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 20, 2014

Cardinal George Pell to give evidence at child sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Wednesday 20 August 2014

Cardinal George Pell’s role in setting up a Catholic Church compensation scheme for victims of pedophile priests will be scrutinised on Thursday at the child abuse royal commission.

Pell was archbishop of Melbourne in 1996 when the Melbourne archdiocese decided to respond to growing allegations of child sex abuse by its clergy. The church considered creating a legal entity that could be sued by victims, but designed the Melbourne Response compensation scheme instead.

Cardinal Pell told the royal commission earlier this year he believed the church should now create an entity that could be sued.

A Victorian parliamentary inquiry last year recommended the Catholic Church be incorporated so it could be sued.

Melbourne archdiocese lawyer Richard Leder said the church’s position had shifted due to a better understanding of the extent of clergy sexual abuse.

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

Wendy Davis Calls For Eliminating Statute Of Limitations On Rape

TEXAS
KERA

By SHELLEY KOFLER

Wendy Davis, the Democratic candidate for governor, said Wednesday she wants to eliminate the statute of limitations for prosecuting cases of rape and sex assault.

Candidate for Governor Wendy Davis calling for and end to the statute of limitations on rape in Texas.
“I will classify sexual assault at the same level as other heinous crimes such as murder and manslaughter and human trafficking, which have no statute of limitations. Eight states are already doing do,” Davis told reporters gathered on the steps of the Frank Crowley Criminal Courts building in Dallas.

Davis appeared with Dallas County Constable Beth Villareal, a victim of domestic violence, whose current job requires her to assist with sex assault cases.

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.

First clergy abuse settlement with archdiocese reached under new law

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: August 20, 2014

Jon Jaker, who was abused as an 11-year-old boy in a St. Paul parish, has reached the first legal settlement with the archdiocese.

A man who was sexually abused by a Catholic priest in the 1970s became the first to reach a settlement with the St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese Monday under a new law that temporarily expands the time period in which such clergy abuse lawsuits can be brought to court.

Jon Jaker had sued the archdiocese last year, charging he had been sexually abused more than 10 times by the now-deceased Rev. Thomas Stitts while serving as an altar boy at St. Leo’s Church in St. Paul. He said he was 11 years old when sexually molested by Stitts, who has been accused by at least a dozen others over the past year.

“This has been a long battle,” said Jaker, at a news conference in the offices of Minneapolis attorney Patrick Noaker.

”I would encourage other victims and survivors to come forward,” he said. “Know that you are not alone. There are hundreds of you still in the shadows. There’s a chorus of us building as strong survivors. I want that chorus to grow.”

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.

Cardinal Pell to face royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Cardinal George Pell’s role in setting up a Catholic Church compensation scheme for victims of pedophile priests will be scrutinised at the child abuse royal commission.

He was Archbishop of Melbourne in 1996 when the Melbourne archdiocese decided to respond to growing allegations of child sex abuse by its clergy.

The church considered creating a legal entity in 1996 that could be sued by victims, but designed the Melbourne Response compensation scheme instead.

Cardinal Pell told the royal commission earlier this year he believed the church should now create an entity that could be sued. …

Cardinal Pell, now working in the Vatican, will give evidence via video-link from Rome at 4pm (AEST) on Thursday.

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

Former priest dies as prisoner after embezzling from Louisa parishes

VIRGINIA
Richmond Times-Dispatch

BY BRANDON SHULLEETA Richmond Times-Dispatch

Former Catholic priest Rodney L. Rodis — who lived a secret life as a husband and father of three children — died as a prisoner earlier this month, after stealing at least hundreds of thousands of dollars from two Louisa County parishes.

Rodis, 58, was serving an 18-year prison sentence for embezzling money intended for church construction, tsunami relief and mission work in Haiti, among other causes. The money was used to support Rodis’ wife and children.

He also wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to his native Philippines, according to evidence presented in court leading up to convictions of 10 counts of felony theft in 2008, in addition to other related convictions.

Rodis died on Aug. 5, according to Chiles Funeral Home in Richmond. At the request of his family, a death notice was not provided, and a cause of death was not available.

Rodis wired at least $515,000 to the Philippines, according to authorities, who said at the time of the investigation Rodis bought properties there, including a three-story mansion.

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.

Rodney Rodis Dies Behind Bars

VIRGINIA
Newsplex

Aug. 20, 2014

A former Catholic priest serving time for stealing from two churches where he served as pastor has died behind bars.

According to a national online database, 58-year-old Rodney Lee Rodis died on August 5th.

Rodis was serving 13 years in prison in Louisa County for embezzling more than a million dollars from Immaculate Conception and St. Jude Catholic churches.

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

Priest Sex Abuse Victim Settles With Archdiocese

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — A victim of clergy sex abuse spoke out Wednesday after settling his case with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The case involved Father Thomas Stitts, who was working at St. Leo’s Catholic Church in St. Paul when the alleged abuse occurred.

The victim, 52-year-old Jon Jaker, came forward Wednesday with his mother and his attorneys. Jaker says the abuse happened when he was 11, and his attempts to speak out were shut down by the church for years.

He was one of the first to bring a lawsuit after the statute of limitations was lifted for victims last year under the Minnesota Child Victims Act.

“I didn’t know what to do, and at 11, I was terrified,” Jaker said. “I’m not terrified anymore, I’m not afraid and I’m going to sit here and tell you my name again. My name is Jon Jaker and I’m a survivor, and today we won a little bit back.”

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.

Archdiocese settles suit with man abused by priest as boy

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

Updated: Aug 20, 2014
by Shelby Capacio

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
It’s a case that dates back to the early 1970s, but the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is settling a suit with a 54-year-old man who claims Father Tom Stitts sexually abused him while being shuffled through metro parishes.

“This is a bittersweet day,” said Leander James, victim’s attorney. “Our client was sexually abused and his mother silenced. After 43 years, his abuser’s employer has finally heard him, his mother and acknowledged his injury. It’s a first step.”

It took more than 40 years for the man known only as John Doe 100 to get the resolution he’d hoped for. On Wednesday, he and his mother intend to emerge from that confidentiality to speak publicly about the case with their attorneys.

“I need to speak up,” John Doe 100 said. “I’m no longer afraid.”

Seated next to his mother, Yvonne, at a Wednesday afternoon press conference, he announced, “My name is Jon Jaker, and I am a survivor, and today, we won a little bit back.”

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.

KANSAS CITY STAR TARGETS BISHOP FINN AGAIN

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the latest assault by the Kansas City Star on Kansas City-St. Joseph Bishop Robert Finn:

Last week a judge agreed with the finding of an arbitrator that Bishop Finn violated a 2008 agreement mandating that suspected child abuse be reported immediately to the authorities. The Kansas City Star says it is “still waiting for the bishop and the Catholic Diocese to do the right thing,” by which it means he should resign. The Star has been waiting for a long time: this is its sixth call for Finn’s resignation in three years. They must be slow learners—few seem to care what it says.

Here are some fast facts that the Star doesn’t want the public to know:

* In 2010 a computer technician finds disturbing crotch-shot photos of girls fully clothed on the computer of a priest; there is one naked photo of a non-sexual nature
* A police officer and an attorney are contacted by diocesan officials
* After the priest attempts suicide, he is sent for psychiatric analysis: it is determined that he is depressed, but he is not a pedophile
* When it is learned that restrictions placed on the priest are violated, the diocese contacts the authorities—even though it had no legal mandate to do so
* Bishop Finn orders an independent investigation of this matter even though there is no complainant
* Porn pictures are later found and Bishop Finn is then found guilty of one misdemeanor for not reporting suspected child abuse

The Star doesn’t want the facts to come out: In 2011, it turned down $25,000 for a full-page ad I had written exposing all the players involved in their well-coordinated war on Bishop Finn, including the role played by the Star.

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.

Gozo bishop stands by ‘alleged’ victims of sexual abuse

MALTA
Malta Today

Gozo bishop Mario Grech today said that he will abide by canonical and civil laws in dealing with priests accused of sexual abuse. In a brief statement, Grech said that in his role as “spiritual leader,” he stands close to the “alleged victims” and their families.

Yesterday, a Gozitan priest was charged in court with sexually abusing a number of underage girls.

Today it emerged that the police intend to file an appeal against bail, after the young priest was released on bail against a €5,000 personal guarantee and €1,000 deposit after pleading not guilty to charges of child molestation, in what is understood to have been criminal acts taking place over several months and involving a number of minors.

Grech added “I acknowledge that I have a duty towards all priests, including those who err and towards God’s people, especially children.”

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.

Padre Urrutigoity: “Si yo tuviera el problema de pedofilia que me atribuyen, no debiera servir como sacerdote”

PARAGUAY
Religion Digital

José Manuel Vidal, 15 de agosto de 2014 a las 19:30

(José Manuel Vidal).- Estuvo en el centro de todas las miradas en la reciente visita apostólica a su diócesis Ciudad del Este. De hecho, antes de la llegada de los visitadores, el padre Carlos Urrutigoity, fue relevado de su cargo de vicario general de la diócesis de Ciudad del Este. En entrevista exclusiva con RD, el sacerdote niega las acusaciones de pederastia, asegura que la Teología de la Liberación “es una ideología anticuada que fracasó” y cree que los “aires primaverales” del Papa existen “sólo en la prensa”.

¿Cómo se encuentra tras la visita apostólica? ¿Tuvo ocasión de entrevistarse con alguno de los dos visitadores o con ambos?

Para sorpresa mía y de muchos, los Visitadores no me llamaron a ninguna entrevista ni me pidieron ningún tipo de información. Al parecer, estaban concentrados en otras áreas. Sólo pude conversar unos minutos con el Cardenal Santos y Abril durante una de sus visitas. No me hizo preguntas ni me pidió ningún informe.

¿Cree que los visitadores llegaron con ideas preconcebidas?

No quisiera juzgar ni prejuzgar. Es cierto que todos tenemos ideas preconcebidas, ya que es parte de nuestro proceso de conocimiento. Pero no sabría decir a ciencia cierta cuáles serían las ideas con que vinieron los Visitadores.

Todos ellos me parecieron observadores muy puntillosos, aunque no parecen haberse interesado en algunos de los temas que uno esperaba. Por la impresión que me dio el Cardenal, no dudo que presentará al Santo Padre un relato muy puntual.

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.

CA- Priest accused of abuse moved to undisclosed location, SNAP responds

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 503 0003, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

A California priest has been removed from his position following allegations of sexual abuse with at least one teenager. We are grateful to the brave individual who spoke up and reported to law enforcement. Children are safer when victims, witnesses and whistleblowers speak up and report crimes.

Fr. Robert E. Gamel was a priest at St. Joseph’s Church in Los Banos since 2009. According to officials at the Diocese of Fresno Gamel has been removed to an undisclosed location away from kids. We are glad he has been removed, but urge Catholic officials to be open and transparent about what they know and when they knew it.

We hope anyone who saw, suspects or suffered child sex crimes will find the courage to speak up, report to law enforcement, and start healing.

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.

Habla el polémico sacerdote Urrutigoity

PARAGUAY
ABC

[Summary: Priest Carlos Urrutigoity agreed to give an interview with Religion Digital, whose managers are linked to Opus Dei which also answers to Rigelio Livieres, bishop of Ciudad del Este. Urritugoity has been accused of sexual abuse and pedophilia.

Asked about allegations of sexual abuse filed in the United States he replied there is no place for that in ministry and it is a serious disorder and psychological and emotional imbalance and is a grave sin. He said information on the internet is slander. He did not mention that in one of the accusations the church had to play the complainant $500,000 to close the case. In the interview which was later released by the press office of the Ciudad del Este diocese, he recognizes himself as a traditional Catholic and conservative and far from the theology of liberation.]

El sacerdote Carlos Urrutigoity accedió a dar una entrevista publicada en un sitio religioso, rompiendo el largo silencio desde las acusaciones por supuestos abusos sexuales y pedofilia, que inclusive propiciaron una intervención del Vaticano.

