ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

July 9, 2014

Lebovits Gets 2 Years; Victim Addresses His Abuser

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

07/09/14
Hella Winston
Special Correspondent

Baruch Lebovits was led out of Brooklyn Supreme Court in handcuffs Wednesday morning after being sentenced to two years in prison after pleading guilty to felony sex offenses with a minor. With time served and time off for good behavior, Lebovits is expected to serve only a few months in jail.

A lawyer for Sam Kellner had tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade Judge Mark Dwyer to reconsider the sentence in light of other alleged sex offenses for which Lebovits has not been convicted.

Before Lebovits was taken to prison, his victim, YR — accompanied by a therapy dog — stood up to address the court. He began by lashing out at anti-abuse activist Nuchem Rosenberg, claiming that he “is bullying me on the hotline,” a reference to comments made on a call-in line by Rosenberg about YR’s physical appearance. Rosenberg has also speculated on his hotline that YR was paid off in exchange for a promise not to testify against Lebovits at trial.

The Brooklyn district attorney has confirmed that YR did enter into a financial settlement with regard to his abuse by Lebovits and also that YR had expressed an unwillingness to take the stand were the case to go to trial.

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.

Funeral arrangements announced for Robinson

OHIO
Toledo Blade

Funeral arrangements have been scheduled for the Rev. Gerald Robinson, who died in an state prison medical facility last week.

Father Robinson‘‍s funeral Mass will be held at St. Hyacinth Church, 719 Evesham Ave., Friday at 11 a.m., and he will be buried at Calvary Cemetery. Father Robinson, who was arrested in 2004 and convicted in 2006 for the murder of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl in 1980, died Friday in a prison hospice at Franklin Medical Center in Columbus. He was serving a sentence of 15 years to life.

Visitations are scheduled for Thursday from 2 to 8 p.m. at W.K. Sujkowski & Son Funeral Home, 3838 Airport Hwy., and Friday at 10 a.m. at St. Hyacinth.

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

Pope Francis’ promised reforms start to take shape with new leaders for Vatican bank

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

Josephine McKenna | July 9, 2014

VATICAN CITY (RNS) Pope Francis’ promised reforms of the Vatican bureaucracy are starting to take shape, with new leaders appointed to oversee the troubled Vatican bank and plans to overhaul the Catholic Church’s approach to global communications.

Pope Francis on July 9, 2014, announced a number of reforms to the Vatican’s communication office and Vatican bank, including tapping Jean-Baptiste de Franssu to lead the bank as its new director.

French businessman Jean-Baptiste de Franssu on Wednesday (July 9) was named new president of the bank, formally known as the Institute for Works of Religion, replacing Ernst Von Freyberg, a German who has run the bank since February 2013.

Six new lay members, including Mary Ann Glendon, a former U.S. ambassador to the Holy See and Harvard law professor, will join the bank’s board.

Australian Cardinal George Pell, head of the Vatican’s economic secretariat, announced the latest changes, which he said are designed to improve vigilance and transparency.

“There are many challenges and much work ahead,” Pell said. “The Holy Father has made it clear these changes should move forward expeditiously.”

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French financier to head Vatican bank amid push for reform

VATICAN CITY
Al Jazeera America

July 9, 2014

The Vatican on Wednesday said it would separate its bank’s investment business from its Church payments work to try to clean up after years of scandal, and vowed to become a “model of financial transparency.”

French businessman Jean-Baptize de Franssu was named as the new head of the bank, officially known as the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), succeeding German lawyer Ernst Von Freyberg, who has run the bank since February 2013.

Freyberg, who has said he is leaving for personal reasons, has introduced reforms to make the IOR more transparent and compliant with international norms against money laundering, and has closed many suspicious accounts.

The Vatican also plans to increase scrutiny on one of the two sections of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See, or APSA — also hit by recent scandals — that runs Vatican properties, handles income and spending, prepares budgets and acts as a central accounting department and purchasing office.

Australian Cardinal George Pell, head of the Vatican’s recently formed Secretariat for the Economy, told a news conference that the move was necessary in order for his department to “exercise its responsibilities of economic control and vigilance” over all Vatican departments.

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.

Finance czar aims to steer Vatican ‘off the gossip pages’

VATICAN CITY
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF JULY 09, 2014

After a sweeping overhaul of the Vatican’s financial operations on Wednesday, one thing seems clear: If Australian Cardinal George Pell fails in getting the Vatican, as he puts it, “off the gossip pages” due to chronic financial scandals, it won’t be because the 73-year-old prelate lacks the power to do the job.

One way or another, changes announced Wednesday bring most of the Vatican’s important financial centers under Pell’s influence, including purchasing and human resources as well as administration of the Vatican’s several billion dollars of investments. They also place Pell confidantes in key positions.

Among the moves unveiled on Wednesday:

• A downsizing of the troubled Vatican Bank, formally known as the “Institute for the Works of Religion”. Administering investments from its estimated $8 billion in holdings will be taken over by a new Vatican Asset Management office, reporting to Pell.

• The “ordinary section” of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA), responsible for personal and procurement, will be transferred to Pell’s Secretariat for the Economy.

• Appointment of French businessman Jean-Baptiste de Franssu as the bank’s new president. From 1990 to 2011 de Franssu was an executive with Invesco Europe, an investing firm with $35 billion in assets under management.

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.

Cardinal George Pell takes control of the Vatican’s finances and outlines sweeping reforms

VATICAN CITY
Sydney Morning Herald

July 10, 2014

Nick Miller
Europe Correspondent

Dublin: Australian Cardinal George Pell has taken personal control of the Vatican’s finances in a reform unprecedented in living memory – but says he is facing “sadness and antagonism” from the old guard at the heart of the Catholic empire.

In an exclusive interview with respected Vatican reporter John L Allen Jr, Cardinal Pell said his mission was “to be boringly successful, to get off the gossip pages”.

On Wednesday, Cardinal Pell held a press conference to announce his economic plan for the Holy See, building on a reform framework approved by the Pope earlier this year.

In February, Cardinal Pell was appointed prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy.

He revealed on Wednesday he had brought in Danny Casey, his former business manager of the archdiocese of Sydney, to head a new office to oversee some of the reform projects.

One of the biggest challenges is the restructure of the scandal-ridden Vatican Bank, which has previously acted as a conduit for money laundering.

Cardinal Pell’s plan gives the bank a new, smaller role in the church’s finances, sets up a new office to administer billions of dollars’ worth of investments, and reviews of the Vatican’s pension fund.

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

Ex-archbishop urged ‘tough’ stand on priest abuse allegation

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Jul 9, 2014

Attorney Jeff Anderson on Wednesday released more clergy documents from a massive lawsuit that has forced the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to turn over more than 60,000 internal documents on priests accused of sexually abusing children.

The documents released today involve the Rev. Joseph Wajda, who was accused of sexually abusing children decades earlier. The archdiocese removed Wajda from parish assignments in 1991 and the Vatican decided to kick him out of the priesthood last year.

The allegations against Wajda are already well known. Then-Archbishop Harry Flynn named Wajda in 2002 as a priest accused of sexual abuse, and the claims received extensive media coverage.

Wajda, 67, has denied the abuse claims and said he has appealed his case to the Vatican.

The documents are part of a lawsuit that alleges the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona created a public nuisance by keeping information on abusive priests secret. The man who filed the suit claims he was sexually abused by the Rev. Thomas Adamson in the 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.

Twin Cities Catholic priest kept in ministry despite abuse allegations, documents show

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: CHAO XIONG , Star Tribune Updated: July 9, 2014

The Rev. Joseph Wajda allegedly made one boy strip naked and bumped into his genitals.

Documents made public Wednesday in the ongoing sexual abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis show that a priest who allegedly abused boys was allowed to continue working as a priest and in an administrative role in the church.

One month after the Rev. Joseph Wajda was ordained in 1973, there was an allegation that he propositioned a young boy, and his alleged misconduct carried on for several more years, according to documents released by attorney Jeff Anderson.

“The Wajda documents show how current Archbishop of St. Louis Robert Carlson, while serving in roles including chancellor and auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in the 1970s-1990s, along with other Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis officials, mishandled and minimized child sexual abuse allegations against Wajda,” said a statement from Anderson’s office.

A statement from the archdiocese was not immediately available.

Wajda, now 67, was permanently removed from ministry in 2003 and laicized in 2013. He lives in Minneapolis and has denied abusing children.

The archdiocese was court-ordered to produce thousands of pages of documents, including material chronicling Wajda’s alleged abuse, for a lawsuit filed by Anderson against the church and former priest Tom Adamson.

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.

Funeral Mass for priest convicted of murder will follow ‘usual protocol’

OHIO
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Jul. 9, 2014

The funeral Mass for a Toledo priest convicted of murdering a religious sister will follow “usual protocol for a diocesan priest’s funeral,” according to the Ohio diocese.

Fr. Gerald Robinson, 76, died Friday at a prison medical facility in Columbus. The Toledo Blade reported he was receiving treatment for heart troubles and had suffered a heart attack around Memorial Day.

In 2006, Robinson was found guilty of the 1980 Holy Saturday murder of Mercy Sr. Margaret Ann Pahl, who was strangled and stabbed 32 times before being covered with an altar cloth in what some deemed a satanic ritual. It was reported that Robinson presided at Pahl’s funeral Mass.

Robinson, who was serving 15 years to life in prison, maintained his innocence up to his death, which preceded a completion of the appeals process. While the appeals continued, he remained a diocesan priest but was restricted from public ministry.

Details about the time and location of Robinson’s funeral have yet to be released, but the Toledo diocese said it anticipates the family will do so Wednesday afternoon. Fr. Charles Ritter, diocesan administrator, is expected to celebrate the funeral Mass, which is open to the public but closed to the media.

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Gozitan priest promoted in Vatican Bank reshuffle

VATICAN CITY
Malta Independent

Gozitan priest Mgr Alfred Xuereb, who had been private secretary to Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis, has been appointed as non-voting secretary to the new board of the Vatican Bank.

Mgr Xuereb is already the secretary general of the new secretariat for economic affairs of the Vatican.

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

Pope Francis Names New Leadership for Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By JIM YARDLEY
JULY 9, 2014

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis continued his efforts to modernize and reorganize the Vatican finances on Wednesday, by appointing a new leadership for the scandal-tainted Vatican Bank, streamlining other operations and signaling future changes to the church’s global media operations.

“Our ambition is to become something of a model in financial management rather than a cause for occasional scandal,” Cardinal George Pell, the pope’s recently appointed prefect on economic affairs, said at a news conference on Wednesday.

The most prominent move, rumored for weeks, was the appointment of Jean-Baptiste de Franssu as the new president of the Vatican Bank, officially known as the Institute of Religious Works, or I.O.R. Mr. de Franssu, a Frenchman who was formerly head of European operations for the investment management company Invesco Ltd., had been serving on an economic advisory council that Francis created in March. He replaces Ernst von Freyberg, a German industrialist appointed last year.

Cleaning up the Vatican’s murky finances has been a top priority for Francis, especially after many of the cardinals who elected him as pope in March 2013 spoke openly about their displeasure with the Vatican’s financial operations.

In recent years, the Vatican Bank has been under growing pressure to comply with international practices to fight money laundering and meet other global norms. In 2010, Italian prosecutors temporarily seized $30 million from two accounts at the bank as part of a financial investigation.

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MO- More new revelations; SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

More newly-released Catholic Church records show that St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson hid clergy sex crimes when he worked in Minnesota.

According to a Minnesota TV station:

“The documents fault Carlson, who was (a Saint Paul archdiocesan official) from the 1970s to 1990s.

The documents say (he) and other church officials mishandled and minimized allegations against former priest and accused child molester Wajda, which allowed Wajda to continue to serve as a priest.

According to the documents, Wajda allegedly began abusing children a month after his ordination in 1973. The allegations are that Carlson and other church officials “learned in 1981 that Wajda was molesting boys under the guise of counseling but waited five years before sending him to psychiatric care.”

We in SNAP are grateful to the brave Minnesota victims who continue to tear off layer and layer of unhealthy secrecy in church offices and files about abuse and cover up.

We’re also grateful to the Minnesota legislators who reformed their state’s child abuse laws so that cover ups like these can be revealed through civil lawsuits.

And we hope that the continually damaging disclosures about Carlson will prod St. Louis Catholic officials to get on the right side of history and share what they know about clergy sex crimes and cover ups here with law enforcement agencies and advocacy groups.

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.

Secret Archdiocese documents reveal Carlson’s actions

MINNESOTA
KMOV

(KMOV) – Secret Archdiocese documents recently released show how the Archbishop of St. Louis Robert Carlson failed to take action on child sexual abuse allegations against former priest Joseph Wajda.

The allegations occurred when Carlson was part of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in the 1970s through the 1990s.

According to a news release, Carlson’s actions, along with other officials, allowed Wajda to continue to serve as a priest.

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.

Secret Documents Released on Former Priest Accused of Abuse

MINNESITA
KSTP

By: Jennie Olson

Secret documents have been made public Wednesday that attorneys say show how a former official with the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis mishandled child sexual abuse allegations against former priest Joseph Wajda.

The documents were released as part of a civil lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, the Diocese of Winona, and former priest Thomas Adamson.

The documents fault Archbishop of St. Louis Robert Carlson, who previously served as a chancellor and auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis from the 1970s to 1990s.

