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 1, 2014

Russellville police: Facebook an important tool

KENTUCKY
Daily News

Posted: Saturday, March 1, 2014

By DEBORAH HIGHLAND The Daily News dhighland@bgdailynews.com 783-3243

RUSSELLVILLE — A sign outside Woodlawn Baptist Church just outside the city limits advertises a revival Sunday and Brother Kevin Lohse as the church’s preacher.

Across town at Logan County Justice Center, Lohse, 39, is set for arraignment at 12:45 p.m. March 12 on a misdemeanor charge of first-degree indecent exposure.

Lohse, who is the interim pastor at Woodlawn, admitted to Russellville police he was the man seen on video surveillance exposing himself at Burkes Outlet, according to Logan Circuit Court records and a release from Russellville police.

“While inside Burkes Outlet, Lohse was observed on video removing his penis from his pants, attempting to gain the attention of a 15-year-old female nearby,” according to court records. “On the video it is apparent that Lohse is looking for the same female, and walking back to where she is standing to expose his penis.

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.

Facebook helps police nab Baptist preacher

KENTUCKY
Associated Baptist Press

By Bob Allen

A Southern Baptist pastor in Kentucky was charged with indecent exposure in an arrest that police credit to social media.

Kevin Lohse, pastor of Woodlawn Baptist Church in Russellville, Ky., was arrested Feb. 26 after police identified him as the man seen on surveillance video exposing himself to a girl shopping in the junior section of a local department store.

Police in Russellville, Ky., posted on Facebook this image of an unidentified man accused of indecent exposure captured on in-store surveillance video. One week and 646 shares later, they say they have their man.
The Russellville Police Department posted a still image of the suspect on Facebook Feb. 17. One week and 646 shares later, Lohse turned himself in and confirmed he was the man in the security footage, according to a police report quoted by WBKO television in Bowling Green, Ky. Police called it “a prime example of community policing.”

Lohse, a graduate of Liberty University, accepted a call as senior pastor at Southern Baptist-affiliated Woodlawn Baptist Church in June 2013. Before that he was on staff at Pathway Baptist Church Calvert City, Ky., an independent Baptist congregation that identifies with Founders Ministries, a group formed in 1982 to promote Calvinism in Southern Baptist life.

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

Still we are making welfare hells

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

March 2, 2014

Jack Waterford
Editor-at-large, The Canberra Times

MY BROTHER, he’s got religion
He’s saving young ladies from sin
He’ll save you a blonde for a dollar
My God, how the money rolls in.”

Australians could hardly help but be shocked and appalled by recent evidence coming before the royal commission into institutional responses to child sex abuse.

The incompetence, negligence and, sometimes effective enabling of abusing teachers in schools is bad enough, casting fundamental doubts about the stewards, the managers or the overseers. But how much more horrible to think that children in obvious need of the state’s tender care and protection – such as orphans in Salvation Army homes, and children made state wards because they were thought to be neglected and abused – being handed over, by our representatives to people who would neglect, and abuse them, physically and sexually, even more.

Thank heavens this could not happen today! Now we know about the risks and temptations of sexual abuse. We know about duty of care. We, or our modern representatives, would never put vulnerable people at risk. Enlightened people run our churches, parliaments, bureaucracies, and institutions. We can be sure the horrible epidemics are no more.

Or can we? It is of the essence of the horrors in the institutions that they represented the best practice of the days in question, endorsed at the time by the whole establishment. This is not to suggest consciousness of abuse – though many players were not so naive as to dismiss the possibility – but a certain blind eye. The sort, for example, some Australians have about conditions in our concentration camps.

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Public Memorial Today: Looking Forward to Meeting You All

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Hello,

Thank you to all the wonderful organisations and people who have been helping promote today’s event or otherwise support it.

For those who can’t make it today, the entire event will be being filmed professionally, and I hope to have this film up on the website within a week. There are some fantastic speakers coming along, with important things to say about the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and associated matters.

I look forward to meeting all of you who have been emailing in recent weeks with messages of love and support.

Thank you to The Courier-Mail and Dot Wittington for a moving and respectful tribute to my father in today’s paper.

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.

Jehovah Witness predator escapes consequences

OKLAHOMA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

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

We are grateful that an Oklahoma prosecutor plans to appeal a devastating ruling that lets a Jehovah’s Witness elder escape consequences for his heinous child sex crimes by exploiting a legal technicality.

[McAlester News-Capital]

Pittsburg County Prosecutor Danita Williams has said she’ll ask a higher court to let her pursue criminal charges against Ronald Lawrence of McAlester, who allegedly repeatedly sexually assaulted two boys and a girl.

Lawrence had successfully argued that an arbitrary, archaic deadline – known as the statute of limitations – means that he gets to avoid prosecution.

We are appalled that an allegedly spiritual man would seek to hide behind a technicality like this. If he wants to defend himself, let him do it on the merits, not on the technicalities.

And we’re appalled by the apparent silence of the Oklahoma Jehovah’s Witness community. Church officials should be using their resources to aggressively seek out others who saw, suspected or suffered Lawrence’s crimes. They should be begging anyone with information or suspicions of his wrongdoing to call police and prosecutors. They should be pledging to pay for therapy and medical expenses for others he has hurt. They should be reminding church staff, volunteers and members that calling law enforcement about known or suspected child sex crimes is crucial. They should be doing an internal investigation to see if other Jehovah’s Witnesses knew of or suspected his crimes and kept silent or concealed the crimes.

Instead, as best we can tell, they’re doing nothing.

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

Mass for paedophile priest’s victims in East Midlands

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A special service is to be held to help Catholics come to terms with decades of child abuse carried out by a priest.

Francis Paul Cullen admitted abusing children in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire over a 30 year period.

The Bishop of Nottingham will take Mass at Christ the King in Mackworth, Derbyshire, the parish where Cullen first abused children in the 1950s.

He was extradited from Tenerife and admitted 21 counts of indecent assault. He will be sentenced on 24 March.

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 Magdalene daughter who brought justice to her mother

UNITED STATES
Irish Central

Sean Dunne @SeanDunneNYC March 01,2014

For the month of March (also known as Irish American Heritage Month) IrishCentral is tapping into the heartbeat of the Irish American community. The Unsung Heroes series features inspiring individuals from across the US who do extraordinary work in their communities and respective fields. From advocates to artists, from local legends to dedicated educators; from a high school baseball team to dynamo nuns in their 80s, these people are making a difference and to them we tip our hats in thanks.

Mari Steed was two-years-old when she was adopted from Ireland by a family from Flourtown, PA. Years later, her search for her birth mother turned up the Magdalene Laundries’ terrifying legacy, and Steed is widely credited for her campaign for justice and the Irish Government’s apology to the Magdalene survivors.

Mari is the daughter of a Magdalene survivor. She was taken from her mother and sent for adoption in America at eighteen months old.

She might never have gone looking for the woman who relinquished her had fate not brought her a great empathy for her mother’s experience. In her senior year of high school, Steed became pregnant by her boyfriend. Her parents sent her to St. Vincent’s, a home in Upper Darby for unwed mot­hers. On rare visits home to Flourtown, young Mari was kept indoors, lest her growing bump may attract neighborhood gossip.

Mari was reunited with her birth mother, who is now known as Josephine Bassett, through her campaign with Justice for Madeline Survivors. Josephine was one of the thousands of women who worked for years in the Magdalene laundries system before the last one closed in 1996. Her mother’s life, Steed told The Irish Voice in 2013, is a “kind of testament to the shadow side of Ireland and the deceitful tale it told itself of a kindly and compassionate social order.”

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 arrested over alleged theft of €600k

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Cormac O’Keeffe

The middle-aged priest was arrested on Wednesday and questioned by a team of detectives tasked with investigating the matter over the last six months, before being later released.

The priest is alleged to have taken regular holidays abroad, staying in luxurious hotels, as well as dining out in expensive restaurants here. The alleged fraud is believed to have gone on for almost 13 years.

Detectives suspect the priest was making false claims for Mass stipends.

Under canon law, a priest is entitled to receive one stipend (share) from the religious order or diocese from collections made during the celebration of Mass and ceremonies such as christenings and weddings.

It is alleged the priest lodged claims on a regular basis, including, it is claimed, under the names of 12 other priests, who were unaware of what was going on. In other cases, fictitious names are alleged to have been used.

A special Garda team is examining stays involving the priest at luxury hotels abroad and purchases of expensive items, including jewellery. Garda sources said they were investigating suspicions the priest may also have had a gambling problem.

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.

Irene Garza’s family hopes Rodriguez would pursue case, but he says there’s no promise of justice

TEXAS
The Monitor

Jared Taylor | The Monitor

Posted on Feb 28, 2014

EDINBURG — Relatives and others advocating the Irene Garza cold case murder be re-examined and go to trial trumpeted Friday another cause to support: Ricardo Rodriguez for Hidalgo County District Attorney.

Rodriguez has enjoyed the family’s support during his bid for district attorney, saying he’d re-examine the 1960 murder case to see whether it should again be taken before a grand jury. But he’s stopped short of making any promises to Garza’s relatives and advocates.

That didn’t stop them from hosting a news conference Friday morning at the Echo Hotel and Conference Center in Edinburg, urging voters to not re-elect incumbent Rene Guerra, who’s been in office more than three decades.

Besides the endorsement, no new information emerged from Friday’s news conference or when The Monitor interviewed Guerra afterward.

Dale Tacheny, an Oklahoma tax attorney who left the priesthood decades ago, told reporters that former McAllen priest John Feit admitted to killing the 25-year-old Garza. He said the admissions came when they both lived at a monastery in Missouri.

In an interview Friday afternoon, Guerra continued to emphasize that he does not believe Tacheny’s testimony would hold up in court, were he asked to testify.

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.

Face of priest investigated for alleged theft from his order

IRELAND
Irish Independent

KEN FOY – PUBLISHED 01 MARCH 2014

Anthony Egan (59) was arrested by gardai investigating the alleged theft of €500,000 from his religious order.

He was released without charge after being questioned for a number of hours at Mountjoy Garda Station yesterday about the alleged offence before being freed from custody.

The Herald reveals that Fr Egan was previously cleared of criminal charges in February 2012 after he was alleged to have falsely advertised his services as a psychiatrist in a national newspaper.

In this new case, a file is now being prepared by the DPP in relation to a complaint by a senior clergyman about the alleged thefts, which are claimed to have taken place over a 13-year period.

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Geraldton priest charged with sexual assault

CANADA
CBC News

Ontario Provincial Police have charged a Catholic priest in Geraldton, Ont., with sexual assault for incidents that allegedly occurred in the 1980s.

OPP said Friday they have arrested 56-year-old Roger Pronovost on two counts of sexual assault and one count of sexual exploitation.

The alleged offences involved one male victim who was a teenager at the time the incidents occurred between 1987 and 1989.

OPP say Pronovost was assigned during that period to St. John the Baptist Church in Longlac, Ont.

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Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana responde a Jason Day

PERU
Correo

[Summary: The Christian life sodality has asked actor Jason Day, to clarify his complaint of an alleged attempted sexual abuse by a priest of that organization.]

28 FEBRERO 2014 | LIMA –
El Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana pide al actor Jason Day, quien promueve la campaña pro aborto Un Billón de Pie, que esclarezca su denuncia de un supuesto intento de abuso sexual por parte de un sacerdote de esa organización, pues de no hacerlo se trataría de una difamación.

Como se sabe, el actor escribió una columna titulada “Esto sí es guerra”, publicada en un diario limeño, donde denunció un supuesto intento de abuso sexual en la sacristía de la parroquia Nuestra Señora de la Reconciliación, en la urbanización de Camacho (Lima), cuando se preparaba para su primera comunión, a los 9 años.

