ABUSE TRACKER

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

April 26, 2013

MO – “Damning” police report will be released

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

WHO
Three St. Louisans who have never spoken publicly before and are all connected to the same predator priest. One is Christopher Bertke, whose friend was molested by the priest. Another is John Doe, a victim who sued that priest. The third is a relative of a victim of that same priest. (The latter two will talk in silhouette without revealing their names.) With them will be two leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

WHY

Police report available HERE

In 2009, Fr. Kevin F. Hederman – a St. Louis priest – was suspended from his ministry in Belize when he was sued for allegedly abusing a St. Louis teenager who he met at Christian Brothers high school (CBC) in Clayton.

But local Catholic officials have not disclosed that in the mid-1990s, another man filed a similar abuse suit against Fr. Hederman. (Both suits settled.) Nor did they admit that Fr. Hederman made some damning admissions when he was questioned by police about the abuse allegations.

Now, it looks like Fr. Hederman may soon be returned to ministry.

Last week, in an email to SNAP, Fr. Hederman’s sister-in-law said that he was recently “cleared” by a letter from the Vatican. She is Terry M. Hederman, an art specialist at Moline Elementary in the Riverview Gardens school district (869-7436 ex. 4977, thederman@rgsd.k12.mo.us). SNAP believes she’s telling the truth, given how similar cases have been handled by Catholic officials in recent years.

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.

Happy Anniversary

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 25, 2013

Dear Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga

Happy anniversary. It was a decade ago next month when you essentially accused Jews of being behind media reports of clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

You said “We all know that Ted Turner is openly anti-Catholic, and he is the owner not just of CNN but also Time-Warner,” Rodriguez said. “This is to say nothing of dailies such as the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Boston Globe, protagonists of what I do not hesitate to call a persecution against the church. . .that reminds me of the times of Stalin and Hitler.”

[National Catholic Reporter]

[Huffington Post]

You’ve had more than 3,600 days now to correct or apologize or explain your irresponsible remarks. As best we can tell, you haven’t.

In most other institutions, you would likely be criticized or demoted or disciplined for such hurtful behavior. Sadly, in the Catholic church, you are rewarded. Last month, you were one of only eight men tapped by the new pope to advise him on church governance.

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.

Chorleiter missbrauchte Jungen

DEUTSCHLAND
Elbe Wochenblatt

Missbrauchsfall in der Thomaskirche Hausbruch wird nach 20 Jahren bekannt
Schock in der Thomaskirche: Vor zwanzig Jahren soll der ehrenamtliche Posaunenchorleiter R. D. einen damals etwa zwölfjährigen Jungen sexuell missbraucht haben. Bekannt wurde der Fall, weil sich der Vater des Betroffenen per E-Mail beim Kirchenkreis Ost meldete. Daraufhin setzte sich der Präventionsbeauftrage der Nordelbischen Landeskirche mit ihm in Verbindung.

Diese Stelle wurde eingerichtet, nachdem 2010 Missbrauchsfälle in der evangelischen Kirche bekannt wurden – damals in einer Gemeinde in Ahrensburg. Es habe zwischenzeitlich auch Gespräche mit dem Betroffnen gegeben, so Remmer Koch, Sprecher des Kirchenkreises Hamburg-Ost.

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.

Gerichtsurteil: Caritas darf Mitarbeiter nach Kirchenaustritt kündigen

DEUTSCHLAND
Spiegel

Ein Sozialpädagoge war enttäuscht über die vielen Missbrauchsfälle und trat aus der katholischen Kirche aus. Daraufhin verlor er seinen Arbeitsplatz in einer Einrichtung der Caritas. Eine Klage gegen die Kündigung hat das Bundesarbeitsgericht nun abgewiesen.

Erfurt – Mitarbeiter in katholischen Einrichtungen müssen auch künftig bei einem Kirchenaustritt mit Kündigung rechnen. Der Austritt sei ein schwerwiegender Loyalitätsverstoß, der die Entlassung aus dem kirchlichen Dienst rechtfertigen könne, entschied das Bundesarbeitsgericht in Erfurt (2 AZR 579/12).

Damit blieb ein Sozialpädagoge aus Mannheim auch in der letzten Instanz mit der Klage gegen seinen Rauswurf erfolglos. Der 60-Jährige war 2011 wegen der zahlreichen Missbrauchsfälle in katholischen Einrichtungen aus der Kirche ausgetreten. Er könne aus Glaubens- und Gewissensgründen nicht mehr der katholischen Kirche angehören, begründete er den Schritt vor seinem Vorgesetzten. Daraufhin verlor er seinen Job in einem von der Caritas getragenen Kinderbetreuungszentrum. Ihm wurde fristlos gekündigt.

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.

Klöster: “Ideale” Strukturen für Missbrauch

OSTERREICH
der Standard

Leserkommentar | Markus Wachter, 26. April 2013, 15:51

Welche Faktoren in Klöstern Vergewaltigungen und Unterdrückung geradezu fördern

Zwei Schadensersatzprozesse gegen das Kloster Mehrerau in Bregenz haben Strukturen zutage gefördert, die geradezu ideal sind für einen Menschen, der Kindern prügeln, missbrauchen und vergewaltigen will.

Ein geschlossenes System bindet die Opfer von allen Seiten und weist ihnen selbst Schuld zu. Die beiden Männer wurden in den 1970er- und 1980er-Jahren vom selben Mönch, Pater J. B., schwer vergewaltigt. Es handelt sich um den ersten Zivilprozess dieser Art, der in Österreich gegen einen Orden geführt wird.

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

Bishop admits cover up over Brede child abuse priest Father Roy Cotton

UNITED KINGDOM
Rye & Battle Observer

Published on 26/04/2013

THE Bishop of Chichester has said the church was wrong in not taking action over paedophile priest Father Roy Cotton.

Cotton was a vicar at St St George’s Church Brede and and St Mary’s at Udimore in the 1990’s and had access to local primary schools.

Gary Johnson and his older brother, from Eastbourne, were abused by Cotton when they were choirboys.

In a private letter of apology to Mr Johnson, Dr Martin Warner wrote: “There has been deception and cover-up here.”

Reacting to the letter, Mr Johnson said: Mr Johnson said: “I’ve been taken seriously at last.”

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.

IL-Child sex abuse reform bill passes IL Senate

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 26, 2013

In a huge victory for innocent kids and a huge defeat for child molesters, the Illinois Senate today passed a bill permanently lifting the civil statute of limitations on child sex crimes. (SB 1399, sponsored by Sen. Link and others)

This measure will stop more sex offenders. It enables child sex abuse victims to expose dangerous predators in court. It enables employers and neighbors and even relatives to learn about and protect themselves from child molesters who otherwise would have stayed “under the radar.”

Illinois kids are safer now because more child molesters will face justice.

Kids are safest when predators are jailed. But that can’t always happen. So the next best option is to expose predators. Our civil justice system should do a better job of this. When this bill becomes law, that will happen.

We hope the Illinois House will promptly pass this bill. We urge Illinois citizens to call their representatives and urge them to put the safety of kids first.

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.

Melbourne archbishop reacts to Maltese priest’s resignation

AUSTRALIA
Times of Malta

The Archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart, has reacted to the resignation of Maltese priest Victor Buhagiar, who claimed the archdiocese was covering up child abuse.

Mgr Hart said he accepted Fr Buhagiar’s resignation with regret and he expressed genuine concern for his welfare.

“I thanked him for his service and said ‘my door is always open to you’.

“Having submitted his resignation, Fr Buhagiar left the parish without informing his parishioners of his resignation,” 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.

General Manager

AUSTRALIA
Pro Bono

The Legal Advisory Service is a free service for members of the public engaging or considering engaging with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Location: Sydney (Sydney based, travel required)
Organisation: National Association of Community Legal Centres
Work Type: Full-time

Legal Advisory Service for people considering engaging with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

• Greenfields role – design & implement operational procedures
• National phone and face to face Legal Advisory Service
• Sydney based, travel required

The Legal Advisory Service is a free service for members of the public engaging or considering engaging with the Royal Commission into Institutional

Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. It is being established by the National Association of Community Legal Centres with funding from the Australian

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.

Alleged victim tells court she was tied to a pole and beaten by nuns at approved school

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

A TEENAGER was tortured and tied to a pipe for two days at a nun-run school, a court has heard.

Catherine Logan, now 57, claimed that nuns from Dalbeath Approved School in Bishopton, Renfrewshire, abused her during her time there between 1969 and 1971.

Mrs Logan told Paisley Sheriff Court that she was hit about 12 or 13 times – including with a riding crop – and alleged she was drugged.

She was giving evidence at the trial of Anne Kenny, 79, and Agnes Reville, 77.

Kenny faces four charges of assault, while Reville is accused of five charges of assault. The accusations involve a total of eight girls.

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 back from Rome to front Vic court

AUSTRALIA
The Age

AAP

The former head of the Salesian Catholic order in Australia has faced court on charges of sexually abusing Victorian children more than 30 years ago.

Priest Julian Benedict Fox, 67, returned from Rome to face three charges of buggery, five charges of indecent assault and two charges of assault in Melbourne Magistrates Court on Friday.

Police allege Fox abused four boys between 1976 and 1985 in Ferntree Gully, in Melbourne’s outer east, and in Sunbury, about 40km northwest of the city.

Police on Monday described the priest’s return to Victoria as a breakthrough in co-operation between Victoria Police and the Catholic Church.

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

Fordham University Address

NEW YORK
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin

The Russo Family Lecture CATHOLIC IRELAND: PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE Speaking Notes of Most Rev. Diarmuid Martin

Archbishop of Dublin

Fordham Centre of Religion and Culture, New York, 24th April 2013

“Ireland has changed and Ireland is changing. The other evening I was at a lecture in the Italian Embassy in Dublin about Ireland in renaissance times. I was struck by two quotes chosen by the lecturer. The first was from Pope Pius II, Piccolomini, written in 1458 looking at the situation of Europe at the time. He concluded his three sentences on Ireland writing: “since nothing worth remembering took place there during the period we write about, we hurry on to matters Spanish”. I can tell you, much worth remembering and much that we would prefer not to remember has taken place in the Ireland of recent times.

