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 10, 2014

What Archbishop Martin Krebs needs from Guam: An appeal to all Victims of Catholic Clergy Sexual Abuse on Guam and Oceania

GUAM
Juan Malimungga

Good Evening my dear friends and family,

Shocking that I would take the time two write about some of the issues that affected me and I continue to ask you today and always to keep the faith. These are very difficult times for many people and I recognize that I cannot be the sole person to come forward each and every time to fight against this kind of devious and criminal actions by leaders. Yet I do it knowing that I am putting into the universe and most importantly, to God above, that I am trying to follow his teachings in Loving my enemy as myself. And indeed, while some people may argue that I often time do this risking so much before me and my professional life, I cannot but help to state for the record, I can’t do it without you! You are the ones that I am madly in love. You, the suffering Chamorro People of the Marianas, and when ever something “major” like this happens, it has been our culture “to keep silent” and “to keep quiet.” And granted, this too is part of a colonial disposition – to feel helpless and to remain silent so that we don’t shame anyone in public or on the radio or even on T.V. However, this kind of behavior is really the work of Satan and we must do everything in our power to get rid of these devils that roam around the world seeking for the ruin of souls. This kind of behavior by Church officials, to keep things silent, is truly a shame upon all of us, the faithful in this Archdiocese. Yet, what my hope is in all of this is to continue to teach the young people who will have my words and my actions for the remaining time that I am alive and to illustrate to them that if anything like this happens – when you are abused in any way – that you take it one step up and seek help from authorities who must listen to your story. This is in the best interest of all involved because if we just keep silent, what would happen if another boy or another girl gets hurt. You and I have the opportunity to stop those who abuse in their place. If we just remain silent and don’t really do anything, then this teaches that person “NOBODY CAN GET ME!” – famous quotation used by other advocates on this island!

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.

George Pell opens up about his new role at the Vatican as ‘God’s Banker’

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

August 10, 2014

Colin Kruger
Business Reporter

Cardinal George Pell appears to have settled in quite nicely to his new role as ‘’God’s banker’’.

CBD is not sure how his Italian language skills are faring but in a recent interview with the Catholic News Service from St John’s Tower in Vatican City, he certainly showed how well he has boned up on the corporate lingo.

In an article titled Pope’s finance chief talks Vatican reform, Pell was asked what he was doing in Rome and why the reform was necessary.

‘‘I’d say we’re attempting to put into place the best available set of management practices,’’ Pell says.

There are international standards for accounting and money management which Pell says he’s introducing to the Vatican, such as regular independent audits.

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.

Broken Rites has helped a “Four Corners” TV program re church-abuse

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

Broken Rites has helped the Australian Broadcasting Corporation with research for a Four Corners television program, being broadcast on Monday 11 August 2014. The program is about how the Catholic Church in Australia tries to cover up its child-sex abuse – and how the church avoids paying full compensation to victims. The ABC producers obtained information from Broken Rites research. Here are the links to some of the relevant Broken Rites articles.

The Four Corners program includes case studies of some of the church’s paedophile priests. For example (you can click on any of the following names):

Fr Aidan Duggan: Cardinal George Pell instructed the church’s lawyers to crush a former altar boy (John Ellis) who had been one of Duggan’s victims. The church is still using this legal tactic (known in legal circles as “the Ellis defence”) to avoid paying full compensation to other victims.

Fr Kevin O’Donnell: George Pell praised Father O’Donnell but Broken Rites supported the victims.

Fr Peter Searson: The church inflicted this “chaplain” on disadvantaged victims.

Fr Dominic Phillips:This priest “befriended” young schoolgirls.

Four Corners also gives an example of one notorious Melbourne parish – Doveton. This low socio-economic area is on Melbourne’s south-eastern outskirts, near Dandenong. The Melbourne Archdiocese leadership sent a succession of sexually-abusive priests to this parish. For example (you can click on any of the following names).

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.

Grudge Match: Msgr. Lynn Vs. D.A.

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

In a grudge match before the state Supreme Court, defense lawyers for Msgr. William J. Lynn will square off against District Attorney Seth Williams.

At stake is the freedom of Lynn, whose historic June 22, 2012 conviction on one count of endangering the welfare of a child was reversed on Dec. 26, 2013 by the state Superior Court.

Both the district attorney and Lynn’s defense lawyers have filed briefs in anticipation of a yet-unscheduled hearing before the state’s highest court. The district attorney began his 33-page filing on July 10th by charging that Lynn “was a high ranking Archdiocesan official specifically responsible for protecting children from pedophile priests.”

“Instead, he relocated them, as part of a general scheme of concealment, in a manner that put additional children at risk of being sexually molested,” the district attorney wrote. In reversing Lynn’s conviction, “The Superior Court erred and should be reversed,” concluded the brief filed by Chief of the D.A.’s Appeal Unit Hugh J. Burns Jr., Deputy District Attorney Ronald Eisenberg, First Assistant District Attorney Edward F. McCann Jr., and D.A. Seth Williams.

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.

Transparency is key to allow healing to begin

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Judy Bastien

Recent allegations of sex abuse of a child by a local priest has sent ripples through the congregation at St. Edmond Catholic Church and at the same time has spurred them to rally in support of its pastor.

“I’m very sad that a leader of my parish has had to go through this,” said Bob Chaney of the Rev. Gilbert Dutel — “Father Gil,” to his parishioners. Chaney, who called Dutel “an inspiring man,” firmly believes in his innocence, as it seems, does the whole congregation.

Last weekend, Dutel received standing ovations from his parishioners during Mass.

“If a person is innocent, it’s fabulous to have support of a community that believes in you,” said Kathryn Elliott, who holds a doctorate in psychology and is in private practice at the Anthetic Psychology Center. “That’s archetypical, loving support.”

But that kind of support can cut both ways. A support system that protects the guilty does the community a disservice.

It should be said that accusations do not always constitute guilt.

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.

Spreading God’s word: Bishop Scharfenberger busy in his new diocese role

NEW YORK
Post-Star

Meg Hagerty

ALBANY

Edward Scharfenberger remembers having a couple of sleepless nights after getting a call from the apostolic nuncio at the Vatican notifying him he had been named to succeed Howard Hubbard as the 10th bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany.

He wasn’t afraid of leaving the Brooklyn parish he served for 12 years, but he feared in his new position he’d be stuck behind a desk all day.

But the 66-year-old has not been languishing in his office since he started his duties in April. He has made it a priority to meet the Catholics in the 12 deanery, 14-county area bishopric.

Kenneth Goldfarb, director of communications for the diocese, said even he has trouble keeping track of the bishop. …

From 2002 to 2008, Scharfenberger was a member of the Diocesan Review Board for Sexual Abuse of Minors for the Brooklyn Diocese, charged with evaluating the way sexual abuse cases were handled. He and a committee determined whether an allegation was credible, then made recommendations to the bishop. During his last year on the board, he took on the role of Promoter of Justice and worked to protect and pursue individual and ecclesial rights in the church.

Sharfenberger acknowledged there was a “lack of vigilance” in the past on the part of church officials to respond to allegations of sexual abuse. As far back as the 1970s, mental health professionals were suggesting perpetrators only needed counseling and reassignment to a new parish and all would be well, he said.

“Those were obviously, as you look back, not the right decisions to be made. Never again,” he said. “Now we urge the public, if they see something, to say something. To many of the victims, more than anything else, the most healing thing is just knowing that somebody is listening to them and takes them seriously.”