El portal religioso “Religión Digital” –cuyos directivos estarían ligados al grupo Opus Dei, al que también responde el obispo de Ciudad del Este, Rogelio Livieres– accedió a una entrevista con Urrutigoity, luego de que se haya cumplido la intervención hecha por los enviados del papa Francisco, ante las denuncias de abusos sexuales y pedofilia, además de otras supuestas irregularidades dentro del seminario y de la diócesis, y el público enfrentamiento con el arzobispo de Asunción, Pastor Cuquejo.

“Si yo tuviera el problema que me atribuyen, no debería servir como sacerdote”, reflexiona el sacerdote argentino al ser encarado sobre los casos de abuso sexual y pedofilia que le han venido siguiendo desde hace años en diferentes países y que lo trajeron finalmente a Paraguay, donde practica su ministerio en Ciudad del Este, con el férreo apoyo del obispo local, Rogelio Livieres.

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 denies Catholic Church tried to protect itself

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AUGUST 21, 2014

Pia Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

A SENIOR lawyer who was ­instrumental in establishing the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese’s compensation scheme for victims of clergy sex abuse has denied any economic modelling was undertaken before a $50,000 cap was established.

This was despite the church’s plan to offer the scheme as an ­alternative to civil litigation.

Richard Leder, who acts on ­behalf of the archdiocese, its archbishops and its representatives in the Melbourne Response, yesterday told a royal commission that $50,000 was insufficient to meet the needs of some victims.

But he defended the church’s intentions in setting up the scheme and denied its requirement that participants waive their rights to future litigation was ­intended to protect the church and its assets.

“I don’t agree, but I can see people would say that,” Mr Leder said, prompting jeers from the public gallery during his testimony in Melbourne.

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

Priest abuse case…

MALTA
Times of Malta

Priest abuse case: Bishop says Church and civil law procedures followed; Police planning to appeal bail decision

Gozo Bishop Mario Grech said today that he had followed the protocols laid down by Church and Civil law in the case revealed yesterday of a priest who allegedly defiled three girls.

In a brief statement, Mgr Grech said any case of sexual abuse of minors deeply hurt the Church and society.

As bishop, he was close to the alleged victims and their their families. He recognised that he had duties to all priests, even those who made mistakes, as well as the people of God, particularly children.

In this case, he said, he had followed the protocols indicated by church and civil law and would continue to do so in other cases.

Meanwhile, informed sources said the police are planning to appeal the Gozo court decision granting bail to the priest, who stands accused of defiling three girls.

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

Gozo Bishop says hefollowed canon andcivil protocolin priest’s abuseof minors case

MALTA
Malta Independent

Gozo Bishop Mgr Mario Grech today said he followed protocol indicated by canon and civil law in the case of a Gozo priest who was accused of abusing girls.

In a short statement, the bishop said that any case of abuse is a deep wound for the Church and society. He said he was staying close to the victims and their families.

He said he understood he had responsibilities towards all priests, even those who commit mistakes, and towards God’s people, in particular minors.

He said that in this case – the Bishop did not mention it in particular, but was making an obvious reference to that priest who was accused of defiling children over the past years – “I followed canon and civil law” and will act in the same way if other similar cases emerged.

Police Inspector Sandro Camilleri also confirmed that the Gozo Bishop collaborated with them.

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

Priest Charged With 7 Counts of Sexual Assault to Appear in Enfield Court

CONNECTICUT
NBC Connecticut

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2014

A Connecticut priest who was suspended last year and arrested in March on several sexual assault charges is due in court on Wednesday for pre-trial proceedings.

Rev. Paul Gotta, 55, of Bridgeport pleaded not guilty to seven counts of sexual assault charges he faces, according to the state judicial website.

Gotta, who served as administrator of St. Philip Church in East Windsor and St. Catherine Church in Broadbrook until he was placed on administrative leave, is accused of sexual abuse, according to the Archdiocese of Hartford.

Police said in April that the arrest warrant is sealed.

Gotta is facing two counts of second-degree sexual assault, felony charges, in connection to reported incidents on April 1, 2012 and Feb. 1 2013, and five counts of fourth-degree sexual assault, misdemeanor charges, for reported incidents in January, February, March, April and May of 2012, according to the state judicial website.

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

Priest abuse case: Police planning to appeal bail decision

MALTA
Times of Malta

The police are planning to appeal a Gozo court decision granting bail to a Gozitan priest who stands accused of defiling three girls.

The 38-year-old priest, who cannot be identified by court order, was arraigned yesterday and his case is being heard behind closed doors.

It is understood the allegations relate to incidents that took place some years ago in Gozo.

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Updated | Police to appeal bail for Gozo priest charged with child abuse

MALTA
Malta Today

Daniel Mizzi 20 August 2014

Clarificaton: this article erroneously referred to the defendant’s previous employment as having been inside a Church school.

The police intend to file an appeal against bail, after a a young priest was yesterday allowed out against a €5,000 personal guarantee and €1,000 deposit after pleading not guilty to charges of child molestation, in what is understood to have been criminal acts taking place over several months and involving a number of minors.

The priest has been prohibited from approaching the victims and their homes, the court said in its bail conditions.

Sources told MaltaToday that the accused has been a priest for around 10 to 12 years and he was recently employed as a religion teacher at a boys’ secondary state school in Hamrun.

Victims were said to be aged close to 15, but one of the girls is said to be aged eight years old.

Standing before Magistrate Paul Coppini at the Gozo courts, the priest, whose name cannot be published by court order, appeared wearing casual clothes and a pair of flip flops after he was summonsed to court by arrest.

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Los Banos priest under investigation moved out of area

CALIFORNIA
Modesto Bee

BY ROB PARSONS
rparsons@mercedsunstar.com
August 19, 2014

A Los Banos Catholic priest under investigation for possible sex crimes involving a teenager has been moved to an undisclosed location where there are no children present, a Catholic church official said Tuesday.

The Rev. Robert E. Gamel was placed on paid administrative leave early Friday, the morning after allegations surfaced involving a teenage church member, said Teresa Dominguez, chancellor for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno.

“There was no way we could’ve acted any sooner on the information,” Dominguez told the Merced Sun-Star in a telephone interview.

Gamel, 64, has not been arrested or formally accused of any wrongdoing by law enforcement, the Los Banos Police Department said Tuesday. “The detectives are still continuing their investigation,” Cmdr. Jason Hedden said, “and we’re still hoping for anyone from the public with information to come forward.”

The Rev. Joe Baca has been appointed interim administrator of the Los Banos parish for an indefinite period of time.

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

Church ‘leadership crisis’ debate rages on

MALTA
Malta Independent

More voices are calling for “a shakeup” of the Maltese Church’s top levels to rid the Curia of its “leadership crisis.”

The debate was sparked by former Mgarr Parish Priest Fr Emanuel Camilleri, who was unceremoniously dismissed by the curia. Speaking to The Malta Independent last week, Fr Camilleri accused Archbishop Paul Cremona and Auxiliary Bishop Charles Scicluna of bowing in to pressure. He was the first to claim that the church is gripped by a leadership crisis.

Fr Camilleri’s comments this week echoed by Fr Joe Borg his regular column on The Times. He compared the current “leadership crisis” to the state the PN was in after losing the 1976 election.

But in comments to the same newspaper today, Victor Axiak, the head of the Church Environment Commission, disagreed with Fr Borg and said that those clamouring for change and seeking the “crucifixion” of Archbishop Cremona, want the Church to move closer to the Nationalist Party. “It (the Church) will not be rendered vibrant and kicking if it resumes its ‘local mission’ of religio et patria and of allowing itself to be pulled one way or the other to the tune of some political group. Paul Cremona is being crucified because he does not want to play this dirty game.”

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

Church’s investigator grilled on independence

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

August 20, 2014

Cameron Houston, Jane Lee

The Catholic Church’s independent commissioner was unable to explain how he received confidential information from a victim of serial paedophile priest Kevin O’Donnell or why it was passed on to the church’s lawyers in an apparent breach of confidentiality.

The Royal Commission also raised concerns about the independence of Peter O’Callaghan, QC, who has investigated allegations of clerical abuse for the past 18 years under the church’s controversial Melbourne Response.

The church’s law firm Corrs Chambers Westgarth was also questioned over its handling of files and sensitive information from three separate arms of the Melbourne Response, which claim to be independent of each other.

Corrs Chambers Westgarth partner Richard Leder denied any confidentiality had been compromised in his role as lawyer for the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne and the Melbourne Response, which he helped establish in 1996.

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

New sex abuse allegations against former Gray priest

MAINE
WGME

[with video]

PORTLAND (WGME) — New allegations are lodged against a former priest from Gray.

Demonstrators outside the Portland Diocese on Tuesday accused Father Tony Caron of sexually abusing Norman Smith when he was a teen.

Father Tony Caron is the former priest of St. Gregory Parish in Gray.

Smith showed CBS 13 News photos from several trips he says Caron took him on after his mother died. His older sister says she thought Caron was befriending her brother.

Instead, Norman Smith claims he was sexually abused for three years.

“The Catholic Church has hidden this stuff for so long. And so many people have been hurt by this. It’s not fair to the children. It’s not fair to their families,” Normal Smith 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.

VALLEY PRIEST ACCUSED OF CHILD SEX CRIMES

CALIFORNIA
ABC 30

By Corin Hoggard
Tuesday, August 19, 2014

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) — A Catholic priest in Los Banos is under investigation for possible sex crimes against a teen.

As the faithful gathered at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church Friday, police were next door, serving a search warrant.

The night before, the Diocese of Fresno alerted police of possible internet sex crimes against a local teen by the church’s lead pastor, Father Bob Gamel.

“During the search warrant, detectives recovered computer equipment, hard drives and other evidence related to the crime,” said Los Banos police Commander Jason Hedden.

Federal investigators are now analyzing the evidence, but Gamel has not been arrested or charged with any crime. The diocese removed him from the church, though, moving him to another location in Los Banos.

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Child institutions should be monitored by national organisation, says child abuse victim’s mother

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY CANDICE MARCUS
August 20, 2014

A woman whose son was sexually abused by a paedophile school bus driver in Adelaide more than two decades ago says she wants a national organisation set up to monitor child institutions.

Convicted paedophile Brian Perkins abused children while he was employed without a background check as a bus driver for the St Ann’s special school in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Helen Gitsham’s son was abused by Perkins and, in a written submission to a federal royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, said the Catholic Church’s response was inadequate.

She said a Catholic Church inquiry that was announced in 2002 was not independent, transparent or comprehensive, and the process had not been scrutinised by anyone other than those associated with the church itself.

“From the very beginning of the inquiry the intention of the Catholic Church was to seek advice on legal matters and liability, not to determine whether the school tried to identify children who may have been abused, nor how families and children were affected and followed up at the time and since,” Mrs Gitsham said.

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Review brings changes to toughen WA’s child protection laws

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

August 20, 2014

Leanne Nicholson
Deputy editor, WAtoday

Strengthening child abuse laws, more education and easier reporting of crimes are among recommended changes to toughen state laws protecting West Australia’s vulnerable.

Sixteen recommendations from a review into the Commissioner for Children and Young People Act were tabled in state parliament on Wednesday and are now open for public comment for the next three months.

Among the recommendation are the commissioner should receive complaints from children and young people, or adults acting on their behalf, about alleged child abuse, for referral on to the relevant investigative authority.

WA Attorney General Michael Mischin said the review found overall the Act had operated effectively and achieved the purpose of promoting the wellbeing of children and young people in Western Australia.

However, Mr Mischin said the review identified some areas for improvement.

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MP calls for investigation into cluster of paedophile priests at Holy Family School in Doveton

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Quentin McDermott and Peter Cronau
Updated 20 Aug 2014

An investigation should be launched into a cluster of paedophile priests at the Holy Family School in Doveton, one of Victoria’s poorest communities, according to one of the MPs who conducted an inquiry last year into the handling of child abuse by religious and other organisations.