The second quote was from Petrarch who, in the latter part of the 12th century, noted about Ireland: “in one year you will hardly hear it thunder once. No thunderbolts cause terror here, no lightening ever strikes”. That quote should make anyone who still had lingering doubts recognise that climate change is a reality!

I entered the seminary in Dublin in October 1962 just one week before the opening of Vatican II. The winter of 1962/63 was one of the bleakest winters for decades and our seminary was a very cold place in more ways than one. My memory of the seminary is of a building and a routine, a discipline and a way of life which seemed to have been like that for decades. Even to someone who was not a revolutionary, it all seemed so out of touch with the world from which I had just come, and in which my friends were thriving. But you were not supposed to think that way. Things were to be done as they had always been done. The Catholic Church was unchanging, but that was about to change.

For years now people looked to Ireland as a vibrant and sustainable model for strong economic growth. Countries were told to follow the Irish example. Today the economic situation of Ireland is full of uncertainties, precisely at a moment when confidence and trust are urgently needed. On the other hand, for decades Ireland was looked on as one of the world’s most deeply and stably Catholic countries and today Ireland finds itself along with other parts of Europe being classified as “post-Catholic”.

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.

Laity key to Irish church’s renewal, Dublin archbishop says at Fordham

NEW YORK
Georgia Bulletin

Published: April 25, 2013

NEW YORK (CNS) — Renewal of the Catholic Church in a “post-Catholic” Ireland depends on a homegrown effort by the laity to overcome clericalism and witness the Christian message in a secular society, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin told a New York audience. Once considered “one of the world’s most deeply and stably Catholic countries,” Ireland, like other parts of Europe, can now be classified as post-Catholic because of sociological changes and lingering fallout from the child sexual abuse scandals that swept the country in recent years, Archbishop Martin said April 24 in a speech at Fordham University. “You can only define post-Catholic in terms of the Catholicism that has been displaced,” he said. The prelate described the Catholic Church in Ireland as being trapped in an illusory self-image when he became the archbishop of Dublin in 2004, but that the demographic majority the church enjoyed hid “many structural weaknesses” and that the church had become insensitive to them

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.

Children now safe to participate in Catholic Church, says Bishop

IRELAND
Galway City Tribune

April 26, 2013

Lessons must be learned from past if trust of people is to be regained

BY DARA BRADLEY

The credibility and very future of the Catholic Church hinges on its handling of the series of child sex abuse scandals, the Bishop of Galway, Martin Drennan, has said.

Unless the Church deals effectively with the child abuse crisis, and learns from the mistakes of the past, then it won’t regain the trust of people, and won’t have credibility, Bishop Drennan told current affairs broadcaster Keith Finnegan.

The exclusive interview, broadcast on Galway Bay FM’s Galway Talks programme, coincided with the publication of the audit of safeguarding practices in the Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora.

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

Ex-Catholic has no right to Church job – German court

GERMANY
euronews

By Tom Heneghan, Religion Editor

PARIS (Reuters) – Germany’s top labour court ruled on Thursday the country’s Catholic charity network had the right to fire an employee who quit the Church in protest against the sexual abuse crisis and disputed decisions by ex-Pope Benedict.

The 60-year-old teacher, challenging his 2011 dismissal, had claimed his constitutional right to freedom of opinion trumped the Church’s right to employ only Catholics who agreed with the religious mission of their jobs.

He said that his work at Caritas Germany tutoring grade-school children did not deal with religion and that pupils of all faiths were welcome there.

The decision was a victory for the mainline Protestant and Catholic churches, which together are Germany’s largest employer after the public sector, against some lay employees and unions challenging the churches’ special status in German labour law.

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.

San Benito minister named fugitive amid sexual abuse investigation

TEXAS
Valley Central

[with video]

by Daisy Barrera

Authorities are searching for a San Benito minister who is now considered a fugitive amid an ongoing sexual abuse investigation.

San Benito police are asking for the public’s help in finding sexual abuse suspect Edwin Talavera.

Investigators told Action 4 News that Talavera was a minister at a storefront church that recently closed off East Stenger Street.

Talavera is facing six sexual abuse charges after being accused of sexually abusing two girls under the age 14 years old.

San Benito police already arrested 34-year-old Norma Alicia Rodriguez in connection to the case.

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.

Praise for child sex abuse info centre

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A Church counsellor has praised an information centre set-up to allow people to come forward in the lead-up to a probe into sexual abuse by Hunter Valley priests.

The Special Commission of Inquiry was triggered by allegations made by Chief Inspector Peter Fox that police were pressured to close investigations into abuse by two Maitland-Newcastle Catholic Diocese priests.

The information centre opens for the last time on May 5, and aims to give people the opportunity to speak confidentially to members of the Inquiry team.

The Church’s co-ordinator of healing and support Maureen O’Hearn says she has helped around a dozen people through that process.

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.

Church volunteer accused of sexual abuse of 3-year-old

NORTH CAROLINA
WSOC

[with video]

By Kathryn Burcham

MONROE, N.C. —

A Monroe church volunteer has been arrested on charges he sexually abused a 3-year-old girl during a church function.

Union County deputies arrested Christopher Broach Tuesday at his Monroe home on charges of indecent liberties and sex offense with a child.

Investigators said Broach was volunteering at the day care at a church function at Southbrook Church in Wesley Chapel in February when the alleged sexual abuse occurred.

Detectives said the victim later told her mother about the incident, sparking an investigation.

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.

Safeguarding God’s Children Program Saturday In Buffalo

BUFFALO (WY)
Sheridan Media

By Aaron Palmer on Thu 04/25/2013

April is Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Prevention Month, and Buffalo’s ASAP, or Ambassadors for Sexual Assault Prevention, have been offering training and workshops on the subject during the month.

Saturday they will present “Safeguarding God’s Children,” a training program geared to preventing and then responding to child sexual abuse. The program is designed for church leaders, clergy, parents, educators, daycare providers or anyone who works with children, although because of content, they recommend those age 16 and older to attend.

The program will be at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church at 178 S. Main Street and will run from 9:30am to 12:30pm.

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

Former Baptist school teacher sentenced in sex assault

COLORADO
Gazette

LANCE BENZEL
THE GAZETTE

A former teacher who pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a 15-year-old student at a now-shuttered Baptist school in Colorado Springs will serve 90 days in jail and up to the rest of her life on intensive probation.

Terah Rawlings, 33, clutched a box of tissues and wept as 4th Judicial District Judge Timothy J. Schutz told her that despite the victim’s wishes to the contrary, she deserved to serve time for the sexual abuse.

“It is shameful that we can’t have our children go off to church or school without fearing they’re going to be assaulted by the people to whom they are entrusted,” Schutz told a courtroom packed with members of Hilltop Baptist Church, which operated the Hilltop Baptist School until its closure in 2010.

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.

Banned priest not monitored

ILLINOIS/KENTUCKY
Chicago Tribune

By David Heinzmann, Christy Gutowski and Stacy St. Clair, Chicago Tribune reporters
April 26, 2013

WHITLEY CITY, Ky. — Five years after church officials ordered the Rev. Carroll Howlin to stop functioning as a missionary priest in this isolated mountain community, Joliet diocesan leaders received a letter from a suburban pastor that illuminated just how little the diocese had done to enforce its own protective measures amid a crippling sexual abuse scandal.

Howlin, an avuncular-looking priest who moved here more than 30 years ago, had been suspended in 2002 after he was accused of molesting a teenage boy — the second of four such allegations he would face in his career. The Joliet Diocese later substantiated claims involving two other victims, including one who committed suicide at 17.

Church officials removed Howlin from public ministry, but otherwise left him alone in Kentucky with a $1,100-a-month pension. He was allowed to continue living in this remote community where he once helped run the Good Shepherd Catholic Chapel, providing food, clothing and other social services.

It appears officials even left Howlin alone in 2007 when the Rev. Gregory Rothfuchs of St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church in Joliet wrote to the diocese that he had discovered the monthly collection his parish had taken up for Good Shepherd for three decades was going directly into Howlin’s personal bank account and the nuns running the mission had not seen a penny.

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

April 25, 2013

Priest appears in court on sex abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC
April 26, 2013

A Catholic priest has appeared in a Melbourne court to face 10 child sexual abuse charges.

Julian Fox, 67, returned to Australia from Rome to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates Court.

The charges include counts of buggery and indecent assault.

It is alleged the offences took place at Sunbury and Ferntree Gully between 1976 and 1985.

Fox was not required to enter a plea.

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.

High-profile priest Fr Julian Fox in court on child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

Shannon Deery
From:Herald Sun
April 26, 2013

THE former Australian head of the second largest Catholic order in the world has appeared in court charged with child sex crimes.

Fr Julian Fox appeared at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court this morning for a brief administrative hearing where 10 charges were filed with the court.

He was been charged with offences, including buggery, indecent assault and common law assault, after returning from Rome last Friday.

Police allege the 67-year-old former principal assaulted students at Salesian College, Rupertswood, between 1976 and 1985.

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.

Salesian priest ‘abused victim with pool cue’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

PIA AKERMAN
From:The Australian
April 26, 2013

A CATHOLIC priest charged with child sex offences has been accused of assaulting one of his victims with a pool cue.

Salesian priest and former school principal Julian Fox, 67, today faced court for the first time since the Catholic church negotiated with Victoria Police to see him returned from Rome.

He has been charged with 10 offences, including committing three counts of buggery against a boy under the age of 14 in 1980.

It is alleged he indecently assaulted another victim with a shortened pool cue in 1981, and indecently assaulted another three times between 1976 and 1978.

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

Catholic priest faces abuse charges in Victoria

AUSTRALIA
TVNZ

A Catholic priest charged with sexually abusing four Victorian children more than 30 years ago has appeared briefly in court.

Julian Benedict Fox, 67, returned from Rome to face ten charges in the Melbourne Magistrates Court.

Police allege Fox abused the four victims between 1976 and 1985 in Ferntree Gully, in Melbourne’s outer east, and in Sunbury, about 40 kilometres northwest of the city.

During a brief filing hearing, he was granted bail on the condition he reports weekly to a Melbourne police station.

