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.

August 8, 2016

SA’s disturbing history of child protection and abuse inquiries and royal commissions

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

[with video]

Political Reporters Lauren Novak and, The Advertiser
August 8, 2016

THE release of the Nyland Royal Commission on Monday is the latest in a series of reports into the state’s child protection system.

Over the past 10 years there has been a litany of inquiries into the Government’s failure to protect children, including three high-profile inquiries also led by former Supreme Court justices.

They repeatedly found a culture of secrecy, unwieldy bureaucracy, lack of resources and a failure to put children first.

As South Australians begin to digest the 260 recommendations made by Margaret Nyland, the Government faces continued criticism for not having implemented the hundreds of proposals already put forward.

Advocates and victims are already warning this latest blueprint for change must not “sit on the shelf”.

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.

$200m to reform child protection system in South Australia

AUSTRALIA
Australian

MICHAEL OWEN
SA Bureau ChiefAdelaide
@mjowen

VERITY EDWARDS
ReporterAdelaide
@VerityEdwardsau

An initial $200 million over four years will be spent by the Weatherill government to begin implementing wideranging reforms based on 260 recommendations of a 850-page final report of a royal commission into South Australia’s troubled child protection system.

Premier Jay Weatherill has today apologised for failings amid findings one in four children in the state is subject of some form of notification to authorities.

“It is true that we’ve failed … the commissioner doesn’t apportion blame,” Mr Weatherill said.

In her report, Commissioner Margaret Nyland said problems with child protection systems were not unique to South Australia, although the state had the “dubious distinction” of caring for a higher proportion of infants and young children on a rotational basis, by commercial shift workers, than anywhere else and relied on this form of care more than any other jurisdiction.

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 element to Maynooth seminary scandal thanks to sexual harassment claims

IRELAND
Donegal Now

The scandal at St Patrick’s College in Maynooth is set to take another twist this week and deepen even further as a former trainee priest will reportedly make a written statement to Gardaí claiming that he was sexually harassed by a member of staff.

The staff member is still employed at the college, according to the Mail On Sunday, and they have not been contacted by Gardaí at this stage either.

The news comes on the back of allegations that suggested a trainee priest was posting partially nude pictures of himself of the gay dating app Grindr, while Archbishop Diarmuid Martin will no longer send trainee priests from his dioceses to Maynooth to study because of the toxic atmosphere there.

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.

Maynooth trustees to meet over controversy

IRELAND
RTE News

The trustees of St Patrick’s College in Maynooth are to meet within the next five weeks to decide their response to the current controversy at the institute.

The announcement by Primate of All Ireland Archbishop Eamon Martin, comes hours after Dublin’s Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, publicly expressed surprise that a trustees’ meeting had not yet been called to address the ongoing crisis.

Yesterday, on RTÉ’s This Week, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin defended his unprecedented decision to move his three seminarians studying at Maynooth to Rome’s Irish College.

He described the climate of anonymous allegations about inappropriate sexual behaviour in the main national seminary as “dangerous and poisonous” saying there was “a strange atmosphere of innuendo” which was “unsettling” for his students and that he had to do something for their futures

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.

Riot breaks out at Anglican synod in Nigeria, four women and one youth injured

NIGERIA
Christian Times

Chiqui Guyjoco
07 AUGUST, 2016

Protesters demanding for the dismissal of an allegedly corrupt Anglican bishop have interrupted the Anglican Church from convening its synod in Nigeria. The said protesters also clashed with authorities which resulted with five people injured.

According to the Anglican’s official website, protesters surrounded St. John’s Anglican Church in Amukpe recently and blocked the clergy and delegates from entering the church to participate in the scheduled synod. The protesters held placards and demanded the resignation of Rt. Rev. Blessing Erife­ta, the bishop of Sapele.

The vicar of St. John then reportedly called the who were soldiers positioned to protect an oil pipeline nearby and requested them to clear the church building of the demonstrators. The clergy prayed at a school nearby as the authorities and protestors clashed. The incident resulted in injuries among four women and a youth.

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.

Lawyer admits tearing up priest’s resignation letter

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
8 Aug 2016

A SOLICITOR and former trustee of the Anglican DIocese of Newcastle has admitted tearing up the original 1990 resignation of paedophile priest Stephen Hatley Gray, which was then replaced with one dated the day before Gray was charged with the sexual assault of a 14-year-old boy.

Central Coast solicitor Keith Allen, who began giving evidence to the Royal Commission on Friday, was again subjected to an intense examination by the commission’s chairman, Peter McClellan, and counsel assisting, Naomi Sharp.

The resignation letter of the disgraced priest Gray has featured in several segments of evidence so far.

In evidence last week, retired former Newcastle assistant Bishop Richard Appleby insisted he was instructed by his bishop, Bishop Holland, to drive to the Central Coast to obtain the resignation after a wild party at the church rectory.

But in Mr Allen’s evidence, it emerged that the letter discussed by Bishop Appleby in evidence – and shown to the commission as being hand-written on church letterhead – may not have been the original letter.

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.

Royal Commission hears of “brown envelope” cases

AUSTRALIA
Guardian News

IAN KIRKWOOD
8 Aug 2016

THE Royal Commission has heard sensational evidence about a secret filing system of “brown envelopes” used in the Newcastle Anglican church under former Bishop Roger Herft.

The commission heard there would have been more than 20 cases detailed in the brown envelopes. Detail of the history of child sexual abuse at the church’s Morpeth seminary were also said to be held in the church archives, stored at the University of Newcastle.

Detail of the brown envelopes emerged when the royal commission showed solicitor and former “ear to three Bishops”, Keith Allen, a file note of a meeting held in early 2015 with the diocesan business manager John Cleary.

The file note also revealed Mr Allen believed the church had influence over the police until quite recently and that the former dean of Newcastle, Graeme Lawrence, would be a focus of the royal commission and any police investigation and that Lawrence would ‘’bring others down’’.

Counsel assisting Naomi Sharp quoted from the file note: “Cleary records you saying that the biggest concern in the Newcastle diocese was Bishop Roger Herft. He indicated that Herft will be in trouble. This was mainly because of Herft’s handling of the Brown envelopes through Herft’s Brown envelope advisory/review committee”.

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

Catholic Church housed paedophile Christian Brothers on same inner-city property it rents out as function centre

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Beau Donelly and Chris Vedelago

The Catholic Church has housed a string of paedophile Christian Brothers on the same inner-city property it rents out as a family-friendly function centre.

A Fairfax Media investigation has revealed the Christian Brothers have been housing child sex offenders next to the Treacy Centre wedding and conference facility in Parkville since it opened three decades ago.

Past residents include notorious paedophiles Robert Charles Best and William Stuart Houston, who are both now serving lengthy jail sentences for historic sex crimes.

The Christian Brothers have refused to disclose how many known abusers are currently living in the complex, citing privacy concerns.

“Any Brother who has a substantiated claim of child sexual abuse against them is subject to appropriate but strict monitoring including restrictions in relation to children,” a spokesman 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.

Mormon Director Charged With More Than 50 Counts of Child Sexual Assault

UNITED STATES
Charisma News

8/4/2016
JESSILYN JUSTICE

A Mormon Australian film director was charged with more than 50 counts of sexual assault for his alleged conduct with 15 boys, according to reports.

Scott, who directed films Spirit of the Game and The Playbook, allegedly molested the children when he coached soccer in Australia during the 1990s, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

The abuse occurred while Scott was a high-ranking member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Reports of child abuse within the group are not uncommon.

Late last month, attorneys subpoenaed LDS President Thomas S. Monson about the church’s sordid history with abuse, particularly about Navajo children in the church’s Indian Student Placement Program.

“What President Monson knew or didn’t know about this and child sexual abuse within this program in general, is relevant. If President Monson claims no knowledge, that too is relevant to what the church knew or should have known about Lee and his ability to lead this program within the boundaries of the Navajo Nation and protect Indian Placement Program’s children from sexual harm,” victims’ attorney Craig Vernon 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.

Abuse complaints filed away in brown envelope

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Anglican Archbishop of Perth Roger Herft had a ‘brown paper envelope’ system to deal with child sex abuse complaints when he was bishop in a NSW Anglican diocese where abuse was widespread.

The envelopes containing information about child sex abuse allegations and other matters brought to the attention of the diocese of Newcastle were dealt with by a review committee.

They were created as a more secret filing system by Bishop Herft, solicitor Keith Allen told a child sex abuse royal commission on Monday.

Mr Allen, a former trustee of the diocese, was questioned about advice he gave the church in 2015 in readiness for the royal commission hearing which began last week.

In that advice, recorded by the current business manager of the diocese, John Cleary, Mr Allen suggested Archbishop Herft would be in trouble over the brown paper envelopes.

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.

Solicitor says he didn’t tell bishop to deny knowledge of paedophile priests

AUSTRALIA
Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Sunday 7 August 2016

A solicitor has denied he advised a former bishop of a New South Wales Anglican diocese to say he could not recall any knowledge of paedophile priests when giving evidence to the child sex abuse royal commission.

Keith Allen, who had been a member of several boards in the Anglican diocese of Newcastle for 40 years, returned to the witness stand for a second day at a commission hearing into how the diocese handled abuse allegations over 30 years.

Allen answered “no” five times when asked if a file note by John Cleary, the business manager of the diocese, was an accurate record of him saying he would advise bishop Alfred Holland to say he could not recall any knowledge of paedophile priests when he appeared before the commission.

In another extraordinary day at the commission sitting in Newcastle, Allen was questioned about acting for the church while also advising a victim’s solicitor.

He was also asked about arranging a fraudulent record for a sexual predator so he could get work elsewhere.

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.

Brenda Niall wins the National Biography Prize for Mannix

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Susan Wyndham

In researching her biography of Daniel Mannix, the Archbishop of Melbourne for 46 years, Brenda Niall was surprised to find how liberal his views were on most issues: he opposed World War I conscription, capital and corporal punishment, and the White Australia policy; supported the church reforms of Vatican II; and called for more openness in teaching children about sex.

“I can’t say whether sexual abuse was going on his time but it probably was,” Niall says. “He lived to be 99 and his attitude to sex education was way before its time. If it had happened, children might have talked to their parents … He was against the silence.”

Niall’s biography, Mannix, has won the $25,000 National Biography Prize for its nuanced and personal portrait of a complex man who was Archbishop until his death in 1963 and is mostly remembered as a fierce anti-communist cold warrior of the 1950s and ’60s.

“He is a biographer’s nightmare,” Niall says, partly because he left instructions for all his letters to be burnt after his death. Only a few were saved by B.A. (Santamaria) for a biography he was writing.

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.

Newcastle lawyer did not tell police about abuse allegations against priests, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

A Newcastle lawyer and Anglican Church official has said he did not go to police with allegations of abuse against priests because he was trying to protect the church.

Former trustee and Newcastle Diocesan Council member Keith Allen has spent the entire day giving evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The case study in Newcastle is looking at the past and present systems, policies and practices within the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle for responding to allegations of child sexual abuse.

Mr Allen discussed the church’s handling of sealed “brown envelopes”, which contained matters of concern to the diocese including criminal allegations against priests.

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

The retrial of Msgr. William Lynn begins to take form

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Joseph A. Slobodzian, Staff Writer

Msgr. William J. Lynn returned to a Philadelphia courtroom Thursday, four years older and a lot thinner than when he left to serve three to six years in prison for his conviction in the Catholic Church clergy sex abuse scandal.

Two Pennsylvania appeals courts have erased Lynn’s child endangerment conviction, although they are powerless to give back 33 months in prison.