Scharfenberger praised Pope Francis for reaching out and apologizing to victims of clergy sexual abuse. In the past 10 years, the Catholic Church has had to do “personal soul searching,” he said.

“That was important. The church that only focuses in on itself and, God forbid, in a very defensive way, is not going to be effective in claiming the Gospel. That having been said, what I like about the Francis approach is that it doesn’t seem like he’s doing this in order to bring people to convert, to proselytize. That’s very distasteful,” he said.

Scharfenberger said the Albany diocese has an agreement with each of the district attorneys in the 14 counties and if an allegation is made, it is forwarded to that office immediately. In addition, the diocese conducts its own investigation with the review board.

“I’m personally present throughout that process to keep an eye on things,” he said. “My goal is to be transparent, to follow law and go beyond in terms of those that have been affected.”

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.

Victim of sex beast priest tells of fury over Church’s handling of paedo attacks

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Aug 10, 2014 By Marie Kierans

Cardinal Sean Brady should be axed over his role in the cover-up of sex abuse against children, a victim of paedo priest Brendan Smyth claimed on Saturday.

Brendan Boland’s poignant new book Sworn To Silence reveals for the first time an Oath of Secrecy that he signed as a young boy in 1975.

Fr Brady also put his name to the official document.

After plucking up the courage to report the abuse to another cleric following two years of hell, the youngster was summoned to a secret Church inquiry and questioned on his own by a group of priests including Fr Brady while his father was told to stay outside.

And despite assurances to both him and his dad that the matter would be dealt with, Smyth continued to abuse children for another two decades before being convicted of more than 100 counts.

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.

Disabled woman sues top priest

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

A DISABLED woman is suing the former Superior of a Catholic religious order, alleging that he sexually abused her over 14 years and that others in the church failed­ to act on their knowledge of what took place.

Documents tendered to the NSW Supreme Court show former school teacher Jennifer Herrick, 61, alleges Father Thomas Knowles repeatedly assaulted her without consent, including by forcing her to have sex in a park grandstand and within sight of other people.

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.

Sex abuse victim Jennifer Herrick seeking damages from former parish priest

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By the national reporting team’s Lorna Knowles

A disabled woman has begun a legal case against her former parish priest for sexually abusing her over a 14-year period.

Jennifer Herrick is seeking aggravated damages from Father Tom Knowles and three senior members of his Catholic Church order, the Blessed Sacrament Fathers.

Ms Herrick says Father Knowles repeatedly exploited her vulnerability as a disabled and sexually naive parishioner.

In June, Ms Herrick spoke exclusively to the ABC about how the church was using the controversial Ellis defence to fight her claim.

Today, she took the long train ride from her home on the NSW Central Coast to Sydney for the first day of her hearing in the Supreme Court.

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.

Disabled woman sues priest for sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

MARK COLVIN: A disabled woman has begun a legal case against her former parish priest, who she says sexually abused her over a 14 year period.

Jennifer Herrick is suing Father Tom Knowles and three senior members of his Catholic Church order, the Blessed Sacrament Fathers.

Ms Herrick says Father Knowles repeatedly exploited her vulnerability as a disabled and sexually naive parishioner.

Two months ago, Jennifer Herrick spoke to PM about how the church was using the controversial Ellis defence to fight her claim.

Lorna Knowles has the story.

LORNA KNOWLES: Early this morning, Jennifer Herrick took the long train ride from her home on the New South Wales Central Coast to the Supreme Court in Sydney, to take on the man she says abused her for 14 years.

JENNIFER HERRICK: It felt surreal in some ways, when you had had a close knowledge of someone that was so betrayed as I’ve had, to then be in a courtroom discussing that same person, it’s not a normal circumstance, and it’s very difficult.

LORNA KNOWLES: She sat silently in court, as a church barrister described her claims as excessive.

JENNIFER HERRICK: I was really affronted by that term. It was insulting and I thought frivolous on his part to something that’s extremely serious.

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.

Anglican Church apologises to victims of abuse across Canberra and Goulburn

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

KATHLEEN DYETT AND JONATHON GUL
August 10, 2014

The Anglican Church has apologised to victims of abuse at special church services across Canberra and Goulburn.

Bishop Stuart Robinson publicly apologised to victims of abuse at the hands of church members, or groups connected to the church.

The apology was either read out to congregations at Lamentation Sunday services, or a video of the apology delivered by Bishop Robinson was played in church.

“From time to time I have to deliver messages which are difficult and painful, and this is one of them,” he said.

“I do make this apology sincerely and genuinely, we do hope to care for people.”

“I take this opportunity to apologise for any abuse or mistreatment, that those in this event, that is the service that you’re attending, may have experienced by groups or individuals connected with our Anglican church,” Bishop Robinson 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.

Wagga Anglican church says sorry

AUSTRALIA
Daily Advertiser

By ELLA SMITH Aug. 10, 2014

THE Anglican church broke its silence on abuse within the ministry with a formal apology in Wagga yesterday.

The service acknowledged the pain, hurt and sorrow caused by the actions and inactions of the church, and sought to act as a step towards healing, forgiveness and reconciliation.

The Anglican Bishop of Canberra and Goulburn, Reverend Stuart Robinson, made a public apology before local priests led their own congregations in services across the diocese.

“The general response in my community, many people were in tears, there was a heavy feeling of sorrow and the chance to lament the immense pain,” Rector of Anglican parish of Wagga, Father Michael Armstrong, said.

“It’s also about us, as a church, asking for forgiveness.

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.

After two years as Buffalo bishop, challenges confront Malone

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

By Jay Tokasz | News Staff Reporter
on August 9, 2014

The 26 teenagers sat stone silent as Bishop Richard J. Malone stepped down from the altar to talk with them about the sacrament of confirmation during Mass inside St. Francis of Assisi Church in Athol Springs.

A confirmation service often is the only direct interaction that many Catholics experience with a bishop in their lifetimes, and Malone, sensing timidity in this group, encouraged them not to be afraid “to talk in church when the bishop asks you to.”

He wanted to know how many of them played sports – a ready icebreaker in sports-obsessed Western New York. He professed his own loyalty to the Boston Red Sox and compared the practice of Catholicism to being a good teammate who trains regularly and keeps in shape.

Malone then ratcheted up the gravity of his homily, urging the young Catholics not to become complacent in their religion. …

Still, the push to revitalize the Buffalo Diocese could not come at a more difficult time.

The Catholic Church hasn’t fully recovered from clergy sex abuse scandals that began rocking the American church more than a decade ago. A 2013 Pew Research Center survey found that 34 percent of American Catholics viewed sex abuse and its cover-up as the church’s most important problem.

In addition:

• For some Catholics, discontent lingers from church and school closings under former Bishop Edward U. Kmiec;

• A shortage of priests will only grow more acute as a large crop of pastors nears retirement age, with many clergy already feeling overburdened and underappreciated; and,

• After years of growth, overall Catholic parish collections, which reached as high as $101 million in 2002, are now headed downward, even as many costs increase, potentially hampering the diocese’s attempts to launch new evangelization programs. The diocese also estimates it has $85 million to $110 million in “long-term” financial commitments for which it must prepare, including priest and lay employee retirement plans and cemetery maintenance costs.

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.

Haselberger speech is Opus Dei Beast PR Stunt of the Day (in SNAP convention).

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

NCR’s full article with Haselberger’s speech focal points and our rebuttal after each paragraph is below these preliminary commentaries.