Victorian Labor MP Frank McGuire made a statement to the Victorian Parliament today, following revelations in last week’s ABC Four Corners program, In the Name of the Law.

The program revealed that Cardinal George Pell did not explain in oral evidence to last year’s Victorian inquiry that the church had held a private hearing in 1997 at which the finding was made that local parish priest, Father Peter Searson, had been guilty of the sexual abuse of two children.

Father Searson was eventually removed from the Doveton parish and charged by police for an unrelated physical assault of a young boy attending the Holy Family School.

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State MP Frank Maguire slams Cardinal George Pell over church sex abuse evidence

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

MATT JOHNSTON HERALD SUN AUGUST 20, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell has been blasted by state Labor MP Frank McGuire over evidence provided about a paedophile priest during a parliamentary inquiry.

Calling for a fresh investigation into the Catholic Church’s response to decades-long sex offences committed in Doveton — uncovered in the 1980s and 1990s — Mr McGuire accused Cardinal Pell of glossing over crimes of former priest Peter Searson.

He said that when Cardinal Pell was questioned about Searson at the recent Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse, Cardinal Pell said “no conviction was recorded for Searson on sexual misbehaviour”.

Mr McGuire told parliament while courts did not convict Searson, documents he had obtained showed that the church’s Melbourne Response, led by independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan, had found Fr Searson was “guilty of sexual abuse of two girls”.

Last night the church fired back at Mr McGuire.

A statement released says: “in his evidence to the inquiry, Cardinal Pell drew attention to Mr O’Callaghan’s investigation into Fr Searson”.

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Damned if you do or don’t defense

NEW YORK
Albany Times Union

Robert Gavin, Law Beat
Published 7:02 pm, Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Troy attorney Jay Hernandez could have employed a defense last week that might have convinced an Albany County jury that reasonable doubt existed in the sexual abuse case against disgraced former Albany deacon Angel Garcia.

But if Hernandez had used that defense, the jury might have convicted Garcia in an hour.

In the end, Garcia was convicted of sexually abusing a girl when she was 6 years old, in 2003.

Hernandez sought to convince the jury that Garcia’s accuser, now 17, concocted the sex abuse charge when she was in her midteens so her family, which is in the United States illegally, could stay in the country. Their daughter’s status as a sex-crime victim was grounds for remaining, he said.

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KITWE BISHOP KILLS SELF

ZAMBIA
Times of Zambia

By MARILYN ROSE and REBECCA MUSHOTA-

A PENTECOSTAL bishop in Kitwe who was facing charges of sexually abusing nine girls from his church has committed suicide, his wife has said.

Dominic Nyondo of Holy Fire Christian Ministry Church is believed to have thrown himself in the crocodile-infested Kafue River.

Mable Nyondo said her husband left home around 22:00 hours on Monday after informing her that whatever was going to happen to him was because of the allegations of sexual abuse against him.

“He left the house between 22:00 hours and 23:00 hours after reading the Bible and said that whatever will happen to him was because of the allegations of sexual abuse against him,” Ms Nyondo said.

“I tried to chase him but he ran towards the river and when I reached (the river), I only found his shirt.”

Ms Nyondo was narrating the ordeal during an interview at the funeral house in Ipusukilo Township in Kitwe yesterday.

Kitwe District Police Commissioner Lizzie Machina said her officers were investigating the matter.

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Cliff Richard cancels his performance at cathedral charity concert

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian (UK)

Martin Williams
The Guardian, Tuesday 19 August 2014

Sir Cliff Richard, facing a historical sexual assault claim, has withdrawn from a charity event because he did not “want the event to be overshadowed by the false allegation”, his spokesman said on Tuesday.

The singer was due to perform at Canterbury cathedral on 26 September in a fundraising concert. The statement added: “He is sorry for any disappointment or inconvenience caused.”

Police searched Richard’s apartment last week as part of an investigation into an alleged sexual assault on a young boy at a religious event in 1985 in Sheffield. The pop star, who was in Portugal at the time of the search, has denied any wrongdoing.

The decision to pull out of the charity event comes after the pop star, 73, hired the high-profile lawyer, Ian Burton.

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Abuse compensation doesn’t recognise harm: Church

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Source AAP 20 AUG 2014

Catholic Church payouts to victims of pedophile priests don’t recognise the harm they have suffered, a lawyer for the Melbourne archdiocese says.

Many victims have told the abuse royal commission they’ve received only “token amounts” in compensation under the church’s Melbourne Response scheme for handling clergy sex abuse complaints.

Lawyer Richard Leder, who represents the Melbourne archdiocese, said it was clear now that the capped payouts set under the Melbourne Response don’t recognise the harm suffered by victims.

“It is clear that for some victims the ability to receive only up to $75,000 in lump sum compensation indicates that the compensation component of the Melbourne Response is not achieving the objective that it was set out to achieve in terms of delivering a financial recognition of the harm.

“I’m absolutely supportive of the commitments that the archbishop has made to review those matters,” Mr Leder told the royal commission on Wednesday.

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It’s my sacred right to leave the Catholic Church

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

JP O’Malley

BETWEEN 1914 and 1915, the Jewish Czech writer, Franz Kafka, wrote the mesmerising novel, The Trial.

Today, 100 years later, it illuminates the connection between bureaucracy and power.

In The Trial, a young bank official, Joseph K, is arrested for a crime that doesn’t seem to exist. He is taken to a quarry outside of his town and killed.

The word ‘Kafkaesque’ is overused by journalists, but it is appropriate in describing my experience when attempting to ‘excommunicate’ myself from the Catholic Church. Attempting to leave this immensely powerful organisation is like being locked in a crystal maze with no exit sign in sight.

Ostensibly, my official attempt to depart from Catholicism started last October. But the philosophical quest began 18 years ago. As a young boy, the Catholic Church was vital in shaping my cultural and intellectual identity.

There was a picture of the Sacred Heart in my bedroom. Every night, until I was eight years old, my brother and I would kneel and say prayers before sleep. …

This was just one year after the arrest of Father Brendan Smith, the notorious paedophile priest whom the Catholic Church initially protected, but who was eventually convicted of several, depraved sex crimes on innocent children: first in Northern Ireland, in 1994, and then again in the Republic, in 1997.

From aged 12, I had no belief, whatsoever, in the concept of a divine being.

By the time I was in my 20s, I was a militant-atheist.

And after my close reading of the ‘Ferns’, ‘Murphy’, and ‘Ryan Reports’, I was fully convinced that this was not an organisation I wanted to be associated with in any way.

It came as a huge surprise to me, then, last October, after I wrote to Reverend Fintan Gavin, the assistant chancellor of the Dublin Dioceses, asking if I could formally leave the Catholic Church, to be told that it was impossible.

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Church commissioner admits giving archdiocese suggestions for abuse response

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AUGUST 20, 2014

Pia Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

THE ‘‘independent commissioner’’ heading the Melbourne archdiocese’s response to clergy sex abuse has admitted providing the church’s media adviser with suggested answers about a notorious abuse case.

Peter O’Callaghan QC, who has spearheaded the Melbourne Response since it began in 1996, has been repeatedly challenged on his independent status from the archdiocese while giving evidence at the royal commission investigating institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

Today it was revealed that he had given the archdiocese’s communications director extensive answers in response to questions from a journalist about the church’s handling of the Foster family after two of their daughters were abused by a priest.

Mr O’Callaghan accepted his action had not been “strictly speaking” any of his business, but said he still believed it was reasonable.

The commission has heard Mr O’Callaghan refused to provide one of the daughters, Katie Foster, with his report on the abuse because her family was considering suing the church.

Mr O’Callaghan has said he believed he had acted appropriately by denying the Foster family his written findings, even though he had verbally confirmed to them that their daughter Katie was abused by one of Victoria’s most notorious priests, Kevin O’Donnell.

Mr O’Callaghan yesterday said he had based his 2000 decision on a 1976 judicial ruling, prompting criticism from NSW appellate judge Peter McClellan as chair of the royal commission investigating institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

“The law has moved quite a bit,” Justice McClellan told Mr O’Callaghan, who was called to the Bar in 1961 and took silk in 1974.

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Child sexual abuse royal commission: O’Callaghan advised abuse victims on strength of cases

AUSTRALIA
Yahoo! News

By court reporter Peta Carlyon | ABC

The man in charge of the Catholic Church’s so-called Melbourne Response to allegations of child abuse has rejected suggestions he failed to encourage victims to go to police.

Peter O’Callaghan QC has been dealing with complainants and deciding whether they are eligible for compensation since the scheme began in 1996.

He was repeatedly questioned about the legal integrity of his decision-making at today’s hearing of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Mr O’Callaghan has been a Queen’s Counsel for 40 years and said the Melbourne Response was based in canon law and “natural justice”.

He said when there was a dispute with a claim he would take on a role similar to a magistrate in a criminal case.

He was again asked repeatedly why he did not report cases of abuse to Victoria Police and why he took it upon himself to advise victims on the potential strength of their cases.

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Gozitan priest charged with child abuse taught at government school

MALTA
Malta Today

Daniel Mizzi 20 August 2014

Clarificaton: this article erroneously referred to the defendant’s previous employment as having been inside a Church school.

A young priest was yesterday allowed out on bail against a hefty personal guarantee and deposit after pleading not guilty to charges of child molestation, in what is understood to have been criminal acts taking place over several months and involving a number of minors.

Sources told MaltaToday that the accused has been a priest for around 10 to 12 years and he was recently employed as a religion teacher at a boys’ secondary state school in Hamrun.

Standing before Magistrate Paul Coppini at the Gozo courts, the priest, whose name cannot be published by court order, appeared wearing casual clothes and a pair of flip flops after he was summonsed to court by arrest.

The priest, believed to be in his early 40s, covered his face as he was taken in to court.

At the start of the sitting, the priest’s defence lawyer, Carmelo Gauci, requested that the case be heard behind closed doors, and almost immediately, Magistrate Coppini upheld the request.

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August 19, 2014

Kansas City is still waiting for the bishop and Catholic diocese to do the right thing

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

Editorial

The only reassuring news to come out of an arbitrator’s recent finding against the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph is that its Victim Advocacy Program, created in 2008 in response to the priest abuse scandal, is operating well.

But every other conclusion of the arbitrator — upheld last week by Jackson County Circuit Judge Bryan Round — brought shame to the diocese and provided more than enough reasons for Bishop Robert W. Finn, already convicted of a misdemeanor, to resign.

In ordering the diocese to pay $1.1 million for violating its agreement with sex abuse victims, arbitrator Hollis Hanover was blunt: “Where they (the victims) expected protection, they received desertion; where the assertion of authority on their behalf was required, they received betrayal.”

He also said he hopes “that I am dead wrong in my opinion that this Diocese as presently constituted will not mend its ways.”

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New allegations against former Fort Myers Catholic priest

FLORIDA
ABC 7

By George Solis, Reporter

FORT MYERS, FL –
New allegations came to light Tuesday against a former Catholic priest in Fort Myers.

The church found him guilty of sexually abusing a boy and now he’s accused of inappropriate behavior with other children.

A first victim stepped forward in 2008, saying Ronald Joseph abused him when he was just 16-years-old at Saint Francis Xavier near downtown Fort Myers.

Diocese leaders conducted their own investigation and removed him from the church – we discovered new information that reveals there could be other victims.

Once again all eyes are on Saint Francis Xaiver Catholic Church in Fort Myers.

Nearly six years ago the church was under scrutiny after allegations of sexual abuse first surfaced. They revolved around Rev. Jean Ronald Joseph.

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NM Archdiocese Accused of Thirty-Year Cover-up

NEW MEXICO
Renegade Catholic

Jay Nelson

Just when you think it’s really and truly finally over, the past reaches out and grabs at you like a zombie hand from a grave. Once again the scandal of clergy sexual abuse hangs over the Land of Enchantment as new lawsuits are filed.