The documents say Carlson and other church officials mishandled and minimized allegations against former priest and accused child molester Wajda, which allowed Wajda to continue to serve as a priest.

According to the documents, Wajda allegedly began abusing children a month after his ordination in 1973. The allegations say church officials, including Carlson, learned in 1981 that Wajda was molesting boys under the guise of counseling but waited five years before sending him to psychiatric care.

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

The Boston Globe announces editorial team for Catholicism website to launch in September

BOSTON (MA)
Talking New Media

Michael O’Loughlin has been hired as the site’s national reporter, while Christina Reinwald has been hired as web producer

Press Release:

BOSTON, Mass. – July 9, 2014 — Teresa Hanafin, the editor of The Boston Globe’s new standalone website dedicated to Catholicism, which is expected to launch by early September, announced her new team today.

“As you know, we hired John L. Allen Jr., the premier Vatican reporter in the country, if not the world, earlier this year from the National Catholic Reporter. His insightful reporting and analysis will be supplemented by on-the-ground event coverage by correspondent Ines San Martin, an engaging Argentinean journalist who has moved to Rome and just finished intense immersion in an Italian language course,” Hanafin said.

San Martin has a BA in social communications and journalism and a master’s degree in communication, both from Universidad Austral in Buenos Aires. She worked as a reporter and editor for Valores Religiosos, managed the international press office for World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro, and was the community/social media manager, content director, and graphic designer for Conta con Nosotros.

Michael O’Loughlin has been hired as the site’s national reporter. O’Loughlin has local roots and a background in religion writing. He grew up in Dracut, Massachusetts, and graduated from St. Anselm College in New Hampshire and Yale Divinity School. He has written for America, National Catholic Reporter, Foreign Policy, The Advocate, and the Religion News Service, and is writing a book on the Catholic Church and millennials, to be published by Paulist Press in the fall of 2015. He has appeared on Fox News and MSNBC.

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Boston Globe Edges Closer To Launching Catholic Site And Moving Downtown

BOSTON (MA)
WGBH

By DAN KENNEDY

John Henry’s vision for the Boston Globe is slipping more and more into focus, as the paper is edging closer to launching its website covering Catholicism and moving from Dorchester to downtown Boston.

The Catholic site will include three reporters and a Web producer, according to an announcement by Teresa Hanafin, the longtime Globe veteran who will edit the project. Look for it to debut in September.

In addition to John Allen, who’s been covering the Church for the Globe since being lured away from the National Catholic Reporter earlier this year, the team will comprise Ines San Martin, an Argentinian journalist who will report from the Vatican; Michael O’Loughlin, a Yale Divinity School graduate who will be the site’s national reporter; and Web producer Christina Reinwald.

Unlike the Globe’s new print-oriented Friday Capital section, which covers politics, the Catholic site will be aimed both at and well beyond Boston with national and international audiences in mind. “It will have a global audience. There’s a natural audience for it,” Globe chief executive officer Mike Sheehan said in a just-published interview with CommonWealth magazine editor (and former Globe reporter) Bruce Mohl.

Because of that, Globe spokeswoman Ellen Clegg tells me, the Catholic site will be exempt from the Globe’s paywall. It will be interesting to see how Sheehan, an ad man by trade, grapples with the difficult challenge of selling enough online advertising to make it work. Although this is pure speculation, I wonder if some of the content could be repackaged in, say, a weekly print magazine supported by paid subscriptions and ads.

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Glenview priest charged with felony theft of more than $110,000

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By Alexandra Chachkevitch
Tribune reporter
11:45 a.m. CDT, July 9, 2014

A Greek Orthodox priest in Glenview accused of improperly spending more than $110,000 from a church trust fund on personal expenses has been charged with felony theft.

The Rev. James Dokos allegedly wrote checks for tens of thousands of dollars to benefit himself, friends and family and to pay his personal credit card bills from the trust that he controlled, but that was set up primarily to benefit a Milwaukee church, according to a criminal complaint prepared by the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office.

The Tribune wrote about the allegations in the complaint last month. The charges became official today, according to the Milwaukee County court website.

Dokos, 62, was a longtime pastor at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Milwaukee before he was transferred to Saints Peter and Paul Church in Glenview in 2012.

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Baroness Butler-Sloss criticised over previous ‘flawed’ paedophile report

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By David Barrett, and Matthew Holehouse
09 Jul 2014

Baroness Butler-Sloss, the former judge appointed to investigate allegations of an establishment cover-up of child sex abuse, was forced to issue an apology after making crucial errors in a previous inquiry into two paedophile priests, The Telegraph can disclose.

The peer was put in charge of a “flawed” investigation into how the Church of England handled the cases of two ministers in Sussex who had sexually abused boys.

Eight months after her report was published Lady Butler-Sloss had to issue a six-page addendum in which she apologised for “inaccuracies” which, she admitted, arose from her failure to corroborate information which was given to her by senior Anglican figures as part of the inquiry.

Critics said it was further evidence that Lady-Butler-Sloss was the wrong person to lead the new Home Office inquiry into a range of institutions, including the Church.

The 2011 report looked at the Church’s handling of information about Roy Cotton, a parish priest in the Diocese of Chichester who died in 2006, and Colin Pritchard, another Anglican minister in the diocese who attended theological college with Cotton in the 1960s.

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Former archbishop given 8 months in jail for sex assault on boy

CANADA
Winnipeg Free Press

By: James Turner

A retired archbishop of the Orthodox Church in America was sent to jail for eight months this morning for sexually molesting an altar boy at a Winnipeg parish nearly 30 years ago.

Seraphim (Kenneth) Storheim learned this morning he would not get the benefit of a conditional sentence that would have allowed him to stay free in the community while serving his sentence.

“The accused was a mature offender at the time of the offence, the offence was a gross abuse of trust and the lasting effects of the crime on the victim are serious,” Justice Chris Mainella said.

Mainella convicted Storheim, 68, of sexual assault earlier this year following a lengthy Court of Queen’s Bench trial.

The victim was an 11-year-old boy visiting Storheim from Ontario in 1985.

The sexual assault on the child consisted of a single, extremely brief, incident or inappropriate touching when both were naked in the child’s room.

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Former archbishop sentenced to jail for molesting alter boy in Winnipeg

CANADA
Brandon Sun

By: The Canadian Press
Wednesday, Jul. 9, 2014

WINNIPEG – A former Orthodox priest is appealing his conviction for molesting an altar boy almost 30 years ago.

Seraphim Storheim was sentenced to eight months in jail Wednesday for sexually assaulting a boy who came to visit him in Winnipeg in 1985.

Storheim showed no emotion in court as Justice Christopher Mainella called his actions deplorable and a gross breach of trust.

The Crown had asked for a 12-month jail sentence, arguing Storheim abused a position of trust, but his lawyer argued for a conditional sentence with no jail time.

At the time of the offence, Storheim was a priest in the Orthodox Church in America but later rose to archbishop — the church’s highest-ranking cleric in Canada.

The 68-year-old was placed on leave when he was arrested in 2010 and retired following his conviction.

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NEW ECONOMIC FRAMEWORK FOR THE HOLY SEE

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 9 July 2014 (VIS) – This morning in the Holy See Press Office a press conference was held to present the new economic plan for the Holy See. The speakers were Cardinal George Pell, prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, Joseph F. X. Zahra and Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, deputy coordinator and member of the Council for the Economy respectively, and Ernst von Freyberg, president of the Board of Superintendence of the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR).

Cardinal George Pell announced new and important initiatives for improving the economic management and administration of the Holy See and Vatican City State. These changes, set in motion by the new Secretariat for the Economy, are the fruit of a detailed analysis of the conclusions and recommendations of the Pontifical Council for Reference on the Organisation of the Economic-Administrative Structure of the Holy See (COSEA), and are considered essential to face risks and weaknesses and, at the same time, to create in the future a new platform for improving economic management. All the changes were approved in the recent meetings of the Council for the Economy (5 July) and the Council of Cardinals (1-4 July), and it is expected that they will be approved by the Holy Father.

The changes relate to APSA (the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See), the Pension Fund, the Vatican media and the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR).

The Prefect of the Secretariat of the Economy expressed his satisfaction with the fact that the Holy Father has approved these important initiatives. Both Cardinal Pell and the Council for the Economy gave thanks for the Pope’s unwavering support and contributions.

“There are many challenges to face and much work to be done”, Cardinal Pell observed. “The COSEA has recommended that various issues be faced as a matter of urgency, such as the transfer of the Ordinary Section of the APSA, the Pension Fund, the media and the IOR. The Holy Father has clearly stated that these changes must be made rapidly”.

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MOTU PROPRIO ON THE TRANSFER OF COMPETENCES TO THE SECRETARIAT FOR THE ECONOMY

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 9 July 2014 (VIS) – The following is the Apostolic Letter issued ‘Motu proprio’ by the Holy Father Francis on the transfer of the Ordinary Section of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See to the Secretariat of the Economy.

“Confirming a centuries-old tradition, the last Vatican Council II reaffirmed the need for the organisation of the Holy See to conform to the needs of the times, above all by adapting the structure of the dicasteries of the Roman Curia, their number, denomination and competence, as well as their approaches and mutual coordination, to the real needs of the Church at every moment.

A concrete result of these principles occurred with the promulgation in February 2014 of the Apostolic letter, in the form of a Motu Proprio, Fidelis Dispensator et Prudens, by which I instituted the Secretariat for the Economy as a dicastery of the Roman Curia. In accordance with the recommendations of the Council for the Economy, the Secretariat is responsible for the economic control and supervision of the dicasteries of the Roman Curia, the Institutions linked to the Holy See, and the administrations of Vatican City State.

In view of the above, and upon consulting the heads of the dicasteries involved, I consider it appropriate for the Secretariat of the Economy to assume among its institutional competences, from now on and in accordance with the methods and times established by the relative Cardinal Prefect, those tasks which were previously attributed to the so-called ‘Ordinary Section’ of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See and, therefore, to transfer to the aforementioned dicastery the competences which the Apostolic Constitution ‘Pastor bonus’ of 28 June 1988 had entrusted to that Section of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See. As a consequence, the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See will no longer be divided into sections and, in the future, it will carry out only those functions previously performed by the Extraordinary Section.

Consequently, having carefully examined every question regarding the matter and consulting with the competent dicasteries and experts, I establish and decree as follows:

Article 1

The text of Article 172 of the Apostolic Constitution ‘Pastor bonus’ is entirely substituted by the following text:

1. This Office shall administer the assets belonging to the Holy See allocated to provide the funds necessary for the performance of the functions of the Roman Curia.

2. The Office shall also administer the moveable assets entrusted to other bodies of the Holy See.

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Ex-archbishop to appeal sentence for sex assault on altar boy

CANADA
CBC News

A former Orthodox priest and archbishop has been sentenced to eight months in jail for sexually assaulting an altar boy in Winnipeg during the 1980s.

A Manitoba judge handed down the decision Wednesday morning against Seraphim Kenneth Storheim, 68, calling his conduct “deplorable and a gross breach of trust.”

Almost immediately Storheim’s lawyer, Jeff Gindin, said his client is appealing the decision.

“There will be plenty” of grounds for appeal, Gindin said.

“Essentially we feel [Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Christopher Mainella] analyzed credibility with errors all the way through.”

Ginden said Storheim will try to get bail on Thursday.

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Canada- Orthodox archbishop is sentenced, SNAP responds

CANADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Statement by Melanie Jula Sakoda of Moraga, California, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), SNAP Orthodox Director ( 925-708-6175, melanie.sakoda@gmail.com )

A Canadian archbishop, who was found guilty of child sexual abuse in criminal court in January, was sentenced today to eight months in jail.

[CBC News]

We are glad that Archbishop Seraphim Storheim will spend time in jail, although we are disappointed that it is not for a longer period of time. While incarcerated, he will be unable to hurt any more children.

Now that the criminal process is complete, we urge the Orthodox Church in America (OCA) to go beyond announcing this sentence on their website, given the small group of vocal supporters who persist in clamoring that the archbishop is “innocent.” Church official must insist that every parish bulletin in Canada post a prominent notice urging anyone who might have suffered, seen, or suspected Storheim’s crimes to call police.

OCA officials must also re-examine the decisions made by the archbishop in all cases of sexual abuse and sexual misconduct, to insure that other predators were not protected and that whistle-blowers were not punished.

Moreover, the Church must not wash their hands of this predator. Not only must they move forward to remove Storheim from the clergy, they must also do what they can to ensure that the archbishop is sent to a secure, remote facility far away from children after he completes his time in jail.

Finally, the OCA should post the names, photos, current whereabouts and work histories of every proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting cleric, whether living or deceased on their website.

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Nichols and Welby give full backing to inquiry into historical child abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
TheTablet

09 July 2014 12:07 by Ruth Gledhill

The Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, pledged their full backing for the new public enquiry into the handling of child abuse allegations by public institutions.

The inquiry’s chairwoman, Baroness Butler-Sloss, the retired senior judge who is former president of the family division of the high court, has wide experience in the field. She was vice-chairwoman of the Cumberlege Commission, which reported on Catholic Church safeguarding policies in 2007. She also chaired a review of historic child sex abuse problems in the Church of England’s Chichester diocese, as a result of which a clergyman was convicted in 2008.

At the Church of England’s General Synod in York this weekend, survivors of sexual abuse by ministers and clergy will meet the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby. The eight members of Minister and Clergy Sexual Abuse Survivors (MACSAS) will be call on the archbishop for a “complete change of culture and behaviour in the Church”.

