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 29, 2012

Priest can’t fulfill bail conditions

AUSTRALIA
Northern District Times

30 May 12 @ 08:15am by Staff Writer

FINIAN James Egan, 77, arrived at Ryde Court last Wednesday in a black BMW with a disability parking permit and was assisted by two young women, AAP reported.

He was charged on May 1 with 17 sexual offences that allegedly occurred between 1972 and 1987 while Egan was serving as a priest in parishes in Sydney and on the NSW Central Coast.

The charges relate to one boy and three girls.

The court was told that Egan is suffering from an unspecified medical condition that will prevent him satisfying one of his bail conditions to report weekly to Ryde police station.

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

‘Nothing official’ on church mergers Phoenixville priest claims

PENNSYLVANIA
The Mercury

By Frank Otto
fotto@pottsmerc.com
Posted: 05/29/12 06:21 pm

PHOENIXVILLE — After a local priest e-mailed parishioners saying he was informed that Sacred Heart and Holy Trinity parishes would close, a Philadelphia archdiocese spokesman said there is no official word on the parishes’ statuses.

In an e-mail sent to some parishioners around noon Tuesday, the Rev. Michael Rzonca said Sacred Heart would merge with the St. Ann parish and Holy Trinity would merge with St. Mary of the Assumption.

“I received a call from (the Rev. Monsignor) Arthur Rodgers informing me that I will be leaving the pastorate of Sacred Heart and Holy Trinity parishes, effective June 30, 2012,” Rzonca, the pastor of both Sacred Heart and Holy Trinity, wrote. “Holy Trinity will be merged with St. Mary’s and Sacred Heart will be merged with St. Ann’s.”

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.

A Message regarding Fr. Dan

SEWICKLEY (PA)
St. James Parish

[with copy of the letter from Bishop Zubik]

A note from the Regional Vicar:

Dear parishioners of Saint James,

It is easy to understand the great emotion you are experiencing at this time. Having known Father Valentine for more than thirty years, I consider him to be one of our finest priests who has many gifts, including being a good leader.

During this interim time I promise my prayers for Father and for the parish. As the temporary administrator my role is to see that parish sacramental life continues uninterrupted. For those who have scheduled weddings, please know these will be celebrated, albeit with a substitute priest. The same is true for baptisms and for any funerals that may take place.

Please be patient and understanding. Given the decreasing numbers of priests available we may have to rely on those who are retired for assistance. Because of my other responsibilities, it is not possible for me to spend many hours at the parish, but I do plan to be present throughout the coming week(s) as necessary.

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.

Sewickley priest takes leave after accusations made against him

PENNSYLVANIA
Times Online

By Jenny Wagner jwagner@timesonline.com

SEWICKLEY — A Sewickley priest has taken a leave of absence from his ministry while the Allegheny County District Attorney’s office investigates an allegation made against him, Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese officials said Tuesday.

The Rev. Daniel A. Valentine, pastor of St. James Catholic Church on Walnut Street, began his leave May 19 after officials received a complaint involving Facebook posts Valentine allegedly made to a minor, according to the Rev. Ron Lengwin, diocese spokesman.

Lengwin said as per church policies, the complaint was turned over to the district attorney’s office.

Bishop David Zubik said in a letter to parishioners posted on the church’s website that he has instructed diocese staff to perform a forensic audit on the church’s computers and Valentine’s personal computer.

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.

Vatican says leaks violated conscience of faithful

VATICAN CITY
Atlanta Journal-Constitution

By NICOLE WINFIELD
The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican on Tuesday sought to put the widening scandal over leaked documents into a very different light, saying the stolen papers didn’t just concern matters of internal church governance but represented the thoughts of people who in writing to the pope believed they were essentially speaking before God.

As a result, Pope Benedict XVI feels particularly pained over the leaks and wants to get to the bottom of the scandal to heal the breach and re-establish a sense of trust among the faithful, according to the Vatican’s undersecretary of state, Archbishop Angelo Becciu.

“I consider the publication of stolen letters to be an unprecedentedly grave immoral act,” Becciu told the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano. “It’s not just that the pope’s papers were stolen, but that people who turned to him as the vicar of Christ have had their consciences violated.”

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.

Catholics fear Vatican’s “Vatileaks” scandal will harm their Church

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Silvia Aloisi

May 29, 2012

Catholic clerics and pilgrims visiting St Peter’s basilica on Tuesday expressed shock over a scandal that has shaken the Vatican and led to the arrest of the pope’s butler, fearing it would hurt both the pontiff and the Church.

“It’s awful and very sad that something like that can happen right at the heart of the Vatican,” said David Kaberia, a priest from Meru in Kenya, standing under the sun in a queue snaking through half of St Peter’s Square to tour one of the holiest sites of Roman Catholicism.

“This is an inside job by greedy people and I think it will inevitably affect the Church worldwide because this is the centre of the Church’s power,” he told Reuters.

The scandal exploded last week when, within a few days, the head of the Vatican’s own bank was sacked, the pope’s butler was arrested over leaks of sensitive documents and a book was published alleging conspiracies among cardinals and corruption in the Church’s financial dealings with Italian business.

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.

Philadelphia priest testifies he always put interests of children first

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Pilot

By Matthew Gambino

PHILADELPHIA (CNS) — Msgr. William J. Lynn took the witness stand in his own defense May 23 and told jurors that “in my heart” he put the interests of children first as he handled allegations of sexual abuse by priests in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

The former secretary for clergy of the Philadelphia Archdiocese faces two counts of endangering the welfare of children by recommending for assignment some priests accused of sexual misconduct with children.

“I did my best to ensure no child got hurt,” he said in testimony at the trial.

The charges are in connection to alleged sexual misconduct by a current priest, Father James J. Brennan, and sexual assault by a former priest, Edward V. Avery.

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 promotes Bishop Richard Malone to Buffalo Diocese; SNAP responds

PORTLAND (ME)/BUFFALO (NY)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Dorris on May 29, 2012

Today, the Pope promoted Maine Bishop Richard Malone to head the Buffalo Diocese. As is so often the case, the church hierarchy is trading one callous official for another.

It’s important to remember that Malone worked under the disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston.

In 2010, it was disclosed that Malone was keeping secret the identity of seven recently accused Maine predator priests. We believe his secrecy violates his promises and the US bishops abuse policy. Even worse, he’s violating basic common sense and needlessly jeopardizing the safety of vulnerable children in Maine.

In 2008, Malone put a Bangor priest (Fr. Paul Coughlin) back into ministry even though that priest let a convicted sex offender live with him in a parish. (Later, Malone reversed himself in response to a public outcry.)On the other hand, in 2007, Malone belatedly and begrudgingly made public a partial list of credibly accused predator priests in Maine. However, he kept that list up only a few years. And in 2009, he removed public tributes on church property to one credibly accused predator priest (Fr. Joseph McGowan).

Bishop Kmiec has repeatedly covered up abuse. Less than three months ago, it was revealed that a priest (Fr. David W. Bialkowski) who Kmiec claimed had been put on medical leave was actually suspended due to credible reports of abuse. Prior to that case, Kmiec had given sanctuary to a priest that had been abusing boys in Pennsylvania. Kmiec has also repeatedly refused requests to make available on his website a list of all credibly accused priests within his diocese.

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.

SNAP blasts promotion of Fargo Bishop

FARGO (ND)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on May 29, 2012

Today, the Vatican has announced that the bishop of the Diocese of Fargo, ND will be promoted to fill the role of archbishop in the Diocese of Denver which has been vacant since Archbishop Charles Chaput moved to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

For now-Archbishop Samuel Aquila, this is a homecoming in many ways. We hope that, as he returns to Denver and takes over the archdiocese, he works diligently and tirelessly to help end the clergy sex abuse and cover-up crisis. However, in the past Aquila has failed to act responsibly to protect kids.

In 2009, it was revealed that three monsignors, after receiving a credible accusation of abuse, refused to share the information with anyone outside the diocesan hierarchy. The diocese first heard the accusation against Fr. Gregory Patejko in 1994, and paid a settlement to the Patejko’s victim that same year. Yet it wasn’t until 15 years later that the allegation was made public, and even then only because the victim grew tired of the diocese’s silence and went to the media himself.

Aquila’s silence in this matter only served to help the Diocese of Fargo avoid public embarrassment, and actually worked against victims by allowing others who may have been abused by Patejko to continue suffering in silence. We don’t know how many other allegations may have been kept under wraps in the same way, but we suspect that this was not the only case.

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

KC bishop promotes “troubling” priest; SNAP responds

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Dorris on May 29, 2012

On Friday, in his diocesan newspaper Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn quietly disclosed his promotion of Fr. Patrick Rush, a priest who is closely connected with a number of proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics. For years, he was the second-in-command of the diocese. He has been named as a defendant, because of that role, in a number of child sex abuse and cover up lawsuits.

If Finn keeps picking and promoting long-time church insiders and those with close ties church insiders, the chances for change are greatly reduced.

As vicar general, in 2002, Rush publicly defended the decision to keep Fr. Thomas Ward in parish ministry, despite the fact that the diocese paid a settlement to his accuser.

Rush admitted that parishioners had not been officially informed by the diocese of the allegations against Ward.

That same year, Rush refused to identify four priests who had been accused of molesting kids.

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.

Aquila describes appointment as Denver archbishop ‘overwhelming’

DENVER (CO)
Grand Forks Herald

DENVER – In a homecoming of sorts, Fargo Bishop Samuel J. Aquila has been named the new archbishop of the Denver archdiocese.

Aquila, 61, was ordained in Denver in 1976, and worked in several Colorado parishes there until coming to Fargo 11 years ago. He’s been the bishop of the Diocese of Fargo since 2002.

He’ll remain in Fargo until shortly before he is installed in Denver on July 18.

At a news conference in Denver Tuesday, Aquila said he learned of the appointment last week.

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.

Another Culture Warrior?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Michael Sean Winters on May. 29, 2012 Distinctly Catholic

I do not want to judge the appointment of Bishop Samuel Aquila based on a single, unfortunate statement he made in the past. Nonetheless, regular readers may recall this post of mine when Bishop Aquila rolled out the Nazi analogy.

I was especially pleased to note then, as I note now, that while I do not think the bishops are engaged in a war against Obama, comments like Aquila’s make it hard not to believe that the White House thinks negotiating with people who compare the president’s actions to nazis and communists are not people with whom it is worthwhile to negotiate. Yes, the White House has made a mess of the HHS mandate and nothing anyone else has said excuses that mess.

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

New Bishop For Buffalo Introduced At News Conference

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

[with video]

By WKBW News

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) – The Diocese of Buffalo announced Tuesday morning that the Most Reverend Richard Malone would be taking over for Bishop Edward Kmiec.

“My profound gratitude to our Holy Father Benedict XVI for his trust in me, in appointing me to oversee this vibrancy of Buffalo,” Most Reverend Richard Malone said.

Malone will be installed as the 14th Bishop of Buffalo at St. Joseph’s Cathedral on August 10th. He comes to Buffalo from Portland, Maine where he served as Bishop since 2004. He said one of the biggest issues he will face is the economic challenge here in Western New York. He said he has experience.

“I come from a state that is also beautiful, but very challenged economically. We have lost a lot of industries there. That is why we put a lot of emphasis on Catholic Charities to reach out to people who need us,” Malone said.

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

Pope transfers Portland bishop to Buffalo

MAINE
The Forecaster

By Matt Hongoltz-Hetling

PORTLAND — The pope has sent Maine’s highest-ranking Catholic, Bishop Richard J. Malone, to the Diocese of Buffalo.