The story below for some reason does not name the accused priest, and the details provided don’t help that much, for there were at least two child-molesting priests who were sent to the Servants of the Paraclete from Connecticut and later became fugitives: Fr. Laurence Brett and Msgr. Arthur J. Perrault. But Brett was ultimately found, laicized and died, and there’s no mention of any of that here, so it would have to be Perrault, who has never been seen again.

Perrault was a big apple here – popular (winning a local “People’s Choice for Favorite Clergy” award), a close friend of later-disgraced Archbishop Robert Sanchez, a top liturgist who wrote columns for the archdiocesan newsletter, did the TV Mass regularly, and served as the coordinator of worship for bishops in the West. He’d been a colonel in the Air Force reserve Chaplains Corps, and served in the four biggest and richest parishes in the state.

And Fr. Perrault was also a major perp. Screwed male and female over a wide range of ages, and he nearly got me once, too. For he taught ethics, of all things, at St. Pius X High School here in Albuquerque back then. I went there back when it was located where the ABQ Uptown shopping mall is now. Thank God, I was only there for my freshman and sophomore years. But on one occasion, I had to see him in his office after school – I had found out about a gang fight that was scheduled for after school that I thought needed to be stopped.

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New documents reveal disturbing details

FLORIDA
WINK News

FORT MYERS, Fla. – The details were kept sealed for years, but new documents show explicit details about the abuse one teen who says he suffered at the hands of former father, Jean Ronald Joseph.

“We did reach a settlement last month, says Adam Horowitz, attorney for the victim. “It was a 6 figure settlement.”

These documents outline an internal investigation by the Diocese of Venice into former father Jean Ronald Joseph, accused of sexually abusing a teen while he worked here at the saint francis xavier parish.

“For 15 years, between 1993 and 2008, the diocese of Venice was aware of a history of red flags by this priest,” says Horowitz

The victim says Joseph groped him in his sleep back in 1993 when he was 16 years old.

The new documents show questionable behavior by Joseph, and witness accounts of other possible victims. Something attorney Adam Horowitz’s client wasn’t aware of. “He had no idea that there were these suspicious behavior that father Joseph was engaged in.”

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Diocese Of Venice Settles Sex Abuse Case In Fort Myers

FLORIDA
WGCU

The Diocese of Venice has reached a six figure settlement with a man who accused a former Fort Myers priest of sexual abuse. The agreement was reached after the accuser obtained secret documents showing the Catholic Church knew the priest was guilty of abusing him as a child.

During a press conference in front of St. Francis Xavier Church in Fort Myers Tuesday, the accuser’s attorney released documents from an investigation conducted by the Diocese of Venice over the span of four years.

The confidential investigation found Jean Ronald Joseph – a former priest at St. Francis—was guilty of violating cannon law by abusing a sixteen year old boy nearly two decades ago.

Adam Horowitz, the victim’s attorney, said his client came forward in 2008, but was only able to seek damages now because of these documents.

“We obtained these confidential church documents because one of the priests at the Diocese of Venice happened to be a friend and an associate of my client’s father—and he acted perhaps out of turn and gave my client that document,” he said. “Had he not done so, we would have never seen this document. It would have never seen the light of day. And much of the community would have believed that Father Joseph was innocent of these charges and my client was a liar.”

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FL- Clergy sex abuse victims urge action from bishop

FLORIDA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2014

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

A Venice Catholic official gave a clergy sex abuse victim a damning document about a predator priest, a document which has now been made public. It clearly shows that the victim told the truth and the priest told lies.

We are grateful to the church official who was brave and caring enough to provide this nine-page ruling by a church court to a man who was sexually assaulted as a child by Fr. Jean Ronald Joseph in Ft. Myers. (We don’t know the church official’s name.)

Fr. Jean Ronald Joseph was accused of molesting a boy and “sleeping with young boys multiple times.” Last year, a church panel found that Fr. Joseph “touched genital area and penis” and “did not cooperate with attempts of reformation by the diocese.”

In 2009, in a horribly mean-spirited move, after church officials disclosed he was accused of abuse, Fr. Joseph publicly released the name of his victim at a news conference and called him a liar.

Not a single Catholic official or employee in the Venice diocese – from bishop to bookkeeper – disciplined or even denounced Fr. Joseph for such a hurtful and intimidating move. Nor did a single church staffer call the police about these alleged heinous crimes. Shame on them.

What now?

Venice Bishop Frank Dewane should publicly apologize for tolerating Fr. Joseph’s cruel but shrewd media stunt in 2009. He should also personally visit each parish where Fr. Joseph worked, begging victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call law enforcement. Finally, Bishop Dewane should write to his colleagues in Haiti, where Fr. Joseph allegedly lives now, and insist that they warn their flocks about this dangerous cleric.

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Priest accused of child molestation is granted bail in Gozo Court

MALTA
Gozo News

A young priest was arraigned in the Gozo Court this afternoon charged with child molestation.

Magistrate Paul Coppini granted a request made by Carmelo Galea, the priest’s lawyer, for the hearing to be held behind closed doors.

The court also agreed to a ban of the publication of proceedings, his name, or the name of the victims. The priest, hid his face from waiting reporters as he was taken in to court.

It is understood that the alleged abuse took place over several months.

The priest was granted bail against a personal guarantee and deposit.

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Editor’s Blog: Why did magistrate ban the press from priest case?

MALTA
Times of Malta

August 19, 2014

by Steve Mallia

Editor’s Blog: Why did magistrate ban the press from priest case?

Was it correct for the presiding magistrate to ban the press after a Gozitan priest was taken to court today (Tuesday) charged with offences related to molestation?

That depends on the circumstances. If for some reason the complainant felt there was no way he or she could testify and there are objective reasons to support this – i.e., embarrassment is not enough – then there are grounds for the magistrate to entertain such a request. But even there, such a decision should only be taken in the most exceptional circumstances.

Yet in this case it appears no such request was made by the complainant. The request came from the defendant’s lawyer. This raises the bar considerably.

Innocent till proven guilty is a given, especially when delicate accusations are made against a priest. But there is a very simple option open to the magistrate to deal with such a scenario: banning publication of the name. This also serves the purpose of protecting the identity of the complainant.
However, a blanket ban on all coverage tends to defeat the object of open justice. Making court proceedings accessible to the public is not just a desirable notion; it is a fundamental principle contained within the European Convention of Human Rights and, as such, should not be dispensed with unless there is a very special reason for doing so. If such a reason is present, it should be communicated clearly so that everybody can understand it.

The magistrate did no such thing in this case. First he threw out certain members of the media for not wearing jacket and tie (a ridiculous requirement, particularly in the sweltering heat of August), and then he threw out the press altogether.

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Priest rapes eight-yr-old, held

INDIA
Business Standard

Police have arrested a priest for having allegedly raping an eight-year-old girl within the premises of a temple in Satbiri area of south Delhi on the occasion on Janmashtami.

According to the police, the incident took place last night when the girl was playing in the temple yard with a few children on the occasion of Janmashtami.

“The accused, identified as Vishvender, a 60-year-old priest took the girl to a separate room made in the temple and raped her,” said a senior police official.

The priest was later arrested from the temple after the girl narrated the incident to her parents who then approached police.

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Venice Diocese settles child sex abuse claim

FLORIDA
News-Press

Fort Myers, Florida (News-Press) — A confidential Diocese of Venice document detailing sexual abuse by a former priest at a Fort Myers church will be released Tuesday at a press conference announcing a settlement in the case.

The defrocked priest, Jean Ronald Joseph, was accused in 2009 of sexually abusing a child while he was serving at St. Francis Xavier church.

Adam Horowitz, the victim’s lawyer, and an attorney for survivors of clergy sexual abuse, will hold the press conference at the church, 2157 Cleveland Ave.

“This is a case in which the priest held a press conference to call his victim a liar,” Horowitz said this morning.

The allegations were made against Joseph in 2009 by a 31-year-old man. The events happened about 15 years previous, the victim said. The diocese made the accusations public at that time. The priest was defrocked by the diocese in 2013.

“What I’m going to release today is a confidential church document when the diocese found the priest guilty,” Horowitz said. He claims a cover-up by the diocese.

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MO- Victims challenge Presbyterian officials

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2014

For more information: David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Victims challenge Presbyterian officials
They sent six lawyers in convicted sex offender case
After a child porn conviction, they still hired him as pastor
He is now serving 30 years for child porn & illegal castration
Stop “cruel and intimidating” legal maneuvers, group says
They beg church officials to reach out to victims in churches & Scouts

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is criticizing a Jefferson City-based Protestant organization for bringing six lawyers to a court hearing yesterday in Fulton to defend it in an abuse case involving a convicted and incarcerated offender.

Presbyterian officials from the Missouri Union Presbytery (573-635-9221) sent six lawyers to defend a civil child sex abuse and cover-up lawsuit against the church and Jack Wayne Rogers. Rogers is being sued by a Kansas City man who charges he was abused as a child by the former youth pastor in 2000. Rogers worked at the Presbyterian Church of Bellflower (MO).

Rogers was working at the church in 2000, 8 years after his 1992 conviction for the possession of child pornography. In 2003, Rogers pleaded guilty to additional counts of possession and distribution of child pornography and was sentenced to 30 years in prison. In 2004, he also pleaded guilty to illegally castrating another man. He is currently incarcerated in Florida.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), are blasting Presbyterian officials and urging them to stop what the group calls “vindictive and intimidating” legal maneuvers.

“The judge heard three uncontested simple motions, so church officials knew the hearing was neither complex nor contentious,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Executive Director. “Still, Presbyterian officials brought in the big guns from Missouri’s largest law firm in what we suspect was an effort to intimidate the victim. If that’s their goal, we’re confident they’ll fail.”

News reports say that Rogers was a Boy Scout leader.

SNAP wants church officials to:

— disclose how much they are spending to defend themselves in the Rogers case,
— reach out to all congregations that may have welcomed or hired Rogers, and
— make a public plea to local Boy Scout organization to reach out to other potential victims.

“There is no good, moral, or legal reason for this kind of legal overkill,” said Barb Dorris of St. Louis, SNAP Outreach Director. “The only reason to send that many lawyers into a courtroom is to intimidate the victim and help continue cover-ups.”

The victim in this case, Rev. Kristopher D. Schondelmeyer, is a now a Presbyterian minister living in Ohio. His goal in filing the lawsuit is to encourage other victims to come forward and get healing.

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Update 4 | Priest in child abuse case released on bail

MALTA
Malta Today

Daniel Mizzi 19 August 2014

A priest in his 40s was today arraigned in court in Gozo to face charges of child molestation. He was released on bail against “a hefty” personal guarantee and deposit.

It is understood that the victims were all girls.

The priest was seen leaving the courtroom with his lawyer, getting into a Toyota Yaris and speeding off to avoid journalists and members of the media. The court’s decision to ban the publication of the name also restricts media houses from showing his face in photographs.

“Some witnesses, who are still young, are afraid to testify,” sources told this newspaper.

Magistrate Paul Coppini upheld a request by the priest’s defence lawyer, Carmelo Galea, for the case to be heard behind closed doors. The request was upheld almost immediately by the court.
However, it is thought the magistrate put the sitting forward by 24 hours after arguing that the prosecution had enough evidence to proceed. So far there is no ban on the publication of details, which is normally reserved for cases involving minors who are related to the accused.

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‘Spotlight’ script tells the story of Globe series

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

By Mark Shanahan and Meredith Goldstein | GLOBE STAFF AUGUST 19, 2014

As you know, a big-budget Hollywood movie about The Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series on the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal is in the works, and we managed to get our hands on a draft of the script, dated June 2013.

Co-written by Josh Singer, whose name might be familiar to fans of “The West Wing,” and Tom McCarthy, who’s also directing the movie, “Spotlight” tells the story of how a team of Boston Globe reporters and editors discovered and, despite concerns about a possible backlash among the newspaper’s advertisers and Catholic subscribers, chronicled the Archdiocese of Boston’s practice of covering up the crimes of problematic priests.

