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.

March 6, 2014

Irene Garza’s family speaks out on ‘RicRod’ victory

TEXAS
Valley Central

by Ashly Custer

After Ricardo Rodriguez’s victory against longtime incumbent, Rene Guerra, in the Hidalgo County race for District Attorney, Irene Garza’s family speaks out.

“We talked about making a change, Mr. Guerra has done what he’s done for 32 years and the 34 years that he’ll be there, but we have things we want to implement,” Ricardo Rodriguez said.

Rodriguez said he is looking to strengthen the public integrity division, create strong relationship with law enforcement, and help those with mental health problems.

Many supporters like Irene Garza’s cousin, Dr. Linda De La Vina, couldn’t agree more.

She said even though Rodriguez has made no promises to prosecute the Garza case, De La Vina is excited to have a new D.A.

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.

Donations Drying Up As NJ Archbishop Continues Half-Million Dollar Home Renovation

NEW JERSEY
The New Civil Rights Movement

by CASEY MICHEL on MARCH 5, 2014

While Pope Francis calls on clergy worldwide to forgo “living like princes,” it appears at least one American archbishop has decided to ignore the Vatican’s dictates. Archbishop John Myers, leading the congregation of Newark, New Jersey, has decided to add $500,000 renovations to his weekend home, which he plans on moving into full-time upon retirement in two years. The home is already valued at $800,000, according to property records, but the archbishop has apparently determined that the worth and stretch — it sits at 4500-square-feet on a sprawling, 8.2-acre plot — don’t suit all of his needs for pastoring.

The Newark Star-Ledger helped bring the archbishop’s cushy needs to light last month, breaking the story that the archbishop is set to expand his already sweeping home by another 66 percent over the coming months. And the price tag they’ve discovered — half a million dollars, set to come from property sales and donations — doesn’t even cover furnishing or landscaping.

Of course, it would be one thing if this renovation were set to create, say, low-income schooling rooms, or homeless services, or even additional rooms for worship. Unfortunately, Myers determined his archdiocese must have been sufficiently stocked with low-income services, because he’s opted to instead stock the new expansion with amenities solely for his enjoyment:

The addition will house a large first-floor study and a smaller, attached library. A bedroom and sitting room — matching the footprint of the first-floor layout — are planned for the second floor. The third floor will house a 28-foot by 28-foot gallery with sweeping views of the property. Plans call for a fireplace on each level.

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.

Will Hasidic Child Sex Abuse Whistleblower Sam Kellner Ever Be Vindicated?

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

Hasidic child sex abuse whistleblower Samuel Kellner may – finally – see the specious criminal charges against him dropped on Friday. But even if that happens, is that enough? Or should Brooklyn DA Ken Thompson investigate and prosecute the people who allegedly set up Kellner and tried to have him wrongly convicted?

Hasidic child sex abuse whistleblower Samuel Kellner may – finally – see the specious criminal charges against him dropped on Friday.

Prosecutors working for the previous DA, Charles J. Hynes, tried to drop the case before this but were overruled by Hynes and Michael Vecchione, Hynes’ Rackets Bureau chief who, along with Hynes, just happens to be a close friend of Arthur Aidala, the attorney for an accused hasidic pedophile, Rabbi Baruch Lebovits, whose family – and Aidala and another Lebovits attorney, Alan Dershowitz – are allegedly behind what many say are the false accusations against Kellner.

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

Statement on the Corriere della Sera Interview and the First Anniversary of the Election of Pope Francis

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

By Terence McKiernan

As the first anniversary of his election approaches, the interview of Pope Francis in Corriere della Sera and La Nacion helps us understand the Pope’s long silence and inaction regarding the sexual abuse of children in the Catholic church. It is not that he has been slowly preparing a major initiative; it is that he doesn’t get it. In the interview, Francis does not offer an apology to the hundreds of thousands of children abused by priests and religious – he doesn’t even express sorrow. Instead, he is triumphalist about clergy abuse of children and silent about the complicity of bishops and major superiors: “The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have moved with transparency and accountability.” The chutzpah of this self-assessment is breathtaking, coming as it does immediately after Francis refused to provide data to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child and refused to extradite Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski.

By the end of the Pope’s remarks, the Church itself has become the victim: “No one else has done more. Yet the Church is the only one to be attacked.” It is astonishing, at this late date, that Pope Francis would recycle such tired and defensive rhetoric, apparently blaming the survivors and the journalists who have informed us about these crimes. What little transparency and accountability the Church has shown, has been compelled by survivors, journalists, advocates, and activists. Pope Francis, who is famous for his humility, should have acknowledged this crucial contribution.

This interview is not a good sign. One year into his photogenic papacy, we are still waiting for Pope Francis to take action regarding the sexual abuse of children by priests and members of religious orders. Sexual abuse is acknowledged to be the gravest crisis the Catholic church has faced since the Reformation, but it is not even mentioned by Francis in his lengthy Evangelii Gaudium. Yet the sexual abuse of children by clergy is a serious impediment to the evangelization that Francis seeks.

Pope Francis has met with drug addicts, immigrants, prisoners, and the physically disadvantaged. But he has not met with clergy sexual abuse survivors, who have been directly harmed by the Pope’s brother priests and by his brother bishops. The victims of sexual abuse should be the Pope’s first priority, because the Church’s responsibility to them is immediate and her ability to remedy the harm is greatest. “The thing the church needs most today is the ability to heal wounds,” Pope Francis said in his interview with Antonio Spadaro, S.J., editor-in-chief of La Civiltà Cattolica. Pope Francis has this ability already but he has yet to extend it to the church’s own wounded.

Pope Francis is a master of the humble expression, and in those terms, it is time for him to “fish or cut bait.” We urge him to take the following steps, using the energy of his first anniversary to correct his feckless response to abuse in the past year. Children worldwide, both Catholic and non-Catholic, have been put at risk by his inaction.

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

Pope Moves to Deflate Breathless Portrayals of Stardom

ROME
New York Times

By JIM YARDLEY
MARCH 5, 2014

ROME — Declaring his frustrations with being portrayed as a superman or a star, Pope Francis used an interview to depict himself as a normal person who laughs, cries and misses his ailing sister, while defending the Roman Catholic Church’s handling of the clerical sexual-abuse scandal and reiterating his belief that women should play a larger role in church decision making.

Ahead of the first anniversary of his election to the papacy later this month, Francis spoke with two Italian and Argentine newspapers this week about his personal life, and also discussed issues like the family, civil unions, the Vatican’s relationship with China and the role of his retired predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI.

Francis’ latest statements did not break new ground or signal any new positions, but he did offer his most public defense of the church’s handling of the clerical pedophilia scandal, even as victims’ advocacy groups continue to criticize the Vatican’s response as inadequate. Last month, a United Nations panel sharply criticized the Vatican and called on church officials to rid the priesthood of all abusers and hold accountable any bishops who covered up crimes.

Vatican officials strongly criticized the United Nations report as outdated and ideologically biased in how it went beyond the issue of pedophilia to challenge church doctrine on issues such as abortion. Francis has established a special Vatican commission to address the sexual-abuse crises, and in the interview, he acknowledged the horror of pedophilia, saying, “The cases of abuse are terrible because they leave very profound wounds.” …

Terence McKiernan, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, a victim’s advocacy group, criticized Francis’ remarks as insensitive and “triumphalist.” He said the pope should have apologized to victims rather than praise the church’s response.

“The chutzpah of this self-assessment is breathtaking,” Mr. McKiernan said in a statement.

Francis has now granted a handful of interviews to Italian newspapers, and analysts say he has skillfully used them to invite discussion of delicate social issues such as same-sex marriage, atheism, divorce or contraception, even as he usually remains unspecific about what concrete changes he endorses.

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 on Anniversary of His Election: Catholic Church “Has Done So Much” on Child Abuse, and SNAP’s Response

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Today, Corriere della Sera (Milan) and La Nación (Buenos Aires) published an interview in which Pope Francis reflects on his first year as pope. Joshua McElwee reports on the interview for National Catholic Reporter. As he notes, Francis defends Paul VI’s ban on artificial contraception, while stating that this ban needs to be applied pastorally; and he states that on the issue of sexual abuse of children, the Catholic church “has done so much. Perhaps most of all.”

For Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), Barbara Dorris responds to the claims about sex abuse:

We are deeply disheartened by Pope Francis’ remarks on the church’s horrific, on-going sexual abuse scandal. His comments reflect an archaic, defensive mindset that will not make kids safer.
For a year, we’ve been saying that while Pope Francis is making progress on church finances and governance, he’s done nothing – literally nothing – that protects a single child, exposes a single predator or prevents a single cover up. Now we know why.
It’s because this pope – who talks of change in much of the church – is apparently satisfied with the status quo on clergy sex abuse and cover ups. (Months ago, he did, in fact, tell Vatican officials who deal with abuse cases to “keep doing what you’re doing.”)
His central claim – that no one has “done more” on abuse than the Catholic church – is disingenuous.
No one has done more to clean up the Gulf of Mexico than British Petroleum. That’s because BP caused the devastating damage itself. It’s more than a little disingenuous.
It would be far more accurate to say that no one has done more to deny, minimize and hide child sex crimes than the church.*

As Jerry Slevin has repeatedly and persuasively maintained, on the issue of child abuse, it appears Francis doesn’t get it–and doesn’t intend to get it. Jerry insists that lay Catholics need to press church officials–but, above all, secular ones–on this issue, and to do so as strongly as possible.

I agree. And it goes without saying that I agree wholeheartedly with Barbara Dorris’s assessment of Francis’s remarks about the church’s response to child abuse as deeply disheartening and as reflecting “an archaic, defensive mindset that will not make kids safer.”

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.

SA priest admits child pornography

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

An Adelaide Catholic priest has pleaded guilty to accessing and possessing child pornography.

Father Stanislaus Hogan, 69, of Sevenhill, appeared in the Adelaide magistrates court on Thursday.

He pleaded guilty to an aggravated count of possessing child pornography and to a count of using a carriage service to access child pornography at Athelstone between April 20 and June 10 2012.

Hogan will be arraigned in the District Court on April 7.

Saint Ignatius’ College in Adelaide later confirmed that Father Stan Hogan was a former member of its staff.

In a statement, it said neither charge was connected with anyone within the college, including past or present students.

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.

Leigh priest suspended while alleged secret affair investigated

UNITED KINGDOM
Bolton News

A ROMAN Catholic priest has been suspended while an accusation he had a secret affair with a vulnerable parishioner is investigated.

Father Stephen Cooper is alleged to have admitted having a two-year affair with Kathleen Lardner before she took a fatal overdose 10 years ago.

Her son Matthew Higgenson contacted the Archdiocese of Liverpool earlier this year following an email allegedly sent to him by Father Cooper, aged 58, in which he confesses to the affair.

Father Cooper was working at St Richard’s RC Church in Atherton at the time and conducted Miss Lardener’s funeral.

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

Judge Denies Archdiocese’s Appeal, Church Officials To Be Interviewed

MINNESOTA
WCCO

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – A judge has denied the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ appeal in a clergy sexual abuse case.

The decision Wednesday clears the way for attorneys representing an alleged victim to interview.

The interviews are scheduled for next month.

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

March 5, 2014

Jesuit priest admits to child pornography offences

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By court reporter James Hancock

A Jesuit priest and teacher at Saint Ignatius College in Adelaide has admitted to child pornography offences.

Father Stan Hogan, 69, has pleaded guilty to accessing child pornography and an aggravated count of possessing child pornography.

The offences happened between April-June 2012 and last August at suburban Athelstone.

Hogan was suspended from the college after his arrest last August.

A publication by the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide said Hogan was ordained in 1976 and also taught at schools in Victoria and New South Wales.

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.

ARCH ROBT CARLSON REPLACED?

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

March 5, 2014 5:19 pm | Author: berger

A Missouri Lawyers Weekly headline proclaims: “Archdiocese shows Greensfelder the door,” replacing its long-time lawyers in sex cases with Gerard Carmody of Clayton and a Colorado-based firm. . .If you believe the Associated Press’ Rome bureau, Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn has replaced St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson. The error came in a story today about Pope Francis’ latest comments about sexual abuse. “Three months after the Vatican announced a commission of experts to study best practices on protecting children, no action has been taken, no members appointed, no statute outlining the commission’s scope approved,” reports the AP. “Francis hasn’t met with any victims, hasn’t moved to oust a bishop convicted of failing to report a problem priest, and on Wednesday insisted that the church has been unfairly attacked on abuse using the defensive rhetoric of the Vatican from a decade ago.”

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

The Tighty Whitie Defense

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

It’s the tighty-whitie defense.

When the prosecution presented its case against “Father Andy” McCormick, the alleged victim testified that the priest wore “blue plaid boxers” under his black priestly cossack. The alleged victim said he got a good look at those boxers 17 years ago when Father Andy allegedly attacked the victim, then a 10-year-old altar boy, in the priest’s bedroom in the rectory at St. John Cantius Church in Bridesburg.

Today, the defense called two witnesses who testified that Father Andy always wore white briefs.

First, Father Andy’s 87-year-old mother told the jury that she’s been buying the priest’s underwear for decades, and she always bought white briefs.

Then the longtime maintenance man at the church, Mark Pasternak, testified that for years he had seen the woman who did the priests’ laundry lay out the underwear on a table in the church basement. Pasternak told the jury that Father Andy, as well as every other priest at St. John Cantius, wore “tighty-whities.”

But on a day when Father Andy testified in his own defense, he was upstaged by what longtime maintenance man Pasternak had to say out in the hallway to reporters. The jury never heard a word of it.
“I sent a priest to jail,” Pasternak said out in the hallway. So he wouldn’t hesitate to send Father Andy to jail, he said, if he knew he was guilty.

“If a kid’s molested, I don’t care who you are, you’re going to jail,” Pasternak said.

There’s a reason why Pasternak looked familiar today to reporters covering Father Andy’s trial. The longtime maintenance man at St. John Cantius was Juror No. 5 in the 13-week trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn. Pasternak was one of the jurors who convicted Lynn on June 22, 2012 of one count of endangering the welfare of a child.