The move will result in an opening that could last for up to a year, officials of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland said Tuesday.

The decision, made by Pope Benedict XVI a week ago, was announced publicly Tuesday morning. Malone said that, in retrospect, he saw a sign from God that presaged the decision.

“Sometimes, subtle indications of God’s plan for us only become apparent in hindsight,” Malone said during a teleconference from Buffalo. “The day before the archbishop called me, I was up in northern Maine celebrating confirmation liturgies. … One of the folks up there advised us to get off the interstate and take a more rural route. … He said, ‘If you’re really lucky, you’ll see a herd of buffalo.’ And there they were, 10 buffaloes grazing in a field.”

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’s sex-abuse trial delayed pending December hearing

KENTUCKY
The Courier-Journal

A Roman Catholic priest who had been scheduled for trial on sexual-abuse charges on Tuesday has been granted at least seven more months before his next court appearance.

Jefferson Circuit Court Judge Mitch Perry on Tuesday scheduled a Dec. 17 status review for the Rev. James R. Schook.

Schook, 64, was indicted in 2011 on seven felony counts of sodomy based on allegations that he sexually abused two boys between 1971 and 1975. He has pleaded not guilty to all of the charges.

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

Former Abbot of Kilnacrott says he’ll co-operate with any abuse enquiries

IRELAND
Northern Sound

May 29 2012

Former Abbot of Kilnacrott Kevin Smith says he will co-operate with any criminal or international enquiry into cases involving victims of abuse.

It comes as Fr Smith, who was the Abbott of Kilnacrott when paedophile priest Brendan Smith was based there, has issued an apology to abuse victims.

In a statement to Northern Sound News, Fr Smith has promised to be open and give all information to either or both criminal or international bodies who may lead an investigation.

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

Full text of apology from Former Abbot of Kilnacrott Fr Kevin Smith

IRELAND
Northern Sound

STATEMENT FROM ABBOT KEVIN A. SMITH, O.PRAEM

HOLY TRINITY ABBEY, KILNACROTT, BALLYJAMESDUFF, CO. CAVAN

Having had some time in prayer and reflection in Medugorje on the past when I was Abbot and Superior of Holy Trinity Abbey, Kilnacrott, Ballyjamesduff, Co. Cavan, I wish to acknowledge and apologise to all those who were abused in any way, their family, friends and fellow priests for mistakes which happened within the Church and various Institutions from August 1969 – March 1995 (when I retired).

I thank the present Prior and Superior for the counselling help being made available through “Towards Healing” freephone 1800 303 416 (ROI) / 08000 963315 (NI/UK).

However, I believe that the real permanent healing comes from inviting Jesus Christ, (The greatest Healer of all) into our lives and handing over to him all our hurts. There has been a call for a “criminal” investigation and/or “International” enquiry – I promise that I would be open to and give all information to either or both of those bodies – The Truth will set us all free.

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

Former abbot apologies to Smyth’s victims

IRELAND
The Anglo-Celt

Paul Neilan

A former abbot at Kilnacrott has finally issued an apology to the victims of sexual abuse perpetrated by paedophile priest Fr Brendan Smyth.

In a statement issued yesterday, Fr Kevin Smith said: “Having had some time in prayer and reflection in Medugorje on the past when I was Abbot and Superior of Holy Trinity Abbey, Kilnacrott, Ballyjamesduff, Co Cavan, I wish to acknowledge and apologise to all those who were abused in any way, their family, friends and fellow priests for mistakes which happened within the Church and various Institutions from August 1969 – March 1995, when I retired.

“I thank the present Prior and Superior for the counselling help being made available through “Towards Healing” (freephone 1800 303 416).

“However, I believe that the real permanent healing comes from inviting Jesus Christ, The greatest Healer of all, into our lives and handing over to him all our hurts. There has been a call for a criminal investigation and or international enquiry – I promise that I would be open to and give all information to either or both of those bodies. The Truth will set us all free.

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.

Vatican scandals lift lid on secret power struggle

VATICAN CITY
CNN

By Richard Allen Greene, CNN

(CNN) – Bad luck comes in threes, even for the pope.

The past week has seen his butler arrested, accused of leaking secret papers from the papal apartment; the head of his bank sacked for incompetence; and a demonstration on his front doorstep by protesters demanding that he reveal what he knows about Italy’s most famous missing-person case.

It’s bad PR for the Vatican, but it may be more than that, experts say. It could affect who becomes the next pope.

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.

Vatican: Pope Benedict XVI unafraid of leaks probe widening with butler Paolo Gabriele’s cooperation

VATICAN CITY
CBS News

(AP) VATICAN CITY – Pope Benedict XVI isn’t afraid about what might emerge in the widening investigation into leaked documents and is encouraging prosecutors and a fact-finding commission to get to the truth over one of the most serious Holy See scandals in recent history, the Vatican spokesman said Tuesday.

Spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said Benedict was pained by the leaks and that he, Lombardi, felt “personally violated,” even though none of the spokesman’s correspondence had filtered out to Italian media or into a recent book of leaked documents that have laid bare the infighting, intrigue and petty squabbles that have plagued the highest echelons of the Catholic Church’s governance.

The so-called “Vatileaks” scandal has tormented the Vatican for months and represents one of the greatest breaches of trust and security for the pope in recent memory. Benedict’s personal butler has been arrested, accused of theft, after documents he had no business having were found in his Vatican City apartment. Few think the butler acted alone, and the investigation is continuing on three separate tracks.

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.

Monsignor Says He’s Sorry But Blameless For Teen’s Abuse By Pedophile Priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Tony Hanson

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Monsignor William Lynn, charged with endangered children by allowing dangerous priests to remain in ministry in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, today told the jury he is sorry for the abuse suffered by one boy during Lynn’s watch as secretary for clergy.

Lynn has conceded there were a number of priests who remained in ministry, working as pastors and assistant pastors — some who had been diagnosed as pedophiles and others whom he had determined were guilty of sexual abuse of minors — including one who has since admitted he sexually assaulted another teen.

That defrocked priest, Edward Avery, pleaded guilty before the start of this trial and is serving a sentence of up to five years (see related story).

Lynn has told the jury he is sorry for the abuse suffered by the teen at the hands of Avery, but he accepted no blame.
Lynn maintains he was powerless to change the church’s practices for dealing with predator priests. As he put it at one point, he was “not the cardinal archbishop of Philadelphia.”

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.

Was Lynn’s testimony worth the gamble?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

May 29, 2012
By Elizabeth Fiedler

Today Monsignor William Lynn took the stand in his own defense – for the third day. Lynn, a former high-ranking official in the Philadelphia Catholic Archdiocese, is facing charges for failing to prevent other priests from sexually abusing children. For defendants in criminal cases the impulse to take the stand in their own defense, can be strong. But while they can help themselves on the stand, but they also can do damage.

It’s a common scene in TV courtroom dramas: the defendant defiantly takes the stand to refute the prosecutor’s accusations. Instead the character ends up in a teary mess confessing to the crime or exposing a secret that ID’s the real criminal.

Philadelphia Criminal Defense Lawyer Dennis Cogan represented former State Senator Vince Fumo who was convicted of corruption. Cogan said there’s always a risk in putting a client on the stand.

“You don’t want him to perform, you don’t want the client on the witness stand to be making the arguments that the lawyer should be making later on,” said Cogan. “You have to go over the methods and manner of presentation.”

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.

Monsignor: ‘I didn’t have the power to do anything’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Msgr. William J. Lynn asserted again Tuesday that he did more than his predecessors at the Archdiocese of Philadelphia to curb or stop sexual abuse by priests, but that he had little choice but to follow directives of his bosses and medical professionals.

“I did much more than had been done before I got there,” Lynn insisted from the witness stand, later adding: “I have many victims that told me I helped them.”

He spoke as Assistant Philadelphia District Attorney Patrick Blessington opened a third-day of cross-examination, pressing Lynn to explain why he didn’t remove priests who had been accused of sexual misconduct. The testimony resumed after Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina denied a bid by the lawyers for Lynn and his codefendant, the Rev. James J. Brennan, to dismiss a charge against each.

Blessington and Lynn picked up largely where they left off Thursday, with the prosecutor firing questions and accusations at the former clergy secretary and Lynn denying any wrongdoing. Calling Lynn “the eyes and the ears” of Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua on sexual abuse complaints and investigation between 1992 and 2004, Blessington asked Lynn why he allowed the Rev. Robert Brennan to stay at a parish in 1993 after learning that two seventh-grade boys alleged that the priest had groped or caressed them.

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

Former LCWR leader gives take on Vatican order

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

May. 29, 2012
By Joshua J. McElwee

Almost two months later, clarity is still elusive.

Across the country, women religious are still trying to make sense of the Vatican’s latest move — an April order to the organization representing the large majority of their ranks, telling the group to revise and place itself under the control of an archbishop.

For the first time since announcement of the sweeping order, the leadership of that group — known as the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) — meets this week to discuss what to do next.

While the group has not given many details about the expected contents of the meeting — scheduled for Tuesday through Friday — an April release said the national board of the group will meet in an “atmosphere of prayer, contemplation and dialogue” and that it “plans to move slowly, not rushing to judgment.”

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.

Pa. monsignor apologizes for abuse victim’s ordeal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Associated Press

By MARYCLAIRE DALE, Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Roman Catholic official is wrapping up three grueling days of testimony in his Philadelphia clergy-abuse trial.

Monsignor William Lynn says he did everything within his power to get accused priests out of parishes and into treatment.

He admits it wasn’t enough for one victim who was sexually assaulted by the Rev. Edward Avery — years after complaints about Avery had reached the archdiocese. Lynn says he’s sorry for that.

Avery is in prison after pleading guilty to the 1999 assault.

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.

U.S. roots for Viganò, the archbishop who opposes corruption

UNITED STATES
Vatican Insider

He sent two letters to the Pope denouncing corruption

Paolo Mastrolilli
New York correspondent

“He is a man who is not afraid to speak the truth and not afraid to point out areas that need reform in the church.” These were the words of praise of new cardinal Timothy Dolan for the Nuncio to the United States Carlo Maria Viganò, published in the New York Times last February. This may help understand how the crisis in the Vatican is viewed abroad and could perhaps shed light on how the former secretary general of the Governorate is feeling. According to the Americans, Viganò is a reformer who was able to foresee the storm ahead. He can therefore feel redeemed, even if not happy, for the developments of the last few weeks and does not need to say anything more, because events seem to follow his predictions.

At the beginning of last year Viganò, who was mainly in charge of the financial management of the Vatican City State wrote two letters to the Pope, denouncing instances of corruption. In October he was removed and appointed Nuncio to the U.S.. When his letters were published, the Vatican leadership issued a statement dismissing his claims.

In his new home in Massachusetts Avenue, Viganò has chosen to keep to himself. But after being somewhat shy at the beginning, he gained confidence in his new role of managing diplomatic relations between the Holy See and the United States, between the American bishops and Rome and also in his very delicate task of pointing out suitable candidates for Episcopal Sees. The trust he has been shown is the result of the good relations he has built with American bishops, who have urged him on many occasions to become the leader of a worldwide reform of the Church.