Even at 131 pages, the script moves briskly, starting with the Eileen McNamara column about pedophile priest John Geoghan that originally piqued the interest of then-Globe editor Marty Baron. To be played in the movie by Liev Schreiber, Baron comes across as fearless, heroic, and mostly humorless. Much is made of his outsider status — “So the new editor of the Globe is an unmarried man of the Jewish faith who hates baseball?” — the clear implication being that if not for Baron’s willingness to pursue the story, the issue of priest sex abuse may not have been so fully investigated.

The other stars of this story, at least according to the screenplay we read, are editor Walter V. Robinson, described as a “Boston everyman,” reporters Michael Rezendes (“good looks, bad haircut”) and Sacha Pfeiffer (“wholesome”), and Mitchell Garabedian, the lawyer who represented several of the victims. (He’s described in the script as “abrasive, to say the least.”) In the movie, Michael Keaton will play Robinson, while Mark Ruffalo will play Rezendes, Rachel McAdams is in discussions to play Pfeiffer, and Stanley Tucci will play Garabedian.

Because every good movie about investigative journalists has to have a scene in a parking garage, the script includes a scene in a parking garage. There are also scenes at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, a “crappy” East Boston diner, Faneuil Hall, Ringgold Park in the South End, a courtroom, and, of course, the offices of the Globe.

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Economic impact of child abuse profound, says ESRI

IRELAND
Irish Times

Paul Cullen

Fri, Aug 15, 2014

Childhood sexual abuse has a profound long-term economic impact on survivors, according to a new study by the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI).

Even decades after the abuse occurred, survivors are more than twice as likely as others to be out of the labour force as a result of being sick or permanently disabled, the research has established.

When account is taken of the psychological difficulties that abuse is already known to cause, male survivors are three times more likely to be sick or disabled than other men.

For women, the impact of child sexual abuse on involvement in the labour force in later life is much smaller and not statistically significant, the study finds. This may arise because the older women who were surveyed were more likely than their male peers to have been “in and out” of the workforce during their adult lives, according to co-author Prof Alan Barrett, head of the economic analysis division of ESRI.

Research has shown the links between abuse and psychological disorders such as depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety. However, the ESRI research is one of the first to examine the economic effect on people who suffered sexual abuse in their childhood years.

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Sexual Abuse & SNAP

UNITED STATES
The Catholic Eye

Posted by David H Lukenbill

SNAP, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, is a wonderful organization that keeps the pressure on the Church to deal with sexual abuse within its priestly ranks effectively.

I have been following them for several years, and they are an organization to keep in touch with for the absolutely amazing work they do.

Many critics claim they are anti-Catholic, but, from what I’ve seen, they area anti-sexual abuse by priests and pro-children.

Here is an excerpt about how they were formed.

An excerpt.

SNAP all began with one person. Barbara Blaine founded SNAP in 1988 after years of pain, depression and shame. She was abused as an 8th grade child by a Toledo, Ohio priest who taught in the catholic school she attended. Years later, her pleas for help from Toledo’s bishop fell on deaf ears. Barbara realized that survivors of clergy abuse could help each other and, by mid 1988, she had built a network of about two dozen victims. By early 1989 several survivors had struck up friendships, held regular telephone conversations and exchanged letters. In 1991, the very first SNAP Meeting was held at the Holiday Inn, Chicago.

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.

Venice Diocese settles child sex abuse claim

FLORIDA
News-Press

At a news conference this afternoon, Adam Horowitz, an attorney for survivors of clergy sexual abuse, will announce a pre-litigation settlement of a child sexual abuse and cover-up claim against the Diocese of Venice involving the Rev. Jean Ronald Joseph.

The allegations relate to Joseph’s abuse of a teenage boy while assigned to St. Francis Xavier parish in Fort Myers, according to a news release from Horowitz.

In 2009, allegations against Joseph by a 31-year-old man were made public by the Diocese of Venice. Joseph denied the abuse, which was alleged to have happened at St. Francis Xavier about 15 years ago.

Horowitz said he will release the new church document, which outlines the internal church investigation and judicial proceedings against Joseph that led to his removal as a priest last year.

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Royal Commission to hold private sessions in Launceston

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

19 August, 2014

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will be holding private sessions in Launceston from 26 – 29 August 2014.

Royal Commission CEO Philip Reed said all people affected by child sexual abuse while in the care of an Australian institution have the opportunity to tell the Royal Commission of their experiences in a private session.

“Over the course of this week 18 survivors of child sexual abuse in Tasmania will have the opportunity to tell the Royal Commission of their experiences, in a private session with a Commissioner.

“The Royal Commission has already held more than 2,200 private sessions in cities and town across Australia and this is the first time the Royal Commission has held private sessions in Launceston.

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Young priest hides face…

MALTA
Times of Malta

[with video]

Young priest hides face as he is arraigned over alleged child abuse, bail granted after sitting behind closed doors

A young priest was granted bail this afternoon after being arraigned before a magistrate in Gozo to face charges of child molestation.

The priest, believed to be in his thirties, covered his face as he was taken to court.

No details of the case were given, but the alleged abuses are understood to have taken place over a number of months and involved several children.

The sitting was held held behind closed doors following a request by lawyer Carmelo Galea. Reporters were ordered out of the courtroom. The court also banned publication of the priest’s name.

Following the granting of bail, the priest left the courtroom accompanied by his lawyer.

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Venice Diocese settles child sex abuse claim

FLORIDA
10 News

Fort Myers News-Press, news source August 19, 2014

Fort Myers, Florida (News-Press) — An attorney for survivors of clergy sexual abuse is planning to announce a pre-litigation settlement of a child sexual abuse and cover-up claim against the Diocese of Venice involving the Rev. Jean Ronald Joseph.

The allegations relate to Joseph’s abuse of a teenage boy while assigned to St. Francis Xavier parish in Fort Myers, according to a news release from attorney Adam Horowitz.

In 2009, allegations against Joseph by a 31-year-old man were made public by the Diocese of Venice. Joseph denied the abuse, which was alleged to have happened at St. Francis Xavier about 15 years ago.

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Priest accused ofabusing minors showsface to camerasafter court issues ban

MALTA
Malta Independent

A young priest was charged with child molestation in Gozo this afternoon, but no details of the case are forthcoming as a total ban has been imposed by the court.

The case was heard behind closed doors on the request of the priest’s lawyer Carmelo Borg. Journalists present for the sitting were ordered to leave.

The priest, in plain clothes, hid his face as he was escorted up the steps leading to the Gozo courts. His attitude changed after the court sitting, as he walked down the steps without covering his face in spite of the clicking or rolling cameras, having been given protection by the magistrate.

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Cardinal should have gone ‘earlier’

IRELAND
Dundalk Democrat

Dundalk man Brendan Boland, who has just published a book on his experience of abuse by the serial paedophile Fr Brendan Smyth, has said he is disappointed with the Cardinal’s letter of resignation to the Pope.

“It’s a long time coming,” he said. “He should have done it back in 2010. Maybe he should not have taken the job at all in 1994 when he found out Smyth was arrested in Northern Ireland”.

The cardinal, who was 75 on Saturday, has submitted his resignation to the Vatican.

This is required of all Catholic bishops when they reach that age.

He will remain a cardinal for life and may continue to vote in papal elections until 2019, when he will be 80.

Interviewed on RTÉ Radio One’s This Week programme on Sunday, Mr Boland said he and Smyth’s other victims were “really disappointed. Cardinal Brady is resigning. It appears to us that he’s just retiring naturally as if he’s done nothing wrong. I feel let down again. They’re attempting to save face again”.

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Pope Francis says he has ‘two or three years’ to live and is open to retirement

Sydney Morning Herald

Onboard the Papal plane: The Pope has publicly broached the prospect of his own death for the first time, giving himself “two or three years” but not ruling out retirement before then.

Talking to reporters on a flight back to the Vatican from South Korea, the 77-year-old pontiff, who seemed in good spirits, was asked about his global popularity, which was evident again during his five-day visit.

“I see it as the generosity of the people of God. I try to think of my sins, my mistakes, not to become proud. Because I know it will last only a short time. Two or three years and then I’ll be off to the Father’s House,” he replied light-heartedly.

The Argentine Pope said he could handle the popularity “more naturally” these days, though at first it had “scared me a little”.

While the Pope has not spoken publicly before about when he might meet his maker, a Vatican source said he had previously told those close to him that he thought he only had a few years left.

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Independent Commissioner Peter O’Callaghan appears at Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

August 19, 2014

Jane Lee, Cameron Houston

The Catholic Church’s independent investigator into allegations of clerical abuse has been asked at the sex abuse royal commission whether he reported abuse to police and if he obstructed certain victims’ attempts to take legal action against the church.

Independent Commissioner Peter O’Callaghan, QC, was also questioned over his involvement in decisions on how much counselling the church should fund and his frequent communication with lawyers for the Archdiocese of Melbourne, which could have compromised his independence.

Counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness, SC, repeatedly asked Mr O’Callaghan why it was his role to advise Carelink, the Melbourne Response’s counselling arm, if and when victims were given treatment.

Mr O’Callaghan replied that he was responding to a request, and that his position “doesn’t preclude me from other roles in the organisation”. He insisted he had acted independently at all times.

A barrister since 1961, he was appointed the Independent Commissioner of the church’s Melbourne Response – its internal process for handling abuse allegations – initially for a six-month term in 1996. Since 1996 the church has paid him more than $7 million.

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Abuse victims still calling after 18 years

AUSTRALIA
Courier-Mail

BY ANGUS LIVINGSTON AAP AUGUST 19, 2014

AFTER 18 years investigating pedophiles in the Catholic Church, Peter O’Callaghan QC is sure of one thing: people don’t make up stories about sexual abuse.

HE was appointed in 1996 to investigate sexual abuse in the Melbourne archdiocese and thought the claims would flood in over the first six months.

They never stopped coming.

Almost two decades later he is still getting calls from victims, including one during a break in a royal commission hearing on Monday.

As the independent commissioner of the church’s Melbourne Response to clergy sex abuse, Mr O’Callaghan has identified 81 offenders and upheld 326 claims of abuse since October 1996, with just nine claims unsubstantiated.

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Pope Francis Tells Reporters: ‘Another Two Or Three Years, And God Will Take Me’

Inquisitr

Pope Francis made a shocking revelation on Monday, as reported by Newsmax, claiming that he only has “two or three years” to live.

The 77-year-old Pontiff apparently shared the shocking news with reporters during his flight back from South Korea and seemed to be in good spirits about the whole thing. When he was asked about the global popularity he enjoys he responded:

I see it as the generosity of the people of God. I try to think of my sins, my mistakes, not to become proud. Because I know it will last only a short time. Two or three years and then I’ll be off to the Father’s House.

The Pope added that he was able to handle the popularity “more naturally” these days even though it was tough at first.

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Archbishop responds

GUAM
KUAM

by Sabrina Salas Matanane

Guam – Archbishop Anthony Apuron responds to a letter written by five Catholic priests calling on him to clarify statements he made in a July 29th press release regarding his reasons for the removal of Monsignor James Benavente.

According to Father Adrian Cristobal Archbishop Anthony Apuron had and still has every intention of meeting with Fathers Tom McGrath, Jeff San Nicolas, Mike Crisostomo, Patrick Castro and Gus Gumataotao. The five priests as we reported wrote a letter to the archbishop dated August 4th. They were seeking clarification on his statement in his July 29th press release explaining his decision to remove Monsignor James Benavente from his positions as rector of the Archdiocese of Agana and director of the Catholic Cemeteries. The basis for his removal? Allegations of financial mismanagement. In the statement the archbishop wrote, “I informed the Presbyteral Council, the College of Consultors and the Archdiocesan Finance Council about this situation and they expressed their support.”

The five priests are part of that Presbyteral Council and in their letter to the archbishop said they disagree with his statement and it’s connection with his decision to remove Monsignor James. As we reported they referred to a meeting they had with the archbishop on July 25th during which he presented the financial situation of the Archdiocese of Agana. The priests state the archbishop made no mention of his intent to remove Monsignor James and that they were not consulted on the matter. They also stated they had no opportunity to discuss or raise objection to his removal and that at no point during these proceedings was a vote or question on the matter placed on the table for discussion to come to the conclusion of our “expressed support of your decision to remove him”.