En un comunicado, el Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana señala “hemos enviado una carta notarial al Sr. Jason Cuthbert Day Del Solar solicitando que proporcione personalmente su testimonio de estos hechos que permita esclarecer esta situación. Hasta el momento no hemos recibido ninguna respuesta”.

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.

Sex abuse charges dropped for Jehovah’s Witness elder

OKLAHOMA
McAlester News-Capital

Charges have been dismissed for a McAlester church elder who allegedly molested, raped and sodomized three adults when they were children.

The charges were dismissed Wednesday for Ronald Lawrence, 76, of McAlester, an elder with the Jehovah’s Witnesses, according to court records. Associate District Judge James Bland dismissed the charges based on statue of limitation arguments from Lawrence’s attorney; the prosecutor in the case announced her intent to appeal Bland’s decision.

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.

Memorandum regarding the verdict in the court case of Archbishop Seraphim

CANADA
Archdiocese of Canada

Main Office:
31 LeBreton Street North
OTTAWA, ON K1R 7H1
Tel.: 1 (613) 233-7780
Fax: 1 (613) 233-1931
E-Mail: office@archdiocese.ca;
bishopirenee@archdiocese.ca
secretary@archdiocese.ca

No 045 February 28, 2014
Venerable Basil the Confessor

MEMORANDUM

Once again I would like to address you all in this memorandum in connection to the announcement of the verdict in the court case of Archbishop Seraphim in Winnipeg, Manitoba on January 24, 2014.

I wish to again remind all clergy of the Archdiocese of Canada, parish Council members, Archdiocesan Council members or anyone associated with the Administration of the Archdiocese of Canada, The Orthodox Church in America not to participate in any form of fundraising for the defense of the Archbishop Seraphim.

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.

Shreveport pastor found guilty in sex crimes trial

LOUISIANA
KSLA

[with video]

By Fred Childers

SHREVEPORT, LA (KSLA) –
A Shreveport pastor has been found guilty on all counts in his federal trial on child sex charges.

Andrea Lewis of Act on Faith Church was charged with 3 counts of transportation of minors with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity. He is accused of having sexual contact with girls in his church choir during trips out of state.

“There was a lot going on at this church that should have sent up flags,” Earl Campbell, the federal prosecutor told the jury during closing arguments at the end of the 5 day trial.

The jury deliberated about 3 hours before returning the unanimous decision just after 2 p.m. Friday.

On Thursday, his defense attorneys called character witnesses to the stand, who described him as a godly man and a good man.

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.

Federal jury finds Shreveport pastor guilty of sex with minors

LOUISIANA
Shreveport Times

Written by
Michael Doughty

Andrea Lewis the former pastor from Shreveport charged with sexual contact with minors was found guilty Friday by a federal jury on three counts of transporting minors across state lines to have sex.

The five-day trial in the courtroom of United States District Judge Elizabeth Foote, culminated in the conviction of the 54-year-old Lewis, who was found guilty of abusing his position as a pastor and choir recruiter from 1994 to 2000.

The choir consisted predominately of girls under the age of 18.

It took the jury three hours of deliberation to deliver the verdict, following a week of testimony and exhibits which indicated Lewis transported at least three minors from Texas for sex.

Testimony indicated Lewis threatened the girls not to tell anyone, and used choir trips and other church related travel to cover up the sexual abuse.

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Newark archdiocese announces a $100 million capital fund-raising campaign

NEW JERSEY
The Record

SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 2014
BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Amid a series of controversies, the Archdiocese of Newark is planning a $100 million fundraising campaign to support Catholic education, parishes and other initiatives.

Jim Goodness, spokesman for the archdiocese, said that the campaign would go on for several years and that officials were still working on the logistics and strategy.

Archbishop John J. Myers announced in a January letter to the archdiocese’s 1.3 million Catholics that half of the money raised during the capital campaign would go to the archdiocese and the other half to parishes.

The archdiocese would invest its half in long-term endowments for Catholic schools, struggling parishes, seminarians, clergy health care and other areas it regularly funds, Goodness said.

To prepare for the campaign, officials and an archdiocese consultant have conducted studies, spoken with pastors and sent out surveys to parishioners and clergy, Goodness said. The archbishop based his decision to let parishes control half of the money on the “candid feedback,” he said.

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

Memorial for those incarcerated in Wexford Magdalene Laundry to be held tomorrow

IRELAND
The Journal

A MEMORIAL SERVICE is taking place this weekend in Wexford to commemorate the women who were incarcerated in The Good Shepherd Magdalene Laundry, St. Mary’s in New Ross.

People are asked to meet at the entrance to St. Stephen’s Cemetery, Irishtown, New Ross in County Wexford.

The Good Shepherd Sisters apologised for the abuse uncovered in a report last year. They ran four laundries, including one in Waterford which did not close until 1996.

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.

Derby pervert priest scandal: Bishop to speak to Mackworth congregation about Francis Paul Cullen

UNITED KINGDOM
Derby Telegraph

By Martin Naylor

THE Roman Catholic Bishop of Nottingham will this afternoon speak to Mackworth parishioners about the case of disgraced former Derby priest Francis Paul Cullen.

The Rt Rev Malcolm Patrick McMahon, whose diocese includes Derby, will be addressing the congregation at Christ The King Church.

Father Andrew Cole, private secretary to the Bishop, said: “The Bishop will be celebrating Mass in Christ the King today at 5.30pm.

“This will be the usual timetabled Saturday evening Mass, but obviously his homily – or sermon – will address Monday’s proceedings at Derby Crown Court.”

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Missbrauch in Emmerich: Kripo ermittelt jetzt

DEUTSCHLAND
Der Westen

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.

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.

Missbrauchsverdacht: Bistum Münster wehrt sich gegen schwere Vorwürfe

DEUTSCHLAND
Kurier am Sonntag

[Summary: Has there been a case of abuse in Emmerick in the Munster diocese by one of several members of the pastoral team? According to a Facebook comment the CID has started investigations in Kleve. A police spokesman said there is initial suspicion but the diocese rejected the allegations.]

Emmerich (28.2.22014). Hat es in Emmerich einen Missbrauchsfall durch ein oder sogar mehrere Mitglieder des Emmericher Seelsorgeteams gegeben? Nach einem Kommentar auf Facebook hat die Kripo in Kleve Ermittlungen eingeleitet. „Ja, es gibt einen Anfangsverdacht“, bestätigte am Freitag Polizeisprecher Heinz Vetter dem Kurier am Sonntag.

Auf Facebook hat ein Mann schwere Vorwürfe erhoben. Er behauptet, dass es in der Zeit vor Pfarrer Karsten Weidisch einen Missbrauch durch mehrere nicht näher benannte Mitglieder des Seelsorgeteams gegeben haben soll und „viele wissen davon“.

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Second Teacher Sues After Termination Following Hales Scandal

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

[with video]

By Phil Rogers | Friday, Feb 28, 2014

Two months after a teacher filed suit against Hales Franciscan High School, saying she was fired for reporting a sex incident on school grounds against the administration’s wishes, a second teacher has now been fired, citing the same reasons.

Former Social Studies teacher Stephen Jennings is also suing Hales, saying he was fired last week because he reported the same girl’s allegations to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, as is required by law. Jennings said he went to DCFS at the girls’s request, after she said the school was not doing enough.

“I felt as a teacher, and a man of God, that it was my responsibility to protect the young ladies and support them,” he said.

In his suit, Jennings alleged then-principal Erica Brownfield had even warned the staff not to say anything about the allegations.

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Suit: Hales Franciscan teacher fired for reporting abuse allegations

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY MEGAN GRAHAM Staff Reporter March 1, 2014

A second former teacher at a Catholic high school on the South Side filed a lawsuit against the institution, claiming he was fired because he reported an alleged sexual assault involving students to the state.

Stephen Jennings alleges in a suit filed Friday in Cook County Circuit Court he was wrongfully terminated from Hales Franciscan High School at 4930 S. Cottage Grove Ave., nearly four months after female students notified him of alleged sexual assaults by male students.

The students came to Jennings weeks after former principal Erica Brownfield conducted a staff meeting in fall 2013 in which she told staff that a female student had possibly been sexually assaulted by male students, the lawsuit said.

She allegedly acknowledged her responsibility to report the incident to the state Department of Children and Family Services but said she was not going to do so, the suit says. She also instructed staff members to not speak to DCFS or report the incident, Jennings claims.

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Dozens of Children Abused at Evangelical Commune, Adult Survivors Allege

CHICAGO (IL)
Christianity Today

Timothy C. Morgan POSTED 2/28/2014

Dozens of individuals raised in Chicago’s Jesus People USA Christian community (JPUSA) are alleging that commune members sexually abused them as children, while leaders covered up the abuse for years.

The allegations are contained in a 90-minute documentary film, released today online, and in a civil lawsuit, filed in January in Cook County against the Evangelical Covenant Church (ECC) and JPUSA in Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood.

“My intent is to expose truth, bring it to light, because it hasn’t been in the light,” filmmaker Jaime Prater told Christianity Today. “No one loves JPUSA more than I do. It’s my home. Why would I want to see Jesus People shut down? Do I believe that those in power need to step down? Absolutely. But it is my hope that the community can somehow get past this and safety precautions can be put in place to preserve the innocence of children.

“For the first time in the history of Jesus People, former members have come together and coalesced through this journey and have started to heal collectively. My ultimate goal is for reconciliation. When the chips fall where they may and appropriate action is taken towards leadership, I would love to walk in my childhood home again and see where I grew up. That’s irrational. But I’m an optimist. Healing on all sides is certainly possible.”

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Evangelical Preacher’s Abuse Victims Awarded $525 Million in Damages

ARKANSAS
Time

By David Winograd @davidwinogradFeb. 27, 20141

Seven women who were physically, sexually and psychologically abused by an evangelical preacher have been granted over half a billion dollars in reparations by an Arkansas judge.

The Associated Press reported Thursday that Miller County Circuit Judge Kirk Johnson awarded $525 million to the victims in actual and punitive damages.

Johnson made the default ruling this week against Twenty First Century Holiness Tabernacle Church, after the organization failed to answer charges. The women were abused by Tony Alamo, the church’s leader, when they were members of the ministry.

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Half a billion dollars is awarded to seven former ‘child brides’ of pedophile televangelist who sexually abused them when they were girls

UNITED STATES
Daily Mail (UK)

By MICHAEL ZENNIE and ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTER
27 February 2014

Half a billion dollars in damages have been awarded to seven women who were raped and beaten for years by a pedophile televangelist who took them as his ‘child brides.’

They are the victims of Tony Alamo – a charismatic Pentecostal preacher whose massive Alamo Ministries has been branded a polygamist cult.

The women described being repeatedly molested and sexually abused, some starting at age 9, by Alamo.

Despite serving a 175-year prison sentence for rape and child sex trafficking, Alamo and his ministry are believed to have billions of dollars in assets, mostly water rights in California.

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JPUSA: A Tragic History of Sexual Abuse

ILLINOIS
Slow Church

March 1, 2014 By Christopher Smith

Although I heard awhile back that that this documentary on the sexual abuse of minors at the Jesus People USA (JPUSA) Community in Chicago was in the works, I happened to see this article on the Christianity Today website this afternoon and saw that it was released today. I knew that it would be one that I needed to watch, so I plunked down my ten bucks and downloaded the movie. You see, I have been acquainted with JPUSA for over 20 years; I have visited their community a couple of times and have friends who are members or former members. There was a block of 5 or 6 years — before my wife and I had kids — in which I attended their Cornerstone Music and Arts Festival every July.