Jennifer Haselberger take SNAP Chicago Convention ‘for a ride’ to South Africa. (‘Take for a ride’ means to cheat or deceive someone)

According to NCR, Jennifer Haselberger got a standing ovation before she uttered a word at the SNAP convention in Chicago last week. The “who’s who” list of speakers who played major roles (in the past) in revealing the Catholic church’s clergy sexual abuse crisis frequently referenced to her (past) role in exposing the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese’s mishandling of pedophile priests. One speaker alone (was assigned) recapped portions of her dissertation (so she wouldn’t have to waste time repeating the past).

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

August 9, 2014

Rise of culture wars has meant ignoring the common good

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Vinnie Rotondaro | Aug. 9, 2014 NCR Today

Few Americans knew much about (or had even heard of) Burwell v. Hobby Lobby before the Supreme Court ruled June 30 that the religiously devout owners of the Oklahoma-based arts and crafts retail chain didn’t have to pay for four kinds of contraceptive care for female employees under the Affordable Care Act.

In the end, what the Supreme Court dropped was a culture war bomb. America has been in the throes of the culture wars since 1970s, says Vince Miller, the Gudorf Chair in Catholic Theology and Culture at the University of Dayton. NCR interviewed Miller to learn more about the culture wars and the effect they have on American society.

NCR: What are the culture wars, and how do they work?

Miller: Culture war politics focuses on what can divide groups, polarize them and then mobilize them against each other. Part of what defines the culture wars is rhetoric: using language that portrays the opponent as not simply wrong, but morally depraved. Politically, it seeks policies and legislation that do not appeal to the majority. It aims to mobilize the base, but not broad coalitions. It’s always about getting 51 percent. …

What have the culture wars done to Christianity?

The religious right was enormously well organized and enormously well funded. And for my entire generation, they were the public voice of Christianity. For people whose access to Christianity is largely what they see on television or in the news or in the paper, they got to define the public face of Christianity. And study after study has shown that the millennial generation has gotten that message loud and clear, and they don’t find it interesting at all. They find it repugnant. In 2007, a Barna study showed that among non-Christians under 30, only 15 percent had a positive view of Christianity. When they were asked to describe Christianity, the words they gave were judgmental, hypocritical, old-fashioned, and too political.

I’m 32, and sometimes when I mention I’m Catholic, I get a look.

Right, and if people don’t know that there’s something else that Catholicism represents — if they don’t already know about Dorothy Day, Oscar Romero, or Sr. Dorothy Stang, about the church’s concern for justice and peace — then there’s no way they would ever learn about any of it in the broader media.

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

Pope’s paedophile priest catcher in NZ

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

STEVE KILGALLON

As the Vatican’s “Promoter of Justice”, Monsignor Bob Oliver bears the “best job title I’ll ever have”.

Catchy title, unenviable occupation.

Oliver is out to capture paedophile priests, surrendering them to civil law, then exacting whatever punishment the Catholic Church can mete out. It makes him a lightning rod for anti-church sentiment, forces him to confront the church’s dark past and its worst miscreants, and means many meetings with victims, often talking of their abuse for the first time. “It breaks your heart,” he said.

It’s been a major worldwide problem for the church: in the US alone, they’ve paid more than $US3b in settling over 3,000 lawsuits from victims; in Ireland, there have been several government apologies and inquiries and estimates of thousands of victims. The new pope, Francis, has taken a hard line on abuse and Oliver, 52, was one of his first appointees.

Oliver visited New Zealand last week, for a conference in Wellington, and granted the Sunday Star-Times a rare interview. The church was once deeply suspicious of the media’s approach to sex abuse cases but Oliver believes media did the church a service: “It’s hard for any group over time to keep up the kind of energy that’s needed to do this work,” he explains. “What the media has been doing was to keep that energy up . . .”

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

Assignment Record – Rev. Thomas J. Sullivan, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Thomas J. Sullivan was ordained a Jesuit priest of the California Province in 1944. His assignments took him to Jesuit Universities in Los Angeles and San Francisco CA, as well as to Japan, Rome and Hawaii. In Los Angeles he directed a retreat center while residing at a high school. Sullivan died in 1992. He was accused in 2002 of abuse in Los Angeles in 1953. In a 2003 lawsuit he was accused of sexually abusing a male high school student, also in Los Angeles,1956-1958. A 2004 archdiocesan report shows that three people had thus far come forward with reports of abuse said to have occurred 1952-1958.

Ordained: June 17, 1944
Died: Feb. 2, 1992

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

Assignment Record – Rev. John J. “Jack” Wood, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: John J. “Jack” Wood was ordained for the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus in 1950. He had been working in Alaskan villages as a seminarian since 1945. In 1962 he transferred to Seattle University to teach, returning in 1965 to Alaska for another year. Next he was assigned to a Portland OR parish, back to Seattle U., on to a Spokane convent and then to a Beaverton OR nursing home as chaplain. Wood spent the following 11 years at a Portland OR retirement facility and another nearly 10 years at a Care Center in Spokane. He died in Spokane March 11, 1997. Wood’s name was included on the Fairbanks diocese’s list in 2009 of “individuals against whom one person has brought a complaint of sexual abuse”. The abuse is said to have occurred in Chevak AK, where he was assigned in the 1950s.

Ordained: June 17, 1950
Died: March 11, 1997

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.

Sex offenders, recidivism, and the Church

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

I am grateful to my good friend Stephanie Smith for contributing this guest post as I spend a little time away with my family – Boz
__________________________________________________________________________

I’m so pleased to be able to fill in for Boz this week as he enjoys a well-deserved time away with his family. Aside from being able to help out a friend, this guest post provides me an opportunity to address a topic that is of great interest and concern to me in protecting children from predators: Recidivism.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines recidivism as, “The tendency to relapse into a previous condition or mode of behavior.” This has become a hot topic in the last few years as it relates to the different treatment models that have been put into place for sexual offenders. One school of thought argues that nothing can be done for sex offenders to change their behavior. Another school of thought argues that there is some evidence that some offenders can avoid reoffending with the managing of behaviors and triggers.

This is a complex subject that certainly cannot be fully addressed in one post. However, I think it is important to begin this discussion with a few key points to consider when re-offense (recidivism) rates are discussed:

1. Treatment options for those who have committed sexual offenses against children is a young and changing field. Although we know that the sexual abuse of children has been occurring throughout history, the idea of providing treatment to offenders is new and is largely untested with very little accompanying research. Much more remains to be learned about the effectiveness of treatment for child sexual offenders.

2. Recidivism studies require that the offenders have been caught and adjudicated within the time period being studied (five years, fifteen years, etc.). Many reported cases that will result in conviction might not be fully adjudicated within that time frame of the study due to the length of time involved in investigating and prosecuting such cases. Furthermore, the delay in the judicial process is also impacted by the fact that most abuse survivors do not immediately report the abuse.

3. Recidivism studies require accurate data regarding reoffending. The fact that child sexual abuse is one of the most underreported offenses makes it extremely difficult to collect accurate data on the recidivism of offenders. For example, the fact that there has not been a new report of abuse regarding a certain offender does not necessarily mean that the offender has not reoffended. It may simply mean that additional victims have not reported the offense.

4. Any study under discussion needs to be reviewed thoroughly to ascertain how “sex offenders” are defined. Are we looking at a broad or specific category of sex offenses? For example, are we considering only offenses against adults, or just offenses against children, or a combination of offenses against adults and 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.