According to Father Cristobal however, he tells KUAM today that the archbishop explained in detail the serious situation that the archdiocese found itself to the Presybteral Council during that july 25th meeting and he told the council clearly that he was going to take action.

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Priest to face child abuse charges

MALTA
Times of Malta

A priest is to be arraigned in court in Gozo today to face charges of child molestation.

The alleged abuses took place over a series of months.

This will be the first arraignment since two former priests were imprisoned in November 2012 after they lost their appeal against abuse convictions.

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Investigation of Diocesan Priest in Progress

CALIFORNIA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno

To: All Media Contacts
From: Teresa Dominguez, Chancellor
Date: August 18, 2014
Re: Investigation of Diocesan Priest in Progress

On Thursday, August 14, 2014, the Victim Assistant Coordinator for the Diocese of Fresno received a call from a concerned parent. Arrangements were made to meet with the parents and their youth that evening to receive a detailed account of the events and observations that motivated the family to make contact with the Diocesan officials. Immediately following the interview, mandated reporting procedures were engaged and the report was received by the Los Banos Police Department.

On Friday, August 15, 2014, an investigation by law enforcement was initiated and the priest, Rev. Robert E. Gamel, Pastor of St. Joseph Church in Los Banos, was placed on administrative leave. Rev. Joe Baca has been appointed Administrator Pro Tem for an indefinite amount of time.

The Diocese of Fresno is cooperating with the investigators while following diocesan safe environment policies and procedures which take into consideration the wellbeing of all parties involved. Since an investigation is in progress, the Diocese is unable to comment on any details regarding this case.

Anyone with information that may be relevant to this investigation is asked to contact Sergeant Ivan Mendez at (209) 827-7070 Ext. 114. The Diocesan Victim Assistance Coordinator, Cheryl Sarkisian, may be contacted at (559) 493-2882.

Most Rev. Armando X. Ochoa, Bishop of the Diocese of Fresno, calls upon the faithful to hold this issue in prayer out of concern for all involved.

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Los Banos priest under investigation for alleged Web sex crimes

CALIFORNIA
Fresno Bee

BY ROB PARSONS
Merced Sun-Star
August 18, 2014

A 64-year-old Catholic priest in Los Banos is under investigation for alleged “Internet related sex crimes” involving at least one teenager, the Los Banos Police Department announced Monday.

The Rev. Robert E. Gamel was placed on administrative leave Thursday pending further investigation, according to a statement from the Roman Catholic Diocese in Fresno. Gamel, 64, has been a priest at St. Joseph’s Catholic Parish since 2009, according to media archives.

Catholic officials in Fresno confirmed Gamel is under investigation in the statement released late Monday. Gamel could not immediately be reached for comment Monday.

No arrests have been made and no criminal charges have been filed, Los Banos Police Cmdr. Jason Hedden said.

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FACT CHECKER: SNAP Lies About Status of Priest To Create Media Hysteria

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

David Pierre

As if any further proof were needed of how the anti-Catholic group SNAP manipulates the media and lies to the public about the Church’s handling of sex abuse cases, consider this recent ominous media statement from David Clohessy, the group’s National Director:

“A new child sex abuse lawsuit has been filed against Fr. William Authenrieth who is apparently still alive and living in Massachusetts.

“We urge [a Florida bishop] to urge his colleagues in Massachusetts to warn the public and their parishioners about Fr. Authenrieth …”

But wait …

There is no “Fr. William Authenrieth.” Authenrieth was indeed once a priest, but as a few seconds of research clearly show, the Church laicized him some three decades ago, in 1985.

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The Role of Rabbis in Confronting Abuse in the Orthodox Community

UNITED STATES
Emes Ve-Emunah

Guest Post by Rabbi Yosef Blau

One of the strongest advocates for victims of sex abuse is Rabbi Yosef Blau, Mashgiach Ruchani of Yeshivas Rabbenu Yitzchok Elchanan (YU). I received the following a submission of a short post generated by the scandal in the seminaries owned and operated by sex abuser Elimelech Meisels. I am honored to do so. It follows:

Sexual abuse is criminal behavior and the police should be contacted. This does not imply that there is no role for the rabbinate and the community leaders in confronting abuse. In many cases the victims are unwilling to cooperate with the police often because of community pressures. Even when they do there is a need to remove an accused offender from a position where he is a potential danger before the slow process of a police investigation and prosecution is completed.

The recent case of the head of a seminary in Israel accused of sexual misconduct with students is an example of the need for rabbinic action. While according to Israeli law the behavior is illegal it is unlikely that American students, who have returned home and know little Hebrew, will go to the Israeli police. Only pressure from an external דין בית will cause the offender to resign his position.

Since he created the school and chose its staff a thorough investigation of the circumstances is necessary to determine if others were negligent and guilty of enabling the abuse or covering it up. This would require speaking first to all the students who were abused or witnessed any questionable behavior and to ascertain if they informed anyone on staff of their concerns.

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Child abuse victims may not be heard

AUSTRALIA
Echo Netdaily

Victims may be turned away from the child abuse royal commission from next month, with the government yet to make a decision on an extension.

The commission has requested its 2015 deadline be extended by two years, along with an additional $104 million, but is yet to be told the outcome.

Without the extension, the commission says 3000 victims won’t be heard.

Commission chairman Peter McClellan told a closed community meeting in Victoria the uncertainty meant victims may be turned away from September, News Corp Australia reports.

More than 2200 abuse victims have had private sessions with the commission, with another 1800 scheduled before the end of the year.

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Church commissioner: ‘independent’ from Melbourne archdiocese

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AUGUST 19, 2014

Pia Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

THE QC leading the Melbourne archdiocese’s response to victims of clergy sex abuse has rejected claims his title of “independent commissioner” conceals the church’s proximity to his role.

Peter O’Callaghan QC has today given evidence at the royal commission hearing examining the archdiocese’s Melbourne Response process.

Mr O’Callaghan, who has been independent commissioner since the Melbourne Response began in 1996, told the commission he “absolutely”

believes he is independent from the archdiocese, though he is funded by it and uses the same instructing solicitors.

“I believe I have been independent in all respects,” he said.

“So far as I’m concerned, I make the decisions without fear or favour and without any influence from other persons.”

Victims who wish to seek compensation from the archdiocese under the Melbourne Response, established by then Archbishop George Pell, are required to meet with Mr O’Callaghan so he can investigate whether their claims meet the balance of probabilities.

They are then referred to a panel which decides the appropriate level of compensation, capped at $75,000, and advises the archdiocese of any punitive action it should take against the offender.

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Barrister picked by George Pell to investigate sex abuse gives evidence

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Tuesday 19 August 2014

The barrister appointed by Cardinal George Pell in 1996 to investigate hundreds of child sexual abuse claims involving the Catholic church in Melbourne thought all claims would be investigated within six months, the royal commission has heard.

More than 18 years later, Peter O’Callaghan QC is still working on the investigation as victims continue to come forward.

His role in Melbourne Response – the operation set up by the church to investigate the claims – included interviewing victims in his legal chambers in the city and making recommendations to the church as to whether they should be compensated, the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse heard on Tuesday.

On Monday, two witnesses told the hearing at Victoria county court in Melbourne how they felt discouraged by O’Callaghan from reporting their abuse to the authorities. They also spoke of feeling overwhelmed by O’Callaghan’s chambers, where most interviews were, and still are, carried out.

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Church lawyer told victims that police involvement would postpone process

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Tuesday 19 August 2014

The lawyer in charge of investigating child sex abuse claims on behalf of the Catholic archdiocese in Melbourne told victims that if they went to the police, his investigation process would end.

Peter O’Callaghan QC told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse on Tuesday that he believed once police became involved, he would be in contempt of court if he continued the church investigation.

The two-week hearing in Melbourne is scrutinising church’s scheme for handling abuse cases, known as the Melbourne Response, established by Cardinal George Pell in 1996.

A witness identified only as AFA told the commission on Monday that during his meeting with O’Callaghan, he was told he would be eligible for compensation from the church of up to $75,000, but this process would be postponed if he went to police.

O’Callaghan said this was standard procedure.

“…if the police are in charge of a matter then I take no further steps because to do so would be conducting a concurrent investigation with the police which would be inappropriate,” he told the Commission.

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Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response commissioner …

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response commissioner expected complaints process to take six months

August 19, 2014

Jane Lee and Cameron Houston

The man who determined whether the Catholic Church should compensate Melbourne clergy abuse victims for almost 20 years thought it would only take six months to handle all their complaints.

Peter O’Callaghan, QC, was appointed the Independent Commissioner of the church’s Melbourne Response – its internal process for handling abuse victims’ complaints – for a six-month term in 1996.

Mr O’Callaghan, who appeared at the Royal Commission in Melbourne on Tuesday, said he told the church’s solicitors and Archbishop Hart that he was optimistic the investigations could be concluded in a short time-frame.

“I was all for expediency if I could achieve it,” he said.

After almost two decades and over 351 complaints, Mr O’Callaghan, QC, conceded his initial estimate was “utopian”.

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OPINION: Priests should quit parishes

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By BOB O’TOOLE Aug. 18, 2014

HUNTER Catholic priests Monsignor Allan Hart and Father William Burston should be removed from their positions as parish priests immediately, and asked to retire or resign from active ministry.

The Clergy Abused Network (CAN), which is a voluntary group of survivors of sexual abuse in a religious context, does not seek to completely end their ministry. They should be free to perform relief liturgical celebrations in the diocese as required.

But the findings of the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry in May this year make anything less than their removal as parish priests unacceptable.

The commission investigated, among other things, Catholic Church knowledge of child sex allegations involving the late Hunter priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen, SC, found that Monsignor Hart was “an unsatisfactory and unimpressive witness”.

The behaviour of Monsignor Hart was an embarrassment to those present at the inquiry.

He contradicted himself. He attempted to distance himself from the issues by claiming he had passed information to his superiors and by doing so had abrogated himself from any further responsibility.

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Group criticizes diocese’s handling of accused priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 19, 2014

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A victims’ advocacy group is criticizing the Diocese of Pittsburgh for not alerting the public 11 years ago when it learned that a Boston priest had been accused of committing sexual abuse here in the early 1960s.

The Diocese of Pittsburgh is defending its actions, saying it had no direct information about the allegation when it learned of it in 2003.

The Rev. John P. Carroll, who is supervised by the Archdiocese of Boston, faces a church trial there that could lead to his removal from the priesthood over an allegation that he sexually abused an altar boy at St. Michael Church in Elizabeth in 1962 or 1963. Father Carroll, now 86, is currently restricted from ministry.

Bishop David Zubik sent letters over the weekend to be read at parishes where Father Carroll had served between 1962 and 1972, asking any potential victims to come forward, after the Boston archdiocese notified him this month of the trial. Father Carroll also served at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale and St. Denis in Versailles (now St. Patrick in McKeesport).

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Abuse victim told to sue Catholic Church

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

BY ANGUS LIVINGSTON
August 19, 2014

The man in charge of investigating pedophile priests in Melbourne told one victim to sue the Catholic Church.

The priest had been moved to the victim’s parish after allegations of abuse elsewhere were reported to the church.

Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan QC told the child abuse royal commission he believed the man had a case for compensation through the courts.

“I said to him, `Look, I know that you should get independent legal advice because there may be an action open to you’,” Mr O’Callaghan told the commission on Tuesday.

“I thought he would have much more success, and I think he did.

“I don’t recall the details of it, but typically of course if you can mount a case at common law you will recover much more than the ex-gratia compensation.”

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Child sex abuse royal commission: Melbourne Response investigator ‘encouraged’ victims to see police

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Helen Vines
Updated 19 Aug 2014

The head of the Catholic Church’s response to sexual abuse allegations encouraged victims to go to the police, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

Peter O’Callaghan, QC, has been the independent commissioner for the abuse complaint handling process, known as the Melbourne Response, since it was set up in 1996 by then Melbourne Archbishop George Pell.