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

The Secretariat of mysteries and the shadows of accomplices

“Gabriele could not have done this alone”

Marco Tosatti
Vatican City

The arrest of Paolo Gabriele, Benedict XVI’s butler, meant that for a brief time all those working in the Pope home (the Vatican Loggias which sport the work of the famous master painter Raphael) could breathe a sigh of relief. This is the place where the Secretariat of State, the Pope’s administrative office, is and where all documents read by Benedict XVI end up. Once a document is ready, Mgr. Georg passes it on to the appropriate office to be archived. So when Italian television program Gli Intoccabili (The Untouchables) presented by journalist, Gianluigi Nuzzi, showed a confidential note that the director of the Vatican Press Office, Fr. Lombardi, had sent to the papal apartments (to Mgr. Georg) summarizing the ‘Orlandi’ case, many in the Vatican thought that it was obviously impossible for the documents to have been leaked from the press office or papal apartments. Therefore the culprit could only be found in the Secretariat of State.

This theory seemed even more convincing when, after the first bouts of investigation, the Vatican Gendarmerie came to a standstill. Sources inside the Vatican surprisingly blamed the slowing down in the investigation on those who should have actually pushed it forward, including the Substitute to the Secretary of State, Giovanni Angelo Becciu. The setback lasted a few weeks, then under pressure from the public opinion and due to further developments, a month ago, a committee of cardinals was formed, led by the energetic cardinal Julian Herranz. The situation then progressed, as we know.

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.

“This is worse than the Church paedophilia scandal”

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The Curia is in a state of panic as rumours circulate about camera phones potentially being banned in the Vatican

Andrea Tornielli
Vatican City

“The atmosphere is poisonous, heavy. Some claim that in the future we won’t be able to take mobile phones with inbuilt cameras into the Vatican.” The ban on camera phones is just a rumour that has been circulating around the Secretariat of State in the last few days, which have been the most difficult in the Vatican in recent years. “Somehow this is even worse than the storm caused by the Church paedophilia scandal,” said a priest who entered the great gate of Porta Angelica with brisk fearful steps.

Many outside the Vatican doubt the guilt of Paolo Gabriele, the Pope’s butler and no one seems to think he could have master-minded the leak of documents published in journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi’s book. We do not know the extent of his involvement yet. If the inquiry remains at this level, the doubts will inevitably grow. The net of moles, which allegedly includes a number of people, struck again, giving once more the same motives that had been put forward by the famous investigative reporter in the pages of “Sua santità” (His Holiness). The leak of Benedict XVI’s confidential papers could apparently have been an act to help the Pope. Few believe this to be true, mostly because the Vatileaks scandal has managed to besmirch the Holy See as a whole and its image is now in tatters.

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Vatican’s assessment of LCWR about fear, not doctrine

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

May. 29, 2012
By Fran Ferder

COMMENTARY

The Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith’s April 18 doctrinal assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious is not about doctrine. It is not primarily about protecting the faith or ensuring an ecclesiology of communion, no matter how many times these terms are woven through the report. It is fundamentally about fear — fear of the loss of power — and the willful use of dominative control to defend that power.

The abundance of religious themes and language do not mask this punitive effort to shore up the crumbling authority of hierarchical leaders. Nor does the document hide the anger that roils beneath the protestations of gratitude and concern. The final report of the LCWR assessment reveals a desperate attempt on the part of some fearful and angry church leaders to protect their turf — to maintain an all-male church leadership, to keep women and laypeople under their authority, and to shield the homophobic-homosexual subculture in the leadership of the Catholic church.

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Anderson says Vatican bank fired president to increase transparency

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Carl A. Anderson, head of the U.S.-based Knights of Columbus and secretary of the Vatican bank’s board of supervisors, said a commitment to promoting transparency led the board to fire Ettore Gotti Tedeschi as bank president.

The board unanimously passed a vote of “no confidence” in Gotti Tedeschi’s leadership May 24 during a meeting in which the Italian banker was allowed to speak “for more than 70 minutes,” according to a memorandum released by Anderson.

The board of the bank, formally known as the Institute for the Works of Religion, issued an unusually blunt statement through the Vatican Press Office May 24, noting that members had repeatedly expressed concern to Gotti Tedeschi about the bank’s “governance,” but that the “situation has deteriorated further.”

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Kinder häufiger Opfer sexuellen Missbrauchs

DEUTSCHLAND
Handelsblatt

Berlin. Im vergangenen Jahr sind mehr Kinder sexuell missbraucht worden als noch ein Jahr zuvor. „Über 14.000 Kinder wurden Opfer eines sexuellen Missbrauchs“, sagte der Präsident des Bundeskriminalamts (BKA), Jörg Ziercke, unter Berufung auf die Polizeiliche Kriminalstatistik 2011 am Dienstag in Berlin. Dies entspreche einer Zunahme von knapp vier Prozent im Vergleich zu 2010 und sei der höchste Wert der vergangenen drei Jahre, fügte Ziercke hinzu.

Zudem wurde im vergangenen Jahr 146 Kinder in Deutschland getötet. Dies stellt einen Rückgang um rund 20 Prozent da. Rund 80 Prozent der getöteten Jungen und Mädchen (114) waren jünger als sechs Jahre. 63 Kinder wurden dem BKA-Chef zufolge vorsätzlich und 73 fahrlässig getötet.

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Wie man Vertrauen zerstört

VATIKAN
Die Tagespost

Der Täter war der Butler – Und im Vatikan fragt man sich, warum der Kammerdiener die Papstpapiere missbrauchte. Von Guido Horst

Rom (DT) Ein Pfingstfest und ein Papstgottesdienst auf dem Petersplatz, die ein wenig an das Osterfest in Rom des Jahres 2010 erinnerten: Damals, vor über zwei Jahren, hatten die Enthüllungen von sexuellen Missbräuchen durch Kleriker vor allem in angelsächsischen Medien plötzlich eine scharfe Wende gegen Benedikt XVI. genommen. Opferverbände in den Vereinigten Staaten und ihre Anwälte bauten – mit dem entsprechenden Echo der internationalen Medien – eine gewaltige Druckkulisse auf, die das Osterfest mit dem Papst in Rom zu erdrücken schien.

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Kirchenkritik und Verfassungsschutz

DEUTSCHLAND
Humanistischer Pressedienst

STUTTGART. (hpd) Wer gemeint hat, dass der Papstbesuch vorbei sei, der irrt. Das kirchenkritische Geschehen in Freiburg wurde auch vom Verfassungsschutz beobachtet und „Freiburg ohne Papst“ im Verfassungsschutzbericht 2011 genannt. Das ist immerhin wiederum neu, dass Kirchenkritiker als Verfassungsfeinde gelten.

Dazu schreibt Albrecht Ziervogel, der ehemalige Sprecher von FREIBURG OHNE PAPST: „Man reibt sich verwundert die Augen: im neuesten Verfassungsschutzbericht der grün-roten Landesregierung Kretschmann wird das Aktionsbündnis FREIBURG OHNE PAPST (FoP), als „linksextremistisch beeinflußt“ bezeichnet. Das Bündnis hatte sich aus Anlass des letztjährigen Papstbesuchs dessen kritische Begleitung in Freiburg zur Aufgabe gemacht.

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„Ein Kleid entwerfen, das passt“

DEUTSCHLAND
KSTA

Seit März ist Stefan Heße Generalvikar des Bischofs von Köln. Mit Joachim Frank und Matthias Pesch sprach er über einen Wandel in den Pfarreien, sprudelnde Kirchensteuer und den Umgang mit dem Missbrauchskandal.

Köln – Herr Generalvikar, zwei Monate stehen Sie auf der Brücke des Tankers „Erzbistum Köln“. Wo könnten wir mit einem empfindlichen Navigationsgerät Kursänderungen wahrnehmen?

STEFAN HESSE: Dafür ist es mir noch zu früh. Bisher war ich nur für ein Segment zuständig. Ich kenne das Generalvikariat ja schon aus meiner früheren Tätigkeit als Personalchef. Jetzt muss ich immer das Ganze im Blick haben. Zurzeit mache ich Antrittsbesuche in meiner neuen Rolle, um die Menschen in den Abteilungen und ihre Aufgaben noch besser kennen zu lernen. Dafür will ich mir bis zum Sommer Zeit lassen, um dann mit den Verantwortlichen zu entscheiden, was wir uns als Schwer-punkte vornehmen. Und ich merke: Die Leute nehmen mich anders wahr – wie ich sie umgekehrt auch.

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Irritationen im Bistum Trier

DEUTSCHLAND
Miss BiT

Am 19.03.2012 berichtet der „SPIEGEL“ in seinem Artikel „Scham und Bestürzung“ über die gängige Praxis von Bischof Ackermann als Missbrauchsbeauftragter der DBK, Pädophile und wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs vorbestrafte Priester weiterhin einzusetzen und somit weitere Kinder der Gefahr, sexuell missbraucht zu werden, auszusetzen.

Am 16.04.2012 berichtet der „SPIEGEL“, dass Bischof Ackermann zwei Priester entpflichtet habe. Diese dürften fortan keinen priesterlichen Dienst mehr tun.

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Is Bishop Finn a BINO?

KANSAS CITY (MO)
dotCommonweal

May 29, 2012

Posted by David Gibson

That would be “Bishop-In-Name-Only.” I ask because NCR’s Joshua McElwee dug into a seemingly boilerplate announcement of “canonical assignments” posted at the newspaper of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph on Friday afternoon and discovered that Bishop Robert Finn had shifted — apparently — some of his authority to a newly-created “Episcopal Vicar with Special Mandate,” who is Fr. Patrick Rush.

The move was made in anticipation of Bishop Finn’s trial this fall in Jackson County on charges of failing to report one of his priests, Fr. Shawn Ratigan, who was suspected of possessing child pornography and perhaps of abusing children.

Finn has already signed away some of his authority in Clay County (another part of the diocese) on sex abuse and personnel policies in order to avoid trial on similar charges there. (See Nicholas Cafardi’s “A Cherished Accommodation” [subscribers only].) Friday’s announcement also transferred another official tainted by the Ratigan case.

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Cleveland priest on “What the Nuns’ Story is Really About”

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Alice Popovici on May. 29, 2012 Sisters Under Scrutiny

A reader emailed NCR the following article from the parish bulletin of the Blessed Trinity Catholic Church in Cleveland, Ohio. We’re posting it with the permission of the author, Fr. Doug Koesel:

What the Nuns’ Story is Really About

Many of you have asked me to comment on the recent investigation into the US nuns. Here goes. In short, the Vatican has asked for an investigation into the life of religious women in the United States. There is a concern about orthodoxy, feminism and pastoral practice. The problem with the Vatican approach is that it places the nuns squarely on the side of Jesus and the Vatican on the side of tired old men, making a last gasp to save a crumbling kingdom lost long ago for a variety of reasons.

One might say that this investigation is the direct result of the John Paul II papacy. He was suspicious of the power given to the laity after the Second Vatican Council. He disliked the American Catholic Church. Throughout his papacy he strove to wrest collegial power from episcopal conferences and return it to Rome.

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UPDATE 1-Tietmeyer denies going for Vatican bank post

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

May 29 (Reuters) – Former Bundesbank head Hans Tietmeyer said on Tuesday he was not a candidate to become the next head of the Vatican bank.

“I know absolutely nothing about this,” Tietmeyer, who headed the German central bank from 1993 to 1999, told Reuters. “I have read that but it is completely untrue.”

Italian media reported earlier on Tuesday that Tietmeyer was under consideration to succeed Italian Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, who left the Vatican bank after a vote of no-confidence on Thursday.