But for the 65-year-old former secretary for clergy – the first Catholic Church official in the nation convicted for the way he supervised pedophile priests – freedom on $250,000 bail is the only clearing in a legal cloud that has shadowed him since 2002.

Still ahead, on May 1, is another public trial in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court, on a charge of child endangerment, and the potential of another conviction and return to custody.

After Lynn was released Tuesday, defense lawyer Thomas A. Bergstrom criticized District Attorney Seth Williams for revisiting the case against Lynn.

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.

August 7, 2016

Crisis in Maynooth: Former Thurles seminarian describes ‘serious bullying’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah MacDonald
PUBLISHED
08/08/2016

A former seminarian at St Patrick’s College in Thurles has told of the severe physical and mental abuse he endured while studying at the seminary.

‘James’ told the Irish Independent of the bullying he endured at the seminary – including one incident where he had a bucket of dirt thrown over him by two people wearing balaclavas.

Outlining for the first time in full his experiences of physical and mental abuse almost 25 years ago in the seminary, as he embarked on what he thought was the path to priesthood, he said, “As I now recall that year, I feel so much pain and horror for what I experienced.”

“When I entered [the] seminary, I was living with over 100 students and priests and lecturers.

“These priests were there to guide us on our journey to ordination and help us discern what we truly wanted out of life. They would be our leaders, spiritual directors and brothers within whom we would place our trust and always be confident that they cared for our wellbeing,” he said.

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

Martin wants new clergy to train in community

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Luke Byrne

PUBLISHED
08/08/2016

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin’s long-term ambition for the capital’s trainee priests is to take them out of seminaries altogether and put them into communities.

Speaking over the weekend, the archbishop advocated “a very different form” of training for the priesthood.

It comes as the controversy over his decision not to send prospective priests to Maynooth, over an apparent gay subculture there, rumbles on.

“A seminarian going on a dating site, there’s something wrong there,” he said, in an interview with RTÉ’s ‘This Week’.

Archbishop Martin spoke about the church’s teaching on human sexuality, calling it something that is “more difficult to get across to people.” He suggested that this was one reason why it might be better to take priests out of seminaries.

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.

Solicitor acted for victim and church

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Annette Blackwell – AAP on August 8, 2016

A solicitor has denied he advised a former bishop of a NSW Anglican diocese to say he could not recall when giving evidence to the child sex abuse royal commission.

Keith Allen who had been a member of several boards in the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle for 40 years has returned to the witness stand for a second day at a commission hearing into how the diocese handled abuse allegations over 30 years.

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

Theresa May was warned not to look overseas for child abuse judge

UNITED KINGDOM
Mirror

7 AUG 2016
BY BEN ROSSINGTON

Theresa May was warned not to look outside the UK before choosing the New Zealand judge who quit the national child abuse inquiry this week, it was claimed.

The Prime Minister, as Home Secretary, appointed Dame Lowell Goddard last year. She is the third chairwoman to quit.

A legal source said: “The PM was advised by very senior people not to look outside because of the need for an intricate understanding of British law and the establishment.

“It’s a difficult balancing act, you want someone who gets it but isn’t part of it. There were questions about whether Justice Goddard had the level of knowledge needed.”

In hearings at the High Court last week the performance of the judge, 67, came under fire. She quit after it was revealed she spent 74 days abroad working or on holiday.

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.

Chief rabbi: Child abuse cannot be ‘swept under the rug’

ISRAEL
Times of Israel

Israel’s Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau on Sunday said members of the ultra-Orthodox community had an “obligation” to treat cases of child abuse and said the issue must not “be swept under the rug.”

In an open letter, the chief rabbi implied that such crimes should be reported to the authorities, but stopped short of explicitly calling for police involvement.

“Under no circumstances may these awful matters be swept under the carpet or be ignored. If they are not stopped, they can cause damage to many other people,” Lau wrote.

“At this time, it is an obligation for all parents, teachers, family members and anyone working in education, to keep their eyes open and to offer as much help as possible to those in need. Burying one’s head in the sand is not the [correct] response to these difficult and painful topics,” Lau wrote.

In his letter, the chief rabbi referred to recent cases of abuse within the Haredi community, which he termed “truly shocking.”

Last week, indictments were filed against six teachers at an ultra-Orthodox school run by the Belz Hasidic sect in Tel Aviv for alleged severe physical abuse of students. One of the six educators was also charged with sexual abuse. Some 22 students are suspected of having suffered physical abuse from the ages of 3-4 to 10-11.

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.

Chief Rabbi urges Haredi teachers not to turn a blind eye to sexual abuse

ISRAEL
Jerusalem Online

After six teachers at a Tel Aviv Hassidic school were indicted this week for abusing their students, Rabbi Benny Lau wrote in an open letter to educators that he was “disgusted” by the revelation and urged them not to keep such incidents a secret.

Aug 7, 2016

Omri Ariel

Amid allegations of sexual abuse made against six teachers at a Tel Aviv Hassidic school, Israel’s Chief Rabbi Benny Lau published on Sunday an open letter to educators in the ultra-Orthodox community, urging them to keep their eyes open and to assist students who may be going through similar experiences.

“To hear that these places, which should have served as a stronghold and a safe haven to these children, became places of nightmare and fear, was extremely painful,” Rabbi Lau wrote. “All of us – parents, teachers and everyone who takes part in the sacred work of education – must now keep our eyes open and assist as much as we can those who need us.”

The ultra-Orthodox community has long been under scrutiny for tending to cover up cases of sexual assault occurring within its schools or homes. Often, even parents who find out about it refrain from involving the police for fear of being cast out or put to shame.

“Turning a blind eye is never an answer to such difficult issues,” Rabbi Lau added. “Each of us must be aware that he or she carries responsibility, even if it doesn’t involve them directly.”

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.

Chief Rabbi: Don’t cover up abuse of children

ISRAEL
Arutz Sheva

Chief Rabbi David Lau published an open letter to educators this evening (Sunday), in which he calls for them to “open their eyes” and deal with any and every instance of child abuse of any kind.

“To my great pain we’ve recently been witness to horrific cases of abuse in our midst,” the Chief Rabbi opened, “cases in which children were hurt in their houses and their schools. How painful it is to hear that the very places which are supposed to provide a feeling of safety and security for our children, have become places of fear.”

Rabbi Lau called for all parents and educators to open their eyes and observe what is happening around them. “Burying our heads in the sand is not the answer in these difficult and painful matters. Every individual must know that he bears responsibility for what goes on around him, even if it doesn’t involve him personally.”

The Chief Rabbi noted that while he chose not to go into the details of the recent cases of sexual abuse in his letter, it is nonetheless important for people to talk about these matters. “I feel disgusted by the very fact that we have to address these matters, but address them we must.”

“As those who dedicate their lives to providing better education, you bear an even greater responsibility to look around and devote your full attention to anything that might damage the souls of our precious youth.”

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.

Irish bishops in denial there is no new crisis over gay seminarians

IRELAND
Irish Central

Niall O’Dowd @niallodowd August 07, 2016

Delusion is among the most damaging mental states of all, allowing individuals to enter fantasy worlds where they can pretend their delusions are reality.

We currently have an outstanding examples of delusionary behavior in the Irish Catholic Church who are pretending there is no gay crisis in their main seminary at Maynooth.

The bishops of Ireland have agreed en masse (with one exception) to deny and to protest the findings of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin that the main seminary in Maynooth has essentially become a hotspot for gay seminarians and very likely should be shut down.

There is evidence of gay dating sites being widely used, of cover ups reaching the higher echelons, of straight novices being shunned if they report any such incidents, of a heterosexual student fired when he reported two seminarians having sex in bed – the list goes on and on.

There has been a gay culture predominant in Maynooth seminary for decades according to experts who know.

Now Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has called it into the open. He stated about Maynooth seminary that there is “an atmosphere of strange goings-on there”.

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.

Professor Alexis Jay emerges as favourite to take over child sex abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Martin Evans

7 August 2016

Professor Alexis Jay, who exposed the Rotherham sex abuse scandal, has emerged as the favourite to take over the Government’s chaotic child sex abuse inquiry.

The former social worker, who currently sits on the inquiry’s panel, is understood to be willing to consider taking on the role if approached by Amber Rudd, the Home Secretary.

Professor Jay is widely respected among survivor’s groups and having been brought up in a tenement in Edinburgh, by a single parent, has none of the establishment links that have tripped up previous heads.

The entire future of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse was thrown into doubt last week, when Dame Lowell Goddard became the third chairman to quit amid criticism over her commitment to the role.

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.

Retired Newcastle Bishop Brian Farran to face questions about why he felt “pressured”

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

JOANNE MCCARTHY
7 Aug 2016

FORMER Newcastle Anglican Bishop Brian Farran will be questioned this week about why he told a church board he was placed in an “unnecessary and unfortunate pressured environment” after it made defrocking recommendations against four priests public.

The priests included former Newcastle Anglican Dean Graeme Lawrence.

NSW Local Court magistrate Colin Elliott after professional standards hearings in 2010 into child sex allegations against Lawrence, his partner and teacher Greg Goyette and Hunter Anglican priests Andrew Duncan, Bruce Hoare and Graeme Sturt.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse public hearing into Newcastle Anglican diocese was told last week that Mr Elliott will give evidence criticising Bishop Farran’s handling of the matter and subsequent changes to the professional standards board’s powers.

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.

Archbishop urges Maynooth to show procedures are ‘robust’

IRELAND
RTE News

[with audio]

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said the National Seminary in Maynooth needs to come forward to show that its house is in order and procedures are “robust”.

Speaking on RTÉ’s This Week, he said procedures need to be shown as accessible and are being used.

His comments follow anonymous allegations of homosexual activity, the use of the dating app Grindr, and other allegations of misconduct at the seminary.

Archbishop Martin said there have been “misunderstandings” from some bishops over his decision to transfer three trainee priests to Rome.

He said many bishops did not agree with his move but he said he defended his position to them because not taking action on the matter would have been “very foolish”.

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.

‘Seminarians going on a dating site, there’s something wrong there’ – Archbishop Martin

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Tomás Heneghan
PUBLISHED
07/08/2016

The Archbishop of Dublin has said his long-term ambition following the recent scandal at Maynooth is to set up a new form of community training for seminarians.

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said he wishes to take men training to become priests in Ireland away from the closed environment of a seminary.

The cleric was speaking to RTÉ Radio One’s This Week programme on Sunday afternoon.

He told the show he made his decision to remove three seminarians from St Patrick’s College at Maynooth in June, following various reports and blogs.

He explained: “I have an obligation, if I feel there is an atmosphere that is unsettling for my students I have to take action.”

He said that despite the decision of other bishops not to remove their seminarians from the college, he did not believe he was overreacting.

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.

Martin links Maynooth controversy to handling of child sex abuse

IRELAND
Irish Times

Ciarán D’Arcy

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has linked the issue of gay activity involving seminarians to the treatment of sexual abusers in the Catholic Church, and has challenged authorities to show that Maynooth “has its house in order”.

Dr Martin stood over comments he made last week that a “poisonous” atmosphere had prevailed at the national seminary, and said the decision not to send three seminary students from the Dublin Archdiocese there was taken in June.

Controversy erupted last Monday when allegations of homosexual activity, sexual harassment and the use of gay dating apps among seminarians at Maynooth surfaced.

“I believe when I see something that I am not happy with, that I would be very foolish not to take action about it,” he told RTÉ Radio’s This Week programme.

“One of the things that I constantly recall in the child sexual abuse, which is another matter but it’s linked to this, is on how many occasions something happened and then somebody said ‘well everybody knew there was something wrong there’ and nobody came forward,” he said.