Mr O’Callaghan has come in for criticism during the current proceedings, with two witnesses telling the commission he discouraged them from taking their claims to the police.

Giving evidence to the commission, Mr O’Callaghan said he encouraged victims to go to the police, and some followed his advice, while others did not.

He agreed with counsel assisting Gail Furness SC that if police were investigating a complaint, his own investigation stopped because “it would be a concurrent investigation and quite inappropriate”.

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Catholic…

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Catholic priests encouraged victims of abuse to go the police, the church tells the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN AUGUST 19, 2014

VICTIMS of sexual abuse by Catholic priests were repeatedly encouraged to make formal complaints to police, but rarely did, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan QC told the commission today many victims didn’t want to name offenders to police.

Mr O’Callaghan told the hearing he didn’t pass matters to police because victims didn’t ask him to and he didn’t want to breach their confidentiality.

Just 119 of the 326 upheld complaints have been dealt with by police since the Melbourne Response, the church’s internal compensation panel, was started in 1996.

Mr O’Callaghan is being grilled as part of the commission’s examination of the Melbourne Response scheme.

It has been widely slammed by victims and was last year heavily criticised during Victoria’s parliamentary inquiry into abuse by religious and other organisations.

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August 18, 2014

4 new lawsuits allege sexual abuse at Archdiocese of Santa Fe

NEW MEXICO
KOB

By: Blair Miller, KOB.com

An Albuquerque law office filed four new lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe alleging priests raped several boys in the 1990s and before in the latest string of legal filings against the church.

The lawsuits come just three months after similar lawsuits were filed against the Archdiocese.

Four male victims, who range from age 31 to 58 now, allege they were abused as children by four different priests, including Fr. Perrault, Fr. Jason Sigler and Fr. Tony Gallegos in northeastern New Mexico.

The lawsuits say the victims have suffered from delayed Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) because of the abuse.

The lawsuits also say priests were hired by the Archdiocese directly out of the Servants of the Paraclete in Jemez Springs, where priests were sent from around the country for psychosexual disorder treatment.

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Trial date set for pastor accused of sexual abuse

NEW YORK
WIVB

[with video]

HARTLAND, N.Y. (WIVB) – A pastor from Orleans County accused of sexually abusing children will go to trial in January.

Rev. Roy Harriger is charged with three counts of coercive criminal sexual conduct against a child, one count of first degree incest, two counts of incest and three counts of endangering the welfare of a child. A judge set a trial date of January 20 when Harriger was in court Monday for pre-trial motions.

At least 15 people in three states have signed affidavits claiming 70-year-old Harriger molested them as children. But many of those cases are past the statute of limitations.

However, a grand jury has found enough evidence to indict Harriger on charges relating to three children. News 4 has learned that Harriger is accused of molesting a boy and a girl about 12 years ago when he was pastor of the Wesleyan Church in Lyndonville.

The case first came to light last Thanksgiving, when Harriger was arrested by State Police. His own son, George Harriger, told News 4 he was molested as a boy but never realized there were others.

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Catholic church lawyer to face inquiry after child sex abuse victims’ criticism

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Monday 18 August 2014

After coming under fire from three witnesses at the 16th public hearing of the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, the independent commissioner appointed by the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese to investigate sex abuse claims, Peter O’Callaghan QC, will face the court on Tuesday morning.

He did not appear on day one of the public hearing on Monday after more than two hours of power outages delayed the proceedings.

The court had heard how two men – Father Kevin O’Donnell and Michael Glennon – were responsible for 73 of the 326 sexual abuse complaints upheld by the Melbourne archdiocese.

They were investigated as part of the church’s Melbourne Response scheme established by Cardinal George Pell. That scheme will be the subject of the hearing over the next fortnight, which will hear from many of the victims interviewed by O’Callaghan as part of church investigations.

A witness identified only as AFA told the court how he was sexually abused by Glennon on three separate dates, starting from when he was 15. His case would later be investigated under O’Callaghan.

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Teacher faces jail for sexual relationship with teenage student

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 19, 2014

Andrew Thomson

A teacher who split from his wife and started a sexual relationship with a teenage student faces jail.

The 48-year-old teacher, a father of five who had admitted his offending to police, yesterday pleaded guilty in the Warrnambool County Court to nine charges involving the girl, who was 15 and 16 years old at the time.

The victim’s mother said in a victim impact statement her life and relationship with her daughter would never be the same again, the Warrnambool Standard reports.

She said her faith and trust in people of authority had been absolutely shattered and she never suspected such evil from a teacher. …

The teacher, who the court heard had also been a victim of paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale, said the girl was very persuasive and he couldn’t resist her.

The offences were committed at Warrnambool, Port Fairy and other smaller towns in the district.

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OH- Alleged sex offender priest challenges law; SNAP responds

OHIO
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

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

A Cleveland Catholic priest is challenging an Ohio law that requires HIV positive adults to disclose their condition to sexual partners.

It seems that no group of sex offenders try harder to overturn sex-related laws more than Catholic priests. We’ve seen accused Catholic clerics challenge indecent exposure, sex offender registry, statutes of limitations and other similar laws. (Next month, for instance, Catholic officials in Hartford Connecticut are seeking to overturn a good statute of limitations law there and replace it with a more predator-friendly one.)

In dozens of cases, we’ve urged Catholic bishops to disclose whether or not they’re paying for lawyers for alleged sex offender priests. Almost always, bishops ignore our requests, even though they have pledged, for at least a dozen years, to be “open” about clergy sex cases.

According to the Plain Dealer, “Fr. James McGonegal is charged with soliciting sex from an undercover ranger at Edgewater Park last October.” We hope Catholic officials are keeping him in treatment, and hope they’ll send him to a credible, independent center for men with sexual difficulties, run by experienced professionals, instead of a discredited church facility run by Catholic clerics.

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LCWR: ‘Ongoing conversation with church leadership is key’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Stockman | Aug. 18, 2014

Leaders of the largest organization representing women religious in the United States issued a statement Monday that they will continue the dialogue with church officials demanding reform, but they will also protect the integrity of their group.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious is made up of leaders from religious communities across the nation and represents about 80 percent of the women religious in the U.S. The group held its annual four-day assembly in Nashville, Tenn., last week, where much of the conversation was about the ongoing doctrinal assessment and demands for reform by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Following the assembly, which ended Friday, the LCWR national board held a three-day meeting and on Monday afternoon issued a statement on its work with Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain to implement the mandated reforms. The doctrinal congregation appointed Sartain to oversee the reform efforts.

“Our study, discernment, and prayer led us to reaffirm our strong belief that ongoing conversation with church leadership is key to building effective working relationships that enable both women religious and church leaders to serve the world,” the board said in the statement. “It is our deepest hope to resolve the situation between LCWR and CDF in a way that fully honors our commitment to fulfill the LCWR mission as well as protect the integrity of the organization.”

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Boston priest. 86, accused of Pennsylvania abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Pottstown Mercury

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pittsburgh’s bishop has notified parishioners that a retired priest now living in Boston has been accused of molesting a child at a western Pennsylvania parish where he served in 1962 and 1963.

Bishop David Zubik also urged anyone who attended St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth — or five other Pittsburgh-area parishes through 1972 — of the allegations.

The Boston Archdiocese says the Rev. John Carroll lives in a home for retired priests in the Boston area.

The priest also served at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale, and St. Denis in Versailles, which is now part of St. Patrick parish in McKeesport, all in the Pittsburgh diocese.

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Judge questions the constitutionality of HIV law used to charge Cleveland priest

OHIO
The Plain Dealer

By James F. McCarty, The Plain Dealer
on August 18, 2014

CLEVELAND, Ohio – The soliciting case against a Cleveland priest was thrown into doubt this morning after a judge questioned the constitutionality of the law governing the crime he was charged with.

The Rev. James McGonegal, 69, the former pastor of St. Ignatius of Antioch Church, is charged with soliciting sex from an undercover ranger at Edgewater Park last October.

The charge is a felony because McGonegal is HIV positive, but failed to divulge this to his intended partner.

McGonegal’s scheduled trial in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court today was postponed after defense attorney Henry Hilow asked the judge to consider his argument that the Ohio statute used to charge his client is outdated, and the case should be dismissed.

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OH- Therapist hired by diocese loses license

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, August 18, 2014

For more info: Judy Jones (636) 433-2511, SNAPjudy@gmail.com, David Clohessy of St. Louis (314) 566-9790 cell, davidgclohessy@gmail.com

Therapist hired by diocese loses license
He counseled several clergy sex abuse victims
And he was used to evaluate prospective clerics
Board found “{he} acted inappropriately with a client”
SNAP says his recommendations are now “questionable”
Group wants bishop to let victims choose their own therapist

A psychologist who worked for the Youngstown diocese in two roles has lost his license for having an inappropriate and non-professional relationship with an adult client.

Psychologist D. Terence Heltzel, in a four page “consent agreement” with the State Board of Psychology, admitted to having an inappropriate relationship with one of his female clients.

According to the consent decree “The Board received a complaint from an adult female alleging that Dr. Heltzel acted inappropriately towards her during her during her final therapy session.”

“The Board and Dr. Heltzel agree that (he) established a professional psychological psychotherapy relationship with (this client) when (she) sought help following the deaths of two family members (and) entered into a non-professional relationship with (her),” the decree says.

“This psychologist dealt with possible victims and possible predators but is guilty of misconduct himself,” said David Clohessy, director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “Now, already wounded victims have been hurt again because of the very poor choice by Youngstown Catholic officials to hire Heltzel.”

“We suspect that Heltzel has tested and evaluated dozens of prospective Youngstown area priests, seminarians and deacons and maybe lay employees over years and years,” said Judy Jones of SNAP. “Now his judgments about those church staff – and their suitability for employment – are in serious doubt.”

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TX- Victims blast Ft. Worth church in abuse case

TEXAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Aug. 15, 2014

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

Members of a Ft. Worth area church cheered as a minister made callous and intimidating comments in a child sex case involving a twice-accused colleague.

Shame on them.

Congregants of Cowboy Way Church cheered and applauded as visiting Pastor Randy Free told them “Our beloved pastor finds himself in the greatest spiritual battle of his life…However there is a silver lining behind this storm cloud … That is that Dan’s God and our God has never lost a battle. And he’s not about to lose this one.”

Shame on Free and everyone who clapped at these insensitive, chilling words. Such hurtful remarks make victims, witnesses and whistleblowers feel frightened and discouraged about reporting known and suspected child sex crimes.

As adults, we face a simple choice. We can make it easier or harder for crime victims to step forward, expose wrongdoers, help police, protect kids and start healing. Members and staff at Cowboy Way Church are making it harder, on teenagers and adults who have been sexually assaulted. And they’re rubbing salt into the already-deep wounds of many crime victims.

It’s very hard for those with information about child sex crimes to speak up. But unless they do, more child molesters hurt more kids. Those at Cowboy Way Church are ignoring this sad reality.

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Abusive Priest’s Past Employer on the Hook

OHIO
Courthouse News Service

By JEFF D. GORMAN

(CN) – An Ohio church that failed to report an abusive priest owes damages to the teenager he victimized at his next parish, a state appeals court ruled.

Jessica Simpkins said she was 15 when Brian Williams, the senior pastor at Sunbury Grace Brethren Church, raped her in March 2008. Williams was sent to prison for eight years for two counts of sexual battery.

Before Williams was Sunbury’s pastor, he was the youth pastor at Grace Brethren Church in Delaware, Ohio.

After settling her lawsuit against Sunbury for $90,000, Simpkins sued Delaware Grace and Pastor Darrell Anderson for negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, infliction of emotional distress and failing to report child abuse.

Simpkins alleged that in the early 1990s, Delaware Grace had learned that Williams had inappropriate sexual contact with a minor female but failed to take action.

Delaware Grace had also allegedly learned in 2001 that Williams had inappropriately touched a woman that he was counseling.