No Place to Call Home is a heart-wrenching movie, offering story after story from victims who were sexually abused as children or teenagers while living as part of the JPUSA community (At one point the film offers the statistic that of 120 former members who were contacted in the course of making the film, over half were victims of sexual abuse at JPUSA). Including among the victims who speak out on camera, is the film’s director and producer Jaime Prater. The movie culminates with three stories of victims who name their perpetrator as Johnny Herrin, a member of the community’s — relatively small — leadership council, the son of the community’s founding pastor (who himself was ousted for sexual abuse), and the drummer for JPUSA’s seminal Christian rock group, The Rez Band. How could such a Christian community that had a relatively high profile in evangelical Christianity over the last four decades foster a culture in which sexual abuse was apparently all too common?

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February 28, 2014

Labour chiefs: It’s OK to have sex with 10-yr-olds

UNITED KINGDOM
Sun

By RHODRI PHILLIPS, LYNN DAVIDSON & ALASTAIR TAYLOR
Last Updated: 28th February 2014

LABOUR’S Patricia Hewitt last night apologised after The Sun confronted her for backing a paedophile plan for the age of consent to be TEN in certain cases.

The ex-Health Secretary put her name to a document that also wanted to legalise incest. She and Jack Dromey, now a Labour MP, were members of a committee recommending a revolutionary change in child sex laws.

Our investigation showed how she backed the work of the Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE) in the 1970s and 1980s. She said: “I got it wrong on PIE and I apologise for having done so.”

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New head of Legionaries of Christ weighs burden of founder’s sins

ROME
Catholic News Service

By Francis X. Rocca
Catholic News Service

ROME (CNS) — When accusations of sexual abuse against Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder and then-general director of the Legionaries of Christ, were first published in 1997, Father Eduardo Robles Gil was running one of the congregation’s schools in Mexico City.

Father Robles Gil did not believe Father Maciel had molested boys in his own seminaries, yet the accusations troubled him, and he asked himself what he would do if they turned out to be true.

“I said, ‘I am happy being a priest, it is where God wants me, and he called me to the Legion, so I would continue being a Legionary priest,'” he told Catholic News Service Feb. 28. “Having made that decision, I was no longer affected so much by what might come out in the newspaper.”

Today, Father Robles Gil is the troubled congregation’s new general director. He is the congregation’s first elected leader after nearly four years of Vatican-supervised reform that, he said, have left members full of “hope, enthusiasm (and) optimism.”

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Puerto Rico bishops hand over accused priests to civil authorities

PUERTO RICO
Headlines from the Catholic World

San Juan, Puerto Rico, Feb 28, 2014 / 03:05 pm (CNA).- Archbishop Roberto Gonzalez Nieves of San Juan and Bishop Daniel Fernandez Torres of Arecibo in Puerto Rico have handed over a group of priests accused of sexual abuse to civil authorities.

In statements to the media, Archbishop Gonzalez Nieves said six cases of alleged sexual abuse of minors by priests have been turned over to Puerto Rican prosecutors.

He pledged “the full cooperation of the Archdiocese, regardless of whether the person who committed the abuse is a minister, employee or volunteer. This entire process, while painful, should be an occasion for reaching the ultimate goal, which is the well-being and protection of minors.”

“None of these priests is currently in ministry,” the archbishop emphasized. “Some of the cases have gone before the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and others have exceeded the statute of limitations. One (accused individual) is dead, another was tried in court in Bayamon and another is outside Puerto Rico.”

For his part, Bishop Daniel Fernandez of Arecibo filed a complaint with police and the Department of the Family against one accused priest.

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Priest’s email confession to two-year secret affair that ended in mother’s fatal overdose

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By LOUISE ECCLES

A Roman Catholic priest faces an inquiry after sensationally admitting an affair with a vulnerable parishioner who later died of a drugs overdose.

In an extraordinary series of emails to her son, Father Stephen Cooper confessed he had been seeing nurse Kathleen Lardner in the months leading up to her death.

Extracts from her diary at the time reveal that the hospital ward manager suspected he was seeing another woman and made her feel ‘like a prostitute’.

Ten years on, Father Cooper now admits that Miss Lardner, who suffered from depression and anxiety, called him on the day she died to say she had taken some pills and ask for forgiveness.
But he says that at her insistence he did not phone an ambulance, despite realising she was in a ‘deep depression’.

By the time an ambulance was called by her long-term partner several hours later, it was too late. She died in hospital the same day, aged 41. An inquest found she had swallowed a fatal quantity of her partner’s blood pressure tablets.

Incredibly, Father Cooper presided over her funeral the following week, with her family and friends oblivious to the affair or her desperate phone call.

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Parents say son tried suicide after alleged molestation by Philly priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

BY HOLLY OTTERBEIN

The trial for a Philadelphia priest accused of molesting an altar boy continued Friday.

The accuser, whose name is being withheld, said the Rev. Andrew McCormick fondled him and attempted to force oral sex him when he was 10 years old. He is now 26.

The young man’s parents testified Friday that their son’s behavior changed in the months afterward. His father said he became angry and stopped doing the things he once enjoyed. His mother said he later attempted suicide.

The man’s parents said their son finally told them about the incident in 2011, after he saw in the news that the Archdiocese of Philadelphia had suspended McCormick, 57, and several other priests because of sex abuse allegations.

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“He Was Like A Wounded Animal”

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

A tearful mom and dad told a jury today about the noose they found hanging in their son’s closet.

They were followed to the witness stand by a grandfather who was a retired detective.

It was “Pop” who took the first statement from the alleged victim in this case, the 26-year-old man who has accused Father Andrew McCormick of sexually assaulting him back in 1997 when he was a 10-year-old altar boy.

“He was like a wounded animal,” the silver-haired detective said of his grandson. “He was so filled with anxiety.”

In short, it was a great day for the prosecution as three relatives of the alleged victim took turns scoring points against “Father Andy.”

Dad was the lead-off witness. He talked about the 3 a.m. text he received on Dec. 5, 2011 from his son.

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Brendan Smyth: Victims of paedophile priest cannot sue church

IRELAND
BBC News

Victims of a paedophile priest have been prevented from taking fresh legal action against the Catholic Church.

The High Court in Dublin made the ruling against the trio, who settled cases against Brendan Smyth in 1998.

The victims alleged negligence because complaints made about Smyth in 1975 were not reported.

But the judge said that the alleged new or additional facts were already in the public domain when the cases were settled.

The trio took a case against the Bishop of Kilmore Leo O’Reilly, and Cardinal Sean Brady – the head of the Catholic church in Ireland.

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Robert Mickens: From Benedict to Francis

UNITED STATES
Frontline

[How big a deal was the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI?]

The resignation I think would be more than anything that Joseph Ratzinger has done in his life as a theologian — and he’s written lots of books, and he’s influenced lots of theology in the church as a Vatican official. He was one of the most important for more than 25 years. More than anything that he’s done, he will be remembered for the resignation. …

What was the state of the church that he bequeathed?

When he resigned, Benedict XVI left a church that was almost run into the ground. Some brighter people and more astute people on the workings of the church had confided in me, even people on the inside, he was killing the church. People were moving away from the church; people were leaving the church in droves.

What he did in his seven years as pope or so, is he brought back into the mainstream many fringe groups on the extreme right, groups that did not like or threw into question the reforms that happened at the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s. The modernization of the church these people did not like. They wanted to go back to the old Tridentine Mass, the pre-Vatican II Mass, and he allowed them. These people were brought back into the mainstream of the church, even though they’re tiny little pockets, insignificant pockets really, [and] they became the tail wagging the dog.

This was driving away a lot of people, even inside the Vatican. The Vatican is naturally a conservative place. … Ratzinger, Benedict XVI, was too conservative even for them.

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New Bill Aimed at Child Sex Abuse Cases in GA

GEORGIA
WSAV

By Shameca Kelley

ATLANTA, GA –
Child sexual abuse impacts 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys before their 18th birthday. Yet, prosecutors say only 1 in 10 actually speak up, but in many cases, not until they are older and well past the statute of limitations for legal action against their abusers.

However, a House Judiciary Committee has passed a new bill, HB 771, which would give victims more time to seek action.

Under current law, child sex abuse victims in the Peach State can only take action against their abusers up to five years after age 18.

If the new bill passes, victims would be able to bring action against his or her abuser up until they reach the age of 30.

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GA- Bill will extend SOL for child sex abuse, victims respond

GEORGIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, February 28, 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 )

A proposed bill in George would extend the statute of limitation for child sex crimes 7 years. This is a step in the right direction, but stronger action is needed.

[WSAV]

House Bill 771, which was passed by a House Judiciary Committee, would give victims of child sexual assault and additional 7 years to file lawsuits. As the law stands now victims only have 5 years after they turn 18. Under the new law victims will have until they are 30 years old.

We are glad this small step in the right direction was taken and that lawmakers are acknowledging that many victims of child sexual abuse take years to report their abuse, due to the extreme trauma. We are sure that this law will help many younger people who were abused as kids, but it does nothing for older people.

Statute of limitations in child sex crimes only protect dangerous predators who more often than not will hurt more than one child. To help prevent future crimes removing the statute of limitations is necessary or at least offering a window.

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Former altar boy reveals grim details of Philadelphia priest’s alleged sex abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
New York Daily News

BY CAROL KURUVILLA / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2014

A former altar boy opened up in court on Thursday about the abuse he allegedly endured under the hands of a trusted Roman Catholic priest.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick, 57, quietly listened to the unidentified young man speak about the sexual encounter that left him scarred at the age of 10.

“I remember trying to hang myself a lot. … Probably every week,” the man, now 26, told a Philadelphia courtroom. “I couldn’t deal with the guilt of what had happened, or what I am.”

McCormick has pleaded not guilty to the crime. The priest, who worked at St. John Cantius Church in Bridesburg at the time, has been placed on administrative leave by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. He was arrested in July 2012, the Philadelphia Daily News reports.

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IL- Conservative Christian allegedly didn’t report child abuse

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, February 28, 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 )

A conservative Christian official from Illinois is on administrative leave following allegations that he sexually harassed women and didn’t report suspected child abuse.

[Religion News Service]

This is the bare minimum. More must be done to protect the vulnerable and expose the truth.

In the charges recently brought by a sexual abuse victim against Bill Gothard, director of Basic Life Principles, we see a very disturbing, but recurring pattern. We have a young person, working for someone that is supposed to be of high principles and above reproach. This responsible person then allegedly violates the trust of the young person, and uses his position of authority to abuse both this victim and others.

We commend the board of this organization for their recent actions; however, we question where they have been on this since the first revelations came forth in 2011.The whistle blowing website Recovering Grace reported that an underage girl was harassed by Gothard in the early 1990s, but was afraid no one would believe her so did not report the crime then.

Were officials unaware all this time of these victims and their claims? Did they notify authorities at once as dictated by civil and moral law? It is unclear in their statement whether Bill was forced to resign, or if he just chose to step aside from his position of power due to the forces that now make the pressure too great to not react.

What we see here is an unfortunate action, and reaction, by those entrenched in positions of trust and power, and how they go about protecting their turf, and the organization, with no regard for the victims and their needs. Where is their outline of action? Where is their plan to address the needs of the victims? Where are their efforts to find others who may have seen suspected or suffered Gothard’s wrongdoing and beg them to call police?

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What role did parish firings, pastor’s temperament play in Bend controversy?

OREGON
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Morris-Young | Feb. 28, 2014

Editor’s note: This is Part 5 of a five-part series on the dispute between a pastor and his bishop in St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Bend, Ore. Removed from his post last October, Fr. James Radloff filed an appeal, but his request was denied by the Vatican, as the Congregation for Clergy sided with Baker, Ore., Bishop Liam Cary. Dated Jan. 31 and made public in Bend Feb. 14, the decision allows Cary to keep secret the reason for the ouster and permits a continued bar on Radloff’s public ministry. According to Radloff’s canonical adviser, Fr. Thomas Faucher, Radloff received a letter from Cary Wednesday, Feb. 26. It was dated Feb. 21. No details were available to the press. Read Part 1 here, Part 2 here, Part 3 here and Part 4 here.