The Bishop of Durham, Paul Butler, who is chairman of the Church of England’s National Safeguarding Committee, said he believed the country had a problem with this kind of abuse and said it was important that victims had their stories heard and received justice.

“We’re really pleased there’s been quite a shift and that an inquiry is now taking place,” he told the Press Association.

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Dodge City pastor enters plea in sex crimes case

KANSAS
KWCH

[with video]

A Dodge City pastor accused of sexual assault has struck a plea deal.

A Ford County judge sentenced Dr. Jerrold Ketner to 36 months probation after he pleaded guilty to aggravated sexual battery on Tuesday.

Ketner, who is 80-years-old, will not have to pay restitution, nor will he have to register as offender, but he was ordered not to have contact with the victim of the crime or her husband.

Carmen Montelongo says that’s just not enough.

“I’m afraid. I’m going to be afraid to go out. Because with people like this, you don’t know. You just don’t know what’s going to happen,” said Montelongo through a translator. Montelongo speaks only Spanish.

She says she has the same fears now that she did when she decided to turn Ketner in, that he’ll end up hurting someone else.

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Dodge City pastor gets probation in sex abuse case

KANSAS
Emporia Gazette

Posted: Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Associated Press
DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Dodge City pastor will serve three years of probation for sexual battery in a plea deal that dropped six other felony charges, including rape.

Eighty-year-old Jerrold Wayne Ketner was sentenced Tuesday. He was arrested in March after a woman who went to him for counseling reported she had been raped and molested for several months.
The woman told KWCH-TV ( (http://bit.ly/1qiPkYW ) that Ketner demanded sex when she could not pay him. She videotaped one of the visits and turned it over to police.

Ford County Judge Leigh Hood cited Ketner’s age, health and lack of prior convictions when announcing the sentence.

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Secret Archdiocese Documents on Former Priest Joseph Wajda Released Publicly Today

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Wajda Selected Documents

News Release
July 9, 2014

Documents Show How Bishop Carlson, Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Gave Wajda Safe Harbor for Decades

(St. Paul, MN) – Secret priest file documents produced under court order by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on former priest and accused child molester Joseph Wajda have been released publicly. The Archdiocese produced the documents as part of a civil lawsuit, Doe 1 vs. the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Diocese of Winona and Thomas Adamson. Adamson is a former priest who is alleged to have sexually abused Doe 1 in the 1970s.

The Wajda documents show how current Archbishop of St. Louis Robert Carlson, while serving in roles including chancellor and auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in the 1970s-1990s, along with other Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis officials, mishandled and minimized child sexual abuse allegations against Wajda. Their actions enabled Wajda to continue to serve as a priest, which put children in danger.

In addition, in 1981, Wajda reported to Carlson that Adamson was engaging in sexual misconduct with a youth, according to the documents.

A summary of the Wajda documents, a Wajda timeline, and several of the approximately 3,200 pages of Wajda documents released by the Archdiocese pursuant to the court order are available on our homepage under News and Events at www.andersonadvocates.com. The entire Wajda file produced by the Archdiocese is available upon request. The original Doe 1 complaint and additional information can be found on our website at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Jeff Anderson: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.817.8665
Contact Mike Finnegan: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.205.5531

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FR. JOE ROSS CASE

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

July 9, 2014 9:06 am | Author: berger

It’s “out of the frying pan, into the fire” for Archbishop Robert Carlson. While the Fr. Joe Ross case is behind him. a Lincoln County civil trail against Fr. Joseph Jiang is moving forward. “Carlson’s fingerprints are all over the Jiang case,” said SNAP’s David Clohessy. (KSDK’s Art Hollday asked the $64,000 question about the Ross settlement. Why would Carlson pay a settlement to a woman he claims isn’t telling the truth?) Meanwhile, another priest from Missouri, Fr. Bob Marsicek, has been accused of abuse in Wisconsin and California.

BTW: Clohessy and Barbara Blaine (a SLU alum) received a Global Women’s Rights Award from the Feminist Majority Foundation at a Hollywood gala hosted by Jay and Mavis Leno. Some past winners: Gloria Steinem and Mariska Hargitay of “Law & Order.”

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Church leaders unite, demand full inquiry into child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Communion News Service

From The Evening Standard

Church leaders have piled unprecedented pressure on Prime Minister David Cameron to order a full public inquiry into institutional child sex abuse in Britain.

The Bishop of Durham, the Right Rev Paul Butler, warned that without such an extensive investigation — with people giving evidence on oath — he feared the full truth would not emerge.

He said that the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, and the Catholic Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, had urged Home Secretary Theresa May a month ago to launch a public inquiry following a string of shocking claims of abuse. The Right Rev Butler, chairman of the CoE’s churches national safeguarding committee, said religious leaders believed there was a “real problem around institutional abuse”.

“A full public inquiry is required because under those terms people have to take oaths and therefore swear to tell the truth,” he said. “My fear is the whole story won’t come out without that.

“Victim survivors need justice and they need their story to be heard.”

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Catholics must denounce priests who abuse minors: Top bishop

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Higuey, Dominican Republic.- The new president of the Dominican Bishops Conference (CED) on Tuesday asked Catholics to denounce the priests who abuse minors, after the Catholic Church’s declaration of zero tolerance against pedophilia.

Nicanor Peña warned that any prelate who engages in some kind of violation will be brought to justice. “Any faithful who’s aware of and truly has some basis, should come to the ecclesiastical authorities, and let them know what’s taking place, so the authority can proceed.”

He acknowledged that pedophilia cases affect the Catholic Church’s image, because many times people lose faith, “but it won’t collapse it.”

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Bishop of Durham calls for full inquiry into sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Sunderland Echo

A FULL public inquiry into institutional sex abuse needs to take place or the whole truth might not come out, the Bishop of Durham has said.

The Right Rev Paul Butler said he believed the country has a problem with this kind of abuse and it is important that victims have their stories heard and they receive justice.

He also acknowledged that the process of investigating such abuse could highlight unpleasant and difficult stories from within the church.

“We’re really pleased there’s been quite a shift and that an inquiry is now taking place,” he said.

“Over a month ago the Archbishop of Canterbury, with support of Cardinal Nichols and the president of the Methodist Church, wrote to the Home Secretary saying a full public inquiry is required into institutional child abuse, which I followed up in the House of Lords a few days ago.

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A murderer is “a priest in good standing”

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Often headlines are a little misleading. The headline you just read is not. It’s true.

On the very day that Pope Francis met with abuse victims, the Toledo Blade reported that a convicted murderer – who choked and stabbed a nun to death – would be buried with full priestly honors

By the time you read this that burial may have already happened. Still, it’s worth noting, especially for the sake of those whose lives have been touched by violent crimes, especially murder and child sexual abuse.

Fr. Gerald Robinson died last week in prison. A jury found him guilty of brutally killing Sr. Margaret Ann Pahl.

(It would have happened sooner, but a top Toledo Catholic official interrupted police questioning of Fr. Robinson, resulting in years of delay and doubt.)

The Toledo diocese has no bishop right now. Fr. Charles Ritter heads the diocese now. He’s announced that Fr. Robinson is still “a priest in good standing” and will be buried accordingly.

We begged Toledo Catholic officials to reconsider. So did the National Survivors Action Coalition. So did the Voice of the Faithful.

No dice. No response.

The Catholic hierarchy takes little action against predators who commit child sex crimes. It takes virtually no action against enablers who conceal these crimes. But one would think that Catholic officials would rally and act against a priest who was accused of molesting a child and found guilty of killing a nun.

Think again. Think again, and weep.

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Press Conference for the presentation of the New Economic Framework for the Holy See, 09.07.2014

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bolletino

Press Conference for the presentation of the New Economic Framework for the Holy See

Introduction by Cardinal George Pell
Attachments

At 12 noon today, in the Aula Giovanni Paolo II of the Holy See Press Office, a press conference will be held on the theme: “New economic framework for the Holy See”.

Speakers: Cardinal George Pell, Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy; Joseph F.X. Zahra, Deputy Coordinator of the Council for the Economy; Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, Member of the Council for the Economy; Ernst von Freyberg, President of the Supervisory Council of the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR).

Introduction by Cardinal George Pell

His Eminence Cardinal George Pell, the Cardinal Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy today announced several important new initiatives to improve the economic and administrative management of the Holy See and Vatican City State.

These changes initiated by the new Secretariat for the Economy follow detailed analysis of the findings and recommendations of Pontificia Commissione Referente di Studio e di Indirizzo sull’Organizzazione della Struttura Economico-Amministrativa della Santa Sede (COSEA) and are considered essential to address identified weaknesses and risks while also creating a new platform for improved economic management in the future.

All changes have been endorsed at the recent meetings of the Council for the Economy (July 5) and the Council of Cardinals (July 1 – 4) and approved by the Holy Father.

The changes affect:

1. APSA
2. PENSION FUND
3. VATICAN MEDIA
4. IOR

Cardinal Pell said he was delighted the Holy Father had approved these important initiatives and he and the Council for the Economy are grateful for his regular input and constant support.

“There are many challenges and much work ahead. It is clear from the work of COSEA that a number of issues, such as the transfer of APSA’s Ordinary Section, Pension Fund, Vatican Media and IOR need to be addressed urgently. The Holy Father has made it clear these changes should move forward expeditiously.”

The Cardinal Prefect also announced the establishment of a small Project Management Office (PMO), led by Mr. Danny Casey formerly Business Manager of the Sydney archdiocese, to implement and introduce some of the proposed changes beginning with the transfer of APSA’s Ordinary Section into the Secretariat for the Economy. The PMO will report directly to the Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy.

The Secretariat for the Economy will begin in September 2014 to prepare the budget for 2015. The goal is for each dicastery and administration to prepare a budget to be followed. Expenditure (within agreed framework) will be the responsibility of each dicastery and administration. Expenditure will be checked against the budgets during 2015 and any over-expenditure will be the responsibility of the dicastery and administration involved.

“We look forward to moving ahead with this work in the coming months.”

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Pope Names Former Invesco Manager for Vatican Bank in Revamp

VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Businessweek

By Andrew Frye July 09, 2014

Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, the former head of Invesco Ltd.’s European business, was named president of the Vatican Bank as Pope Francis continues his reorganization of the Catholic Church’s scandal-tainted financial operations.

Franssu replaces Ernst von Freyberg, who was appointed by Francis’s predecessor, Benedict XVI, at the head of the Institute for Religious Works, or IOR, as the bank is known.

“Excellent progress has been made through adherence to international standards,” according to a statement released by the Vatican. “A new anti-money-laundering framework has been put in place and every effort continues to be made to comply with this framework.”

The chairman of mergers-and-acquisitions adviser Incipit, Franssu was appointed by the pope earlier this year to the Vatican’s council that oversees economic issues.

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Pope replaces Vatican bank managers

VATICAN CITY
Telegraph (UK)

The Vatican on Wednesday named a French businessman to head up its scandal-plagued bank as part of a radical overhaul of the Holy See’s economic framework ordered by Pope Francis.

Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, former chief executive of Investco Europe, will lead a newly streamlined bank following a year of internal investigations which resulted in the closure or suspension of thousands of suspicious, ineligible or inactive accounts.

“Our ambition is to become something of a model for financial management rather than cause for occasional scandal,” Vatican finance minister Cardinal George Pell told journalists.

Franssu himself said he was “looking forward to continuing the efforts of transparency.

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PATTEN HEADS VATICAN MEDIA COMITTEE

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Lord Patten has been appointed to lead a committee overhauling the Vatican’s approach to the media only two months after quitting his role as chairman of the BBC Trust for health reasons.

The former cabinet minister and last Governor of Hong Kong worked with three different director-generals during his time at the corporation and weathered scandals including excessive executive pay and the corporation’s disastrous Diamond Jubilee coverage.

The Vatican said Lord Patten, a practising Catholic, would head the committee which would be charged with making “substantial financial savings” and ensuring “the Holy Father’s messages reach more of the faithful around the world, especially young people”.

The committee is expected to publish its report within 12 months.

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New chief for scandal-dogged Vatican bank

VATICAN CITY
Rappler

(UPDATED) Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, former chief executive of Investco Europe, will lead a newly streamlined bank following a year of internal investigations

Jean-Louis de la Vaissiere, Agence France-Presse

Jul 09, 2014

VATICAN CITY (UPDATED) – The Vatican on Wednesday, July 9, named a French businessman to head up its scandal-plagued bank as part of a radical overhaul of the Holy See’s economic framework ordered by Pope Francis.

Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, former chief executive of Investco Europe, will lead a newly streamlined bank following a year of internal investigations which resulted in the closure or suspension of thousands of suspicious, ineligible or inactive accounts.

“Our ambition is to become something of a model for financial management rather than cause for occasional scandal,” Vatican finance minister Cardinal George Pell told journalists.

Franssu himself said he was “looking forward to continuing the efforts of transparency.”

The appointment comes just a day after the bank said profits last year had been all but wiped out in its efforts to clean up its accounts.

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Britain’s Patten to lead Vatican communications re-vamp drive

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

BY PHILIP PULLELLA
VATICAN CITY Wed Jul 9, 2014

(Reuters) – Former Hong Kong Governor Chris Patten will head a committee to advise Pope Francis on how to re-vamp and modernize the Holy See’s media strategy, the Vatican said on Wednesday.