FRANCIS AND THE NUNS: AN INTERVIEW WITH MARY GORDON

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

BY PATRICIA MILLER AUGUST 8, 2014

Novelist, essayist and biographer Mary Gordon takes on Pope Francis’ treatment of American nuns, and by extension his and the Catholic Church’s attitudes toward women as a whole, in an essay in the August issue of Harper’s Magazine.

Gordon notes that Francis’ much-quoted assertion that the church has focused too much on “issues related to abortion, gay marriage and the use of contraceptive methods” has “suggested the possibility of a new era for the Church, on in which economic justice would take precedence over divisive social issues.” As American nuns “have been the de facto leaders of the country’s liberal Catholics,” Gordon says that Francis’ treatment of the nuns can be seen as a marker of how serious he is about “shifting the Church’s attention.”

But, she concludes, “a year and a half into his papacy, Pope Francis is looking an awful lot like his predecessors,” most notably by allow the investigation into the Leadership Conference of Women Religious and their ongoing censure and the larger “apostolic visitation” of all American nuns to continue at the behest of Vatican conservatives.

RD’s Patricia Miller talked to Gordon about Francis’ treatment of the nuns and the history of hostility between women religious and the all-male hierarchy, which she says “has been consistent throughout Catholic history.” …

You point to a crisis of masculinity among the hierarchy as a result of the sex abuse scandal and the fear of powerful women (who are playing a surprisingly effective role in the political arena, as Network and the LCWR did during the debate over ObamaCare). Does this come down to a question of authority in the church and who wields it?

Yes, it does. With all people in authority, when they feel embattled they get more aggressive. The bishops aren’t any different. They really perceive that their authority is being challenged by the nuns. It is a kind of default setting to look at women when that happens and to try and dominate them to reestablish authority.

You note how badly the attacks on the LCWR and the American nuns in general have gone over with the general public. It really has been a PR disaster for the Vatican. Why don’t you think they have recalibrated, if for no other reason than they seem to be generating more and more sympathy for the nuns?

Because I think they perceive, correctly, that their growth area is with the right wing. That’s their base and that’s where the money comes from. In America, the people who like the nuns are the liberals and they aren’t in the pews every Sunday.

It all comes down to the money. They don’t want to alienate Dominos Pizza [Dominos Pizza founder Thomas Monaghan is a major donor to conservative Catholic causes] and the other big money donors. No one on the left gives them the kind of money that they get from the right. You see this all the time with Catholic colleges like Boston College. Wealthy alumna will make a fuss about something they don’t like and they will pull 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.

Court cracking down on survivor compensation abuses

CANADA
APTN

By Kathleen Martens
APTN Investigates

WINNIPEG – There’s a new sheriff in charge of dealing with lawyers who might prey on Indian Residential School survivors.

Retired British Columbia judge Ian Pitfield has been deputized by BC Supreme Court Justice Brenda Brown as a “special independent advisor” on survivor complaints about their legal services.

The fact there’s enough work to keep Pitfield busy may surprise some. But officials say they welcome the help. All parties to the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement approved his hiring effective June 30th.

The details are contained in a court order issued by Justice Brown that was recently made public. She is one of the supervisory judges of the settlement agreement, and has presided over one investigation into a lawyer’s conduct and is presently reviewing another’s.

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

Pope Francis, Ray Rice and the ‘F Word’: How Faith Communities Can Help Trauma Victims Heal

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

David Briggs
Writer, Association of Religion Data Archives

The women came seeking healing. Many of these survivors of the Rwandan genocide had lost family members and some had been raped and infected with HIV. More than a few were struggling just it to make it to another day before they found Solace Ministries.

Sometimes it took a month, or a full year before they spoke about their experiences with other survivors. When they did, even if it was only to say a few words before they broke down in tears, other survivors gathered around, embracing one another.

The passage from the Book of Isaiah — “Comfort, comfort my people, says your God” — was the mantra for this ministry, which helped women take the first steps to escape from the depths of horror.

Envisioning a future with a sense of hope was nurtured among a loving community that reinforced their belief in a God who had not abandoned them.

One sermon topic was off limits, however, for the Solace ministers.

“They never, ever, ever preached forgiveness,” said University of Southern California sociologist Donald Miller, who has visited Rwanda 16 times and conducted more than 260 interviews with widows and orphans of the 1994 genocide.

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“Important services” missing from Magdalene survivors redress scheme

IRELAND
Journal

‘DEEP DISAPPOINTMENT’ has been expressed at draft redress legislation aimed at securing medical and community services for survivors of Magdalene laundries.

Justice for Magdalenes Research (JFMR) has said the Heads of Bill falls short of what was recommended by Justice John Quirke.

The group has also raised concerns for survivors living abroad, and said it was ‘dismayed’ at the delay in the publishing of this draft legislation.

Some survivors had passed away or have required frequent hospitalisation, the group claimed.

JFMR has noted that “important services” are missing from the Bill, ranging from “complementary therapies, high tech drugs and home support to assist with household tasks”.

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Magdalene group criticises compensation bill

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Conor Ryan
Investigative Correspondent

Justice for Magdalenes has strongly criticised draft legislation that deals with the entitlements of those given compensation for their suffering in the laundries.

JFM said the heads of bill fell far short of what had been recommended to the Government and limited the key medical entitlements that were supposed to be available.

The draft bill allows for a certain level of free medical care to those who receive ex-gratia payments.

However, the way the benefits are parsed means they are actually more restrictive than the established medical card (HAA) scheme.

“Important services which are missing from the bill include complementary therapies, high-tech drugs, and home support to assist with household tasks,” JFM research said in a statement. “The bill also requires a GP referral for counselling, which is not necessary under the HAA card scheme.”

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Magdalene compensation Bill falls short, says survivors group

IRELAND
Breaking News

Justice for Magdalenes has criticised recommendations in draft legislation which sets out their compensation entitlements for treatment they received in the laundries.

The group is unhappy at the delay in publishing the legislation.

It says the medical care listed is restrictive and falls short of what was recommended by Judge Quirke.

Justice for Magdalenes says it will work with TDs and Senators to ensure the Bill is amended to honour the Government’s committments to Magdalene survivors.

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The Staying Power of Emotional Abuse

UNITED STATES
Christianity Today

Sabrina Hardy, guest writer

“At least he didn’t take your virginity,” the leader of my Bible study group murmurs sympathetically, handing me a tissue to wipe away the tears brought on by my choked confession of a previous abusive relationship. I tense, mutter “that’s true,” and escape the conversation feeling just as broken and empty as before I worked up the courage to talk to her.

I have this conversation with three separate spiritual leaders at my Christian college, a roommate, and several close friends, and when they hear my ex-boyfriend never abused me sexually, their well-meaning first response always falls along similar lines: “It could have been worse—he could have raped you.” “At least he never laid a hand on you.”

I leave each conversation with none of the relief I expected, and each time, I spend a restless night staring at the walls of my dorm, wondering, Is my depression wrong because I was never sexually abused? and the more destructive, Maybe if he had taken my virginity, someone would listen to me.

Victims of sexual abuse are increasingly speaking out about the aching sense of shame and loss that accompanies such a violation and how it can become exacerbated by the church’s focus on feminine virginity. Yet, even these conversations and debates fall into the same trap: a narrow focus that seems to elevate sexuality to a position of sole importance.