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

‘Trainee priests going on a dating site, there’s something wrong there’

IRELAND
Journal

THE ARCHBISHOP OF Dublin has called for a new community-based system for training priests.

Diarmuid Martin was speaking to RTÉ’s This Week programme today after a week of media activity around alleged gay culture in place at St Patrick’s College in Maynooth, Ireland’s national seminary.

Anonymous allegations had been made that seminarians had been using Grindr, a gay dating app.

Martin had on Tuesday confirmed to the Irish Times that he would not be sending three student priests from his diocese to the seminary, describing “an atmosphere of strange goings-on”.

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.

GA–Clergy sex abuse victims to start new support group

GEORGIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, August 8, 2016

An international self-help organization for men and women who were molested by religious leaders will hold its first confidential support group meeting in Savannah on Tuesday, August 9th.

Michael Corbett, who is the Savannah director for the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), explained why he is starting a local support group.

“SNAP was there when I needed it. The other members understood what I had been through, because they had had similar experiences. Sharing my story with them helped me tremendously on my healing journey, and I want to share that gift with others.”

In 1993 Corbett was a 17 year old Boston teenager when he was sexually assaulted by a Catholic priest, Father Robert Gale. In 2001, the Savannah SNAP leader was interviewed by the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team for their Pulitzer Prize winning exposé of the cover up of child sexual abuse in the Boston Archdiocese. Gale was convicted as a result. The Globe’s investigation was the subject of the movie Spotlight, which won the Academy Award for best picture earlier this year.

Barbara Dorris, the long-time National Outreach Director for SNAP, will be on hand to help launch the new support group, and she also commented on the launch.

“We hope that by starting these meetings we can reach out to local victims who are still suffering in silence. We urge both survivors and their supporters to join us on Tuesday. By sharing their truths people realize that they are not alone, and they can begin to heal.”

The confidential support group – for both religious sex abuse victims and for their families – will be held at 7:00 pm. on August 9th. The location is not being made public, in order to protect the privacy of the participants. Those interested in attending should contact Corbett (508-207-7418, Savannah@SNAPnetwork.org) or Dorris (314-503-0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org) for the location of the meeting.

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Anglican clergy in group sex allegation

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

A child sex abuse survivor will tell a royal commission two Anglican priests had group sex with him while another priest watched and stroked a 17-year-old boy who was so drunk he passed out.

The evidence on Monday from a man given the pseudonym CKH follows shocking revelations last week about a network of pedophiles in the Anglican diocese of Newcastle who targeted children in a church-run boys home.

CKH is expected to say he was 14 years old when priest Andrew Duncan had oral sex with him and the sexual abuse continued for years. During his involvement with Duncan, CKH alleges he was groomed to have sexual encounters with three other priests, Graeme Lawrence, Bruce Hoare and Graeme Sturt.

He will also say he was 19 when the group sex incident happened in a motel room after a Riverina diocese clergy function in 1984.

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If child abuse were a disease, we’d see urgent action. Our culture must change

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sue Berelowitz

The resignation of Lowell Goddard as chair of the official inquiry into historical child sex abuse is an opportunity for us to now focus on the really critical issue. For the inquiry to be credible the whole purpose must be to learn the lessons from past institutional failures so that children now and in the future are effectively protected.

The inquiry I chaired into child sexual exploitation in gangs and groups found extensive evidence of professionals and institutions refusing to see the signs and hear the voices of abused children. This was institutional denial by those whose job is to protect children from rape and sexual violation.

There is a dangerous belief that the sexual abuse of children is a “historical” phenomenon, that it’s about a few rotten apples in high places or recognised positions of power. Let’s look at the reality. The new crime survey from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) tells us that 11% of all females and 3% of all males aged 16-59 have disclosed that they were sexually abused as children.

This translates into at least 600,000 girls in England today who are, have been or will be victims of sexual abuse by the time they are 18. The figure for boys would be at least 150,000. These figures are profoundly shocking and yet I am not in the least surprised by them for they fit the known evidence, including that most people were abused by someone known to them such as a friend, acquaintance or family member.

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Anti-gay Catholic cleric faces lawsuit over abuse in Guam

GUAM
The Freethinker

A while back, Anthony Sablan Apuron, above, then Catholic Archbishop of Guam warned that the introduction of marriage equality to the South Pacifiic island that belongs to America would ‘destroy the basic fabric of society’ and put Guam on the ‘road to a totalitarian system’.

Apuron and Guam’s Catholic archdiocese are now embroiled in a $2-million lawsuit that alleges that Apuron abused boys in 1970s.

According to this report, three former altar boys and the mother of another filed the libel and slander lawsuit, saying they were called liars when they accused Apuron of sexual abuse.

The lawsuit appears to have forced a 95-year-old Catholic priest – the Rev Louis Brouillard – into the open. After he was identified as an abuser during a hearing this week in the Guam Legislature, he stepped forward to confess abusing boys on Guam. He said he had confessed his sins to other priests on the island at the time but none told him to specifically stop.

Instead, the other priests told him to “do better” along with regular penance, such as saying Hail Mary prayers.

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Vatikan beurlaubte Angestellten wegen sexueller Vorwürfe

VATIKAN
derStandard (Osterreich)

The Vatican has placed an employee on leave until further notice because he allegedly sought intimate contact with a minor. This was confirmed by the Vatican spokesman Greg Burke on Sunday.]

7. August 2016

Mann soll sich einer 13-Jährigen unangemessen genähert haben

Vatikanstadt – Der Vatikan hat einen Angestellten bis auf weiteres beurlaubt, weil er intimen Kontakt zu einer Minderjährigen gesucht haben soll. Das bestätigte Vatikansprecher Greg Burke am Sonntag auf Anfrage, wie die Nachrichtenagentur Kathpress berichtete.

Burke betonte zugleich, der Fall sei außerhalb des Vatikan angesiedelt. Er widersprach damit der Darstellung der italienischen Tageszeitung “Il Mattino” (Sonntag), die den Beschuldigten in das Umfeld von Papst Franziskus und dessen Residenz Santa Marta rückte.

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Vaticano, scoppia un altro scandalo dipendente accusato di pedofilia

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Il Mattino

[Another scandal at the Vatican. An employee has been accused of pedophilia.]

Città del Vaticano. I guai non finiscono mai. Ancora una volta Papa Francesco si trova a fronteggiare un caso parecchio imbarazzante. Un’altra grana da risolvere, un altro dispiacere. Stavolta a dare grattacapi è un dipendente che ogni tanto si intravedeva a Santa Marta, anche se era impiegato in un altro settore. In questi giorni è stato allontanato dal Vaticano con accuse pesanti: adescamento di minorenni via chat, materiale pedo pornografico. Il ragazzo, un laico di cui non sono note le generalità – è stato denunciato alla autorità giudiziaria vaticana in attesa che si completino le opportune verifiche per poi procedere la vicenda in tribunale. Tutto è nato a causa di alcuni filmati che giravano in rete e che sono stati intercettati dai gendarmi. Papa Francesco, saputo dell’accaduto, c’è rimasto male. Sbalordito e addolorato.

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Call to re-open court to all abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Austrlian

MICHAEL MCKENNA
ReporterBrisbane
@McKennaattheOz

Child protection advocates are calling on Australian states to widen reforms of litigation laws so abuse victims forced into compensation settlements can launch new legal action.

Queensland, Western Australia and the ACT are about to join Victoria and NSW in abolishing the statute of limitations that ­effectively blocks victims from having their cases heard in court.

In Queensland, victims have had until their 21st birthday to sue institutions over their abuse.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse last year recommended states reform laws to allow people to sue regardless of when alleged abuse happened.

However, so far legislative changes have excluded victims who have already taken action and been forced into settlements after the time limit defence was used against them. Some victims received as little as $10,000, a fraction of what churches, schools and governments now face in court-ordered damages.

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MEDIA RELEASE – AUGUST 6, 2016

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

A religious order of priests and brothers, the Franciscan Friars of Holy Name Province, based in midtown Manhattan, refuses to help a woman who is a childhood sexual abuse victim of Fr. Paul A. Walsh OFM, a/k/a Fr. La Salle A. Walsh, OFM, a priest who served at Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Church and Preparatory School in Kingston, Jamaica

Woman who was sexually abused at approximately the age of ten (10) in approximately 1962 by Fr. Paul A. Walsh, OFM, a/k/a Fr. La Salle Walsh, OFM, wants the Franciscan Friars to pay for the cost of her therapy, resolve her clergy sexual abuse claim, and help her try to heal

What
A demonstration and leafleting regarding the Franciscan Friars’ Holy Name Province refusal to help a childhood sexual abuse victim of a Franciscan Friar, Fr. Paul A. Walsh, a/k/a Fr. La Salle A. Walsh, from Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Church and Preparatory School in Kingston, Jamaica

When
Sunday, August 7, 2016 from 8:45 am until 12:30 pm (before and after Sunday Masses)

Where
At the rear entrance to St. Francis of Assisi Parish on West 32nd Street, Manhattan, between 6th and 7th Avenues.

The address of St. Francis of Assisi Parish is 135 West 31st Street, New York, NY 10001
212-736-8500

Who
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey which assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, and members of Road to Recovery, Inc.

Why
A woman who was approximately ten-years old in the 1960s and sexually abused by Fr. Paul A. Walsh, a/k/a Fr. La Salle A. Walsh, OFM, at Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Church and Preparatory School in Kingston, Jamaica, wants the Holy Name Province of the Franciscans to pay for her therapy, resolve her claim, and help her try to heal. Demonstrators will demand of the Holy Name Province of the Franciscans that it help the woman who was sexually abused as a child by a Franciscan priest try to heal by paying for her therapy and resolving her clergy sexual abuse claim in a timely and just manner.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800 – roberthoatson@gmail.com

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Calls for SA Parliament to be recalled to consider 260 child protection recommendations

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

South Australian Parliament should be recalled so recommendations from the Child Protection Systems Royal Commission can be implemented as soon as possible, the State Opposition says.

The final report by Commissioner Margaret Nyland contains 260 recommendations and is 850 pages long, Child Protection Reform Minister John Rau revealed today.

It was delivered to Governor Hieu Van Le at Government House on Friday afternoon, but the contents will not be made public until after a State Cabinet meeting on Monday.

Opposition Leader Steven Marshall said the document could not be properly scrutinised because Parliament had risen for the winter break.

He said it should be recalled so that legislative changes prompted by the report are not delayed.

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Cardinal sins: the gospel according to Vatican’s secret gays

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Kim Bielenberg

PUBLISHED
07/08/2016

The catechism of the Catholic Church explicitly states that “homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered”.

The Vatican warns that under no circumstances can a gay lifestyle be approved, but that has not stopped rumours and scandals reaching to the very heart of the institution.

This has not just happened over years and decades, but over centuries, leading to inevitable accusations of hypocrisy.

According to several accounts, which are hard to verify 1,000 years later, Pope John XII from the 10th Century had sex with men and boys and was accused of transforming his palace “into a whorehouse”.

The 14th Century Pontiff Boniface VIII, who reigned from 1294 to 1303, was said to have declared to a prospective male lover that two men having sex was “no more a sin than rubbing your hands together”.

Historical rumour records that Paul II passed away while having sex with a page boy, and that he was succeeded by Sixtus IV, who appointed his lover, Petro Riario, who happened to be his nephew, a cardinal at the age of 17.

While recent popes have been free of gay scandal on a personal level, the rumours and stories of liaisons among the clergy continue to be a feature of Vatican life and are regularly reported in the Italian press.