Patten, 70, one of Britain’s most experienced politicians, will be president of an 11-member committee made up of six experts from around the world and five Vatican officials.

It will make proposals within the next year to bring the Vatican more up to date with communications trends, improve coordination among departments and cut costs, a statement said.

The Vatican, which already has a number of internet sites and Twitter accounts, including that of Pope Francis, will use more digital media to reach a wider, younger audience, it said.

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Evidence from Francis helps convict bishop’s junta-era killers

ARGENTINA
The Tablet (UK)

08 July 2014 13:41 by Francis McDonagh

An Argentine court on Friday condemned two former members of the country’s 1976-83 military regime, Luciano Benjamín Menéndez and Luis Fernando Estrella, for the murder of Bishop Enrique Angelelli of La Rioja on 4 August 1976.

The judges described the murder as part of a campaign of “state terrorism”. Angelelli was killed when his car was forced off the road and overturned, and his death was officially declared to be the result of an accident. This version was largely accepted by the Argentine bishops – one archbishop said Angelelli died because he was a bad driver.

One factor in the verdict was the release by Pope Francis of correspondence from Bishop Angelelli to the nuncio in Argentina sent a fortnight before his death, in which the bishop described the threats he had received from the military and local landowners. At the time of his death he was returning from the funeral of two of his priests, Frs Carlos Murias and Gabriel Longueville, who had been murdered by the military, and also reported on this to the Vatican in the correspondence released by the Pope.

Bishop Angelelli, a frequent visitor to deprived communities, was well known for his support of trade unions and co-operatives, and declared that he worked “with one eye on the Gospel and one eye on the people”. The verdict, and the Pope’s role, is a further step in the rehabilitation of the Argentine Church, whose leaders at the time were generally silent about the atrocities of the military regime, and in some cases complicit in them.

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A Holy Calling? Lord Patten To Advise Pope Francis On The Vatican’s Media

UNITED KINGDOM
Management Today

Will it be a job filled with heavenly blessings or a role doused in hellfire? Lord Patten, the former chair of the BBC Trust, is heading to the Vatican this autumn to advise Pope Francis on his media strategy.

The Oxford University chancellor will head a committee that will report in 2015 on improving the Catholic Church’s TV station, radio and newspaper as well as expanding its output online.

Patten’s time at the BBC, which came to an end earlier this year when the 70-year-old Catholic had heart surgery, ought to prepare him well for the part-time role at the Vatican: both organisations have byzantine governance structures, a core devoted following and have been rocked by child abuse scandals.

It probably won’t do much to lower his blood pressure, though, even if Pope Francis is a media gift of God compared to his stern predecessor Pope Benedict XVI. Acts such as washing the feet of young offenders and ditching the bulletproof Popemobile have done more to repair Catholicism’s image in the last year or so than any number of @Pontifex tweets. But dodgy Vatican bankers and paedophile priests aren’t going anywhere.

Earlier this week the Vatican bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works, reported 2013 profits that had nigh on been wiped out after it purged dodgy customers. Its president and four non-exec board members are due to step down too, according the BBC.

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Court expected to sentence former archbishop convicted of sexual assault

CANADA
CTV Winnipeg

Published Wednesday, July 9, 2014

A former archbishop is expected to find out Wednesday whether he’ll receive jail time or a conditional sentence.

Earlier this year a judge convicted Seraphim Storheim of sexually assaulting an altar boy who lived with him in 1985.

Storheim was an Orthodox Church in America priest at the time and later became archbishop.

The crown wants 12 months in jail, while the defense is asking for a conditional sentence.

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Vatican plans to re-vamp media strategy

VATICAN CITY
RTE News

Former Hong Kong Governor Chris Patten will head a committee to advise Pope Francis on how to re-vamp and modernise the Holy See’s media strategy.

Mr Patten will chair the 11-member committee made up of six experts from around the world and five Vatican officials.

Dublin priest Monsignor Paul Tighe, has been appointed secretary to the committee.

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin said Mgr Tighe is a person of integrity and competence, whose innovation in media relations is “making a significant impact in the Universal Church”.

The new committee will make proposals within the next year to bring the Vatican more up to date with communications trends, improve coordination among departments and cut costs, a statement said.

The Vatican, which already has a number of internet sites and Twitter accounts, including that of Pope Francis, will use more digital media to reach a wider, younger audience, it said.

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Louisiana court challenges confessional secrecy

LOUISIANA
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Jul. 8, 2014 NCR Today

The Louisiana Supreme Court has issued a decision that may require a priest to violate the secrecy of the confessional.

The case involves the possible confession of a 12-year-old minor who allegedly was abused by a church parishioner in 2008. The complaint says that she told the priest during three separate confessions of her abuse, which involved inappropriate touching, kissing and saying that he wanted to make love to her.

Her parents are suing the priest, Rev. Jeff Bayhi, and the Diocese of Baton Rouge, because he did not report the abuse, which continued after the confessions. The alleged abuser died of a heart attack in 2009 during the criminal investigation.

According to the Times-Picayune, the parents of the minor claim that the priest told her to deal with it herself because “too many people would be hurt.” The girl reports, “He just said, ‘This is your problem. Sweep it under the floor.'”

The parents want the priest to testify whether the confession took place and what was said. The priest and the diocese say he cannot reveal what was said in confession.

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MPs for Portsmouth area back investigation into handling of child sex abuse allegations

UNITED KINGDOM
Portsmouth Herald

MPS have thrown their weight behind an independent inquiry into the handling by public bodies of allegations of child sex abuse.

Home secretary Theresa May last night announced a Hillsborough-style investigation will take place to seek the truth about widespread allegations of a paedophile ring with links to the establishment in the 1980s.

The inquiry will be given access to all government papers it requests, and could be converted into a full public inquiry if its chairman feels it is necessary.

Meanwhile, a separate review, led by NSPCC chief executive Peter Wanless, will look into an investigation conducted last year into the Home Office’s handling of child abuse allegations made over a 20-year period, as well as the response of police and prosecutors to information which was passed on to them.

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Paedophile inquiry will reveal vile secrets of the protected but only if done properly

UNITED KINGDOM
Mirror

BY KEVIN MAGUIRE

The paedophile Pandora’s Box will be opened to give up its vile secrets.

If the inquiry does its job properly, we’ll discover the names of the political Rolf Harrises, Jimmy Saviles, Stuart Halls and Max Cliffords who were disgracefully protected by the establishment.

The resistance of David Cameron and Home Secretary Theresa May to a Hillsborough-style probe was infuriating and yesterday’s U-turn is a victory for public pressure.

It is a vindication of Labour MP Tom Watson who was sneered at in October 2012 when he demanded an investigation into a paedophile.

It is a feather in the cap of his colleague, MP Simon Danczuk, who unmasked Rochdale abuser Cyril Smith then widened his targets.

It is a tribute to the survivors who refuse to be intimidated by their tormentors and bravely come forward. And it is a tribute to a free press that challenged official stonewalling and refused to be cowed by expensive legal threats.

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What Pope Francis Has Done Differently in Tackling the Sexual Abuse Scandal

UNITED STATES
PBS – Frontline

Click here for the story.

July 8, 2014 by Priyanka Boghani

Yesterday, Pope Francis met for the first time in his papacy with victims who suffered childhood sexual abuse at the hands of clergy members. In a sermon at a private mass for the victims, the pope used “some of his most emotional language yet,” speaking “like a sinner in confession,” wrote Jason Berry, religion writer at GlobalPost and author of Render Unto Rome: The Secret Life of Money in the Catholic Church.

FRONTLINE spoke with Berry this afternoon to find out more about Francis’s meeting with the victims, what his record in Argentina suggests about his current intentions, and the prospects for his efforts to reform the Vatican.

Berry coproduced Secrets of the Vatican, FRONTLINE’s inside look at the recent scandals that have rocked the church. The film rebroadcasts tonight on many PBS stations (check local listings).

What was different about what Pope Francis did yesterday?

First, Pope Francis spent a great deal of time, according to the press reports, with each of the individuals. The young woman who spoke to the Irish newspapers said he was unhurried, he didn’t look at his watch, and sat with her at length and listened to her. This was different from the approach that Pope Benedict took, with shorter meetings, and not as involved in gathering the emotional weight of each one of their accounts. I don’t mean that as a criticism of the former pope, but Francis decided to go more than the extra mile in spending time with them.

The second point is, his language struck me as quite a reflection of guilt on his part on behalf of the hierarchy of the church. He begged for forgiveness rather like a sinner going to confession. What’s significant there is that when someone in his position establishes a terrain of language, a territorial vocabulary, for discussing something that’s as aching and reaching as this scandal that has been building for years, it creates a kind of arena for ongoing exchanges.

Even though some of the survivors’ groups are attacking him, he’s actually done them a favor by speaking as bluntly as he did. The challenge for the pope and for the Vatican now is how they create the structural changes to meet the promise of the rhetoric.

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Tim Loughton MP: We have the child abuse inquiry…

UNITED KINGDOM
Conservative Home

Tim Loughton MP: We have the child abuse inquiry that I and others campaigned for. This is what it now needs to do.

By Tim Loughton

Tim Loughton is MP for East Worthing and Shoreham and a former Minister for Children and Families.

It was back in November 2012 that I published an open letter to the Prime Minister on this website requesting that he set up an overarching inquiry into historic child sex abuse in the wake of the flood of abuse stories coming out of the Jimmy Savile revelations.

Twenty months on, that flood had become a tsunami, engulfing the BBC, NHS, independent schools, churches, care homes – and it was threatening to cascade into the world of politics too.

Last month, together with Zac Goldsmith and five other MPs from other parties I wrote to the Home Secretary repeating that request, given the mounting pressure built up from the relentless headlines about yet another child abuse scandal. The campaigning website Exaro helped to spark a social media campaign, putting the matter on MPs’ radar – and after I wrote to all colleagues last week inviting them to co-sign our letter no fewer than 141 had done so by Monday, and rising.

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Savile victims’ lawyer backs NSPCC call on child abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

The call by the NSPCC chief to change the law so that failing to report child abuse is a crime has been welcomed by a lawyer who represents 176 victims of disgraced TV presenter and serial abuser Jimmy Savile.

Liz Dux, a lawyer with Slater & Gordon, said: “The NSPCC’s backing for mandatory reporting is a welcome and significant moment in our fight to protect future children from predators like Savile, Harris, Smith and Hall.

“This, coupled with an announcement earlier this week by Theresa May that an independent inquiry is to be held, signals we are moving in the right direction – the victims will take some heart.

“Universally the victims I work with say they want change, they support mandatory reporting.

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Ala. ex-pastor charged with sex abuse after 2 adults say he molested them as children

ALABAMA
Daily Reporter

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama — A former pastor at a Birmingham-area Baptist Church has been charged with sexual abuse and sodomy after two adults told investigators he molested them years ago when they were children.

Sharon Heights Baptist Church cut all ties with the Rev. Jay Strickland, who had served as the Jefferson County church’s administrative pastor, after sheriff’s investigators arrested him last month. Strickland was freed from jail on $70,000 bond and faces a preliminary court hearing July 17.

Authorities began investigating Strickland in April after a man came forward and said the minister had sexually abused him as a boy, al. com reported (http://bit.ly/VG1gdW ). Jefferson County sheriff’s Sgt. Jack Self said investigators later tracked down a woman who told them she too had been molested by Strickland during her childhood.

Few other details about the case have been released. Strickland’s defense attorney, Richard Jaffe, said authorities claim the abuse described by their witnesses happened at least seven years ago.

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Our Opinion: An encouraging step for Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Berkshire Eagle

It’s impossible to justify the Catholic Church’s decision to coverup the allegations of sexual abuse by clergy members that exploded like a July 4 firecracker several years ago. Sexual abuse in any form is a heinous act and has long-lasting repercussions for the victims. Church officials did not handle the scandal or its fallout well, and the higher-up officials have never held some of the perpetrators responsible.

Given that history and those circumstances, Pope Francis deserves credit for trying to deal with the situation in his own unorthodox way. Not only did he meet with six of the victims Monday, he begged for their forgiveness and vowed to hold bishops accountable for their handling of pedophile priests.

Do the pope’s actions change what happened? No. In his remarks, the pope made no mention of the countless victims or their families around the world, or whether bishops and other prelates involved in the cover-up would be fired or demoted. But it is a start. Asking for forgiveness is one of the first steps in the long process of healing. Through his words and his actions, the leader of the Catholic Church has acknowledged that this traumatic situation took place, and that those involved will be held responsible. Again, that is an important first step. And, it is another example of the willingness that Pope Francis has shown to address difficult situations that the Church appeared to sidestep or avoid before he became the Church’s spiritual leader.

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Royal Commission on child abuse helps Bega Valley man heal

AUSTRALIA
Bega District News

By Ben Smyth July 9, 2014

A BEGA Valley man who bravely shared his story of childhood abuse at the hands of Catholic teachers with BDN readers, has also had his traumatic past heard by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

John (not his real name) spent 10 days in Canberra as commissioners held private sessions and public hearings into the Marist Order as part of a sweeping inquiry into child sexual abuse and seemingly institutionalised cover-ups.

In 2012, when then Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced the Royal Commission, John said despite the anger, guilt and depression that has haunted him since his schooldays at Marcellin College in Randwick, he felt “joyful in the knowledge a day of reckoning was coming” (BDN, 16/11/12).

