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.

May 22, 2012

APNewsBreak: Franciscan files tell abuse story

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Fox News

Published May 22, 2012

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – Robert Van Handel was a 15-year-old seminarian at St. Anthony’s, a prestigious Franciscan boarding school, when, he said, a priest slipped into the infirmary where he was recovering from a fever and began to molest him. The priest told him it would help draw the fever out.

More than a decade later, Van Handel himself was molesting children while working as a Franciscan priest at the same Santa Barbara boarding school. Van Handel formed a boys’ choir for local children and chose his victims from among its ranks for eight years.

The generational arc of sexual abuse at St. Anthony’s, including Van Handel’s own account of his crimes, is included in more than 4,000 pages from the confidential files of nine Franciscan religious brothers who were accused of abuse. The internal files, coupled with an additional 4,000 pages of sworn testimony obtained by the AP, are the largest release of a religious order’s files to date and paint one of the fullest pictures yet of a pervasive culture of abuse that affected generations of students at the seminary dedicated to training future Franciscans.

The religious order settled for $28 million in 2006 with plaintiffs who alleged abuse by the nine Franciscans, but Van Handel and other defendants fought the release of their private files for six years in a legal battle that reached the California Supreme Court.

The files were obtained by The Associated Press from a plaintiff’s attorney ahead of them being made public Wednesday.

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.

Deceased priest dropped from abuse lawsuit in Jackson County

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star

By MARK MORRIS
The Kansas City Star

The recent death of a Catholic priest has prompted lawyers to remove him from a civil lawsuit that alleged he abused a girl in the 1960s.

Lawyers representing the plaintiff filed paperwork in Jackson County Circuit Court Monday to formally remove the Rev. Francis McGlynn from the suit filed against him and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph in October.

McGlynn, 84, died earlier this month.

The notice of dismissal covered only McGlynn. The diocese remains in the suit.

The 2011 suit was the fourth filed against McGlynn since 2003, according to court records. The other three have been settled.

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.

RTE chief defiant on priest show

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

RTE chairman Tom Savage has insisted only communications minister Pat Rabbitte can force him to step down over the Prime Time Investigates scandal.

The broadcasting boss dismissed calls for his resignation in the wake of the defamation of innocent priest Fr Kevin Reynolds, who was wrongly accused of rape and fathering a child.

“It’s up to the minister to decide whether I’m a fit person or not,” said Mr Savage. “There are almost no bonuses or kudos for being in the position. Every day I give to the job would be a financial loss for what I could be doing elsewhere. But it is worth doing and to walk away, I believe, would be wrong.”

The broadcasting boss, who served as a priest for eight years, came under attack during a grilling from the Oireachtas Communications Committee.

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

Pope directs U.S. bishops on hot-button issues

VATICAN CITY
The Salt Lake Tribune

By ALESSANDRO SPECIALE
| Religion News Service

Vatican City • During the past six months, Pope Benedict XVI has delivered five major speeches to small groups of American bishops who were in Rome for their “ad limina” visits, which are required once every five years.

The ad limina visits are how the pope and Vatican departments keep tabs on bishops from around the world. They are also an occasion for the pontiff to address the major issues faced by a local church.

In his speeches, Benedict often echoed bishops’ concern about religious freedom and the challenges confronting the U.S. church. In his latest address Tuesday, he warned bishops of the “threat of a season in which our fidelity to the gospel may cost us dearly.”

The pope didn’t directly mention the bishops’ recent conflicts with the Obama administration over a birth-control mandate and other hot-button issues, but touched on many of the topics at the heart of the controversy — from conscientious objection to gay marriage.

One factor that might have shaped the pope’s message to the American bishops in recent months is the relative weakness of the Vatican’s ambassador to the United States, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano.

He is a newcomer, having arrived in Washington just weeks before the bishops’ visits started. He has been embroiled in the so-called “Vatileaks” scandal with the publication of his private letters to Benedict that denounced widespread “corruption” in the Vatican.

Here’s a recap of what Benedict had to say on hot-button issues in these past months.

SEXUAL ABUSE

“It is my hope that the church’s conscientious efforts to confront this reality will help the broader community to recognize the causes, true extent and devastating consequences of sexual abuse, and to respond effectively to this scourge which affects every level of society.” (Nov. 26)

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: We weren’t prepared for abuse complaints

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Associated Press

By MARYCLAIRE DALE, Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A priest assigned to help with child sex-abuse complaints at the Philadelphia archdiocese in the early 1990s says he was “woefully unprepared” and left after a year.

Monsignor James Beisel’s (BYE’-zuhlz) testimony comes in the child-endangerment and conspiracy trial of his friend, Monsignor William Lynn.

Lynn is accused of keeping accused priests in ministry. Defense lawyers have started their case by calling three of his church colleagues.

The priests say Lynn talked compassionately with abusers and sent accused priests for mental-health evaluations.

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.

Colorado Springs priest arrested on allegations of sex abuse

COLORADO
Colorado Springs Gazette

May 22, 2012

MATT STEINER
THE GAZETTE

A Catholic priest who has been under investigation since early January was arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting a child.

According to Colorado Springs police, Rev. Robert Charles Manning turned himself in Tuesday after an arrest warrant was issued.

Manning, who retired in February from St. Gabriel the Archangel Catholic Church in Colorado Springs, is being held in the El Paso County jail in connection with an Oct. 17, 2011 incident. Court records show that bail has been set at $10,000.

Manning was asked by the church to step down shortly after allegations were brought to the attention of the police on Jan. 4.

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

Diocese statement on Father Manning arrest

COLORADO
Colorado Catholic Herald

May 22, 2012

On May 17, 2012, the El Paso County District Court issued an arrest warrant charging Father Robert Manning with alleged sexual assault on a minor by a person in a position of trust and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Father Manning is a priest of the Archdiocese of St. Louis who served as the Pastor of St. Gabriel Catholic Church in Colorado Springs from June 30, 2007 until January 23, 2012.

When the Diocese of Colorado Springs received the allegation against Father Manning on January 5, 2012, it immediately reported the matter to the police and promptly placed Father Manning on administrative leave. On January 18, Archbishop Carlson, the Archbishop of St. Louis, suspended Father Manning’s faculties. The Diocese has fully cooperated with law enforcement and the Archdiocese of St. Louis. It is complying with its obligations under the Bishops’ Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

This is an extremely difficult situation for all. The alleged victim and family have, at all times in their communications with the Diocese, been polite and cooperative. Our hearts go out to them. Our hearts go out to all victims of abuse.

The Diocese of Colorado Springs has taken extraordinary care to ensure that its ministries are safe for those it serves. Its safe environment practices and protocols involve thousands of trainings and background checks, prompt reporting requirements, and more. We ask the faithful and all people of good will to pray for the alleged victim and his family, for the parishioners and staff at St. Gabriel’s, for the law enforcement officials, for the accused priest, and for all involved.

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.

Cei: i vescovi non sono obbligati a denunciare i casi di pedofilia

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Bolognatg24

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO, 22 MAGGIO – Il segretario generale della Cei, monsignor Mariano Crociata, ha esposto le linee guida della Cei nei confronti dei casi di pedofilia. I vescovi non avranno l’obbligo di denuncia degli abusi, una linea guida che farà molto discutere.

«Non possiamo chiedere al vescovo di diventare un pubblico ufficiale», ha detto mons. Crociata, «formalizzare la richiesta al vescovo di denunciare i casi di abuso vuol dire andare contro l’ordinamento, del resto su questo problema la cooperazione con la magistratura è un fatto ordinario».

«E’ chiaro a tutti noi vescovi che bisogna collaborare con le autorità civili», ha puntualizzato il segretario, ma «ciò non vuol dire che noi si possa operare in modo difforme da quanto prevede la legislazione». L’unico “vincolo” che la Cei riesce ad imporre ai vescovi è quello di «incoraggiare le vittime a rivolgersi alla magistratura».

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Pedofilia: CEI, non c’è obbligo di denuncia

CITTA DEL VATICANO
La Politica Italiana

CITTÀ DEL VATICANO – Entrano in vigore, senza alcuna sorpresa, le annunciate linee-guida della Cei «per i casi di abuso sessuale nei confronti di minori da parte di chierici» richieste dalla Santa Sede ad ogni episcopato mondiale.

Come ampiamente previsto, il documento stabilisce che «il vescovo, non rivestendo la qualifica di pubblico ufficiale né di incaricato di pubblico servizio, non ha l’obbligo giuridico di denunciare all’autorità giudiziaria statuale le notizie che abbia ricevuto» in merito ad abusi sessuali compiuti da sacerdoti su minori. Tuttavia è «importante la cooperazione del vescovo con le autorità civili, nell’ambito delle rispettive competenze e nel rispetto della normativa concordataria civile». Una linea giurisprudenziale che non prende in considerazione la fattispecie del favoreggiamento della pedofilia e che venne preannunciata nel maggio del 2010, quando il segretario generale della Cei, mons. Mariano Crociata, spiegò che «la normativa italiana non prevede l’obbligo di denuncia in questi casi».

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.

Cei e pedofilia: il documento

ITALIA
La Stampa

Secondo quanto previsto dall’attuale legislazione italiana e dagli accordi concordatari, ”i vescovi sono esonerati dall’obbligo di deporre o di esibire documenti in merito a quanto conosciuto o detenuto per ragioni del proprio ministero”. E’ quanto si legge nelle ”Linee guida per i casi di abuso sessuale nei confronti di minori da parte di chierici” presentate oggi in Vaticano dal segretario generale della Cei, monsignor Mariano Crociata.

Secondo quanto previsto dall’attuale legislazione italiana e dagli accordi concordatari, ”i vescovi sono esonerati dall’obbligo di deporre o di esibire documenti in merito a quanto conosciuto o detenuto per ragioni del proprio ministero”. E’ quanto si legge nelle ”Linee guida per i casi di abuso sessuale nei confronti di minori da parte di chierici” presentate oggi in Vaticano dal segretario generale della Cei, monsignor Mariano Crociata. ”Nell’ordinamento italiano – si spiega – il vescovo, non rivestendo la qualifica di pubblico ufficiale ne’ di incaricato di pubblico servizio, non ha l’obbligo giuridico di denunciare all’autorità giudiziaria statuale le notizie che abbia ricevuto in merito ai fatti illeciti” di abuso sessuale da parte del clero.

Quindi si specifica: ”eventuali informazioni o atti concernenti un procedimento giudiziario canonico possono essere richiesti dall’autorità giudiziaria dello Stato, ma non possono costituire oggetto di un ordine di esibizione o di sequestro”. Ancora si precisa che ”rimane ferma l’inviolabilità dell’archivio segreto del vescovo”, anche in questo caso ”devono ritenersi sottratti a ordine di esibizione o sequestro anche registri e archivi salva la comunicazione volontaria di singole informazioni”. Si afferma inoltre che ”nessuna responsabilità, diretta o indiretta, per gli eventuali abusi sussiste in capo alla Santa Sede o alla Conferenza episcopale italiana”. Infine si mette in luce che, comunque, ”risulterà importante la cooperazione del vescovo con le autorità civili, nell’ambito delle rispettive competenze e nel rispetto della normativa concordataria e civile”.