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The ‘Francis effect’: three voices

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Fr. Eddie Siebert, S.J. The IN Network | Aug. 8, 2014 NCR Today

It was a frigid, gray February morning, and we huddled alongside thousands of pilgrims packed outside St. Peter’s Square waiting for the pope. Heeding smart advice, my colleague Kathleen Kelly and I arrived just before 8 a.m. to an already massive crowd for the 11 a.m. General Audience. We were in Rome for the SIGNIS World Congress for Catholic Communicators, and it seemed that the main topic of conversation that morning among our fellow conference attendees was just how crowded the Vatican felt since Francis’ election. We were told that audiences are usually held inside St. Peter’s in winter, but the event had been moved outside to accommodate the record-breaking throngs hoping to see the pope.

At 10 a.m., the roar of the flock erupted to the level you might expect at a One Direction concert. He had arrived early — a move characteristic of a pope who has a habit of choosing to spend more time with the people than allotted on the papal schedule. Instead of making a beeline for the front VIP section, where the politically and ecclesially connected waited, the pope entered from the back of the crowd, greeting those with the worst views and least connections. He hopped off the popemobile and lingered there, looking very much at home embracing a mother and her baby, blessing a young disabled woman, and laughing with an older man who may have been homeless. There was this palpable joy in the air as we all watched Francis model something so simple and yet so profound.

His popularity is something even the best PR machines here in Los Angeles can’t execute. It seems like every day, there’s a new story about the popular pontiff — but unlike much of what we see in the news, the Francis stories don’t reek of strategic PR stunts. My own observation of him that day in February and most of the accounts I hear have a few things in common. This is a man who doesn’t start his encounters with theology or dogma. In each situation, he starts with the person right in front of him. He’s not afraid to go after the estranged, to walk with people in their darkness, anger or pain. He seems most comfortable on the margins, with the complicated people and complicated situations many of us would prefer to ignore. …

We also spoke with Peter Saunders, head of the London-based group the National Association for People Abused in Childhood. Sexually abused by two Catholic priests as a child, Peter has been an outspoken voice for change and reform in the Catholic church in the U.K. He was one of six abuse victims to have a groundbreaking face-to-face meeting with the pope last month. Peter admits he’s still not sure why he was invited, as he’s hardly a “safe bet from a PR perspective.” We spoke with him about his “life-changing meeting” with the pope, in which he said, “there wasn’t any pressure to hold back. The pope listened intently and said all the right things.”

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Church Leader Jerald Hill Suspected Of Attempted Dog Sex

MISSISSIPPI
Huffington Post

By David Moye

A church leader in Roach, Missouri, is out of a job after being arrested for allegedly trying to arrange a sexual encounter with a dog.

Jerald Hill, 56, was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of attempted unlawful sex with an animal and attempted animal abuse.

Authorities began investigating Hill after the Boone County Sheriff’s Department Cyber Crimes Task Force got a tip about a Craigslist post by a man looking for two types of animals for sex.

One of the chosen animals was a dog, but investigators declined to mention the other type of animal, the Columbia Tribune reports.

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Priest says church must clear the air

AUSTRALIA
The Leader

By Monica Heary Aug. 9, 2014

THE Catholic Church has to be more open about the sexual abuse that has clouded its name, a former Sutherland priest celebrating 50 years in the ministry has said.

“The church has to do away with secrecy looking at this issue and also at celibacy; these are real questions for it to consider,” said Father John Sullivan, 74.

The priesthood has been a long learning process for the retired parish priest.

Among the parishes where he has ministered are Marayong, Malabar and Concord.

He has been a Parramatta Psychiatric Centre chaplain and a private secretary to cardinals James Freeman and Edward Clancy. But it was while he was ministering to alcoholics that he received one of his most profound messages.

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Indian school survivor Alvin Dixon spoke out for truth

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

TOM HAWTHORN
Special to The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Aug. 08 2014

At the age of 10, Alvin Dixon was removed from his home and family and sent more than 500 kilometres south to the Alberni Residential Indian School on Vancouver Island. Two hours after arriving, he was beaten with a strap. His crime: speaking the only language he knew, which was not English.

Many more beatings were to be endured in the following years. The boarding school operated by the United Church would be revealed later to have been a stalking ground for sadists and at least one predatory pedophile, their quarry the helpless children snatched away in the name of civilization.

What young Alvin and the other children suffered is shocking for its callousness and cruelty. Even the mundane seemed puzzling; he was expected to fill out a form detailing what he had eaten after every meal, an odd bureaucratic task considering the boys all ate from the same shared pot. Only last year it was revealed the children had been the unwitting subjects of experiments conducted by the federal government and the Canadian Red Cross to determine how little nutrition they needed to survive. Alvin Dixon, a malnourished boy, had been a human guinea pig.

Mr. Dixon, who has died at 77, survived the school, earned a university degree, and later counselled fellow residential school survivors. Later still, as a respected Heiltsuk First Nation elder, he became an eloquent and sometimes angry voice for those wronged.

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Family sues Adventist officials after sexual assault on Arlington campus

TEXAS
Fort Worth Star-Telegram

BY MAX B. BAKER
maxbaker@star-telegram.com

The family of a teenage girl who was sexually assaulted by a teacher and basketball coach on the campus of the Burton Adventist Academy in Arlington is suing the Texas Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, saying officials did not do enough to protect the girl while she was at school.

In June, Carlos E. Rodriguez, 37, pled guilty in Tarrant County court to continued sexual abuse of a child under 14 and was sentenced to 30 years in prison without possibility of parole. The assaults took place in 2012 when the girl was 13 and in the eighth grade, according to the court documents.

The family still lives in the area and waited until after the criminal case was completed to sue, one of their attorneys said. They are not named in court documents to protect the girl’s privacy.

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Judge declares mistrial in case of pastor charged with sexual battery

MISSISSIPPI
WREG

BY ASHLEY CROCKETT AND MIKE SURIANI

ALCORN COUNTY, Miss. — Judge James Roberts has declared a mistrial in the case of a pastor charged with felony sexual battery of a girl.

The judge learned the jury took two votes and couldn’t agree, and the jury foreman confirmed they can’t reach a verdict.

Pastor Timothy Nall is accused of sexually abusing the girl between August 1, 2012, and April 28, 2013, when the child was 6 and 7 years old.

The girl, who is now 8 years old, testified Nall inappropriately touched her while at her grandparents house in Alcorn County.

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Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton in Talks for Catholic Priest Sex Abuse Scandal Film

UNITED STATES
The Hollywood Reporter

UPDATED: Rachel McAdams and Stanley Tucci are also joining the Tom McCarthy-directed, ripped-from-the-headlines drama.

Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Stanley Tucci are in advanced talks to board the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal film Spotlight.

The ripped-from-the-headlines drama chronicles the Catholic Church’s decades-long cover-up of its pedophile priests in Massachusetts that came to light thanks to a yearlong investigation by The Boston Globe. Tom McCarthy (Win Win) is directing.

Ruffalo and McAdams would play reporters. Insiders say McAdams’ part is a supporting role.

Participant Media is financing the film, which is being produced by Michael Sugar and Steve Golin of Anonymous Content and Rocklin/Faust’s Nicole Rocklin and Blye Faust. Open Road will distribute in the United States. eOne is taking international sales rights and will distribute in its territories. The then-untitled film had been set up at DreamWorks, but the studio quietly exited the project last year. Multiple suitors are said to be vying for the potentially controversial title.
Josh Singer wrote the Black List script.