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

Bishop ‘misled inquiry’

AUSTRALIA
The Age

April 26, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age

A Greek Orthodox bishop misled the Victorian inquiry into how the churches handled child sexual abuse when he denied any cases in his church, another member of the community has said in a letter to the inquiry.

Bishop Iakovos told the inquiry that he was not aware of any case or anecdotal evidence of child sexual abuse ”in living memory”, and that he had consulted much older members of the church.

But the letter writer, who asked not to be named, told the inquiry there was a well-known case in 2002 when the parish priest of the Church of St Catherine in East Malvern, Father Andreas Papadimitropoulos, was found guilty of indecently assaulting a teenage girl.

”This case is well known among the hierarchy of the Greek Orthodox Church in Australia, and information about it is even available online,” the letter says.

It also cites harassment and abuse in Sydney, but this does not fall under the inquiry’s terms of reference.

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.

Assignment Record – Rev. Claude P. Boudreaux, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Boudreaux was ordained a priest of the Society of Jesus in 1955. His early career was spent in India and Sri Lanka, after which he worked as a teacher in Jesuit high schools in Louisiana and Texas. For two years in the mid-1970s Boudreaux served as regional secretary of the General Curia for the Jesuits in Rome. For the bulk of the following three decades Boudreaux was a teacher at Jesuit High School in New Orleans. In December 2004 an accusation surfaced that Boudreaux had sexually abused a minor thirty years previously. The Jesuits removed Boudreaux from active ministry after determining that the accusation was credible, and sent him for extensive treatment. Boudreaux was then to be assigned to live in a community without access to minors.

Ordained: 1955
Retired: 2005

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Wrong then, wrong now: the bishops’ top adviser on sexual abuse

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler April 25, 2013

“Just as the banishment of lepers was fueled by medieval myths, the hysteria surrounding child sexual abusers is exacerbated by myths about those who suffer from sexual deviancies. Child molesters incarnate our deepest childhood fears… Our myths about child molesters come more from the projections of what lies within our own inner psyches than from the truth about who these men are.”

Does that quotation suggest that the author is motivated primarily by a desire to protect children from sexual abuse? Would it surprise you to learn that the author was–and to this day remains–one of the most influential voices advising Catholic Church leaders on the handling of sex-abuse cases?

The quotation comes from a 1995 article by Msgr. Stephen Rossetti in America magazine, with the revealing title: “The Mark of Cain: Reintegrating Pedophiles.”

”Reintegrating Pedophiles” was, in a sense, Msgr. Rossetti’s job from 1996 through 2006, when he served as director of the St. Luke Institute, the most prominent of the facilities treating American priests accused of abusing children. When the sex-abuse scandal erupted in the US, we learned that dozens of priests were released from such facilities and returned to ministry, only to molest children once again. Today, looking back regretfully on their decisions, many bishops explain that when they returned abusive priests to active ministry, they were following the best advice given by experts—experts like Msgr. Rossetti.

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.

Same Old, Same Old: New Book About Catholic Abuse Scandals Mistates Facts, Lauds the Abuse Industry, and Polishes Well-Worn Stereotypes

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

Sometimes you can judge a book by its cover, and sometimes you can judge a book by the author’s radio interviews.

Appearing on a St. Louis radio program hawking a new book about the Catholic abuse scandals, writer Michael D’Antonio, author of Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime, and the Era of Catholic Scandal, claimed that to this day “not a lot of effort to protect kids” has been exerted by the Catholic Church.

In truth, because of the aggressive, groundbreaking measures enacted by United States bishops years ago, the Catholic Church is likely the safest environment for children today. Contemporaneous accusations of abuse against Catholic priests are extremely rare, recently averaging only 8.5 allegations per year for the entire United States.

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.

Alleged child molester, bishop Kacavenda, “punished” by Serbian Orthodox Church

SERBIA
In Serbia

BELGRADE – Bishop of Zvornik and Tuzla, Vasilije Kacavenda, who has been retired by Serbian Orthodox Church, will leave his lavish palace in Bijeljina and move into a cell of the male monastery Vasilije Ostroski in the center of Bijeljina or monastery Sisatovac on Fruska Gora, reports news magazine “Kurir”.

Recently, after the affair of sexual abuse of minors in which the bishop was allegedly involved and after news magazine “Kurir” has published part of the video on which, allegedly, bishop is kissing and enjoying a passionate moment with a boy, on Tuesday Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church has stepped in and silently punished the bishop by retiring him and sending him to monastery.

How will Kacavenda, after being used to hedonism and luxury feel to live in a modest monastery, without friends, going outs, modern technology and luxury – many wonder.

The bishop has, in his palace in Bijeljina, enjoyed the most modern equipment for home, fireplace, hot tub, gold, antiques, servants and luxuries, of which an ordinary person can only dream of. The furniture in his home is made mostly of ivory, the salon is full of sculptures and artifacts, and his guests were served food in silver plates.

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MO-Priest is 9th local cleric accused of child porn; SNAP responds

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 25, 2013

In 2011, when he was suspended, Archbishop Robert Carlson’s public relations team said Fr. William Vatterott was accused of “inappropriate electronic communications.” Now, Fr. Vatterrott has been charged with child porn.

According to BishopAccountability.org, at least eight other current or former local clerics have been accused of possessing child porn or showing porn to kids (Fr. James Beine, Fr. Bruce Forman, Fr. William Christensen, Fr. James Funke, Fr. James Patrick Grady, Fr. John Hess, Fr. Gerhardt Lehmkuhl and seminarian Nicholas Pinkston).

Yet a quick search of the archdiocesan website shows just three mentions of “child pornography” (and one was just added yesterday when charges against Fr. Vatterott were disclosed).

We hope that someday Catholic officials will stop using euphemisms like “inappropriate conduct” and “boundary violations” and start being more honest.

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CT- Former priest’s trial delayed for the 21st time, SNAP responds

CONNECTICUT
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 25, 2013

It’s outrageous that a Connecticut priest, who is accused possessing child pornography is delaying justice and exploiting technicalities. Is it any wonder that few victims of sexual violence and exploitation feel good about our justice system?

Despite these inexcusable delays we hope that anyone who saw, suspected or suffered abuse will come forward, report to law enforcement and start healing.

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INTL- Video game mocks clergy abuse scandal, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 25, 2013

Some will do anything – no matter how hurtful – to make money. Shame on this video company. Heinous child sex crimes and cover ups, by Catholic officials or anyone, is no joking matter.

Why rub salt into the already deep and often still fresh wounds of hundreds of thousands of victims of pedophile priests across the world?

We call on these callous corporate decision-makers to withdraw this game, apologize, and donate any money they may have made to organizations that prevent abuse and help victims.

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Calling for inquiry to focus in on courts

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Janet Fife-Yeomans
The Daily Telegraph
April 26, 2013

CHILDREN will remain at risk unless the royal commission into institutionalised child sex abuse includes the Family Court in its investigations, Bravehearts founder Hetty Johnston has warned.

Ms Johnston said it would be a missed opportunity if the court was not included.

“Thousands of children and their families are depending on it,” she said yesterday.

In a submission sent by Bravehearts to the royal commission, the organisation said improvements to practices, policies and procedures within the court would have a positive impact on a “large number of Australian abuse survivors”.

Ms Johnston said it was a “no-brainer” that the court came under the commission’s terms of reference.

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Former pupil at school run by nuns ‘held in torture cupboard for days’

SCOTLAND
STV

A former pupil at a school run by nuns claimed she was attacked by them after being sent there for stealing two bras from Woolworths.

Catherine Logan told a jury that she was kept in a cupboard when she was at the school 41 years ago.

The 57-year-old was giving evidence in the trial of Anne Kenny, 79, who faces four charges of assault and Agnes Reville, 77, who is accused of five charges of assault at Dalbeath Approved School in Bishopton, Renfrewshire.

She told Paisley Sheriff Court that she was taken back to the school three years ago, which was the first time she had gone back since leaving it.

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Two nuns ‘tied woman to a pipe …

SCOTLAND
Daily Mail

Two nuns ‘tied woman to a pipe for two days and tortured her when she was at convent school in the seventies’

By Steve Robson

A teenager was tied to a pipe and tortured for two days by nuns who ran the convent school she attended, a court has heard.

Anne Kenny, 79, and Agnes Reville, 77, are accused of assaulting eight girls at Dalbeath Approved School in Renfrewshire, near Glasgow, in the 1970s.

Catherine Logan, 57, claims in one incident Kenny, known as Mother Rosari, hit her so hard with a carpet beater she ruptured her spleen.

She told Paisley Sheriff Court that she was ‘hit’ about twelve or thirteen times – including with a riding crop – and also alleged she was drugged.

Kenny faces four charges of assault while Reville is accused of five charges of assault.

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St. Louis Priest Father William Vatterott Indicted on Child Pornography Charge

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Riverfront Times

By Sam Levin
Thu., Apr. 25 2013

William Vatterott, a Roman Catholic priest from St. Louis, was indicted yesterday on a federal child pornography charge — and could ultimately face ten years in prison and fines of up to $25,000.

Vatterott, 36, will appear in federal court later this week or early next week to respond to the indictment, the U.S. attorney’s office says in a statement.

He was placed on administrative leave in 2011 after a complaint was filed with the Ballwin police. He had allegedly been involved in an underage drinking incident — and was accused of “inappropriate conduct.”

The indictment says that he possessed “at least two images of an unidentified nude boy on his computer” between June 2010 and June 2011.

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Church asks for help from Irish abuse watchdog

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

April 26, 2013

Barney Zwartz, Noel Towell

The head of the Catholic Church watchdog on clerical abuse in Ireland is to advise the Australian church about how well its abuse protocol is working.

Ian Elliott will visit Australia later this year to talk about lessons from the Irish experience and to help the church review its Towards Healing system, a spokesman said.

The National Committee for Professional Standards executive officer, Father Tim Brennan, said there was no external monitoring of how Towards Healing dealt with victims, and no way for the church to prove its systems were working.

”How does it get a clean bill of health?” Father Brennan asked. ”At the moment, there’s no mechanism to establish who does things well. The Irish experience is a way to go that step further.”