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Pantomime dame

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sunday Times

James Gillespie
August 7 2016
The Sunday Times

n the Millbank offices of the child sex abuse inquiry, tensions between Dame Lowell Goddard and her team had been building for some time.

They reached a climax on Thursday when a source alerted The Sunday Times. “The confrontation with Goddard will take place today,” the insider said. “If she tries to cling to office and goes to Theresa May or Amber Rudd, she will discover that there is no support for her.”

A few hours later Goddard had gone — tendering a curt resignation letter that was immediately accepted by Rudd, the home secretary.

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Insiders reveal the ‘autocratic style, poor memory and shaky grasp of British law’ that meant Dame Lowell Goddard had to go as head of child abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Mail on Sunday

By AMIE GORDON FOR MAILONLINE and DAVID ROSE FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

In a damaging blow to the Government’s inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, staff have criticised former chair Dame Lowell Goddard, describing her as ‘difficult’ to work with and ‘autocratic’.

This comes after the New Zealand judge resigned on Thursday as chair of the £100 million Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA).

Sources claimed Dame Lowell, appointed by then-Home Secretary Theresa May just over a year ago, had lost the confidence of senior staff and members of the inquiry panel.

Her resignation letter was immediately accepted by Mrs May’s successor as Home Secretary, Amber Rudd.

Insiders and lawyers in the inquiry, which is already besieged by setbacks, have accused her of acting in an ‘autocratic’ manner towards staff.

One insider told The Sunday Times Dame Lowell was ‘difficult’ to work with and staff had to develop a ‘thick skin’.

Another told the paper: ‘Goddard’s treatment of the staff and of the panel of four assisting her has been autocratic.’

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Lord Janner’s family announced legal bid to have him kept out of child sex inquiry just hours before controversial chief quit

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By AMIE GORDON FOR MAILONLINE

Lord Greville Janner’s family have announced they intend to launch legal action to have him removed from the Government’s child sex abuse inquiry.

Daniel Janner QC, the son of the Labour peer who died amid allegations of paedophilia, criticised the ‘disarray’ of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse following the resignation of its third chairwoman, Dame Lowell Goddard.

He described the allegations against his late father as ‘obscene’, adding a ‘dead and innocent man’ could not defend himself.

This comes as another setback to the £100 million Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, after its chair Dame Lowell Goddard left her post on Thursday – hours after Mr Janner had sent an email detailing his plans to take her to court.

Lord Janner, who died aged 87 in December, is alleged to have abused children over a period spanning more than 30 years and dating back to the 1950s.

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Crisis of faith

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Kim Bielenberg

PUBLISHED
07/08/2016

The hugely popular gay dating app Grindr is banned or blocked in countries such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia. This week the embattled Irish Catholic hierarchy would be forgiven for wishing that it was also outlawed in Maynooth, the location of Ireland’s only seminary.

Grindr boasts that it is the world’s largest gay social network, enabling men to see pictures of “100 guys on a location-based grid… chat, make a date, and have some fun anytime, any place”.

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin this week announced that he was not sending students of the priesthood to the 200-year-old seminary at Maynooth.

Part of the reason given was that some students in the seminary were allegedly using Grindr.
The dating app has become part of normal gay culture among two million users worldwide, in the same way as Tinder is used by heterosexuals to hook up online.

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Longtime Walworth County judge retires, reflects on criminal justice system

WISCONSIN
Gazette Xtra

JONAH BELECKIS
Sunday, August 7, 2016

ELKHORN—Court cases are like puzzles, now-retired Walworth County Judge James Carlson says.

Some are easy to put together. Some are difficult.

Carlson, 72, of Whitewater, retired Monday after 37 years as a judge. He still remembers certain cases, and most of them were the difficult ones. …

Carlson remembers the Rev. Donald McGuire, a Jesuit priest from Illinois who was convicted in 2006 on five charges of indecent behavior with a child and sentenced to seven years in prison. After the case wrapped up, Carlson said, nearly 40 people came forward to say they had been molested.

Today, the story of priest sexual abuse is still in the news, particularly after the movie “Spotlight” won an Oscar for its portrayal of The Boston Globe’s investigation in the early 2000s.

Some of these ills of society have gotten better over time. Some have gotten worse.

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Preparing your kids to protect themselves from danger, abuse

SOUTH CAROLINA
WSPA

By Tony Cedrone
Published: August 6, 2016

GREENVILLE, SC (WSPA) – With the school year just days away, protecting your children from predators is important to all parents.

Just last weekend, Greenville County officials say a former campus pastor at Summitt Church in Greenville inappropriately touched and molested a 12-year-old at his home.

In a rare twist, investigators say James Briley called last Friday and admitted to committing the crime.

Now, experts want parents to talk to their kids about how to protect themselves around predators.

Suzy Cole with the Children’s Advocacy Center says, “Just like the safety rules about looking both ways before you cross a street, there are also safety rules about your body.”

Cole says it’s important for kids to know the difference between safe touching and unsafe touching, even if it seems harmless.

“If someone tickles you and it starts to hurt and you don’t like it, you tell them to stop and it stops right then,” says Cole.

Nowadays, Cole says, using old methods to teach kids about stranger danger doesn’t cut it, “more than 95% of the children we see here were not abused by a stranger but by somebody they know, usually somebody they love.”

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Radio personality charged with sexual abuse

KENTUCKY
The Independent

By MIKE JAMES The Independent

ASHLAND Kentucky State Police have charged a regional radio personality with first-degree sexual abuse in an ongoing investigation.

Timothy “Fig” Carper, 49, of Grayson was arrested Friday and taken to the Carter County Detention Center, according to the Kentucky State Police Ashland post.

Carper is a well-known sports broadcaster for WLGC.

He also is a former youth pastor for a Grayson church.

The warrant for his arrest was issued after a grand jury heard evidence and testimony July 22, according to state police.

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Sexual abuse priests omitted from directory

IRELAND
The Sunday Times

Justine McCarthy
August 7 2016
The Sunday Times

A Dublin diocesan priest who has self-published a book listing Catholic clergy in Dublin from 1900 to 2011 said he omitted priests convicted of child sexual abuse because he was concerned about data protection.

The names of notorious clerical abusers such as Ivan Payne, Tony Walsh, Patrick Hughes and Bill Carney, who died in the Midlands Prison last year, are missing from the book, entitled the Archbishops, Bishops and Priests Who Served in the Archdiocese of Dublin 1900 to 2011, compiled by J Anthony Gaughan.

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New suit over predator priest

CONNECTICUT
Republican-American

Cleric who served in Naugatuck named

BY MICHAEL DOOLING REPUBLICAN-AMERICAN

Suggestions of allegations of sexual abuse by a Naugatuck priest 50 years ago surfaced Thursday in the latest lawsuit filed against him in New Mexico, his home for decades until he fled the country to avoid legal action against him.

Arthur J. Perrault, the priest who served Naugatuck’s St. Francis Church in 1965, has been named in another lawsuit filed in the Second Judicial District Court in Albuquerque, New Mexico

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Maynooth is not the only casualty – the faithful are also being hurt

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah MacDonald
PUBLISHED
03/08/2016

The news that gardaí have told a former seminarian who alleges that he was sexually harassed by a member of staff in the National Seminary in Maynooth that they are taking his complaint seriously and that an investigation will be launched is significant in the latest chapter of the scandal.

A day after the Irish Independent reported the story of a man who made allegations of inappropriate behaviour at the seminary, he approached gardaí to make a preliminary statement about alleged harassment.

“They certainly felt that a couple of isolated incidents which I mentioned did warrant investigation by them, and would be deemed sexual assault,” he said.

“I will be meeting them next week in person to provide a written statement concerning the above.”
Later that day, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin described the atmosphere in the National Seminary in Maynooth as “poisonous”.

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We could all learn lessons from Maynooth scandal

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Donal Lynch
PUBLISHED
07/08/2016

‘So I suppose this makes me like Annie Murphy”, I said to the recently ex-seminarian sitting on the edge of my bed. He smiled wryly at me. This was the early 2000s, we were still very young, and post-coital banter felt like a strange kind of progress – gay sex in Ireland still had a furtive air to it. And every extra taboo we could violate – including a religious vow – made the whole thing even more exciting.

A relationship would not have been possible, even if we had wanted it. The years of pent-up sexual energy this man had accumulated had by now given way to even more years of reckless promiscuity. That began in the seminary itself – at least five of his classmates had been gay – but it quickly became untenable to stay there. Even then there was a tipping point for rumours.
After he left Maynooth, even by libertine gay male standards, his single-minded pursuit of new encounters was legendary. In the years after we first met there were tales of his life that seemed alternately swashbuckling and tragic.

Through the addictive fog of this behaviour, little glimmers of insight came to this man. He told me the years in the seminary had not made him like this. Joining it was supposed to have been a solution to an obsession. He had grown up in a world that had told him that his sexuality was bad. Like a lust-obsessed Victorian this shame and secrecy around sex had placed it at the centre of his life. The seminary seemed like the logical panacea. And yet it only made things worse. As Camille Paglia said of the church scandals in the US, “when the wires go underground they raise their voltage.”

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Gay sex storm in the seminary casts shadow on cloistered life

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Maeve Sheehan
PUBLISHED
07/08/2016

It seemed like tabloid heaven – a Catholic archbishop talking about a “gay culture” at the national seminary and rumours of student priests using gay dating app Grindr.

Archbishop of Dublin Diar- muid Martin explained why he had decided to pull his seminarians out of St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, to study in Rome instead.

“I just wasn’t happy with Maynooth,” he said last Monday after the Irish Independent brought the story into the national consciousness. “There seems to be an atmosphere of strange goings-on there – it seems like a quarrelsome place with anonymous letters being sent around.”

On RTE news on Wednesday he said the allegations in these letters included claims that students were on Grindr and that the authorities there were dismissing anyone who tried to complain.
He described a “poisonous” atmosphere in which anonymous letters flourished.

As one of four archbishops in Ireland, Dr Martin is a trustee of St Patrick’s College and was a recipient of these poison pen letters.

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August 6, 2016

Child abuse is far too complex for a single inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Guardian

Barbara Ellen

Since Dame Lowell Goddard became the third person to resign as chair of the independent inquiry into child abuse (IICA), much time and energy has been wasted denigrating her for “bailing”, and sniping about her salary, her lack of grasp of British law and the extended “holidays” at home in New Zealand.

Presumably at some point, it will be revealed exactly what happened. The only thing that matters right now is that her appointment has failed, as did then-home secretary Theresa May’s other appointments, Lady Elizabeth Butler-Sloss (strong establishment links, including a brother who was lord chancellor during the era being scrutinised), and Dame Fiona Woolf (accused of too close an association with the late Leon Brittan, who was being investigated). What a hot mess, and it’s not the only one.

The IICA was established, post-Savile, to investigate how public bodies and established institutions handled their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse. Now not only is a new chair needed, but so too arguably is a completely fresh approach. The inquiry has been widely criticised for becoming overwhelmingly broad in scope, complex, incoherent, impractical, and expensive. Reading about the IICA in detail is not only to invite a pounding headache, but also to understand why Lowell Goddard resigned, and why there’s not a stampede to take over the job.

A recurring criticism is that the inquiry has become so overblown and complicated as to doom it to eventual failure. It’s a fair point. Then again, what did people expect? This was always going to be a wide-ranging, multi-faceted, decades-spanning historical inquiry, requiring painstaking investigation, involving personal testimonies from multitudes of abuse survivors and third parties. What screams “quick and simple” about any of that?

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Mutinous lawyers toppled head of sex abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sunday Times

James Gillespie and James Lyons
August 7 2016
The Sunday Times

Senior officials and lawyers in the child sex abuse inquiry had been threatening to make a declaration of no confidence in its chairwoman before she resigned abruptly last week.