The personality of Fr. James Radloff as well as the termination of some St. Francis of Assisi Parish employees continue to be flashpoints in discussions of why the priest might have been removed as pastor.

Letters in Bend’s major newspaper, The Bulletin, and posts on the NCR website have alternatively chastised and lauded Radloff for staffing changes.

In separate interviews, two parishioners claimed Radloff terminated five employees with no warning not long after assuming reins of the parish, giving them an hour to vacate, in one case eliminating income for a family of six.

Others argue that staff changes were needed. Parishioner Donna Hodson said bluntly Feb. 8, “True, it’s hard to let people go, but the people he let go needed to be let go. How do you fire someone kindly?”

Support independent Catholic journalism. Subscribe to NCR.
Thirty-year parishioner Ken Roberts said, “Radloff was very impulsive and made a lot of decisions without regard for the consequences. He dismissed a lot of good people from the staff when he arrived which alienated many. Some of those are returning under the new regime which is very heartening and it is because Fr. Julian (Cassar) is reaching out to them and trying to heal our community which has been in some kind of turmoil for the last several years.”

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Brendan Smyth abuse victims cannot take new case against church

IRELAND
RTE News

The High Court has ruled that three victims of abuse by paedophile priest Brendan Smyth who settled cases in 1998 may not proceed with fresh legal action against the Catholic Church.

The victims had alleged the Bishop of Kilmore and now Cardinal Seán Brady did not take steps to prevent Smyth from abusing children in the 1970s and 1980s.

Bishop of Kilmore Leo O’Reilly was sued as successor to the previous bishop Francis McKiernan. Cardinal Seán Brady is being sued in a personal capacity.

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IL- University piano quartet is criticized

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Feb. 28, 2014

For more information: Melanie Jula Sakoda ( 925-708-6175 cell, melanie.sakoda@gmail.com ), Cappy Larson ( 415-637-2006, cappy@rlarson.com ), David Clohessy ( 314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

University piano quartet is criticized
Group was to help convicted child molester
Professors had planned to perform at fundraiser
It’s unclear whether event has been postponed or cancelled
School official claims he “cannot forbid our faculty from performing”

Four Illinois Wesleyan professors and musicians were set to perform at a fundraiser for a convicted child molester. But yesterday, protests by a victims group led to the event’s cancellation or postponement.

Members of a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, were upset about a planned March 5th fundraiser to benefit Archbishop Seraphim Storheim, once the top Orthodox official in Canada, who was found guilty last month of sexually abusing an altar boy.

Yesterday, SNAP wrote to IWU provost Jonathan D. Green (309-556-3101, jgreen@iwu.edu), asking him to stop The Illinois Wesleyan Piano Quartet from agreeing to perform at the event or at least denounce the quartet for doing so.

SNAP sent similar protest letters to four other groups, asking them to block the fundraiser from happening.

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Bill Gothard Placed on Administrative Leave After Allegations of Sexual Harassment

UNITED STATES
Christian Post

BY NICOLA MENZIE , CHRISTIAN POST REPORTER
February 28, 2014

Bill Gothard has been placed on administrative leave by board members of his nonprofit organization, Institute for Basic Life Principles, amid an investigation into allegations that he sexually harassed several women and young girls.

Billy Boring Jr., one of nine members (including Gothard) on the Institute for Basic Life Principles’ board, told World magazine: “After completion of the review the board will respond at an appropriate time, and in a biblical manner.”

While the investigation was ongoing, Gothard “will not be involved in the operations of the ministry. The board of directors will be prayerfully appointing interim leadership.”

A Christian-run online organization named Recovering Grace has been publishing victim accounts of alleged abuse at the hands of Gothard. Recovering Grace claims to be privy to at least 34 different women who say they were victims of “textbook sexual harassment” and emotional abuse at the hands of Gothard. According to RNS, Gothard was also being investigated for failing to report allegations of child abuse.

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Bill Gothard placed on administrative leave

UNITED STATES
World Magazine

By WARREN COLE SMITH
Posted Feb. 27, 2014

The board of directors of the Institute for Basic Life Principles has placed its longtime leader Bill Gothard, 79, on “administrative leave” while the board investigates claims that he years ago engaged in sexual harassment and other misconduct.

Responding to a WORLD inquiry, board chairman Billy Boring stated, “After completion of the review the board will respond at an appropriate time, and in a biblical manner.” Until then, the statement said, Gothard “will not be involved in the operations of the ministry. The board of directors will be prayerfully appointing interim leadership.”

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Conservative leader Bill Gothard on leave following abuse allegations

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

Sarah Pulliam Bailey | Feb 28, 2014

(RNS) Bill Gothard, an Illinois-based advocate for home-schooling and conservative dress and who warned against rock music and debt, has been placed on administrative leave after allegations of sexually harassing women who worked at his ministry and failing to report child abuse cases.

Gothard’s Institute in Basic Life Principles was once a popular gathering spot for thousands of Christian families, including the Duggar family from TLC’s “19 Kids and Counting.” Gothard’s Advanced Training Institute conferences were also popular among devotees of the Quiverfull movement, who promote large families and eschew birth control.

He’s also rubbed shoulders with Republican luminaries. He and former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee were photographed at a campaign lunch together; former Georgia Gov. Sunny Perdue spoke at one of Gothard’s conferences; and Sarah Palin, when she was a small town mayor in Alaska, attended his International Association of Character Cities conferences and declared Wasilla among Gothard’s “Cities of Character.”

In a statement posted Thursday, board chairman Billy Boring told World magazine: “After completion of the review, the board will respond at an appropriate time, and in a biblical manner.” Until then, the statement said, Gothard “will not be involved in the operations of the ministry. The board of directors will be prayerfully appointing interim leadership.”

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Evangelist pastor Rick Warren plans mental health ministry after son’s suicide

CALIFORNIA
New York Daily News

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2014

LAKE FOREST, Calif. — A year after his son’s suicide, popular evangelical pastor Rick Warren is taking on a new mental health ministry inspired by his personal tragedy.

Warren, founder of Saddleback Church and a best-selling author, will team with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange and the National Alliance on Mental Illness to host a daylong event next month focused on helping church leaders reach parishioners who are struggling with mental illness.

The Gathering on Mental Health and the Church grew out of private conversations Warren had with the local Catholic bishop, Bishop Kevin Vann, after his son’s death and his own writings in his journal as he processed his grief. Matthew Warren, 27, committed suicide last April after struggling with severe depression and suicidal thoughts for years.

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CA- Victims praise Rick Warren/OC bishop event

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Feb. 28, 2014

For more info: Joelle Casteix 949 322 7434, jcasteix@gmail.com,
David Clohessy 314 566 9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Victims praise Rick Warren/OC bishop event
Daylong seminar to address mental health issues
Education is an important first step, group says
SNAP: “But firing wrong-doers as important as therapy”

A national support group for victims of child sexual abuse is applauding an upcoming church-sponsored mental health seminar, saying it’s a good first step in helping victims and others heal from the pains of mental illness.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPNetwork.org), are calling the partnership between Saddleback Church founder Rick Warren and the Catholic Diocese of Orange, CA, “movement in the right direction” to help victims of child sexual abuse and anyone who is suffering with mental illness.

[New York Daily News]

The seminar, which will be held at the Saddleback Church campus in south Orange County, will feature speakers and small group seminars which will educate ministers and the public on how to compassionately and effectively help those suffering from mental illness.

SNAP leaders say that events like this should be accompanied by decisive action to help those who are suffering due to child sex abuse and cover-ups in Orange County institutions.

“There are three ways we can help victims of mental illness: compassion, intervention, and action,” said Joelle Casteix of Newport Beach, SNAP Volunteer Western Regional Director. “But without action—without punishing wrongdoers and those who covered up for them—victims of child sexual abuse who suffer from mental illness are only more isolated, shamed and vulnerable.”

Casteix hopes that church officials in the area will publicly invite abuse victims to attend the event.

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Clergy Abuse Overwhelmed a Pope: It Ought to Be Exposed

UNITED STATES
Poets & Lunatics: The Power of the Pen on the Journey of Faith

February 28, 2014 By Wendy Murray

I recently watched a Frontline documentary titled “Secrets of the Vatican” highlighting the daunting challenges facing Pope Francis. His predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, resigned from the office a year ago today (Feb. 28, 2013) under a cloud of corruption and the stench of unresolved rampant sex-abuse cases. The documentary highlights the challenge Pope Francis faces in the unspoken mandate to clean up the Church, most notably the shameful sordid legacy of covering up of rampant sex abuse over many decades that has destroyed lives.

The problem of abuse and cronyism is not exclusive to Catholicism. Evangelical Boz Tchividjian asserts unequivocally that sex abuse among evangelical clergy is ‘worse’ than that within the Catholic church. Tchividijian – a former child-abuse victim; child-abuse prosecutor; founder and executive director of GRACE (Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment); law professor; author and — it’s worth noting — Billy Graham’s grandson; speaks and writes extensively on issues related to sex abuse within the evangelical faith community. “Christian mission field is a ‘magnet’ for sexual abusers,” he says. “The Protestant culture is defined by independence”– the implication being that this independence, when it comes to confronting pathologies in ministry, sets the table for little if any accountability.

A report published by the Baptist General Convention of Texas (2000) noted “the incidence of sexual abuse by clergy has reached ‘horrific proportions.’” Studies revealed that 40 percent had acknowledged “sexually inappropriate behavior.”

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Three steps to reform the Vatican

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Feb. 26, 2014 Faith and Justice

Pope Francis has placed reform of the Vatican as a top priority of his papacy. Whether or not he will succeed remains to be seen.

There are at least three things necessary to successfully reform an institution: changing its culture, appointing key people who support the reform, and putting in place structures, policies, and procedures to concretize the reform.

Changing the culture of an institution is probably the most difficult and the most important. It is not enough to send out memos mandating new policies or to move boxes around in the organizational chart. The attitudes and values of the people in an institution make it what it is, especially if those values are not just talked about but incarnated at the top.

From his first minutes in office, Pope Francis has been trying to change the culture of the institutional church. He has talked about leadership as being for service rather than for status, power, or prestige. He has been critical of clericalism and careerism. He realizes that reform requires a conversion of hearts and minds. And he has not just talked, he has walked the walk. He has modeled what it means to be a good bishop, a good priest, a good Christian.

Second, reform requires putting people who support change into key positions. Francis began this by appointing as secretary of state Pietro Parolin, a highly competent Vatican professional who supports the pope’s vision and agenda.

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Charges dropped against Rabbi Glick

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 28, 2014

Stephen Cauchi and Barney Schwartz

A respected rabbi who was stood down from Melbourne’s Yeshivah College over allegations that he raped a student in the 1970s has had charges against him dropped.

Rabbi Avrohom Glick, 67, was then deputy principal and later principal of the College. He was head of religious studies when he was stood down last December.

Rabbi Glick, of Balaclava, was arrested and interviewed in December and released pending further inquiries.

Yeshivah College principal Yehoshua Smukler said at the time that although “Rabbi Glick is a highly respected staff member and community figure”, he would be immediately stood down.

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Bishop wins court case to halt actions by three abuse survivors

IRELAND
Irish Times

Mary Carolan

A Catholic Bishop has won a High Court court halting three actions for damages brought against him in a representative capacity by a man, his sister and another woman who previously settled Northern Ireland court actions for stg £25,000 each over sexual abuse by paedophile priest Fr Brendan Smyth.

President of the High Court, Mr Justice Nicholas Kearns, today granted an application by Bishop of Kilmore, Dr Leo O’Reilly, for orders halting, on grounds of the previous settlements, the actions brought against him in his representative capacity as Bishop of the Kilmore diocese.