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Church hires abuse watchdog

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Jacquelin Magnay and Ean Higgins
From:The Australian
April 26, 2013

THE Catholic Church in Australia has hired an experienced Irish investigator of clerical abuse — who has called for a complete cleanout of people who ignored child sexual activities — as the church undergoes further scrutiny in the royal commission.

Ian Elliott, the chief executive of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland, will head to Melbourne in the next few months after spending the past six years scrutinising child sexual abuses within the Irish Catholic Church.

Mr Elliot said Australia had to be prepared to be accountable and transparent — and have evidence that they are being accountable and transparent — before children can be kept safe and protected.

He said his Irish experience, which included a review of the Diocese of Cloyne and formulating a rigorous review and standards process for child protection that has been adopted by the church, showed Australia could only eradicate child abuse within the church if there was full conviction to do so from the bishop down.

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Church adviser questions value of abuse inquests

AUSTRALIA/IRELAND
Brisbane Times

April 26, 2013

Noel Towell
Reporter for The Canberra Times

The man chosen to advise the Australian Catholic Church on child sex abuse says he is ”not a fan” of statutory inquiries into paedophilia in the church.

Ian Elliott, who has led the Irish church’s internal response to the child sex scandals that shook that nation, has been hired by the Australian church to advise on its response to widespread abuse allegations.

Announcing his new job this week, Mr Elliott told an Irish newspaper that state-based inquiries into institutional abuse were long, costly and often failed to establish anything new.

During six years leading the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland – a church-run group – Mr Elliott and his staff completed audits of procedures and safeguards in 16 Irish dioceses and four religious orders, with reports due on another 10 dioceses and 100 orders by 2015.

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Pope hints at possible changes to scandal-ridden Vatican bank

VATICAN CITY
Yahoo! News

By Philip Pullella | Reuters

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Francis has indicated for the first time that he may make changes to the Vatican’s scandal-ridden bank as part of a broad review of the Holy See’s troubled administration.

Before Francis was elected last month, many of the cardinals who went on to choose him expressed concern about the harm done to the Church’s image by three decades of scandals at the bank, which Italian magistrates are now investigating for money laundering.

A report last year by Moneyval, a European anti-money laundering body, found that the bank, officially the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), had failed to meet some of its standards on fighting financial crimes, and called for increased oversight.

In an impromptu sermon at a Mass for Vatican employees including staff from the bank, the pope said they should concentrate on the true mission of the Church and that Vatican departments were needed “only up to a certain point”.

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Pope prepares IOR reform: “The Church is not a company”

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The Pope’s message to Vatican bank employees is that offices are necessary but only to a certain extent

Andrea Tornielli
VATICAN CITY

“Everything is necessary, offices are necessary, but only to a certain extent,” Pope Francis stated yesterday in the homily he pronounced during his customary morning mass in St. Martha’s House. In his message he also made explicit reference to the Vatican bank (IOR), which has had a rocky history, having often been at the centre of controversies, scandals and investigations.

His words indicated that the Vatican bank, along with all Curia’s various bodies, would be undergoing a review and reform in the next few months. The IOR, however, will not be shut down.

Francis’ words were centred around the profound essence of the Church, which must never consider itself a “company” that “makes deals to gain more partners”, neither does it measure its success in terms of organisation. “The path Jesus chose for his Church is a different one: he chose the difficult path, the path of the Cross, the path of persecution.” The Church begins “in the heart of the Father.”

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Second ‘Runaway Priest’ found by Dallas News sent back to Australia to face sex-abuse charges

UNITED STATES/AUSTRALIA
The Dallas Morning News

By Reese Dunklin
rdunklin@dallasnews.com
5:02 pm on April 24, 2013

Another priest from our landmark 2004-2005 series on the Catholic Church’s international transfers of sex abusers has been arrested.

Australian authorities charged the Rev. Julian Fox, pictured, after he returned from his religious order’s headquarters in Rome. He faces 10 counts of sexually and physically abusing boys at a Melbourne-area boarding school, according to press reports.

In our series, I reported that Fox was moved to Fiji after an abuse complaint in the late 1990s was made to his order, the Salesians of Don Bosco. The Salesians also paid his accuser a settlement, officials acknowledged to me.

When I talked to Fox by phone in 2004, he said a church review had exonerated him. He declined to further discuss the allegations.

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Corrections and clarifications

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

An article Wednesday about Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki saying the church had mishandled the case of a priest accused of inappropriate contact with a child incorrectly stated that Jerry Topczewski, chief of staff for Listecki, has criticized the media for reporting the accusations against Father Robert Marsicek. Topczewski says he’s been critical of the extent of the coverage on Marsicek.

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Six abuse cases still pending in Clogher

IRELAND
Impartial Reporter

Sarah Saunderson
Published 25 Apr 2013

There are currently six civil cases involving allegations of clerical child abuse pending in the Clogher diocese, the Bishop of Clogher the Very Rev. Liam MacDaid has said.

While the “vast majority are historical”, it has emerged that a most recent allegation came to light as recently as two years ago.

A report released yesterday (Wednesday) on behalf of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI) draws “a line between the practice of this diocese today and some of the practice which existed previously”.

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Statement regarding Fr. William Vatterott

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Louis

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information contact:
Angie Shelton
Community Relations Specialist
Phone: 314-792-7101

The Archdiocese of St. Louis has learned that Fr. William Vatterott, who had been the Pastor at St. Cecilia Parish in St. Louis and previously an Associate Pastor at Holy Infant in Ballwin, has been charged with possession of child pornography.

Fr. Vatterott has been on administrative leave from St. Cecilia Parish since June of 2011, when the archdiocese was made aware of these allegations. Since that time, the archdiocese has fully cooperated with the investigation conducted by law enforcement and the U.S. Attorney’s office.

The Archdiocese of St. Louis encourages all persons with reports of misconduct with a minor involving a member of the clergy or other church personnel to contact Deacon Phil Hengen, Director of Child and Youth Protection, at 314.792.7704 or the Missouri Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline at 800.392.3737 or law enforcement officials.

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Catholic Priest Indicted On Child Porn Charges, Could Face Up To 10 Years In Jail

ST. LOUIS (MO)
International Business Times

By Charles Poladian | April 25 2013

A Catholic priest, William Vatterott, 36, was indicted on a possession of child pornography charge in St. Louis, and, if convicted, could face 10 years in jail as well as a $250,000 fine.

Vatterott’s indictment was released by the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District Missouri, Richard Callahan, notes Reuters. Vatterott served as a pastor of St. Cecilia Parish in St. Louis from 2008 until he was placed on administrative leave in June 2011 by the Archdiocese of St. Louis.

The archdiocese issued a statement on Wednesday regarding Vetterott’s indictment saying, “Fr. Vatterott has been on administrative leave from St. Cecilia Parish since June of 2011, when the archdiocese was made aware of these allegations. Since that time, the archdiocese has fully cooperated with the investigation conducted by law enforcement and the U.S. Attorney’s office.”

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Editorial: Sex abuse accountability should be universal law

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by NCR Editorial Staff | Apr. 25, 2013

In late February, Maltese Auxiliary Bishop Charles Scicluna told Italian journalists, “From now on, no one” — and when he said “no one” he meant the 117 cardinals coming to Rome for the conclave that would elect Pope Francis — “will be able to say they know nothing about what goes on regarding clerical sex abuse.” Efforts begun by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and continued by Pope Benedict XVI are “now a fundamental part of the church’s response to sex abuse,” Scicluna said. “It will be part of the leadership program of whoever is elected in the Sistine Chapel.”

Scicluna, of course, is more than an auxiliary bishop from Malta. He was the prosecutor handling sex abuse cases for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for 10 years until he was made a bishop last year. He, under the leadership of Ratzinger as the doctrinal congregation’s prefect, deserves credit for breaking the ecclesial logjam and beginning to move effectively against clergy who had abused children.

As we sort through Benedict’s pontificate and his more than three-decades-long legacy at the top of the church hierarchy, it would be wrong to too easily dismiss what Benedict did to protect children from clergy sex abusers. This does not mean his record is blemish-free or that we agree entirely with the processes used by bishops and the Curia to handle cases of abuse brought against clergy. But there can be no doubt that the church and her children would be in a far worse position if Benedict had not taken control of these cases in 2002.

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Two years later, former Berlin priest yet to face trial

CONNECTICUT
Berlin Citizen

Monica Szakacs

It has almost been two years since a former assistant pastor of St. Paul Church in Kensington was first arrested and charged with five felony counts of risk of injury to a minor and one misdemeanor obscenity charge.

Father Michael Miller’s case was continued for the 21st time on March 28, 2013. His next hearing is scheduled for Wednesday, May 1, in GA 15 Courthouse, at 20 Franklin Square, New Britain.

William J. St. John Jr., a Waterbury attorney who represents the former Berlin priest, said he cannot discuss any details regarding the case.

Miller was first arrested on July 12, 2011, at St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, on charges that he had inappropriate contact with more than one minor. At the time he’s been hospitalized for an unknown reason.

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St. Louis Catholic priest indicted on child pornography charge

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KELO

By Kevin Murphy

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) – A federal grand jury indicted a Catholic priest in St. Louis on Wednesday on child pornography charges involving Internet images of a boy under the age of 18, in the latest sex accusation to rock the Church.

William Vatterott, 36, was charged with possession of child pornography, according to the indictment released by the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and fines of up to $250,000, if convicted.

The indictment is the latest in a series of abuse accusations to hit the U.S. Catholic Church over the past two decades. The scandals have cost the Church billions of dollars in settlements and driven prominent dioceses into bankruptcy.

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Truth and reconciliation in Montreal

CANADA
Global News

MONTREAL- Alora Condo is a sixth-grader at St. Willibrord’s School in Chateauguay. As she attended the Truth and Reconciliation event at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, she was shocked by what she saw. It reminded her of experiences her Mohawk grandfather had while he was at a residential school.

“They took away their culture, their language and they replaced it with some other kind of language,” she said. “My kinds of people went to these schools, and I wish I could have helped them.”

For a lot of students in the western Montreal area, Aboriginal issues hit close to home. A full third of St. Willibrord’s School, where Condo attends, have roots in the Mohawk nation of Kahnawake nearby.