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Judge denies bid to drop charge in Pa. priest case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

PHILADELPHIA — A Philadelphia judge is denying a Roman Catholic priest’s bid to have one of two child-endangerment counts dismissed in his clergy-abuse trial.

Meanwhile, Monsignor William Lynn is back on the witness stand for a third day.

Lynn’s lawyers argue the endangerment charge involving the Rev. James Brennan should have been filed by 2001, two years after the victim’s complaint.

Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina has rejected the motion, and Lynn is enduring more heated cross-examination.

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Pope taps Fargo bishop …

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

Pope taps Fargo bishop Aquila for new US post in Denver archdiocese; names Buffalo bishop

By Associated Press, Updated: Tuesday, May 29

VATICAN CITY — The pope has named Monsignor Samuel Aquila as the new archbishop for Denver, Colorado, filling an important U.S. post left vacant after Archbishop Charles Chaput moved to Philadelphia.

The 61-year-old Aquila, currently bishop of Fargo, North Dakota, is returning home in many ways, having studied at Denver’s St. Thomas Seminary and worked in several Colorado parishes following his ordination in 1976.

Also Tuesday, the Vatican announced that Pope Benedict XVI had named a new bishop for Buffalo, New York, tapping Monsignor Richard Malone to replace the retiring Bishop Edward Kmiec. Malone is currently bishop of Portland, Maine.

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Maine’s Roman Catholic bishop moving to Buffalo

BUFFALO (NY)
The Wall Street Journal

Associated Press

PORTLAND, Maine — The Roman Catholic Bishop of Maine has been named to lead the Diocese of Buffalo.

Pope Benedict XVI on Tuesday announced that Bishop Richard Malone has been appointed Bishop of the upstate New York diocese.

Malone will be officially installed in his new position on Aug. 10 at St. Joseph Cathedral in Buffalo.

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Vatican names Samuel J. Aquila Catholic archbishop in Denver

DENVER (CO)
The Denver Post

Posted: 05/29/2012

The Vatican this morning named Fargo, N.D., Bishop Samuel J. Aquila as the fifth archbishop of the Denver Archdiocese.

For Aquila, a conservative bishop cut from the same cloth as his predecessor here, Charles Chaput, it’s a homecoming.

Although the 61-year-old Aquila is a native of Burbank, Calif., he was ordained a priest here in 1976 and served in local parish ministry for 11 years.

Aquila held several positions in the Denver Archdiocese in education and liturgy until 1999, when he became the founding rector of St. John Vianney Seminary.

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Priest with local ties is sentenced to jail time

CANADA
570 News

Mike McCulloch 570 News
May 29, 2012

A former Catholic priest who served in parishes throughout southern Ontario has been sentenced to 15 months in jail.

James Boudreau served in parishes in Guelph, Kitchener, Hamilton and Burlington.

And has been convicted on one count of sexual assault involving a teenager, dating back to 1984.

Boudreau was also sentenced to six months on a second charge after another person came forward regarding an incident in 1983.

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Prosecutors not yet finished with Pa. monsignor

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

May 29, 2012
By Associated Press

A Roman Catholic church official is due back on the stand for a third day today when his child-endangerment trial resumes in Philadelphia.

Monsignor William Lynn was on the stand last week for two days of grueling cross-examination about how he handled abuse complaints.

Prosecutors say Lynn is responsible for the archdiocese’s failure to remove suspected predators from ministry, and report them to police.

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Joy Overcomes Denver’s Archbishop-Designate

DENVER (CO)
National Catholic Register

by MARIANNE MEDLIN (CNA/EWTN News)
05/29/2012

DENVER — As Archbishop-designate Samuel Aquila of Fargo, N.D. assumes his role as Denver’s new shepherd, the former Coloradan brings with him a love for the priesthood, a passion for pro-life advocacy and a heart for the youth.

“I never, ever dreamed that I would ever return here,” he said. “And now in the Father’s providential plan and in his love, I’m now the archbishop.”

“It’s amazing,” he said, overcome with emotion.

Archbishop-designate Aquila will be installed as head of the archdiocese on July 18 at Denver’s Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.

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State involvement in the Magdalene Laundries

IRELAND
Justice for Magdalenes

1. The Irish State has accepted that there was abuse in the Magdalene Laundries. The abuse is documented in the report published in 2009 by the Commission established by the State to inquire into child abuse (“the Ryan Report”) – and the abuse is also fully borne out by the survivor testimonies which JFM has collected. Both the Ryan Report and the testimonies recount that the women’s labour in the Magdalene Laundries was forced and wholly unpaid, working conditions were harsh and the women were completely deprived of their liberty and suffered both physical and emotional abuse.

2. However, the State has not yet accepted responsibility for that abuse and nor has it offered any apology or redress to the survivors. The State has repeatedly denied responsibility for the treatment of women and girls in the Magdalene Laundries, distinguishing between the treatment of children in residential homes which were the responsibility of the State (the “Industrial and Reformatory Schools”) and those incarcerated in the Magdalene Laundries, which the State characterizes as private and charitable institutions in which it played no regulatory function.

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Bishop Richard Malone Appointed Bishop of Buffalo

PORTLAND (ME)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland

Pope Benedict XVI has appointed the Most. Rev. Richard J. Malone, Bishop of Portland as the new Bishop of the Diocese of Buffalo (New York). The Holy Father’s appointment was announced at 6 a.m. (Eastern) today (May 29, 2012) at the Vatican. The date of Bishop Malone’s installation will be August 10, 2012 at St. Joseph Cathedral in downtown Buffalo.

The Diocese of Buffalo has over 633,000 Catholics (more than three times that of Maine). In the city of Buffalo alone, there are 32 Catholic churches. The diocese has seven Catholic colleges and universities, and 15 Catholic High Schools.

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Holy Father names 14th bishop of Buffalo

BUFFALO (NY)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo

by Office of Communications

“It is with great joy and happiness to announce that Pope Benedict XVI has accepted my resignation and has appointed the Most. Rev. Richard J. Malone, bishop of Portland, Maine, as the new ordinary for the Diocese of Buffalo,” said Bishop Edward U. Kmiec. “Bishop Malone is a colleague of mine in the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and we have been acquainted over the years. He comes to Western New York with tremendous experience and a wonderful reputation for being a caring, pastoral bishop and a true shepherd to his people.”

The Holy Father’s appointment was announced at 6 a.m. (Eastern) today (May 29, 2012) at the Vatican.

Bishop Malone arrived in Buffalo on Monday, May 28. He concelebrated Mass this morning at the bishop’s residence with Bishop Kmiec, diocesan Chancellor Msgr. Paul A. Litwin and Msgr. David G. LiPuma, priest secretary to Bishop Kmiec and diocesan vice chancellor.

Following a 10 a.m. news conference with Bishop Kmiec at the Catholic Center on May 29, Bishop Malone will meet with diocesan staff and then join Bishop Kmiec for visits to St. Joseph Cathedral, Catholic Charities offices on Delaware Ave. and Our Lady of Victory Basilica in Lackawanna. On Wednesday, May 30, Bishop Malone will return to Maine.

Born March 19, 1946, in Salem, Mass., Bishop Malone, 66, has been bishop of Portland since 2004. Prior to his assignment in Maine, he served as auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston upon his episcopal ordination in 2000.

“I am most grateful to our Holy Father for his trust in appointing me bishop of the Diocese of Buffalo. While there is sadness in my heart at leaving the Catholic faithful of Maine, especially the priests, deacons, consecrated religious, seminarians and lay leaders, I look forward with enthusiasm to taking up my responsibility as chief shepherd of the Church of Buffalo. I am very grateful to follow in the footsteps of Bishop Kmiec who is a loving, faithful and generous servant of the Gospel.”

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 29 May 2012 (VIS) – The Holy Father:

– Appointed Bishop Richard J. Malone of Portland, U.S.A., as bishop of Buffalo (area 16,511, population 1,621,000, Catholics 716,000, priests 425, permanent deacons 127, religious 1,075), U.S.A. He succeeds Bishop Edward U. Kmiec, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age limit.

– Appointed Bishop Samuel J. Aquila of Fargo, U.S.A., as archbishop of Denver (area 101.279, population 3,328,000, Catholics 549,325, priests 306, permanent deacons 184, religious 203), U.S.A.

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Magdalene lobby group criticises Coalition inaction

IRELAND
The Irish Times

KITTY HOLLAND

THE GOVERNMENT has failed to implement a key recommendation by the UN Committee Against Torture to set up an inquiry into the “inhuman and degrading” treatment of thousands of women and girls in the Magdalene laundries during the last century, a lobby group for the women has said.

The Justice for Magdalenes group submitted its NGO follow-up report in Geneva yesterday, one year after the UN committee recommended the State “institute prompt, independent and thorough investigations into all complaints of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment that were allegedly committed in the Magdalene laundries”.

In appropriate cases, the committee said, the State should “prosecute and punish the perpetrators with penalties commensurate with the gravity of the offences committed, and ensure all victims obtain redress and have an enforceable right to compensation, including the means for as full a rehabilitation as possible”.

While the Justice for Magdalenes group welcomed the establishment of an interdepartmental committee, chaired by Senator Martin McAleese, to “clarify State interaction with the Magdalene Laundries”, it said this was inadequate and unnecesary.

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Magdalene survivors criticise ‘unacceptable’ delay for apology and redress

IRELAND
The Journal

SURVIVORS OF THE Magdalene Laundries have criticised the government for failing to implement the recommendations of a United Nations Committee Against Torture (UNCAT) almost a year ago.

The Justice for Magdalenes (JFM) group, an advocacy group for survivors of the Catholic-run institutions which operated in Ireland between 1922 and 1996, have said in a submission to UNCAT that it is unacceptable that there has not yet been any apology, redress and reparations for survivors.

The Minister for Justice, Alan Shatter, set up an inter-departmental committee, chaired by Senator Martin McAleese, last year in order to establish the facts of State involvement in the Magdalene Laundries.

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REFILE-No candidates yet to fill Vatican bank post – source

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

May 29 (Reuters) – The Vatican has not begun to consider who may succeed Italian Ettore Gotti Tedeschi as head of the Vatican bank, a person familiar with the situation said on Tuesday after media reports said former Bundesbank head Hans Tietmeyer was in the frame.

The source, who spoke to Reuters on the condition of anonymity, said there was “no short list, no long list, let alone anybody in pole position” to succeed Tedeschi.

Tedeschi fell victim to no-confidence vote by the bank’s board last Thursday.

Italian newspapers reported on Tuesday that Pope Benedict, a German, was was eyeing Tietmeyer, who headed the German central bank from 1993 to 1999, to succeed Tedeschi.

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Priesters verdeeld over celibaat

NEDERLAND
de Stentor

HILVERSUM – Nederlandse priesters zijn sterk verdeeld over het celibaat. Dat blijkt uit een anonieme enquête van het NCRV-programma Altijd Wat onder 135 priesters, meldt de NOS.

Van de priesters die aan het onderzoek meededen, vindt 40 procent dat het celibaat moet worden afgeschaft. En van die groep vindt bijna een kwart dat de regel van de rooms-katholieke kerk seksueel misbruik in de hand werkt.

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Vatileaks: Hunt is on to find Vatican moles

VATICAN CITY
Belfast Telegraph

By Michael Day in Italy
Tuesday, 29 May 2012

The Vatican has long been said by those who know it to be a nest of vipers. But recently, the poison has been laid bare for everyone to see as leak after embarrassing leak has revealed an institution at war with itself.