The cases by the three were also brought against Cardinal Sean Brady, who is being sued in his personal capacity arising from his role as part-time secretary to former Bishop of Kilmore, Francis McKiernan, during a church investigation in 1975 into complaints about Smyth.

Cardinal Brady had not made any similar application to that of Bishop O’Reilly and the proceedings against him remain in being.

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Canada- Ottawa parish responded quickly to victims’ request for help

CANADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Feb. 28, 2014

For more info: Melanie Jula Sakoda 925-708-6175 cell, melanie.sakoda@gmail.com, David Clohessy 314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Ottawa parish responded quickly to victims’ request for help
Fundraiser for convicted archbishop cancelled or postponed
He was brought to trial last year, accused of molesting 11 year old twin boys
SNAP: “We fear concert is merely postponed, so we hope the other groups we contacted will also step up to the plate”
“Public support for proven molesters is wrong because it deters victims of other child sex crimes from speaking up,” victims say

A victims’ group is grateful that an Ottawa Orthodox parish responded swiftly to their plea for assistance. The church cancelled a fundraiser to benefit an archbishop who was convicted last month of molesting an altar boy, and assured the group that they would never allow it to take place in their facility. However, the event organizers appear undeterred by this set-back.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, were upset about a planned March 5th event to raise money for Archbishop Seraphim Storheim, who was found guilty last month of abusing one of the twins. Storheim is the former head of the Archdiocese of Canada of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA). He is suspended by the OCA while he awaits church discipline for his crimes.

Yesterday, SNAP wrote four church institutions connected with the event. The group said the event “hurt at least one child sex abuse victim and deterred other child sex abuse victims from speaking up.” Later during the day, the website promoting the event posted that “The chamber music concert on March 5 at Woodroffe United Church is cancelled due to the change of schedule.”

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TN- Victims blast Nashville Catholic officials

TENNESSEE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Feb. 28, 2014

Statement by Susan Vance of Knoxville, leader of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 865-927-2923, vancefamily1@comcast.net )

Yesterday, when confronted by a TV reporter, Nashville Catholic officials admitted receiving a report of child sex crimes by a priest that they had kept secret for years. Shame on them.

[Fox 17]

The alleged child molesting cleric is Fr. Gansmann who also spent time in Illinois and Minnesota. Last week, for the first time, Catholic officials in the Twin Cities disclosed, because of a court order, child sex abuse allegations against Fr. Gansmann.

For years, Catholic bishops have pledged to be “open” about clergy sex cases. These two belated disclosures – in St. Paul and in Nashville – show that this pledge is rarely kept.

Those hurt by Fr. Gansmann — in Minnesota and Tennessee – are getting older. Many of them have likely told no one or few people about their pain. Their suffering would be lessened if Catholic officials would “come clean” about these clergy sex crimes and aggressively seek out, and help, these victims. Instead, however, bishops continue their self serving secrecy, letting those trapped in silence, shame, and self blame continue in pain. Again, shame on them.

Roughly 30 US bishops have, under pressure, posted on their websites the names, photos and work histories of child molesting clerics. This is the least Catholic officials can do to protect kids. None of Tennessee’s bishops have done this. Now would be a perfect time for Nashville’s bishop to do this.

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Ein Missbrauchsopfer wehrt sich

DEUTSCHLAND
Berliner Zeitung

[Summary: Some wounds never heal. So it is with the abuse case involving the Catholic Church in Potsdam and Tegel. An old case of abuse must be reopened because the victim has decided to put on some pressure. A parish priest accused to sexual abuse had been rehabilitated although the church knew he had forced a boy into a sexual act.]

Von Julia Haak

Die katholische Kirche hat einen Priester rehabilitiert, obwohl bekannt war, dass er einen Jungen sexuell missbraucht hatte. Nur weil das Opfer sich wehrt, wird der Fall nun neu untersucht.

Manche Wunden heilen nie. Wenn sie nach Jahren wieder aufbrechen, kommt es für Beteiligte oft überraschend. So ist es auch in einem Missbrauchsfall, der die katholischen Kirchengemeinden Peter und Paul in Potsdam und Herz Jesu in Tegel betrifft. In der katholischen Kirche muss jetzt ein alter Fall neu aufgerollt werden, weil das Opfer plötzlich Druck macht. Ein des sexuellen Missbrauchs beschuldigter Gemeindepfarrer war rehabilitiert worden, obwohl der Kirchenleitung bekannt war, dass er tatsächlich einen Jungen zu einer sexuellen Handlung genötigt hatte.

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SC- Victims prod Bob Jones University to act now

SOUTH CAROLINA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Feb. 28, 2014

For more information contact Barbara Dorris, SNAP Outreach Director (314) 862-7688 home, (314)503-0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com, and David Clohessy, SNAP Executive Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Victims prod Bob Jones University
“Don’t wait for report, act now,” they say
Group wants school to post predators’ names
SNAP: Thirty Catholic bishops have done this
“It’s the least the school can do to protect others,” victims say

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is asking Bob Jones University officials to post on their website the names of “proven, admitted or credibly accused sex offenders who have worked at or attended the school.”

Last week, university officials announced that a report on campus sex crimes would proceed. But their earlier decision to stop the report has led some to question school administrators’ sincerity.

[Religion News Service]

The university’s top staff should be doing everything they can to prevent sexual assault, help victims and expose predators, say leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“Top university staff should take clear steps now to expose the wrongdoers and protect the vulnerable,” said Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, SNAP Outreach Director. “They should not passively sit back and wait for a report to be finalized while offenders walk free and might hurt others, especially offenders who might now be imprisoned had administrators acted more responsibly.”

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Three victims of paedophile priest Brendan Smyth can’t bring fresh claims against church

IRELAND
Irish Independent

UPDATED 28 FEBRUARY 2014

A Catholic Bishop has won a High Court court halting three actions for damages brought against him in a representative capacity by a man, his sister and another woman who previously settled Northern Ireland court actions for Stg £25,000 each over being sexually abused over years as children by paedophile priest Fr Brendan Smyth.

The President of the High Court, Mr Justice Nichoals Kearns, today granted an application by the Bishop of Kilmore, Dr Leo O’Reilly, for orders halting, on grounds of the previous NI settlements, the actions brought against him in his representative capacity as Bishop of the Kilmore diocese.

The cases by the three were also brought against Cardinal Sean Brady, who is being sued in his personal capacity arising from his role as part-time secretary to former Bishop of Kilmore, Francis McKiernan, during a church investigation in 1975 into complaints about Smyth.

Cardinal Brady had not made any similar application to that of Bishop O’Reilly and the proceedings against him remain in being.

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A Novel Approach for Twin Cities: Punish those responsible

MINNESOTA
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

Kristine Ward

One way to sometimes stop people from doing wrong is to punish them for doing wrong. History, psychology and common sense all suggest this approach often works.

But tragically, Catholic officials virtually never use this approach when shocking revelations of clergy sex abuse and cover-up surface.

It’s an approach that St. Paul-Minneapolis Catholic officials might consider as they try to save themselves and their archdiocese from a rapidly expanding scandal that has put dozens of accused clerics in the news over the last few months and several other church staff who reportedly kept quiet about or hid their alleged sexual misbehavior.

When we say “Catholic officials,” we are largely referring to Auxiliary Bishop Lee Piché, who is now in charge of the Twin Cities archdiocese. Archbishop John Nienstedt has stepped aside while an allegation of child sexual abuse against him is investigated.

When it comes to wrongdoers who merit punishment, the St. Paul-Minneapolis church hierarchy has lots of choices.

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Ex-priest spared jail after breaching sex offender conditions

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 28, 2014

Adam Cooper
Reporter for The Age

A former Catholic priest on the sex offenders registry has avoided a jail term despite admitting he breached a court order by umpiring junior cricket matches.

Paul Chris Pavlou, 54, stood in 11 under-15 matches between 2010 and 2012 for the Victorian Sub-District Cricket Association in what was a breach of his obligations as a convicted sex offender, in that he was paid to work with children.

Pavlou also had a previous conviction for failing to comply with conditions of the registry, to which he was added for his 2009 conviction for performing an indecent act with a child under 15 and knowingly possessing child pornography.

At one point in Pavlou’s plea hearing on Friday, County Court judge Paul Lacava asked of defence counsel Sam Stafford: “How many chances does a sex offender have to get before he receives a term of imprisonment?”

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Derby pervert priest Francis Cullen ‘was in tears’ when quizzed by schoolgirl’s mum

UNITED KINGDOM
Derby Telegraph

By Martin Naylor

A FORMER Mackworth schoolgirl said paedophile priest Francis Cullen burst into tears when her mother confronted him about his abuse more than 50 years ago.

The woman claims her mother was then visited by “a senior member of the Catholic Church” and told the matter would be dealt with – but Cullen remained at Christ the King Church in Mackworth until 1978.

The woman, who does not wish to be identified, has come forward following Cullen’s court appearance in Derby on Monday.

At that hearing, the 85-year-old admitted abusing children over a 35-year period.

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Priest arrested after claims he stole €500,000 to fund luxurious lifestyle

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

A priest has been arrested after he allegedly used parishioners’ money to fund a lifestyle of luxury.

Detectives nabbed him following a six-month investigation into the Dublin-based cleric.

It came amid complaints he stole cash by making false claims for mass stipends over a 13-year-period.

It is also alleged that the priest, who is in his 50s, lodged claims under the names of other priests who were unaware of the scam.

Under cannon law, a priest can only claim stipends for one mass per day.

It is also alleged the cleric used the money to fund a luxurious lifestyle and enjoyed stays in luxurious hotels, as well as expensive jewellery.

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Sex abuse priest Gordon Rideout’s release bid rejected

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A priest who was jailed for sexually abusing children has had his application for release from prison on compassionate grounds rejected.

Canon Gordon Rideout, from Polegate, East Sussex, was jailed for 10 years in May for 36 separate sex offences.

The priest, in his 70s, abused 16 children between 1962 and 1973, in Hampshire and Sussex.

BBC South East learned he was recently released from prison to attend hospital on a temporary licence.

‘Utter disgust’

He later returned to jail. The Ministry of Justice said the nature of his hospital treatment was confidential.

One of his victims said she felt anguish at Rideout’s “obvious ploy to manipulate the system” with his application.

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Priest held over €500k theft from his order

IRELAND
Irish Independent

TOM BRADY, SECURITY EDITOR – UPDATED 28 FEBRUARY 2014

A PRIEST has been arrested by gardai investigating the theft of more than €500,000 from his religious order.

It follows a six-month investigation by a team of detectives into complaints of theft, which allegedly took place over a 13-year period.

The cash was allegedly taken from the order by making false claims for Mass stipends.

Under canon law, a priest is entitled to receive one stipend from the diocese or the order from collections made during the celebration of Mass.

Additional stipends cannot be claimed if the priest celebrates multiple Masses on one day.

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Cardinal Dolan Warns: You May Hear Some Things About Me….

NEW YORK
Seasons of Grace

February 24, 2014 By Kathy Schiffer

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, in his blog Gospel in the Digital Age, warned New Yorkers this week that they may soon be seeing his name cast in an unfavorable light in the media. The Archdiocese of St. Louis, where he served as auxiliary bishop for a year in 2001-2002, has just been ordered by a court to release documents regarding clergy abuse cases.

Before you get too excited about that, though, let me assure you that the Cardinal assures us he’s been forthright and has done nothing wrong.

On February 18, just before departing for the Consistory in Rome, Cardinal Dolan published a letter to Catholics in the Archdiocese of New York explaining the situation. He wrote:

“…you know how I always try to alert you to any potentially negative publicity about the Church, or about me. Well, there could be some. My home archdiocese of St. Louis just complied with a court order to release the documents regarding cases there of sexual abuse of minors. (Cardinal Egan already did that here a decade ago, sharing all of the information we had on abusive priests with proper district attorneys, something we continue to do today.)