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Italiens Bischöfe veröffentlichen Missbrauchs-Leitlinien

ROM
kathweb

Österreichische Regelung ist präziser und schärfer formuliert

Rom, 22.05.2012 (KAP) Sexueller Missbrauch durch katholische Geistliche muss von den Bischöfen Italiens nicht automatisch gegenüber den staatlichen Strafverfolgungsbehörden angezeigt werden: Die Bischöfe seien jedoch verpflichtet mit den staatlichen Behörden zusammenzuarbeiten, heißt es in den Leitlinien für den Umgang mit sexuellem Missbrauch, die am Dienstag von der Italienischen Bischofskonferenz (CEI) in Rom vorgestellt wurden. Ein Bischof sei keine staatliche Amtsperson. Rechtlich sei er daher nicht verpflichtet, Informationen an staatliche Justizbehörden weiterzuleiten, heißt es in dem 24-seitigen Dokument.

Priester, die Minderjährige sexuell missbraucht haben, sollen nach den Worten von CEI-Generalsekretär Bischof Mariano Crociata unverzüglich aus der Seelsorge entfernt werden. Ein solcher Geistlicher werde nicht wieder in die ordentliche Seelsorge zurückkehren und in keiner Weise mehr Kontakt mit Minderjährigen bekommen, sagte Crociata.

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Churchill priest to plead guilty Wednesday to child porn charges

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

May 22, 2012 3:37 pm

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Churchill priest indicted on child pornography charges is scheduled to plead guilty tomorrow in U.S. District Court.

Rev. Bartley Sorensen of St. John Fisher Catholic Church was initially charged in state court with possession of thousands of images on his computer of young boys posing naked or engaging in sex acts.

Authorities chose to pursue the case in federal court, where penalties are heavier.

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Vowing change, Legion head admits he knew of US priest’s transgressions

ROME
Catholic News Service

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

ROME (CNS) — The head of the Legionaries of Christ admitted he knew about the sexual improprieties of a U.S. priest based in Rome and did too little to restrict his high-profile ministry.

But more important than his failure to limit the priest’s ministry, he said, is the need to reassure members “that things are handled differently now.”

Legionary Father Alvaro Corcuera, who succeeded the late Father Marcial Maciel Degollado as director general of the order, said he had known in 2005 that Legionary Father Thomas D. Williams had fathered a child, but acknowledged he “was not diligent in setting proper restrictions and enforcing them.”

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Catholic Priest Turns Himself in to Police

COLORADO
KRDO

Police issued an arrest warrant for Father Charles “Robert” Manning former Priest of St. Gabriel the Archangel Catholic Church.

He turned himself in Tuesday.

Police are not revealing much information on the case, except to say that all affidavits are sealed an no comment can be made at this time.

The investigation against Manning on sexual abuse after allegations were made on January 4, and police were immediately alerted.

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Legion’s latest admission revives hypocrisy charge

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

[the letter]

By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press –

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Legion of Christ religious order, already discredited for having covered up the crimes of its pedophile founder, suffered another blow to its credibility after its superior admitted Tuesday that he knew in 2005 that his most prominent priest had broken his vows of celibacy and fathered a child, yet did nothing to prevent him from teaching and preaching about morality.

The admission by the Rev. Alvaro Corcuera is likely to enrage members of the Legion and its lay branch who have endured years of apologies, hypocrisy and explanations for the crimes of the order’s founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, who sexually abused his seminarians and fathered three children with two women.

The Rev. Thomas Williams, the public face of the Legion in America, admitted last week that he had fathered a child several years ago, going public with a statement after The Associated Press presented the Legion with the accusation. …

A U.S. victims’ group, Survivors’ Network of those Abused by Priests, called for Pope Benedict XVI to oust Corcuera, saying if the pope wants “a more holy and pure and safe church, he can’t keep ignoring or rewarding serious wrongdoing.”

Maciel, who founded the Legion in 1941 in Mexico, died in 2008.

The scandal surrounding the Legion is particularly grave given that Maciel was held up as a model for the faithful by Pope John Paul II, who was impressed by the orthodox order’s ability to attract money and young men to the priesthood.

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Trial delayed in Jackson pastor, sex case

MISSISSIPPI
The Clarion-Ledger

Written by
Jimmie E. Gates

The trial for a pastor accused of coercing a young male church member into a sexual relationship has been delayed.

The lawsuit was filed against the Rev. Kevin Joseph Boyd Sr., senior pastor of The Apostolic Church in Jackson. Boyd also operates a church in New Orleans. The trial was scheduled for this week in Hinds County Circuit Court.

Boyd has vehemently denies the allegations of sex abuse. The Clarion-Ledger does not use the names of persons alleging sexual abuse.

The claims in the lawsuit were similar to allegations leveled against Atlanta mega-church pastor Bishop Eddie Long by four young men. The lawsuit against Long was settled last year.

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Defense starts in Philadelphia priest-abuse trial

PHILADLEPHIA (PA)
The Palm Beach Post

By MARYCLAIRE DALE
The Associated Press

Updated: 2:31 p.m. Tuesday, May 22, 2012

PHILADELPHIA — The defense in a groundbreaking child-endangerment trial laid blame for the transfer of predator-priests at the feet of a dead archbishop.

Lawyers for Monsignor William Lynn called two colleagues to the stand Tuesday to try to counter eight weeks of searing evidence from the prosecution. The priests testified that Lynn, as secretary for clergy, never had the authority to remove problem priests or move them to new parishes.

Instead, Lynn could only make recommendations to his superiors, and “ultimately to the cardinal,” Monsignor Joseph P. Garvin testified.

Lynn, 61, served as secretary for clergy from 1992 to 2004, most of it under Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua. Bevilacqua died in January, two months before Lynn went on trial. Prosecutors preserved his testimony in a videotaped deposition late last year, but rested without playing it for jurors.

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CALL FOR RTE RESIGNATIONS AT OIREACHTAS COMMITEE

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

May 22, 2012

Members of the Oireachtas Communications Committee are calling on the Chairman and the Director General of RTÉ to resign.

Senior figures in the State broadcaster are appearing in Leinster House again today to discuss the defamation case of Ahascragh priest, Fr Kevin Reynolds.

TDs Mattie McGrath and Tom Barry as well as Senator John Whelan say Tom Savage and Noel Curran’s position are untenable.

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Defense witness: Lynn had no power over accused priests

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

A priest who helped Msgr. William J. Lynn investigate child-sex abuse complaints in the 1990s on Tuesday described the former clergy secretary as a low-level manager who pressed accused clerics to enter treatment but who had no authority to order them to do so.

The priest, Msgr. Michael T. McCulken, testified that Lynn’s recommendations typically needed the approval of three bosses above him, including Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua. At the time, Lynn was one of six priests who held the title of “secretary” within the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, overseeing areas ranging from education to Catholic life.

“Was there any level in the official hierarchy that was below the secretaries — or would they be the bottom rung?” defense lawyer Jeffrey Lindy asked McCulken.

“They would be the bottom rung,” McCulken said.

His testimony in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court came as lawyers for Lynn and his codefendant, the Rev. James J. Brennan, opened their defense in the landmark clergy-sex abuse trial. Prosecutors say Lynn, secretary for clergy between 1992 and 2004, endangered children when he allowed Brennan and another priest, Edward Avery, to live or work in parishes despite signs they might abuse minors. They say Brennan tried to rape a 14-year-old in 1996, an accusation he has denied.

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Pontifikat der Scharlatane

DEUTSCHLAND
Heise

Peter Bürger 16.05.2012

Kleinbürgerliche Heimathorizonte und das Ende der katholischen Weite: Der Papst aus Bayern und der Zentralkomitee-Katholizismus sind den Herausforderungen des 3. Jahrtausends nicht gewachsen. – Eine fromme Polemik

Zum Fest Christi Himmelfahrt findet in Mannheim der 89. deutsche Katholikentag statt. Die wohl bedeutendste katholische Gestalt aus Mannheim ist der von den Nationalsozialisten hingerichtete Jesuit Alfred Delp. Er war (trotz seiner Nähe zu einigen deutsch-katholischen Ideologiekomplexen) ein kompromissloser Gegner der Faschisten. Einen Monat vor seiner Ermordung schrieb dieser Märtyrer in sein Gefängnistagebuch über den Selbsterhaltungstrieb der Kirchenmächtigen: “Wir haben die kirchenpolitische Apparatur überschätzt und sie noch laufen lassen zu einer Zeit, wo ihr schon der geistige Treibstoff fehlte.

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Erzbistum Köln will kritischen Bischof fernhalten

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Rundschau

Der Kölner Erzbischof Kardinal Joachim Meisner interveniert gegen einen geplanten Auftritt eines kritischen Mitbruders aus Frankreich. Doch der streitbare Sozial-Bischof Jacques Gaillot widersetzt sich.

Köln –

Der Kölner Erzbischof, Kardinal Joachim Meisner (78), will offenbar einen Auftritt seines französischen Mitbruders Jacques Gaillot (76) in Köln verhindern. Wie der „Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger“ berichtet, erinnert Meisner den Sozial-Bischof Gaillot an ein Verbot aus dem Jahr 2004, auf Kölner Territorium tätig zu werden. „Umso mehr erstaunt es unseren Erzbischof, dass Sie ihm die geplante Veranstaltung in keiner Weise angekündigt haben“, heißt es in einem Brief von Meisners Generalvikar Stefan Heße an Gaillot.

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Bischof Müller attackiert Reformgruppen

DEUTSCHLAND
TVA

Mannheim (dpa) – Der Gastgeber des nächsten Katholikentages 2014, der Regensburger Bischof Gerhard Ludwig Müller, hat die Reformgruppen in der katholischen Kirche attackiert. «Es ist die Frage, ob die sogenannten Reformgruppen wirklich solche sind», sagte er der Nachrichtenagentur dpa in einem Gespräch über seine Pläne. Diese Gruppen bekämen nichts zustande und hängten sich an große Veranstaltungen an. Sie seien eine «parasitäre Existenzform».

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Sunshine Protects Child Abuse Victims

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Tom Allon

Just when you think good, old-fashioned investigative journalism is going the way of the horse and buggy and typewriter, there comes along a thoughtful expose that restores your faith in a free and robust press.

Two weeks ago, The New York Times (where I started my career as a lowly copy boy a quarter century ago) produced a two-part series on the unusually cozy relationship between the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office and the Orthodox rabbis in some Brooklyn communities who seemed to be playing judge and jury in cases of sexual abuse of young children.

Whether it’s the Catholic Church, Penn State football or the Orthodox Jewish community, the instinct to close ranks and shield alleged abusers because of the negative publicity to their tribe is the wrong one.

Just ask the late football coach Joe Paterno’s family how well that strategy worked. Or the Catholic Church, which has lost millions of dollars and lots of credibility because of its slow response to rampant abuse of children.

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First defense witness in Philadelphia priest-abuse trial says cardinal made priest transfers

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Daily Journal

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: May 22, 2012 – 11:16 am

PHILADELPHIA — The first defense witness in a groundbreaking clergy-abuse trial says the defendant lacked the authority to transfer priests within the Philadelphia archdiocese.

Monsignor William Lynn is the first Roman Catholic church official charged for allegedly helping transfer suspected predator-priests to new parishes.

Monsignor Joseph Garvin, former secretary for Catholic Human Services, testified Tuesday as the first defense witness.

He says Lynn could recommend that a priest be transferred — but says the cardinal ultimately makes the decision. That fits with Lynn’s argument that he took orders from Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua.

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Rebel priest deplores Church’s ‘leadership crisis’

AUSTRIA
Austrian Independent

A Catholic preacher who established a group of “disobedient” priests reacted coolly to Viennese Archbishop Christoph Cardinal Schönborn’s warnings.

Speaking to Italian daily La Stampa last week, Schönborn said regarding the Austrian Church’s reaction to the Preachers’ Initiative: “Now is the time to clarify the various issues. We might take disciplinary measures, but I hope that this is not necessary.”