Already this year we’ve read about documents warning of a “death threat” against the Pope, widespread nepotism and corruption, exiled whistle-blowers, gay smear campaigns and embarrassing revelations about the Vatican’s tax affairs. Most of the damaging of the “Vatileaks” were revealed by the reporter Gianluigi Nuzzi in a series of TV programmes and now his new book Sua Santità (Your Holiness).

As ever, lumbering several steps behind, the powers that be at the Holy See last month set out to catch the mole or moles behind the leaks – which they refer to as “criminal acts”. The Pope’s butler has already been nabbed in possession of some of the confidential papers. But few people think he acted alone.

Yesterday, we learnt that an unnamed Italian cardinal is now a suspect. But even if all the leakers are caught, few observers think that there’s an end in sight for the PR disasters that have blighted the reign of 85-year-old Pope Benedict XVI. The stately Vatican Insider website, for its part, blamed an intrusive modern media. “Scandals even graver than this (such as the Calvi case) occurred in the Wotyla papacy, but today the media coverage is multiplied,” it said.

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What the #!%*? Did the Pope’s butler do it?

VATICAN CITY
National Post (Canada)

In this occasional feature, the National Post tells you everything you need to know about a complicated issue. Today: Corruption, cronyism, mismanagement and high-level power plays are exposed at the Vatican. A banker has been ousted and the Pope’s butler arrested.

Q: How did this all start?
A: The Vatileaks scandal broke in January when Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi broadcast letters from the former No. 2 Vatican administrator to the Pope in which he begged not to be transferred for having exposed alleged corruption that cost the Holy See millions of euros in higher contract prices. But the whistleblower, Monsignor Carlo Maria Vigano, was moved and is now the Vatican’s ambassador in Washington.

Q: But it didn’t end there?
A: No. At the weekend, Mr. Nuzzi published a book, Your Holiness: The Secret Papers of Benedict XVI, in which he released dozens of private letters to Pope Benedict, and other confidential Vatican correspondence and reports, including encrypted cables from Vatican embassies around the world.

Q: And what do they show?
A: A host of things. Some documents showed Vatican officials discussing one of the great unsolved mysteries in Italy, the 1983 disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi, the 15-year-old daughter of a Vatican employee. That led to the reopening of a criminal investigation. The book also provides a window into the nexus between Italian banking, media power and the Vatican. In a letter last Christmas, Bruno Vespa, Italy’s most well-known television host, enclosed a cheque for $12,500 to the Pope’s private secretary, Monsignor Georg Gaenswein, describing it as “a small sum at the disposal of the pope’s charity,” and asking for a private audience. The director of Italy’s Intesa San Paolo bank, Giovanni Bazoli, sent a $32,000 cheque, “with my most deferential salutations.” Other letters are written in obsequious baroque language, in which everyone — from Jesuits to government officials and Mercedes-Benz directors — seeks favours, recommendations and, most of all, the Pope’s ear.

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Pope’s butler to co-operate with probe

VATICAN CITY
The Chronicle-Herald (Canada)

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY — One of the Vatican’s biggest scandals in decades widened Monday with the Pope’s butler — arrested for allegedly having confidential documents in his home — agreeing to co-operate with investigators, his lawyer said Monday.

Paolo Gabriele’s pledge to co-operate with Vatican magistrates raises the spectre that high-ranking prelates may soon be named in the investigation into leaks of confidential Vatican correspondence that have shed a light on power struggles and intrigue inside the highest levels of the Catholic Church.

Italian media reported Monday a cardinal is suspected of playing a major role in the “Vatileaks” scandal. However, the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, denied the reports. He said many Vatican officials were being questioned in the investigation but insisted “there is no cardinal under suspicion.”

He also dismissed as “pure fantasy” a rash of other unsourced reports about the investigation in the Italian media, which have been on a frenzy ever since reports of Gabriele’s detention emerged Friday.

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Leaks reveal bitter Vatican power struggle

VATICAN CITY
The Daily Star (Lebanon)

May 29, 2012

By Ella Ide

VATICAN CITY: The flood of secret Vatican documents leaked to the press, enraging the Holy See, aims to oust the Church’s powerful number two and maybe to replace the pope himself, experts say.

The so-called “Vatileaks” scandal is a plot within the intrigue-filled Vatican City to unseat Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, seen by some as wielding too much power and not acting in the Church’s interests, they say.

“The documents that have been leaked all concern Bertone in one way or another,” Marco Politi, Vatican expert for Il Fatto Quotidiano daily, told AFP.

“This is all about damaging him to get a new secretary of state,” he added.

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Police review dossier over disgraced Bishop

UNITED KINGDOM
Eastbourne Herald

Published on Tuesday 29 May 2012

SUSSEX Police are reviewing a dossier of information into disgraced former Sussex bishop, the Right Reverend Bishop Peter Ball.

The former Bishop of Lewes resigned in 1993 after being cautioned for an act of gross indecency against a teenager.

Now BBC Sussex is reporting that Sussex Police is reviewing files dating back 20 years to consider whether any future prosecution might be made.

Sussex Police confirmed: “Over the past 10 days we have received from Lambeth Palace two reports from a church safeguarding consultant, which contain reviews of church safeguarding files relating to historic issues in the Chichester Diocese. We have also received the files themselves.

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Watchdog works with those abused by priests as children to prevent recurrence

IRELAND
The Irish Times

ANDREW FAGAN

RITE & REASON: The courage of the abused is helping the church put preventative measures in place

MEASURES TAKEN by the church in Ireland to make it a safer place for children are showing their effect. The most recent publication of statistics by its Child Safeguarding and Protection Service show a marked decline in alleged child sexual abuse incidents by priests reported to the Archdiocese of Dublin from a peak in the 1980s.

This does not mean that the story of child abuse by priests can be laid aside as history. We all need constant reminding of the devastation caused by the abuse of hundreds of children by a small but by no means insignificant number of priests in Dublin over many years. Sadly, a number of them were serial child abusers who wreaked havoc and destroyed the lives of children and families – havoc and hurt compounded by the stunning failure to address these crimes.

Over the past two decades, since revelations of child abuse by priests came into the public domain, the archdiocese, together with other dioceses and religious congregations, has persisted in implementing quality programmes of child safeguarding.

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Monsignor Lynn Set For Third Day Of Cross-Examination In Clergy Sex Abuse Trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

by Pat Ciarrocchi

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Tuesday morning, 61 year old Monsignor William Lynn will be back on the witness stand at the Criminal Justice Center testifying in his own defense.

Lynn, a priest for 36 years and the one time Secretary of the Clergy, is the highest ranking Catholic Church administrator to be tried for his handling of clergy sex abuse.

“There are some hard questions he’s got to answer,” says John White of Downingtown. On Thursday, White had traveled to Philadelphia and spent the day in Courtroom 304, praying for his pastor.

“We’re very concerned about how he is being treated. He’s probably the nicest gentleman I’ve ever known and I think that will come out in the end.”

The jury, which begins its tenth week on duty, won’t be judging nice.

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May 28, 2012

Former priest jailed on sex charges; served in southern Ontario parishes

CANADA
Brandon Sun

BRANTFORD, Ont. – A former Catholic priest who served in parishes throughout southern Ontario has been sentenced to 15 months in jail.

James Boudreau was convicted on one count of sexual assault involving a teenager, dating back to 1984.

Boudreau was also sentenced to six months on a second charge after another person came forward regarding an incident in 1983.

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Ex-Guelph priest sent to jail over sex assaults

CANADA
Guelph Mercury

GUELPH — Former priest James Boudreau nodded to a handful of supporters as he was led out of a courtroom Monday to begin jail terms for two historic sexual assaults.

One jail term is 15 months in length. The second sentence is for a six-month term. It will run concurrently with the longer one.

“I believe it was on the harsh side,” defense attorney Roger Yachetti said, in a brief interview outside the Ontario Court of Justice room. He’ll seek instruction from Boudreau, but doubted an appeal will be launched.

Crown prosecutor Steve Hamilton termed Justice Gary Hearn’s decision “well reasoned” and “appropriate.”

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Talking to teens about abuse? Check your panic at the door

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on May 28, 2012

Talking to your teen about sexual abuse? Don’t worry. Just take a deep breath and keep reading.

If your kids are younger, start here.

Usually, teen victims will reach out to their peers—friends who have no training, few skills and lack the maturity to properly report the abuse to the cops and get the victim help. Many times, the victim will swear the friend to secrecy. The friend, seeing how the victim has already been hurt and betrayed, will readily keep the secret. If the abuser is a teacher of someone the friend knows, the peer will keep the secret out of fear.

It’s a lose-lose: We have another teen who is suffering from vicarious trauma, fear and stress because they are forced to “keep the secret.” This happened in my own case, and the long-term wounds that many of my high school classmates suffered were just as deep and long-lasting as my own. Teen victims are also more likely to be blamed for the abuse (“Why did you keep going back?” “Why didn’t you just punch the guy?” “You must have wanted it.”), so the lifetime effects of the abuse can be more debilitating and shameful for everyone involved.

You’re a parent of a teenager. What the hell do you do now?

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Group submits evidence of State’s co-operation with Magdalene laundries

IRELAND
RTE News

The Justice for Magdalenes campaign group has discovered that women were transferred from State-funded mother and baby homes to Magdalene laundries, where they were held against their will and without their children.

The group said the evidence strengthens the case for an immediate State apology and compensation to former detainees.

Last year the UN Committee Against Torture strongly criticised the Government’s failure to apologise to and compensate former detainees of the State’s 10 Catholic-run Magdalene laundries.

Today some 500 pages of testimony – gathered in recent months from 13 survivors – was given to the McAleese Committee, which was established by the Government in response to the UN’s criticisms.

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Church of England inquiry into Sussex abuse bishop

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

By Colin Campbell
BBC South East Home Affairs Correspondent

The Church of England has carried out a investigation into a former Sussex bishop, the BBC has learnt.

The Right Reverend Bishop Peter Ball resigned in 1993 after receiving a police caution for committing an act of gross indecency against a teenager.

Files kept at Lambeth Palace about the former Bishop of Lewes are being scrutinised by police.

A Church of England spokesman said the church had instigated a review of the files and could not comment further.

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Greens campaign to help abuse victims get church assets

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Anna Patty
May 29, 2012

“With the accused priest either penniless or deceased, and the church itself not being a legal entity able to be sued in its own right, victims of sexual abused are left with no legal remedy” … Greens MP David Shoebridge. Photo: Nick Moir

VICTIMS of alleged sex abuse at the hands of Catholic priests claim they have been denied adequate compensation because the church has its assets locked up in property trusts.

The NSW Greens released a draft bill yesterday that aims to hold the Catholic Church financially responsible for such abuse.

The Greens MP David Shoebridge said the NSW Court of Appeal held, in a landmark 2007 case, that the church’s assets, controlled by property trusts, could not be accessed by victims of sexual abuse.

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Vaticano: «Un cardinale dietro il corvo»

CITTA DEL VATICAN
Il Messaggero

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO – Al di là di Porta Sant’Anna tutto scorre come se apparentemente non stesse capitando niente di speciale. Frotte di turisti che vanno e vengono, le guardie svizzere che si fannofotografare dai giapponesi, il solito traffico di auto targate Scv che entrano ed escono dal confine. Eppure lassù, nell’Appartamento, quello con la A maiuscola, tutti gli sviluppi, anche minimi che stanno emergendo dalla più grave inchiesta che sia mai capitata in tempi recenti vengono seguiti con estrema attenzione.