Anyway, since I was an auxiliary bishop in St. Louis for a year (2001-02), and vicar for priests for nine of those twelve months, I would anticipate that my name will again be highlighted in the press. I sure have nothing to hide, and am very much at peace with law enforcements officials reviewing the files. In fact, we already released all the documentation to them a dozen years ago!

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The Prison of Father MacRae: A Conspiracy of Silence

UNITED STATES
These Stone Walls

Editor’s Note: This is Part Two of a guest post by Ryan A. MacDonald. Part One was “The Trial of Father MacRae: A Conspiracy of Fraud.”

“I don’t share your belief in Father MacRae’s innocence. I just don’t believe a judge and jury would sentence a priest to life in prison with anything less than clear and compelling evidence.”

The above quote was the reply of a prominent American Catholic writer when I challenged him to take a closer look at the trial and imprisonment of Father Gordon MacRae. There is nothing to be gained by publishing the writer’s name. I still hope he might accept my challenge to study this matter with more depth than the New Hampshire news media and priests of the Diocese of Manchester have given it. I have asked the writer to show me the evidence he feels so certain must exist. He is wrong about this. There is simply no factual evidence to support this conviction.

But for some, the absence of evidence is evidence of evidence. That Catholic writer’s presumption about evenhanded justice and due process reflects the naiveté of the innocent and just. I once shared such naiveté, but I have since learned that ignorance is not bliss. I know too much about this case to cling to any delusions that everyone in prison must be guilty, or that a Catholic priest, while actually innocent, could not be railroaded into prison based on false witness.

So does The Wall Street Journal’s Dorothy Rabinowitz, one of the most just and courageous journalists I know. She has a talent for enabling readers to place themselves in the shoes of the falsely accused, and it’s a terrifying place to be. A recent article, “On Woody Allen and Echoes of the Past” (WSJ.com, February 9, 2014), had that same effect. It isn’t long, but it’s compelling and powerful.

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Mother of priest’s victims reveals family pain, more abuse and church’s rebuke

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

[with audio]

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Feb 25, 2014

The mother of the boys abused by the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer no longer ends her days with a silent prayer. Memories and flashbacks surface too easily in those quiet moments. Instead, she plays solitaire on her cell phone until sleep.

It’s been nearly two years since she learned that two of her sons were abused by Wehmeyer and that one of the boys, in turn, sexually abused his 5-year-old twin sisters. Last year, a third son told her that he, too, had been abused by the priest. One of the boys, she also learned, abused an additional sibling. In all, six of her nine children have been sexually abused either by Wehmeyer or each other, she said.

Wehmeyer pleaded guilty in 2012 to sexually abusing two of the boys, ages 12 and 14, and possessing child pornography.

The family’s life is now a blur of therapy appointments and psychiatric hospitalizations. It is, the mother said, “a war zone.” She once hoped that some of her sons would become priests. Now she hopes that none commit suicide.

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God vs. the Gavel

UNITED STATES
WKCR

Artist: Marci Hamilton
Title: God vs. the Gavel
Album: WCKR Late City Edition
Length: 29:35 minutes (33.86 MB)
Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 160Kbps (CBR)
Date Broadcast: Thu, 27 Feb 2014

Tune in to this Thursday’s Late City Edition for a conversation with Marci Hamilton, expert in constitutional and First Amendment law, and author of God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law. Professor Hamilton discusses what happens when religious liberty and the law come into conflict, especially when First Amendment protection permits and even fosters oppression and abuse.

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Bishop Raymond James Boland dies at age 82

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

February 27
BY DARRYL W. LEVINGS AND MATT CAMPBELL
The Kansas City Star

Bishop Raymond James Boland, the beloved missionary priest who followed so many of his fellow Irish to the New World, eventually coming to a Kansas City suffering from the almost biblical flood of ’93, died Thursday in Cork in the old country.

Boland served as the fifth bishop and spiritual leader of the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph until he retired on May 24, 2005.

“I just felt, in some misguided fervor of my youth, that I wanted to be another St. Patrick or something,” he would reminisce about his emigration.

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Can Francis achieve his reforms?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas C. Fox | Feb. 27, 2014 NCR Today

As part of the Feb. 25th PBS Frontline documentary, “Secrets of the Vatican,” the producer asked me to write an essay assessing the chances Pope Francis can succeed in his agenda to reform the church. This is what I wrote:

Can Pope Francis restore his church’s shattered credibility? Tend the wounds of millions of disaffected Catholics, pillared by decades of clerical sex abuse and cover-up? Can he bury a church authority structure modeled after kings and their courts?

These are tall orders for a 77-year-old bishop who moved to Rome just one year ago to find himself suddenly heading a church of 1.2 billion followers.

Change does not come easily in the Catholic Church, yet I for one am more than modestly optimistic Francis will succeed in ways few have yet to imagine. Consider these points:

One: He was elected by his fellow cardinals with a solid mandate for reform, starting with a Vatican bureaucracy that is widely perceived as inept and out of touch. He has appointed a council of eight cardinals from around the world to move this task forward. A roof leaks from the top down. Francis has wisely started his reform at the top.

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Man Indicted for Child Sex Abuse in Mt. View Church

ALASKA
KTUU

Matthew F Smith, Digital Producer, msmith@ktuu.com

ANCHORAGE –
A man charged with sexually abusing a 6-year-old girl in a Mountain View church bathroom last month has been indicted on one count of sexual abuse of a minor.

David Chiklak, 29, was detained in the church parking lot by members of the congregation after police say he brought the girl into the men’s bathroom. Police say a woman in the women’s bathroom heard the girl crying and discovered Chiklak standing over the victim with his belt unbuckled.

Chiklak has arrested at the church and has remained in custody since his arrest, a statement from the District Attorney’s office declared. He was

The girl was interviewed by investigators and confirmed the sexual abuse, according to charging documents.

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Man indicted for suspected assault at church

ALASKA
KFQD

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) – A grand jury has indicted a man suspected of sexually assaulting a 6-year-old girl at a church in northeast Anchorage. Prosecutors say the grand jury indicted 29-year-old David Chiklak on one count of felony sexual abuse of a minor. Chiklak was arrested Jan. 27. A woman told police she was in a bathroom with a girl at the church and heard someone call the child out. The woman a short time later heard the girl crying in the men’s bathroom. Police say the woman entered the men’s bathroom and saw a man with his belt unbuckled standing over the girl. Parishioners detained Chiklak in the parking lot. Police arrested Chiklak and said he was not a member of the church but had attended a service with others.

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“Father Andy” Faces His Accuser

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

His troubles with “Father Andy” began when his mother confided to the priest that her son might be gay.

The alleged victim, now 26, testified in court today that when he was a 10-year-old altar boy, the priest brought him to his room in a church rectory, and sexually assaulted him.

Then, after the alleged attack, the victim testified the priest would repeatedly tell him on the playground that homosexuality was a sin, and so was masturbation.

How did that make him feel, the prosecutor asked?

“Horrible,” the young man testified. “As a homosexual, if it’s a sin, it means I’m going to hell.”

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Two pictures emerge of priest accused of assaulting altar boy

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

DANA DIFILIPPO & MENSAH M. DEAN, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS DIFILID@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-854-5934
POSTED: Friday, February 28, 2014

THE LATEST young man to accuse a Philadelphia Catholic priest of molesting him as an altar boy told a jury yesterday that the experience so badly shocked, embarrassed and debilitated him that he turned to drugs, alcohol and multiple suicide attempts before reaching his teens.

The slim man, dressed in a white shirt, black tie and slacks, emotionally spoke of being 10 years old in 1997 when the Rev. Andrew McCormick invited him to the priest’s rectory bedroom at St. John Cantius Church in Bridesburg.

McCormick undressed them both, fondled the boy, straddled his chest and tried to force his penis into his mouth, the man said on the first day of McCormick’s trial in Common Pleas Court.

“I was in shock. I couldn’t believe this was happening to me,” said the man, 26, whose identity the Daily News is not revealing.

After he refused to allow McCormick to fully insert his penis into his mouth, “he told me to get out,” testified the man, who said he recalled that the priest never fully took off his plaid boxer shorts.

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February 27, 2014

Archdiocese sends court sealed list of priests accused of child sexual abuse since 2004

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Feb 27, 2014

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has submitted under seal in Ramsey County District Court the names of priests accused of child sexual abuse since 2004, according to victims’ attorneys.

Ramsey County Judge John Van de North had ordered the archdiocese to provide the names by Feb. 18. The archdiocese fought the order, arguing it would cause “irreparable harm to the Archdiocese and its clergy,” but failed to convince Van de North to change it.

The latest disclosure comes as part of a lawsuit filed by a man who says he was sexually abused by the Rev. Thomas Adamson in 1976 and 1977. Last year, in the same lawsuit, Van de North ordered the archdiocese to release the names of “credibly accused” priests on an older list.

The submission of post-2004 names marks the latest development in an increasingly aggressive legal battle over the archdiocese’s handling of clergy sexual abuse cases.

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SEX ARRESTS CONCERN COMMUNITY

CALIFORNIA
Oakdale Leader

By Richard Paloma
Staff Reporter rpaloma@oakdaleleader.com 209 847-3021 ext 8136
POSTED February 27, 2014

The arrest by Ceres Police Department of Oakdale Bethel Assembly of God youth minister Tyler Bliss on suspicion of possessing child pornography last week marks the third time in less than six months that a person in a position of trust has been arrested for a sexual offense involving children in the City of Oakdale.

Last September former Boy Scout troop leader Paul Birmingham was arrested by the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department for engaging in sexual acts with a minor after a month-long investigation into an inappropriate relationship he had with a 15-year-old boy over a five-year period. Detectives say the victim told them the first encounter happened when the boy was 13.

Birmingham was the owner of Print-Rite Printing on Hi Tech Parkway in the city.

A few weeks later in September, Oakdale Police arrested Cloverland Elementary School substitute teacher Bryan Thies for lewd acts with a child and child molestation.

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French court acquits priest on rape charge

FRANCE
Yahoo! News

Lons-le-Saunier (France) (AFP) – A French court on Thursday acquitted a 69-year-old priest charged with raping a devout and vulnerable parishioner.

Daniel Lagnien, 69, was accused of taking advantage of a 39-year-old woman described as psychologically frail with no sexual experience, in a case with the potential to inflict further damage on the reputation of the Roman Catholic clergy after years of sexual scandals.

The prosecution had alleged that Lagnien made advances to the 39-year-old virgin during a 2010 pilgrimage to a shrine in the French Alps.

Several days later, she went to the priest’s home in Moirans-en-Montagne, Jura seeking an explanation of his behaviour.

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Alleged Victim Offers Testimony As Philadelphia Clergy Abuse Trial Begins

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Tony Hanson

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — There’s emotional, tearful testimony as a 26-year-old man tells a Philadelphia jury he was sexually assaulted by a parish priest when he was a 10-year-old altar boy at St. John Cantius in Bridesburg in 1997.

The alleged victim says Father Andrew McCormick recruited him to be an altar boy and then sexually assaulted him after an evening mass. Later he says the priest emotionally abused him, made him feel terrible, that he was going to hell for who he was, a homosexual, and he says he considered and tried suicide multiple times the next year.

He says he finally came forward in 2011 to face the memories and scrutiny so this does not happen to another little boy.

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Sex Abuse Allegations Surface Against Former Nashville Priest

TENNESSEE
Fox 17

John Dunn

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — There are new worries that a Catholic priest may have sexually abused children during his time in Nashville. The allegations against Father Kenneth Gansmann have just been exposed.

St. Vincent De Paul is a small Catholic church in North Nashville, and during the 1960’s it was led by Father Kenneth Gansmann.