Schüller, who founded the group in June 2011, announced: “We have to wait and see what these so-called disciplinary measures are. We will then consult our juridical advisors and discuss our reaction.”

Schüller heads the parish of Probstdorf, Lower Austria. The former Caritas Austria president said the Catholic Church in the alpine country was not in a general crisis – despite high membership cancellation figures and no end to reports about sexual abuse at churches and clerical boarding schools, especially in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.

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RTE CHIEF APPEARS BEFORE OIREACHTAS COMMITTEE

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

May 22, 2012 –

The RTÉ Director General says he doesn’t believe there will ever be a repeat of the defamation case involving Ahascragh Priest Fr. Kevin Reynolds.

Noel Curran says a whole range of changes have been put in place to ensure nothing on the same scale can happen again.

Senior figures in the State broadcaster are appearing before the Oireachtas Committee on Communications to continue discussions on the incident.

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Catholic Priest Says A Schoolgirl Who Went Missing In 1983 Was Kidnapped For Vatican Sex Parties

VATICAN CITY
Business Insider

Michael Kelley

The Catholic Church’s leading exorcist priest asserts that a Vatican employee’s daughter thought to be buried in a mob boss’s tomb was kidnapped for Vatican sex parties, reports Nick Pisa of the Daily Mail.

Father Gabriel Amorth, who was ordained in 1954 and has carried out more than 70,000 exorcisms, made the claim to Italian newspaper La Stampa as police examine the contents of mobster Enrico De Pedis’s tomb for clues about the 1983 disappearance of 15-year-old Emanuela Orlandi.

Father Amorth, 85, noted that an archivist at the Vatican previously admitted to recruiting girls for parties and told La Stampa newspaper the he believes that Orlandi “ended up in this circle” and that the “case of sexual exploitation” led to her murder followed by “the hiding of her body,” according to the Daily Mail.

Father Amorth also said that “diplomatic staff from a foreign embassy to the Holy See” were also involved.

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SNAP asks Brown Co. DA to investigate

GREEN BAY (WI)
Fox 11

Chad Doran, FOX 11 News

GREEN BAY – The victims advocacy group SNAP – the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests – is asking the Brown County district attorney to investigate the Green Bay Diocese in the wake of the Merryfield fraud case.

Monday, a jury in Outagamie County found the diocese committed fraud by not telling parishioners that former priest John Feeney had a history of inappropriate contact with children prior to molesting Todd and Troy Merryfield in 1978, when Feeney workd at a church in Freedom.

The group is asking DA David Lasee to examine the “scope and nature” and “pattern of practice” of what it says is the concealment of priests in the diocese.

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Legionaries of Christ Head Admits To Knowing Priest Thomas Williams Had Fathered Child

ROME
Huffington Post

[the letter]

By Philip Pullella

ROME, May 22 (Reuters) – The leader of the Legionaries of Christ admitted on Tuesday he knew for years the scandal-plagued religious order’s most famous priest had fathered a child but still allowed the popular cleric to preach about morality.

The religious order, still reeling from revelations that its founder was a sexual abuser and drug addict with two secret families, suffered another major blow last week when it admitted that Father Thomas Williams, an American based in Rome, had also led a double life.

But the question that had been left hanging after the first admission was how long Williams’ superiors knew.

In a letter to members published on the order’s website, Father Alvaro Corcuera said he found out about Williams’s child “early in my new assignment” as the order’s director-general, which began in 2005.

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Archbishop John Hepworth Suspended from TAC College of Bishops. Two New Appointments Made

AUSTRALIA
Virtue Online

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
May 17, 2012

The governing body of the Traditional Anglican Communion yesterday suspended TAC Archbishop John Hepworth from the Church’s College of Bishops, which rendered him ineligible to function as Bishop Ordinary of the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia.

The authority has been transferred to Vicar General Fr. Owen Buckton assisted by Bishop David Robarts as Episcopal Authority with immediate effect.

The announcement was made by India-based Archbishop Samuel Prakash, Acting Primate of the TAC. The new administrators of the TAC in Australia are both members of ACCA.

“Hepworth is no longer permitted to serve as Bishop Ordinary of Australia,” Johannesburg-based Bishop Michael Gill, Secretary to the College of Bishops, told VOL.

Fr. Buckton is based in Rockhampton and Bishop Robarts lives in Launceton, Tasmania.

The suspension as Bishop pertains to both the TAC and ACCA. Bishop Hepworth had sought to enter the Roman Catholic Church through the Pope’s offer of an Ordinariate but had been rebuffed following allegations that he had been raped by three priests four decades ago.

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OIREACHTAS COMMITTEE TO RESUME QUESTIONING RTE BOARD

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

May 22, 2012

The public must be given assurances to restore confidence in the State broadcaster, after the defamation of Ahascragh priest Father Kevin Reynolds.

That’s the view of Andrew Doyle, Chairman of an Oireachtas Committee which is due to meet again today [May 22].

The chairman of the RTE Board, Tom Savage, and the Director General at the State broadcaster, Noel Curran, will appear before the Joint Committee on Communications – to face questions over the ‘Mission to Prey’ programme.

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Missing girl ‘buried in murdered mobster’s tomb …

ROME
Daily Mail (United Kingdom)

Missing girl ‘buried in murdered mobster’s tomb was kidnapped for Vatican sex parties’, claims Catholic Church’s leading exorcist priest

The Catholic Church’s leading exorcist priest has sensationally claimed a missing schoolgirl thought to be buried in a murdered gangster’s tomb was kidnapped for Vatican sex parties.

Father Gabriel Amorth, 85, who has carried out 70,000 exorcisms, spoke out as investigators continued to examine mobster Enrico De Pedis’s tomb in their hunt for Emanuela Orlandi.

Last week police and forensic experts broke into the grave after an anonymous phone call to a TV show said the truth about Emanuela’s 1983 disappearance would be ‘found there’.

And although bones not belonging to the mobster were recovered they have not yet been positively identified as hers.

However Father Amorth, in an interview with La Stampa newspaper, said: ‘This was a crime with a sexual motive.

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In wake of landmark fraud decision…

GREEN BAY (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

In wake of landmark fraud decision, victims urging Brown County DA to launch investigation of Green Bay diocese

In wake of landmark fraud decision, victims urging Brown County DA to launch investigation of Green Bay diocese

Group wants law enforcement to examine the “scope and nature” and the “pattern and practice” of concealing child molesters and systematic destruction of thousands of pages of evidence

WHEN
Tuesday, May 22, 1:30 p.m.

WHERE
Outside the Brown County DA’s Office, 300 East Walnut Street

WHAT
After discussing the landmark decision by an Appleton jury on Monday that the diocese of Green Bay is guilty of fraud in concealing the sex abuse history of former priest John Patrick Feeney, victim/survivors of childhood sexual assault by Wisconsin clergy who are leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org/SNAPwisconsin.com) will attempt to hand deliver a letter to the Brown County DA asking him to investigate the full “scope and depth” of the concealment of at least 50 other clergy known or suspected by the diocese of Green Bay to have sexually assaulted minors over the past decades. The number is the latest available data derived from a self-report submitted for a national study commissioned by the US Bishops by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and published in 2004. 16 of these offenders are members of the Norbertine religious order which is headquartered and works in ministries for the Green Bay diocese.

Although the diocese has maintained that it has furnished the DA with the names of all known offenders, survivors will release an email from previous Brown County DA John Zakowski which shows that as of that date no such information has been provided to the DA’s office. And, in 2007, according to depositions taken for the current fraud case, senior diocesan church officials have admitted to the systematic destruction of what appears to be nearly all evidence of criminal behavior by clergy and fraudulent concealment of those crimes by church officials.

On Wednesday, the jury in Appleton will reconvene to hear new testimony to consider if punitive damages will be assessed against the diocese.

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Defense to start in Philly priest-abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NECN

May 22, 2012

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The defense is set to start Tuesday in the trial of a former Roman Catholic church official charged with helping cover-up child sex-abuse complaints in the Philadelphia archdiocese.

Monsignor William Lynn has been on trial for eight weeks. The prosecution evidence included testimony from more than a dozen people who say they were abused by priests.

Jurors have also seen hundreds of internal church documents found in secret archives.

The 61-year-old Lynn is the first U.S. church official charged for his handling of abuse complaints. Defense lawyers argue that he took orders from the late Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua.

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Catholic order head admits hiding priest’s scandal

ROME
Toronto Sun

[the letter]

ROME – The leader of the Legionaries of Christ admitted on Tuesday he knew for years the scandal-plagued religious order’s most famous priest had fathered a child but still allowed the popular cleric to preach about morality.

The religious order, still reeling from revelations that its founder was a sexual abuser and drug addict with two secret families, suffered another major blow last week when it admitted that Father Thomas Williams, an American based in Rome, had also led a double life.

But the question that had been left hanging after the first admission was how long Williams’ superiors knew.

In a letter to members published on the order’s website, Father Alvaro Corcuera said he found out about Williams’s child “early in my new assignment” as the order’s director-general, which began in 2005.

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Victims Lash Out As Pedophile Gets 20 Years To Life

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

The victims and families of a child molester lashed out at him in a Brooklyn court yesterday. Michael Sabo was sentenced to 20 years to life in prison for the sexual abuse of a boy and a girl and for possessing a large amount of child porn.

“You’re a miserable, rotten piece of slime…I feel like breaking your bones and I hope you rot in prison. I want to kill you over and over again,” a victim, who was five when Sabo began molesting him in 2001 and who is now 16-years-old, wrote in a letter read aloud in court by his father. Sabo molested the boy for five years.

“While pretending to be our family and pretending to be nice, he was sexually abusing my sister. This is the true definition of a sociopath. You ruined her childhood, and perhaps her whole life,” the older sister of a now 12-year-old victim seethed. “You are a monster.” Sabo began sexually abusing the girk when she was six years old girl and continued for at least three years.

Sabo, a 38-year-old nurse who went to Yeshiva Torah Temimah, the school where notorious pedophile Rabbi Yehuda Kolko taught for decades, pleaded guilty earlier this month to sexually assaulting the children and for possessing a large amount of kiddie porn.

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Vics blast B’klyn pervy papa

NEW YORK
New York Post

By JOSE MARTINEZ

Last Updated: 1:59 AM, May 22, 2012

A deviant dad could be caged for the rest of his life for preying on kids in his Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn.

Michael Sabo was smacked with a 20-years-to-life prison sentence yesterday after relatives of his two young victims trashed him as a “monster” who should never walk free again — and as District Attorney Charles Hynes continued taking heat for shielding the names of accused sexual attackers in religious Jewish communities.

“I feel like breaking your bones and I hope you rot in prison,” one of Sabo’s victims, now 16, wrote in a letter read aloud in court by his dad. “I want to kill you over and over again.”

Sabo pleaded guilty this month to molesting a boy and a girl over several years, even as prosecutors said the girl’s relatives were pressured in a synagogue by Sabo supporters who vowed to pack the courtroom if she dared to testify against him.

“Despite this shameful act, these children and their parents still had the courage to come to court,” prosecutor Kevin O’Donnell said.

The family of another of Sabo’s accusers didn’t cooperate because of fear of reprisals from within the Orthodox community, prosecutors said.