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PEDOPHILE PRIESTS PROJECT CIRCLES MARK RUFFALO, MICHAEL KEATON FOR CAST

UNITED STATES
Breitbart

The new movie Calvary starring Brendan Gleeson as a conflicted priest involves sexual abuse issues committed by Church officials.

It’s a fictional story, but Hollywood is prepping another film focusing on pedophile priests based on real headlines. And the names circling the project will be familiar to most movie goers.

Mark Ruffalo of The Avengers fame and Michael Keaton, experiencing a career reboot thanks to big buzz over the upcoming Birdman, are both in talks to join Spotlight. So, too, are Rachel McAdams (A Most Wanted Man) and Stanley Tucci (The Hunger Games franchise), according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Spotlight, to be directed by Win Win auteur Tom McCarthy, will focus on the Boston Globe’s investigation of a pedophile priest cover-up by the Catholic Church.

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Anglican Church strips former archdeacon Peter Coote of clergy position over sexual abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Diocese of The Murray has revoked the licence of former archdeacon Peter Coote following an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct.

The decision means Mr Coote can no longer hold any office or position as a member of the clergy within the South Australian diocese.

It came after more than 10 years of investigations and hearings by the Anglican Church Professional Standards Boards and reviews of their findings and recommendations.

Mr Coote was the parish priest at Happy Valley when he became the subject of sexual misconduct and inappropriate behaviour complaints involving three women in the southern suburbs in 2004.

At that time Mr Coote was reprimanded.

An internal church investigation took place three years later when the Anglican Church’s Professional Standards Board decided to stand Mr Coote down.

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August 8, 2014

Bishop pledges 10% as Capital Campaign begins

CALIFORNIA
Catholic Voice

Staff report

Almost 100 receptions are planned before year-end for about half the parishes in the Oakland diocese as an effort to raise $65 million goes into full sway.

The other half of the parishes will host their informational receptions in the first half of 2015.

At a kickoff presentation to parish staff members on July 17, Bishop Michael C. Barber, SJ, suggested a standard for giving by pledging 10 percent of his salary to the Capital Campaign (See his column on Page 5). Archbishops Allen H. Vigneron and Salvatore J. Cordileone, both former bishops of Oakland, will make their own contributions, Bishop Barber said.

The parish receptions began Aug. 4. Most parishes have more than one event scheduled. The receptions are one way to provide information and develop pledges on the campaign. Personal contact, parish bulletins, announcements and the media are also being used to encourage participation.

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BISHOP WILTON GREGORY CATCHING FIRE

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

August 8, 2014 12:02 pm | Author: berger

The Cardinals have placed Jason Motte on a 15-day DL and the team recalled Nick Greenwood from Memphis. . .Ex-Belleville Bishop Wilton Gregory is catching fire from SNAP over his legal tactics in a clergy sex abuse case. Gregory, who now heads the Atlanta archdiocese, lost his bid to get a pedophile priest case tossed out because the alleged victim used “Jane Doe” instead of her real name in court filings. Meanwhile, St. Louis Catholic officials have admitted that Fr. Alexander P. Lippert has been credibly accused of abusing a child. . .

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Assignment Record – Rev. James W. Plamondon, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: James W. Plamondon was ordained a priest of the Chicago Province of the Society of Jesus in 1951. He was sent to Alaska where he ministered in remote villages until 1972, at which point he was transferred to the Great Falls MT diocese. Plamondon studied in Berkeley CA 1974-1975, then did retreat work in the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese for a year. He left the priesthood in 1977 to marry and moved to Worcester MA. He died in 1989. Plamondon’s name was included on the Fairbanks AK Diocese’s list of accused priests and religious with admitted, proven or credible accusations. There is one known accusation against him.

Ordained: June 13, 1951
Left priesthood: 1977
Died: May 24, 1989

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Chicago Letter Counters Israel: Students can Drop Meisels Seminaries and Others Can Accept Them

ILLINOIS
Frum Folllies

[with copy of the letter]

Two days ago on August 6, 2014, Rabbi Shmuel Feurst, one of the three dayanim (rabbinical judges) of the Chicago Special Beis Din wrote:

By this letter, I certify that according to Jewish law (al pi halacha)
1. any student currently enrolled in any of the following seminaries, Pninim, Binas Bais Yaakov, Chedvas Bais Yaakov or Keser Chaya, is free to attend any seminary they wish, and
2. any seminary is free to accept any student they wish including students who withdraw from the aforementioned seminaries.

Rabbi Feurst explicitly rejects the ruling (and thus, the authority) of the Israeli Beis Din (IBD) of Rabbis Shafran, Malinowitz and Gartner which forbade students from switching and other seminaries from recruiting or accepting them.

The seminaries named above were under the control of Elimelech Meisels and according to the IBD they were transferred to the control of the IBD and Mr. Yankie (Yaakov) Yarmish. They are embroiled in this controversy because Meisels admitted abusing students, and Chicago’s rabbis are not persuaded that the enablers have been removed or even of the extent of and nature of Meisels removal.

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Klein now says he’s for Child Victims Act

NEW YORK
Riverdale Press

By Shant Shahrigian
Posted 8/7/14

Advocates for justice for years of sexual abuse at Horace Mann School and elsewhere are welcoming state Sen. Jeff Klein’s new support of the Child Victims Act, which would end the statue of limitations for sex crimes against minors and open up a one-year window for past cases to come to court.

Advocates previously voiced outrage at the Senate’s inaction on the legislation, with some of them blaming Riverdale’s state Sen. Jeff Klein — one of the most powerful lawmakers in New York — for the bill’s failure to gain traction.

As recently as March 2013, Mr. Klein gave a statement saying he opposes the Child Victims Act. But following a Press story quoting the angry activists, he wrote a letter in these pages saying he, in fact, supports the bill.

“I’m very encouraged by the fresh position expressed by Senator Klein,” said Joseph Cumming, a survivor of abuse at Horace Mann who previously criticized Mr. Klein. “I am happy to withdraw my earlier statement in which I said I would welcome seeing him out of office.”

Mr. Klein, whose office did not make him available for an interview, is fighting a Democratic primary challenge from Riverdale’s former Councilman Oliver Koppell.

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Marist Brothers review abuse compo cases

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Marist Brothers have apologised for inaction and poor processes in response to child sex abuse allegations, and say they’re now reviewing past settlements to victims.

The Catholic order has been under scrutiny in recent months as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse examined its handling of complaints against two pedophile brothers who abused children in NSW, Queensland and the ACT.

The order’s provincial head in Australia, Jeffrey Crowe, has paid tribute to those who had spoken out after suffering at the hands of John Chute and Gregory Sutton.

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Brookhaven Man Arrested for Sexually Touching a Child at a Church

MISSISSIPPI
WJTV

[with video]

By Danielle Avitable

BROOKHAVEN, Miss. – Josiah D. Franklin made his first appearance in court Thursday morning. The judge set his bond at $25,000, however, the 22-year old remains behind bars and charged with gratification of lust touching of a child.

Detective Clint Earls with the Brookhaven Police Department says the incident happened Monday evening at a local church and Franklin was arrested Tuesday.

Joshua Franklin tells us, it was his brother Josiah who called police about what he allegedly did at Christ Church International.

“My brother has never been in trouble with the law, this is his first time and he actually admitted it to the police himself,” says Joshua.