The Franciscan priest not only led the predominantly African-American parish, but he also oversaw St. Vincent’s elementary school. Just last week church leaders in Minnesota revealed that credible claims of sexual abuse were made against Gansmann while he was in that state in the 1950’s.

FOX 17 News started asking questions, and we learned that allegations have also been made against Gansmann here in Nashville. “About three and a half decades after he died, we got an allegation that he may have abused a student at St. Vincent’s during the late 1960’s,” says Rick Musacchio with the Diocese of Nashville.

Mike Coode, who is a survivor of church sex abuse, says it is especially disturbing knowing that Gansmann spent so much time around hundreds of children. “It would not surprise me in the least, in fact it would surprise me if he didn’t abuse kids here,” says Mike Coode. Coode is one of several survivors urging the Nashville diocese to acknowlege what happened and seek out other possible victims.

The Diocese of Nashville is now encouraging anyone to come forward, and offering support to anyone who may have been molested or abused. “The diocese wants any victims of past abuse to come forward no matter how long ago that might have happened,” says Musacchio.

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Pope Francis says Church needs better bishops

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Register

Written by David Gibson, Religion News Service
Thursday, 27 February 2014

VATICAN CITY – In another strongly worded message to the Catholic hierarchy, Pope Francis told the Vatican body that vets nominees for bishops that they need to find him better candidates to send to dioceses around the world.

“To choose such ministers we all need to raise our sights, to move to a higher level,” Francis told the Congregation for Bishops, the critical department of the Roman Curia that acts as a clearinghouse for bishop nominees, Feb. 27. “We can’t do anything less, and we can’t be content with the bare minimum.”

On consecutive days last weekend, Francis delivered stern warnings to 19 new cardinals he appointed to join about 150 others in the College of Cardinals: On Feb. 22, he told them to avoid “rivalry, jealousy, factions,” and at a Mass in the Vatican the next day, he said they must reject “habits and ways of acting typical of a court: intrigue, gossip, cliques, favouritism and preferences.”

Francis also has repeatedly called on clerics to live simply and humbly, and in his address to the cardinals and staff who make up the Congregation for Bishops, Francis said that self-denial and sacrifice are written into the bishop’s DNA.

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Jura: le curé accusé de viol finalement acquitté

FRANCE
L’Express

Le père Daniel Lagnien qui comparaît depuis mercredi pour viol et agressions sexuelles à l’encontre d’une paroissienne, a été acquitté par la cour d’assises du Jura.

Le parquet avait requis jeudi cinq ans de prison, dont trois avec sursis, à l’encontre d’un prêtre jugé devant les assises du Jura pour viol d’une paroissienne particulièrement vulnérable. Il a finalement été acquitté dans la soirée par la cour d’assises du Jura.

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French court acquits priest on rape charge

FRANCE
Expatica

A French court on Thursday acquitted a 69-year-old priest charged with raping a devout and vulnerable parishioner.

Daniel Lagnien was accused of taking advantage of the woman described as psychologically frail with no sexual experience, in a case with the potential to inflict further damage on the reputation of the Roman Catholic clergy after years of sexual scandals.

The prosecution had alleged that Lagnien made advances to the 39-year-old virgin during a 2010 pilgrimage to a shrine in the French Alps.

Several days later, she went to the priest’s home in Moirans-en-Montagne, Jura seeking an explanation of his behaviour.

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Misbruik kost bisdommen ruim 8 miljoen euro

NEDERLAND
Trouw

[Summary: The sexual abuse scandal so far has cost the Dutch dioceses more than 8 million euros. However, most of the money was not spend on compensation to the victims but includes the investigation that the Wim Deetman commission did on abuse in the Catholic Church in the Netherlands. The victims have received more than 3 million in compensation according to statements from the seven dioceses. A total of 5.4 million euros was spend on the investigation and handling of complaints from victims. The Utrecht diocese has paid out the most with 2 million euros.]

Het seksueel-misbruikschandaal heeft de Nederlandse bisdommen tot nu toe meer dan 8 miljoen euro gekost. De zeven aartsbisdommen zijn echter niet het meeste geld kwijt aan schadevergoedingen voor de misbruikslachtoffers, maar aan onder meer het onderzoek dat de commissie-Deetman deed naar het misbruik in de Rooms-Katholieke kerk in Nederland.

De misbruikslachtoffers hebben tot nu toe ruim 3 miljoen euro schadevergoeding gekregen, blijkt uit jaarrekeningen van de bisdommen. Met 5,4 miljoen euro betaalden de bisdommen bijna twee keer zoveel voor het onderzoek van oud-Tweede Kamervoorzitter Wim Deetman en de behandeling van de klachten van de slachtoffers. Het tv-programma Brandpunt Reporter bericht daar donderdag over. Het bisdom Utrecht moest het diepst in de buidel tasten: een bedrag van 2 miljoen euro kwam voor zijn rekening.

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St. Paul archbishop will give testimony next month

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 02/27/2014

Attorneys for a plaintiff in a clergy sexual abuse case will take the testimony of Archbishop John Nienstedt and former top deputy Rev. Kevin McDonough on March 19 and 20, attorney Jeff Anderson announced Thursday.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis had objected to the depositions, asking Ramsey County District Judge John Van de North to stop them. But Van de North ruled Feb. 16 that the depositions should go forward.

The judge also refused to stay his order that the archdiocese and the Diocese of Winona submit names of priests accused of sexual abuse since 2004.

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Cardinal O’Brien faces prospect of further action against him by Vatican

SCOTLAND
The Tablet

27 February 2014 by Christopher Lamb and Brian Morton

Scottish Cardinal Keith O’Brien is facing the possibility of further disciplinary action being taken against him by the Holy See.

Today his successor as Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, Leo Cushley, was due to arrive in Rome for a five-day visit where he is expected to discuss the issue

Cardinal O’Brien stepped down just over a year ago after allegations of sexual misconduct were made against him by five men, four of them priests. Last May the Vatican ordered him to spend time in prayer and penance outside of Scotland and Archbishop Cushley has said publicly that he should not return.

According to his spokesman, Archbishop Cushley has “listened to the parties concerned and will transmit any information provided to him to the Holy See”, adding that he will “assist in any way he can in order to help bring a just and equitable conclusion to the matter for all involved.”

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MN- Archbishop’s deposition set but SNAP predicts it won’t happen

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Feb. 27

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 )

Two top St. Paul archdiocesan officials will supposedly be deposed next month about clergy sex crimes and cover ups, but we doubt that will actually happen.

[SFGate]

A dozen Catholic bishops – and two Catholic religious orders – have sought bankruptcy protection at the 11th hour to prevent depositions like these from taking place. And some Catholic officials (Boston’s Cardinal Bernard Law and, more recently, Australia’s Cardinal George Pell) have been promoted to Rome, in part we believe, to avoid facing tough questions about child sex abuse and cover up cases. Other Catholic officials (like Fr. John Urell of the Orange County diocese) have claimed illness and gone away or been sent away to church “treatment centers” to prevent or delay depositions like this.

We’d love to be proven wrong. But we strongly fear neither Twin Cities officials – Archbishop John Nienstedt and Fr. Kevin McDonough – will actually be deposed.

And we again ask a puzzling question that Twin Cities law enforcement personnel should publicly answer: How is it that civil attorneys get to question Nienstedt and McDonough but police and prosecutors don’t? This makes us question again why law enforcement officials aren’t being more assertive with these obviously reckless, deceptive, callous and self-serving Catholic bureaucrats.

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George Pell – the view from the pew

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Kristina Keneally

At one level, I always felt a bit of sympathy for Cardinal George Pell. He’s a product of a particular time and culture in the Catholic Church. I can’t imagine he was overjoyed as Bishop of Sydney to have me, a theologically-trained Catholic feminist Premier on his hands.

In the lead up to World Youth Day, the Cardinal and I were preparing to do a media event. I had advised him that I would open the press conference, and then throw to him. He said, “Minister, what would you like me to say?”

I replied, “Your Eminence, I’ve been waiting my whole life for a Cardinal to ask me that question.”

He looked at me blankly. “I’m sorry. I don’t understand. What do you want me to say?”

Some people swear the Cardinal has a great sense of humour. I suspect those people are men. In my interactions with him, I never saw evidence of it. …

Then, of course, there is the scandal of the sexual abuse of children.

As a mother and a Catholic, I am horrified by the abuse inflicted by Catholic priests and teachers on children in their care. I am further angered by an institution that failed to take these reports seriously and, in some cases, simply moved predators on to unsuspecting new parishes.

Some people have tried to implicate the Cardinal in these actions. Let me be clear. I make no accusation against Cardinal Pell when it comes to the sexual abuse crisis, except this one: that he has not responded well as a pastor, and that he lacks evident compassion and humility in the face of story after story of failure in the Catholic Church to deal with the sexual abuse of children.

Unfortunately, his public statements indicate an inclination to protect the institution rather than the vulnerable.

To be fair to our Ballarat-born Melbournian Cardinal, I don’t think he ever quite understood the egalitarian, pragmatic nature of Sydney or the lay of the media landscape here. Whereas Francis and John Paul II are natural media performers, Pell seemed to struggle to use the media to its best effect.

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Priest who sexually assaulted young sisters has success in appeals court

NORTHERN IRELAND
Fermanagh Herald

A FERMANAGH priest convicted of sexually assaulting three young sisters has had some of his convictions overturned.

New evidence was produced at the Appeals Court in Belfast regarding the conviction of Father Eugene Lewis of the White Fathers Order and three sisters from County Fermanagh.

The case ran for four weeks in 2011, following which Father Lewis was convicted of eleven charges of indecent assault. However, after the charges were appealed, the Court upheld eight of the charges but ruled that three others were unsafe.

The Court of Appeal considered the matters and handed down a ruling which was published by the Court Service of Northern Ireland this week.

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Prosecution: Priest targeted then assaulted boy, 10

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
POSTED: Thursday, February 27, 2014

The sex assault trial of the Rev. Andrew McCormick opened Thursday with the prosecutor saying the evidence will show that the Catholic priest targeted, groomed and assaulted a 10-year-old altar boy in his room in the rectory of a Northeast Philadelphia parish.

“No 41-year-old man has the right to touch a child,” Assistant District Attorney Kristen Kemp told the Philadelphia Common Pleas Court jury in her opening statement.

Kemp said the alleged victim will testify about how McCormick asked him to become an altar boy in 1997 at St. John Cantius parish in Bridesburg.

“In a strong, hard-core Catholic neighborhood, this was a huge honor,” Kemp said.

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Canada- Victims blast fundraiser for convicted archbishop

CANADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, February 27, 2014

For more information: Melanie Jula Sakoda ( 925-708-6175 cell, melanie.sakoda@gmail.com ), Cappy Larson ( cappy@rlarson.com ), David Clohessy ( 314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

Victims seek help from church and university
A fundraiser is set for convicted archbishop
He was accused of molesting 11 year old twin boys
Group wants officials to denounce the event
SNAP: “Public support for proven molesters is wrong”
“It deters victims of other child sex crimes from speaking up,” they say

Sex abuse victims are criticizing a fundraiser for an archbishop convicted of child sexual abuse. The group is also urging leaders of five institutions to cancel the event or discourage attendance at it.

Members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, are upset about a March 5th fundraiser to benefit Archbishop Seraphim Storheim, who was found guilty last month of child sexual abuse. Storheim is the former head of the Archdiocese of Canada of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA). He has been suspended by the OCA while he awaits church discipline.

SNAP believes the event “hurts at least one child sex abuse victim and deters other child sex abuse victims from speaking up.” The fundraiser will be held at the Woodroffe United Church in Ottawa. The Woodroffe parish belongs to the United Church of Canada.

Performing at the concert will be the Illinois Wesleyan Piano Quartet. According to the concert flyer, all members of the ensemble are professors at Illinois Wesleyan University (IWU) in the United States.