“We had so many Native students that I felt it was my responsibility to share it with them,” said Annabelle Daignault, a French teacher at the school. “We kind of learned everything together, they were shocked obviously.”

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Editorial: Truth and reconciliation – from past to future

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

MONTREAL – Many non-aboriginal Canadians remain all too ignorant of the shameful history of Canada’s residential schools, whose damaging legacy continues to be felt in aboriginal communities across the country. The Montreal hearings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, which got underway Wednesday and are to continue until Saturday, are part of the process of moving forward, not only for those who choose to testify, but for all Canadians.

At these public hearings, which are being held in seven Canadian cities, survivors of the residential school system are getting an opportunity to recount their experiences. Over the course of more than a century, tens of thousands of First Nations, Métis and Inuit children were wrenched from their families and communities, and sent away to boarding schools run by religious groups and funded by the federal government. Though the schools were winding down by the 1970s, the last of them did not close until 1996.

More than merely a well-intentioned effort to educate children, the policy was frankly designed to assimilate aboriginals — “to take the Indian out of the child,” according to one bureaucrat of the day. Students were forbidden to speak their own languages, and their traditional beliefs were denigrated and characterized as sinful. And all too often, the children were also subjected to physical and sexual abuse. No wonder, then, that the schools have left a painful legacy, one with which survivors, their descendants and their communities are still struggling. The commission’s work is part of a healing process that also includes monetary compensation, and has seen a 2008 apology from the federal government.

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Truth and Reconciliation: What Joe Canadian needs to know

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

By Steve Bonspiel, Special to The Gazette
April 25, 2013

MONTREAL – The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada opened hearings Wednesday in Montreal at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel that will run through Saturday — and there are a number of reasons you should be there.

The commission was created after the $1.9-billion residential-schools settlement in 2007 between the government of Canada (along with partner Roman Catholic, Anglican, Presbyterian and Methodist churches) and the Assembly of First Nations.

Frank disclosure of the atrocities committed at church-run, government-backed residential schools have finally started to come out into the open since the settlement. An apology by all federal political parties, including Prime Minister Stephen Harper in the House of Commons in 2008, was seen as a step forward.

But for Native people, many of whom see the apology as shallow, free of any real remorse or substance, there is still so much work and educating to be done.

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Truth and Reconciliation: ‘It’s about all of us,’ Michaëlle Jean says

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

By Christopher Curtis, The Gazette April 24, 2013

MONTREAL — It may be painful and profoundly troubling, but Canadians need to have a serious conversation about residential schools.

Michaëlle Jean’s voice resounded sharply as she described the need for all Canadians to embrace aboriginal issues as their own. The former governor-general was in Montreal Wednesday to take part in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission — a $60-million project aimed at documenting the systematic torment suffered by generations of aboriginals who were forced into Canada’s residential school system.

Jean served as governor-general when the TRC was launched during a ceremony at Ottawa’s Rideau Hall in 2009. She became an honorary witness at the roving commission’s first national event in Winnipeg, where elders described the unspeakable acts of abuse they survived during childhoods spent as wards of the federal government.

“It was the start of a dialogue, it was very troubling to hear the testimonies, sometimes disturbing, but there was also hope,” Jean told a group of reporters huddled in a hallway inside the Queen Elizabeth Hotel downtown. “Because it was about sharing, sharing of the facts about this very dark chapter of our history. … I think the role of this commission is breaking the role of indifference. Indifference is not an option, we need to confront history together and see how we want to move forward.”

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Die Perspektive der Opfer

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche: Drei Jahre nach dem Skandal kritisieren Betroffene die Diözese Würzburg für die fehlende Aufklärung des Falls Damian Mai.

Sie fordern Transparenz statt weitere Vertuschung. Bislang schweigt das Ordinariat.

Für Bischof Friedhelm Hofmann sind die 2010 auch in seiner Diözese ans Licht gekommenen Missbrauchsfälle durch katholische Geistliche erfolgreich bewältigt worden. In dieser Zeitung lobte er jüngst die „transparente Aufarbeitung“ und „rückhaltlose Aufklärung“ der Vorwürfe. „Ich kenne keine Einrichtung in Deutschland, die Opfern sexuellen Missbrauchs in ähnlicher Weise entgegenkäme“, lobte der Bischof die finanzielle Entschädigung, die die katholische Kirche leistet. Auf der Frühjahrskonferenz der deutschen Bischöfe war die durch den Missbrauchsskandal ausgelöste Vertrauenskrise gar kein Thema mehr.

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Reports shows that Galway diocese responded quickly to abuse allegations over four decades

IRELAND
Galway Advertiser

By Mary O’connor

Bishop of Galway Martin Drennan should ensure written restrictions are in place ensuring priests who are “out of ministry” due to child abuse allegations do not appear in public dressed in priestly attire, a report into safeguarding practices for children in the Galway diocese recommends.

The 28-page document, which was published yesterday (Wednesday) examines case records dating back to 1975.

It reveals allegations were made against 14 diocesan priests in the period 1975 to 2013. A total of 38 allegations were received, 27 of which were reported to the Gardai and the HSE. Allegations were made against three priests who are in ministry, two who are retired and five who are deceased. Two others have left the priesthood while a further two men are still members of the diocese but are “out of ministry”. One priest in the diocese was convicted of child abuse in the 38-year-period.

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Catholic church outlines new child protection measures

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Ian Elliott, the Catholic church’s own watchdog on child protection measures in Ireland, has detailed the policies now in place to prevent child abuse in several dioceses.

It is part of a nationwide review of each diocese and Religious Order in the wake of a series of damning state inquiries into the extent of paedophilia in the clergy and subsequent cover-ups.

Audits looked at in his third and latest tranche include the dioceses of Ferns, Killala, Elphin, Waterford and the Society of African Missions.

* In Ferns, where in 2005 investigators uncovered decades of abuse and cover-ups, 24 priests have faced allegations since 1975, none are in ministry and three have been convicted.

Mr Elliott noted a sea change compared to how the diocese operated since the report eight years ago, including a complainant-centred approach adopted by clergy and support staff.

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Ex-bishop Joseph Duffy holds hands up …

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Ex-bishop Joseph Duffy holds hands up over failure to tackle his paedophile priests

BY VICTORIA O’HARA– 25 April 2013

A former bishop failed to prevent clerical sex abuse and did not remove suspected paedophile priests from the ministry, a damning new watchdog report has said.

The Irish National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC) report published yesterday said there was “an unacceptable delay” in taking action against one priest.

It said Bishop Joseph Duffy’s delay came despite concerns being raised of “a credible allegation” in the Clogher diocese, which includes parts of Tyrone, Fermanagh, Cavan, Donegal and Louth.

The review said that 13 priests in the diocese faced allegations, one of whom is classified as either “in ministry or retired”, and two have been convicted.

In another case, a priest in the diocese was suspected of multiple incidents of abuse, but he was not removed, was transferred to another parish and eventually was sent overseas for therapeutic help.

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Reaction to Clogher clerical abuse report

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

Northern Ireland Programme Director of Amnesty International, Patrick Corrigan, welcomed the publishing of the Clogher clerical abuse report.

“We got yet another glimpse into the horror of abuse suffered by children in parishes in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland and the way in which figures in the church hierarchy permitted the abuse to continue.

“Yet, church-approved reviews are no substitute for a proper, independent investigation into clerical child sex abuse throughout Northern Ireland,” he said.

“It is increasingly clear that clerical child sex abuse happened in Northern Ireland over many years and over many parishes – but only a proper state-instituted inquiry will tell us the extent of the problem and help bring to account those responsible.”

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Irish audits show ‘evidence of steady progress’ dealing with abuse

IRELAND
The Boston Pilot

By Michael Kelly

Posted: 4/24/2013
DUBLIN (CNS) — The head of the Catholic Church’s child safeguarding watchdog said he is encouraged by the latest audits of the handling of abuse allegations by dioceses and a religious congregation.

Ian Elliott, head of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church, said the seven audits, published April 24, show “clear evidence of steady progress in developing robust safeguarding structures” in the church.

“The overall picture is a very positive one with the vast majority of the criteria used to assess performance against the review standards as being fully met,” he said.

While commending the overall picture, some of the audits are critical of past failings. In Clogher Diocese, for example, the review found that retired Bishop Joseph Duffy “consistently missed” opportunities to prevent abuse.

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.

Watchdog Elliott played key role in Catholic Church child safety reform

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Thu, Apr 25, 2013

So it’s goodbye to Ian Elliott. Some in the Catholic Church in Ireland clearly have felt it has been less than good to know him. Then maybe it’s just the beginning of a longer farewell involving the chief executive of the church’s child protection “watchdog-with-a-helluva- bite” and the authorities in Maynooth.

He may yet be employed on a consultancy basis as the review process in the church’s 162 institutions goes on.

It is doubtful whether the Catholic Church on this island has ever owed as much to a Presbyterian where restoring its credibility is concerned. Yesterday’s “gratifying” reports on current child protection practices in six dioceses and one religious congregation would hardly have been possible without his doggedness. He has played a hugely significant role in making Catholic parishes in Ireland today among the safest places for children.

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Church child protection chief to stand down after six years

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Thu, Apr 25, 2013

Ian Elliott is to stand down as chief executive of the National Board for Safeguarding Children next month. “My contract expires at the end of June and, when leave is taken into account, I’ll be gone by the end of May,” he said yesterday.

By then he will have completed his second three-year contract with the board since 2007.

He has been requested by the Catholic Church in Australia to advise it on setting up child-protection review structures and will visit the country for three weeks in August and September next.

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Garry O’Sullivan: ‘Boring’ audit answers prayers of battle-weary church dioceses

IRELAND
Irish Independent

25 April 2013

IN his Northern peace process memoir ‘Making Peace’, Senator George Mitchell mused that he hoped he could go with his son into the Stormont Assembly 10 years after the Good Friday Agreement and be bored by the proceedings – a sign of normalcy in democratic politics.

Reading the six reviews of Irish Catholic dioceses by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCI) – its third tranche – that same sense of ‘normalcy’ is evident as the clean bills of health, notwithstanding historic problems, are handed out.