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

In crisis, Francis fails

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on March 5, 2014

One of the chapters of my upcoming book deals with what I call Institutional Rot, that is, why “good” people do and say bad things in the name of the institution and how children are caught in the crossfire. For an institutional culture to have this kind of crisis, the direction—or I should say, misdirection—has to come from the top.

For the sake of comparison, let’s look at a hypothetical:

Auto Company X is the leading automaker in the United States. For more than 100 years, Company X’s cars have been a part of American’s lives and a well-loved and trusted brand. But civil lawsuits filed by victims have unearthed the fact that Company X has knowingly been making and selling defective cars that veer off the road and kill people.

Hundreds of victims sue the company. In the process of the litigation, it’s discovered that many of the corporate officers knew about the defects and did nothing. Instead of being fired, the executives are allowed to keep their jobs.

The news gets worse and worse. In some areas of the country, anywhere from one in ten to one in 20 cars were killing people. While many of the cars were taken off the road, the company refuses to disclose how many cars still on the road have the potential to kill. In some cases, Company X took their emblems off of certain killer cars and now claims that they are no longer responsible for what those cars do.

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.

Appeals court: Archbishop must testify in clergy abuse lawsuit

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: March 5, 2014

Archbishop John Nienstedt must testify under oath about the Archdiocese of St. Paul- Minneapolis’ response to child sex abuse charges against local priests, the state appeals court affirmed Wednesday.

The Minnesota Court of Appeals refused to consider an appeal by the archdiocese and the Diocese of Winona, which were court-ordered in February to make Nienstedt and former vicar general Kevin McDonough testify under oath about abuse complaints.

The action came in response to a lawsuit filed earlier this year by an alleged victim of former priest Tom Adamson. Ramsey District Judge John Van de North had ruled that Nienstedt and McDonough must provide sworn testimony on that case, as well as others.

It was the first time a Minnesota archbishop had been ordered to testify under oath about more than one abuser, the victim’s attorneys said, allowing for questions about multiple cases over time.

Church officials had argued that Van de North overstepped his authority in ordering the depositions, and in ordering the disclosure of the names of priests accused of sexual misconduct since 2004, regardless of whether the accusation was deemed “credible” by the church.

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

Priest tells jury he is no child molester

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

MENSAH M. DEAN, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER DEANM@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-568-8278
LAST UPDATED: Wednesday, March 5, 2014

His face turning red, the Rev. Andrew McCormick Wednesday turned toward the nine women and three men who will decide his fate and blurted out: “I want the jury to know that I never molested. I want to convince you of that.”

Moments later, when asked by defense attorney William J. Brennan if he had ever molested any of the estimated 700 altar boys he came in contact with over 14 years at a Bridesburg church, McCormick, 57, was succinct: “Never,” he simply said, bringing his attorney’s brief questioning to a sudden conclusion.

Thursday morning, the Common Pleas Court jury will hear closing arguments from Brennan and Assistant District Attorney Kristen Kemp. The jurors will then begin deliberating after receiving legal instructions from Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright.

McCormick, who rejected a guilty-plea offer from Kemp’s office, is being tried for involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, sexual assault, child endangerment, indecent exposure and related counts for allegedly attempting to force a 10-year-old altar boy to perform oral sex on him in 1997.

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.

Kellner Seeking Probe Of Witness Intimidation

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

03/05/14
Hella Winston
Special Correspondent

While it would seem a good bet that Sam Kellner’s dizzying, three-year legal odyssey may finally come to an end this week with a dismissal of his criminal case, the chasidic abuse whistleblower is not holding his breath. It’s easy to understand why. The way things have been going, there probably isn’t a bookie in Vegas who would take any action on that wager.

“The former trial prosecutors twice wanted to dismiss my case and were overruled. And now we have a new [Brooklyn] district attorney in office [Kenneth Thompson], and he is taking almost six weeks to review it. And so I am still an indicted person. How do you like it?” Kellner, 52, asks matter of factly, before tallying up how many judges, prosecutors and district attorneys have presided over his case — four, five and two respectively, with a new judge expected this week. (At a hearing scheduled for Friday, prosecutors are expected to let the judge know whether they are moving to dismiss the case or will take it to trial.)

“I must be a very dangerous guy,” he adds, his sense of the absurd fully intact.

Dangerous, indeed. In 2011, a year after helping the district attorney convict a serial chasidic child molester named Baruch Lebovits, whose alleged victims include Kellner’s own son, Kellner found himself under arrest. He was charged with having several years earlier paid one young man to falsely testify in a grand jury that he was abused by Lebovits, and with sending emissaries to attempt to extort the Lebovits family for hundreds of thousands of dollars in exchange for a promise he could persuade the witnesses against him to drop their charges.

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.

Plot Thickens At Bob Jones University

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • March 5, 2014

You may have heard that the influential Christian pastor Bill Gothard has been placed on leave by the organization he heads pending an investigation into sex abuse charges against him — a scandal that, if the allegations prove true, stretches back decades, and involves cover-ups. A reader who is a graduate of Bob Jones University, and who is upset over that school’s alleged history of covering up sex abuse within its community, sent this link to a piece exploring the role BJU professors played in masterminding an alleged Gothard cover-up. Excerpt:

In 1980, two BJU officials (only one is named, a Rev. Van Gelderen) were summoned by Gothard to help him downplay a scandal that was about to overwhelm his multi-million dollar ministry. You can read more about that scandal on Recovering Grace, but suffice to say that the two BJU men were used by Gothard in his attempt to hush up accusations of sexual harassment against Gothard’s brother. Gothard asked the two BJU officials to help convince the IBYC board not to send a letter to supporters admitting the scandal and apologizing, and they obliged. Their plot failed, however, and when the board overruled Gothard and the BJU staffers and demanded that the sexual harassment be dealt with, Van Galderen reportedly reversed his stance and regretted coming at all. This incident is a fascinating parallel to BJU’s current PR troubles, as the school clearly still clings to a strategy of withholding potentially damaging information until the story has already exploded in the media.

Most damaging in this narrative, though, is a remark Van Gelderen made to the IBYC board when trying to dissuade them from properly handling sexual abuse:

They explained that “this kind of thing had happened also at [Bob Jones] University and this is how they have always handled it there.”

This ominous declaration can only mean one thing: in the 1980s, BJU already had a firm process in place for dealing with cases of sexual harassment and scandal within its administration. Whatever else that process might entail, it’s clear from Van Gelderen’s testimony here that covering up information and keeping supporters in the dark was key.

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 Dodges, Weaves and Wobbles on Child Sexual Abuse

UNITED STATES
Patrick J. Wall

Pope Francis missed an opportunity to not repeat his predecessors’ failures on the crimes of clerical sexual abuse of minors.

Last month the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child sharply denounced the Vatican’s failure since 2001 to report data to the United Nations on sexual abuse by priests.

“The Holy See has consistently placed the preservation of the reputation of the Church and the protection of the perpetrators above children’s best interests…”

“The Holy See has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and to protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which have led to the continuation of the abuse by and the impunity of the perpetrators.”

In response to this harsh critique, the Holy See thought it prudent to correct the UN’s “lack of understanding,” justify its policies, claim the Vatican is “a reality different” than other countries, and complain of moral intervention into “doctrinal positions of the Catholic Church.” This response only served to underscore the Committee’s findings on the Holy See’s conduct- the Vatican places its reputation over concerns for survivors of sexual abuse by priests.

Today Pope Francis again dodged, weaved and wobbled on criticisms of the Vatican’s handling of child sexual abuse and went so far as to defend the Church’s record. In an interview with Corriere della Sera, the Holy Father spoke in defense of the Vatican’s actions in dealing with child sexual abuse, saying “no one has done more” to address the issue. “The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility… Yet the Church is the only one to have been attacked.”

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.

Abuse inquiry hears boy ran away from care home three times

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Times

Dan Keenan

Wed, Mar 5, 2014

A boy was physically punished so often by a nun in a Derry care home he ran away three times.

This incident triggered intense attention by social services, the Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry heard.

The witness, who cannot be named, said the nun at the centre of his allegations “throttled” him on one occasion and repeatedly punished and humiliated him in front of others and he had to get away.

“I couldn’t get on with her because she just hated the ground I walked on, she beat me at every opportunity,” he alleged.

“She put me down, she denigrated me in front of everybody. I ran away from the place three times. On one occasion she actually throttled me and left marks on my neck. I ran away to my mother and my mother took me to the doctor and then across the Border. I think there was a notice put in the paper about me missing.”

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.

Court clears way for deposition of Archbishop Nienstedt

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Mar 5, 2014

The Minnesota Court of Appeals has cleared the way for attorneys representing an alleged victim of clergy sexual abuse to interview Archbishop John Nienstedt.

In a three-page order issued Wednesday, Chief Judge Edward Cleary denied requests by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona to block depositions of Nienstedt and former vicar general Kevin McDonough.

Victims’ attorney Jeff Anderson has scheduled Nienstedt’s deposition for April 2 and McDonough’s deposition for April 16. He had scheduled the depositions for March but postponed them because of the appeal.

“We’re glad that we can move this thing forward, and that they saw this as the judge did,” Anderson said.

A spokesman for the archdiocese did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Court of Appeals’ decision came in a lawsuit brought by a man who claims he was sexually abused as a child by the Rev. Thomas Adamson in 1976 and 1977.

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.

Court clears way for archbishop’s deposition

MINNESOTA
SF Gate

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The Minnesota Court of Appeals has cleared the way for attorneys representing an alleged victim of clergy sexual abuse to interview Archbishop John Nienstedt.

Chief Judge Edward Cleary denied requests by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona to block depositions of Nienstedt and former vicar general Kevin McDonough.

Minnesota Public Radio (http://bit.ly/NV2MEC ) reports the plaintiff’s attorney, Jeff Anderson, has scheduled Nienstedt’s deposition for April 2 and McDonough’s deposition for April 16. Anderson had scheduled the depositions for March but postponed them because of the appeal.

The archdiocese had no immediate comment.

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

Phila. Priest Cross-Examined at His Sex Abuse Trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Tony Hanson

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — An accused Philadelphia priest took the witness stand today to say he never sexually molested a former altar boy who is now 26 years old.

Father Andrew McCormick this afternoon told the jury that he never molested the alleged victim in this case nor any of the hundreds of altar boys he supervised. In his words, “None — none whatsoever.”

McCormick, speaking directly to the jury, said, “I want to convince you of that. It has certainly been a devastation to me.”

The alleged abuse happened at St. John Cantius Church in 1997 (see related stories).

Then, in an attempt to undermine the defendant’s credibility, prosecutor Kristen Kemp got McCormick to acknowledge he had been reprimanded by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia for having young boys up to his living quarters. And even after the reprimands, he admitted, he repeatedly had boys up to his quarters.

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.

Accused Philly priest denies molesting altar boy

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CT Post

By MARYCLAIRE DALE, Associated Press
Updated 4:41 pm, Wednesday, March 5, 2014

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Roman Catholic priest accused of molesting an altar boy has briefly taken the stand in Philadelphia and denied the charge.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick acknowledges that he knew the accuser in 1997 at his parish.

And he says he was later warned twice not to have children in his living quarters, as new church rules took effect.

But he calls the criminal case “a devastation.”

Jurors are set to hear closing arguments Thursday.

Their deliberations could include talk of boxers versus briefs. The defense suggests the accuser misidentified the type of underwear that McCormick wears.

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.

MN- Court says church depositions must happen, victims respond

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 05, 2014

Statement by Frank Meuers of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 952-334-5180, frankameuers@gmail.com )

A Minnesota appeals court has ruled against Twin Cities Catholic officials who want to further delay the deposition of top church staffers in a clergy sex abuse and cover up case. We are grateful this brave victim has moved a step closer to learning the truth about how Archbishop John Nienstedt and Fr. Kevin McDonough may have ignored or concealed heinous child sex crimes.

[Pioneer Press]

Judge Van de North’s decisions in the case, we feel, have been very reasonable. But of course the church hierarchy continues to exploit every possible avenue to keep their cover ups covered up. (It’s ironic that while this happens, Pope Francis is claiming the church is “transparent” on clergy sex crimes)

We hope this ruling will prod others who were assaulted by clergy into stepping forward, seeking justice, protecting kids and exposing cover ups.

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.

KAB-Chef Hupfauer gesteht und legt Amt nieder

DEUTSCHLAND
RP

[Summary: Georg Hupfauer, national chairman of the Catholic Workers Movement, had admitted to surfing the internet sites containing child pornography and has resigned.]

Aachen. Die Staatsanwaltschaft Aachen ermittelt gegen den Bundesvorsitzenden der Katholischen Arbeitnehmer-Bewegung (KAB), Georg Hupfauer, wegen des Verdachts auf Besitz von Kinderpornografie.

Einen entsprechenden Bericht der “Bild”-Zeitung bestätigte Behördensprecher Jost Schützenberg am Mittwoch der Katholischen Nachrichten-Agentur (KNA). Hupfauer räumte auf Anfrage ein, auf Internet-Seiten mit Kinderpornografie gesurft zu haben. Er lege den KAB-Vorsitz nieder.

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.

MN- Court says church depositions must happen, victims respond

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 05, 2014

Statement by Frank Meuers of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (952-334-5180, frankameuers@gmail.com)

A Minnesota appeals court has ruled against Twin Cities Catholic officials who want to further delay the deposition of top church staffers in a clergy sex abuse and cover up case. We are grateful this brave victim has moved a step closer to learning the truth about how Archbishop John Nienstedt and Fr. Kevin McDonough may have ignored or concealed heinous child sex crimes.

[Pioneer Press]

Judge Van de North’s decisions in the case, we feel, have been very reasonable. But of course the church hierarchy continues to exploit every possible avenue to keep their cover ups covered up. (It’s ironic that while this happens, Pope Francis is claiming the church is “transparent” on clergy sex crimes)

We hope this ruling will prod others who were assaulted by clergy into stepping forward, seeking justice, protecting kids and exposing cover ups.