According to sources in the inquiry, Dame Lowell Goddard quit after there was a “terminal” loss of confidence in her by her legal team.

She was also accused of behaving in an “autocratic” manner towards staff, being dismissive of the four panel members who sat with her and failing to grasp key legal issues.

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Child abuse inquiry judge Dame Lowell Goddard did not resign – she was ‘sacked’, legal sources reveal

UNITED KINGDOM
Mail on Sunday

By DAVID ROSE FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

Dame Lowell Goddard, the New Zealand judge who resigned on Thursday as chair of the £100 million Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), did not leave her post voluntarily but was effectively fired, The Mail on Sunday has learned.

Dame Lowell, appointed by then-Home Secretary Theresa May just over a year ago, had already lost the confidence of senior staff and members of the inquiry panel, according to two well-placed legal sources.

After she gave a stumbling performance at a preliminary hearing on the case of former Labour politician Greville Janner, when she appeared not to understand her own legal powers, this was picked up by Mrs May’s successor as Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, and her advisers.

The final straw was the disclosure – prompted in part by questions from this newspaper – that in her first year in the job, she spent 30 days on leave and 44 days supposedly ‘working’ in Australia, although in all that time she held only two meetings with members of a child abuse inquiry underway there. A Home Office spokeswoman last night insisted it was ‘her decision’ to offer her resignation. But asked whether this had been suggested to Dame Lowell by officials because her position was becoming untenable, she refused to comment.

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Strange goings on at St Patrick’s College

IRELAND
The Sunday Times (UK)

Justine McCarthy
August 7 2016
The Sunday Times

Diarmuid Martin, the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin, was aware of gay sex rumours circulating about the national seminary at St Patrick’s College in Maynooth when he received a signed letter from a woman last May. She said she was writing on behalf of an unnamed seminarian who feared a backlash if he went public. She urged the prelate to take action to stop student priests’ promiscuous homosexuality, including use of the gay dating app, Grindr.

Martin replied that, if what the woman was alleging was true, somebody must come forward with information.

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Trainee priest sex claim ‘untrue’

IRELAND
The Sunday Times (UK)

Justine McCarthy
August 7 2016
The Sunday Times

A widely-reported allegation that a Maynooth seminarian discovered two student priests having sex together in the college was untrue, according to a man who brought the complaint to the seminary authorities.

Mainstream and Catholic media have reported that a seminarian, who has remained anonymous, was expelled after he reported finding two students in bed together.

Francis McLoughlin, who says he lodged the complaint with a fellow student on behalf of the anonymous seminarian, told The Sunday Times he now accepts it was a “misunderstanding”.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Charles M. DeGuire

MISSOURI
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Charles M. DeGuire was ordained for the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 1934. He assisted in parishes in University City and St. Louis, and pastored parishes in Folk, St. Mary’s, and St. Louis. He retired in 1976 and died in 1982. DeGuire was accused in a lawsuit filed June 21, 2016 of sexually abusing an altar boy beginning in 1967, when the boy was a 10-yr-old 5th grader, and continuing until the boy was in 8th grade.

Ordained: 1934
Died: April 20, 1982

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Judge who deserted child abuse probe ‘can stay in her taxpayer-funded £110,000-a-year London house and is entitled to a £90k payoff despite resigning with immediate effect’

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By SAM GREENHILL and CHRISTIAN GYSIN and CHRIS GREENWOOD FOR THE DAILY MAIL and BEN TUFFT FOR MAILONLINE

Dame Lowell Goddard, who quit as head of the nationwide child abuse inquiry, could be allowed to stay in her £110,000-a-year luxury London apartment, despite resigning with immediate effect.

Lawyers from the Home Office are poring over the New Zealand judge’s contract, but it is thought she is entitled to a three month notice period, with taxpayers footing the bill for her residence and pay.

The former chair of the landmark inquiry could also receive up to £90,000 in severance pay – as well as being able to stay in her Knightsbridge apartment for three months.

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‘I thought I was the only one’: survivor of elite prep school sexual abuse speaks out

UNITED STATES
The Guardian (UK)

Joanna Walters
@Joannawalters13
Saturday 6 August 2016

Anne Scott has negotiated with Burmese generals, government ministers, Israeli military chiefs and fighters in the Gaza Strip, but this was her toughest battle yet.

“For about four months I was having full-on 2am panic attacks,” she said.

She was referring to a time earlier this year when she was negotiating with her illustrious New England boarding school into agreeing to a settlement with up to 30 men and women, herself included, who were subjected to rape and sexual abuse by staff as teens.

On Wednesday, the elite St George’s School in Middletown, Rhode Island, which was founded in 1896 and has taught Astors, Vanderbilts and a Bush, among others, issued a statement in conjunction with Scott and her lawyers in which the school agreed to pay compensation to victims.

It had previously apologized and pledged to learn from “what happened”, after Scott broke a 25-year silence to go public last December.

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DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Time to rethink the £100m abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

What a farce!

As Dame Lowell Goddard becomes the third chairman in two years to resign from Theresa May’s child abuse inquiry (or was she pushed?), this ill-fated exercise is once again up in the air.

The Mail has deep compassion for victims of paedophilia, who often bear mental scars throughout their lives.

But with the departure of this deeply unimpressive New Zealand judge, who spent three of her first 12 months in the £500,000-a-year job on holiday or overseas, it is surely time to take stock.

Leave aside problems in finding a competent chairman with no links to Establishment figures under suspicion.

From the outset, the inquiry has been blighted by its dauntingly wide brief to cover more than 60 years and investigate dozens of institutions.

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Oregon Minister, kids camp director accused of making child pornography

OREGON
KATU

[with video]

by Kellee Azar, KATU NewsFriday, August 5th 2016

PORTLAND, Ore. — A minister is locked up in the Multnomah County jail, accused of producing child pornography in Colorado.

U.S. Marshals will be transferring James Parkhurst, a United Methodist Church Deacon and Executive Director of Camp and Retreat Programs for the Oregon-Idaho Conference of the United Methodist Church , into federal custody for the case that originates out of the District of Colorado Federal Court.

According to the church’s communication director, Greg Nelson, Parkhurst went through an extensive background check before being hired.

“We have a process of screening employees and volunteers that are part of our program, he passed that screening. We also have processes to protect children or vulnerable adults when they are working in our camp or churches,” Communications Director Greg Nelson said.

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There’s only one way to fix this child abuse debacle – listen to the victims

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Deborah Orr

Dame Lowell Goddard, brought in to head the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse hasn’t said much about why she has resigned, but criticism has appeared in the media of the amount of time she had spent abroad or on holiday. Maybe she’s unfeasibly thin-skinned. Perhaps she has been looking for some time for a plausible reason to bolt. MPs who yesterday demanded an explanation may get to the truth.

Still, a year is good going for the New Zealander. The first appointee, Elizabeth Butler-Sloss, lasted less than a week. The second, Fiona Woolf, didn’t quite make two months. Butler-Sloss resigned because it emerged that her brother, Michael Havers, had been attorney general during failed investigations three decades ago. Woolf resigned because she had social links to the family of Leon Brittan, whose own role at various times would necessarily be part of the investigation.

It’s no coincidence that the inquiry has burned through three chairs already. The demands of the role dictate that any suitably experienced British head will be part of the establishment the inquiry is investigating. Yet it’s hard to see how anyone who isn’t British would have enough understanding of the general culture to grasp the enormity and complexity of the task. Or even grasp quite what the task actually is.

Sure, you don’t have to have been a child in the 1970s to understand quite how ruthlessly Jimmy Savile dominated an enabling media, or what a self-deprecating renaissance man Clement Freud appeared to be, or what a trusted politician Cyril Smith was. But it helps. These men were at the heart of the establishment for most of their adult lives. And there were many more, some now convicted, others dead, and others, probability dictates, still sauntering away from justice.

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JUDGE AND FURY Workshy child abuse probe chief Dame Lowell Goddard gets to keep free flat

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sun

BY NICK PISA 6th August 2016,

THE £360,000-a-year judge who quit Britain’s child abuse inquiry will keep her £2,000-a-week grace and favour home.

Dame Lowell Goddard, 67, who quit on Thursday, could also get a £90,000 pay-off.

She was appointed in April 2015 after first Baroness Butler-Sloss quit a week into the job and then Dame Fiona Woolf left after little over a month.

Yet she heard no evidence into claims of abuse from the Church, Westminster and the judiciary.
She also spent more than 44 days in Australia and New Zealand on “inquiry business”.

Yet in that time she had just two meetings with officials from Australia’s Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse during 2015 and 2016.

As well as her pay, her £110,000 rent on a flat and her bills and driver were covered by taxpayers.

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Maynooth is ‘living in the past’, says Fr D’Arcy

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Ciara Treacy
PUBLISHED
06/08/2016

One of Ireland’s best-known clerics has said the national seminary in Maynooth is “living in the past”, but added that it has wider problems.

Fr Brian D’Arcy said the seminary’s issues were broader than a “couple of guys in some form of homosexual contact”.

He also argued that the seminary draws students who want the security of traditional views.

Asked if he thought the issue surrounding St Patrick’s College was one of promiscuity or homosexuality, the Fermanagh-based priest said: “I don’t think it’s either. Honestly, I do not know. There are, at most, a couple of guys involved in some form of homosexual contact.

“The issue is that the Archbishop feels that Maynooth is not suitable to educate priests and that is a major issue.

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Vatican’s man an enigma among his own

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Michael Kelly

06/08/2016

No man has done more to ensure that the Catholic Church in Ireland retains credibility than Archbishop Diarmuid Martin. It’s a reputation that he has sometimes paid a heavy price for, but also one that he’s been loath to claim credit for.

A career Vatican diplomat, Martin (71) was thrust into the maelstrom in 2003 when Pope John Paul II handpicked him to return to his native Dublin to manage a Church in crisis. Cardinal Desmond Connell – then at the helm of the country’s largest diocese – had been mortally wounded by the punishing revelations in Mary Raftery’s ‘Cardinal Secrets’ documentary which exposed a corrupt culture that put the avoidance of scandal and the reputation of the Church ahead of the needs of children.

To be fair to Connell, he had acted to remove abuser-priests from ministry, but, crucially, he had been lax in reporting suspected abusers to the civil authorities.

Rome knew that Dublin needed urgent attention and it found it in the Pope’s representative to Geneva, Diarmuid Martin. From his arrival, Martin pledged full co-operation with a judicial inquiry which had been established to investigate the handling of abuse allegations. He struck up an instant rapport with survivors who, before his arrival, had felt their concerns fell on deaf ears.

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Breda O’Brien: Negativity around Irish church not the norm worldwide

IRELAND
Irish Times

Breda O’Brien

World Youth Day (WYD), an event instituted by St John Paul II as a regular gathering of young people, had about two million participants this year. In the US, more than one-third of seminarians in training cite attendance at a WYD as an influence on their vocation.

You could say it’s because anyone attending a World Youth Day (oddly named because the official programme is six days long) is likely to be open to the idea of a religious vocation, but pilgrims are a very varied bunch. They range from those who are at best not actively antagonistic to the church, to those who have a very deep Catholic commitment.

However, at WYD, vocations are sparked in part because they will see and interact with lots and lots of young religious and priests, the majority of whom seem very happy and fulfilled.

Most young people will be drawn to marriage rather than a religious or other vocation, but for the minority who have a different calling it must be so discouraging to come home from WYD to be greeted by another alleged scandal in Maynooth.