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Deetman vraagt vrouwen om misbruik te melden

NEDERLAND
de Stentor

DEN HAAG – Vrouwen die ooit als minderjarige zijn misbruikt binnen de Rooms-Katholieke Kerk (RKK) kunnen zich vanaf dinsdag melden bij de commissie-Deetman. De meldingen zullen een belangrijk onderdeel uitmaken van een nieuw onderzoek, zo heeft de commissie dinsdag bekendgemaakt.

Vrouwelijke slachtoffers kunnen zich tot 1 juli melden. “Het onafhankelijk wetenschappelijk onderzoek spitst zich toe op seksueel misbruik van en fysiek en psychisch geweld tegen minderjarige vrouwen binnen de RKK in Nederland tussen 1945 en nu”, aldus een woordvoerder.

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Dutch women asked to report abuse

NETHERLANDS
Radio Netherlands

Published on 22 May 2012

Women who were victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Roman Catholic clergy when they were children can submit their reports to the Deetman Commission from Tuesday.

Their reports will form part of a new inquiry by the commission, which so far has limited its inquiry to the abuse of young boys in Catholic boarding schools and seminaries.

The women have until 1 July to submit their reports.

“The independent inquiry will focus on the sexual abuse of, and psychological violence against, under-aged women in the Roman Catholic Church between 1945 and the present day,” a spokesperson said.

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Nun quits following abuse by priests

IRELAND
Drogheda Independent

By ALISON COMYN

Wednesday May 16 2012

A LOCAL nun has joined a new religious group after claiming to have suffered physical and mental abuse at the hands of priests for many years.

Mother Maria Francesca has ‘given up Rome’ to become a Franciscan Sister of the Blessed Sacrament in Liverpool. The 58-year-old is now part of the ‘Ecumenical Catholic Church’, which allows women priests and married priests. A NUN from Duleek has broken away from the Vatican as she says she cannot stay silent anymore on the ‘ bullying, sexual and physical abuse’ she and others suffered at the hands of Catholic priests during the past few decades.

Mother Maria Francesca is a member of the Stears family in Duleek, but has been a nun in the UK for many years, recently ‘giving up Rome’ to become a Franciscan Sister of the Blessed Sacrament in Liverpool.

The 58- year- old says she defended the Catholic Church to the hilt in the past, but could no longer stay silent on the abuse she has suffered and witnessed, or the fact the Vatican imposes rules she simply cannot follow.

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Irish nun quits Catholic church after claiming abuse at hands of priests

IRELAND
Irish Central

By
PATRICK COUNIHAN,
IrishCentral Staff Writer

Published Tuesday, May 22, 2012

A County Meath nun has quit the Catholic Church and formed a new religious group in protest at years of ‘mental, sexual and physical abuse’ at the hands of priests.

The Drogheda Independent reports that Duleek nun Mother Maria Francesca has ‘given up on Rome’ and joined the Ecumenical Catholic Church in the English city of Liverpool.

Mother Maria Francesca is now a Franciscan Sister of the Blessed Sacrament in Liverpool, a movement she helped to establish earlier this year.

The 58-year-old’s new Church allows women priests and married priests.

She told the paper that she cannot ‘stay silent’ anymore on the ‘bullying, sexual and physical abuse’ she and others have suffered at the hands of Catholic priests.

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Larry Bollinger Indicted On Sexual Abuse Charges Of Girls In Haiti

NORTH CAROLINA
digtriad

Gaston County, NC– A former Gaston County pastor was denied bond after he pleaded not guilty to sexually abusing Haitian girls while running a ministry in Haiti.

Indictments read in federal court on Monday stated that Larry Michael Bollinger, 66 traveled to Haiti to engage in sexual conduct with a girl younger than 18 years old.

The indictment was handed up last week against Bollinger, but according to WBTV in Charlotte new information was released during the hearing today.

According to investigators, Bollinger was in Haiti working as the director of the Hope House, which provided food, shelter and schooling for Haitian children.

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Jury awards brothers $700,000 in lawsuit against Green Bay Catholic Diocese

APPLETON (WI)
Green Bay Press-Gazette

Written by
Jessie Van Berkel
Gannett Wisconsin Media

APPLETON — When an Outagamie County jury decided the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay covered up a priest’s history of child molestation, it sent a message to the rest of Wisconsin, an advocate for sexual abuse victims said.

The outcome of Todd and Troy Merryfields’ civil lawsuit against the diocese Monday empowers victims across the state to come forward, said Peter Isely, the Midwest director for Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. For others who have reported sexual abuse by priests, this “should increase the pressure to bring these cases to a just resolution.”

“That is always something that occurs when this culture of secrecy … is pierced and opened by cases like this,” Isely said.

Rev. John Feeney molested the Merryfields in 1978, when they were 12 and 14 years old. In 2004, Feeney was convicted of sexual assault of the brothers. After the criminal trial, the brothers said they learned the priest had a history of similar assaults in the 1960s and 1970s that the diocese knew about and hid from parishioners at St. Nicholas Church in Freedom, which the Merryfields attended.

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Jury awards brothers $700K in Green Bay diocese lawsuit

APPLETON (WI)
Fox 6

APPLETON (AP) — An Outagamie County jury on Monday awarded two brothers $700,000 in a fraud trial against the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay.

The civil jury found the diocese responsible Monday for concealing a former priest’s history of child molestation. Brothers Todd and Troy Merryfield sued the diocese in 2008, alleging the diocese was aware the Rev. John Feeney sexually assaulted others before 1978, when it assigned him to Freedom’s St. Nicholas Church. Feeney was convicted in 2004 for the sexual assaults of the Merryfields and has already served his prison sentence.

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Green Bay diocese liable for molestation cover-up

APPLETON (WI)
Post-Crescent

Written by
Jessie Van Berkel
Post-Crescent staff writer

APPLETON — When an Outagamie County jury decided the Roman Catholic Diocese of Green Bay covered up a priest’s history of child molestation, it sent a message to the rest of Wisconsin, an advocate for sexual abuse victims said.

The outcome of Todd and Troy Merryfields’ civil lawsuit against the diocese Monday empowers victims across the state to come forward, said Peter Isely, the Midwest director for Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. For others who have reported sexual abuse by priests, this “should increase the pressure to bring these cases to a just resolution.”

“That is always something that occurs when this culture of secrecy … is pierced and opened by cases like this,” Isely said.

Rev. John Feeney molested the Merryfields in 1978, when they were 12 and 14 years old. In 2004, Feeney was convicted of sexual assault of the brothers. After the criminal trial, the brothers said they learned the priest had a history of similar assaults in the 1960s and 1970s that the diocese knew about and hid from parishioners at St. Nicholas Church in Freedom, which the Merryfields attended.

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Head of ‘Legion of Christ’ admits knowing about priest’s child seven years ago

ROME
The Journal (Ireland)

THE HEAD of the embattled ‘Legion of Christ’ religious order has admitted to covering up news that his most prominent priest had fathered a child, and announced a review of all past allegations of sexual abuse against Legion priests amid a growing scandal at the order.

Fr Alvaro Corcuera wrote a letter to all Legion members in which he admitted he had heard – before he became superior in 2005 – that Rev Thomas Williams, a well-known American television personality, author and moral theologian, had a child.

He said he took Williams’ word that the rumours were false.

Corcuera said that after becoming superior in 2005, he confirmed Williams’ paternity yet did nothing to prevent him from teaching morality to seminarians or preaching about ethics on television, in his many speaking engagements or his 14 books.

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Fr Alvaro Corcuera, LC, Legion’s General Director, Writes to all Members of the Movement in North America

ROME
Legionaries of Christ

Fr Alvaro Corcuera, LC, general director of the Legion of Christ, offers the following letter to members and friends of Regnum Christi.

The letter is also available in pdf format.

***
Thy Kingdom Come!
REGNUM CHRISTI
MOVEMENT
_________

GENERAL DIRECTOR

Rome, May 21, 2012

To the Legionaries of Christ and Regnum Christi members in North America

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

All of us have had to deal with very difficult news over the past few days. And of course, this comes in light of the terrible news three years ago regarding Father Maciel.

I want to take this opportunity to share with you my part in what many of you may regard as failings – and to explain how the Legion is working to ensure better performance in the future.

While serving as the rector of our seminary in Rome, I had heard rumors about Fr. Thomas Williams’ misbehavior. I inquired about them, but Father denied them, and I believed him.

In 2005, I found myself the second General Director of the Legion of Christ. I knew that I would face great challenges, but had no idea of all that was to come. Early in my new assignment, I learned that Fr. Thomas Williams had, in fact, had a relationship with a woman and they had a child. I reviewed the situation with Fr. Williams, asking him to start withdrawing from public ministry. In May of 2010 I placed restrictions on his ministry. Unfortunately, these restrictions were not firm enough as he was not asked to leave teaching. This March I gave Fr. Thomas the explicit indication to fully withdraw from all public ministry. I also must admit that, in the midst of all that was happening I was not diligent in setting proper restrictions and enforcing them.

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Legion No. 1 announces review of sex abuse cases

VATICAN CITY
CTV (Canada)

The Associated Press

Date: Tuesday May. 22, 2012

VATICAN CITY — The head of the embattled Legion of Christ religious order admitted Tuesday to covering up news that his most prominent priest had fathered a child and announced a review of all past allegations of sexual abuse against Legion priests amid a growing scandal at the order.

The Rev. Alvaro Corcuera wrote a letter to all Legion members in which he admitted he had heard before he became superior in 2005 that the Rev. Thomas Williams, a well-known American television personality, author and moral theologian, had a child. He said he took Williams’ word that the rumours were false.

Corcuera said that after becoming superior in 2005, he confirmed Williams’ paternity yet did nothing to prevent him from teaching morality to seminarians or preaching about ethics on television, in his many speaking engagements or his 14 books, including “Knowing Right from Wrong: A Christian Guide to Conscience.”

Williams, for example, was the keynote speaker at a Legion-affiliated women’s conference just last month in the U.S. and was scheduled to speak at another one in October.

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May 21, 2012

Philly Abuse Trial Eye-Opener, Media Yawns

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
TheMediaReport

Dave Pierre

You would never know it from the media coverage, but the defendants won a significant victory in the high-profile criminal abuse trial in Philadelphia last Thursday.

As the prosecution rested its case, Judge M. Teresa Sarmina dismissed conspiracy charges against the two Catholic cleric defendants, Msgr. William J. Lynn and Rev. James J. Brennan.

Sarmina’s ruling was important, but most journalists buried this episode in their coverage of the trial, giving the ruling only a passing mention.

The media takes a side

For over a year, journalists fell over themselves in trumpeting the alarming claims that Philadelphia Church officials actually intended that children be abused. Now, after nearly two months of trial testimony, it turns out that the prosecution’s outlandish accusations were so ridiculous and baseless that even Judge Sarmina – who has exhibited dubious impartiality during the trial – felt compelled to grant the defense’s request to acquit the two clerics of the wild charges.

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Bishop’s lawyers renew effort to dismiss Jackson County charges

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

By MARK MORRIS
The Kansas City Star

Lawyers representing Catholic Bishop Robert W. Finn have renewed efforts to have misdemeanor charges against him and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph dismissed.

In filings given to a Jackson County judge last week, Finn’s lawyers and those representing the diocese argued that a state law requiring clergy and many others to report suspicions of child abuse is unconstitutionally vague.

Earlier this month, prosecutors asked for permission to add an additional count of failure to report to those that Finn and the diocese already face.

A grand jury in October charged each with one misdemeanor failure-to-report charge related to how they handled the Rev. Shawn Ratigan between December 2010 and May 2011.