Per ora in carcere c’è solo Paolo Gabriele, un uomo semplice sul quale pesano sospetti terribili. E’ il bandolo della matassa, il terminale, magari inconsapevole, di una filiera che porta in alto. A questo punto gli inquirenti non escludono nemmeno un cardinale. Per questo gli sforzi investigativi sono concentrati sul maggiordomo, sul suo passato, si passano a setaccio i suoi conti correnti e quelli dei familiari. Si cerca di capire a chi era diretta quella miniera di carte sottratte al Papa, pazientemente riprodotte e meticolosamente catalogate dopo che erano transitate su una delle scrivanie ritenute più sicure al mondo. E pensare che in pochissimi sono ammessi in quella stanza dall’atmosfera rarefatta.

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Mystery mole in the Vatican

VATICAN CITY
The Australian

AFP
May 29, 2012

An UNNAMED cardinal is suspected of being a leading mole behind a series of embarrassing leaks of confidential papal documents, the Italian media reported yesterday.

“A cardinal led the crow,” read the headline in Il Messaggero, referring to the Pope’s personal butler Paolo Gabriele, who was arrested last week in the “Vatileaks” scandal after secret papers were found in his home.

“The real brains are the cardinals. Then there are the monsignors, secretaries and smaller fry,” according to one source quoted by La Repubblica.

Gabriele, who has worked at the Vatican since 2006 and was one of a select few with access to the Pope’s private quarters, was arrested a month after the Pope set up a special commission of cardinals to probe the leaks.

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La Santa Sede: «Nessun cardinale è indagato»

ITALIA
Corriere della Sera

MILANO – «Non c’è nessun cardinale italiano o straniero sospettato, né nessuna donna è indagata». Lo ha affermato il portavoce della Santa Sede, padre Federico Lombardi. «Tutto questo – ha detto padre Lombardi – lo smentisco in modo totale». «Faccio presente – ha spiegato il portavoce – che la Commissione nominata dal Papa sente diverse persone fra cui cardinali, ma questo non significa che siano sospettati». Ed è falso anche, ha assicurato, che «ci sia qualche donna indagata». Insomma, ha scandito, «è pura fantasia quanto afferma una presunta intervista pubblicata su un quotidiano».

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Carte rubate al Papa, un cardinale italiano finisce nella lista dei sospettati

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Corriere della Sera

[con il video]

CITTÀ DEL VATICANO – Che nell’indagine sui corvi si facesse sul serio lo si era capito già il mese scorso, quando Benedetto XVI istituì la commissione cardinalizia con pieni poteri presieduta dal porporato dell’Opus Dei Julián Herranz e con il prefetto emerito di Propaganda Fide Jozef Tomko e Salvatore De Giorgi, già arcivescovo di Palermo. In apparenza poteva sembrare pletorica, da settimane erano già in corso l’indagine penale del Tribunale vaticano e quella amministrativa della Segreteria di Stato. Ma una commissione simile ha due caratteristiche fondamentali: risponde direttamente al Papa e, con piena autorità, può indagare su chiunque. Gia allora si era messo in conto che l’inchiesta sulla fuga di notizie, al di là della manovalanza, potesse toccare livelli più alti, fino al Collegio cardinalizio: «Agirà in forza del mandato pontificio a tutti i livelli».

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Vatican says trust in church hurt by leaks scandal

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

VATICAN CITY | Mon May 28, 2012

(Reuters) – The faith of Roman Catholics in their Church has been damaged by a scandal over leaked documents in which the pope’s butler has been arrested, the Vatican said on Monday.

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Cardinals divided. Bertone’s management under fire

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Giacomo Galeazzi
Vatican City

The IOR events divide the cardinals. Thursday the lay governing council of the ‘Vatican bank’ fired its president Ettore Gotti Tedeschi with a series of accusations. But most people know that the ‘pope’s strongbox’ is looked after by a double management. Above the lay-supervisory council is the cardinals’ commssion which met on Friday, but was unable to release a statement.This was an unprecedented event and a sign that an agreement has not yet been reached. the committee includes cardinals Attilio Nicora, Jean-Louis Tauran, Telesphore Placidus Toppo and Odilo Pedro Scherer, led by the Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone . Apparently Nicora and Tauran criticised Bertone over his management of Gotti Tedeschi’s dismissal and the issue of the negotiation which would lead the Holy See to finally join Ocse’s ‘white list’ , a record of financially virtuous countries”.

The experts from Moneyval, the European Council group that deals with rating countries’ measures against money laundering and terror funding are still monitoring the Vatican’s regulations and procedures. Moreover Nicora resents Bertone for taking power away from the Aif, the Vatican internal information authority that he leads, slowing down the journey towards financial transparency. It is hard to tell if the clash within the cardinals’commission involves the evaluation of Gotti Tedeschi’s work. But there are no doubts that this will have repercussions on the nomination of the new president. At the moment the favourite to succeed Gotti Tedeschi is vice-president Ronaldo Hermann Schmitz, a banker from Piacenza. But the there are many theories. The ideal candidate is the former leader of Bundesbank, Hans Tietmeyer, from Germany, who would be a welcome choice for the pope, but he is very old. Now within the cardinals’commission there are two distinct currents. On one side those (Nicora, Tauran) who believe that transparency, the need to comply with international standard to be included in the ‘white list’ is paramount, on the other those who like Bertone believe that this line of action must be followed with moderation, since the Vatican is unqiue and cannot be compared with other sovreign states. Apparently Moneyval concluded, after the first inspection, last November, that the new regulation was ‘too vague’ . It therefore went through quite substantial changes.

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Rumours of new suspects beyond the Tiber: now the hunt is on for the masterminds

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

A lay functionary under scrutiny: he could be arrested

Giacomo Galeazzi
Vatican City

Interrogations of the lay officials of the Secretariat of State, a hunt for the possible mastermind behind the infiltrators, internal ‘governance’ in anguish. Scandals even graver than this (such as the Calvi case) occurred in the Wotyla papcy, but today the media coverage is multiplied. Vatican investigators seek evidence, proof, and possible “higher level” accomplices, in fact, Vatican public prosecutor Nicola Picardi’s “initial investigation” has already been closed, and the phase of “formal investigation”, conducted by Judge Piero Antonio Bonnet, has already begun.

Yesterday the Pope mentioned the Gospel: “the wind shakes the House of God, but it does not fall”. No direct reference to the Vatileaks scandal, though the reference does mention clouds that are gathering of the skies of the present. The transition to the formal stage, said spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi, has made it possible to officially release the name of the arrested individual; furthermore, it involves a real arrest to all effects, given that in the Vatican, the practice taking a suspect into “custody” does not exist. The investigation has been proceeding swiftly thanks to the fact that it’s entirely within the Vatican’s jurisdiction: Gabriele is a Vatican citizen, and lives next to the Gendarmerie, and it was in his home were the “confidential documents were discovered.” Full-court investigations, which don’t exclude “other acts”; for this reason, the length of the investigation could even lengthen. Again in the afternoon, Fr. Lombardi intervened to explain that “the judiciary has now charged Paolo Gabriele simply with the crime of aggravated theft: we are at a very early stage of criminal proceedings, therefore the high estimates regarding an eventual prison sentence printed by some newspapers have absolutely no justification”. A clarification with respect to some reports, according to which Gabriele would have been charged with crimes such as a violation of the correspondence of a head of state, and thus an attack on state security, with a penalty of up to 30 years in prison.

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Fr. Lombardi: “There are no cardinals being investigated”

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The statement of the director of the Vatican Press Office following developments in the saga of the papal butler’s arrest

Vatican Insider staff
Rome

The director of the Vatican Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi has confirmed that “there are no Italian or foreign cardinals being investigated” in light of the arrest of the Pope’s butler, Paolo Gabriele.

“This is a painful situation for many people, because of their acquaintance and closeness to Paolo and because of the negative light in which it may portray the Church and the Holy See,” the Jesuit priest and Vatican spokesman recalled. He then said that “the Pope is informed about and aware of the situation and is maintaining his faith and moral superiority.”

The Pope’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, who was recently arrested on suspicion of leaking confidential Vatican documents, “will collaborate fully” in the investigations, his lawyer, Carlo Fusco confirmed, in a communiqué issued by the Vatican Press Office.

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Someone persuaded him to keep those papers

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

A source close to the butler “ He has either gone crazy or has been framed”

Andrea Tornielli
Vatican City

“And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and slammed against that house; and yet it did not fall, for it had been founded on the rock”. Benedict XVI exhausted, grieved, but still smiling yesterday reminded believers of Rinnovamento dello Spirito (Renewal of the Spirit) of Jesus’ words. Even though the Vatican was founded on the rock, its foundations keep shaking after the unexpected turn of events with the arrest of Paolo Gabriele, the pope’s butler, on suspicion of leaking hundred of confidential documents which he would have taken from the pope’s private desk.

In the Sacred palaces, yesterday morning, there was a sense of annoyance for the articles spreading doubts over the accusations and describing the shock of many people in the Vatican at the possibility that someone like ‘little Paolo’ could be a mole. “ the documents that were found in his possession and which he should not have had are incontrovertible evidence of his guilt” said the Secretariat of State.

After the disbelief and shock, faced with the fact that the pope’s butler was illegally in possession of various documents, many in and outside the Vatican pondered about the butler’s motives and the people behind him.

An old priest with a long experience of vatican trials invited people to be cautious “ The arrest took place Wednesday evening, the butler’s home was searched in that occasion and the documents were found. But a serious enquiry, worthy of its name, before labelling him a ‘mole’ would have to find elements proving how those documents exchanged hands”. The cleric added “ we all feel embarassed and sad, Paolo’s family is crushed. Whoever pushed him to do such things is guiltier than him, because he used a naive person…”

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Holy See remains in crisis following ousting of Vatican bank president

VATICAN CITY
The Irish Times

PADDY AGNEW in Rome

THREE DAYS after the sensational arrest of Pope Benedict’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, and four days after the dismissal of Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, president of Vatican bank IOR, the Holy See remains in crisis.

In a climate that smells of a witch hunt, further arrests are predicted as Vatican police attempt to solve “Vatileaks”, the leaking of private documentation from the papal apartment.

In an audience with the Renewal in the Holy Spirit movement on Saturday, Pope Benedict appeared to make reference to the current difficulty when quoting St Matthew: “And the rain descended and the floods came and the winds blew and beat upon that house; and it fell not: for it was founded upon a rock.”

With the ex-butler Mr Gabriele still in detention (in a Vatican gendarmerie holding room, since there is no Vatican prison), those winds continue to blow. Furthermore, as the international clamour makes itself more manifest, there were all the indications powerful figures in the Holy See were busily engaged in a Stalinist-style rewrite of history.

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INVESTIGATION INTO LEAKING OF RESERVED DOCUMENTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 26 May 2012 (VIS) – Holy See Press Office Director Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J. today made the following declaration concerning investigations taking place in the Vatican on the leaking of reserved documents.

“I can confirm that the individual arrested on Wednesday evening for illegal possession of reserved documents, which were found in his domicile located within Vatican territory, is Mr. Paolo Gabriele, who is still being held in detention.

“The first phase of the ‘summary investigation’ under the direction of Nicola Picardi, promoter of justice, has come to an end and given way to the phase of ‘formal investigation’, which is being conducted by Piero Antonio Bonnet, investigating magistrate.