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Marist sex abuser Gregory Sutton may have been tipped off, inquiry hears

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Helen Davidson
theguardian.com, Thursday 7 August 2014

A police officer who investigated early allegations of child sexual abuse by Marist Brother Gregory Sutton has added further testimony to claims Sutton was tipped off so he could evade arrest.

A royal commission is examining how the Marist Brothers responded to allegations of child abuse against Sutton and another of its former teachers.

Sutton was convicted in 1996 after pleading guilty to 67 charges of sexual assault against 15 children. He was sentenced to 18 years in prison, with a minimum term of 12 years, and was released in 2008.

Sutton’s identity had been legally hidden for almost 20 years until the beginning of this public hearing, when the presiding commissioner, Justice Jennifer Coate, overturned the suppression order.

In new evidence submitted to the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse on Thursday, Detective Senior Constable Donna Lawrence said when she and fellow officers sought to arrest Sutton, they learned he was overseas and could not be found, and suspected he had been tipped off.

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Class Suit Filed Against Seminary & Beit Din Heads

ILLINOIS
Tzedek-Tzedek

A class suit filing was submitted this week to the District Court for the Northern District of Illinios which accuses disgraced Rabbi Elimelech Meisels, his sister Rachel Slanger, Yakov Yarmish and Bet Din Dayan Rabbi Zvi Gartner of conspiring to defraud parents out of thousands of dollars in tuition fees and withheld deposits. The four Meisels seminaries (Pnimim, Hemdas, Binas and Keser Chaya) are also identified as defendants.

The plaintiffs names have been omitted from the head of the published document, but are assumed to be parents of girls who attended the seminaries or are now enrolled.

The filing details a gruesome tale of how Meisels and others lured parents and students into their seminaries under false pretenses of ultra-orthodox standards of behaviour, and then Meisels groomed and sexually assaulted the girls, subsequently threatening & intimidating the victims into silence.

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Wineke: Catholic Church needs to grow, not shrink

WISCONSIN
Channel 3000

Author: William R. Wineke, Special to Channel 3000
Published On: Aug 07 2014

Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki said he has seen the future of the Catholic Church and it is diminished, in numbers, at least.

“My conclusion to the question of the face of the Catholic Church in the United States is that we will be smaller but stronger because we will stand for the truth given to us through the Holy Spirit’s presence in the church instituted by Christ,” the archbishop wrote in an email to Milwaukee Catholics.

The comments are similar to those Madison Bishop Robert Morlino made to me a decade ago when he came to town.

I’m sure they mean well, but I can’t help thinking we seem to have bishops who don’t particularly like Catholics, which strikes me as downright weird.

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GA- Catholic bishop loses & victim wins; SNAP responds

GEORGIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Aug. 8, 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 )

Atlanta’s Catholic archbishop has lost his bid to stop a clergy sex abuse and cover up lawsuit on a technicality. Shame on him for even trying.

Archbishop Wilton Gregory tried to get a case tossed out over the victim’s use of “Jane Doe,” rather than her actual name, in legal papers. This is a mean-spirited move designed only to help Catholic officials evade responsibility for heinous crimes. It is more befitting a cold-hearted CEO than a man who professes to be a caring shepherd.

In 2002, Gregory postured as a “reformer” when he headed the US Conference of Catholic Bishops as it enacted its first-ever nationwide church abuse policy (a policy we regarded then, and still regard now, as weak, vague and almost meaningless because it’s virtually never enforced).

The very least Catholic bishops can do is to fight victims, if they must, on the merits, not on the technicalities.

We are grateful to the appeals court for not letting Gregory get away with such a callous, self-serving maneuver. And we are even more grateful to this brave victim for having the strength and courage to speak up, expose wrongdoers, protect kids, deter cover ups and start healing. We hope her bravery will encourage others who have been assaulted by priests, nuns, brothers, seminarians and bishops to follow in her footsteps.

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Holy Synod issues updated background check guidelines

UNITED STATES
Pokrov

Author: Staff
Date Published: 08/07/2014
Publication: Orthodox Church in America website

Updated Background Check Guidelines
SYOSSET, NY [OCA]

At their most recent meeting held March 18-21, 2014, the members of the Holy Synod of Bishops, in conjunction with the Office for Review of Sexual Misconduct Allegations (ORSMA) issued guidelines for background checks. On July 20, 2014, a final, revised set of guidelines were issued.

“Background checks must be obtained, and must be renewed every three years, for all readers, subdeacons, deacons, priests, and bishops in the Orthodox Church in America, as well as for all laypersons who have more than incidental contact with children in the course of their work in the Church,” said Archpriest John Jillions, OCA Chancellor. “While the guidelines recommend a company that provides background checks, parishes may utilize other companies, so long as they offer comparable products and costs.”

The revised guidelines are available in PDF format on the OCA web site.

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‘Apuron was asked for financial statement in 2012’

GUAM
Marianas Variety

THURSDAY, 07 AUG 2014

A LETTER from the former Apostolic Delegate for the Pacific, Archbishop Charles Balvo, to Guam Archbishop Anthony Apuron dated March 7, 2012, requested that a financial report be turned in to him as is the requirement for every diocese.

Balvo wrote to Apuron that he had not received a financial statement from the Archdiocese of Agana since 2007 and up to the time he wrote the letter in 2012.

Further, Balvo pointed out that every diocese is required to have a finance council and that consent of the finance council is required for acts of “alienation.”

In 2012, former finance council member Richard Untalan wrote to Balvo with his concerns about an alienation or assignment of the Yona property upon which the Redemptoris Mater seminary is built. Untalan wrote that he and three other council members agreed that they were terminated by Apuron because they voted against transferring the title of that land, a vote which was not supported by Apuron.

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Stakes are high as LCWR heads into annual assembly

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Stockman Dawn Cherie Araujo | Aug. 8, 2014

As the largest leadership organization for U.S. women religious prepares to gather for four days in Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 12-16, the group appears to stand on a precipice.

But what lies on either side or what path the membership will choose to follow, no one can say.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious has been under the shadow of a Vatican-ordered doctrinal assessment since 2009. Following the investigation in 2012, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith ordered it to reform its statutes and appointed a bishop to oversee changes.

Now, the situation is starker: In April, Cardinal Gerhard Müller, prefect of the congregation, ordered that after this assembly, speakers at the group’s events must be approved by Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain, who heads the five-year reform agenda for LCWR.

But will LCWR members choose to follow Müller’s edict that Sartain have approval power over speakers at major events? Or will the group decide to stick to its contention that the sanctions are “disproportionate to the concerns raised and compromised the organization’s ability to fulfill its mission”?

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Diocese claims cleric accused of abuse was approved by Ratzinger

PARAGUAY
The Tablet

08 August 2014 by Jon Stibbs, Isabel de Bertodano

A South American diocese at the centre of an investigation by the Vatican has strongly defended its bishop over his handling of abuse allegations concerning his new vicar-general.

A message on the diocesan website of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay’s second largest city, claimed the appointment of Fr Carlos Urrutigoity was approved by the future Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, and that the accusations against the priest were “slander”.

Bishop of Ciudad del Este Rogelio Ricardo Livieres Plano has repeatedly defended Fr Urrutigoity, who was incardinated into the diocese in 2005. The priest was accused of abusing seminarians while working at the United States diocese of Scranton, Pennsylvania, between the late 1990s and 2002. He denies the allegations and has not been convicted of any crime.

Last week the diocesan website carried a robust defence of the bishop, stating that in 2005 Fr Urrutigoity, who is originally from Argentina, “came recommended by some cardinals with functions in the Holy See (one of them, elected a few days later Successor of Peter)”.