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American nuns resist Vatican rebuke

NEW YORK
USA Today

By Cara Matthews, The (Westchester, N.Y.) Journal News

OSSINING, N.Y. – As the Vatican accuses American nuns of spending too much time on human rights and helping the poor, some Catholic activists who support them are organizing vigils and petitions to persuade the church to change its mind.

“With the sisters, they’ve worked their fingers to the bone. They deserve more than this,” said Eileen Sammon, a parishioner at St. Ann’s Church here and a former Dominican nun. “They’re like a helicopter hierarchy hovering over the sisters instead of cleaning their own house,” referring to the continuing problem of priests’ sexual abuse of children.

Sammon is organizing a prayer vigil Tuesday in front of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan with the hope that Cardinal Timothy Dolan will contact the Vatican and ask to have the reprimand rescinded.

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Additional charge likely

CANADA
Northern News Service

Jeanne Gagnon
Northern News Services
Published Monday, May 21, 2012

IQALUIT
A former Iglulik Catholic priest, already facing 77 charges, will likely face at least one more, according to the Crown prosecutor, during a court appearance May 14.

Eric Dejaeger’s charges include 68 that are sex-related, one count each of failure to appear in court, uttering threats and unlawful confinement as well as three counts each of assault and use of violence to prevent reporting of suspicious activity.

The 65-year-old accused is also facing one count of indecent assault and gross indecency in Alberta.

Crown prosecutor Paul Bychok said outside the court Dejaeger will likely face at least one more charge. During Dejaeger’s court appearance on May 14, the Crown elected to proceed by indictment – which involves more severe punishment if there is a conviction – on the latest 38 charges.

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Jury: Green Bay Diocese guilty of fraud in child sex abuse

APPLETON (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

Statement by Peter Isely, SNAP Midwest Director
CONTACT: 414.429.7259

It took a jury today in Appleton, Wisconsin barely four hours to conclude in a landmark decision that the bishops and senior managers of the diocese of Green Bay had committed fraud in concealing and transferring serial child sex predator, Fr. John Patrick Feeney. What is so significant about this decision is that the jury reached its conclusion even though the judge had severely limited the amount of evidence, including hundreds of pages of internal church files, that they could examine. If the jury had seen the totality of Feeney’s file they would likely have reached their decision in even less time.

This is the first trial against a diocese for sexually abusive clerics in state history. A pair of controversial state supreme court decisions in the mid 1990’s fully immunized the church from any and all corporate liability for priest child molesters based on a controversial interpretation of the first amendment. It is a testament, therefore, to the courage and persistence of Todd and Troy Merryfield and their families who have doggedly pursued justice through a much more daunting path of filing their claim under the state’s fraud statutes.

How today’s decision is going to impact other dioceses in the state—including the 570 cases filed in federal bankruptcy court in Milwaukee, many of those cases for fraud—is yet to be seen. But this much the jury in Appleton has made clear today: Society cannot afford—children cannot afford–to have an institution, no matter how laudatory its other accomplishments–that is accountable to no one.

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Jury awards brothers $700K in Wis. diocese lawsuit

APPLETON (WI)
San Antonio Express-News

APPLETON, Wis. (AP) — A jury has awarded two brothers $700,000 in a fraud trial against the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay.

The Outagamie County jury found the diocese responsible Monday for concealing a former priest’s history of child molestation.

Brothers Todd and Troy Merryfield sued the diocese in 2008, alleging the diocese was aware former priest John Feeney sexually assaulted others before 1978, when it assigned him to Freedom’s St. Nicholas Church. Feeney was convicted in 2004 for the sexual assaults of the Merryfields and has already served his prison sentence.

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The Vatican Lays a Cunning Trap for American Nuns

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Mary C. Johnson

At the end of this month, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious will meet to formulate a response to a Vatican trap whose cunning is best appreciated within the long tradition of religious authorities who craft impossible dilemmas for those they perceive as threats.

Two millennia ago, the chief priests sent someone to ask Jesus, “Should we pay taxes?” If Jesus said yes, he would pit himself against Jewish resistance to Roman occupation and therefore, in Jewish eyes, against God. If he said no, the Romans could execute him for sedition. Instead, Jesus famously replied, “Render to Ceaser what is Ceaser’s and to God what is God’s.”

In the 15th century, Joan of Arc’s ecclesiastical inquisitors asked her, “Do you know yourself to be in God’s grace?” If Joan answered yes, she would commit heresy because the Church had long taught that no one could be certain of being in God’s grace; if no, they could interpret her answer as an admission of guilt. Joan looked them in the eyes and replied, “If I am not in God’s grace, may God put me there; if I am, may God so keep me.”

Today, the Vatican tells the women of the LCWR, “Submit to our oversight and control of your every action for the next five years.” The Vatican’s official “or else” clause remains unstated but clear to all involved. “Submit to our authority, or call yourselves Catholic no longer.”

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Bishops Search for Condoms in Cookie Boxes

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

By Mary E. Hunt

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops is having a Saturday Night Live moment. Emboldened by the Vatican’s hostile takeover of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the gentlemen have shown their prowess by choosing to investigate the Girl Scouts of the USA. Which would be comical—first the nuns, now the Girl Scouts—if the goal were not so pernicious and the outcome so damaging, especially to the bishops.

The tactics against the girls and the women are taken from one playbook, the goal of intimidation is the same, and the pushback in both cases is distracting from more pressing problems at hand. Still, you wonder who does their public relations, as the bishops are now about as popular as a recession.

The apparent goal of this exercise of “investigating” gender female persons is to set up and enforce a male-defined model of girlhood/womanhood. A Vatican-, or in this case, USCCB-launched investigation is what Sister Sandra Schneiders, IHM, calls the equivalent of a grand jury investigation. There is the presumption that something is wrong, not something right, that there is guilt to be uncovered, not virtue to be unleashed. What is wrong seems to be women and girls thinking for themselves and acting for the common good.

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Jury finds Green Bay Catholic Diocese liable for fraud

APPLETON (WI)
WTAQ

APPLETON, WI (WTAQ) – An Outagamie County jury has found the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay liable for committing fraud in a decision Monday involving a civil lawsuit.

The 12 person jury agrees with brothers Todd and Troy Merryfield in their claim the diocese committed fraud when it allowed former priest John Feeney to continue serving despite rumors of inappropriate behavior with children.

Feeney would be convicted in 2008 of molesting the Merryfields while he was at a Freedom church in 1978.

But the jury did not agree on the award the brothers were seeking. Attorneys for the Merryfield brothers have asked the jury for a total of $2.7 million between them. The lawyer for the diocese said the jury should award no more than $100,000 if the jury finds the diocese guilty of fraud.

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Jury reaches verdict in diocese fraud trial

APPLETON (WI)
Fox 11

[with video]

APPLETON – We have breaking news from Outagamie County Court.

A jury has found the Green Bay Catholic Diocese committed fraud when it allowed a priest to continue serving despite rumors of inappropriate behavior with children.

Todd and Troy Merryfield filed the lawsuit.

The jury agreed with their argument that leaders in the diocese placed John Feeney in a Fox Valley church after hearing he was swimming naked and taking showers with young boys.

Feeney was later convicted of molesting the Merryfield brothers.

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Green Bay diocese held liable for molestation cover-up

APPLETON (WI)
Press-Gazette

Written by
Jessie Van Berkel
Post-Crescent staff writer

APPLETON — An Outagamie County jury found the Roman Catholic Diocese of Green Bay responsible Monday for concealing the Rev. John Feeney’s history of child molestation.

Feeney was convicted in 2004 of child sexual assault of Troy and Todd Merryfield in 1978. Afther the criminal trial, the brothers said they learned the priest had a history of similar assaults in the 1960s and 1970s that the diocese knew about and hid from parishioners at St. Nicholas Church in Freedom, which the Merryfields attended.

The brothers filed a civil lawsuit against the diocese in 2008 and the case went to trial May 14. After the verdict was announced the men and their attorneys shook hands and hugged; on a courtroom bench behind them, the brothers’ parents hugged and their mother wept.

The jury awarded Troy Merryfield $475,000 and Todd $225,000 in damages.

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Jury awards brothers $700,000 in lawsuit against Green Bay Catholic Diocese

APPLETON (WI)
Press-Gazette

APPLETON — Two brothers have won a lawsuit against the Green Bay Catholic Diocese alleging diocese knew of priest’s sex abuse past in 1978.

A jury awarded Todd Merryfield $225,000 and brother Troy Merryfield $475,000, finding that the diocese knowingly or recklessly represented Rev. John Feeney as safe despite his history of child molestation.

During the trial, attorneys for Todd and Troy Merryfield had suggested the jury award a total of $2.8 million to their clients as compensation for their abuse in 1978 in Freedom at the hands of former priest John Feeney.

The assaults of the Merryfields weren’t a matter of dispute at trial. Feeney was sentenced to prison in 2004 for assaulting the boys. He’s since been released.

Jurors began deliberating about 12:30 p.m. after closing statements from attorneys representing both the Merryfields and the diocese.

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NEWS10 Special Report: Inside the Child Victim’s Act and Catholic Church

NEW YORK
News 10

[with video]

By Taryn Kane

ALBANY, N.Y.–A bill some claim would help alleged victims of child sexual abuse has failed in the New York Legislature seven times.

It is currently making it’s way through the Assembly and Senate again.

Legislators behind the bill claim the Catholic Church is the primary opponent each year, consistently lobbying against it.

The church says it is not against the entire bill, just a portion of it. However, Michael DeSantis, an alleged abuse victim, says he was abused by five priests over a period of four years when he was young.

DeSantis says if the whole bill doesn’t pass, justice isn’t being served.

“I cannot be near red wine,” he says. “I cannot take the smell of church wine, because I would smell it on their breaths.”

DeSantis says he repressed his memories until he was 33, making him unable to press charges because the statute of limitations had expired.

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AH, DIVERSITY

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. . .A March 2013 trial date has been set in St. Louis county for a little-noticed civil child sex abuse lawsuit against Fr. Thomas Graham. In 2005, a jury found Graham guilty of sodomy for molesting Lyn Woolfolk in the late 1970’s and sentenced him to 20 years in jail. However, in November of 2006 the MO Supreme Court overturned the conviction and prison sentence, citing the three-year statute of limitations on the charge. . .

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Pastor denied bond after sexual abuse allegations against Haitian children

NORTH CAROLINA
WBTV

A former Gaston County pastor was denied bond after he pleaded not guilty to sexually abusing Haitian girls while running a ministry in the impoverished country.

Larry Michael Bollinger, 66, was in federal court on Monday morning after he was accused of traveling to Haiti to engage in sexual conduct with a girl younger than 18 years old, according to an indictment.

The indictment was handed down last week against Bollinger, but new details were released during court proceedings on Monday afternoon.

According to investigators, Bollinger was in Haiti working as the director of the Hope House, which provides food, shelter and schooling for Haitian children.

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American Nuns: Guilty as Charged?

UNITED STATES
The Nation

Angela Bonavoglia

May 21, 2012

On April 18, the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith—the modern-day vestige of the Holy Office of the Inquisition—released the conclusions of an investigation begun in 2008 into the sins of our sisters. The congregation issued what amounted to a takeover decree to the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, a move that “stunned” the organization. With over 1,500 members, all heads of religious congregations, LCWR leans liberal and represents 80 percent of America’s 57,000 nuns.