While the Royal Commission is in the process of requesting additional funding to continue for another two years, John believes that day of reckoning has arrived and now some semblance of healing can take place.

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Failing to report child abuse could become a crime as NSPCC backs law change to prevent cover-ups

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By MATT CHORLEY, MAILONLINE POLITICAL EDITOR

Anyone who fails to report child abuse would face criminal charges under plans being put to ministers.

Peter Wanless, the head of the NSPCC, said it should be a crime for someone to keep abuse secret in order to protect an organisation or an individual’s reputation.

Home Secretary Theresa May has left the door open to a change in the law in response to allegations that politicians, and institutions including the government, the BBC, the NHS and the Church were part of an Establishment cover-up of decades of sexual abuse.

In a major change in policy, Mr Wanless, who is leading a review into the Home Office’s handling of abuse allegations, said he now backed so-called ‘mandatory reporting’ of abuse.

Mr Wanless told the BBC: ‘If someone consciously knows that there is a crime committed against a child, and does nothing about it because they put the reputation of the organisation above the safety of that child, that should be a criminal offence.’

He also backed the idea of imposing a duty on hospitals, boarding schools and children’s homes to report abuse.

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‘Abuse crisis is not a thing of the past,’ says Irish archbishop

ROME
Catholic Herald (UK)

By CAROL GLATZ on Wednesday, 9 July 2014

The crisis of child abuse by clergy is not a thing of the past — it will linger until the Church humbly and courageously reaches out to all people still suffering in silence, said Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin.

“To some it might seem less than prudent to think that the Church would go out of its way to seek out even more victims and survivors,” opening up further possibilities for lawsuits, anguish and “trouble,” he told representatives from bishops’ conferences from around the world.

However, when Jesus tells pastors to leave behind their flock to seek out the one who is lost, that mandate “is itself unreasonable and imprudent but, like it or not, that is precisely what Jesus asks us to do,” he said in an introductory address on July 7.

The archbishop was one of a number of speakers at an annual meeting of the Anglophone Conference on the Safeguarding of Children, Young People and Vulnerable Adults. The 2014 conference was being held July 7-11 at the Pontifical Irish College in Rome and was hosted by bishops from Ireland and Chile. Every year, two different countries organize the conference.

Founded in 1996, the conference is an informal gathering bringing together delegates from the church in the Americas, Europe, Asia and Africa, to share best practices and develop solid norms in the prevention and handling of the scandal of sexual abuse.

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Kincora: Time we knew full truth of Belfast’s house of horrors

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Kincora: the name became a byword for depraved sex attacks on children in care. Is the scandal that threatened to bring the political establishment here crashing down finally about to give up its secrets 35 years on? Ivan Little reports

09 JULY 2014

Amid the non-stop conveyor belt of justice at the old Crumlin Road courthouse in Belfast at the time, a depraved group of senior civil servants, paramilitaries and politicians must have been hoping against hope as they watched the television news that the guilty pleas from the three men in the dock would be the end of their worries.

Court Number One wasn’t exactly packed to the rafters as Kincora Boys’ Home officials Billy McGrath, Raymond Semple and Joseph Mains whispered their one-word admissions to the 23 sex abuse charges against them in December 1981.

I and a small number of other reporters on the Press benches readied ourselves to take notes of what we expected would be a deluge of revelations about what the trio had done to at least 11 boys in their care between 1960 and 1980.

But the full story never came out during the proceedings. And if it hadn’t been for a briefing for a couple of us sitting on a window ledge in the courthouse by a senior RUC detective, it would have been even more difficult to tell what we did of the story of shameful abuse in bedrooms, toilets, landings and the TV room of the home, which stood on the Upper Newtownards Road at its junction with North Road.

Boys were sent there by the courts, or because it was thought they were in moral danger, but their problems were just beginning after they went through the front door of the detached house. …

A unionist councillor, Joss Cardwell, took his own life in 1983 after he was questioned by police. He was chairman of a council welfare committee and said he had statutory visiting responsibilities in relation to care homes. The Rev Ian Paisley was accused of failing to report McGrath’s abuse to police.

A member of his church, Valerie Shaw, claimed she told the DUP leader about McGrath’s homosexual activities eight years before he was arrested and brought to court.

“I approached Dr Paisley on at least seven occasions,” she said in TV interviews. “I asked him time and time again what he intended to do about this. My concern all along was very much for the fact that there were young boys under the threat of this man’s (McGrath’s) corruption.”

Dr Paisley denied the allegations against him and responded by calling for a full judicial inquiry. He said Ms Shaw did tell him about McGrath’s homosexuality, but not that he worked at Kincora. He said he regretted that Ms Shaw didn’t take her concerns to the police, but she countered that she had.

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Brother of child abuse inquiry judge Elizabeth Butler-Sloss was accused of ‘cover up’

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Matthew Holehouse, Political Correspondent, and Martin Evans
09 Jul 2014

The brother of the judge in charge of the Government’s inquiry into allegations of an establishment paedophile ring refused to prosecute a paedophile diplomat caught exchanging obscene material.

Sir Michael Havers, the late brother of Baroness Butler-Sloss, was accused of a “white-wash” after he backed a decision not to prosecute Sir Peter Hayman.

Baroness Butler-Sloss, a former president of the Family Division of the High Court who led the inquest into the death of Princess Diana, has been appointed by Theresa May to lead an independent inquiry into allegations that child sex abuse was covered up by state bodies, the church, political parties and the BBC. The Home Office said she had “impeccable credentials”.

But Simon Danczuk MP said the family connection made her ill-suited to investigate allegations about how the Government handled alleged paedophiles.

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Church preschool director fired

NEW YORK
Saratogian

By Paul Post, The Saratogian
POSTED: 07/08/14

SARATOGA SPRINGS >> The longtime director of a local church preschool and day-care program has been let go amidst allegations of child abuse, although no criminal charges have been filed.

St. Paul’s Lutheran Church terminated Joan Beaudoin of Clifton Park as director of its Christian Childhood Center in May, following an investigation by the state Office of Children and Family Services and Saratoga County Department of Social Services.

Beaudoin was immediately placed on administrative leave when the allegation was first lodged March 25. She was fired after an investigation by state and county officials substantiated such charges, according to the Rev. Adam Wiegand, the church pastor.

“We can’t, in good conscience, allow that person to continue with that on their record,” he said.

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Ky. Pastor Arrested for Statutory Rape of Teen Church Member

KENTUCKY
Fox 17

[with video]

Updated: Tuesday, July 8 2014

Roy Neal Yoakem, the 46-year-old pastor at the New Gospel Outreach Church in Scottsville, Ky., was arrested Monday for the statutory rape of a 14-year-old member of his church congregation, according to a Tuesday press release from the Gallatin Police Department.

Yoakem has is a convicted sex offender who lives in Scottsville, with a secondary address in Gallatin.

Yoakem is accused of assaulting the victim on two occasions; once at his church and once at his Gallatin residence in early June, according to the release.

Yoakem has been incarcerated on charges in Kentucky and was extradited to Sumner County on Monday.

Yoakem is registered in Tennessee as a violent sex offender for a conviction in Kentucky in 2005 for second-degree sexual abuse of an 8-year-old boy.

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Former pastor’s trial date set

TEXAS
Denton Record-Chronicle

By Megan Gray-Hatfield Staff Writer mgray@dentonrc.com
Published: 08 July 2014

A former Denton County pastor is set to face trial later this year after he allegedly tried to coerce a teenage girl to remove her clothes, law enforcement officials said.

Jeffrey Dale Williams, the former lead pastor at The Church of Corinth, will go on trial Dec. 1 on a charge of attempted sexual performance of a child, according to Denton County court records.

Attempted sexual performance of a child is a third-degree felony. If convicted, Williams faces a sentence of two to 10 years in state prison and a fine of up to $10,000.

The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services contacted Corinth police investigators about possible allegations of sexual abuse on April 3, 2013.

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SNAP responds to Pope’s remarks on sexual abuse by clerics

MINNESOTA
Northlands Newscenter

July 8, 2014

Duluth, MN (NNCNOW.com) — The Survivor Network of Those Abused by Priests or “SNAP” is responding to Pope Francis’ remarks about not tolerating sexual abuse by clerics.

On Monday, the Pope met with six people who have been abused by Roman Catholic priests.

This was the first time any Pope has met with victims of clergy sexual abuse inside the Vatican walls.

Verne Wagner, the Northern Minnesota Director of SNAP, says the group appreciates the efforts of the Pope to try to right the wrongs of the past, but he says action needs to be taken to follow the words.

“Until we really see changes by the Vatican, you have to wonder how sincere this is. Was this for publicity? Or will there actually be action taken to change how the church reacts to scandals and sexual abuse?” said Wagner.

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Nigeria: Police Arrest Pastor That Impregnates Married Women and Young Girls ‘In the Name of God’

NIGERIA
allAfrica

Vanguard

BY CHINENYEH OZOR, 9 JULY 2014

Nsukka — The Police in Nsukka, Enugu State, recently, arrested a 53-year-old man who claims to be the Pastor of Ministry of the Holy Trinity in Umudikwere community whom they alleged specializes in impregnating married women and young girls in his ministry.

Police sources alleged that the Pastor identified as Timothy Ngwu, the General Overseer of Ministry, sexually abuse female members of the ministry and claim that the Holy Spirit directs him to do so in the name of God.

How it was blown open

Crime Alert gathered that the alleged sexual exploits of the self-acclaimed man of God was blown open when his estranged wife, Veronica Ngwu, who hails from Udi L.G.A and have three children for the pastor, could no longer stomach the sexual rascality of her husband. She reportedly lodged complaint with the Anti- Child Trafficking Unit of the Criminal Investigation Department, Enugu, which led to the arrest of Timothy Ngwu, for alleged sex and child abuses/trafficking.

Veronica, the estranged wife of the suspect reportedly informed the police that she escaped from the ministry with one of her daughters when her husband impregnated her niece and claimed he was obeying the directives of the Holy Spirit and a prophetic revelation. She also informed detectives led by Gloria Udoka (DSP) that the situation at the Vineyard ministry of the Holy Trinity was better imagined than seen alleging that her husband converts married women and single girls to his own and impregnates all of them while pretending to be obeying spiritual directives.

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Church report into sex abuse published ten years on

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Church leaders have published a report into the sexual abuse by a Cathedral steward over three decades.

The Diocese of Chichester has published a report which was produced ten years ago in the wake of the conviction of Terence Banks.

Banks, who had a long association with Chichester Cathedral and had risen to the role of head steward, was convicted in 2001 for 32 sexual offences against 12 boys over 29 years.

Bishop of Chichester Dr Martin Warner said the report was being published now to “shed light on past events, to aid learning, build trust and foster openness” but not to cause “further pain”.

The CARMI Report, which was received by church leaders in 2004, followed an investigation by Sussex Police and was commissioned by the former Bishop of Chichester The Rt Rev’d Dr John Hind, review after the Banks trial.

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Catholics divided on meaning of pope’s meeting with victims

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

By Laura Crimaldi | GLOBE STAFF JULY 09, 2014

New Englanders touched by the clergy sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church are divided over whether Pope Francis’ first meeting with victims was sincere or a publicity stunt, but they agree on one thing: The gesture will mean little unless the pontiff pushes for change.

“I think meeting with six victims is a great start. It doesn’t mean that anything is going to change,” said Phil Saviano, a Roslindale resident who established the New England chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

Francis met on Monday with six victims, two each from Ireland, Germany, and the United Kingdom, in the hotel where he lives on Vatican grounds. They also joined the pontiff for his morning Mass.

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, attended the meeting, said Harry-Jacques Pierre, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Boston. O’Malley is a member of the pope’s new Commission for the Protection of Minors and also organized Pope Benedict XVI’s first meeting with abuse victims, which happened in Washington, D.C., in 2008. …

Anne Barrett Doyle, codirector of BishopAccountability.org, a Waltham group devoted to collecting documents about the abuse crisis, said Francis’ pledge was a first.

“The pope made an unambiguous commitment to hold bishops accountable for failing to protect children,” Barrett Doyle said. “We have not had a papal promise like this to date, one so plainly said. Now, we can hold the pope accountable for following through with this pledge.”

Some were skeptical, though, saying Francis has maintained the status quo with bishops since becoming pontiff in March 2013.

Paul Kellen, a founding member of the National Survivor Advocates Coalition, said the church so far has done much to shield bishops, but little to help sex abuse victims.

He cited the example of former Boston archbishop Bernard Law, who was accused of protecting abusive priests during his tenure, and was given a prestigious post at a basilica in Rome in 2004 by Pope John Paul II instead of being demoted.

Kellen also referred to Robert J. Carlson, a former auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, who responded 193 times in a court-ordered deposition that he could not remember details about priest child sexual abuse during his tenure. Carlson now leads the archdiocese in St. Louis.

Victims of abuse, Kellen said, “would believe that there was some value in what happened to them if it became the motivation to change the behavior of the institution. . . . That’s what I’m looking for.”