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Assembly in the West to be planned in Claremorris

IRELAND
The Association of Catholic Priests

For those wishing to be involved in planning a gathering in the West similar to what we had in Dublin a few weeks ago, a meeting is planned for Wednesday next, 30 May. it will be held in the MacWilliam Hotel, Claremorris at 8.00pm on Wednesday, May 30th. Anyone interested — lay, religious or priest — is welcome.

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Silencing priests weakens Church authority — Sean O’Conaill

IRELAND
The Association of Catholic Priests

Why exactly does the Catholic magisterium seek to prevent Catholic priests from questioning magisterial positions, even on merely disciplinary matters?

The only good reason surely must be to strengthen the authority of those positions, to persuade us that those positions are the only correct ones.

However, I have to say that for this particular Irish Catholic the action recently taken against six Irish priests has had precisely the opposite effect. I strongly believe that the authority of the magisterium itself, and of all clergy who expressly support its positions on controversial disciplinary issues, has never been more seriously undermined in Ireland than by this action.

The reason is that in Ireland we tend to give authority to teachers in proportion to their disinterestedness – the degree to which they obviously derive no personal benefit from what they teach. So, the few Catholic clergy who disregarded the Irish penal laws of the period 1691-1750 gained authority from the fact that they had nothing to gain and everything to lose by staying in Ireland and proclaiming what they taught.

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Did the Prosecution’s “Smoking Gun” Backfire?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog

Ralph Cipriano

It was billed as the prosecution’s smoking gun — a worn gray folder of documents passed out to the jury, just before the prosecution rested its case.

Inside the folder were several typed and handwritten documents compiled by Monsignor William J. Lynn that were ordered shredded by Cardinal Bevilacqua in 1994, but 18 years later, those documents mysteriously reappeared in a locked safe at archdiocese headquarters.

The most famous document in the folder was the list of 35 then-active priests compiled by Lynn who had been either convicted or accused of sexual abuse of minors. The smoking gun was supposed to be proof of a conspiracy to protect the Catholic Church and keep its shameful sexual abuse of children hidden at all costs.

But last week, as the defense presented its case, the smoking gun took on another meaning. The way the defense spun it, that worn gray folder was proof that Msgr. Lynn had done his best to expose sexually abusive priests in the ministry, and put his bosses on notice about all of them. The story of how Lynn’s superiors handled those documents, as well as their author, was proof that the monsignor was out of the real power loop in the archdiocese.

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Voices of new suspects beyond the Tevere; now the hunt is on for the masterminds

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Giacomo Galeazzi
Vatican City

Interrogations of the lay officials of the Secretariat of State, a hunt for the possible mastermind behind the infiltrators, internal ‘governance’ in anguish. Scandals even graver than this (such as the Calvi case) occurred in the Wotyla papcy, but today the media coverage is multiplied. Vatican investigators seek evidence, proof, and possible “higher level” accomplices, in fact, Vatican public prosecutor Nicola Picardi’s “initial investigation” has already been closed, and the phase of “formal investigation”, conducted by Judge Piero Antonio Bonnet, has already begun.

Yesterday the Pope mentioned the Gospel: “the wind shakes the House of God, but it does not fall”. No direct reference to the Vatileaks scandal, though the reference does mention clouds that are gathering of the skies of the present. The transition to the formal stage, said spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi, has made it possible to officially release the name of the arrested individual; furthermore, it involves a real arrest to all effects, given that in the Vatican, the practice taking a suspect into “custody” does not exist. The investigation has been proceeding swiftly thanks to the fact that it’s entirely within the Vatican’s jurisdiction: Gabriele is a Vatican citizen, and lives next to the Gendarmerie, and it was in his home were the “confidential documents were discovered.” Full-court investigations, which don’t exclude “other acts”; for this reason, the length of the investigation could even lengthen. Again in the afternoon, Fr. Lombardi intervened to explain that “the judiciary has now charged Paolo Gabriele simply with the crime of aggravated theft: we are at a very early stage of criminal proceedings, therefore the high estimates regarding an eventual prison sentence printed by some newspapers have absolutely no justification”. A clarification with respect to some reports, according to which Gabriele would have been charged with crimes such as a violation of the correspondence of a head of state, and thus an attack on state security, with a penalty of up to 30 years in prison.

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“I confess: I’m one of the whistleblowers We’re doing it to defend the Pope”

ROME
La Repubblica

by MARCO ANSALDO

ROME – Who are the Vatican whistleblowers? “There isn’t just one brain behind the operation, there are several. There are cardinals, private secretaries, monsignors and the small fry. Men and women, priests and laypeople. The whistleblowers even include cardinals. But the Vatican Secretary of State cannot admit that and has the small fry arrested, like “Paoletto” (as Paolo Gabriele is affectionately known), the Pope’s valet. Who has got nothing to do with it apart from having passed on some letters.”

A suburb in the north of Rome, a table in a bar, traffic passing by. It is lunchtime on a now limpid Sunday morning and one of those behind the flow of confidential letters from the Holy See 1 is explaining how the operation works.
“Those doing it are acting to protect the Pope.”

The Pope? Why?
“Because the whistleblower – or rather whistleblowers, because there are more than one of them – want to reveal the corruption inside the church in recent years, since 2009-2010.”

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“Confesso, uno dei corvi sono io Lo facciamo per difendere il Papa”

ROMA
La Repubblica

di MARCO ANSALDO

ROMA – Chi sono i “corvi” del Vaticano? “La mente dell’operazione non è una sola, ma sono più persone”. “Ci sono i cardinali, i loro segretari personali, i monsignori e i pesci piccoli. Donne e uomini, prelati e laici. Tra i “corvi” ci sono anche le Eminenze. Ma la Segreteria di Stato non può dirlo, e fa arrestare la manovalanza, “Paoletto” appunto, il maggiordomo del Papa. Che non c’entra nulla se non per aver recapitato delle lettere su richiesta”. Un quartiere alto di Roma nord, un tavolino di un bar, sempre un po’ di traffico intorno. All’ora di pranzo di una domenica mattina finalmente tersa uno dei “corvi”, gli autori della fuoriuscita di lettere segrete dalla Santa Sede, spiega i dettagli dell’operazione. “Chi lo fa – dice subito – agisce in favore del Papa”.

Per il Papa? E perché?
“Perché lo scopo del “corvo”, o meglio dei “corvi”, perché qui si tratta di più persone, è quello di far emergere il marcio che c’è dentro la Chiesa in questi ultimi anni, a partire dal 2009-2010″.

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Laity to set up church reform groups

IRELAND
The Irish Times

PATSY McGARRY, Religious Affairs Correspondent

FOLLOWING THE Toward an Assembly of the Catholic Church gathering in Dublin’s Regency Hotel three weeks ago, which was attended by over 1,000 Catholic laity, priests and nuns calling for dialogue in the Irish church, two further events are planned for this coming week.

A meeting will take place in All Hallows College, Dublin at 8pm on Wednesday, May 30th. It will discuss the formation of an umbrella group to represent laity interested in supporting reform and renewal in the church.

“We feel that an umbrella organisation will bring greater focus and cohesion to the ‘lay voice’ calling for dialogue,” said Noel McCann, one of the organisers of Wednesday’s meeting.

“Our aim would be to establish the organisation in the mainstream, and with the moral authority coming from a significant membership [so that it can] become relevant to the debate on the future reform and renewal of our church,” he said.

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‘Tide turned against Catholic Church in Vatican’

VATICAN CITY
Press TV (Iran)

[with video]

Pope Benedict’s butler Paolo Gabriele has been charged with illegal possession of secret documents that revealed cronyism and corruption in Vatican contracts.

The documents revealed allegations of corruption, mismanagement and cronyism in the awarding of contracts for work in the Vatican and internal disagreement on the management of the Vatican bank.

Press TV has interviewed Gerard O’Connell, a Vatican Affairs analyst in Rome about the ramifications of the leaked information of the internal conduct of the Catholic Church and the investigations that have been opened regarding the matter. What follows is an approximate transcript of the interview.

Press TV : Documents that allege corruption in the Vatican contracts with Italian firms… they’ve now hit the very heart of the Roman Catholic Church with the arrest of the Pope’s personal butler.

How sensitive do you think this has become when we speak of it becoming nearer or closer to the Vatican doors?

O’Connell: Well, it’s certainly dramatic. It’s certainly serious. What you are seeing here is the revelation of private correspondence at the heart of government.

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Pope’s silence on scandal, lack of transparency: Analyst

VATICAN CITY
Press TV (Iran)

[with video]

The Catholic Church has always had a long history of involvement in illegal activities such as child sex abuse, always covered up by the heads of the Church.

Press TV has conducted an interview with Dr. Randy Short, with the Dignity, Human Rights and Peace organization from Washington to further discuss the issue.

The video also offers opinions of two additional guests, the Vatican affairs analyst, Gerard O’Connell from Rome and also, Reverend Dr. Stephen Sizer from the capital city of Tehran. The following is a rough transcript of the interview.

Press TV: The Vatican’s own newspaper for one has ignored the story we have been seeing the Pope himself he has not commented on this in the public appearances that he has made up until now. Do you think that this is an appropriate way to handle the scandal?

Short: Well, for the personas that are in the employ of the Holy See, it would not make a lot of sense for you to do exposes on the persons that sign the cheques that you receive pay from.

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Q&A on the Vatican’s ‘butler did it’ story

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.

Given intense interest in the arrest of a papal butler charged with being at least one of the moles responsible for the Vatican leaks scandal, I’ll list below the five most common questions I’ve fielded, along with my best stab at a response.

1. Who is this guy?

Paolo Gabriele is a 46-year-old Italian layman, with a wife and three children, who’s worked in the papal apartment since 1998. Gabriele was hired by the personal secretary of Pope John Paul II, Stanislaw Dziwisz, today the cardinal of Krakow. Gabriele’s role was mostly to see to the pope’s clothing, to serve his meals, and to be on hand for other personal needs. He performed the same functions for John Paul and Benedict when they were on the road, travelling on the papal plane.

As such, Gabriele was one of just a handful of people who enjoy direct daily access to the pope, along with Benedict’s two priest-secretaries and the four consecrated lay women belonging to the Memores Domini community who do most of the cooking and cleaning. Benedict XVI, who puts great emphasis on fostering a family spirit among his closest aides, would doubtless see Gabriele as a member of his personal family.

Gabriele, known around the Vatican as “Paoletto” (“little Paul”), has the reputation of being a devout and fairly simple person, not someone who would ordinarily be suspected of involvement in high intrigue.

2. What’s the evidence against him?

Officials familiar with the case say it’s almost a slam-dunk, given that a search of Gabriele’s Vatican apartment turned up stacks of confidential documents along with equipment for making reproductions. Because the Vatican doesn’t have a jail, Gabriele has been detained in one of three secure rooms in the offices of the Vatican gendarmes, a space more often used to accommodate pick-pockets arrested for fleecing the large crowds of tourists on Vatican grounds before they’re turned over to Italian authorities.

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Memo explaining why Vatican Bank head was fired

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

by John L Allen Jr on May. 27, 2012 NCR Today

Yesterday the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera published an internal memorandum from the Supervisory Council of the Institute for the Works of Religion, popularly known as the “Vatican Bank,” outlining why the council unanimously expressed no confidence in the institute’s president, Italian economist and banker Ettore Gotti Tedeschi.

The memo was written in English, the usual working language for council meetings, and was signed by Carl Anderson, Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus and secretary of the Supervisory Council.