Only Clogher diocese came in for some criticism of its management of allegations and this was prior to the current bishop’s appointment in 2010. Under Bishop Duffy, now retired, the diocese “consistently missed” opportunities for “preventative interventions”.

Maeve Lewis of One in Four called the reviews “reassuring” and called on the Children’s Minister to accelerate the Children First legislation.

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Child Abuse Awareness

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee

Most Reverend Jerome E. Listecki
Archbishop of Milwaukee

This is Child Abuse Awareness month and this week is Safe Environment Week in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, where we pay special attention to the measures adopted over the past 10 years to ensure children are safe in our parishes and schools.

Last night, as a way of marking these events, I celebrated a Mass of Atonement, joining our prayers to the sacrificial act of Jesus, to pray for those who have suffered from clergy sexual abuse, for the community that carries the pain associated with their brothers and sisters, for the reform in the heart and mind of those clergy who have abused, but most importantly, for a sense of understanding that God’s love can accomplish a reconciliation in our lives and in our community.

In preparing for the Mass, which was hosted by St. John Vianney Parish in Brookfield, I began thinking about how our attention to Safe Environment is one of the good things that has come out of the evil that was perpetrated upon innocent children. The Safeguarding All of God’s Family program has provided training to more than 50,000 adults who have contact with our young people and, in addition, more than 100,000 children received safe environment education in their curriculum.

We have heightened our awareness about sexual abuse and tried to reach out to abuse survivors in the best ways possible. We have worked with law enforcement to ensure our policies for handling reports of sexual abuse are the best they can possibly be. We have an annual audit of our practices to make certain we remain in compliance with all the demands of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

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Archbishop Suggests Marsicek Should Have Been Removed

WISCONSIN
Patch

By Jim Price

In a pastoral letter now published in his blog on the Archdiocese of Milwaukee website, Archbishop Jerome Listecki says that while the church followed “the letter of the law” in allowing Father Robert Marsicek to retain his priestly duties in Wauwatosa while he was being investigated in California, it might not have followed “the spirit of the law,” in light of the church’s pledge to keep children safe.

The contrite missive, titled “Child Abuse Awareness,” begins by noting that this is Child Abuse Awareness month and this week is Safe Environment Week in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, and his celebration of a Mass of Atonement at St. John Vianney Parish in Brookfield for the victims of clergy sexual abuse, as well for “the community that carries the pain” associated with it.

Listecki outlines steps the Catholic Church has taken over the past decade in training of its staff, education of its flock, and outreach to the community, restoring trust and credibility to an institution “badly broken” by its response to past allegations of abuse.

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Serbian priest accused for sexual abuse of minors [video]

SERBIA
In Serbia

BELGRADE – After various media started reporting about Serbian priest in Bosnia has allegedly abused minors, and even some of them got killed in the attempt to hide it, Serbia was deeply shaken. This was not the first time an Orthodox Church Priest gets accused for such a vicious crime.

Bishop Vasilije Kacavenda, or episkop zvorničko-tuzlanski, which is his original title, has become known as child molester judging by testimonials from his alleged victims and their parents. But there is no concrete evidence, such as photos or videos.

After the Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church heard about the unfortunate news, they decided to “punish” Kacavenda by retiring him. The decision came after careful consideration of available information. Kacavenda was retired, but allowed to keep his rank. However, the bishop hopes that this is just temporary decision, that all the charges will be dropped and he would be reinstated.

Another problem comes from the fact that Kacavenda is known as a bishop who has furniture painted in gold, and a home that looks like a palace.

Kačavenda was accused of multiple homosexual activities with minors. Serbian media also accused him of having sex with four young boys, claimed that it can be seen on the video (scroll down), and also that Serbian Orthodox Church is in the possession of this and maybe other videos, but it is not available for the public. Serbian Orthodox Church representatives have neither confirmed nor denied this claim.

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April 24, 2013

Fr. William Vatterott indicted on child porn charges

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK

ST. LOUIS (KSDK) – A federal grand jury indicted a St. Louis priest on child pornography charges Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Attorney Richard Callahan said.

According to court documents, Fr. William Vatterott was found to be in possession of the illicit materials between June 2010 and June 2011.

Two teens reported to the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 2011 that Fr. Vatterott engaged in inappropriate electronic communications with them. One teenager, who was 18-years-old at the time, also reported underage drinking and other undisclosed inappropriate behaviors. Neither teenager reported physical contact or solicitation of any kind.

Fr. Vatterott was placed on administrative leave after the incidents were reported. He had served as pastor at St. Cecilia Parish since January 2008, after serving as associate pastor at Holy Infant Parish in Ballwin.

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Archbishop Jerome Listecki releases letter after Mass of Atonement

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

April 24, 2013, by Katie DeLong

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — This week, Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki held a Mass of Atonement — a Mass that has become an annual event during which the church seeks forgiveness for clergy who have sexually abused children. Now, Listecki has released a letter following that Mass in which he discusses Child Abuse Awareness month and Safe Environment Week within the Archdiocese.

Archbishop Listecki’s letter reads:

Love One Another
April 23, 2013

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

This is Child Abuse Awareness month and this week is Safe Environment Week in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, where we pay special attention to the measures adopted over the past 10 years to ensure children are safe in our parishes and schools.

Last night, as a way of marking these events, I celebrated a Mass of Atonement, joining our prayers to the sacrificial act of Jesus, to pray for those who have suffered from clergy sexual abuse, for the community that carries the pain associated with their brothers and sisters, for the reform in the heart and mind of those clergy who have abused, but most importantly, for a sense of understanding that God’s love can accomplish a reconciliation in our lives and in our community.

In preparing for the Mass, which was hosted by St. John Vianney Parish in Brookfield, I began thinking about how our attention to Safe Environment is one of the good things that has come out of the evil that was perpetrated upon innocent children. The Safeguarding All of God’s Family program has provided training to more than 50,000 adults who have contact with our young people and, in addition, more than 100,000 children received safe environment education in their curriculum.

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St. Louis priest indicted on child porn charge

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

By Robert Patrick rpatrick@post-dispatch.com 314-621-5154

ST. LOUIS • A St. Louis priest was indicted Wednesday on one federal child pornography charge, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.

Prosecutors say Father William F. Vatterott, 36, possessed child pornography between June 2010 and June 2011. The indictment accuses Vatterott of having at least two images of child porn on his computer; both were images of an unidentified nude boy.

Vatterott is expected to appear in federal court late this week or early next week, they said.

If convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison.

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Judge Issues Opinion in Priest Sex-Abuse Appeal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Legal Intelligencer

By Amaris Elliott-Engel
The Legal Intelligencer

April 24, 2013

The Philadelphia judge who presided over the first trial in the country of a Catholic Church official charged with endangering the welfare of children abused by other priests said there was evidence that his motive was to perpetuate a system of protecting abusive priests over their sexual-abuse victims.

Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina, writing in a 236-page opinion required under procedural rules in the appeal of Monsignor William J. Lynn, said that Lynn “followed in his predecessors’ footsteps, perpetuating the system that he inherited.”

Lynn was responsible for reviewing allegations of sexual abuse involving priests as the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s secretary of clergy from 1992 until 2004.

For example, Sarmina cited the situation of Father Nicholas Cudemo, who Lynn knew had been accused of abusing at least nine different girls, and whom Lynn instructed to comply with restrictions on his ministry “’for the good of the church and the avoidance of scandal,”’ according to the opinion.

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Pa. Judge Defends Church Aide’s Trial, Conviction

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
ABC News

By MARYCLAIRE DALE Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA April 25, 2013 (AP)

A Philadelphia judge is defending her decisions in the trial of the first Catholic Church official in the U.S. to be charged and convicted in the cover-up of the priest abuse scandal.

Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina argues Monsignor William Lynn lied to perpetuate a church cover-up of child sexual abuse. Her opinion explains some of her trial decisions, which Lynn plans to challenge on appeal.

The Legal Intelligencer first reported on the judge’s April 12 ruling on Wednesday.

Lynn was a longtime secretary for clergy. He was convicted of child endangerment and is serving a three- to six-year prison term.

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Diocese of Clogher singled out for failing to prevent child abuse in the past

IRELAND
Highland Radio

The border diocese of Clogher has been singled out for failing to prevent child abuse in the past.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church criticised the former bishop.

The Diocese consists of County Monaghan, much of County Fermanagh with parts of Counties Tyrone, and Donegal.

The reviewers said it was clear that in the past – opportunities to intervene and prevent abuse were consistently missed.

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Clogher clerical abuse report: retired bishop accepts criticism over handling of allegations

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

The former Bishop of the cross-border Catholic diocese of Clogher Joseph Duffy has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour by priests there in a report published today.

A review by the National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC), the Catholic Church’s child protection watchdog, found that “opportunities for preventive interventions were consistently missed when concerns of abuse by clergy were highlighted in the past” in Clogher.

Bishop Duffy, a former spokesman for the Catholic bishops, led the diocese for 31 years until his retirement in 2010.

The NBSC review, published this morning, covered the period from January 1st, 1975. It found a line had been drawn “between the practice of this diocese today and some of the practice that existed previously”.

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Catholic child abuse: 187 allegations against 98 priests have led to zero convictions

IRELAND
The Journal

“I am one of the fortunate survivors to have succeeded in securing a criminal conviction against one of two Spiritan priests who sexually abused me,” writes campaigner Mark Vincent Healy.

THE DIOCESES OF Clogher, Elphin, Killala and Waterford join the infamous group of seven Catholic Church authorities, including Derry, Dramore and Limerick, where not one priest has been convicted for having committed an offence or offences against a child or young person despite numerous allegations since 1 January 1975.

From the 16 dioceses reviewed to date by the National Board for Safeguarding Children, there have been 187 allegations made in relation to 98 priests where there have been no convictions. This represents a third of the church authorities examined where not one priest was held to account. Following the publication of the third tranche of audits, today is yet another difficult day to bear for any survivor from these Catholic Church authorities.

It is hard to take in the sense of pain and suffering inflicted upon those brave enough to bring their case forward, to seek justice. Seven of the 16 dioceses sent their complainants away with nothing for their pain and suffering save an empty apology having re-traumatised them all over again.