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.

Víctimas de Karadima rechazan propuesta compensatoria del Arzobispado y exigen “perdón”

CHILE
La Tercera

[Summary: The victims of priest Fernando Karadima have rejected proposed compensation offered by the Santiago archbishop. Negotiations will continue.]

por Karen Soto – 05/03/2014

No hubo acuerdo, pero sí voluntad de negociar. Las víctimas del sacerdote Fernando Karadima rechazaron la propuesta compensatoria del Arzobispado de Santiago y accedieron a fijar una nueva fecha para llegar a un trato, ante la demanda civil presentada en contra del ente eclesiástico.

Tras la audiencia, el abogado de las víctimas, Juan Pablo Hermosilla, manifestó que las partes acordaron seguir conversando para llegar a una negociación y de no ser así enfrentarán un juicio.

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Appeals court rejects archdiocese bid to stop Nienstedt deposition

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

[Order – Granting or Denying Mandamus Prohibition ]
[Timeline of efforts to have Winona’s list released ]

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 03/05/2014

The Minnesota Court of Appeals has rejected an attempt by the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis to prevent the deposition of Archbishop John Nienstedt and a former top deputy.

The court refused to consider an appeal by the archdiocese and the Diocese of Winona that sought to halt discovery in the case of John Doe 1, a man who alleged sexual abuse by former priest Thomas Adamson, according to an order filed Wednesday by Chief Judge Edward J. Cleary.

Ramsey County District Judge John Van de North had ruled in the case that the church agencies must turn over names of priests accused of sexual abuse of minors since 2004. And Van de North ordered the depositions of Nienstedt and Kevin McDonough should go forward.

But church officials balked at those orders, saying among other things that Van de North may have exceeded his authority.

“Our read of this (order) and the language in it is that they have ruled that we are able to move forward with discovery … that the trial court was right,” said plaintiff’s attorney Jeff Anderson.

Anderson said the deposition of Nienstedt is now scheduled for April 2; that of McDonough is set for April 16. The location has not yet been determined, he said.

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Pope Francis vs. critics on sex abuse: Both sides have a point

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF MARCH 05, 2014

Pope Francis may have won hearts and minds around the world with his simplicity and common touch, but he offered proof today that he’s also not afraid to put his approval ratings on the line when he thinks there’s a point to be made.

In an extended conversation with the Italian paper Corriere della Sera, which was also published in the Argentine daily La Nacion, the pontiff not only vigorously defended the Catholic church’s record on its child sexual abuse scandals, but also complained that “the church is the only one attacked.”

While the pope touched on many other points in the interview, from divorced and remarried Catholics and birth control to some of the urban myths that have grown up around him, it was his comments on the abuse scandals that seemed most destined to spark reaction.

It wasn’t long in coming.

Within minutes, one advocacy group for victims of clerical abuse had blasted the pope’s rhetoric as “archaic and defensive,” while another styled it as proof that “he doesn’t get it.” Many Catholic voices, however, hailed the comments as a long-overdue rebuttal to a biased habit of ignoring the strides the church has taken, as well as making it a scapegoat for a broader social problem.

What to make of the stark contrast over what Francis had to say? The truth of it is that both sides probably have a point.

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New Jersey ‘Bling’ Bishop Myers $500,000 home renovation infuriates parishioners to cut off contributions…and priest blames “the media is our

UNITED STATES
Pope Francis the CON Christ.

Updated March 4, 2014

Paris Arrow

New Jersey’s ‘Bling’ Bishop Myers is infuriating his parishioners to close their pocketbooks and stop donating to his annual appeal fund. Myers is also attracting international attention these days from neighboring New York City to across the Atlantic Ocean in the United Kingdom where the well-known Daily Mail entitled its article, ‘They’re not going to get another penny out of me’: Parishioners outraged over Archbishop’s $500,000 home renovation project, see news compilation below. If Myers thought he was going to retire quietly into the sunset in his dream house – now described in detail for the world to see – he was mistaken.

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POPE LAUDS BENEDICT FOR ABUSE RESPONSE

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on remarks made today by Pope Francis on the sexual abuse scandal:

No one has done more to check the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church than Pope Benedict XVI, but he receives very little credit for doing so. That is why what Pope Francis said today matters: he singled Benedict out for his yeoman efforts. “Benedict XVI was very courageous and has opened a new way.” Because of Benedict, he said, “the Church has done much, perhaps more than all the others.”

Pope Francis is twice right. Long before Benedict became pope, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, as head of the Vatican’s doctrinal congregation, called for swifter and stronger procedures to punish molesting priests. That was in 1988. In 2001, he was given exclusive jurisdiction over these matters, and in 2003 he was awarded the power to police priestly sexual abuse. When he became pope, he made it more difficult for practicing homosexuals to enter the priesthood, the net effect of which has been a sharp decline in the number of abuse cases.

In his interview today, Pope Francis said, “The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution that has moved with transparency and responsibility. No one has done more, and yet the Church is the only one that is being attacked.” The pope was obviously referring to the highly politicized, and maliciously conceived, United Nations report on the Vatican’s response to this issue.

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Rome- Pope “offended” by the wrong problem in the church; SNAP says

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 5, 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 pope said he is “offended.” Apparently, he’s not really offended by Catholic officials who transfer predators and keep secrets and endanger kids. He’s offended by the “hype” around his papacy.

We feel the same way, even more now that he has shown his ‘true colors’ on the church’s on-going clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis.

The Associate Press reports that:

“Pope Francis is coming under increasing criticism that he doesn’t get it on sex abuse. Three months after the Vatican announced a commission of experts to study best practices on protecting children, no action has been taken, no members appointed, no statute outlining the commission’s scope approved.

Francis hasn’t met with any victims, hasn’t moved to oust a bishop convicted of failing to report a problem priest, and on Wednesday insisted that the church had been unfairly attacked on abuse, using the defensive rhetoric of the Vatican from a decade ago.”

[Telegraph]

When he says that abuse has left “very deep wounds” on victims, the pope is deliberately framing the scandal as something that’s largely in the past – by focusing on already hurt victims, not on still-vulnerable children. This is good public relations but it’s not reality. While many clergy sex crimes have been disclosed in the West, far fewer cover ups have been, and little of either has been disclosed in the developing world. No matter how hard Catholic officials may try to depict this scandal as “in the past,” it’s very much a part of the church right now.

Inadvertently, Pope Francis has done our movement to protect children a service. For months, many have assumed he would sooner or later get around to taking action to safeguard the vulnerable in the church. Over and over, we heard well-meaning Catholics and commentators say “Give him time, he’s new,” “He’s improving Vatican governance first,” “He’s got to tackle internal leaks first,” “Streamlining church bureaucracy is his top priority,” and “He can’t do everything at once.”

Now, there’s more clarity and less doubt about his intentions on abuse. He’s willing to discuss change in several parts of the church. But not when it comes to pedophile priests and complicit bishops.

Many consider the pope as a moral authority. He says that only the Catholic Church has been attacked on abuse. If he honestly believes that other institutions are dealing with abuse in reckless ways, we would welcome him exposing and denouncing them.

On a personal level, as a parent, and the brother of a predator priest, I am very upset by Pope Francis’ comments. My brothers (three of them) and I became victims of child sex crimes because a Catholic prelate (Bishop Michael McAuliffe) sent a predator priest (Fr. John Whiteley) to our parish with no warning.

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Court of Appeals Issues Orders in Doe 1 Lawsuit

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Order – Granting or Denying Mandamus Prohibition
Timeline of efforts to have Winona’s list released

(St. Paul, MN) – The Court of Appeals issued two orders denying the Archdiocese’s and Diocese of Winona’s attempt to review Judge Van de North’s decisions and delay the case. These decisions permit us and this courageous survivor to move forward with full discovery including taking the depositions of the decision makers and advancing efforts to unearth the long-kept secrets. We are grateful to Doe 1 for having the courage to stand up to expose the truth.

The orders are attached and the Doe 1 complaint and other documents can be found on our website at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Jeff Anderson: Cell/612.817.8665

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Former Phila. Altar Boys Discount Accusation of Sex Abuse by Priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Tony Hanson

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The defense began presenting its case today in the trial of a Philadelphia priest accused of sexually assaulting a ten-year-old altar boy in 1997 (see related story).

The alleged victim testified earlier in the trial that he was sexually assaulted by Father Andrew McCormick in the rectory after an evening mass (see previous story).

But the defense has presented testimony from several men who also served as altar boys and knew Father McCormick, beginning in the mid-1980s.

They have testified they spent time with Father McCormick, serving masses or alone in the rectory, even going on social outings with him, never sexually molested them or did anything that made them uncomfortable.

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Pope defensive on sex abuse as commission lags

VATICAN CITY
Boston.com

By NICOLE WINFIELD / Associated Press / March 5, 2014

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis is coming under increasing criticism that he simply doesn’t get it on sex abuse.

Three months after the Vatican announced a commission of experts to study best practices on protecting children, no action has been taken, no members appointed, no statute outlining the commission’s scope approved.

Francis hasn’t met with any victims, hasn’t moved to oust a bishop convicted in 2012 of failing to report a suspected abuser, and on Wednesday insisted that the church had been unfairly attacked on abuse, using the defensive rhetoric of the Vatican from a decade ago.

Victims’ advocates cried foul, saying his tone was archaic and urging Francis to show the same compassion he offers the sick, the poor and disabled to people who were raped by priests when they were children.

‘‘Under Pope Francis the Vatican continues to deny its role in creating and maintaining a culture where upholding the reputation of the church is prioritized over the safety of children,’’ said Maeve Lewis, executive director of the Irish abuse support group One in Four. …

The former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio has said that while he was archbishop of Buenos Aires, he never dealt with a case of sex abuse, and indeed the scandal has yet to explode in Argentina on the scale that it has elsewhere, including recently in neighboring Chile.

But the online database BishopAccountability.org has cited several cases of Argentine bishops siding with abused clerics and imposing gag orders on victims — practices that were common in the U.S. before American bishops changed their tune amid an avalanche of lawsuits.

Terrence McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org said it was ‘‘breathtaking’’ that Francis had made the church the victim of the scandal, rather than express sorrow to the hundreds of thousands of victims or acknowledge the complicity of bishops in covering up the crimes.

‘‘It is astonishing, at this late date, that Pope Francis would recycle such tired and defensive rhetoric,’’ McKiernan said in a statement.

The Vatican has in the past decade overhauled its internal procedures to make it easier to oust rapists. But it still has no blanket policy telling bishops to report abusers to police or risk being sanctioned themselves, and to date no bishop has been punished for a cover up. In addition, the harshest penalty the church hands out to abusers is the ecclesial equivalent of firing the priest.

McKiernan called for Francis to remove bishops who enabled abuse, citing St. Louis, Mo., Bishop Robert Finn, who was convicted in 2012 of failing to report suspected child abuse. A group of Catholics from his diocese recently sent a letter to Francis urging Finn to be removed.

McKiernan also questioned the usefulness of the pope’s new commission since bishops’ conferences around the world have already identified best practices. ‘‘What the Vatican needs now is a tough enforcer, not another study group,’’ he said.

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Former altar boys testify in priest’s defense

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

Joseph A. Slobodzian, Inquirer Staff Writer
POSTED: Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Three former Philadelphia altar boys told a Common Pleas Court jury Wednesday of trips to Poland with accused priest Andrew McCormick and all maintained that the cleric never acted improperly toward them.

The witnesses – now adults – were called by McCormick’s lawyers on the first day of the defense case. All described a Catholic priest who freely socialized with boys while assigned to the St. John Cantius parish in Bridesburg.

They said McCormick, now 57, routinely “hung out” with them at the church rectory, invited them alone and in groups to his private room on the second floor, took them out for fast-food and movies and, ultimately, on two-week tours of Poland.

Two witnesses said their parents accompanied them and McCormick; another said he went with his mother’s approval.

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Kinderporno-Verdacht gegen Chef der Katholischen Arbeitnehmer

DEUTSCHLAND
Focus

[Summary: Aachen authorities are investigating the national chairman of the Catholic Workers Movement – George Hupfauer – on suspicion of possessing child pornography. Computer hard drives and USB sticks were seized.]

Die Staatsanwaltschaft Aachen ermittelt gegen den Bundesvorsitzenden der Katholischen Arbeitnehmer-Bewegung, Georg Hupfauer, wegen des Verdachts auf Besitz von Kinderpornographie. Computer-Festplatten und USB-Sticks wurden beschlagnahmt.

Das bestätigte Staatsanwaltschaftssprecher Jost Schützeberg gegenüber der “Bild”-Zeitung (Donnerstagausgabe). “Gegen die genannte Person ist nach einer Strafanzeige seit März 2013 ein Ermittlungsverfahren wegen des Verdachts auf Besitz von Kinderpornographie anhängig.” Bei der Durchsuchung von Hupfauers Privathaus im März 2013 seien verschiedene Datenträger beschlagnahmt worden. Speichermedien wie Computer-Festplatten und USB-Sticksdes KAB-Chefs würden derzeit noch ausgewertet.

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Priest lures, sexually assaults a 12-year-old girl

INDIA
IBN Live

A 12-year-old girl was allegedly molested by a temple priest at Bateshwar town in Agra, police said on Wednesday.

The girl, who sells wood-apple (belpatra) leaves near the temple, was allegedly lured to a lonely place and molested by the priest on Tuesday, police said.

The priest has been identified as Ajit Goswami. The girl, however, managed to escape from the clutches of the priest and inform her parents, who along with locals gathered in front of the temple. The priest fled the spot and an investigation is on, said police.

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Transcript: Pope Francis’ March 5 interview with Corriere della Sera

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

Vatican City, Mar 5, 2014 / 11:35 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Find below an English translation, by CNA’s Alan Holdren, of the March 5 interview of Pope Francis with Italian daily “Corriere della Sera”.

Holy Father, every once in a while you call those who ask you for help. Sometimes they don’t believe you.