When Archbishop Diarmuid Martin gave Maynooth a vote of no confidence by withdrawing his three clerical students, presumably it was after trying to effect reforms along with his episcopal colleagues.

Ironically, the students will be going instead to the Pontifical College in Rome, which was itself the subject of a heavily critical report in 2012 after what is called an apostolic visitation, in this case headed by Cardinal Timothy Dolan.

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Crisis in Maynooth: Growing disquiet about scandal won’t just go away

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Nicola Anderson

PUBLISHED
06/08/2016

‘The dogs in the street know Maynooth in its current state is not fit for purpose… this is my experience of Maynooth. What have our bishops to fear in thoroughly reforming our national seminary?”

These words were those of a young student at the national seminary.

He loves the Church, he explains – but what he has met with in Maynooth is a formation structure that prefers him to be “worldly, to be just one of the lads, to be a ‘yes man’ who’ll not offer the challenge of the Gospel to the modern world”.

His words were spoken by an actor on RTÉ radio – but there can be little doubt that the authorities in Maynooth have already figured out the identity of the young seminarian behind the sentiment.

If the situation at the national seminary is as many claim it to be, it seems possible that he will soon be approached and advised that his vocation is not working out. But his removal will not quell a disquiet that has mounted to a deafening hum in the wake of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin’s announcement that he would be transferring three Dublin seminarians to Rome because of “strange goings-on” at Maynooth.

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Archbishop Martin’s mission to jump-start Church being stalled by myopic clericalism

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Martina Devlin

06/08/2016

No room at the inn for priesthood candidates if you’re a woman, or a man who can’t take a vow of celibacy – and move along please if you’re a practising gay. What a chilly Christian family the Catholic Church has let itself become. No wonder there are only 55 trainee priests at Maynooth.

The Catholic Church has been stalled at a crossroads for some considerable time, with dwindling vocations and shrinking congregations. Those who seek to jump-start the institution – such as Archbishop Diarmuid Martin – face obstacles from a doggedly conservative bloc.

This week, we see him isolated among the Irish hierarchy in his stance on Maynooth, with nobody in the Church’s management class willing to support him. The Irish Church is inherently traditionalist, and Archbishop Martin (who trained in Rome and spent most of his career there as a diplomat) is not part of that clerical club.

However, the Irish people trust the Archbishop of Dublin and admire his sincerity. That tells its own story.

Perhaps the bishops and archbishops genuinely disagree with his decision to send the Dublin diocese’s trainee priests to Rome rather than Ireland’s national seminary. Equally, it’s possible they are closing ranks and playing old school politics.

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Secrecy that hovers over Maynooth reflects lack of transparency in clerical abuse scandal

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Gina Menzies
PUBLISHED
06/08/2016

The Maynooth story is symptomatic of the challenges facing the Catholic Church and its future direction. Both Archbishop Diarmuid Martin and Father Brendan Hoban of the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) have used the same phrase – a “closed, strange world” – to describe Maynooth Seminary. And the fallout is much wider than rumours circulating about inappropriate sexual activities in the Seminary.

The secrecy that hovers over Maynooth reflects the lack of transparency in the handling of clerical child abuse. Are the people of God not entitled to know how their future priests are being trained to minister? Those who struggle to remain in the Church are ill served by the current confusion and lack of leadership.

The issues of clerical formation and theological orthodoxy in Maynooth form the current battleground between two visions for the future of the Catholic Church in Ireland. The ongoing battle is between those who seek a reform of the institutional Church in accordance with the documents of Vatican II, and those who believe that the way forward is a return to and restoration of the pre-Vatican II model of the Church.

The phrase Roma locuta; causa finita est (Rome has spoken; the cause is finished), coined by St Augustine in the fifth century, underpinned a simpler, rule-bound world in which all decisions were taken within the Vatican circle and unquestioning obedience was required of the faithful.

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Maynooth’s gay cloister an ‘open secret in church’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah MacDonald
PUBLISHED
06/08/2016

The gay culture at the national seminary in Maynooth has been an open secret for decades, according to former student priests.

A former St Patrick’s College seminarian is the latest to claim the existence of a gay culture within the seminary has been well known in church circles for decades, and that the trustees of Maynooth have long been aware of it. The man, who studied in Maynooth in the 1990s, said there were gay cliques operating within Maynooth and heterosexual students were pressured to say nothing.

And a leading expert on religious affairs has warned the hierarchy that churchgoers are “entitled to know” how their future priests are being trained.

Writing in today’s Irish Independent, theologian Gina Menzies says: “The secrecy hovering over Maynooth reflects the lack of transparency in the handling of clerical child abuse.”

Meanwhile, the Maynooth controversy will be discussed with college management at the autumn general meeting of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference in Maynooth in September. The meeting will be attended by Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin.

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Irish Catholic Church Leaders To Meet Over Maynooth Controversy

IRELAND
98 FM

[with audio]

The Irish hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church will meet next month to discuss the recent controversy surrounding St Patrick’s seminary.

It follows allegations of a so-called gay sub-culture among trainee priests at the college, as reports emerged some seminarians were found using a gay dating app.

The Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, has opted to send three seminarians to train in Rome over Maynooth, while the college continues to refute the allegations.

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Maynooth stand-off symptom of deeper malaise in Catholic Church

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Kim Bielenberg
PUBLISHED
06/08/2016

The hugely popular gay dating app Grindr is banned, or blocked, in countries such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia. This week, the embattled Irish Catholic hierarchy would be forgiven for wishing that it was also outlawed in Maynooth, the location of Ireland’s only seminary.

Grindr boasts that it is the world’s largest gay social network, enabling men to see pictures of “100 guys on a location-based grid … chat, make a date, and have some fun, anytime, any place”.

The Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, this week announced that he was not sending students of the priesthood to the 200-year-old seminary at Maynooth. Part of the reason given was that some students in the seminary were allegedly using Grindr.

The dating app has become part of normal gay culture among two million users worldwide, in the same way as Tinder is used by heterosexuals to hook up online.

But in the eyes of Archbishop Martin, the app was “inappropriate for seminarians” as it was “something which would be fostering promiscuous sexuality”.

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Councillors call on Government to “get a grip” on child abuse inquiry that will look at Oxford

UNITED KINGDOM
Oxford Times

Matt Oliver, Local government reporter. Call me on 01865 425498 / @OxMailMattO

THE Government needs to “get a grip” on the national inquiry into child sexual abuse after the latest judge in charge of it quit, councillors have said.

Ian Hudspeth, leader of Oxfordshire County Council, raised concerns that Dame Lowell Goddard’s departure from the investigation would mean lessons learnt in Oxford from Operation Bullfinch would not be shared with the rest of the country quickly.

The landmark operation by police and social services uncovered the rape and abuse of six young girls by seven men in an organised gang, an area the inquiry is expected to look at.

Mr Hudspeth said: “Here, a key part of tackling these vile atrocities was the joint working that developed between authorities to catch things at an earlier stage and stamp it out.

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Protecting the young is more important than prosecuting ghosts

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Editorial

Dame Lowell Goddard has stepped down as chairman of the public inquiry into child sex abuse, the third person to do so – triggering a desperate hunt to find a replacement. The stated motivation of the inquiry is a noble one. Child abuse is a heinous crime and has been shielded by institutional failure. Victims and their families want the justice they are owed.

The thirst for endless public inquiries is unhelpful. Contemporary victims are rarely rescued by long, expensive discussions of hindsight that can feel like a prosecution of past decades.

But, as Charles Moore writes, there is good reason to pause and think before proceeding with this particular inquest. It is no coincidence that governments have struggled to find an effective chairman. The indictment of the entire establishment by some campaigners has meant that any person with almost any connection to that establishment has been deemed unacceptable – and judges, generally, are well-connected people.

This problem speaks to the enormous, unwieldy scope of the investigation. It is unlimited to any particular period of history or part of British society, and can effectively put ghosts on trial. Accused people are normally allowed some opportunity to defend themselves. The dead obviously cannot do that, which means that this inquiry operates within a reality well beyond the normal bounds of British justice.

The thirst for endless public inquiries is unhelpful. Contemporary victims are rarely rescued by long, expensive discussions of hindsight that can feel like a prosecution of past decades. There are terrible things happening right now among the living that need to be addressed – one example is the recent child abuse scandal in Rotherham that exposed failings within local government and police. Enough talk – get on with the job of protecting the young.

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Diarmuid Martin remains a maverick among the clergy

IRELAND
Irish Times

Archbishop’s criticism of Maynooth seminary latest example of individuality

Patsy McGarry

A friend resorted to the Belgian songwriter Jacques Brel this week in response to all the talk of “strange goings-on” at the national seminary in Maynooth. “Si j’étais Dieu en les voyant prier/ Je crois que je perdrais la foi.” Or: “If I were God seeing them pray/I believe that I would lose my faith.” It was not an untypical reaction.

More typical was the perplexed guy at a train station on Thursday morning. “What’s he at?” he roared at me from a platform across the tracks, referring to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, “Is he mad? He sounds like a drunk in a pub: ‘I don’t like this place. . .the atmosphere. . .I’m outta here!’.”

He believed the Archbishop was just throwing a tantrum. From regular observation over the past 13 years, since his arrival back in Dublin in 2003, this reporter has yet to witness Archbishop Martin throw a tantrum despite some trying circumstances.

It wasn’t always so. In his highly entertaining 2008 memoir Good Times and Bad the Archbishop’s only sibling, older brother Séamus, recalls how the younger “Diarmuid had not been the ‘holy’ type of person one associated with those who had a vocation for the priesthood. As a child he might have been far more accurately described as a ‘holy terror’. He was noted throughout the extended family for throwing tantrums – in a family in which tantrum-throwing had been brought to a fine art.”

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‘Church knew of gay culture for decades’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah MacDonald
PUBLISHED
06/08/2016

A former Maynooth seminarian claims senior figures in the Catholic Church have been aware of allegations of a gay culture in Maynooth for decades.

The man, who is now married with children, studied in Maynooth in the 1990s. He said the existence of a gay culture within the seminary has been well known within church circles for decades and the trustees of Maynooth have long been aware of it.

‘Sean’ did not want to be named publicly, but he is known to the Irish Independent.

He said even back in the 1990s there were gay cliques operating within Maynooth and heterosexual students tended to be isolated or pressured into keeping their heads down and saying nothing about what they witnessed. Many left the seminary and married.

The former trainee priest questioned why Archbishop Diarmuid Martin was acting now on Maynooth.

The former seminarian also highlighted how the Murphy Report, which investigated the mishandling of allegations of clerical sexual abuse in the archdiocese of Dublin, reported on the death of a Dublin priest in a gay sauna.

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Rev. Schondelmeyer keeps pushing for change

OHIO
Toledo Blade

By TK Barger | BLADE RELIGION EDITOR
Published on Aug. 6, 2016

When the Rev. Kristopher Schondelmeyer, 33, was early in his high school years, he already felt the call to Presbyterian ministry and been in conversation with the head pastor of his church in Sedalia, Mo., about it.

“My family has been Presbyterian for generations,” said Pastor Schondelmeyer, who has been associate pastor at Christ Presbyterian Church since 2010. “This is in my blood; if you cut me, I’ll bleed Presbyterian blue. This is who I am.”

It was very surprising, therefore, that in 2014 the pastor would sue the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) at the national, regional, and local levels in response to his having been sexually assaulted by a certified lay pastor when he was 17.

But on June 22 at the church’s national general assembly in Portland, Ore., the stated clerk, who is the top clergy official, interrupted business to formally apologize to Pastor Schondelmeyer on behalf of the church, after the lawsuit was settled in 2014 and 2015.