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Depositions scheduled in priest abuse lawsuit

MINNESOTA
SFGate

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Deposition dates have been set for top officials in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in a lawsuit filed by a former altar boy who says he was abused in the 1970s.

Archbishop John Nienstedt will be deposed March 19 and the Rev. Kevin McDonough, a former vicar general of the archdiocese, will testify March 20. A Ramsey County judge recently rejected the archdiocese’s attempt to block the depositions of Nienstedt, McDonough and Father John Brown. The plaintiff’s attorney, Jeff Anderson, said Thursday Brown’s deposition has not been scheduled because the priest is ill.

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Gerald Funcheon is back in the news

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on February 27, 2014

Crozier priest Father Jerry Funcheon, who is the subject of the first lawsuit filed under Hawaii’s civil window, is back in the news – this time because Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis church officials “forgot” to put him on a website that lists abusive clerics. Church documents show that Funcheon may have abused up to 50 boys.

NBC Minneapolis affiliate KARE posted this story yesterday, which chronicles much of Funcheon’s past, including the cover up of his actions by men like Fr. Kevin McDonough, the embattled former Vicar General of the Archdiocese. McDonough has been implicated in the cover up of numerous cases of abuse in Minnesota. He is also the brother of White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough.

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Croatian church condemns paedophile priest

CROATIA
West

by Nicola Dotto – 02.27.2014

An ecclesiastical court in Croatia has, for the first time, passed a guilty verdict on a priest accused of sexually abusing children. After years of investigation and hearing the direct testimonies of the victims, Don Nedjeljko Ivanov, of the diocese of Zara, was convicted of paedophilia dating back to the 1980s and ’90s. The sentence means he will lose his position in the Church and he will be forced to leave the parish. However, the fact that the crime took place more than 15 years ago means the priest will avoid being prosecuted by the civil justice system. However, this is a landmark first in the centuries-long history of the church in Zagreb.

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DA: Philly priest abused 10-year-old boy after mom sought advice about boy’s sexuality

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Daily Journal

By MARYCLAIRE DALE Associated Press
First Posted: February 27, 2014

PHILADELPHIA — Prosecutors in Philadelphia say a Roman Catholic priest assaulted a 10-year-old after the boy’s mother met with the priest about her son’s sexuality.

The account Thursday comes as the latest priest-abuse trial in Philadelphia gets under way.

Prosecutors say the accuser’s mother had sought help from the Rev. Andrew McCormick over concerns her son was gay.

They say McCormick then targeted the boy, and sexually assaulted him at his northeast Philadelphia rectory in 1997.

Defense lawyer William Brennan asks jurors why no one else has accused McCormick of molestation despite his 30-year church career.

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Seksueel misbruikschandaal kost Aartsbisdom Utrecht 2 miljoen

NEDERLAND
DUIC

[document]

[Summary:The sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church has cost the Utrecht archdiocese more than 2 million euros.]

Het seksueel misbruikschandaal binnen de Katholieke kerk heeft het Aartsbisdom Utrecht meer dan 2 miljoen euro gekost. Hiermee heeft het Utrechtse bisdom het meest betaald van alle Nederlandse bisdommen. Dit meldt het KRO programma Brandpunt Reporter.

Van de twee miljoen euro die Utrecht moest betalen, ging meer dan 830.000 euro naar de compensatie van slachtoffers. Meer dan 470.000 ging naar de kosten van Commissie Deetman, die het seksueel misbruik onderzoekt. Aan het meldpunt wordt meer dan 700.000 euro betaald. In totaal hebben de bisdommen meer dan 8,5 miljoen betaald aan de de slachtoffers, Commissie Deetman en het meldpunt misbruik.

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Padre fazia orgia com menores em casa paroquial, regada à bebida alcoólica na Paraíba, diz promotor

BRASIL
Surgiu

[Summary: The Paraiba prosecution will interrogte adolescents who had sex with Father Adriano Jose, pastor of Jacarau on the north coast of the state. The prosecutor said sexual orgies occurred inside the rectory and at motels. The Paraiba archdiocese confirmed the priest has been suspended from performing priestly duties.]

O Ministério Público da Paraíba (MPPB), através da Promotoria de Jacaraú, vai interrogar nesta quarta-feira (26), adolescentes que tiveram relações sexuais com o padre Adriano José, pároco de Jacaraú, no Litoral Norte do Estado. De acordo com o promotor Marinho Mendes, as orgias sexuais, que ocorriam dentro da casa paroquial e motéis, eram regadas à bebidas alcoólicas. A Arquidiocese da Paraíba confirmou que ele está suspenso de ordem, ou seja, impedido de realizar missas. O padre Jaildo Souto também teve às ordens suspensas suspeito de abuso sexual.

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Fiscal fallout at the Vatican

UNITED STATES
Harvard Gazette

February 26, 2014

By Christina Pazzanese, Harvard Staff Writer

In keeping with Pope Francis’ growing reputation as an egalitarian-minded maverick, the Vatican announced Monday that he will begin revamping the Holy See’s financial operations by creating a new ministry, called the Secretariat of the Economy, that will have broad authority and report directly to him.

The agency is expected to bring order and transparency to the notoriously secretive Vatican Bank, which critics charge operates like an offshore tax haven for organized crime and money launderers and is now mired in a string of corruption scandals. Last month, a senior cleric serving as a top Vatican accountant was charged criminally for trying to smuggle €20 million from Switzerland into Italy through the private, unregulated bank, which is formally known as the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR).

Headed by Australian Cardinal George Pell, a longtime reform advocate, the new ministry will be advised by a 15-person council that includes eight prelates and, for the first time in church history, seven lay financial experts. An auditor appointed by the pope will have the power to review all financial records.

Vatican watchers say the pope’s move is the most dramatic structural overhaul of the church bureaucracy in 25 years, with some calling it unprecedented for its swift and substantive nature in addressing an issue that has dogged the church for decades.

Gregg Fields, M.P.A. ’95, is a veteran business journalist and currently a research fellow at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University. Fields, who is studying the threat that institutional corruption poses to the U.S. economy and how the cozy affinity between Washington, D.C., and Wall Street has undermined the effectiveness of financial industry regulations, spoke with the Gazette about the significance of the Vatican’s reforms and the challenges that Pope Francis faces in trying to restructure and bring transparency to an entrenched financial institution.

GAZETTE: How significant are the actions the pope took this week, and more broadly, what he’s done since last August, such as hiring a Washington, D.C.-based company to conduct a forensic review of the bank’s finances?

FIELDS: Two things I found very interesting this week. One, I do think that the creation of this authority is very significant because it’s going to totally rework the way the Vatican handles its assets, the way the Vatican looks at things like due diligence and review. I think it was the pope who said it’s going to be less Vatican-centric in terms of the way it operates. So I think that’s very significant. The other thing I found interesting about the statement, frankly, was what wasn’t in it. Unless I have missed something, what was not in it is any mention of the IOR, the Vatican Bank. And we know last week, the pope was briefed about the bank. We don’t know what he was told, but we do know that last year he said, “Maybe the bank doesn’t have a future.” I suspect, just as a journalist looking at what’s not there, this is a way of changing the IOR’s role in a way that diminishes it, and could be a prelude to getting rid of it.

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IL- Commune accused of “rampant child sex abuse,” SNAP responds

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, February 27, 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)

New lawsuit in Chicago accuses a Christian commune of covering up “rampant” child sexual abuse.

[DNA Info]

Once again we see the same repeat pattern in the Uptown Jesus People USA’s behavior that we have seen over and over throughout our nation and the world. A situation exists where there is a hierarchy of power, and a central belief system that promotes control over people and their daily lives. From this unhealthy environment, comes unhealthy behaviors, including sexual abuse. This appears to be just another case.

The part that concerns us the most at SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is the response that we see constantly by those in power. Those that were and are in a position of power have a responsibility to prevent, or at the very least to respond to, abuse of any kind as quickly as possible. Here we see the typical pattern that occurs when a victim comes forward. There is denial first and foremost, then they point out the statute of limitations, and refer inquiries to their lawyers.

What should be glaringly apparent is that there is no reaching out to the victims, no cry for other possible victims to come forward, and no investigation in joint effort with civil authorities, to make sure the crisis is promptly addressed, victims treated and/or compensated, preventing future abuse and cover ups, and punishing those responsible.

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Archdiocese of Chicago document release fact check

CHICAGO (IL)
Catholic New World

The Archdiocese understands the concerns and questions surrounding the recent release of documents related to 30 Archdiocesan priests who have been accused of abusing minors at various times during the last half century. Because of the recent conflicting and inaccurate media reports regarding the document release, the archdiocese wants to provide some additional, factual background information.

1992 and 2002 reforms

FACT …

In September 1992, after appointing a special commission to assess how sexual misconduct was being handled by the archdiocese, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin announced new policies regarding clerical sexual misconduct and established the archdiocese’s independent Review Board and the assistance ministry — one of the first in the nation.
The Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People (Dallas Charter) was promulgated by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in June 2002
In October 2002, Cardinal George led a delegation to Rome to secure approval of the Dallas Charter and the zero tolerance policy, which states no priest with even one substantiated allegation of sexual abuse can serve in ministry.

Archdiocese of Chicago Today

FACT …

No priest with even one substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor serves in ministry in the Archdiocese of Chicago today.
The Archdiocese of Chicago is in full compliance with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.
When an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by a cleric is received by the archdiocese, the allegation is immediately reported to civil authorities. The priest involved can be asked to step aside while the allegation is further investigated.

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Trial Begins for Priest Accused of Molesting Altar Boy

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

Opening statements are set to start Thursday in the Philadelphia trial of a priest arrested after his accuser followed child sex-assault trials involving Penn State and the Roman Catholic church.

The accuser, a former altar boy, says he was sexually assaulted after Mass in 1997 by the Rev. Andrew McCormick.

McCormick was suspended from the Philadelphia archdiocese over a less serious allegation when he was arrested in 2012.

The 57-year-old priest’s lawyer says the charges — including sexual assault, child endangerment and indecent exposure — stem from one encounter with a lone accuser.

Philadelphia prosecutors have been investigating priest-abuse reports in Philadelphia for a decade, and have gained several sex-abuse convictions.

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Fugitive Priest arrest warrant ‘had been withdrawn’

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A paedophile priest wanted for a string of sexual assaults had his arrest warrant withdrawn more than a decade ago because the courts thought he would never be found, it has emerged.

Francis Cullen, 85, spent more than 20 years on the run in Tenerife before he was extradited last year.

A warrant had been issued for his arrest after he skipped bail in 1991 but it was withdrawn in 2000,

Police said the decision was a matter for the courts.

Cullen admitted abusing five boys and two girls, aged six to 16, connected to churches in Mackworth and Buxton in Derbyshire and Hyson Green in Nottingham, in offences dating back to 1957.

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Priest searched online for sexual images of children, according to police report

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

[with audio]

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Feb 25, 2014

Feb 26, 2014

Documents released Tuesday by the St. Paul police department in a closed investigation show that the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis knew in 2004 that a priest had searched online for sexual images of children.

The police file of the investigation into alleged child pornography on the computer of the Rev. Jon Shelley includes a 2004 report from a private forensic examiner who reviewed the images on Shelley’s computer. It found that Shelley had searched the Internet for the terms “free naked boy pictures,” “blond boys sucking pics” and “preteen.” The examiner wrote the report for the archdiocese’s private investigator, who gave it to the chancery in 2004, according to the police file.

The archdiocese kept Shelley in ministry despite the report’s finding.

A spokesman for archdiocese declined to comment on why Shelley remained in ministry after church leaders learned he looked for pornographic images of minors. Shelley’s attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

MPR News reported in October of last year that top church officials debated for months in internal memos whether the images from Shelley’s computer could be considered child pornography and concluded that they didn’t need to call police.

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