Yes, it has happened. When one calls, it is because he wants to speak, to pose a question, to ask for counsel. As a priest in Buenos Aires it was more simple. And, it has remained a habit for me. A service. I feel it inside. Certainly, now it is not that easy to do due to the quantity of people who write me.

And, is there a contact, an encounter that you remember with particular affection?

A widowed woman, aged 80, who had lost a child. She wrote me. And, now I call her every month. She is happy. I am a priest. I like it.

The relations with your predecessor. Have you ever asked for the counsel of Benedict XVI?

Yes. The Pope emeritus is not a statue in a museum. It is an institution. We weren’t used to it. 60 or 70 years ago, ‘bishop emeritus’ didn’t exist. It came after the (Second Vatican) Council. Today, it is an institution. The same thing must happen for the Pope emeritus. Benedict is the first and perhaps there will be others. We don’t know. He is discreet, humble, and he doesn’t want to disturb. We have spoken about it and we decided together that it would be better that he sees people, gets out and participates in the life of the Church. He once came here for the blessing of the statue of St. Michael the Archangel, then to lunch at Santa Marta and, after Christmas, I sent him an invitation to participate in the consistory and he accepted. His wisdom is a gift of God. Some would have wished that he retire to a Benedictine abbey far from the Vatican. I thought of grandparents and their wisdom. Their counsels give strength to the family and they do not deserve to be in an elderly home. …

The scandals that rocked the life of the Church are fortunately in the past. A public appeal was made to you, on the delicate theme of the abuse of minors, published by (the Italian newspaper) Il Foglio and signed by Besancon and Scruton, among others, that you would raise your voice and make it heard against the fanaticisms and the bad conscience of the secularized world that hardly respects infancy.

I want to say two things. The cases of abuses are terrible because they leave extremely deep wounds. Benedict XVI was very courageous and he cleared a path. The Church has done so much on this path. Perhaps more than anyone. The statistics on the phenomenon of the violence against children are shocking, but they also show clearly that the great majority of abuses take place in the family environment and around it. The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility. No other has done more. And, the Church is the only one to be attacked.

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The healing priest’s rich lifestyle

PHILIPPINES
Philippine Daily Inquirer

By Ramon Tulfo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Thursday, March 6th, 2014

San Miguel Corp. (SMC) could well have underwritten the construction of the proposed P1-billion shrine to Mother Mary, a project of Fr. Fernando Suarez in Cavite province.

But the business conglomerate discovered massive unnecessary spending by the healing priest, according to an SMC insider, and thus withdrew its support from the project.

“Before, Father Suarez would come to RSA’s office wearing only a T-shirt and sandals, but now he wears expensive clothes and watches, stays in five-star hotels and attends tennis matches like the Wimbledon Classic and the French Open,” said the SMC insider.

Ramon S. Ang, president and CEO of San Miguel Corp. is “RSA” to his subordinates.

RSA, who wears an ordinary collared shirt to work, has faith in the healing power of Father Suarez, but he was reportedly “shocked” at the priest’s change of lifestyle.

Ang is a devout Catholic and his wife is a member of Opus Dei, an organization of ultraconservative Catholic laymen.

When SMC, as a principal benefactor, ordered an audit of Father Suarez’s Mary Mother of the Poor Foundation, the business conglomerate discovered that the foundation had spent money left and right without supporting documents.

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Ex-altar boys testify for accused Philly priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Albany Times Union

By MARYCLAIRE DALE, Associated Press
Updated 1:20 pm, Wednesday, March 5, 2014

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A string of former altar boys are testifying on behalf of a Philadelphia priest accused of molesting one of their peers in 1997.

The defense witnesses include young men who traveled to Poland as boys with the Rev. Andrew McCormick.

They say nothing sexual occurred, although one shared a room with McCormick, and the other says the priest gave him beer there.

The testimony comes on Ash Wednesday, a holy day that starts the Lenten season in the Roman Catholic church.

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Pope Francis Defends Church’s Response To Clergy Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
Frontline

[Secrets of the Vatican – Frontline]

March 5, 2014, 1:23 pm ET by Jason M. Breslow

In one of his first public comments on the issue of clergy sex abuse, Pope Francis defended the Catholic Church’s response to the crisis, telling an Italian newspaper, “no one else has done more.”

The pope’s statements marked one of his boldest replies yet to criticism of the church’s handling of abuse cases, and came a month after a highly critical United Nations report found cause for alarm with the Vatican’s past and present practices.

“The cases of abuse are awful because they leave profound wounds,” Francis said. But, he added: “The Catholic Church is maybe the only institution to have moved with transparency and responsibility. No one else has done more. Yet the church is the only one to be attacked.”

One year into his papacy, Francis has taken several steps to address the abuse scandal. In July, he overhauled Vatican law to specify sexual violence against children as a crime. Five months later, he established a commission to advise him on how to protect children from pedophile priests and on how to counsel victims.

At the same time, the Vatican declined to cooperate with the U.N. investigation, which concluded “that the Holy See has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and to protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which have led to the continuation of the abuse by and the impunity of the perpetrators.”

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SEX & ABUSE BY CATHOLIC CLERGY

UNITED STATES
when religion fails

When I first started hearing about the sexual abuse scandal within Roman Catholic community I hoped that it might present a perfect opportunity for the religious institution to address this secretive and universal issue out of the dark into God’s healing light’. What a disappointed it has turned out to be and unfortunately still is.

So what are the obstacles that the Church still needs to overcome? Only an independent expert who understands the workings of the Roman Catholic institution could answer that question. Such an expert is A.W. Sipe a much respected & recognized Certified Clinical Mental Health Counselor who earlier spent 18 years as a Benedictine monk and priest. He was trained specifically to deal with the mental health problems of Roman Catholic Priests.

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Melancholy Thoughts as Gothard is Placed on Administrative Leave for Charges of Clergy Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
Under Much Grace

It has been an interesting few weeks for the survivors of spiritual abuse and those who have suffered the “extra special” kind of spiritual abuse that comes with sexual advances made by clergy.

After years of suffering in silence and scorn, many have cause for hope. Bob Jones University reinstated the Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment Group to complete their investigation of unreported assaults. And… Bill Gothard was placed on administrative leave by the board of his parachurch organization, the Institute in Basic Life Principles. These matters have even caught the attention of the secular press including the New York Times and the Washington Post.

It has been said of critics that people like me are dancing with glee over these new developments with Gothard in particular, as somehow it means that there will be no consequences for sinful activities. (I can’t connect any of those dots at all!) I wish to see the abusers come to justice so that restitution can be made to the survivors. And in many ways, that is impossible. It would be nice, however, if places like Sovereign Grace would at least pay for therapy to help their victims can recover. It would be something. It is a starting place. – But it makes me anything but happy. Part of me cringes, half anticipating that all of these efforts will result in no change at all, despite all of the work and the public scrutiny that the victims have suffered in the process. Or it may be change that no one will see tangibly in quite a long time. That’s often how these things work.

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Pope defensive on sex abuse as commission lags

VATICAN CITY
The Telegraph

BY NICOLE WINFIELD
Associated Press
March 5, 2014

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis is coming under increasing criticism that he doesn’t get it on sex abuse.

Three months after the Vatican announced a commission of experts to study best practices on protecting children, no action has been taken, no members appointed, no statute outlining the commission’s scope approved.

Francis hasn’t met with any victims, hasn’t moved to oust a bishop convicted of failing to report a problem priest, and on Wednesday insisted that the church had been unfairly attacked on abuse, using the defensive rhetoric of the Vatican from a decade ago.

Victims’ groups cried foul, saying his tone was archaic and urging Francis to show the same compassion he shows to the sick, poor and disabled to people who were raped by priests.

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

I’m no superman, says pope after sex abuse criticism

VATICAN CITY
eNCA

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis has defended the Catholic Church’s record on tackling the sexual abuse of children by priests, saying “no one else has done more” to root out paedophilia.

The comments, in an interview published on Wednesday, were the pope’s first response to a scathing UN report that denounced the Vatican for failing to stamp out child abuse and allowing systematic cover-ups.

“The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility. No-one else has done more. Yet the Church is the only one to have been attacked,” he said in an interview with Il Corriere della Sera daily.

Last month’s hard-hitting UN report called on the Church to remove clergy suspected of raping or molesting children.

It accused the Vatican of systematically placing the “preservation of the reputation of the Church and the alleged offender over the protection of child victims” — an accusation the Church heatedly rebuffed.

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 strikes back at church critics on sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF MARCH 05, 2014

In the wake of a recent United Nations report blasting the Vatican for its record on child sexual abuse, Pope Francis today issued a strong defense both of the Catholic church and his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI, saying “no one has done more” to combat exploitation of children.

“Statistics on the phenomenon of violence against children are striking, but they also show clearly that the great majority of abuse happens in the family and neighborhood environments,” the pope said.

Francis acknowledged that sexual abuse of minors leaves “very deep wounds,” and insisted that the church has turned a corner.

“The Catholic church is perhaps the lone public institution to have moved with transparency and responsibility,” Francis said. “No one has done more, yet the church is the only to be attacked.”

The pope’s comments came in a wide-ranging interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.

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.

TX- New prosecutor elected; SNAP responds

TEXAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

We are thrilled that Rene Guerra – who has refused to aggressively pursue a murder case involving a priest — has been defeated. We hope the newly elected prosecutor will honor his pledge to re-open the troubling Irene Garza case.

[The Monitor]

Just days ago, Guerra made biased and hurtful comments that will make it harder for police and prosecutors to pursue criminals (because he publicly and inappropriately attacked the honesty of a witness, which deters other witnesses from stepping forward).

[SNAP]

We hope that Ricardo Rodriguez ‘s election brings some hope to Garza’s family. And we hope that anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered any wrongdoing by Fr. John Feit will contact law enforcement immediately.

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

New Jersey archbishop sells church assets to build himself an indoor swimming pool

NEW JERSEY
The Raw Story

By Jonathan Allen

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The Roman Catholic archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, is facing mounting criticism over his plan to spend $500,000, mostly from the sale of church assets, on a extension to a countryside house where he will soon spend his retirement.

Some local Catholics are refusing to contribute to church collections in protest at Archbishop John Myers’ planned 3,000-square-foot (280-square-meter) extension, saying he is failing to follow the austerity of both Pope Francis and Jesus Christ.

“It’s vulgar … The church is changing around him,” said Kevin Davitt, a parishioner at St Catharine’s Church in Glen Rock who has stopped donating to church appeals.

“He loves the pomp and circumstance, he loves the robes. That’s his world. There’s an obvious tone-deafness about him,” said Davitt in a telephone interview.

News of the three-story extension has consumed worshippers in the archdiocese since the plans were first reported by the Newark Star-Ledger two weeks ago. The building will include a library, an indoor exercise pool and what the newspaper described as a hot tub.

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.

Political attack ads run during controversial cold case report

TEXAS
Valley Central

This is it, the final stretch.

Local attorney and former district judge Ricardo Rodriguez says he’s played nice in the race for district attorney.

But the gloves are off and he’s not backing down now. The 48 hours reports that shed light on the Irene Garza murder case aired Saturday with Rodriguez’s final political ads before election day running during the commercial breaks. Coincidence or a planned attack on incumbent Rene Guerra who was featured in the story.

Rodriguez says it was not planned.

The ads running during that time slot sure did stir up questions among voters, but Rodriguez says the focus should be Irene Garza’s family and the case that went cold.

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.

District Attorney Responds To Cold Murder Case Investigation

TEXAS
Fox 2

[with video]

District attorney René Guerra held a press conference to clarify doubts surrounding the investigation into Irene Garza’s homicide.

After a special documentary aired over the weekend on a national network about the Irene Garza murder case, which Guerra deemed biased and political, the district attorney decided to call on the media to refute accusations that his office has not done enough to prosecute the case.

“The foreman of the grand jury together with the rest they decided they did not want to hear any further testimony after 14 weeks and 76 hours of testimony,” René Guerra, Hidalgo County district attorney explained.

Irene Garza was found dead at 25 in a canal in McAllen in April of 1960. Evidence collected back then was not sufficient to tie the prime suspect father john fait, who had received Garza for confession.

It was not until 2004 that new testimony emerged from 2 former priests that the case was brought to life again.

But a grand jury concluded to ‘no bill’ after not being convinced of the evidence.

However, Garza’s family believes the jury was not presented with all the evidence in a proper manner.

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

On eve of election, Rene Guerra fights back on Irene Garza issue

TEXAS
The Monitor

[The Last Confession – CBS 48 Hours]

Posted: Monday, March 3, 2014
Jacob Fischler | The Monitor

EDINBURG — One day before their campaigns end, neither candidate for Hidalgo County district attorney campaigned much — at least nominally.

Former 92nd state District Court Judge Ricardo Rodriguez worked from his law office in Edinburg during the day. And incumbent DA Rene Guerra held a news conference at the Hidalgo County Courthouse to attempt to clear his name after a national news story broadcast Saturday looked unfavorably upon his 2004 handling of a 1960 murder case. He said the conference was not a part of his campaign.

“I’ve asked you all to be present today because of the news story that appeared on 48 Hours on CBS national news on Saturday night,” he said to reporters. Guerra stood behind a long mahogany table stacked high with file folders and audio tapes in the Grand Jury Room of the county courthouse.

He said the files and tapes contained evidence in the unsolved case of Irene Garza, the 25-year-old McAllen beauty queen murdered in 1960. Guerra came under fire when the case was reopened and went to an Hidalgo County grand jury in 2004, but the grand jury failed to indict. Some criticized Guerra’s office for soft-pedaling the prosecution, while also appearing callous to the victim’s family. Guerra hoped the evidence would show his prosecutors made a good faith effort in the case.

“All he did is just use the county courthouse to get out his message, with taxpayer money,” Rodriguez said. “That’s why his campaign finance report shows he doesn’t spend any money, because he uses the resources available to him as district attorney. And it’s not fair.”