“It seemed the right thing to do, to publicly acknowledge this,” said the Rev. Gradye Parsons, who has since retired from the role as stated clerk. “It was really a lack of public acknowledgment that made this all the harder for Kris to get justice.”

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Child porn charges for former teacher from Florham Park, authorities say

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

William Westhoven, @WWesthoven August 5, 2016

Taught at Mt. Carmel, Boonton, and St. Vincent DePaul, Stirling

A Florham Park man who taught at parochial schools in Boonton and Long Hill was arrested Thursday and charged with producing and distributing images of child sexual abuse, according to U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman.

Colin M. Skeele, 30, also faces charges of enticing a minor to engage in criminal sexual activity, according to court documents that include excerpts of shocking dialogue transcribed from Skype messages between Skeele and an unnamed individual, who agreed to produce and transmit photos and live videos of children as young as 7-years-old engaging in sexual acts with a 1-year-old.

Arrested by agents of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations, Skeele was detained without bail by U.S. Magistrate Court Judge Joseph A. Dickson. He is charged by complaint with two counts of production of child pornography, one count of enticement of a minor to engage in criminal sexual activity and one count of distribution of child pornography.

Court documents state Skeele was employed as a teacher in a Boonton parochial school from June 2009 to about June 2010, and also taught in a parochial school in the Stirling section of Long Hill from about February to June of 2012. He also was seasonally employed at a boys summer camp in Hardwick from 2004 to about 2011.

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Ex-Old Mission School vice principal responds after son’s molestation arrest

CALIFORNIA
The Tribune

BY MATT FOUNTAIN
mfountain@thetribunenews.com

The mother of a Paso Robles man accused of molesting 18 young children spoke out Friday, days after she lost her job as vice principal of a San Luis Obispo Catholic school, claiming that she was not aware of accusations against her son.

“Had Jason displayed behavior that would have led me to think him capable of hurting children, I would have turned him in myself,” Margaret Porter of Paso Robles wrote in an email Friday. She also castigated “the local blogosphere” for its treatment of her after her adult son’s arrest.

Jason Robert Porter, 44, was arrested in June and then arrested again last month on suspicion of molesting 18 children and creating and possessing child pornography. The criminal complaint filed July 19 by the San Luis Obispo County District Attorney’s Office lists 18 children ranging in age from 1 to 10 years old.

Porter has pleaded not guilty to 31 charges and remains in San Luis Obispo County Jail in lieu of $7 million bail. He is due back in court for a pretrial hearing Monday.

On Tuesday, Tina Ballantyne, principal of Old Mission Catholic School in San Luis Obispo, sent an email to parents of students there, saying Margaret Porter would no longer be employed at the school, where she has been vice principal since June 2015.

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Judge approves $500,000 in Duluth diocese legal bills

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By Tom Olsen on Aug 5, 2016

Legal fees are continuing to mount for the Diocese of Duluth in wake of a $4.9 million verdict in a child sexual abuse case that led to a bankruptcy filing last year.

On Thursday, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel approved payments totalling more than $500,000 to five law firms.

The diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in December, and a judge is required to sign off on all operating expenses while it remains under court protection. The payments will compensate the firms for work completed through the end of May.

The vast majority of the funds are going to four law firms retained by the diocese, while approximately $62,000 is going to compensate the attorneys for a creditors’ committee, which represents the interests of 125 people who have filed child sexual abuse claims against the diocese.

The diocese said it was forced to enter bankruptcy protection following the major verdict handed down by a St. Paul jury in November. The case was the first to go to trial under the Minnesota Child Victims Act, which temporarily lifted the statute of limitations for victims of decades-old abuse cases to file suit.

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Maynooth seminary ‘a place of psychological abuse’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Three former seminarians share their experiences at St Patrick’s College, Maynooth over the past decade. They describe an atmosphere of ‘psychological abuse’, a flawed complaints process, and ‘a lot’ of sexual activity

Patsy McGarry

A pattern of seemingly ongoing shambolic investigation into complaints by seminarians at St Patrick’s College Maynooth is a disquieting feature of recent revelations from Ireland’s national seminary.

It echoes an observation from the 2005 Ferns report which found, concerning another inquiry into complaints at the college by senior seminarians in the 1980s, that “by any standard the concerns as communicated by the seminarians and expressed by Fr McGinnity were inadequately investigated”.

This was a reference to the 1984 bishops’ investigation which followed expressions of concern presented to the bishops by then senior dean Fr Gerard McGinnity, acting on behalf of senior seminarians, about conduct of then Maynooth vice president Msgr Michael Ledwith.

Subsequently Fr McGinnity was removed from Maynooth and Msgr Ledwith became president. He stood down in 1994 after making a confidential settlement with a minor who had claimed being sexually abused by him.

On the treatment of Fr McGinnity the Ferns report observed “punitive actions of that nature could only deter bone fide complaints to church authorities which should be valued as providing information for the control of those having access to young people.”

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Former Guam priest says it’s ‘possible’ he abused boys

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

Guam’s Catholic Church has apologised to victims of a former priest who told local media on Thursday that it was “possible” that he abused altar boys there in the 1950s.

On Monday, Leo Tudela, 73, told senators that Father Brouillard and two other church members sexually abused him when he was an altar boy in Guam starting in 1956. He was speaking at a public hearing on a bill that would lift a statute of limitations that prevents lawsuits being filed for historical abuses.

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai issued the statement of apology after Father Louis Brouillard, 95, told the media he regrets the abuses and was seeking forgiveness from his victims.

“With the news that Father Louis Brouillard, a priest who served on Guam confessed to having abused altar boys on Guam in the 1950s, I convey my deepest apologies and that of the entire Church to Leo Tudela and all other persons who were also victimised,” Archbishop Hon said.

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Guam Catholic priest, 95, says he was told to say prayers for molesting boys

GUAM
New York Daily News

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Saturday, August 6, 2016

HAGATNA, Guam — A 95-year-old Catholic priest admitted to sexually abusing boys decades ago on Guam. He said he confessed his sins to other priests on the island at the time but none told him to specifically stop.

Instead, the Rev. Louis Brouillard said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press on Saturday morning that the other priests told him to “do better” along with regular penance, such as saying Hail Mary prayers.

Brouillard served in Guam from the 1940s through the 1970s, teaching at San Vicente and Father Duenas Memorial schools while he was a priest. He said he molested “a couple of boys” during that time.

However, when pressed on how many boys he might have abused, Brouillard said: “I have no idea. Maybe 20.”

“At that time, when I was that age, I got the impression that kids liked it, so I went ahead. But now of course, I know it’s wrong and I’m paying for it,” Brouillard said.

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August 5, 2016

Upstate pastor called sex assault center to report sex crime, director says

SOUTH CAROLINA
WYFF

GREENVILLE, S.C. —The Upstate pastor accused of inappropriately touching a 12-year-old girl called an Upstate center for sexual assault and child-abuse survivors to report he committed a crime against a child, according to the center’s executive director.

James Brian Briley is charged with criminal sexual conduct, the warrant said.

Deputies said Briley was the campus pastor at Summit Church on Rutherford Road in Greenville. A church leader said Briley was the pastor for four years and has been terminated from his position. (Scroll to the bottom of this story for a full statement from the church officials)

Police said he also worked at the Frazee Dream Center in the past. An official from the center told WYFF News 4 that Briley worked at the center seven years ago.

The executive director of the Julie Valentine Center told WYFF News 4’s Corey Davis that Briley called the center’s hotline at 9 p.m. Monday and said he committed a crime against a child. Shauna Galloway-Williams said Briley was very detailed about what happened with the girl.

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Pastor reported his own child sex crime, center says

SOUTH CAROLINA
WSPA

GREENVILLE, SC (WSPA) – A center that provides services for sex assault and child abuse victims says a pastor reported his child sex crime to them.

James Brian Briley, 54, is charged with criminal sexual conduct with a minor by the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputies say he inappropriately touched and molested the 12-year-old victim at his home on July 31.

Shauna Galloway Williams, executive director of the Julie Valentine Center, says that they received a call from James Brian Briley on Friday evening.

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Rockland’s Horowitz not only rabbi threatened by child molester

NEW YORK/ISRAEL
The Journal News

Adrienne Sanders and Lee Higgins, lhiggins2@lohud.com August 5, 2016

The Rockland rabbi being sued for tweeting about a child molester’s whereabouts is not the only child advocate the sex offender has attempted to silence using Israeli courts.

Yona Weinberg threatened to sue Rabbi Daniel Eidensohn for defamation in May, spurring the psychologist and anti-abuse activist to immediately remove all mention of the convicted sex offender from his blog. Both are based in Israel.

The action comes a year after Weinberg filed a defamation suit against Monsey’s Rabbi Yakov Horowitz, a case that is set for trial in November.

“This is a classic example of the sex offender as a bully,” Eidensohn told the Journal News/lohud.com in an email. “He didn’t say to remove particular items that he felt were false or misleading — he said everything.”

Meanwhile, Weinberg responded to The Journal News/Lohud story published earlier story this week with declarations that he was not being pursued by law enforcement and that he is being unfairly harassed. Weinberg moved to Israel from Brooklyn as he was being sought on a new assault charge, The Journal News/lohud reported.

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Frum Watch as a Replacement for Failed Messiah

UNITED STATES
Frum Follies

The February buyout of Failed Messiah by Diversified Holdings left a gap. For almost 12 years, its previous proprietor, Shmarya (Scott) Rosenberg, kept tabs on all the misdeeds of the orthodox world mostly by locating and aggregating news from other sources, and sometimes with original investigation and reporting. His sources included public professional media, blogs, kol korehs (rabbinical proclamations), pashkavilim (flyers, often anonymous), and other leaked documents.

The orthodox world, especially its Haredi segment, does not distribute information that can embarrass it, except in the rarest and most unavoidable circumstances. So those wanting to understand its happenings benefited from Shmarya’s work. It now seems clear that the new owners of Failed Messiah bought it to shut down its criticism. In spite of early promises to continue to cover sex abuse problems, they have done zilch. However, at least the old posts are still up. Should they delete them, they are mostly copied over on the Internet Archive. Just plug in the no-longer working link from FM or any other source, and it will show up if it is on the Archive.

Frum Watch, a FaceBook page attempts to fill that gap and they do a pretty good job at the aggregating function. In fact, I would say they do a better job than Failed Messiah. There is less needless inflammatory language. They have a commenting policy prohibiting bigotry towards any group and they enforce it. They are a collective, including some Hebrew and Yiddish fluent members who occasionally translate and in any event annotate or synopsize material from non-English sources. They seem to post a good half a dozen or more stories a day. There is no muss and fuss. Sometimes they let the story title speak for itself. Sometimes they briefly introduce it. Sometimes, when needed, or when they have more to say, they add to it.

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The seminary and the gay scandal: Why Ireland is talking about Maynooth seminary and its priests this week

IRELAND
Irish Post

August 5, 2016, By Erica Doyle Higgins

EARLIER this week Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said he was “unhappy” with activities alleged to be taking place at Ireland’s national seminary.

The Catholic clergyman also said he would be removing his priests-in-training from the Maynooth-based college and instead sending them to Rome.

The Archbishop’s comments come amidst anonymous allegations of misconduct and gay sexual activity at the Co. Kildare-based seminary, which is home to 55 priests-in-training.

Once noted as the oldest seminary in the world, St. Patrick’s College is this week at the centre of a series of controversial claims.

When contacted by The Irish Post both Maynooth seminary and The Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference said they would be making no further comment on the matter.

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Now Dame Lowell has quit, the great child abuse inquiry should stop too

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

CHARLES MOORE
5 AUGUST 2016

It is over two years ago that Theresa May, then the home secretary, announced that she would set up the great child abuse inquiry.