After giving an obligatory nod to the sisters’ good works in schools, hospitals and social service agencies, the CDF devoted the remainder of its Doctrinal Assessment to attacking the sisters for failing to provide “allegiance of mind and heart to the Magisterium of the Bishops”; focusing on the “exercise of charity” instead of lambasting lesbians, gays, and women who use birth control or have an abortion; refusing to accept the ban on women’s ordination; allowing “dialogue” on contentious subjects; and tampering with the notion of God the “Father” while promulgating other “radical feminist” theological interpretations. The CDF’s solution: send in three men, an archbishop and two other bishops, to take control of LCWR for five years.

This led to an enormous outpouring of support to the sisters. But to anyone who has been watching the nuns closely, an unsettling observation emerges: these charges appear, in some measure, to be true. But that is not because, as the Assessment insists, LCWR has rejected “communion” with the church. Instead, it is evidence of a theological conflict that is raging in the Catholic Church, a conflict that most of us only notice when it spills over into American politics.

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Defense lawyers may play up scapegoat aspect in child sex-abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

May 21, 2012
By Elizabeth Fiedler

Several weeks into a landmark trial over child sexual abuse in the Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia, defense lawyers are ready to lay out their case. They’ll argue that Monsignor William Lynn acted responsibly by reporting abuse allegations to higher officials. Lynn is accused of endangering children by transferring priests accused of sexual abuse to unsuspecting parishes.

Monsignor William Lynn served as secretary for clergy under the late Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua.

Rocco Palmo is the editor of “Whispers in the Loggia,” a website that covers Catholic news and politics.

“Over their cross-examination, the defense essentially kept coming back to the same point which is, ‘Was Monsignor Lynn the ultimate person responsible for reassigning priests?’ And you know the answer, not just in Philadelphia but in any Catholic Diocese, is, no, he wasn’t. That everything would ultimately be determined at the time by Cardinal Bevilacqua,” said Palmo.

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Another priest with Bucks ties deemed ‘unsuitable’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
PhillyBurbs

Posted on May 21, 2012

by James McGinnis

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia has taken formal action against another former Bucks County priest following allegations of sexual misconduct.

Monsignor George Mazzotta was deemed unsuitable for ministry following a “substantiated allegation” of sexual abuse of a minor more than 40 years ago, according to the church in a press release Sunday.

Mazzotta, 73, served at more than a dozen parishes and schools, including a two-year stint at Saint Robert Bellarmine Church in Warrington from 1988 to 1990.

The archdiocese said it first learned of the allegations against him back in 2010 and immediately reported the claims to law enforcement.

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Jury deciding abuse lawsuit against Green Bay diocese

APPLETON (WI)
Post-Crescent

Written by
Jim Collar
Post-Crescent staff writer

APPLETON — An Outagamie County jury is deciding now whether the Roman Catholic Diocese of Green Bay shielded a priest who later was convicted of molesting two boys.

Attorneys for Todd and Troy Merryfield suggested the jury award a total of $2.8 million to their clients as compensation for their abuse in 1978 in Freedom at the hands of former priest John Feeney.

The assaults of the Merryfields weren’t a matter of dispute at trial. Feeney was sentenced to prison in 2004 for assaulting the boys. He’s since been released.

Jurors began deliberating about 12:30 p.m. after closing statements from attorneys representing both the Merryfields and the diocese.

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Salesian Fr. Itzaina- “Suicide Victims = Stupid & Mindless”

CALIFORNIA
OpEd News

By
Joey Piscitelli

Once again, the vocal mouthpiece for the Salesian Order of priests, Fr. Itzaina – now Pastor at St. Peter and Paul’s Cathedral in San Francisco, has managed to degrade and dehumanize victims. This time, he discusses in his Sunday bulletin on 5/20/2012 the subject of ” whether those who commit suicide go to heaven”.

click here

As a clergy abuse victim myself, who has personally butted heads with this cleric, I can say without reservation that Fr. Itzaina has not displayed a shred of compassion for me, or my family, who were tortured by the Salesian Order for over 5 years, for filing a legal claim against them for clergy sex abuse. (Which I won.) Nor have I met any other Salesian clergy victims who have stated that the Salesians have treated them with remorse; or have displayed accountability.

If one can imagine the pain, depression and desperation that a suicide victim endures, which leads to taking their own life; the question of not “going to heaven” for their suicide is redundant and inconsiderate, to say the least.

Itzaina continues his peculiar essay with this revelation, “There’s no doubt that suicide is a grave matter, but having full knowledge and willful consent is another thing. There must be full conscious knowledge to make suicide gravefully sinful”.

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Cyprys to stand trial

AUSTRALIA
J-Wire

May 21, 2012

Following a commital hearing in Melbourne, David Cyprys will stand trial on 40 charges relating to molesting 12 students at the Yeshivah College in Melbourne’s St Kilda.

Cyprys, 44, is a former security guard at the school. The alleged offences involved students between seven and twenty and include rape, indecent assault and gross indecency with a child.

Magistrate Luisa Bazzari commented that evidence given by the Yeshiva’s Rabbi Glick in which he denied knowledge of the offences at the time was “unfathomable”.

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Day school security guard to face rape charges

AUSTRALIA
JTA

May 21, 2012

SYDNEY, Australia (JTA) — An Orthodox Jewish man who worked as a security guard at a Jewish boys’ school in Melbourne was committed to stand trial on charges of sexually abusing children.

In the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court Monday, magistrate Luisa Bazzani ordered David Cyprys to face 40 charges of child molestation – including multiple counts of rape – against 12 students at Yeshivah College in the 1980s.

Cyprys, 44, who runs a company called Shomer Security, pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

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School guard will face trial

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Benjamin Preiss
May 22, 2012

A FORMER security guard at a Melbourne orthodox Jewish school accused of sexual assault has been committed to stand trial.

David Samuel Cyprys, 44, faced about 50 charges including rape and sexual assault of 12 students from Yeshivah College in St Kilda between 1982 and 1991. Twelve charges yesterday were struck out in Melbourne Magistrates Court before Cyprys pleaded not guilty to the remaining charges.

Last week, Abraham Glick, the former principal of Yeshivah College, changed his evidence and admitted he knew in the early 2000s of rumours that a former security guard had molested children.

Yesterday magistrate Luisa Bazzani said it was ”unfathomable” that Rabbi Glick did not know about the allegations at the time. Rabbi Glick still teaches at the school.

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Vatican concerns puzzle resource center leaders

SILVER SPRING (MD)
National Catholic Reporter

May. 21, 2012
By Jerry Filteau

SILVER SPRING, Md. — One of two organizations named in the Vatican-ordered reform of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious advised women religious on their canonical and financial rights during the Vatican’s recent three-year apostolic investigation of U.S. women’s orders.

In its eight-page April 18 document calling for a reform of LCWR, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith mentions the Resource Center for Religious Institutes twice.

“We worked with women’s communities during the apostolic visitation and we worked with LCWR during the [separate] doctrinal assessments” that culminated in the new document from the doctrinal congregation, Benedictine Fr. Daniel Ward, the center’s executive director, told NCR.

“But under canon law everybody has a right to canonical counsel,” he added.

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Philadelphia Priest Trial Resumes With Monsignor Defense

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WBUR – Here and Now

After eight weeks of testimony by the prosecution, lawyers for Monsignor William Lynn are opening their case Monday.

They are expected to argue that Lynn, the former secretary for clergy in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, is being unfairly held accountable for years of higher-ups failing to remove priests who’d abused children.

Lynn is the first Roman Catholic church official nationwide to be tried for covering up child sex abuse. In eight weeks of testimony that wrapped up last week, lawyers for the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office sought to convince jurors that Lynn endangered children by letting two priests continue to lead parishes despite signs they were abusive.

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Loophole in Irish law allows priests to remain silent over abuse

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

A 70-year-old law in the Republic of Ireland allows priests to stay silent on allegations of sex abuse they may hear outside the protected environment of the confessional, it has been revealed.

It means children could still be at risk from paedophiles because priests will be able to withhold what they hear, despite new legislation which makes it a crime to fail to report child abuse.

Anything a priest hears outside the confessional will be covered by what is known as ‘sacerdotal privilege’, meaning that allegations heard during a conversation could be claimed to be exempt from reporting.

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OM vraagt ontbinding en verbod op Vereniging Martijn

NEDERLAND
Blik Nieuws

Assen – Het Openbaar Ministerie (OM) heeft woensdag met gebruikmaking van zijn civiele bevoegdheid aan de rechter gevraagd de Vereniging Martijn te ontbinden en te verbieden. Dit meldt het OM woensdag.

De werkzaamheden van de vereniging maken inbreuk op de rechten en de belangen van het kind gezien de schadelijke effecten van seksueel kindermisbruik waardoor de maatschappelijke onrust toeneemt.

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APNewsBreak: Video depicts alleged abuse at school

WICHITA (KS)
The Sacramento Bee

By ROXANA HEGEMAN
Associated Press

Published: Friday, May. 18, 2012

WICHITA, Kan. — The mother of a 14-year-old boy says a cellphone video depicting her son struggling to stand on two broken legs is proof that her son was harmed while attending a Kansas military school and supports claims in a federal lawsuit that the school encouraged a culture of abuse.

The 3:39-minute video clip obtained exclusively by The Associated Press depicts Jesse Mactagone of Auburn, Calif., at St. John’s Military School wobbling and pleading for help as an instructor tries to make him stand. Both of the boy’s legs were broken during the four days in August 2011 that he attended the school, and he was hospitalized before being flown home. He no longer attends the school.

Mactagone and the families of six other students filed a federal lawsuit in March seeking unspecified damages, claiming the school in Salina allowed and encouraged abuse. St. John’s has settled nine previous abuse lawsuits filed since 2006. However, law enforcement authorities in Kansas have declined to file assault charges against anyone at the school, citing a lack of evidence.

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Il Vaticano rimuove il vescovo di Trapani Micciché: “Non comprendo”

ITALIA
Live Sicilia

Benedetto XVI ha sollevato oggi dalla guida della diocesi di Trapani il vescovo Francesco Micciche’ e ha nominato come amministratore apostolico monsignor Alessandro Plotti, ex vescovo di Pisa. La diocesi di Trapani era stata al centro di una visita apostolica dal giugno 2011, compiuta dal vescovo di Mazara del Vallo Domenico Mogavero, in seguito a un’inchiesta della Procura di Trapani su ammanchi relativi e due Fondazioni gestite dalla Curia, e a dissidi tra Micciche’ e alcuni prelati.

L’inchiesta della Procura, che aveva prima innescato il 7 giugno 2011 l’invio del visitatore apostolico e oggi la rimozione del vescovo, riguarda un presunto ammanco di denaro – oltre un milione di euro – nella fase di incorporazione da parte della Fondazione ”Auxilium” di un’altra fondazione gestita dalla Curia, la ”Campanile”. L’indagine e’ stata condotta dalla sezione di polizia giudiziaria della guardia di finanza per la Procura trapanese. Mons. Plotti, nato a Bologna, compira’ 80 anni il prossimo 8 agosto. E’ stato arcivescovo di Pisa dal giugno 1986 al febbraio 2008.

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Il Papa “licenzia” il vescovo di Trapani

ITALIA
Romagna NOI

TRAPANI – Il 19 maggio Papa Benedetto XVI ha sollevato dalla guida della diocesi di Trapani monsignor Francesco Miccichè e ha nominato amministratore apostolico monsignor Alessandro Plotti, ex vescovo di Pisa. Alle spalle una vicenda difficile, che andava avanti da circa un anno. La gestione della diocesi di Trapani, infatti, era sotto indagine da parte del Vaticano dal giugno 2011, quando era partita una “visita apostolica” guidata dal vescovo di Mazara del Vallo, Domenico Mogavero, responsabile della Cei per gli Affari giuridici. La causa? Un’inchiesta della procura di Trapani su ammanchi relativi a due Fondazioni gestite dalla Curia. Ma non solo. Dietro c’erano forti dissidi tra il vescovo e alcuni parroci. Uno per l’esattezza. Un prete disinvolto, con il pallino degli affari e amicizie altolocate.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 21 May 2012 (VIS) – The Holy Father: …

– Removed Bishop Francesco Micciche from the pastoral care of the diocese of Trapani, Italy, and appointed Archbishop emeritus Alessandro Plotti of Pisa, Italy, as apostolic administrator “ad nutum Sanctae Sedis” of that diocese.