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

After 32 years in office, Guerra loses race for District Attorney

TEXAS
The Monitor

Posted: Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Jacob Fischler | The Monitor

EDINBURG — The moment he heard the results of early voting, 32-year veteran Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra knew his career in elected office had ended.

“I’m shocked,” he said. “I didn’t expect the people to turn against me that much.”

Voters in the Hidalgo County Democratic primary, who had voted for him to be their chief prosecutor in eight consecutive elections, soundly asked him not to return for another term in January.

Ricardo Rodriguez, the former 92nd state District Court judge who was 9 years old when Guerra first took office in 1982, received more than 20,000 of the 32,000 early voting ballots cast. Guerra needed to win roughly 75 percent of the Election Day vote to pull even, but he lost that by a similar margin. The final tally was about 29,000 votes for Rodriguez and 16,000 for Guerra. …

The family of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old beauty queen from McAllen who was murdered in 1960, celebrated Guerra’s loss.

“We just got tired of year after year after year of the abrasive and insulted way that Rene had treated us,” said Noemi Sigler, a relative of Garza and the daughter of a sheriff’s deputy who originally investigated the case.

The 54-year-old case, which happened when Guerra was an eighth grader at an Edinburg school, became a campaign issue this year when Garza’s relatives campaigned on Rodriguez’s behalf, claiming Guerra bungled the 2004 reopening of the case. CBS aired an episode of the news magazine program 48 Hours on Saturday that delved into the case and highlighted the DA’s race as a possible path to attain justice for Garza.

Rodriguez has promised to take another look at the Garza case, but not to necessarily send it to another grand jury.

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

In Hidalgo County, challengers unseat veteran officeholders

TEXAS
The Monitor

Jacob Fischler | The Monitor

Posted on Mar 5, 2014

EDINBURG — At about 7:20 p.m. Tuesday, in the parking lot of the Edinburg middle school he attended more than a quarter-century ago, Ricardo Rodriguez hugged his 15-year-old son close and kissed him on top of his head.

“It’s over,” the Hidalgo County district attorney-elect said.

It was an atypical display of emotion from the 41-year-old former 92nd state District Court judge, who rarely lets his guard down in public but had complained in the past two days of the way the time he’d committed to a volatile district attorney’s campaign had strained his family life.

“That’s why I stick around there and that’s why that’s my traditional ground there where I stick around because I don’t like to show too much of those emotions,” he said later. “It was special because my son was there also there with me, and they’ve taken a drain in this campaign.”

Rodriguez defeated 8-term incumbent — and former political ally — Rene Guerra, 69, with nearly 64 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary for Hidalgo County district attorney. Rodriguez outspent the veteran in the campaign at a rate of more than 3-to-1, while building support for the idea that change was necessary in the DA’s office.

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.

Rome- Pope of “change” now backs status quo; SNAP says

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Statement by SNAP leader Becky Ianni of DC/northern Virginia ( 703-801-6044, SNAPVirginia@cox.net )

We agree with Pope Francis that “The statistics of the phenomenon of violence against children are staggering.”

He proposes, however, not a single step by anyone to help remedy this tragic fact. His response to this devastating violence is apparently to change little or nothing.

Instead of using his unequalled bully pulpit to exhort parents to be more vigilant or prosecutors to be more aggressive or lawmakers to be more pro-active or employers to be more cautious, he defends the indefensible.

And instead of using his vast power to reform his church hierarchy’s legendary reckless, callous and deceptive handling of clergy sex cases, he mischaracterizes insignificant, belated, grudging concessions as significant, genuine progress. Instead of admitting he and his colleagues and underlings have been and still are too secretive, he endorses his and their continuing patterns of promising transparency while practicing deception. (It was just a few months ago, under this pope, not his predecessor, that Vatican officials rebuffed a United Nations panel’s request for information about clergy sex crimes.)

The Pope’s interview, according to the National Catholic Reporter, “contains some of the pope’s only public words on the sexual abuse crisis, which continues to roil dioceses across the world.”

[National Catholic Reporter]

The Pope said “Clearly that the vast majority of abuse happens in the family setting and neighborhood.” What possible motive could he have for saying this except to deflect attention from the Catholic Church’s horrific track record moving predators, promoting enablers, stonewalling investigators, deceiving parishioners, destroying evidence, attacking victims, discrediting whistleblowers, blocking disclosures, and stopping reforms of secular child safety laws?

“Those people – in families and neighborhoods – are worse than we are” is a petty and hurtful claim unbecoming of a pontiff.

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Defense set to begin at Philly priest-abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Pottstown Mercury

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The defense is set to begin in the trial of a priest accused of molesting an altar boy after a Mass in 1997.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick has pleaded not guilty to the alleged attack at a Roman Catholic parish in Northeast Philadelphia.

The 26-year-old former altar boy says he thought he was being punished because he was gay. He says he tried to hang himself afterward, when he was 11.

But he has instead gone on to a successful retail career after battling substance abuse.

The 57-year-old McCormick has been suspended from ministry since 2011, following a less serious complaint about another boy.

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.

Freethinker helps abuse victim gain support in lawsuit against a Catholic priest in Australia

AUSTRALIA
Freethinker (UK)

BY BARRY DUKE – MARCH 4, 2014

LAST January we carried a shocking report about the reinstatement of a Catholic priest who had been put on “administrative leave” for 16 months after he was accused of abusing a young disabled woman in Australia over a period of 14 years.

Father Tom Knowles, to the horror his victim, Jennifer Herrick, and others who had suffered abuse at the hands of priests, was returned to active ministry at St Francis’ Church in Melbourne.

After we reported that the Catholic Church had reinstated Knowles because he was now “committed to a prolonged, regular and very intensive and personally confronting programme of therapy” an unidentified woman posted a comment beneath the report.

It contained information Herrick believed could be of considerable use to her. She contacted me, and asked whether there was any possibility of being put in touch with the woman.

As I had the person’s email address I was able to establish the contact the victim sought, and recently Herrick emailed me to say that she is now “in constant contact with the woman” who wishes to remain anonymous.

She has thus been an immense support to me because she understands his character and has witnessed it over a long period of time. I tell you this so you know how important your website is for, in this instance, affording the victim about whom the article spoke, finding support in unexpected places!

She added:

I also want to tell you, Barry – and I’m sure you will be pleased to know – that I recently have taken out civil court proceedings against Tom Knowles and the trustees and the still-living provincial leaders of his Order (who ought to have been aware of what he was doing, being responsible for him) in the Supreme Court of NSW.

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 Bishop and The Heiress

UNITED STATES
Leon J. Podles: Dialogue

March 4th, 2014

As a harmless amusement, to distract my thoughts from the perennially depressing revelations about sexual abuse and corruption in the Church, I took up working out the genealogy of my family. Some pleasant surprises on my side: a staunch Confederate, and a soldier who was on the muster rolls at Valley Forge. Also indirect relationship, but real and traceable, to Lady Beatrice Weasel, King Alfred, and best of all, Lady Godiva.

My wife’s family had some very successful industrialists, such as the great-grandfather who invented the open hearth process for making steel and built blast furnaces all over the world, naming many of them (to the puzzlement of historians) after his daughter Lucy, a woman of forceful personality. Others were classic American stories: from ticket agent to president of the New York Central Railroad, from cabin boy to owner of a steamship line. Another ancestor was James Caldwell, an English actor who came to the United States in the early nineteenth century. He played Romeo in the theater in Fredericksburg, Virginia; during the death scene the widow Wormseley sighed and fainted. One thing led to another, and over the opposition of all her relatives, she married him, producing a son, William Shakespeare Caldwell. Having dipped his toe into the gene pool of the First Families of Virginia, James Caldwell returned to the theater in New Orleans where awaited his mistress, a Jewish actress by the name of Margaret Abrams. My wife (to the consternation of her mother) is descended from that activity on the wrong side of the sheets. So far, so good. Hot stuff. Caldwell made a fortune lighting first his theater and then the cities of New Orleans, Mobile, Memphis, and Cincinnati with gas.

Shake Caldwell (as William Shakespeare was known), went to the University of Virginia, and married another FFV maiden, producing two daughters, Mary Gwendolin and Mary Eliza (these are my wife’s first cousins, three times removed). The Caldwells, I gather, may have been from a Catholic (if somewhat sexually irregular) background, because he and his wife prayed to Mary for children, which is why they were both named Mary. The mother died; the father, although he had already established the Little Sisters of the Poor in Richmond, postponed becoming a Catholic until just before his death, when he was baptized. He left the daughters in the care of Irish Catholics he had met in New York. They turned over the care of the daughters to the thirty-two-year-old Father John Spalding, nephew of Archbishop Martin Spalding of Baltimore. Mary Gwendolin was eleven and Mary Eliza nine. John Spalding was chaplain at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Manhattanville, and took over their education, travelling with Mary Gwendolin to such an extent that it caused gossip. He became trustee of their estate.

At the age of twenty-one, Mary Gwendolin, under the guidance of now-Bishop Spalding of Peoria, purchased the land in Washington D. C. for the Catholic University of America and gave money for the erection of Caldwell Hall. She was honored by Pope Leo XIII for her generosity and received the Laetare Medal from Notre Dame in 1899. Mary Gwendolin’s wealth attracted the attention of Joachim Napoleon Murat, the heavily-indebted grandson of the King of Naples; he wanted half her wealth as her dowry, so he could pay off his gambling debts. She said no dice. Instead she married a French marquis, Bishop Spalding presiding. It did not work out; they separated, and she pensioned the Marquise off so he wouldn’t divorce her, which would cause her to lose her title, Marchioness des Monstiers-Mérinville.

Her sister Mary Eliza gave the money for Caldwell chapel. In it, with Bishop Spalding presiding, she married a German baron who was killed when Kaiser William’s yacht ran into his yacht during a regatta, leaving her the Baroness von Zedtwitz, with a four-month-old boy who became the bridge champion of the world. Spalding became the boy’s guardian.

Mary Gwendolin then became ill, and in 1901 revealed a dark secret to her sister: that she had been sexually involved with Spalding for twenty years, that is, it started she was nineteen. There were scenes. He was up to be made Archbishop of Chicago, but the Vatican investigated and instead made him retire at age sixty-eight. In 1904 both sisters publicly renounced Catholicism, although not directly accusing Spalding. Privately Mary Elizabeth called Spalding “a whited sepulcher,” “a liar,” a “sensual hypocrite,” of “a private life of iniquity and license” and “a very atheist and infidel.” She offered to come to Rome with witnesses to testify against Spalding, whom she had known “intimately” (her emphasis). Both sisters were denounced by Catholics as sick, crazy, spoiled rich girls who threw tantrums and made wild accusations when life didn’t turn out the way they wanted.

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Pope Francis says he is no ‘superman’

VATICAN CITY
Buenos Aires Herald

Pope Francis has played down the notion that he is a “superman” who will bring sweeping reforms to the Roman Catholic church, stressing that its ban on contraception and opposition to gay marriage will remain in place.

The pope, in an interview with Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper published today, also said no institution had moved with more “transparency and responsibility” than the Church to protect children in the wake of its sexual abuse scandals. …

Asked about the sexual abuse scandal, in which many priests who molested children were moved from parish to parish instead of being dismissed, he said the Church had done much since the scandal first broke some 15 years ago and was being singled out for attack.

He defended the Church’s record, including that of his predecessor former Pope Benedict, whom Francis credited with having the courage to start reforms.

“On this path, the Church has done much, perhaps more than all others,” he said.

“The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution that has moved with transparency and responsibility. No-one has done more, and yet the Church is the only one that is being attacked,” he said.

He appeared to be referring to a report by a United Nations committee last month which accused the Vatican of systematically turning a blind eye to decades of sexual abuse of children by priests, and demanded it turn over known or suspected offenders to civil justice.

The Vatican said the report was distorted, unfair and ideologically slanted.

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Rome–Pope shows “archaic, defensive” mindset; SNAP says

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 5

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

We are deeply disheartened by Pope Francis’ remarks on the church’s horrific, on-going

His comments reflect an archaic, defensive mindset that will not make kids safer.

[SBS]

For a year, we’ve been saying that while Pope Francis is making progress on church finances and governance, he’s done nothing – literally nothing – that protects a single child, exposes a single predator or prevents a single cover up. Now we know why.

It’s because this pope – who talks of change in much of the church – is apparently satisfied with the status quo on clergy sex abuse and cover ups. (Months ago, he did, in fact, tell Vatican officials who deal with abuse cases to “keep doing what you’re doing.”)

His central claim – that no one has “done more” on abuse than the Catholic church – is disingenuous.

No one has done more to clean up the Gulf of Mexico than British Petroleum. That’s because BP caused the devastating damage itself. It’s more than a little disingenuous

It would be far more accurate to say that no one has done more to deny, minimize and hide child sex crimes than the church.

In recent years, in some countries, Catholic officials have indeed been engaged in a flurry of abuse-related work. Sadly, it’s been because they’ve been forced to do so. And sadly, it’s been legal defense and public relations work primarily, not the real work of prevention, healing and justice. Under extraordinary pressure – from victims, parishioners, police, prosecutors, journalists – hundreds of bishops have been forced to adopt policies, procedures and protocols about abuse. But all this paperwork is largely meaningless, because no one enforces those policies and procedures. The fundamental and unhealthy clerical culture – that is obsessed with careerism, secrecy and self-protection – remains thoroughly intact in the Catholic hierarchy. And that’s why clergy sex crimes and cover ups continue even now.

It is irrelevant and hurtful for Pope Francis to say that more abuse happens in homes. He’s a very smart man. He knows the crux of this crisis is less about the heinous clergy sex crimes and more about the selfish, continuing cover up of those crimes by thousands of current and former Catholic officials. He can claim his underlings are “transparent.” But history proves otherwise.

It’s a shame that he claims the church has been “attacked.” The truth is that corrupt church officials – not “the church” – has been exposed.

And a quick factual point: he has NOT created an abuse commission. Three months ago, one of his spokesmen said that the pope will do so. No action has yet been taken.