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Church politics:The elephant is definitely in the room

MALTA
Malta Independent

Every institution has its own politics, and the Maltese Church falls squarely in that state of fact. Last week, a former parish priest vented his frustration at being asked to resign his post because the Church was being held to ransom by some parishioners and feast organisers. All too often it takes an incident such as this to point out the elephant in the room. Fr Emanuel Camilleri, who was at Mgarr parish, blurted out that the Church was in a leadership crisis.

Initially, many were flummoxed, it was a bolt out of the blue. But when this newspaper tried to speak to the Curia to get a reaction the next day, we were told that there was no comment to be made. That same day, we were given a full length rebuttal by one of the parish committees that organise the feast there. We were told that the letter was given the ok by the Church.

Still, all seemed to peter out. But yesterday, Fr Camilleri’s beliefs were echoed word for word by the respected Fr Joe Borg in his column in The Times. Fr Borg also calls the issue the “elephant in the room”. He clearly states his doubts about whether the current leadership is up for the job. But before that, he tackles the issue of the Church being out of touch and getting its priorities wrong.

And this is where the main problem lies. Pope Francis has clearly rejuvenated the Catholic faith on a global level. You could also say that his actions – however small – have gone towards restoring people’s faith in humanity.

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DA says statute of limitations prevents action against accused priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Bill Zlatos
Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

An expired statute of limitations will keep the Allegheny County District Attorney’s Office from pursuing an allegation of sexual abuse involving a priest and a minor, authorities said Monday.

The district attorney, through a spokesman, endorsed the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh’s handling of such cases, even though the diocese did not act on this allegation for nearly 11 years.

The diocese said it learned of the allegation against the Rev. John P. Carroll on Dec. 9, 2003, from the archdiocese in Boston. The allegation dates to when Carroll was parochial vicar at St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth from 1962 to 1963. He was in the diocese until 1972.

Church officials in Boston informed the Pittsburgh diocese on Aug. 5 that it had begun steps to dismiss him from the priesthood.

“If we are talking about something that is alleged to have taken place in 1962, or in the 10 years after, until this individual was no longer associated with the Diocese of Pittsburgh, the statute of limitations would still prevent us from taking any action on the allegation,” said Mike Manko, spokesman for District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr.

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“BLACK TOWN, WHITE POWER” IN FERGUSON

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

A Kansas City judge upheld a $1.1 million award to 42 clergy sex abuse victims in an unprecedented “breach of contract” case against Bishop Robert Finn, who hails from our town. The suit charged Finn violated a 2008 settlement which included non-economic abuse prevention commitments. The only other case in the U.S. is a pending one against the Jesuits over the alleged abuse of a student by Fr. Daniel C. O’Connell, a former St. Louis University president. .

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Smyth abuse victim disappointed at Cardinal Brady’s ‘retiring naturally’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Mon, Aug 18, 2014

Abuse victim Brendan Boland (53) has expressed disappointment at the manner of Cardinal Brady’s retirement as Archbishop of Armagh and Catholic Primate of All-Ireland.

The cardinal, who was 75 on Saturday, has submitted his resignation to Rome, as is required of all Catholic bishops when they reach that age. He remains a cardinal for life and may continue to vote in papal elections until August 16th, 2019, when he will be 80.

In 1975 Brendan Boland, then 14, was questioned by canon lawyer Fr John Brady and Dundalk parish priest Msgr Francis Donnelly on allegations he made about being abused by Norbertine priest Fr Brendan Smyth.

Present in support of Brendan Boland was then young Dominican priest Fr Oliver McShane in whom the teenager had first confided about the abuse. Fr McShane has since left the priesthood. At the end of the inquiry Brendan Boland was sworn to secrecy by Fr Brady.

On Cardinal Brady’s letter of resignation, Brendan Boland said yesterday “it’s a long time coming.” He felt “he should have done it back in 2010. Maybe he should not have taken the job at all in 1994 when he found out Smyth was arrested in Northern Ireland”.

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PA- Victims condemn Pittsburgh bishop for “11 yrs of secrecy”

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 503 0003, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

For 11 years, Pittsburgh Catholic officials hid the fact that Fr. James P. Carroll is a credibly accused child molester. Yesterday, they finally “came clean” about his crimes. But Pittsburgh church staff said nothing about their callous cover up.

We strongly suspect that Fr. Carroll has spent the past decade living among unsuspecting neighbors who see him as a charming, safe, “grandfatherly” figure. We hope he hasn’t assaulted more kids over these 11 years.

No matter how Catholic officials try to spin it, this is irresponsible and inexcusable. It’s a clear violation of the promises made by Catholic officials – in Pittsburgh and at the national level – to be “open” about clergy sex crimes. Even worse, Pittsburgh Catholic officials, by keeping silent about a potentially dangerous cleric, may have enabled him to hurt more kids.

Two months ago, we disclosed (at a news conference) that Fr. Carroll was a credibly accused child molester.

At that time, back in June, like they have done for years and still do, Pittsburgh Catholic officials said nothing.

Bishop David Zubik’s PR man claims that in 2003, he and his well-educated staff “considered child sexual abuse as a ‘moral defect,’ as it did with alcoholism, rather than a disease,” (according to the Tribune Review). That is insulting baloney.

In 2003, Zubik and other top Pittsburgh Catholic officials knew child sex abuse was a crime. They knew it was apt to be repeated. They knew that citizens have a duty to help police catch criminals. They knew that if they told the truth about Fr. Carroll, more victims might step forward and file charges and Fr. Carroll might be convicted and imprisoned. But they chose – for more than a decade – to stay silent and endanger kids.

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SNAP Fundraising Drive: Please Consider Donating

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

[with video]

William D. Lindsey

The critically important support organization for survivors of clerical sexual abuse, SNAP, has a fundraising drive underway right now. I’d like to draw readers’ attention to the drive. As the video at the head of the posting states, at present, SNAP support groups in the U.S. are confined primarily to large urban areas. SNAP is trying to expand its outreach by setting up new support programs in three new cities.

The group is soliciting financial assistance to send two SNAP trainers to those three cities. Please consider helping. The Indiegogo link above has a button that allows you to contribute online.

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Canada- Catholic official pleads guilty to child sex crimes

CANADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For Immediate Release: Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

Contact: David Clohessy of St. Louis MO 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com, Brenda Brunelle of Windsor, Canada 519 800 3492, windsor@SNAPnetwork.org

Victims urge Catholic group to do outreach
Its former official faces sentencing in sex case
Ottawa man was former head of Catholic youth group
He just pleaded guilty in 1984 child sexual assault case
In 2002, a civil case against him & Knights of Columbus was settled
Group says Knights should prod others who were hurt to “come forward, get help, and call police”

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is urging a Catholic men’s organization to help find others who may have been sexually assaulted by an Ottawa man who pleaded guilty last week to child sex crimes.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests are writing the head of the New Haven Connecticut-based Knights of Columbus, prodding them to “do aggressive outreach” to seek out “others who may have seen, suspected or suffered abuse” by Steve Fagan. For years, Fagan, who pleaded guilty last Monday to sexually assaulting a boy in 1984, was the State Chair of the Knights’ Ontario youth auxiliary.

Fagan will face a sentencing hearing on October 17 and “such outreach may help prosecutors convince the judge to levy an appropriate sentence,” SNAP’s letter said.

“The justice system works best, and kids are protected best, when judges have more information about child molesters before they are punished,” said David Clohessy of SNAP. “If there are others victims of Fagan out there, the least the Knights can do is find them and urge them to contact Crown officials in the next few weeks.”

The Crown is seeking a six month jail sentence, two years’ probation, that Fagan be listed on the sex offender registry.

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Archdiocese Accused of 30-Year Coverup

NEW MEXICO
Courthouse News Service

Monday, August 18, 2014

By VICTORIA PRIESKOP

ALBUQUERQUE (CN) – The Archdiocese of Santa Fe protected a series of pedophile priests in a cover-up lasting at least 30 years, according to three recently filed lawsuits.

The lawsuits in Bernalillo County Court sketch a history of boys between the ages of 9 and 15 being molested by priests who the Archdiocese allegedly knew sexually children, but allowed to work with children nonetheless.

Two of the three plaintiffs claim that the priests had received treatment at the Servants of the Paraclete center in Jemez Springs, N.M., and that the Paraclete center charged an average of $10,000 for the treatment.

The treatment was intended to “cure” priests of sexual attraction to children, but “after some effort at treatment, usually by prayer, these abusers were released into New Mexico parishes and communities and hired by [the Archdiocese of Santa Fe],” John Doe D claims in his complaint.

John Doe D’s lawsuit lists the names of 40 priests, including an archbishop, who the archdiocese allegedly admitted “have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse.” The abuse allegedly occurred from the 1950s through the 1990s.

John Doe D claims that the archdiocese knew that its “culture of the day include(ed) a ratio of pedophile priests to non-pedophile priests of about 40 percent in the decades preceding and including plaintiff’s birth and childhood.”

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Boston priest. 86, accused of Pennsylvania abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
WTAE

PITTSBURGH —Pittsburgh’s bishop has notified parishioners that a retired priest now living in Boston has been accused of molesting a child at a western Pennsylvania parish where he served in 1962 and 1963.

Bishop David Zubik also urged anyone who attended St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth — or five other Pittsburgh-area parishes through 1972 — of the allegations.

The Boston Archdiocese says the Rev. John Carroll lives in a home for retired priests in the Boston area.

The priest also served at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale, and St. Denis in Versailles, which is now part of St. Patrick parish in McKeesport, all in the Pittsburgh diocese.

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Israel to extradite suspected haredi sex abuser to Australia

ISRAEL
The Jerusalem Post

By SAM SOKOL
08/18/2014

NEW YORK- An Israeli-Australian dual citizen wanted for allegedly sexually abusing several teenaged girls was arrested and is slated to be extradited to Australia.

Malka Leifer, an ultra-orthodox woman living in Emmanuel, was the principal of the Adas school in Melbourne between 2001 and 2008. She stands accused of engaging in sexual behavior with a number of students, including three sisters. She left Australia after being fired by a local school board.

“Ms Leifer is wanted to face prosecution in Victoria for alleged sexual assault offenses,” The Age quoted a spokesperson for the Australian Attorney General.

The arrest is the result of legal action initiated by a victim seeking compensation from Leifer, resulting in an extradition request filed in a Jerusalem district court by the Israeli AG’s international department.

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Former Adass Israel School principal Malka Leifer faces extradition over alleged sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 18, 2014

Jewel Topsfield
Education Editor for The Age

The former head of an Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne will be extradited to Australia to face charges of sexually abusing her students.

Malka Leifer, a former principal of the Adass Israel School in Elsternwick, fled to Israel in 2008 after the school board sacked her following complaints of inappropriate conduct with students.

The Australian Attorney-General’s Department said Mrs Leifer had been arrested in Israel in response to an extradition request made by Australia.

“Ms Leifer is wanted to face prosecution in Victoria for alleged sexual assault offences,” a spokesperson said.

The Israeli news website Ynet reported overnight that a resident of Emmanuel, a settlement town in the West Bank, was arrested on Sunday.

It said the woman was suspected of sexually abusing three sisters at an Orthodox high school in Melbourne between 2004 and 2008.

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Former principal of Adass Israel School …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Former principal of Adass Israel School in Melbourne arrested over alleged sexual abuse

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN AUGUST 18, 2014

A FORMER principal of a Melbourne Jewish girls’ school has been arrested amid claims she sexually abused students including sisters.

Malka Leifer was arrested in Israel overnight where it is believed extradition proceedings have started in an attempt to have her returned to Melbourne.

The Attorney General’s office confirmed this morning Ms Leifer is wanted in Melbourne to face allegations of historic sexual offending against a string of girls.

The mother of eight left Australia in 2008 after she was sacked as principal at the ultra orthodox Adass Israel School in Elsternwick.

The sacking followed complaints that she had acted inappropriately with students while principal between 2001 and 2008.

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