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LIAR Pope Francis, skip ‘forgive’ BS. Set poor nations free by returning your loot hidden in secret Vatican Swiss Banks. Set Jesus free from Vatican & Eucharist

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

Pope Francis imitates Saint John Paul II the Great

Pope Francis is imitating – (not Jesus) – but his Holy Father of Lies John Paul II the Great – read our related article, Cold-blood-ed John Paul is no saint for children because he said nothing and did nothing to save and protect them for 27 years http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2014/05/cold-blood-ed-pope-john-paul-ii-is-no.html

With pompous fanfare of empty words, words, words, the Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team arranged theatrics for John Paul II to ask forgiveness for many famous (e.g. Crusades, Galileo) Church crimes but not for his own singular crime and biggest sin which was his complicit hidden JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army with his poster boy and evil Achilles Heel, Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston, read more here http://jp2m.blogspot.ca/

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July 8, 2014

Lawsuit against Catholic Diocese questions confidentiality of confessional

LOUISIANA
WAFB

By Cheryl Mercedes

CLINTON, LA (WAFB) – The Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge has vowed to fight all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court to defend its beliefs.

It involves a lawsuit, allegations of the sexual abuse of a minor, and whether a priest can be forced to testify about what was said in the confessional.

The parents of a child who claims she was molested several years ago by an older parishioner of Our Lady of Assumption Catholic Church in Clinton, La. is suing the alleged now deceased perpetrator, George Charlet, Jr., along with a priest and the Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge.

Attorney Brian Abels, who is representing the parents, said the girl, then 14 years old, was sexually abused.

“This is kissing and touching and fondling. The very last time our client thought she was going to be raped,” Abels said.

The suit alleges the girl went to confession three times, each time telling the priest, Father Jeff Bayhi, that Charlet had touched her inappropriately and told her “he wanted to make love to her.”

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Alleged Victims of Church Sex Abuse Want More Action

NEW JERSEY
NJTV

[with video]

By Michael Hill
Correspondent

These three men survived priest sex abuse. They’ve heard two other popes apologize. Now Pope Francis.

“I beg your forgiveness for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders,” he said.

Leaders these three say who hid or harbored the abusers.

Mark Crawford is the New Jersey director of SNAP — the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. He says of his abuser, “Actually he’s still a priest today and he was allowed to retire, lives in New Jersey, works for the state. Never convicted and that’s what I’m talking about, these secrets are still well kept.”

“They have to help the victims of child abuse instead of spending millions and millions of dollars on the best lobbyists and lawyers,” said Fred Marigliano.

“I think it’s a good step forward. As we all know this is the third pope who has apologized for this scandal and I think it’s time for action,” Stephen Marlowe said.

The trio want cardinals and bishops to out and oust abusers.

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Schaap seeks reduced sentence in sexual abuse case

ILLINOIS
NWI Times

Jim Masters Times Correspondent

HAMMOND | Jack Schaap, the imprisoned former First Baptist Church of Hammond pastor, says in court documents he would have gone to trial on charges he sexually abused a 16-year-old church member rather than plead guilty if he was aware of how harsh his sentence would be.

Schaap, who is petitioning to have his 12-year sentence vacated, contends his attorney advised him his sentence would be a maximum 120 months if he pleaded guilty, more likely between three and four years, and perhaps as low as 18 months.

Schaap’s legal brief offers Sixth Amendment claims he had ineffective legal counsel. Upon entering his guilty plea, Schaap told Judge Rudy Lozano he did not realize his actions — which included having the girl driven from Illinois to Michigan to engage in sexual activity — were illegal.

A brief filed by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jill Koster seeking denial of Schaap’s appeal points to contradictions in his statements during sentencing proceedings in which “he acknowledged he faced a minimum 10 years in prison and a maximum of life in prison.”

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Baroness Butler-Sloss to lead paedophila inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Wales Online

Former High Court judge Baroness Butler-Sloss is to lead the independent inquiry into child sex abuse, Home Secretary Theresa May has announced.

The investigation is into the handling of allegations of paedophilia by state institutions as well as bodies such as the BBC, churches and political parties.

Crossbench peer Baroness Butler-Sloss is the former president of the family division of the High Court and chaired the Cleveland child abuse inquiry in the late 1980s.

Mrs May said: “In recent years, we have seen appalling cases of organised and persistent child sex abuse that have exposed serious failings by public bodies and important institutions.

“That is why the Government has established an independent panel of experts to consider whether these organisations have taken seriously their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse.”

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Parting Reflections on Norbert Krapf’s Catholic Boy Blues: Letting It Rip (for the Good of the Whole Church)

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Now that I’ve finished reading Norbert Krapf’s Catholic Boy Blues: A Poet’s Journal of Healing (Nashville: Greystone, 2014), I thought I’d share some parting thoughts about the book with you. I’ve blogged about it previously here and here.

As my previous postings about Catholic Boy Blues have noted, Krapf grew up in a closely knit German Catholic farm community in rural Indiana. It was in the context of that community, a beloved community, that he experienced repeated sexual abuse at the hands of his parish priest. He was not alone in the experience: as he knew at the time and then as he also learned down the road when he sought to come to terms with the childhood abuse, the priest was molesting other boys, too. In fact, he apparently abused boys for a number of years during which he pastored the parish in which Krapf grew up.

Catholic Boy Blues is Krapf’s attempt as an adult to come to terms with what happened to him as a child. It’s an attempt to exorcise the memory and effects of his abuse at the hands of a religious leader his parents and the rest of his community implicitly trusted. To banish the harm done to him — to remember it in a way that opens the painful memories to healing — he employs the poetic device of inviting a Greek chorus of voices, as it were, to mull over what happened to the devout young altar boy treated as an object by a grown man, the same trusted religious figure whose hands moved from grasping his child’s penis to putting holy oil on the head of a dying parishioner, blessing and baptizing the new-born babe, and consecrating the union of a man and a woman in marriage, as Krapf tells us in a poem entitled “The Hand” (49).

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Kellner’s Lawyer Seeking Tougher Sentence For Molester

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

07/08/14
Hella Winston
Special Correspondent

On the eve of convicted child molester Baruch Lebovits’ sentencing, a lawyer for Sam Kellner is asking both the judge and probation officer to consider Lebovits’ other alleged victims as well as alleged witness intimidation, tampering and perjury committed by Lebovits’ associates in connection with both his and Kellner’s prosecutions.

In separate letters, the lawyer, Niall MacGiollabhui, cites “well-established” case law that allows the court to consider not only prior offenses for which a defendant was convicted, but also those for which he has not been convicted.

“Once [this information is] considered,” MacGiollabhui writes, “I submit [that the court] will find that the currently promised sentence is woefully inadequate.”

Lebovits has pleaded guilty to felony sex abuse charges and is expected to be sentenced on July 9 to two years in prison; with credit for time served and good behavior he is expected to serve only several months. Legal observers say it is extremely rare that a judge would adjust the sentence based on such a pleading.

Kellner was charged in 2010 with paying a young man, referred to in court documents as MT, to fabricate abuse claims against Lebovits and attempting to extort the Lebovits family through emissaries. However, the case against him was dismissed in March after a reinvestigation by the new Brooklyn district attorney, Ken Thompson, found that the witnesses lacked credibility.

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IOR President Freyberg: Phase One of reform concluded

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

[with audio]

(Vatican Radio) The Institute for Religious Works (IOR) released its balance sheets Tuesday for the year 2013 showing that in a bid to strengthen transparency the IOR closed the accounts of three thousand customers.

They also show that in 2013 the institute, also known as the Vatican Bank allocated € 54 million euro to the budget of the Holy See.

Speaking to Vatican Radio’s Fr Bernd Hagenkord, the outgoing President of The Institute for Religious Works, Ernst Von Freyberg said that Phase One of the reform of the IOR had been concluded.

Below find a full transcription of an interview in English with President of the Institute for the Works of Religion, IOR, Ernst Von Freyberg. Listen to this interview with the Head of Vatican Radio’s German section Father Bernd Hagenkord SJ.

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Nun-slaying Ohio priest to be buried with full honors: ‘He was a sinner, as are we all’

OHIO
The Raw Story

By Travis Gettys
Monday, July 7, 2014

An Ohio priest who died while serving a life sentence for murdering a nun will be buried with full honors.

Father Gerald Robinson was convicted in 2006 of choking Sister Margaret Ann Pahl to the edge of death in the sacristy of the former Mercy Hospital and then stabbing her 32 times in the chest, neck, and face on April 5, 1980 – the day before Easter and one day before the nun would have turned 72.

According to the Toledo Blade, Robinson presided over Sister Margaret’s Mass of the Resurrection.

The 76-year-old Robinson died Friday morning in hospice at a Columbus hospital run by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

His cause of death has not yet been reported, but the priest had been treated at the hospice for heart trouble. …

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests and the National Survivors Advocate Coalition have asked Father Charles Ritter to hold a small, private funeral for Robinson and explain why he was not given a full burial.

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Ex-Alabama pastor charged with sexual abuse, sodomy of children

NEW YORK/ALABAMA
New York Daily News

BY NINA GOLGOWSKI NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

A former Alabama pastor has been charged with sexual abuse and sodomy after two adults came forward accusing him of molesting them as children.

Ex-Birmingham-area pastor, Rev. Jay Strickland, has since bonded out of jail following last month’s charges of two counts of sexual abuse and one count of first-degree sodomy.

An investigation into the alleged abuse was launched in April after a man came forward accusing Strickland of abusing him as a child.

Shortly after, Jefferson County sheriff’s Sgt. Jack Self told AL.com that they tracked down a woman who echoed similar child abuse allegations from years ago.

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Jefferson County man charged with sexual abuse of children

ALABAMA
WSFA

By Brianne Britzius
By Christy Hutchings

JEFFERSON COUNTY, AL (WBRC) –
A UAB nurse anesthetist is accused of sexually abusing two people when they were children.

Jay Strickland is charged with two counts of sexual abuse and one count of first-degree sodomy.

The charges were filed after a man and woman came forward with information claiming Strickland abused them when they were younger.

Strickland is out of jail after posting a $70,000 bond. Court records indicate he is from Morris.

UAB Hospital said they have placed Strickland on administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation. They released this statement:

“Jay Strickland has been placed on administrative leave pending the proper investigation of the circumstances of his arrest. Until more information is available, it would be inappropriate to comment further.”

Strickland’s attorney, Richard Jaffe, released this statement:

“The law firm of Jaffe and Drennan represents Jay Strickland who faces allegations that are claimed to have occurred over seven or more years ago. Jay is deeply distressed and shocked about these unproven allegations, according to Richard S. Jaffe his lead attorney. Jay has resigned from his volunteer leadership position with his former church. Unfortunately these charges must and need to be fairly and vigorously tested in a court of law. Jay has an exemplary background and character, and those who know him are extremely upset and equally shocked by the allegations.”

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Former Brookside assistant pastor…

ALABAMA
North Jefferson News

Former Brookside assistant pastor, Warrior EMS officer Jay Strickland arrested on sexual abuse charges

By Robert Carter
North Jefferson News

MORRIS — A former assistant pastor at a Brookside church, who also served with the Warrior Fire Department, has been arrested on charges of sexual abuse and sodomy.

Jay Strickland, who was an administrative pastor at Sharon Heights Baptist Church, was arrested on June 5 on charges that he sexually abused two separate people, both of whom were children at the time.

Jefferson County Sheriff’s Sgt. Jack Self said their office first learned of the accusations three months ago when a male victim came forward. In the course of the investigation, it was determined that another female victim was involved.

Both victims are now adults and live outside the state, Self said.

Strickland, 50 and a Morris resident, was arrested on June 5 and charged with two counts of sexual abuse and one count of sodomy. He was released from jail on $70,000 bond, and faces a preliminary hearing on July 17.

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Former Jefferson County pastor charged with sexual abuse and sodomy

ALABAMA
AL.com

By Carol Robinson | crobinson@al.com
on July 08, 2014

JEFFERSON COUNTY, Alabama – A former pastor at a Jefferson County church is charged with sexual abuse and sodomy after two adult victims came forward claiming he abused them as children.

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office charged the Rev. Jay Strickland, a UAB nurse anesthetist and former administrative pastor at Sharon Heights Baptist Church in Brookside, with two counts of sexual abuse and one count of first degree sodomy.

Strickland is on administrative leave from UAB pending investigation.

Sheriff’s Sgt. Jack Self said the investigation was launched in April after a male victim came forward and reported he had been abused by Strickland when he was a child. The victim is now an adult and lives in another state.

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Clergy Abuse Survivors Ask Charlotte Diocese for More Outreach

NORTH CAROLINA
WFAE

[with audio]

By NICK DE LA CANA

A group of clergy abuse survivors is criticizing the Catholic Diocese of Charlotte for its handling of sexual abuse cases. This comes on the heels of a meeting between Pope Francis and abuse survivors yesterday, and the recent dismissal of criminal and civil sexual assault cases in the Charlotte Diocese.

In 2010, Father Joseph Kelleher was charged in Stanly County with taking indecent liberties with a child when he was a priest in Albemarle in the 1970s. On July 1st, his case was dismissed after the court determined the 86-year-old was mentally incompetent. Court documents say he has dementia and is delusional.

Pam Wennersten Laico, whose brother was sexually abused by a Catholic priest in Pittsburgh, speaks to reporters. She was joined by David Fortwengler, left, who was assaulted in Maryland when he was 11.

In June, two separate lawsuits were dismissed in which two unnamed men accused the Dioceses of Charlotte and Raleigh of covering up sexual abuse crimes committed by Kelleher and another priest, Father Richard Farwell, who was convicted in Rowan County in 2004 of taking indecent liberties with a child.

The judge dismissed those cases because the statute of limitations had run out. It was too late to file a lawsuit.