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Kritischer Uno-Bericht: Papst verteidigt Umgang der Kirche mit Missbrauchsskandal

VATIKAN
Spiegel

“Kein anderer hat mehr getan”: Papst Franziskus hat die Kritik am Verhalten der katholischen Kirche im Missbrauchsskandal zurückgewiesen. Die Kirche habe Transparenz und Verantwortung gezeigt.

Rom – Die sexuellen Übergriffe auf Kinder seien “furchtbar, weil sie sehr tiefe Wunden hinterlassen”, sagte Papst Franziskus der italienischen Zeitung “Corriere della Sera”. Eine Verfehlung der katholischen Kirche bei der Aufklärung des Missbrauchsskandals sieht er aber nicht. Im Gegenteil: “Die katholische Kirche ist vielleicht die einzige öffentliche Institution, die sich mit Transparenz und Verantwortung bewegt hat. Kein anderer hat mehr getan. Und doch ist die Kirche die einzige, die angegriffen wird”, sagte er.

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Kripo ermittelt wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs in Emmericher Kirche

DEUTSCHLAND
Der Westen

[Summary: Police have started investigation into possible cases of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church at Emmerich. Police are asking witnesses to contact them. The Munster diocese said officials there are not aware of cases of sexual abuse.]

Florian Bickmeyer – 3. März 2014

Emmerich. Zeugen sollen sich bei der Polizei melden. Derweil äußert sich das Bistum Münster in einer längeren Stellungnahme zum Thema. Das Bistum betont: Pfarrer sind meldepflichtig, wenn es einen Fall von Missbrauch gibt.

Nach dem Facebook-Beitrag von Thomas Peters und der NRZ-Berichterstattung hat nun die Kriminalpolizei die Ermittlungen zu einem möglichen Missbrauch in Emmerich aufgenommen. Bereits gestern wurden erste Zeugen vernommen. Wie berichtet könnte es einen Fall im Zusammenhang mit der Katholischen Kirche in Emmerich gegeben haben, der in der Zeit vor Pfarrer Karsten Weidisch lag. „Wir bitten Zeugen sich bei uns zu melden“, sagt Polizeisprecher Heinz Vetter. Hinweise: 02822/7830.

Derweil hat das Bistum Münster eine längere Stellungnahme geschickt:

„1. Die Kommission des Bistums Münster für Fälle des sexuellen Missbrauchs Minderjähriger durch Geistliche hat bislang keinerlei Kenntnis von irgendeinem Fall sexuellen Missbrauchs Minderjähriger durch Geistliche in Emmerich.“

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Müller und Gänswein mahnen gerechten Umgang mit Limburger Bischof an

VATIKAN
Radio Vatikan

Der Umgang in der Öffentlichkeit mit der Causa Limburg war in den vergangenen Monaten nicht immer glücklich. Im Vatikan haben zwei einflussreiche deutsche Kirchenmänner dazu gemahnt, der Person des Bischofs Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst– ungeachtet eventuellen Fehlverhaltens – Gerechtigkeit widerfahren zu lassen: Erzbischof Georg Gänswein und Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller stellten sich dem Mikrofon der ARD; die Interviews entstanden wenige Tage vor der Übergabe des Limburger Prüfberichts im Vatikan. Der Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation Kardinal Müller sagte:

„Erstens ist ihm [Bischof Tebartz-van Elst] nichts an Verfehlungen nachzuweisen, was das Bischofsamt unmöglich machen würde, und auch wenn es dann vorkäme – erst muss noch über die Faktenfrage gesprochen werden – kann man mit einem solchen Menschen auch nicht so umgehen, dass er von Reportern gejagt wird, wo immer er sich aufhält.“

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Fall Georg K.: Endet am Donnerstag der Prozess?

DEUTSCHLAND
Westdeutsche Zeitung

[Summary: A court in South Africa is to determine whether Pastor George K., who is accused of 37 cases of sexual abuse in Germany, should be returned to Germany. An international arrest warrant has been in effect.]

Willich/Tönisvorst. Die Hoffnung ist groß, aber es wäre nicht das erste Mal, dass sie enttäuscht wird: Am Donnerstag wird vor Gericht in Brits bei Johannesburg erneut gegen den aus Willich stammenden Pfarrer Georg K. verhandelt – und es könnte sein, dass dieses Verfahren endet und der Geistliche direkt nach Deutschland gebracht wird.

Der 55-Jährige muss sich in Südafrika verantworten, weil er sich während eines Kommunion-Camps Kindern genähert haben soll. In Deutschland wirft die Staatsanwaltschaft Krefeld ihm sexuellen Missbrauch in 37 Fällen vor, ein internationaler Haftbefehl ist ausgestellt.

Der Prozess in Südafrika tritt seit Jahren auf der Stelle, wurde durch immer neue Anträge verschleppt und immer wieder wird vertagt. Beobachter halten es für möglich, dass der Prozess einfach zu Ende geht, womöglich ohne ein Urteil.

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Francisco: “Pintar al Papa como Superman es ofensivo”

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO
La Nacion (Argentina)

En una entrevista con el Corriere della Sera, que LA NACION publica en forma simultánea y exclusiva, Bergoglio habla de su revolucionario primer año al frente de la Iglesia

Por Ferruccio de Bortoli | Corriere della sera

Un año ha transcurrido desde aquel simple buona sera que conmovió al mundo. El lapso de doce meses tan intensos no alcanza para contener la gran masa de novedades y signos profundos de la innovación pastoral de Francisco. Nos encontramos en un pequeño salón en Santa Marta. La única ventana da a un patio que abre un minúsculo ángulo de cielo azul. El Papa aparece de improviso por una puerta, con la cara distendida y sonriente. Se divierte con los varios grabadores que la ansiedad senil del periodista colocó sobre la mesa. “¿Funcionan todos? ¿Sí? Menos mal.” ¿El balance de este año? No, los balances no le gustan. “Yo sólo hago balance cada 15 días, con mi confesor.”

Santo Padre, usted cada tanto llama por teléfono a los que le piden ayuda. ¿Y algunas veces no le creen que sea usted?

Sí, ya me ha pasado. Cuando uno llama es porque tiene ganas de hablar, una pregunta que hacer, un consejo que pedir. Cuando era cura en Buenos Aires, era más fácil. Y a mí me quedó esa costumbre. Es un servicio. Me sale así. Pero es cierto que ahora no es tan fácil hacerlo, dada la cantidad de gente que me escribe.

¿Hay alguno de esos contactos que recuerde con particular afecto?

Una señora viuda de 80 años que había perdido a su hijo. Me escribió. Y ahora le pego una llamadita una vez por mes. Ella está feliz, y yo hago de cura. Me gusta.

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Francis marks anniversary with interview on sex abuse, women, contraception

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Mar. 5, 2014 NCR Today

ROME Pope Francis has marked the first anniversary of his pontificate with a wide-ranging interview touching on his views on a host of topics, including the role of women in the Catholic church, the ongoing clergy sexual abuse crisis, and possible changes to the church’s family pastoral practices.

Published Wednesday simultaneously in Italy and Argentina, the interview seems to find the pontiff walking a bit of a tightrope — expressing support for church teachings that have sometimes divided Catholics but also calling for mercy and consideration in their application.

Speaking on the church’s prohibition on the use of artificial contraception, for example, Francis says a lot depends on how you consider Pope Paul VI’s 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae, which reaffirmed the ban. But, Francis also says, Paul was a “genius” in making the decision.

“It all depends on how you interpreted Humanae Vitae,” states Francis in the interview, published in Italy by the daily Corriere della Sera. “The same Paul VI, in the end, recommended to confessors much mercy, attention to concrete situations.”

Pope Paul, states Francis: “Had the courage to stand against the majority, to defend the moral discipline, to exercise cultural restraint.”

“The question is not that of changing the doctrine, but to go deep and to ensure that pastoral care takes into account situations and what is possible for people,” the pontiff continues.

Wednesday’s interview, published in Spanish by the Argentinian paper La Nación, was conducted by Ferruccio de Bortoli, the editor-in-chief of the Italian paper. It is the last of several lengthy the interviews the pontiff has granted in the year since his election as pope on March 13, 2013.

The interview contains some of the pope’s only public words on the sexual abuse crisis, which continues to roil dioceses across the world. Asked about the subject, Francis replies: “I want to say two things.”

“The cases of abuse are awful because they leave profound wounds,” he states. “Benedict XVI was very courageous and has opened a way. On this way the church has done so much. Perhaps most of all.”

“The statistics of the phenomenon of violence against children are staggering, but show clearly that the vast majority of abuse happens in the family setting and neighborhood,” he continues.

“The Catholic church is maybe the only public institution to have moved with transparency and responsibility,” he states. “No one else has done more. Yet the church is the only one to be attacked.”

In the nearly 3,000-word exchange the pope also touches on a number of personal subjects, calling himself “a man who laughs, cries, sleeps peacefully, and has friends like everyone else. A normal person.”

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Digging deeper: ‘Secrets of the Vatican’

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

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

In the category of in case you missed it, the documentary program Frontline aired “Secrets of the Vatican” last week, which is available online for viewing.

The piece starts out with a profile of the Legionaries of Christ, an order founded in Mexico by Marcial Maciel. Maciel was recently denounced by the organization he founded for having sexually abused children. Pope Benedict XVI removed him in 2006, and he died in 2008, but for years, even as criticism mounted, the Vatican supported him.

The program also features victims from the archdiocese of Milwaukee, which one expert said faces some of the most callous and disturbing cases of sexual abuse he’s ever witnessed. It recounts Cardinal Timothy Dolan, former auxiliary bishop in St. Louis, 2007 transfer of $57 million to a cemetery fund to protect the archdiocese’s assets from victims of clerical abuse.

The Associated Press recently reported that the archdiocese has proposed setting aside $4 million to compensate victims; it filed for bankruptcy in 2011 and the question of whether the cemetery funds can be used to compensate those abused is under appeal, according to the article.

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Women Could Have Greater Role in Church, Says Pope

VATICAN CITY
Wall Street Journal

By DEBORAH BALL
March 5, 2014

ROME—The Vatican could soon make significant changes to the role of women in the church and to the Catholic church’s approach to divorcées, said Pope Francis in a sweeping interview with Italian and Argentinean newspapers. He also suggested the church could consider a shift in its approach to contraception, although he ruled out a wholesale change in doctrine.

As the anniversary of his election approaches, the Argentinean-born pontiff also sought to rebuff criticisms that he has done too little to respond to the sex abuse scandals that have rocked the church, while he also renewed his criticisms of globalization. At the same time, Pope Francis sought to play down the huge popularity that his papacy has generated, saying that he is “not some sort of superman.”

In an extensive interview granted to Italian daily Corriere della Sera and Argentinean newspaper La Nacion, the pope said that women could have greater decision-making power in the church’s hierarchy. Some Vatican experts have raised the possibility of the pope’s appointing women to senior positions within the Vatican’s bureaucracy, perhaps as the head of one of its powerful departments.

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Pope: No institution has done more to tackle sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
Newstalk

John Alexander O’Dowd

The Pope has defended the Catholic Church’s record on tackling the sexual abuse of children by priests, saying “no-one else has done more” to root out paedophilia.

Last month, the United Nations denounced the Vatican for allowing child abuse to be covered up. The UN accused the church of preserving its own reputation and the reputation of abusers over the protection of child victims.

In an interview with an Italian daily, ‘Il Corriere della Sera’ published this morning, Pope Francis says statistics show the great majority of abuses are carried out in family or neighbourhood environments.

And he praised his predecessor Benedict the 16th for being the first pope to apologise to abuse victims.

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Chief priest of Badrinath shrine denied bail

INDIA
Press Trust of India

New Delhi, Mar 5 (PTI) Chief priest Keshavan Namboodiri of Badrinath shrine in Uttarakhand, who was arrested for allegedly confining and molesting a woman in a hotel here, has been denied bail by a Delhi Court.

Metropolitan Magistrate Shreya Arora Mehta dismissed the application of Keshavan, saying the allegations against him are serious in nature and if he is released on bail, he may try to influence the witnesses in the case.

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Predators, Alcohol and Teens … a deadly combination

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on March 4, 2014

The sexual abuse of teens by powerful adults (teachers, coaches, priests, family members) is a trauma double whammy: teens damaged by the abuse AND they are often blamed for the abuse by community members who say that the teen wanted it, was a slut, or should have known better.

What these people don’t understand—but predators do—are the intricacies of a teenager’s brain.

I’m not talking about hormones here. I’m talking about the physical, mental and emotional maturation of the white matter between a kid’s ears.

In his book Brainstorm, Daniel J. Siegel talks about why teenagers act the way they do. Without getting into the meat of the book (which is a must read for teens and parents), there was one specific point he made (among many) that shows why predators who target teens are far more likely to use alcohol to groom their victims.

According to Siegel’s studies, the teenage brain is subject to much greater dopamine releases than either children or adults. That is, they get much greater pleasure and a much bigger “rush” from alcohol, drugs, or dangerous behavior (sex, fast driving, BMX racing, etc.). So the euphoria a teen feels after drinking is much more intense than what an adult feels. Therefore, it’s harder to resist … or stop.

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Witness says priest’s conduct made him ‘uncomfortable’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LAST UPDATED: Wednesday, March 5, 2014

After three days of prosecution testimony, the sexual-assault trial of Catholic priest Andrew McCormick moves to the defense Wednesday with the priest’s lawyers saying they have not decided whether their client will testify.

On Tuesday, Assistant District Attorney Kristen Kemp completed her case in a day dominated by a former Bridesburg altar boy’s conflicted testimony about his relationship with McCormick.

Adam Visconto, now 27, told the Common Pleas Court jury that McCormick was an influential spiritual mentor at St. John Cantius parish in Bridesburg. Visconto testified that McCormick “grew my soul” at a time he considered becoming a priest.

Visconto denied that McCormick ever molested him or was sexually inappropriate. But he also said he cut off contact with the priest because of what he called “proximity issues.”

