predatory priests were uncovered, or the men made admissions before the grand jury itself.”

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.