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Judge: Archdiocese Responsible for Alleged Misconduct of Priest

ST. LOUIS (MO)
CBS St. Louis

Kevin Killeen (@KMOXKilleen)
July 8, 2014

LINCOLN COUNTY, Mo. (KMOX) – A judge in Lincoln County rules the St. Louis Archdiocese is responsible for the alleged misconduct of one of its priests—even off church property.

It’s the civil case of Father Joseph Jiang, accused of wrongdoing with a young girl in Lincoln County.
Attorney Ken Chackes represents the girl’s family.

“The courts say that a church is responsible for the conduct of a priest, even off property, when he is only off property but still doing the duties of the priest,” he says.

The Archdiocese had asked that the case be dismissed, arguing it could not be held responsible for the faraway conduct of one of its priests. The judge denied that request.

“We argued that this priest was only allowed into the home of this family because they knew he was a priest, they trusted him as a priest, he came there as a priest, he prayed with them there as a priest, so he was still doing his priestly duties,” Chackes says.

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Louisiana Court Orders Catholic Priest To Break Confessional Seal

LOUISIANA
The Daily Caller

Tristyn Bloom

A recent Louisiana Supreme Court ruling may land a Catholic priest in jail for refusing to testify about a confession he may have heard several years ago, the Times-Picayune reports.

The plaintiffs in the case allege that their underage daughter mentioned during confession to Fr. Jeff Bayhi several years ago that an elderly parishioner inappropriately touched her, and that the priest failed to report it to the authorities.

The current Louisiana Children’s Code says that mandated reporters–people who have regular contact with vulnerable groups like children and are legally required to report signs of abuse– include “any priest…or other similarly situated functionary of a religious organization unless not required to report a confidential communication as defined in the Code of Evidence Article 511.”

The Code of Evidence Article allows exemptions for confidential communication “it is made privately and not intended for further disclosure except to other persons present” and notes that the privilege “may be claimed by the person or by his legal representative. The clergyman is presumed to have authority to claim the privilege on behalf of the person or deceased person.”

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Lawsuit against St. Louis archdiocese for abuse allowed to proceed

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KMOV

(KMOV.com) – A judge has refused to dismiss a lawsuit filed against the St. Louis Archdiocese in connection with an abuse case against a priest.

The archdiocese was sued after the family of a victim claimed it did not do enough to protect their daughter from Joseph Jiang, who is accused of abusing her on the grounds of the Cathedral Basilica and at her Lincoln County home.

The archdiocese argued it could not be held responsible for abuse that did not occurred on church property.

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Archdiocese denied motion to dismiss abuse case

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK

Kevin S. Held, KSDK
July 8, 2014

ST. LOUIS – A Lincoln County judge denied a request by the Archdiocese of St. Louis and Archbishop Robert Carlson to dismiss a civil suit filed by the family of a girl claiming she was the victim of sexual abuse by a priest.

The lawsuit, filed after a St. Louis circuit judge dismissed abuse charges against Fr. Joseph Jiang, alleges Archbishop Carlson did not do anything to stop the molestation. The family accused Jiang of having inappropriate contact with the girl on four separate occasions. The charges were dropped in November 2013.

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Accused New Square Molester Pleads Not Guilty

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

Accused New Square child sex abuser Rabbi Moshe Menachem Taubenfeld pleaded not guilty this morning to second-degree course of sexual conduct against a child, the Journal News reported.

Judge William Nelson continued Taubenfeld’s $25,000 cash bail and issued a order of protection compelling Taubenfeld to stay away from his alleged victim.

Taubenfeld is due back in court July 15.

No New Square child sex abuser has reportedly ever been sentenced to prison. Most are never reported to police, allegedly because New Square’s leader, the Skvere Rebbe Rabbi David Twersky, forbids it. The only known case that was reported and prosecuted, Taubenfeld’s younger brother Herschel, ended in a no-prison plea deal – even though the Herschel Taubenfeld was caught on tape admitting the abuse.

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New Square Rabbi Moshe Taubenfeld arraigned on sexual abuse charges

NEW YORK
News 12

NEW CITY – A New Square rabbi, accused of sexually abusing a child multiple times pleaded not guilty in Rockland County Court today.

Rabbi Moshe Menachem Taubenfeld, 55, pleaded not guilty to charges that he sexually abused a boy repeatedly from September 2001 until May 2006.

Taubenfeld’s accuser, who spoke to News 12 using the name ‘Laiby,’ says he turned to the rabbi for counseling after the attacks on Sept. 11. He claims members of the Hasidic community tried to pressure him and his family not to press charges.

During Tuesday’s arraignment, the judge issued a temporary order of protection against Taubenfeld, forbidding him to have any contact with his alleged victim.

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LA- Unusual court ruling on confession, SNAP responds

LOUISIANA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, July 7, 2014

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

The Louisiana Supreme Court may compel a Catholic priest to testify in court about an alleged confession in a clergy sex abuse and cover up lawsuit.

[The Times-Picayune]

This is what happens when Catholic officials conceal child sex crimes for decades – they lose credibility among judges. And this is what happens when Catholic officials deliberately and deceptively exploit confessional confidentiality.

Often, we’ve seen Catholic officials falsely claim that conversations about abuse were confessions, so they could keep hiding the truth from police, prosecutors, parents and parishioners. We hope that’s not the case here.

We hope that anyone who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by Fr. Jeff Bayhi or cover ups by Baton Rouge Catholic officials – will speak up, get help, expose wrongdoers and protect kids.

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COURT ORDERS PRIEST TO REVEAL CONFESSION

LOUISIANA
Breitbart News

by AUSTIN RUSE 8 Jul 2014

The Supreme Court of Louisiana has ordered a Catholic priest to reveal something said to him in confession, asking him to do something that would result in his automatic excommunication from the Catholic Church.

The case revolves around a 12-year-old girl who confessed to the priest that she had sexual relations with an older man who also attended her Church. A law suit was brought against the priest and the Diocese of Baton Rouge after the accused man died of a heart attack and therefore the criminal investigation had ended.

The young girl was said to have testified that she told the priest in confession what had happened and that his response was that it was her problem and she should “Sweep it under the floor.” The suit brought against the priest and the Diocese seeks damages for sexual abuse. The suit charges that, under state law, the priest had a legal obligation to report what the girl told him because he was a “mandatory reporter.”

The church holds that anything said in confession is sacrosanct and can never be revealed. Laws around the world and in all 50 US states recognize the inviolability of the confessional.

Lower courts upheld the claims of the Church, which have been a part of jurisprudence for centuries, but the State Supreme Court decided in May that his testimony can be compelled since the confidentiality of confession was waived by the girl.

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Sexual abuse lawsuit against St. Louis priest pushes forward

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By Lilly Fowler lfowler@post-dispatch.com 314-340-82210

A sexual abuse lawsuit involving the Rev. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang is moving forward, despite attempts by the Archdiocese of St. Louis to have the case dismissed.

The archdiocese argued that the court should dismiss the lawsuit on the grounds that the alleged sexual abuse did not occur on church property, according to a statement released by plaintiff attorney Ken Chackes.

The civil lawsuit accuses Jiang of fondling a teenage girl from Lincoln County. Much of the alleged abuse is said to have occurred in the girl’s home. In the lawsuit, Chackes argues that Jiang would not have been welcomed into the victim’s home if it were not for his position in the archdiocese.

Criminal charges surrounding the same allegations against Jiang were dismissed last year.

Jiang is also accused of sexually abusing a young boy at St. Louis the King School, the elementary school at the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica.

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Group urges Charlotte Diocese to apologize for abuse

NORTH CAROLINA
WSOC

[with video]

By Stephanie Coueignoux

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Members of a support group for people abused by priests want the Charlotte Diocese to admit two priests molested children.

Monday, the diocese applauded Pope Francis’ personal apology to four European victims.

Pam Wennersten Laico became incredibly emotional as she spoke about how she said a local priest sexually abused her brother.
“I can’t believe this one priest destroyed our family, destroyed our entire family,” she said.

She and others are now calling on Bishop Peter Jugis to help the four Charlotte area men they say were sexually abused more than 30 years ago.

“What has Bishop Jugis done for those four men to help them rebuild their lives and put one foot in front of the other?” Laico said.

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Now, Pope Francis needs to act on clergy sexual abuse

UNITED STATES
Bangor Daily News

Posted July 08, 2014

Editorial

In the 16 months since he assumed the papacy, Pope Francis has projected an image of humility and open arms to the outside world — especially when compared with the image of the Catholic Church projected by his predecessor.

It hasn’t taken much for Pope Francis to make waves.

Soon after becoming pope, he traveled to a juvenile detention center outside Rome and washed the feet of 12 young people, including two Muslims and two women — shocking traditionalists while expanding the reach of a custom meant to emulate Jesus washing the feet of his disciples.

Last summer, as he returned to the Vatican from a trip to Brazil, the pontiff said of gay priests, “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?” It was the first time a leader of the Catholic Church used the word “gay,” and it marked a change in attitude toward gay clergy just eight years after Francis’ predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, called homosexuality “an objective disorder.”

Pope Francis also has called for a greater role for women in the Catholic Church and he has called on young Catholics to stir up “trouble in the dioceses” in order to forge a church more connected to the people.

Even without major policy changes within the church, a pope’s gestures and statements can have a powerful effect in shifting public attitudes. But even when it comes to gestures, Pope Francis has fallen short in addressing the clergy sexual abuse that has irreparably damaged victims and done serious harm to the Catholic Church.

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Would You Embrace a Pedophile Priest?

UNITED STATES
Standing on My Head

July 8, 2014 By Fr. Dwight Longenecker

Pope Francis famously kissed a man with a horrible physical deformity, but what if he kissed a man who was even more horribly deformed in his soul? What if he were to go to prison to hear the confession of a pedophile priest?

The Pope has met with some victims of priestly sex abuse and quite right. I’m sure everyone agrees: let’s do as much as we can to make it up to the victims of priestly sex abuse. Let’s make sure we have adequate child protection plans in place. Let’s have a zero tolerance policy on sex abuse. Let’s make sure the bishops who were covering up are stopped. Let’s guarantee that the police will be brought in when a Catholic priest breaks the law. Let’s stop this terrible crime and protect the children.

Once all that is said and done what do you do with a pedophile priest? Would you be able to forgive a man who was guilty of this horror?

What is your attitude? Would you “lock him up and throw away the key?” Do you want to do something worse–castrate him maybe or maybe throw him in among the demonic thugs in prison hoping that they do the dirty work and torture the guy before they finally kill him? It’s understandable that you would feel that way.

If the man is guilty of a crime he must serve his time, but then what?

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Pope Meets Sex Abuse Victims, Bearing A Plea For Forgiveness

UNITED STATES
NPR – All Things Considered

[with audio]

by SYLVIA POGGIOLI
July 07, 2014

In his first meeting with victims of clerical sex abuse, Pope Francis asked forgiveness on behalf of the church.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

At the Vatican today Pope Francis had his first meeting with victims of clergy. He vowed to hold bishops accountable for the protection of children. The meeting came nearly 16 months after Francis was elected. Victim support groups said it was long overdue. For more on this NPR’s Sylvia Poggioli joins us from Rome. Hello Sylvia.

SYLVIA POGGIOLI, BYLINE: Hello, Robert.

SIEGEL: And I understand the Pope held a Mass with these victims, including a dramatic homily. What did he say?

POGGIOLI: Well, the Pope pronounced his strongest words yet on clerical sex abuse. He begged forgiveness from the victims and said, sex abuse of minors is more than a despicable action, it’s like a sacrilegious cult in the church that profaned God. He said, he realizes many have suffered unrelenting emotional and spiritual pain, and even despair, and some have turned to drugs and resorted to suicide. And he vowed that he will not tolerate abusers and that bishops will be held accountable if they shield them.

SIEGEL: What do we know about the victims who were present with the Pope?

POGGIOLI: There were three men and three women – two each from Britain, Germany and Ireland. Names and ages were not revealed. The Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said, the Pope met for about half an hour with each of them and listened very attentively to their stories. The six participants, he said, were very moved by the encounter. But one victim, 43-year-old Marie Cain, later told the Irish Times she told the pope that cover-ups continue and that he has the power to change things. Now interestingly there were no Americans present, even though the sex abuse scandals erupted first in the U.S. It may be that since American watch-dog groups have been among the most critical of the church, the Vatican may have selected a group of survivors more open to reconciliation and more likely to stay out of the media spotlight.

SIEGEL: Sylvia, many victims groups have criticized the Pope for being slow to speak out on the issue of sex abuse and he did anger many of those same groups when he said, in an interview in March, that the Catholic Church has done more than any other organization to root out pedophiles. So how are those groups reacting to today’s meeting?

POGGIOLI: Well, you know, most watch-dog groups won’t be satisfied until the Vatican definitively requires all bishops and religious superiors to report suspected cases of sex abuse of minors to civil authorities. And yet the director of bishopaccountability.org, Anne Barrett Doyle, said, that though over-due, the meeting was positive and the Pope’s homily recognized the terrible impact of abuse on victim’s families. She said, Francis made a significant and historic promise to discipline those who fail to respond adequately to child sexual abuse. But the spokesman for a German survivor group, Norbert Denef, called it a public relations event. Vatican spokesman father Lombardi said it was anything but a PR stunt.

SIEGEL: Sylvia, I understand that Pope Francis has come in for criticism recently, not for his actions as Pope, but as archbishop of Buenos Aires some years ago.