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Oakland priest holds vigil for church reform while on voluntary exile

OAKLAND (CA)
National Catholic Reporter

by Monica Clark | Apr. 24, 2013

Oakland, Calif. —
Every Sunday morning for the last three years, Tim Stier, former pastor of Corpus Christi Parish in Fremont, Cailf., has stood outside Oakland’s Cathedral of Christ the Light to call attention to the need for what he calls “structural reform” within the church. Sometimes he is alone, holding a large sign that reads, “Include the Excluded: Women, Gay Persons, Abuse Survivors.” At other times, a handful of supporters joins him in the two-hour vigil.

On April 14, the third anniversary of his demonstration, about two dozen adults gathered in solidarity with him. Some were members of the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests. Others belonged to Women of Magdala, a local group advocating for the ordination of women. There were also gay and lesbian Catholics and a few of his Fremont parishioners.

“It’s important to stand with him,” said Patty Leal, who has known Stier since he presided at her wedding 32 years ago. “I have such great respect for him. I know what it has cost him to follow his conscience.”

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Ex-bishop accepts mistakes …

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Ex-bishop accepts mistakes after watchdog criticises poor judgement in dealing with paedophile priests

24 April 2013

A retired Catholic bishop has admitted mistakes after a watchdog found opportunities to stop dangerous paedophile priests were consistently missed.

Joseph Duffy, who led the Diocese of Clogher on the border in Ireland for 31 years, conceded poor judgment among past hierarchy in dealing with clerical abuse allegations.

The damning review found one serial abuser had not been taken out of ministry but moved to a new parish and eventually sent overseas for therapy.

In a second case, auditors said it was unacceptable to allow a priest facing a credible abuse allegation to continue to minister.

“I accept the criticism in the review and regret that, in the past, the standard of managing some cases fell short of what is expected today,” Bishop Duffy said.

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Minnesota SOL Reform

WALTHAM (MA)
BishopAccountability.org

As of April 19, 2013, the Minnesota legislature appears close to passing the Child Victims Act (HF 681 [see also another web posting of HF 681] / SF 534). It would eliminate prospectively the civil statute of limitations for minors and provide a three-year window in which previously barred cases could be brought.

If passed into law, it will make Minnesota’s justice system accessible to adults who were sexually assaulted as children and result in the identification of sexual predators — including some who may be abusing children still.

Bills like the Child Victims Act give society another benefit that is seldom mentioned: they expose institutional wrong-doing. In Delaware, a similar law resulted ultimately in the release by the Catholic Diocese of Wilmington of 11,000 pages of formerly secret abuse files. In California, the San Diego diocese released 10,000 pages and the Los Angeles archdiocese, 12,000 pages – both disclosures the result of a law that freed victims of time restrictions. When victims have civil recourse, institutions are forced to account for their actions.

It is troubling that in Minnesota, some of those lobbying against the Child Victims Act have been involved in the very bureaucracy whose actions in abuse cases would be revealed if the bill passes. The bill faces active opposition from the Minnesota Religious Council. Three Council members are from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, including two – Rev. Kevin McDonough and former archdiocesan attorney Andrew Eisenzimmer – who worked for decades in the archdiocese to manage abuse cases. Their involvement in the Minnesota Religious Council effectively continues that effort.

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Abuse survivor demands state inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah Stack and David Young– 24 April 2013

AN abuse survivor who alleges an uncle of the former Bishop of Clogher was one of his attackers has demanded a state inquiry into clerical sex crimes in Northern Ireland.

The Stormont Executive has established a statutory probe into abuse committed in state and church-run institutions, but its remit does not cover criminal acts committed by priests outside of children’s residential facilities.

Michael Connolly claims he was victimised for five years of his childhood in Donagh, Co Fermanagh, by parish priest Peter Duffy, who was later promoted to canon.

The deceased cleric was the uncle of the former Bishop of Clogher, Joseph Duffy, who was today heavily criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour of priests in the diocese.

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Ex-priest claims Australian Church hid sex abuse

MALTA/AUSTRALIA
Times of Malta

A Maltese man has blown the lid on the Australian Church by quitting the priesthood and claiming the Victorian Archdiocese has been deleting child sex abuse records.

Victor Buhagiar claims he “saw and heard” the Archbishop of Victoria order a secretary to turn off a recorder before discussing clerical sex abuse during a Church council meeting in April 2012.

He bowed out as a priest last January, saying his subsequent enquiries into the matter had led him to a metaphorical dead end.

“I believe there’s a devil in the hierarchy,” Mr Buhagiar has now told Australian investigative TV show Today Tonight.

“I suspect the recorder was turned off to create a black hole, so that investigators will…find nothing. Certain data is not being recorded in any way, shape or form.”

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Abuse watchdog heads to Australia

AUSTRALIA/IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

24 April 2013

The head of the Catholic church watchdog into clerical abuse in Ireland is to head up a similar review panel in Australia, he has revealed.

Ian Elliott said he will leave his post in the summer after examining the records of 16 diocese and four religious orders.

The remaining 10 dioceses will be complete by the end of this year, he said, with the 100 plus orders and religious authorities examined by 2015.

“I have been invited to go work in Australia with the Catholic church,” he said. “They are interested in a review process and are learning from the Irish experience.”

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IL- Alleged predator priest is sued; SNAP responds

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 24, 2013

Two men are suing the Chicago Catholic archdiocese and a former priest for alleged child sex crimes.

For the most part, only the most egregious child molesting clerics were defrocked in the 1970s, so we suspect that Fr. Baranowski assaulted many kids. We hope every single person who saw, suspected or suffered his crimes will find the courage to speak up, get help, expose wrongdoing, call police, and start healing.

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Pfarrer wegen Kindesmissbrauchs vom Vatikan entlassen

DEUTSCHLAND
Neues

Veröffentlicht am Mittwoch, 24. April 2013 von Stefan Domeyer

Der wegen Kindesmissbrauch verurteilte Pfarrer Andreas L. ist nicht mehr Priester. Ein von der vatikanischen Glaubenskongregation durchgeführtes kirchenrechtliches Verfahren führte zu seiner Entlassung aus dem Klerikerstand. Dies teilte das Bistum Hildesheim mit.

Andreas L. wurde im Januar vorigen Jahres zu sechs Jahren Haft verurteilt. Das Landgericht Braunschweig sah es als erwiesen an, dass er drei Jungen über mehrere Jahre sexuell schwer missbraucht hat. An die strafrechtliche Verurteilung schloss sich ein kirchenrechtliches Verfahren gegen L. an. Das staatliche Urteil wurde zusammen mit den Unterlagen der bisherigen kirchlichen Ermittlungen an die Glaubenskongregation weitergereicht.

„Das entspricht den Vorgaben des Vatikans in Fällen von sexuellem Missbrauch“, erläutert Weihbischof Heinz-Günter Bongartz, Geschäftsführer des Bischöflichen Beraterstabes für Verdachtsfälle des sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Geistliche im Bistum Hildesheim. Das Urteil der Glaubenskongregation könne sich so auf die staatlichen Ermittlungen stützen.

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‘Significant developments’ in child safeguarding in Diocese of Ferns

IRELAND
The Journal

[Diocese of Ferns]

A REPORT INTO child protection practices in the Diocese of Ferns, which was the subject of the Ferns Report into allegations of clerical sexual abuse, was published today.

The report was published by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI), as part of a review of safeguarding practice within all the Church authorities on the island of Ireland.

Criteria

The 2005 Ferns Inquiry Report was an official government inquiry into clerical sexual abuse allegations made against the Diocese of Ferns. One of the offenders was Fr Seán Fortune, who abused a large number of teenage boys. Fortune took his own life before his trial.

Today’s report found Ferns met 47 out of its 48 criteria fully, and one partially.

There are approximately 100,000 Catholic residents in the diocese, across 49 parishes. Its bishop, Bishop Denis Brennan, was installed on 1 March 2006

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Clogher Diocese child sex abuse abuse report released

IRELAND
Fermanagh Herald

A report into how allegations of child sex abuse were handled in the Clogher Diocese has revealed opportunities were “consistently missed”.

The audit by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church revealed allegations were made against 13 priests since 1975.

The Clogher Diocese includes six Tyrone parishes: Fintona, Dromore, Trillick, Eskra, Clogher and Aghavea-Aghintaine (Fivemiletown/Brookeboro). The diocese also spans across Fermanagh, Monaghan, Donegal, Louth and Cavan.

Of the 13 priests subject to allegations, seven were dead at the date the review commence on November 7 2012. A total of 23 allegations were reported to An Garda Síochána and 22 allegations to the HSE since January 1 1975.

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Diocese continues investigation into priest accused of misconduct

SOUTH CAROLINA
Fox Carolina

By Casey Vaughn

GREENWOOD, SC (FOX Carolina) –
A man who told Greenwood County deputies he was touched by a priest 15 years ago has decided not to pursue charges, according to reports.

The Index-Journal reported Tuesday that the victim told deputies he did not want to further pursue the investigation.

The allegations against Father Hayden Vaverek made news in early March when the Catholic Diocese of Charleston released a statement saying he had been put on administrative leave after someone reported the misconduct.

The diocese reported that the misconduct occurred while Vaverek was pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Greenwood, but “no parishioners of that parish were involved in the reported allegation.” Diocesan officials said the sexual misconduct involved a minor and happened more than 15 years ago.

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Abuse response was ‘often unsatisfactory’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Londonderry Sentinel

By Kevin Mullan
Published on 24/04/2013

OPPORTUNITIES to intervene following reports of clerical abuse in the cross-border Catholic Diocese of Clogher were consistently missed in the past, according to a newly-published report commissioned by Bundoran-born Bishop Liam McDaid.

The report carried out by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church (NBSCCC) at the request of Bishop McDaid who was ordained in 2010, was published on Wednesday (April 23).

Twenty-three allegations were made against 13 priests in the Diocese, which includes parts of Donegal, Tyrone and Fermanagh, since 1975. Three were still alive at the time of the review last November; two were convicted of offences against children; but one against whom an allegation had been made was never convicted of any offence.

Whilst acknowledging Bishop McDaid’s hard work ensuring good working relationships were maintained with safeguarding agencies in both jurisdictions of his diocese, the report does point to serious failings prior to his prelacy.