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Alle zwei Minuten wird in Deutschland ein Kind missbraucht

DEUTSCHLAND
SFB-Infos

Der Zustand eines Staates hängt maßgeblich von seiner inneren Formgebung ab. Dass die gegenwärtige Staatsform und seine ausführenden Vertreter alles andere als zukunftsträchtig für unser Volk sind, dafür reicht ein gewissenhafter Blick auf die bedrohliche Gegenwart und Geschichte. Danach haben die Nachfolgegenerationen von Demokraten in der Bundesrepublik die Verantwortungslosigkeit und das politische Versagen der Weimarer Republik um Längen überholt.

Erschreckend genug, dass momentan über zwei Millionen Kinder in Deutschland weit unter der Armutsgrenze leben, jeden zweiten Tag ein Kind vorsätzlich getötet wird, sich ihr gesamter Gesundheitszustand in den letzten zehn Jahren massiv verschlechtert hat, nimmt nun auch die Zahl der Missbrauchsfälle von Jahr zu Jahr zu. Kindesmissbrauch kommt mittlerweile so häufig vor, dass man davon ausgehen kann, dass in jeder Kindergartengruppe, in jeder Schulklasse, in jeder Nachbarschaft misshandelte Kinder zu finden sind. Laut aktueller polizeilicher Kriminalitätsstatistik für das Jahr 2011 registrierte die Polizei einen Anstieg von 4,9 Prozent auf 12.444 Fälle gegenüber 2010.

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Wir sind keine Opfer, wir sind Betroffene

DEUTSCHLAND
Rheinneckarblog

Mannheim, 20. Mai 2012. (red/cr) Bis heute ist sexuelle Gewalt in der Kirche ein Thema, mit dem sich die katholische Kirche nicht nur schwer tut, sondern weiter belastet. Die versprochene Aufklärung bleibt aus, Opfer werden durch Serienbriefe weiter erniedrigt. In der Johanniskirche disktutierten Betroffene über das, was fehlt und das, was man selbst tun kann.

Von Christian Ruser

An diesem Morgen ist das Hauptschiff der Johanniskirche gut halb gefüllt. Ob es an der Uhrzeit liegt oder am Thema, ist schwer zu sagen. Klar ist nur, dass es sich um ein Thema handelt, über das in der katholischen Kirche ungern gesprochen wird: Sexuelle Gewalt in der Kirche.

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Die Kirche soll auf der Seite der Opfer stehen

OSTERREICH
Utrechter Union der Altkatholischen Kirchen

Pressemitteilung der Altkatholischen Kirche Österreichs anlässlich der Skandale um die Missbrauchsfälle in der römisch-katholischen Kirche.

In den letzten Wochen wird die römisch-katholische Kirche – aber nicht nur sie – von Skandalen um Missbrauchsfälle erschüttert. Eine selbstverständliche Haltung einer christlichen Kirche ist es, sich auf die Seite der Opfer zu stellen. Es ist zu hoffen, dass beide Seiten – Betroffene und Kirche – die daraus resultierenden Probleme bewältigen und Verletzungen geheilt werden können.

Dazu ist eine möglichst transparente Aufarbeitung aller Fälle notwendig. Auch der altkatholischen Kirche ist bewusst, dass Missbrauch von Minderjährigen nicht nur in kirchlichen Institutionen vorkommt. Dennoch haben kirchliche Einrichtungen gleich welcher Konfession eine besondere Verantwortung, was den Umgang mit solchen Vergehen betrifft. Entscheidend ist dabei die Zusammenarbeit mit nichtkirchlichen Beratungszentren und staatlichen Behörden.

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The Vatican must adopt anti-leaks systems

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The need to deal with cases and problems managing media pressure with absolute transparency

Marco Tosatti
Rome

Mass-media are understandably saturated with news about the Vatican documents which could have been leaked by a single source, or not. Meanwhile, other less sensational news stories which are, however, more meaningful for the life of the Church, take second stage. But they are in fact not entirely unrelated to the first; both cases represent a situation that Benedict XVI is trying his best to straighten out, modify and correct. We have noticed three in the last week. Here they are.

A Catholic bishop has been demoted to a lay state because he was accused of importing paedo-pornographic material to Canada. Raymond Lahey, Bishop of Antagonish, cannot operate as presbyter, nor preside over religious ceremonies or administer sacraments. In recent years, it is the first time that a punishment of this sort is inflicted upon a prelate at the end of a canonical trial. In January, Lahey was condemned to fifteen months in prison because the Ottawa airport police found hundreds of pornographic photographs of adolescents on his computer. Lahey was released on parole at the end of the trial.

On another continent, the head of the Episcopal Conference was removed and replaced. It is the Central African Republic, where, on 14 May, Benedict XVI appointed new bishops. Three years after the inquiry that in May 2009 caused the early resignations of 54-year-old archbishop Paulin Pomodino of Bangui and of Bishop François-Xavier Yombandje, who retired at the age of 52. An inquiry lead by the then archbishop, now cardinal, Robert Sarah found that Pomodino adopted “a moral attitude not always in conformity with his commitment to follow Christ in chastity, poverty and obedience.” The inquiry also uncovered the fact that many among the local clergy had children. Last 14 May Benedict XVI appointed 45-year-old Fr. Dieudonné Nzapalainga as archbishop of Bangui. Up to then, the clergyman had worked as an apostolic Administrator, and 42-year-old Fr. Nestor-Désiré Nongo-Aziagbia, Father Superior of the Society of African Missions in Strasburg, France, as bishop of Bossangoa.

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All The Cardinal’s Men: Who Are These Guys?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog

Ralph Cipriano

Sunday, May 20, 2012

For the past eight weeks, as the prosecution presented its case against Monsignor William J. Lynn, district attorneys and defense lawyers kept mentioning three names: Cullen, Molloy and Cistone.

The same three names appeared over and over again on documents marked “confidential” that were repeatedly displayed on courtroom computer screens, as evidence of a conspiracy from the secret archive files.

Cullen, Molloy and Cistone were the three top guys in the archdiocese chain of command just below Cardinal Anthony J. Bevliacqua. All three outranked Msgr. Lynn, the lone man at the defense table left holding the bag for the sins of an entire corrupt organization.

When the defense presents its case next week in the archdiocese sex abuse trial, expect to hear a lot more about Cullen, Molloy and Cistone. Defense lawyers are apt to invoke the trio as often as possible in their efforts to convince a jury that Lynn was just a lackey down at Archdiocese HQ, and not a guy who wielded any power.

So who are these guys, and why aren’t they sitting at the defense table with Msgr. Lynn?

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Remembering Catholic Psychiatrist Conrad Baars

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

Sue Baars reflects on her father’s contributions to psychiatry and the Church.

by JIM GRAVES
05/21/2012

It is the 40th anniversary since Catholic psychiatrist Conrad Baars (1919-1981) joined with Anna Terruwe to release the book The Role of the Church in the Causation, Treatment and Prevention of the Crisis in the Priesthood. A synthesis of ideas which they had presented to the 1970 Synod of Catholic Bishops, the book described what is today termed emotional deprivation disorder and warned that priests and religious with emotional repression and love deprivation could lead to disaster in the Church. Champions of Baars’ beliefs included Pope Paul VI. …

This lack of affirmation has affected the priesthood and is discussed in your father’s Crisis in the Priesthood book.

When my father and Dr. Terruwe addressed the Synod of Catholic Bishops, they were sharing their experience working with clergy. They discovered that some men admitted to the priesthood were not emotionally mature men; they were not affirmed. It had a negative impact on their priesthood, relationships with their congregations and individuals.

They recommended that when a man was being considered for the seminary that he not just receive psychological testing, but that time be taken to get to know him personally. His warmth and personality is going to have a positive impact on his priesthood and the Church. It can bring people towards God, just as a negative personality is going to turn them away.

While emotional problems contributed to the scandals in the priesthood, I’m pleased to see that much greater attention is being paid now to who is healthy enough to be ordained a priest. There’s a better understanding that there needs to be a human formation as well as a spiritual formation. We’re doing a better job evaluating candidates for the priesthood, and it’s going to be better for the Church as a whole.

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Swiss theologian Hans Küng says …

GERMANY
God Discussion

Swiss theologian Hans Küng says no to Vatican 2 anniversary celebration; says Catholic Church is in “sore distress”

Swiss author, priest and theologian Fr. Hans Küng, distraught at the state of the Catholic Church which he terms is in “sore distress,” has declined an invitation to attend the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council at the German Katholikentag at Mannheim,which was held from Friday, May 18, to Sunday, May 20. The Tablet, a Catholic news weekly, notes Küng’s reply:

“I was honoured to receive the invitation but is one really in the mood to celebrate at a time when the Church is in such sore distress?” Fr Küng asked in his four-page reply. “In my opinion there is no reason for a festive Council Gala but rather for an honest service of penance or a funeral service,” he said.

Küng is perhaps most famous for rejecting the Catholic Church’s doctrine of papal infallibility, which he discussed in his book Infallible? An Inquiry (1971). In retaliation, the Church stripped him of his missio canonica, his licence to teach as a Roman Catholic theologian, but he carried on teaching as a tenured professor of ecumenical theology at the University of Tübingen until his retirement (Emeritierung) in 1996.

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New law on disclosing child abuse may not apply to priests

IRELAND
The Journal

THE CONTROVERSIAL new legislation which would make it a criminal offence not to disclose information relating to the abuse of a child would not address the current exemptions granted to priests, it has emerged.

A briefing paper for TDs and Senators, produced by the Oireachtas library service, has noted that the Withholding of Information on Offences against Children and Vulnerable Persons Bill does not remove the privilege given to priests under a court ruling from 1945.

In that ruling – in the case of Cook v Carroll – the High Court held that priests enjoyed “sacerdotal privilege”, which gives them the right to “refuse to divulge any confidential communication whatever made to him as a priest”.

That means that any disclosures made to a priest – even if they are not given through the sacrament of confession – do not have to be referred onwards, as they are considered to have been made in confidence.

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It’s Time For The Vatican To Let In Some Light

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

Submitted by Douglas Bloomfield on Sun, 05/20/2012

The Vatican has branded as “criminal” the publication this weekend of confidential papal documents exposing the internal power struggles surrounding possible corruption and mismanagement involving international money laundering, the Associated Press reported.

Already dubbed “Vatileaks,” the scandal had been brewing for months and was further inflamed with Saturday’s publication of “His Holiness,” a book by Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, that included a trove of Pope Benedict XVI’s correspondence.

Vatican officials are threatening criminal action against the author who exposed the alleged corruption and infighting. Keeping secrets of wrongdoing, financial and moral, is not unusual for the Vatican, where it is apparently believed that confession may be good for the soul but not for the Church.

Sixty-seven years after the fall of the Third Reich, the Vatican remains the only country that refuses to open its Holocaust-era archives, fueling speculation that it has a lot to hide. Despite repeated promises to be more forthcoming, the Vatican has been slow and parsimonious about opening those records to scholars, both Jewish and Catholic.