Visconto cited several times when McCormick put his arm around him as they sat on a sofa in the rectory and a time when, he said, the priest asked him and another altar boy to meet him in the church’s basement.

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Abuse inquiry hears series of allegations of rape, beatings and verbal abuse

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Times

Dan Keenan

Wed, Mar 5, 2014

Allegations of rapes, beatings and other abuses made by former residents of Derry care homes run by the Sisters of Nazareth have been heard by the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry. Statements submitted to the inquiry from those implicated strongly deny all claims.

The allegations and subsequent denials dominated evidence on the 15th day of the inquiry into alleged abuses in residential institutions.

One witness, who alleged she was repeatedly physically abused at St Joseph’s Home, Termonbacca, in Derry, said she was also raped while in care outside the institution.

The woman, who is now herself a foster parent, told the inquiry panel she and her husband provided homes for children in care because she “didn’t want them to go through what I went through”.

The witness, who cannot be identified, cited regular beatings from a named nun who also showed alleged bias against children who “did not tell her things”. The inquiry heard this nun also force-fed children.

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Will Pope Francis Finish Martin Luther’s Reformation?

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

In three year’s time, the world will mark both (A) the 500th anniversary of the German theologian, Martin Luther’s Reformation launch, and (B) the first Jesuit Pope, Francis’ 80th birthday. That is the current retirement age of cardinals and Francis may retire then to establish a term limit precedent.

Recent reports from Germany indicate that Francis by then may be well on the way to completing, not merely countering, the Reformation that Luther had started and, paradoxically, Jesuits had been founded mainly to counter. Francis now has the unprecedented opportunity (1) to complete the reform of the Catholic Church, (2) to end the scandalous religious rift that never should have occurred, and (3) to consolidate the fruits of the enormous efforts of both Luther and Loyola and their many followers.

Why Germany? A central element of the explanation is that it is where Swiss born, Rome Jesuit educated, Fr. Hans Kung has boldly taught scholars and advocated for reform for almost six decades, often working closely with Luther’s principal Protestant intellectual successors. Hans Kung has for decades clearly been a key, if not the key, Catholic intellectual, and pastoral, force behind this “New Reformation”. He has suffered much at the hands of the last two popes for his reform advocacy, but he is continuing to press, as he soon celebrates his 86th birthday.

Francis would likely benefit if he soon read carefully, if he hasn’t already, the superb, comprehensive and straightforward new reform book, “Can We Save the Catholic Church?”by Jesuit educated, Hans Kung described further at: http://amzn.com/B00CR42LNG that Fr. Kung already sent him, and then met with Hans Kung, who surely would be pleased to consult with him. Pope Francis, by a gracious hand written note, has already thanked Hans Kung for the reform book. Fr. Kung knows much about what ails the Church and what is needed to cure it, as best I can tell.

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Edmonton to host final Truth and Reconciliation Commission event on residential schools

CANADA
Edmonton Journal

BY BRENT WITTMEIER, EDMONTON JOURNAL MARCH 4, 2014

EDMONTON – Willie Littlechild has heard the dark stories, exposed to light after a half century of secrecy.

In the past five years, the former Conservative MP has listened to thousands of horror stories while travelling to 600 Canadian communities as part of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

He’s also seen the relief and healing that can follow.

Between March 27-30, Edmonton will host the seventh and final national event for the commission, established in 2008 as part of a settlement between aboriginal students, churches and the federal government. Up to 4,000 people are expected to attend the Shaw Conference Centre each day to learn about the history of the schools, rife with abuse and home aboriginal children removed from their families.

Health Canada will have 350 support workers on-site to help people who react to what they hear.

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Vatican Diary / The secretariat of state has lost its control over the economy

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

VATICAN CITY, March 5, 2014 – The comprehensive reform of the Roman curia is not yet around the corner. This was reiterated at the end of February by the coordinator of the council of cardinals instituted by Pope Francis with this aim in mind as well.

Cardinal Óscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga in fact said in an interview published in “Avvenire” on February 25:

“Reforms of the curia have always taken a great deal of time. We are living in the age of the immediate, and many would like answers. The positions in the dicasteries are being examined, and those on the councils will follow. They should have patience.”

But Pope Francis is not sitting back to wait for this comprehensive reform. He is proceeding with his own acts of reform, by motu proprio.

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Pope defends church efforts against abuse

VATICAN CITY
SBS

AAP

Pope Francis has defended the Catholic Church’s record on tackling the sexual abuse of children by priests, saying “no-one else has done more” to root out pedophilia.

“The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility. No-one else has done more. Yet the Church is the only one to have been attacked,” he said in an interview with Il Corriere della Sera daily published on Wednesday.

Last month, the United Nations denounced the Vatican for failing to stamp out child abuse and allowing systematic cover-ups, calling on the Church to remove clergy suspected of raping or molesting children.

It accused the Vatican of systematically placing the “preservation of the reputation of the Church and the alleged offender over the protection of child victims” – an accusation which was heatedly rebuffed.

The Argentine pontiff, who will celebrate the one-year anniversary of his election on March 13, said in the interview the abuse cases “are terrible because they leave very deep wounds”.

“The statistics on the phenomenon of violence against children are shocking, but they also clearly show that the great majority of abuses are carried out in family or neighbourhood environments,” he said.

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Local Catholic leaders open door for sex abuse talks

AUSTRALIA
Standard

By PETER COLLINS March 5, 2014

AFTER weathering years of negative feedback about sexual abuse cover-ups, Warrnambool’s Catholic Church parish leaders have taken a proactive approach by opening up the previously taboo topic for discussion.

Tomorrow two discussion workshops will be held in St Joseph’s Church foyer to address the issue of child sex abuse within the wider community and its impact on victims.

“This is an opportunity for the church and wider community to come together for a greater understanding of the issues associated with child sexual abuse,” parish priest Father John Fitzgerald said.

“We know that child sexual abuse was ineptly and unsympathetically handled by the Catholic Church.

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Pope Francis grants interview to Italian daily Corriere della sera

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Less than two weeks shy of one year on from his election as bishop of Rome, Pope Francis describes himself as, “A man who laughs, cries, sleeps well and has friends like everyone else.” It is the self-description the Holy Father offered to the editor-in-chief of the Italian daily, Corriere della sera, Ferruccio De Bortoli, in an interview appearing in the paper’s Wednesday, March 5th edition.

The Pope’s wide-ranging conversation with the veteran journalist covers themes from bioethics, to styles and modes of Church governance, to his friendship with and esteem for his predecessor, Pope-emeritus Benedict XVI.

Some of the strongest remarks concerned the role of women in the Church. “It is true that women can and ought to be more present in the places where the Church’s decisions are made. This, however, I would call a promotion of a ‘functional’ type. Only, in this way, we do not get very far: We need to consider that the Church takes the feminine article,” he said, “She is feminine in her very origins (It. dalle origini).”

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Pope Francis praises Humanae Vitae, lauds Pope Benedict’s efforts against sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

In an interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, Pope Francis praised Humanae Vitae, Pope Paul VI’s 1968 encyclical on contraception.

Emphasizing that confessors should be merciful, Pope Francis said that his predecessor’s “genius proved prophetic: he had the courage to stand against the majority, to defend moral discipline, to exercise a cultural ‘brake,’ to oppose present and future neo-Malthusianism. The question is not that of changing doctrine, but of going into the depths, and ensuring that pastoral [efforts] take into account situations, and what it is possible for people to do.”

“Cases of abuse are terrible because they leave very deep wounds,” Pope Francis said. “Benedict XVI was very courageous and opened up a path. The Church has done so much on this path.”

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«Benedetto XVI non è una statua Partecipa alla vita della Chiesa»

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Corriere della Sera

di Ferruccio de Bortoli

Un anno è trascorso da quel semplice «buonasera» che commosse il mondo. L’arco di dodici mesi così intensi — non solo per la vita della Chiesa — fatica a contenere la grande messe di novità e i tanti segni profondi dell’innovazione pastorale di Francesco. Siamo in una saletta di Santa Marta. Una sola finestra dà su un piccolo cortile interno che schiude un minuscolo angolo di cielo azzurro. La giornata è bellissima, primaverile, tiepida. Il Papa sbuca all’improvviso, quasi di scatto, da una porta e ha un viso disteso, sorridente. Guarda divertito i troppi registratori che l’ansia senile di un giornalista ha posto su un tavolino. «Funzionano? Sì? Bene». Il bilancio di un anno? No, i bilanci non gli piacciono. «Li faccio solo ogni quindici giorni, con il mio confessore».

Lei, Santo Padre, ogni tanto telefona a chi le chiede aiuto. E qualche volta non le credono.

«Sì, è capitato. Quando uno chiama è perché ha voglia di parlare, una domanda da fare, un consiglio da chiedere. Da prete a Buenos Aires era più semplice. E per me resta un’abitudine. Un servizio. Lo sento dentro. Certo, ora non è tanto facile farlo vista la quantità di gente che mi scrive».

E c’è un contatto, un incontro che ricorda con particolare affetto?

«Una signora vedova, di ottant’anni, che aveva perso il figlio. Mi scrisse. E adesso le faccio una chiamatina ogni mese. Lei è felice. Io faccio il prete. Mi piace».

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Pope hits out at criticism of Church over abuse scandals

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

Pope Francis has strongly defended the Catholic Church’s record on tackling sexual abuse by priests.

In a rare interview with an Italian newspaper, the Pope said “no-one else has done more” to root out paedophilia.

He said the church had acted with responsibility, yet it was the only institution to have been attacked.

Last month the UN strongly criticised the Vatican for failing to stamp out child abuse.

In an interview with Corriere della Sera, Pope Francis said: “The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility. No-one else has done more. Yet the Church is the only one to have been attacked.”

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‘No-one has done more than Church’ against sex abuse: Pope

VATICAN CITY
7 News

AFP

Vatican City (AFP) – Pope Francis has defended the Catholic Church’s record on tackling the sexual abuse of children by priests, saying “no-one else has done more” to root out paedophilia.

The comments, in an interview published Wednesday, were the pope’s first response to a scathing UN report that denounced the Vatican for failing to stamp out child abuse and allowing systematic cover-ups.

“The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility. No-one else has done more. Yet the Church is the only one to have been attacked,” he said in an interview with Il Corriere della Sera daily.

Last month’s hard-hitting UN report called on the Church to remove clergy suspected of raping or molesting children.

It accused the Vatican of systematically placing the “preservation of the reputation of the Church and the alleged offender over the protection of child victims” — an accusation the Church heatedly rebuffed.

The Argentine pontiff, who will celebrate the one-year anniversary of his election on March 13, said in the interview that the abuse cases “leave very deep wounds.”

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March 4, 2014

What Lies Beneath

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

In her opening statement to the jury, Assistant District Attorney Kristen Kemp accused “Father Andy” McCormick of taking some altar boys to see an R-rated movie.

Kemp told the jury that when the priest took the altar boys to see What Lies Beneath, he was too embarrassed to wear his Roman collar out in public, so he went to the movie theatre dressed in plainclothes.

Today in court, one of the former altar boys who went to see the film reprised that tale on the witness stand, saying it was one of the few times he’d ever seen Father Andy not dressed like a priest. Adam Visconto, now 27, said he was in seventh grade and presumably around 13 when he went to see the R-rated movie with Father Andy. The implication was the priest, wearing a polo shirt and pants, had snuck the altar boys in to a see a movie that according to its rating required kids under 17 to be accompanied by a parent or guardian.

But William J. Brennan, McCormick’s defense lawyer, brought to the courtroom a DVD copy of the 2000 supernatural suspense thriller starring Harrison Ford and Michelle Pheiffer. Brennan asked the former altar boy to read the fine print on back of the box. Instead of an R-rating, the movie was rated PG-13, meaning parents were “strongly cautioned” to consider whether kids under 13 should see the movie.

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Court upholds dismissal of claim in Milwaukee Archdiocese bankruptcy

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel
March 4, 2014

A federal appeals court has upheld the dismissal of a claim in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy that was filed by a man who was molested by a priest at age 7 and who had signed a $100,000 settlement agreement with the church in 2007.

John Pilmaier had filed a claim in the bankruptcy asserting that the archdiocese lied to him to induce him to sign the agreement. The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that Pilmaier’s attorneys “failed to show that the alleged misrepresentations were a substantial factor in his decision to accept the settlement.”

The ruling upholds earlier decisions by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley and U.S. District Judge Rudolph T. Randa but applies a different legal standard.

Pilmaier is one of about 90 individuals with prior settlements who filed claims in the bankruptcy alleging they were misled by the archdiocese during their settlement talks. It was not immediately clear whether the appeals court decision in Pilmaier’s case would affect those because of the narrow issues addressed by the court.

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Finding Information About the Publicly Accused Minnesota Priests

MINNESOTA
Legal Examiner

Posted by Mike Bryant
March 4, 2014

With the passage of the Child Victims Act, survivors who were sexually abused as children now have an open window in Minnesota to bring cases that have been previously barred by the statute of limitations. It will be important that every person who was abused, knows of abuse, or suspected abuse come forward and make sure that justice is done.

If you have questions concerning particular priests, MPR has a great resource to check out. They have listed information about each of the named priests and where they have been assigned.

If you know of a priest who is not on the list, it is worth contacting an experienced priest abuse attorney because history has shown that there continue to be names that are protected. The safety of future children has been insured when new names are added and each pedophile can be found.

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Inquiry hears allegations of rape and regular sexual abuse

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Times

Dan Keenan

Tue, Mar 4, 2014

A woman who was repeatedly physically abused at a Derry children’s home has said she was also raped while in care outside the institution.

The witness told the Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry heard the claims from the woman who is now herself a foster parent. She told the inquiry panel she and her husband provided a home for children in care because she “didn’t want them to go through what I went through”.

The witness, who cannot be identified, cited regular beatings from a named nun who also showed bias against children who “did not tell her things”. The inquiry heard this nun also force-fed children who refused to east the institution’s porridge.

She said her and her siblings had to walk to school rather and were not brought there in a bus driven by the same nun because they were not among “her favourites”.