First, it was to be the Butler-Sloss Inquiry, but Lady Butler-Sloss resigned almost immediately because some objected to the fact that her brother had been Attorney General in the Eighties (“establishment cover-up”).

Then, for a few weeks, it was the Woolf Inquiry, but Fiona Woolf resigned because she admitted to having dinner with Lord Brittan, against whom lurid child abuse allegations had been made (“establishment conspiracy”).

A desperate Mrs May then looked to the other side of the world, and found Justice Lowell Goddard in New Zealand.

From February last year, it became the Goddard Inquiry. At the time, Dame Lowell warned that an inquiry “which does not have achievable goals cannot deliver”, but she still took the job.

On Thursday, Dame Lowell resigned, speaking of the inquiry’s “legacy of failure” and adding that “with hindsight it would have been better to have started completely afresh”.

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Why didn’t Protestants didn’t try to score anti-Catholic points during the Sexual Abuse Scandal?

UNITED STATES
Daffey Thoughts

August 5, 2016 by Dave Griffey

Easy. We knew it happened in our churches, too. The problem with the Catholic abuse scandal that set it apart from almost all other scandals was the appearance of a vast network of systemic cover up and intimidation. Except for a few well documented cases, most abuse revelations didn’t seem so widely hidden. In our cases, the scandals were dealt with on a local level, often quickly, discreetly, and without involving outside authorities. That is how it was usually handled in most organizations. In some denominations there might be more bureaucratic wrangling. But on the whole, there wasn’t a great number of incarcerations accompanying these accusations, unless it was a particularly egregious case.

Take a church I served at in Florida in the early 90s as an example. I was an associate minister. We had several associates and part time ministers helping the pastor. The congregation decided that the youth group needed a minister. So we hired one. All seemed to be going well at first, until reports started trickling in that something was seriously wrong. Youngsters were being hit on by the youth leader. Several girls came forward and said that the youth minster had made sexual advances. After inquiries and talking to the minister in question, it was decided the charges were valid. No police were called, however. Instead, we asked the youth leader if she could leave. That’s right, she. Breaking from the media template, she was a spunky, energetic young woman hired on to lead our growing youth ministry. And it wasn’t the young boys she was hitting on. Certainly not the image we conjure when we think of the abuse scandal.

But that was how we did it. That’s how schools did it back in the day. And it wasn’t some fluke. I ministered in several states through the years, and at no point was I in a district where something like this didn’t happen. Then again, I wasn’t in a school district where it didn’t happen, or in a town where at least one doctor or another wasn’t similarly accused. The point is, when the news of the scandal erupted across the international press, most Protestant leaders I knew kept quiet because we knew the problem was in no way confined to the Catholic Church. That was ridiculous to think. The massive, coordinated cover up that appeared to accompany the scandal was likely the result of the Church’s own institutional structure.

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Sussex Police apology over Bishop George Bell affair

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Sussex Police is to “apologise” for distress caused to the niece of Bishop George Bell by a media release about alleged abuse by the cleric.

It follows a complaint by journalist Peter Hitchens about the revelations.

The force said it was apologising to Barbara Whitley because police did not contact any living relatives of the bishop to let them know an inquiry was to be made public by the Church.

It said it was not apologising for the investigation or the statement itself.

In a letter to Mr Hitchens, Det Supt Jeremy Graves, head of the force’s professional standards department, said the force would apologise to Ms Whitley.

“The distress caused to Barbara Whitley is of course regrettable and I know that Katie Perkin [head of corporate communications] plans to personally write a letter of apology to her,” he wrote.

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Greville Janner abuse inquiry judge Lowell Goddard’s resignation is a ‘betrayal’, sa

UNITED KINGDOM
Leicester Mercury

A solicitor who is representing people who were allegedly sexually abused by Greville Janner said they would feel “betrayed” after the chairman of an independent investigation into their allegations stood down.

Peter Garsden spoke after the Dame Lowell Goddard announced last night she was stepping down as chairman of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, (IICSA), which is to hear testimonies from up to 30 people who say the Labour politician sexually abused them.

However, she gave no reason for her decision. A national newspaper had earlier reported she had spent a lot of time out of the country during her first year in the post.

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Judge’s exit pleases lobby group

UNITED KINGDOM
New Zealand Herald

A group which lobbies for child abuse survivors has welcomed the unexpected departure of a New Zealand judge as head of a major British inquiry into institutional abuse.

Dame Lowell Goddard, 67, who had come under fire for reportedly taking three months’ holiday since her appointment in April 2015, quit the highly paid job saying it was beset with a “legacy of failure” that was hard to shake off.

But Phil Frampton, of the group Whiteflowers, claimed Goddard failed to give victims a proper voice. He said her departure was a chance for the inquiry to get on “the right track”.

Frampton said she was “the wrong choice from the beginning”.

He added that she “continually refuted survivors’ attempts to have an equal footing at the inquiry to the government institutions that failed them”.

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U.K. Government Says Sex Abuse Inquiry Will Go On Despite Chair’s Resignation

UNITED KINGDOM
Wall Street Journal

By NICHOLAS WINNING
Aug. 5, 2016

LONDON—The U.K. government said it would continue the work of a high-profile inquiry into child sexual abuse after the chair resigned citing a legacy of failure, raising fresh doubts about the process.

Judge Lowell Goddard announced her resignation late Thursday in a two-sentence letter to Home Secretary Amber Rudd. She is the third inquiry head to quit; the two previous ones left following criticism they were too close to the establishment.

Ms. Rudd said the success of the inquiry remained an “absolute priority” and she planned to appoint a new chair as soon as possible.

In a statement issued after her resignation, Ms. Goddard said public inquiries are never easy to conduct, but the difficulties of this particular inquiry have been compounded by “its legacy of failure which has been very hard to shake off and with hindsight it would have been better to have started completely afresh.”

She said taking the job early last year had been an incredibly difficult step as it meant relinquishing her career in her home country of New Zealand and, “leaving behind my beloved family.” While she added that the inquiry had been a struggle in many respects, she was confident it had helped victims of child sexual abuse get their voices heard.

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Victims: UK child abuse inquiry must go on after chief quits

UNITED KINGDOM
Boston Herald

AP

LONDON — The British government must make sure an inquiry into decades of child sexual abuse is not derailed by the sudden resignation of its chief, abuse survivors and politicians said Friday.

Lowell Goddard, a judge from New Zealand, quit Thursday — the third chief that the troubled probe has lost since it was announced in 2014. Goddard was chosen to head the inquiry after two previous chairwomen were appointed, and then rejected because of their connections to Britain’s establishment.

Lucy Duckworth, who sits on the inquiry’s panel of victims and survivors, said Goddard’s resignation was frustrating but the inquiry should go on. Labour lawmaker Tom Watson said new Home Secretary Amber Rudd “needs to reassure people that she’s still committed to this inquiry.”

Rudd said the inquiry would continue under a new chief.

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What led to abuse inquiry chairwoman’s resignation?

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

By Tom Symonds
Home Affairs correspondent

The reason for Dame Lowell Goddard’s resignation as chairwoman of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse has not been made clear, but suggestions she had difficult relations with officials have begun to emerge.

Several sources have told me there has been “tension” with one suggesting that Justice Goddard felt she was not getting the support and “loyalty” her job required.

There has been no comment from anyone on the independent inquiry and victims’ representatives have been locked in a meeting expected to take much of the day.

One source with knowledge of the inquiry’s operations said they did not believe Justice Goddard’s departure was linked to the disruption caused to her family life by moving to the UK.

This source said she had moved fully to this country from her native New Zealand, including buying furniture. Her husband is also understood to be in Britain too.

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Former teacher and Baptist minister found guilty of historic sexual abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Derbyshire Times

A former teacher turned Baptist minister has been found guilty of sexually abusing a boy he taught at a Derbyshire school in the 1970s.

John Thompson had denied sexually touching the boy over a four-year period at Crich C of E Junior School 40 years ago. He faced charges of six counts of indecent assault and two of gross indecency with the pupil.

A jury of six men and six women at Derby Crown Court took just over three hours to reach a unanimous verdict against Thompson, of Tutbury Road, Burton.

Thompson, a father of four boys, lived in Crich and was a third year teacher at the school between 1968 and 1981. He then left teaching to study theology, becoming employed as a Baptist minister, working at Babington Hospital in Belper, Crich Baptist Church, and a church in Sutton-in-Ashfield before becoming a minister in Burton in 1988.

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Janner family welcomes resignation of child sex abuse inquiry chair

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

By Jenni Frazer, August 5, 2016

The son of the late Lord Janner has welcomed the resignation of Dame Lowell Goddard as chair of the government’s independent inquiry into child sex abuse.

Daniel Janner said he had been ready to call for the judge to stand down after she refused his request to adjourn the part of the inquiry relating to Lord Janner.

He described the investigation as “a legal Titanic, without a captain”.

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Child abuse inquiry: Lowell Goddard is asked to appear before MPs

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Peter Walker, Harriet Sherwood and Sandra Laville
Friday 5 August 2016

The chair of the Commons home affairs committee has asked Dame Lowell Goddard to appear before MPs to explain her sudden resignation as chair of the public inquiry into institutional child abuse, the third person to quit the role in little over two years.

Keith Vaz said he had written to the New Zealand judge, who announced her resignation on Thursday night, to ask whether she would appear before the committee when parliament returns “to help us in determining what is going to happen in the future”.

The Labour MP told Sky News: “She is someone with impeccable credentials, so this is a big shock that she chooses to resign now. I think what’s really important is that we find out the reasons why she has decided to take this course of action.”

Vaz said he wanted to know more about the reasons behind the departure of Goddard, whose resignation statement said the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, set up in 2014, was beset with a “legacy of failure”.

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Child abuse inquiry judge must explain why she quit, says Vaz

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill
August 5 2016
The Times

Dame Lowell Goddard must give a full explanation of her decision to resign as chairman of the major public inquiry into child sexual abuse, a senior MP has said.

Keith Vaz, chairman of the Commons home affairs committee, said Dame Lowell, 67, had been invited to appear before MPs next month.

The judge resigned suddenly on Thursday, less than 24 hours after The Times revealed that she had been on holiday or abroad for three months of her first year as chairman of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA).

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UK establishment covering up scandals: Analyst

UNITED KINGDOM
Press TV (Iran)

Press TV has conducted an interview with Camilia Shambayati, commentator and analyst from Tehran, to discuss the resignation of the head of a major British child sex abuse inquiry, marking the third time an official has left this role in the past two years.

The following is a rough transcription of the interview.

Press TV: We have had reports of child sex abuse scandals and cover-ups involving numerous MPs and celebrities in the UK. Why do you think this inquiry has been dragged out this long and its head changed so many times?

Shambayati: Well, it’s clearly a very convenient situation for the British establishment to be in. You just have to look at the Chilcot report for example which was dragged on for years and years and was only released last month. What that does is it lessens the impacts, softens the blow of the results. And meanwhile, the perpetrators roam free and they’re given sort of respite.

Now, having said that this is also a disaster for the British establishment, because it just shows that lack of management they have and power and they have no handle on the situation. Now, this is the third time this resignation has occurred in just two years, the report was launched two years ago in 2014 and it was spearheaded by former Home Secretary Theresa May.

Now, Dame Goddard gave no reason for her resignation and she was only on the job for 16 months. And what that shows is there is enormous pressure in this position and perhaps because they’re trying to delay the cover-ups and this is an inquiry that’s stretching back decades and it’s an enormous task and it’s going to be a lot of pressure on the next chairman to take this role.

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