The memo can be found here:

When Gotti Tedeschi was named president of the Institute for the Works of Religion in 2009, he was widely touted as a reformer, the captain of internal financial reforms desired by Pope Benedict XVI. In the years since, however, complaints have repeatedly circulated that Gotti Tedeschi acted as a sort of absentee landlord, taking greater interest in his work with Italian banks and his own speaking and writing rather than his Vatican commitments.

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Cardinal a leading mole in Vatileaks scandal: Italy media

VATICAN CITY
AsiaOne

Monday, May 28, 2012

ROME – An unnamed cardinal is suspected of being a leading mole behind a series of embarrassing leaks of confidential papal documents, the Italian media reported on Monday.

“A cardinal led the crow,” read the headline in Il Messaggero, referring to Pope Benedict XVI’s personal butler Paolo Gabriele who was arrested last week in the “Vatileaks” scandal after secret papers were found in his home.

“The real brains are the cardinals. Then there are the monsignors, secretaries and smaller fry,” according to one source quoted by La Repubblica.

Gabriele, who has worked at the Vatican since 2006 and was one of a select few with access to the pope’s private quarters, was arrested a month after the pope set up a special commission of cardinals to probe the leaks.

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Vatican Documents Leaked: Did Butler Paolo Gabriele Do It?

VATICAN CITY
ABC News (United States)

[with video]

By JEFFREY KOFMAN (@JeffreyKofman) and PHOEBE NATANSON

May 28, 2012

He is always at the Pope Benedict XVI’s side.

Butler Paolo Gabriele, helps the Pope dress in the morning and serves him his meals through the day.

But now the Pope’s loyal butler is under arrest, accused of betraying the man he serves by leaking embarrassing confidential Vatican documents to the Italian media.

The arrest has stunned the Vatican, a place very familiar with intrigue, but not public betrayal by someone so close to Pope.

“The fact that this came from somebody who was in the papal apartment and a member of the papal family is great cause for a crisis of consciousness,” said John Allen, with the U.S. National Catholic Reporter.

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Vatican corruption scandal widens

VATICAN CITY
CBC News

The Associated Press

Posted: May 28, 2012

One of the Vatican’s biggest scandals in decades appears to be widening with reports that an Italian cardinal may be involved in a power struggle involving leaked documents, corruption and intrigue.

Leading Italian newspapers Corriere della Sera and Il Messaggero reported Monday that the pope’s butler — arrested three days ago for allegedly feeding documents to Italian journalists — clearly did not act alone, and that an unidentified cardinal is suspected of playing a major role in the scandal.

The Holy See had no immediate comment, but was planning to brief reporters on the latest developments.

The Vatican’s investigation into the source of leaked documents has yielded its first target with the arrest of the butler, who reportedly kept a treasure trove of documents in his Vatican apartment.

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Vatican leakers say cardinals among plotters in scandal

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY | Mon May 28, 2012

(Reuters) – The worst crisis in Pope Benedict’s pontificate deepened on Monday when Italian media said at least one cardinal was among those suspected of leaking sensitive documents as part of a power struggle at the top of the Church.

The scandal exploded last week when within a few days the pope’s butler was arrested for leaking documents, the head of the Vatican’s own bank was abruptly dismissed and a book was published alleging conspiracies among the cardinals or “princes of the Church”.

Newspapers, quoting insiders who had themselves leaked documents, said the arrested butler was merely a scapegoat doing the bidding of more powerful figures in the scandal, which has been dubbed “Vatileaks”.

Documents passed to Italian journalists accuse Vatican insiders of cronyism and corruption in contracts with Italian companies. La Stampa daily quoted one of the alleged leakers as saying the goal was to help the pope root out corruption.

On Saturday, Paolo Gabriele, 46, Pope Benedict’s personal butler, was formally charged with stealing confidential papal documents. But leakers quoted by La Stampa, La Repubblica and other media said the leaking plot went much wider.

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Vatican faces widening of leaks scandal

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY | Sun May 27, 2012

(Reuters) – The Vatican faces a widening scandal that in one short week has seen Pope Benedict’s butler arrested, the president of its bank unceremoniously dismissed and the publication of a new book alleging conspiracies among cardinals.

It was a poisonous Pentecost Sunday for the pope, who likely had the tumultuous events of the past week on his mind as he celebrated a mass in St Peter’s Basilica on the day regarded as the birthday of the Church.

On Saturday his personal butler, Paolo Gabriele, 46, was formally charged with stealing confidential papal documents in the scandal that has come to be known as “Vatileaks”. Some of the documents allege cronyism and corruption in contracts with Italian companies.

One prominent cardinal, illustrating the growing emotion of the debate in Vatican circles, wrote in an Italian newspaper that the pope had been betrayed just as Jesus was betrayed 2,000 years ago.

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Magdalene survivors ‘still waiting for apology’

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Monday, May 28, 2012

The Justice for Magdalenes group said today that survivors of abuse are still waiting for an apology, one year on from a UN reccommendation.

Women who were affected by abuse at the Magdalene laundries are also yet to receive any redress or reparation.

The support group is today submitting its NGO follow-up to the United Nations Committee Against Torture in Geneva.

As part of this process, the Irish State is required to report back on measures taken to put last June’s recommendations in place.

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The State Of The Church

UNITED STATES
WBUR

[with audio]

The Catholic Church has been in the public spotlight a lot this year. The issues of contraception and gay marriage have been part of the presidential campaign and church leaders have weighed in. There have also been new revelations in a case involving leaked Vatican documents, and it may actually be a case where the butler did it. Host Rachel Martin speaks with John Allen, a senior correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter.

Transcript

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

For more on the potential impact of this case and the overall state of the U.S. Catholic Church right now, we’re joined by John Allen. He is senior correspondent with the National Catholic Reporter. He joins us on the line.

Thanks so much for being with us, John.

JOHN ALLEN: Rachel, it’s a pleasure.

MARTIN: We just heard Barbara Bradley Hagerty outline the gist of this case against Monsignor Lynn. What are the implications? What does this trial mean for the Catholic Church?

ALLEN: Well, on one level it is a sad confirmation of the narrative that is already terribly familiar, which is that there was a pattern in the church of when accusations of sexual abuse against personnel would be brought forward, not to report them to police and prosecutors; to try to handle them internally and, in some cases, to sweep them under the rug.

But the new element here is that for the first time, we have a senior church official who’s been criminally indicted, not for the abuse itself but for the cover-up. And what that does is send a powerful signal to other administrators in the church that if they engage in the same kind of conduct, they could pay the same price.

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Diocese and Morning Star Ranch Reach Settlement Agreement

SPOKANE (WA)
KHQ

Posted: May 28, 2012

by Katie Steiner, KHQ Reporter

SPOKANE, Wash. – The Diocese of Spokane handed out a letter to all of its parishioners Sunday. This letter was written by Bishop Blase Cupich announcing that they had reached a settlement with the victims of the Morning Star Boys Ranch case. The Bishop told KHQ that he was very happy that the diocese did not have to close any churches. This case has been in mediation since October of 2010. In his letter, the Bishop said that the settlement met all four of the diocese’s goals. No parish will be foreclosed, all appeals will be withdrawn, the church will pay 1.5 million dollars in claims cases and mediation expenses, and Federal Judge Michael Hogal will be the Tort Claim Reviewer and will be in charge of any new future claims in the next four years. The Bishop also wrote “This is an important and significant turning point in a very sad chapter of our diocesan history. We can never forget the harm done to children, who deserved better from the Church and her ministers. Once again, I apologize to the survivors of the sexual abuse by clergy and to the families of survivors.”

The attorney for 26 of the victims in this settlement, Tim Kosnoff, talked to KHQ and he said that this settlement “obtained some justice. I wish it could have been more, but it is validation, and it’s closure for them, and compensation and I hope that they can put this chapter behind them and move on with their lives,” Kosnoff said. He said that he was happy that this process is over, but was not thrilled with the outcome. “It was reasonable under the circumstances…this was not a victory, but it was not a defeat, we salvaged a case out of a very difficult situation.”

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Calls to make Catholic church liable for abuse

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

SEX abuse victims of priests in NSW may receive vastly higher compensation payments under a Greens proposal to let victims sue the Catholic Church directly.

Greens MP David Shoebridge says victims are missing out on potentially large payouts because they have to rely on mediation with the church.

They cannot sue the Catholic Church directly in NSW – unlike the Anglican Church – because of a 1936 state law that separated the church’s property trust from its pastoral duties, he says.

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Sexual abuse lawsuits on hold while Philadelphia priests on trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

May 28, 2012
By Elizabeth Fiedler

The landmark priest sexual abuse trial is set to resume in Philadelphia Tuesday. While the criminal trial continues, a flurry of lawsuits by alleged abuse victims are on hold.

Marci Hamilton is co-counsel in seven cases brought against the Catholic church by alleged abuse survivors.

“It’s standard operating procedure for civil attorneys to stay out of the way of the prosecutors and to make sure the criminal trials go forward first,” said Hamilton.

At the criminal trial, jurors have heard emotional testimony from an alleged victim, as well as testimony from Monsignor William Lynn — who defended himself against allegations that he endangered children by helping re-assign priests accused of sexual abuse.

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May 27, 2012

Vatican Historian Alberto Melloni – Consider Reality Leaks Instead

ITALY
Joey Piscitelli

Posted on May 27, 2012 by Joey Piscitelli

It’s absolutely no surprise that the Vatican is once again inundated with scandal and corruption, concerning the Popes new nightmare – the Vatican “leaks”.

Yes, we all know about the proverbial mystery movie; and this time the butler really did it. Nice work, Paolo Gabriele. An oscar is forthcoming to your Vatican prison cell. I caution you to watch your back in Vatican prison; you know the stories about the prison showers – and also the “alleged” stories about the Catholic Clergy.

You’re definitely in the wrong place, at the wrong time. In my defense for that last dubious remark- I’m only repeating information quoted in countless articles on Catholic clergy abuse in the last 10 years, by news reporters in virtually every country on this planet.

However, let me get to the real point. I was apparently on the brink of fainting today when I read the statement by Alberto Melloni, the Vatican historian that was quoted as saying this:

“Never has the sense of disorientation in the Catholic Church reached these levels. But now there is something more, a sense of systematic disorder”.

Yes… he said that.

The educated, famous Vatican historian Alberto Melloni actually said that there has never been a sense of disorientation, and systematic disorder in the Catholic church such as there is now.

As a clergy abuse victim myself, I can’t help but ask this uber-obvious question:

“Where the hell have you been for the last 20 years Melloni?”

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Diocese of Antigonish announces more church closures

CANADA
The Cape Breton Post

Published on May 27, 2012
Staff ~ The Cape Breton Post

SYDNEY — Four Sydney area Catholic churches are slated for closure over the next two years following an announcement by the Diocese of Antigonish, Sunday.

St. Anthony Daniel Church on Alexandra Street and Sacred Heart Church on George Street will close in June 2014. St. Joseph’s Church on Cabot Street will remain open and will absorb the congregations from those two churches.

In a letter by Bishop Brian Dunn to parishioners, the rationale for this change has to do with the fact St. Joseph’s is the newest of the three buildings, it’s large enough to accommodate the two other parishes, and it has level access, plenty of parking and office space in the church.

Next year, Immaculate Heart Church on Mira Road will close and Sunday services at St. Anne’s Church in Membertou will be discontinued. Those parishioners will relocate to the three operational Sydney churches before St. Anthony Daniel and Sacred Heart are shut down in 2014.

As a result of the amalgamation, St. Joseph’s parish will be renamed, said Rev. Donald MacGillivray, spokesperson for the diocese’s planning committee.

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