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Upcoming Panel in Honolulu: Civil Window, Victims Rights, Prevention

HAWAII
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on March 4, 2014

I’ll be in Honolulu next week to talk about child sex abuse, the Hawaii civil window, victims rights and abuse prevention. If you are in the area, I hope you can join us.

Here are the details. The event is free and open to the public.

The Unspeakable Crime: Childhood Sexual Abuse Panel

When: March 13, 2014 7-9 PM
Where: Harris United Methodist Church, 20 N. Vineyard, Honolulu
Sponsored by Rainbow Family 808.com

Rainbow Family 808.com, is proud to announce their First Support Group Meeting. It will address Childhood Sexual Abuse in our midst. This timely Panel focuses on the two-year window for Childhood Sexual Abuse which ends in April 2014. Families need to understand the harm this ‘unspeakable’ crime does to their children.

Joelle Casteix is the leading national “in the trenches” expert on the prevention and exposure of child sex abuse and cover-up, especially within institutions such as the Catholic Church. A former journalist, educator, and public relations professional, Joelle has taken her own experience as a victim of child sex crimes and devoted her career to exposing abuse, advocating on behalf of survivors, and spreading abuse prevention strategies for parents and communities.

Attorney Jeff Anderson is widely recognized as a pioneer in sexual abuse litigation and a champion of survivors of childhood sexual abuse. In nearly four decades as a litigator Jeff has represented thousands of clients and has tried over two hundred and fifty jury trials to verdict. Known for his optimism, energy and compassion for clients, Jeff is credited with being instrumental in exposing the large scale cover-up of pedophile priests in the early 1980′s. As one of the first trial lawyers in America to publicly and aggressively initiate lawsuits against sexual predators—and the institutions that conceal and protect them—Jeff’s efforts have obtained justice for thousands of survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

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Portland auxiliary bishop appointment draws criticism from SNAP

OREGON
KOIN

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) – The Archdiocese of Portland has a new auxiliary bishop appointed by Pope Francis.

The Vatican Information Office identified him as Msgr. Peter Leslie Smith, 55. It will be only the third such appointment of an auxiliary bishop in the 168-year history of the Portland Archdiocese.

A news conference was scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center.

According to the Vatican Information Office, Smith was born in South Africa and was ordained as a priest in 2001. He was a priest at the St. Rose of Lima parish in Portland and is currently vicar general and moderator of the Curia.

He has a law degree from the University of Natal Law School in South Africa, with a master’ degree in theology from Mount Angel Seminary in Saint Benedict, Ore.

The Survivors Network of the Abused Priests (SNAP) issued a news release Tuesday, calling the choice “disappointing.”

“Smith is a civil and a canon lawyer,” SNAP wrote. “In our view, the church hierarchy needs fewer lawyers, not more lawyers. Kids and victims need prelates who are trained to deal with this horrific, on-going crisis from a pastoral perspective, not a legal perspective.

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Another former Stannies priest arrested

AUSTRALIA
Western Advocate

March 5, 2014

A FORMER priest at St Stanislaus’ College has become the 11th man charged over historic allegations of sexual abuse at Bathurst schools.

Former Bathurst officer Detective Sergeant Justin Hadley, now attached to Sydney’s Northern Beaches command, arrested the 70-year-old man in Marsfield about 7.25am yesterday.

The man was taken to Ryde police station where he was interviewed before being charged with 14 counts of aggravated sexual assault relating to alleged incidents between 1975 and 1982, during the man’s time at St Stanislaus’ College.

The man was bailed with strict conditions and will appear before Burwood Local Court on April 23.

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Here’s What Family Values Really Look Like

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

George Heymont

One of the joys of watching world cinema is that it takes you outside your standard frames of reference. In some cases this means stories with fewer guns, gore, and explosions. In other situations, it simply means that the influence of Jesus is never a given.

Consider Draft Day, a short documentary by Josh Kim that follows a handful of ladyboys in Bangkok as they take their chances in the national lottery for military service. Note the care with which military personnel comfort young men as they learn whether they will be exempt or subject to the draft. It’s a touching ceremony unlike anything you would ever see in America’s armed forces.

When it comes to narratives that challenge the traditional concept of family values, the fresh perspectives gained from world cinema can seem like a breath of fresh air. Here in the United States it seems as if the people who bray the loudest about family values are the people who are incapable of practicing what they preach.

Need an example? Try Minnesota’s Archbishop John Nienstedt, who spent $600,000 in church funds to lobby against Minnesota’s same-sex marriage initiative and sent anti-gay DVDs (unrequested) to 400,000 Minnesota homes in an attempt to get voters to ban same-sex marriage. In September 2013, Nienstedt claimed that “Satan is the source of same-sex marriage.” But on December 17, Nienstedt announced that he was temporarily stepping down from his ministry after allegations surfaced that, during a photo session several years ago, he had inappropriately touched an underage male’s buttocks.

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Priest who sexually abused kids at children’s home bids for early release from prison

UNITED KINGDOM
Crawley News

A FORMER priest jailed for ten years for historic sexual abuse at an Ifield children’s home is reported to have applied for an early release from prison on compassionate grounds, because of ill health.

Gordon Rideout abused boys and girls as young as five at Ifield Hall, a Barnado’s children’s home which has since been demolished.

It was during his time as assistant curate at St Mary’s Church, in Southgate, between 1962 and 1965, that he would visit the home and carry out the abuse.

It is understood Rideout, 74, was released from prison to go to hospital on a temporary licence.

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OR- New Portland Catholic bishop appointed; SNAP responds

OREGON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 4, 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 )

Msgr. Peter Leslie Smith is the new auxiliary of the Portland Catholic archdiocese. We are disappointed by this choice.

[Vatican Information Service]

Smith is a civil and a canon lawyer. In our view, the church hierarchy needs fewer lawyers, not more lawyers. Kids and victims need prelates who are trained to deal with this horrific, on-going crisis from a pastoral perspective, not a legal perspective.

He is also the vice chair of the presbyteral council, the vicar general and moderator of the Curia – all high ranking posts. So we strongly suspect that he knows of or suspects clergy child sex crimes and cover ups that he’s not helping to uncover.

We are encouraged when rank-and-file priests, not consummate church insiders, are promoted. That’s the way to bring real change.

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Vatican’s new finance ministry to use ‘the language of the enemy’

VATICAN CITY
The Tablet (UK)

03 March 2014 14:27 by Abigail Frymann

The Pope’s newly announced finance minister has said that the working languages of the forthcoming Secretariat for the Economy will be English as well as Italian, a sign that the new Vatican department will be run as a global institution.

Cardinal George Pell, whom Pope Francis announced last week would head the Secretariat which will have authority over all the financial and administrative activities of the Holy See, said the Italian-dominated curia and his Anglo-Saxon appointment marked “two different ways of thinking”.

“It will be a change for some people who bring a different level of understanding and patterns of thought,” he told The Boston Globe. “There will probably have to be formation courses to explain what’s needed.”

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Santos Abril named head of cardinals group in Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
Gazzetta del Sud

Vatican City, March 4 – Members of the investigative Commission of Cardinals studying reforms of the Vatican Bank on Tuesday appointed Cardinal Santos Abril y Castello as group president. The commission members, appointed by the pope for five years, meet at least twice per year to approve business processes and strategies at the Vatican Bank, officially known as the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR). The present commission was appointed in January by Pope Francis in what was seen as a radical reshuffling of appointments originally made by his predecessor Benedict XVI. The new committee consists of Santos Abril, archpriest of the papal basilica of Saint Mary Major in Rome; Christoph Schoenborn, archbishop of Vienna; Thomas Christopher Collins, archbishop of Toronto; Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Interfaith Dialogue; and Secretary of State Pietro Parolin.

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CARDINAL ABRIL Y CASTILLO APPOINTED PRESIDENT OF THE CARDINALS’ COMMISSION FOR THE IOR

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 4 March 2014 (VIS) – The members of the Cardinals’ Commission of the Istituto per le Opere di Religione (IOR) have nominated Cardinal Santos Abril y Castello as their President.

According to the Institute’s Statutes, the members of the Cardinals’ Commission are appointed by the Holy Father for a period of five years. The Cardinals’ Commission is called to meet by its President at least twice a year. It reviews reports on major business processes and strategy presented by the President of the Board of Superintendence. The Commission further oversees the Institute’s adherence to statutory norms and appoints the members of the Board of Superintendence.

The Institute’s current Cardinals’ Commission was appointed in January 2014 by the Holy Father and is composed of Cardinal Santos Abril y Castello (Archpriest of the Papal Basilica of St Mary Major), Cardinal Thomas Christopher Collins (Archbishop of Toronto), Cardinal Pietro Parolin (Titular Archbishop of Acquapendente and Secretary of State), Cardinal Christoph Schonborn (Archbishop of Vienna) and Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran (President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue).

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MT- Church officials should act now, not wait for settlements

MONTANA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 04, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

As part of a yet-to-be-finalized settlement with clergy sex abuse victims, Helena Catholic officials say they’ll release the names of credibly accused child molesting clerics. They should have done this years ago and we urge them to do this now. There’s no reason they cannot or should not.

[Montana Standard]

For the sake of healing and the safety of kids, church officials should name all the pedophile priests right now, and not wait to be forced to do so by legal settlements. Helena Bishop George Thomas should especially name the proven, admitted and credibly accused who are still alive and capable of hurting more kids. He should be ashamed that he has kept these names hidden for years. He’s done so only for the sake of his own convenience, comfort and reputation (and the reputations of other high ranking church officials, past and present).

Roughly 30 U.S. bishops have posted the names of predator priests on their websites, almost always after considerable litigation and pressure. Both Montana bishops should do so right now.

[BishopAccountability.org]

Some of the roughly 50 predator priests belong to religious orders, like the Jesuits and the Ursuline Sisters. Those Catholic institutions should also disclose these names immediately.

More than 360 adults report having suffered horrific child sex crimes by Catholic clerics. In our view, this likely means that hundreds of current and former Catholic employees either knew about or suspected these crimes and either ignored or concealed them. That is horrific too.

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IL- Pedophile priest worked in 3 Illinois dioceses

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 4, 2014

For more information: Barbara Blaine, SNAP Founder and President (312) 399-4747, SNAPblaine@gmail.com and David Clohessy, SNAP Executive Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Pedophile priest worked in 3 Illinois dioceses
He was publicly exposed two weeks ago for first time
Sex abuse victims seek help from Cardinal George
Group blasts “bare minimum” approach by Catholic officials

A credibly accused predator priest who was exposed for the first time two weeks ago, worked for years at St. Augustine’s school in Chicago. And a support group for clergy sex abuse victims is urging Chicago Catholic officials to “aggressively seek out others who may have seen, suspected or suffered his crimes.”

[Minnesota Public Radio]

Because of a court order, St. Paul Minnesota church officials revealed that Fr. Kenneth Gansmann was removed from active ministry because of allegations that he molested a child. Fr. Gansmann, who is now deceased, also worked in two other Illinois dioceses: Springfield and Joliet.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, are asking Cardinal Francis George to “use his vast resources to seek out any others who may have seen, suspect, or suffered abuse.” Cardinal George should visit every parish were Gansmann worked and beg victims or witnesses to come forward, they say.

Gansmann worked in Chicago at St. Augustine’s school from 1936 until 1945.

“He had access to hundreds of children every year. It is never too late to report abuse,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP’s director. “We hope those who are suffering in silence will find the courage to speak up. And we hope Chicago church staff will gently but firmly prod them to do so.”

“It’s difficult for some people to understand this, but often, victims stay silent unless someone in a position of authority – a prosecutor, a bishop, or even a parent – begs them to step forward and get help,” said Barbara Blaine of Chicago, SNAP’s founder and president. “Fr. Gansmann’s victims are likely getting older. They were children in a time when children were expected to never question adults, so it’s likely they’re still carrying this horrible burden alone. Catholic officials can and should gently but firmly prod them to break their silence and start healing.”

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Molestation charges against McAlester church elder dismissed …

OKLAHOMA
Tulsa World

Molestation charges against McAlester church elder dismissed on statute of limitations grounds

By DYLAN GOFORTH World Staff Writer

McALESTER —- Charges have been dismissed against a Pittsburg County church elder who prosecutors say molestated children more than 30 years ago, with a judge citing the statute of limitations in a case alleging a church cover-up.

Ronald Lawrence, 76, was charged in November with 11 counts of lewd molestation, five counts of forcible oral sodomy, two counts of forcible sodomy and one count of rape by instrumentation.

Lawrence, an elder at the Jehovah’s Witness church in McAlester, was arrested after three accusers said he had abused them in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Associate District Judge Jim Bland dismissed the charges Thursday over the state’s objections due to statute of limitations issues, Lawrence’s attorney, Warren Gotcher, said Monday.

Court records show that Bland stayed the decision, pending prosecutors’ appeal.

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OK- Victims applaud prosecutors for appealing child sex case

OKLAHOMA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Statement by Judy Jones of St. Louis, Midwest Assistant Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 636 433 2511, 314 974 5003, snapjudy@gmail.com )

We are grateful that McAlester prosecutors are appealing the recent dismissal of a child sex abuse case involving a Jehovah’s Witness elder (Ronald Lawrence) who is accused of molesting three girls.

[Tulsa World]

No predator should walk free because of an arbitrary, archaic deadline called the statute of limitations. It’s a law that gives adults who commit and conceal heinous crimes against kids tons of incentive to intimidate victims, threaten whistleblowers, discredit witnesses, destroy evidence, transfer predators and keep a tight lid on the truth (until the deadline expires and they escape consequences.)

Many judges in many jurisdictions have ruled that deliberate moves to hide child sex crimes effectively freezes the statute of limitations and have let prosecutors proceed in those cases. No callous employer should be rewarded for concealing suspicions or knowledge of dreadful crimes against kids from law enforcement.

We hope the prosecutors win their appeal. That will not only protect kids from Lawrence. It will also protect other kids by deterring decision-makers from helping child predators hide their crimes.

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