POGGIOLI: Yeah. A recent report by bishopaccountability.org shows that the future Pope was silent on the issue and refused to meet with victims. Just ahead of today’s meeting a group of Argentine survivors wrote him a letter expressing pain that they had not been included. And commenting on today’s meeting, Anne Barrett Doyle of Bishop of bishopaccountability.org said, avoidance, silence and denial were successful containment tactics in Latin America but they will not work on the global stage and they are not consistent with the mercy and compassion so evident in Francis’ papacy.

SIEGEL: That’s NPR’s Sylvia Poggioli in Rome talking about Pope Francis’ meeting today with six victims of clergy sex abuse. Sylvia, thanks.

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Brainfood from the Heartland

OHIO
Vindy.com

The Louie b. Free Radio Show

Schedule for July 08, 2014

Scheduled Guests

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests – SNAP

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests – the largest, oldest and most active support group for women and men wounded by religious authority figures (priests, ministers, bishops, deacons, nuns and others). We are an independent and confidential organization, with no connections with the church or church officials. We are also a non-profit, certified 501 (c) (3) organization and we are here to help. SNAP was founded by Chicago’s Barbara Blaine in 1988. Since then, SNAP has helped thousands of survivors. We offer support in person, (via monthly self-help group meetings in chapters across the country), ove the phone, online, and twice-a-year at national meetings. We also provide a safe and productive outlet for the passion many survivors feel toward preventing future abuse.

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Pope Meets Abuse Victims, Begs Forgiveness for Church

CALIFORNIA
NBC Bay Area

video

A rare move was made by the Pope. He asked for forgiveness from people who were sexually abused by priests. Pope Francis met one-on-one with several victims. Monday’s meeting happened in the Vatican but it impacted many abuse victims here in the Bay Area. NBC Bay Area’s Monte Francis reports from San Francisco and talks to a local victim of sexual abuse

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Chichester child abuse victims wait 10 years for report

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A report on child abuse in the diocese of Chichester has been published more than a decade after it was written, following pressure from victims.

The report on abuse between the 1970s and 2000 in the diocese and at the Cathedral was written in January 2004.

The case review followed the conviction of Terence Banks in 2001 for 32 sexual offences against 12 boys over 29 years.

The diocese said victims had “consistently asked for the full facts to be brought to light”.

The review was commissioned by the then Bishop of Chichester, the Right Reverend Dr John Hind.

Banks had a long association with Chichester Cathedral and grew up living in the Treasury, before leaving home to move to London.

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Pope Meets with Clergy Sex Abuse Victims

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Statement by Anne Barrett Doyle
Co-Director, BishopAccountability.org

An archival organization that gathers documents and data about the global Catholic abuse crisis

July 7, 2014

Though overdue, Pope Francis’s meeting today with clergy sex abuse victims was a positive and necessary step. The Pope’s homily shows some readiness to be transformed by his encounter in Rome with the survivors, and makes several important points – he emphasizes the specifically Catholic nature of abuse by priests, and the terrible impact of abuse on the victims’ families, and the role of “Church leaders.” (See the English and Spanish text of the Pope’s homily.)

Most notably, the pope made a significant and historic promise to discipline bishops who fail to respond adequately to child sexual abuse: “All bishops must carry out their pastoral ministry with the utmost care in order to help foster the protection of minors, and they will be held accountable.”

While the pope’s description of bishops’ culpability as “sins of omission” is inaccurate in the extreme, his is still a stern and specific acknowledgement that bishops must ensure the safety of children.

But now Pope Francis must internalize and personalize his point about Church leaders who “did not respond adequately to reports of abuse.” His future actions on this crucial point must begin from his own past.

As Argentina’s most powerful archbishop, he refused to meet with victims, and he stayed largely silent on the issue of clergy sex abuse, except to issue a surprising denial that he had ever handled an abusive priest. His only known action was to commission a behind-the-scenes report to judges that sought exoneration of a criminally convicted priest by impugning the credibility of the priest’s victims.

Avoidance, silence, and denial were successful containment tactics in Latin America, but they will not work on the global stage, and they are not consistent with the mercy and compassion so evident in Francis’s papacy.

Although his record on abuse is not encouraging, it is possible that Pope Francis will allow his first meeting with victims to radicalize him. The test of his sincerity will be the actions he now takes. We will have some reason for hope if:

1) He quickly schedules a second meeting to include the Argentine victims he ignored when he was their spiritual leader.

2) He demonstrates transparency with one or two significant directives. He should immediately order the release of the Vatican abuse documents currently being withheld from Australia’s Royal Commission. He should also order the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to release the names, assignment histories, and full case files of all 848 priests who were laicized in the last decade. He thereby would make common cause with abuse victims worldwide, as well as the 30-plus U.S. bishops and religious superiors who already have published the names of credibly accused priests.

3) He changes canon law to require bishops and religious superiors worldwide to report suspected child sexual abuse to civil authorities. The two recent UN hearings have drawn attention to the Holy See’s policy of allowing bishops not to report if local law does not require them to do so. This laxness has had devastating results: In countries with weak reporting laws, abusers are staying in ministry, and children are still at risk. In 2013, a criminal court in Argentina had to dismiss a case against a priest who had abused up to 50 boys; the statute of limitations had expired because his archbishop, Cardinal Estanislao Esteban Karlic of the Parana archdiocese, had refused to report the priest’s crimes in 1995. The cardinal instead allowed the priest to move to another Argentine diocese, where he became pastor of a parish. The cardinal’s lawyer applauded the dismissal of the case, saying, “Parents should have made the complaint.”

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COURT RULES AGAINST SEAL OF CONFESSION

LOUISIANA
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on a ruling made by the Supreme Court of Louisiana:

In 2008, a fourteen-year-old girl alleges that she told her parish priest that she was being abused by a now-deceased lay member of their parish. The girl alleges the disclosures came during the Sacrament of Confession. Now her parents are suing the priest, and the Diocese of Baton Rouge, for failing to report the alleged abuse. The State’s Supreme Court has ruled that the priest, Fr. Jeff Bayhi, may be compelled to testify as to whether the Confessions took place, and if so, what the contents of any such Confessions were.

Confession is one of the most sacred rites in the Church. The Sacrament is based on a belief that the seal of the confessional is absolute and inviolable. A priest is never permitted to disclose the contents of any Confession, or even allowed to disclose that an individual did seek the Sacrament. A priest who violates that seal suffers automatic excommunication from the Church.

As a result of this ruling Fr. Bayhi may now have to choose between violating his sacred duty as a priest and being excommunicated from the Church, or refusing to testify and risk going to prison. The Diocese said Fr. Bayhi would not testify.

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NY- Priest charged with child porn misses court, SNAP responds

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

for immediate release: Tuesday, July 08, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314-503-0003, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

A New York priest, who was scheduled for a plea deal today in his child pornography case, did not appear before the judge. We hope this case does not have any delays and if the priest gets a plea deal that it is harsh and protects innocent children.

[Post-Standard]

Fr. Robert Ours, who is currently living in Syracuse, was arrested in May for child porn charges. We hope whether this goes to trial or there is a plea deal is his superiors in the Syracuse Catholic diocese aggressively seek out others who may have seen, suspected or suffered Fr. Ours’ crimes and urge them to contact police and prosecutors immediately.

Additionally, Bishop Robert Cunningham should visit every parish Fr. Ours worked and beg witness, whistleblowers, and victims to come forward and report to secular officials. And we hope anyone who was hurt by Fr. Ours will stop suffering in silence and self-blame, get help and start healing.

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Church sex abuse survivors seek more than an apology from Pope Francis

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

Jason Berry

Pope Francis said the clergy abuse crisis was “camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained” Monday in Rome.

He also used some of his most emotional language yet in a Vatican-distributed video of his sermon at a private Mass for six adults victimized by priests as children.

The survivors, two each from Ireland, Germany and the UK, spent the weekend at Santa Marta, the Vatican residential hotel where the pope lives. It typically houses visiting churchmen.

The group had breakfast with the pope, and met individually with him in sessions through the morning.

Francis compared clerical abuse of children to “a sacrilegious cult.”

The pope spoke, too, like a sinner in confession: “I beg your forgiveness, too for the sins of omissions on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse made by family members, as well as by abuse victims themselves.”

“Are sins of omissions not also crimes?” Alberto Athié, a prominent advocate for abuse survivors, said in an interview by phone from his home in Mexico City.

“Is this only about local ecclesiastical authorities, when in fact they were and are acting under the provisions of the Holy See?” ruminated Athié, who left the priesthood and a high-profile position with the Mexican bishops’ conference in 1999, protesting the cover-up of a pedophile.

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JULY 2014

UNITED KINGDOM
Diocese of Chichester – Church of England

This report was completed in 2004. It refers to a period of time in the history of Chichester Cathedral and the Diocese of Chichester from the 1970s until 2000, when a serial child sex offender was able to use church networks to gain the trust of children and parents and commit sexual offences. This offender was convicted of these offences in 2001 and sentenced to 16 years’ imprisonment, after a lengthy and thorough investigation by Sussex Police.

Today, as we publish this report, first and foremost our thoughts are with the survivors and their families. The effects of abuse can last a lifetime, and the passing of the years may or may not have brought any kind of healing. It is our sincere hope that those affected by these crimes have found a measure of peace over time. Directly following this offender’s conviction, a number of senior clergy expressed their profound sorrow for the victims’ suffering. Now, in 2014, we wish to join our voices with theirs: as Christians we are profoundly ashamed of abuse that has happened in church or church institutions. We extend our most sincere apologies to survivors and their families, though we know that this can never repair the damage done.

Following the trial, the former Bishop of Chichester, the Rt Rev’d Dr John Hind, commissioned an independent author, Edi Carmi, to provide him with a report. Edi Carmi worked with a multi-agency steering group that was chaired independently by His Honour Judge Peter Collier QC. This process was designed to replicate the standard of Serious Case Reviews at the time, as defined in the government guidance, Working Together to Safeguard Children 1999. It was received by the Bishop of Chichester in 2004, and the recommendations were invaluable in informing practice in the Cathedral and across the Diocese. This report marked the beginning of a crucial process of self-reflection and learning that continued with the published reports by Roger Meekings, Baroness Butler-Sloss and of the Archiepiscopal Visitation. The learning gained from this process of rigorous scrutiny informs every aspect of our safeguarding practice today, which has moved on enormously since 2004.

At the time this report was received, Serious Case Reviews were not published in their entirety. Our decision to publish this report now has been informed by a number of factors, the most important of which has been our interaction with victims of sexual abuse in churches, who have consistently asked for the full facts to be brought to light, so that lessons are learned and everything possible is done to ensure these awful events are not repeated. Sexual offenders operate in the shadows of our communities and exploit any weaknesses in culture and process that exist, as has been shown many times recently in cases across the country in a number of different institutions. Reports such as this illuminate those weaknesses and the ways offenders use them, in the hope that future practice is improved and children are better protected. It is for this reason we are publishing this report today.

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Safeguarding report published

UNITED KINGDOM
Diocese of Chichester – Church of England

Safeguarding Report Published

The Bishop of Chichester, Dr Martin Warner and the Cathedral Chapter have welcomed the publication of a report which reviewed safeguarding practices in Chichester Cathedral and the Diocese.

The CARMI Report, received in 2004, followed an investigation by Sussex Police resulting in the trial and conviction of an offender for child abuse in 2001. The previous Bishop of Chichester, The Rt Rev’d Dr John Hind, commissioned a review after the trial, to identify learning and produce recommendations. This report is an outcome of that review.

The review was designed to replicate the standard of Serious Case Reviews at the time and was invaluable in informing and improving safeguarding practices in the Cathedral and the Diocese.

Dr Warner and the Cathedral Chapter said: “Today, as we publish this report, first and foremost our thoughts are with the survivors and their families. The effects of abuse can last a lifetime and the passing of the years may or may not have resulted in any kind of healing. As Christians we are profoundly ashamed of abuse that has happened in church or church institutions. We extend our most sincere apologies to all survivors and their families, though we know that this can never repair the damage done.

They added: “It is our sincere hope that those affected by these crimes will regard the publication of the Report as a positive step. Our intention is to shed light on past events, to aid learning, build trust and foster openness, not to cause further pain. In this way, the publication is intended to reinforce our commitment to a continuous review of our safeguarding practices and procedures.”

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Chichester Diocese publishes sex offender report after ten years

UNITED KINGDOM
Chichester Observer

A REPORT into how a child sex offender was able to use church networks to abuse boys has been published today (Tuesday, July 8) – ten years after it was completed.

The CARMI report, published by the Diocese of Chichester and Chichester Cathedral, was commissioned following the conviction of Terence Banks in May, 2001, for a string of sex offences.

Banks, referred to as CO1 in the report, was convicted of 32 sexual offences against 12 boys over 29 years.

The report was commissioned by the previous Bishop of Chichester, The Rt Rev’d Dr John Hind following the trial and was completed in 2004.

However, today is the first time it has been published in full.

Ashamed

In a joint statement, the Bishop of Chichester, Dr Martin Warner and the Cathedral Chapter said:

“Today, as we publish this report, first and foremost our thoughts are with the survivors and their families.

“The effects of abuse can last a lifetime and the passing of the years may or may not have resulted in any kind of healing.

“As Christians we are profoundly ashamed of abuse that has happened in church or church institutions.

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