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2 More Philly Priests Removed From Ministry

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
My Fox Philly

PHILADELPHIA – Two priests have been found “unsuitable for ministry” following allegations of sexual abuse of minors.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia announced the decision Sunday.

One of them, Monsignor George Mazzotta, most recently served at Saint Madeline Parish in Ridley Park and Stella Maris Parish in Philadelphia.

Church officials say an allegation of abuse that happened in May 2010 had been substantiated.

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Bishops created a committee to hide archives from discovery

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

May 21, 2012 12:16 am

By Amaris Elliott-Engel / The Legal Intelligencer

As the last prosecution witness in the Philadelphia priest sex-abuse trial took the stand last week, the jury was told about an Archdiocese of Philadelphia document turned over to prosecutors.

That document suggested the late Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua and other Pennsylvania bishops formed an ad hoc committee to “better protect … from civil law discovery” secret-archive files of priests with a history of problems, including of allegations of sexually abusing minors.

The Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia kept sensitive personnel files in “secret archives,” trial witnesses have said on several occasions.

The document that jurors were shown Wednesday was the only mention of that committee, and the rest of the day’s testimony focused on defendant Monsignor William J. Lynn’s compilation of a list of 35 priests who had reportedly abused minors from the archdiocese’s secret archives and the discovery of a copy of the list in a forgotten safe in 2006 that was turned over to prosecutors only this year.

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Philadelphia Archdiocese removes two more priests from ministry

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By Miriam Hill
Inquirer Staff Writer

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Sunday announced that it had found two more priests unsuitable for ministry over claims that each had sexually abused a minor.

The archdiocese said it had substantiated a claim against Msgr. George J. Mazzotta, who most recently served at Stella Maris Parish in Philadelphia and St. Madeline Parish in Ridley Park.

Msgr. Hugh P. Campbell, who is retired but most recently served at St. Maximilian Kolbe Parish in West Chester, told the archdiocese himself in December that he had sexually abused a minor, according to a brief news release from the archdiocese.

The archdiocese did not provide details of what occurred in either case. Archdiocesan spokeswoman Donna Farrell said she could not comment beyond the release, which did not include the ages or genders of the minors.

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Editorial: Two new Delco priests are keeping the faith

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

Published: Monday, May 21, 2012

There was a time when becoming a Roman Catholic priest was considered a noble calling.

Many would still consider it such, but they would also realize it is not an easy one.

For the last decade, the Roman Catholic Church in the United States and Europe has been stalked by hundreds of allegations of clerical sexual abuse.

In 2002, when a Boston priest was convicted of sexually molesting a child, the scandal broke nationwide. The accusations against priests flew so fast and furiously, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops was forced to develop a Charter for the Protection of Children & Young People.

One of their most important provisos was that church officials must turn over any allegations of sexual abuse of minors by priests to civil authorities, something they failed to do previously resulting in the perpetuation of pedophile priests at parishes and in the general public.

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In S. Philly, sadness over priest news

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

By Julie Shaw
Philadelphia Daily News
Daily News Staff Writer

PARISHIONERS of Stella Maris Parish in South Philly expressed sadness on Sunday after hearing the news at Mass over the weekend — Msgr. George Mazzotta, who served there from 2008 to 2010, did indeed sexually abuse a minor more than 42 years ago.

“I feel bad for the victim,” said one woman, who wanted to be identified only by her first initial and last name, R. Young. “I feel bad because he [Mazzotta] was a sick man. He should have been helped a long time ago.”

Young, 69, said she heard the news at the 5 p.m. Mass on Saturday. She was “more surprised” when the allegation about Mazzotta arose two years ago.

“I feel bad for the victim, because if it was my own child, I would want to hit him [Mazzotta],” she said. “I just would have liked to slap his face.”

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May 20, 2012

Abuse victim uses pulpit to urge atonement

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Claire O’Sullivan

Monday, May 21, 2012

A survivor of industrial school abuse, who took to the pulpit to call for a national day of atonement, has urged priests to give survivors an opportunity to speak to their fellow parishioners.

On the third anniversary of the publication of the Ryan Report into child abuse, Christopher Heaphy spoke to the congregation at Aglish Church in west Co Waterford at 11am Mass yesterday about how he and his two brothers spent a total of 35 years at Greenmount, Passage West, and Lota industrial schools in Cork.

The 67-year-old survivor, who has acquired a degree in electrical engineering and now lives in Co Waterford, asked the State, the Catholic Church, and the Irish people to establish a national annual day of atonement “where all of the perpetrators ask our forgiveness and the forgiveness especially of those who are in trauma, physical pain, and feel excluded from the mainstream of Irish life”.

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Phila. Archdiocese takes steps against 2 more priests

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By Miriam Hill
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Sunday announced that it had found two more priests unsuitable for ministry following claims that they had sexually abused a minor.

The Archdiocese said it had substantiated the claim against Msgr. George J. Mazzotta, who most recently served at Stella Maris Parish in Philadelphia and Saint Madeline Parish in Ridley Park.

Msgr. Hugh P. Campbell, who was retired but most recently served at Saint Maximilian Kolbe Parish in West Chester, told the Archdiocese himself in December that he had sexually abused a minor, according to a brief release from the Archdiocese.

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Archdiocese Deems 2 Philadelphia Priests ‘Unsuitable’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

PHILADELPHIA (CBS/AP) — The Archdiocese of Philadelphia says two priests have been found unsuitable for ministry following allegations of sexual abuse of minors.

A statement from the archdiocese Sunday says the priests, 73-year-old Monsignor George J. Mazzotta and 77-year-old Monsignor Hugh P. Cambell, “have agreed to accept a supervised life of prayer and penance.”

Monsignor Mazzotta was found unsuitable for ministry following a substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor. Since May 2010 when the archdiocese received the allegation and reported it to law enforcement, Monsignor Mazzotta has not been permitted to exercise his public ministry, wear clerical garb, or present himself publicly as a priest.

An announcement regarding Monsignor Mazzotta was made this weekend at Stella Maris Parish in Philadelphia and Saint Madeline Parish in Ridley Park, his two most recent assignments.

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Massive Prominenten-Kritik an katholischen Bischöfen

DEUTSCHLAND
PZ-news

Prominente Katholiken haben massive Kritik an den deutschen Bischöfen geübt und dabei Unterstützung aus der evangelischen Kirche erhalten. Baden-Württembergs Ministerpräsident Winfried Kretschmann (Grüne) hielt den Oberhirten beim Katholikentag in Mannheim mangelnde Dialogbereitschaft vor. Der widerständige österreichische Priester Helmut Schüller kritisierte, die einfachen Gläubigen hätten in der Kirche überhaupt keine Rechte. Ein evangelischer Landesbischof sieht die Katholiken sogar im Widerspruch zur Bibel.

«Streit und Kritik sind kein Ausdruck von Illoyalität, sondern von Besorgnis um wichtige Fragen», sagte Kretschmann. Es könne nicht sein, dass Bischöfe wie Franz-Josef Overbeck aus Essen es als «wenig förderlich» bezeichneten, dass die Laien erneut über strittige Themen wie das Diakonat der Frau sprechen wollten.

Zugleich rief der katholische Ministerpräsident die Laien auf, zu Kompromissen bereit zu sein. Die Katholiken an der Basis müssten die Sorge der Bischöfe ernst nehmen, dass Streit die Kirche zerreißen könne. Allerdings müssten die Bischöfe auch akzeptieren, dass viele Laien sich eine offenere Kirche wünschten. «Wir sollten uns dann nicht gegenseitig gleich den rechten Glauben abstreiten.»

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Kritik an mangelndem Dialogwillen katholischer Bischöfe

DEUTSCHLAND
Stern

Die Organisatoren des Katholikentages sind zufrieden: Die Kirche habe sich als lebendig präsentiert. Aber auch sie spüren Unruhe und Spannung. Kein Wunder: Prominente Katholiken üben massive Kritik.

Mannheim (dpa) – Die Organisatoren des Katholikentages sind zufrieden: Die Kirche habe sich als lebendig präsentiert. Aber auch sie spüren Unruhe und Spannung. Kein Wunder: Prominente Katholiken üben massive Kritik.

Zum Abschluss des 98. Katholikentags in Mannheim zogen die Veranstalter eine überwiegend positive Bilanz und hoffen auf Impulse bei der Suche nach Auswegen aus der Kirchenkrise. «Wir haben eine lebendige, glaubensstarke und vitale Kirche erlebt», sagte der Präsident des Zentralkomitees der deutschen Katholiken, Alois Glück, am Samstag. Allerdings sei bei vielen der 80 000 Besucher auch Unruhe und Spannung deutlich geworden, wie es mit ihrer Kirche weitergeht.

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Eingelullt und abgehakt: Wie Tätervertreter ihre Heimopfer abservieren wollen

DEUTSCHLAND
Readers Edition

Helmut Jacob| 18. Mai 2012

Teil 2: Entschuldigungsgestammel – Der Eiertanz um die Wahrheit

Wer Gewalt und die Verbrechen nicht benennen kann und will, sie relativiert, verharmlost, beschönigt und unvollständig darstellt, wird nicht dazu in der Lage sein, glaubhafte Worte einer Entschuldigung zu formulieren. So sind denn auch die mir vorliegenden „Entschuldigungen“ zu einem Gestammel und zu hohlen Phrasen verkommen.

“So steht mit Erscheinen dieses Buches außer Frage, dass unter dem Namen Bethels junge Menschen unter den Bedingungen des Heimlebens gelitten haben. Dafür bitte ich im Namen Bethels in aller Form um Entschuldigung und von Herzen um Vergebung!” So Pastor Ulrich Pohl, Vorsitzender des Vorstands und Anstaltsleiter der v. Bodelschwinghschen Stiftungen Bethel in dem Geleitwort (1) zum Buch „Endstation Freistatt – Fürsorgeerziehung in den v. Bodelschwinghschen Anstalten Bethel bis in die 1970er Jahre“ (2).

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Psychology Today, and the John Jay Report on Clergy Abuse

UNITED STATES
AlterNet

Joey Piscitelli

I was prompted to write this story …. More like triggered to write this story, as a response to a column in Psychology Today by Thomas Plante, PhD. He wrote an article on his column “Do the right thing”, concerning the “John Jay Report on Clergy Abuse.”

It occurred to me as I stared at his article – and then at my computer; that maybe I should disassociate instead. Why not. There is an unwritten law that establishes the rules on child abuse articles; and sets boundaries for abuse victims such as myself: to refrain from writing op-eds because child abuse victims:

“ have strong opinions and emotional hysteria.”

I credit those last six words to Thomas Plante, PhD. May 28th, 2011. They are firmly implanted in my Post Traumatic Stress Disordered brain. If this were a supervised “step” program, I should realize that I should not be typing right now – and I should be taking medication to stop me from having emotional hysteria about clergy abuse. Perhaps medication should be prescribed to me by a psychologist who is an expert on clergy abuse victims who have “strong opinions” .I’ll go out on a limb here, and type my opinion anyway. Who knows, it may even be therapeutic, in a unprofessional way of course, but maybe that’s just what I need to veer back on the road to recovery.

The “John Jay Study on Clergy Abuse” which is apparently the self proclaimed ultimate authoritative manual on the subject, is said to be non-partial; even though the Catholic Hierarchy was a major financial contributor. It’s just a minor coincidence that has no effect on the outcome of the study I’m told; so I’ll keep my hysteria in check.

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