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2 men sue Chicago archdiocese, allege priest molested them in ’60s

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY LEEANN SHELTON
Staff Reporter

Last Modified: Apr 22, 2013

Two men are suing the Chicago Archdiocese and a former priest, claiming he molested them during unsupervised overnight trips more than 50 years ago.

The plaintiffs — now both in their mid-60s — say they met then-priest Alexander Sylvester Baranowski when they were students at St. Wenceslaus grammar school in Chicago.

Both men say Baranowski molested them on separate overnight ministry trips to Springfield in 1961 and 1962, on which he would take only one student with him, according to the suit filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court.

They claim that on each trip, Baranowski feigned that the hotel had made a mistake, and that the only room available had only one bed, forcing them to share a bed with him, the suit said. The priest then sexually abused them while they were sleeping, both men claim.

Church officials have since substantiated allegations against Baranowski, accusing him of sexual misconduct involving minors. He resigned in 1975 and was stripped of his priesthood a year later, according to the archdiocese’s website.

The men blame the archdiocese for failing to act, claiming church officials knew about the alleged abuse but concealed it from their families, law enforcement and other Catholics to protect the church’s reputation.

A spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Chicago said Monday night that officials have not yet seen the suit and declined to comment.

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Don Mayo – a sexual abuse victim’s battle to be believed

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Janet Fife-Yeomans
From:The Daily Telegraph
April 25, 2013

ALL child sex abuse victim Don Mayo wants is justice – but his story is so confronting, the Victims Compensation Tribunal at first said it could never have happened.

Now a well-known radio announcer, Mr Mayo was repeatedly raped as a boy by four brothers and a lay teacher at Christian Brothers College, Burwood.

Like most victims of childhood abuse, it took him decades before he could talk about it and, by then, his life “had fallen apart”.

Now he is one of the thousands pinning their hopes on the royal commission into institutionalised child sex abuse to provide answers.

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‘Unacceptable delays and unsatisfactory responses’ to abuse concerns in Clogher

IRELAND
The Journal

THE NATIONAL BOARD for Safeguarding Children’s review into child protection practices in the Clogher diocese was highly critical of past responses to abuse allegations.

However, investigators drew a clear line between the past and current systems.

The report said that from the cases examined, “it was clear that opportunities for preventive interventions were consistently missed when concerns of abuse by clergy were highlighted in the past”.

In one particular case, there was an “unacceptable delay” in taking action against a priest and removing him from all ministry following a “credible allegation”.

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Child safeguarding report on Galway diocese makes 9 recommendations

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

Nine recommendations have been issued in a report into safeguarding practice in the diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora.

The 28 page document issued by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church examines seven standards.

It’s based on case material made available by Bishop Martin Drennan along with interviews with key personnel who contribute to safeguarding within the diocese.

The review references practice under the leadership of Bishop Drennan, Bishop McLoughlin and Bishop Casey.

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Catholic hierarchy ‘failed to stop’ child sex abuse by priests in Clogher

IRELAND
The Guardian (UK)

[Diocese of Clogher]

Henry McDonald, Ireland correspondent
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 24 April 2013

The Catholic hierarchy failed to step in and prevent ongoing child sex abuse by priests in a Northern Ireland diocese, one of seven internal church reports has admitted.

Irish Catholicism’s National Board for Safeguarding Children found on Wednesday that there was “an unacceptable delay” in taking action against one priest after what it describes as “a credible allegation” in the Clogher diocese, which covers the border counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh as well as Cavan and Donegal in the Irish Republic.

Among the cases of system failure cited by the report is of a priest suspected of being a serial abuser who was not removed from the ministry but was instead first moved to another parish in the diocese and then sent overseas.

He was eventually extradited back to Ireland after several years but died before he could be brought before a court, the report concluded.

The report, which does not name any priest involved, says there were complaints against 13 clergy in the diocese over four decades. Two of the priests from Clogher were subsequently jailed.

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Retired bishop criticised over handling of child abuse allegations

IRELAND
Irish Times

The former Bishop of the cross-border Catholic diocese of Clogher Joseph Duffy has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour by priests there in a report published today.

A review by the National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC), the Catholic Church’s child protection watchdog, found that “opportunities for preventive interventions were consistently missed when concerns of abuse by clergy were highlighted in the past” in Clogher.

Bishop Duffy, a former spokesman for the Catholic bishops, led the diocese for 31 years until his retirement in 2010.

The NBSC review, published this morning, covered the period from January 1st, 1975. It found a line had been drawn “between the practice of this diocese today and some of the practice that existed previously”.

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Abuse allegations against three active priests in Galway diocese

IRELAND
The Journal

THE REVIEW by the Church’s national board for the safeguarding of children has revealed that abuse allegations have been made against three of the 63 priests who are currently on active duty in the Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora.

The review of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (PDF) is broadly positive of safeguarding procedures in the diocese, in a report which examines its performance under three different bishops since 1975.

While there is some criticism of how complaints had previously been managed in the diocese, the appraisal of procedures since the appointment of Bishop Martin Drennan in 2005.

Bishop Drennan this morning told Galway Bay FM that the allegations against the three active priests had been discussed with the Gardaí and HSE, and it was considered that the allegations were not significant enough to warrant removing them from duty.

The priests are not named in the Safeguarding Board’s report.

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Killala diocese records only a small number of abuse allegations

IRELAND
Irish Independent

[Diocese of Killala]

Caroline Crawford– 24 April 2013

THE Review of Safeguarding Practice within the Diocese of Killala found only a small number of allegations of abuse.

The report revealed that allegations were made against three priests in the Diocese with only four allegations received.

Three of these allegations were reported to gardai while only one was reported to the HSE. No convictions resulted from the allegations.

Two of the priests against whom allegations were made are still alive. The third was deceased at the time the allegation was made anonymously.

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Rosarian Academy former teacher Stephen Budd arrest prompts town hall to

FLORIDA
WPTV

[with video]

By: Jeff Skrzypek

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Stunned by the aftermath of sex crime allegations involving an ex-teacher at Rosarian Academy, parents and teachers got advice from experts on how to keep their children safe.

In early April, former Rosarian Academy teacher Stephen Budd was arrested for allegedly forcing several students into sex acts.

Weeks later, Rosarian Academy parents like Eliezer Hernandez sat and listened on Tuesday to a panel who hoped to prevent future sex crimes involving children.

“I mean what do you say? We’re at a loss for what we say to our six-year-old,” said Hernandez, who has both a six-year-old and a two-year-old at Rosarian Academy.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office along with the Center for Missing and Exploited Children tried to help parents on Tuesday to prevent their kids from trusting the wrong people.

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Archbishop Jerome Listecki suggests church erred in Wauwatosa priest case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

April 23, 2013

Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki issued a letter Tuesday suggesting the Catholic Church erred in its handling of a Wauwatosa priest suspended from leading two parishes and schools after a teacher reported what she considered inappropriate contact with a child in March.

Listecki said Father Robert Marsicek’s history of boundary issues involving children called into question the decision to leave him in ministry after it was learned in May 2012 that he was being investigated for alleged sexual abuse of two boys in the late 1980s to 1990s in California.

“While our decisions followed the letter of the law in accordance with existing policies, I am not sure they followed the spirit of the law with regard to our pledge to be vigilant in keeping children safe,” Listecki said in his weekly letter to Catholics in southeastern Wisconsin.

That decision, Listecki said, undermines the progress the church has made in addressing its sex abuse scandal and working to keep children safe in their parishes and schools.

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Fresh abuse allegations as diocese reports launched

IRELAND
Newstalk

Seven reports have been released today which exmained child protection services in 6 dioceses and one order

Galway, Waterford, Clogher, Ferns, Kilalla and Elphin as well as the Society of African Missions religious order have all been subject to the reviews.

Out of the 7, the report into the Diocese of Ferns, is severely critical of two former Bishops in the Diocese for their handling of child sexual abuse cases.

The report by the National Bord for Safeguarding Children shows 100 allegations of child sexual abuse were made in the diocese since 1975.

3 priests have been convicted of committing an offence against a child in that time.

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Watchdog criticises former bishop as Diocese of Elphin commended

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

[3rd Tranche of NBSCCCI Reviews – April 2013]

A watchdog review of the Diocese of Clogher, which straddles the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, found opportunities to prevent attacks in the past were consistently missed when concerns were raised.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland said, however, that a line should be drawn between how the diocese used to do its business and the rules in place today.

Bishop Joseph Duffy led the diocese for about 30 years until his retirement in 2010.

The report into Clogher is one of seven being released today by the watchdog.

Bishop Liam McDaid was ordained as Bishop of Clogher on July 25, 2010.

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Ex-bishop criticised over claims

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

A former bishop has been criticised for unsatisfactory responses to child abuse allegations and risky behaviour of priests.

A watchdog review of the Diocese of Clogher, which straddles the border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland, found opportunities to prevent attacks in the past were consistently missed when concerns were raised.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland said, however, that a line should be drawn between how the diocese used to do its business and the rules in place today.

Bishop Joseph Duffy led the diocese for about 30 years until his retirement in 2010.

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Christian Pfeiffer: Mehr Gewalt in freikirchlichen Familien

DEUTSCHLAND
nw-news

Bielefeld (sim). In freikirchlichen Familien erleiden Kinder nach Untersuchungen des Kriminologen Christian Pfeiffer mehr Gewalt als in anderen Familien. Je stärker christlich-fundamentalistische Eltern im Glauben verankert seien, desto mehr prügelten sie, sagte Pfeiffer beim Deutschen Präventionstag in Bielefeld.

In katholischen und evangelischen Elternhäusern sei es umgekehrt: “Je religiöser sie sind, desto seltener üben sie Gewalt aus.” Grundlage der Befunde sind Befragungen des Kriminologischen Forschungsinstituts Niedersachsen in den Jahren 2008 bis 2011 unter 23.500 deutschen Jugendlichen aus Familien, die einer christlichen Gemeinde angehören. Pfeiffer war Schlussredner des Präventionstags der Deutschen Stiftung für Verbrechensverhütung und Straffälligenhilfe.

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