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Papal whodunit lacks teeth

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

THEATRE
The Last Confession
By Roger Crane
2.5 stars
His Majesty’s Theatre

Review: David Zampatti

The sudden death of the first Pope John Paul, Cardinal Albino Luciani, in September 1978 left a disquieting aftertaste. An apparently healthy man of 65, barely a month into his papacy, he died in contradictory circumstances while Vatican scandals lurked in the shadows.

After a whodunit? This could be a doozy.

Trouble is, The Last Confession is an awfully convoluted one, constructed around real, well-known, figures of the recent past. That gives its writer, Roger Crane, a lot of work to do, and precious little historical wriggle room in which to do it.

I’ve never seen – heard is more accurate – a play with so much exposition. The weight of it nearly crushes the life out of the drama. It’s not helped by a big cast, mostly men in scarlet cassocks. I half expected Monty Python’s Spanish Inquisition to burst in at any moment.

The result is a someone-might- have-dunit; the play’s conspiracy theory goes no further than implying that there might have been one. Various cardinals with an axe to grind grumble in Vatican corridors but we are given no real evidence that any or all of them gave the unfortunate John Paul the chop, or even that any chop was given.

All of which is frustrating for the play’s detective, the energetic Cardinal Giovanni Benelli. As Crane’s story goes, at least, he has passed on the chance to ascend the papal throne in favour of the modest, good-humoured Luciani (the characterisation overtly emphasises Luciani’s similarities to the popular qualities of the current pontiff) and is about to accept the position of Vatican Secretary of State when his new boss is found dead in the papal apartment.

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We must get to Kincora truth, says Kilclooney

NORTHERN IRELAND
News Letter

by Sam McBride
sam.mcbride@newsletter.co.uk
Published on the 08 August 2014

A veteran unionist peer has said that everything must be done to uncover the truth of what happened at Kincora Boys’ Home.

Former Ulster Unionist deputy leader Lord Kilclooney said that the Home Office needed to examine whether the UK-wide inquiry into cover-ups of historical child abuse by establishment figures should extend to cover the notorious east Belfast case.

Last month the chairman of Stormont’s Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA), Sir Anthony Hart, told First Minister Peter Robinson that his inquiry did not have the power to compel witnesses or force the release of documents from the Ministry of Defence or the Home Office if they were unwilling to attend and be questioned about allegations that members of the Army or MI5 were aware of the Kincora abuse and failed to act.

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Pedophile lawsuit filed by sex abuse victim against archdiocese lingers in Newark

NEW JERSEY
News 12

[with video]

NEWARK – A lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Newark alleging sexual abuse of a child has yet to be resolved.

Filed by an unidentified John Doe, the suit names the late Father Robert G. Gibney as a pedophile.

The archdiocese and the abuse survivor met today to mediate a settlement, but were unsuccessful.

“The archdiocese, by stonewalling him, is denying him that the abuse even took place,” says Kevin Waldrip, a fellow abuse victim.

Advocates for the victim are demanding the church validate his claim so he can start healing

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Alleged victim plans to sue priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Citizens Voice

BY TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
Published: August 8, 2014

The woman who alleged she was indecently assaulted by the Rev. Philip Altavilla when she was a teenager filed notice she intends to sue him and the Diocese of Scranton.

Joseph Lenahan, attorney for the woman, filed a writ of summons on Aug. 1, the same day Lackawanna County Judge Michael Barrasse dismissed all criminal charges against the suspended priest because the statute of limitations had expired.

A summons puts a defendant on notice of a pending lawsuit, but does not provide any details of the claims being made. Lenahan confirmed the lawsuit relates to allegations in the criminal case that the Rev. Altavilla inappropriately touched the woman in 1998, when she was 13.

The Rev. Altavilla was charged in April with indecent assault, corruption of a minor and a related offense after the woman alleged he gave her alcohol and ran his hands up and down her legs following a midnight Mass. Barrasse dismissed all counts because the statute of limitations required the crimes be reported within two years after the woman turned 18, which meant the charges had to be filed by 2005.

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Group demands archbishop release names of accused clergymen

GUAM
KUAM

by Jolene Toves

Guam – Members of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests continues its criticism of Archbishop Anthony Apuron. SNAP called for the removal of Father John Wadeson last month, accusing the archbishop of knowing the priest’s past but kept him in active and prominent ministry locally. SNAP says that according to the archdiocese of Los Angeles, Wadeson has been accused of abuse by two children in the 1970 and has been banned from acting as a priest there. SNAP’s volunteer regional director Joelle Casteix comments “how many warnings does Apuron need before he takes any action to protect children? It seems he only responds to embarrassment.”

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Archbishop silent during slew of church controversies

GUAM
KUAM

by Jolene Toves

Guam – Archbishop Anthony Apuron has not conducted any public interviews regarding the recent controversies involving the local Catholic Church. The biggest controversy as of late is his removal of Monsignor James Benavente as the rector of the Archdiocese of Agana and director of Catholic Cemeteries. The archbishop has only spoken through press releases in which he accused him of financial mismanagement.

KUAM News attempted to get comment from him today, to no avail.

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Chicago religious community denies sex abuse charges

ILLINOIS
Peoria Public Radio

By WILLIS KERN

Attorneys for a religious community in Chicago are threatening individuals who have leveled sex charges at the organization with slander unless they stop talking publicly about the allegations.

The abuse charges were made in two lawsuits filed against Jesus People USA earlier this year, as well as in a documentary about the community by filmmaker Jaime Prater. Prater lived at the Jesus People community as a child and is now suing the community. He says he and other former child residents will not be silenced.

“Most of us got really irate. We’ve been quiet about this for years, for 30 years in some cases.”

Jesus People and its sponsoring church, the Evangelical Covenant Church of America, deny the allegations which involve physical as well as sexual abuse of minors.

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Jackson County jury splits verdict in church case

MISSOURI
The Daily Star-Journal

Kansas City (AP) — A Jackson County jury has returned a split verdict in a lawsuit accusing a pastor who’s also a past president of the Missouri State Board of Education of sexual exploitation.

The Kansas City Star reported the jury ruled Thursday that the Rev. Stan Archie’s Christian Fellowship Baptist Church has to pay a former staffer and her husband $350,000 for misrepresenting that a 2007 church investigation of her abuse allegations was aimed at learning the truth.

Jurors rejected claims alleging that Archie and the church had defrauded the staffer by misrepresenting Archie as a “safe and competent” counselor. The jury declined to consider punitive damages.

Lawyers for the couple, who were not identified, had been seeking $1.5 million.

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Yigo Mayor Dismayed at Media “Ambush” of Archbishop

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Buhain Carrera
Friday, 08 August 2014

Guam – The local community and victims advocate organizations are calling on Archbishop Anthony Apuron to answer to questions regarding sexual abuse allegations and the removal of Monsignor James Benavente from the Agana Cathedral rectory.

Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests or SNAP issued a statement this morning blasting Apuron for allowing an accused child molester, Father John Howard Wadeson, to work for the Archdiocese of Agana and then recommending him to the San Francisco Archdiocese.

They called his behavior “reckless” and demanded “concrete action.”

Joelle Casteix of SNAP said in a statement, “How can Apuron claim to be a good and pastoral shepherd to his flock when he knowingly allowed a known predator to have a position of great power?”

SNAP also noted in their statement that Father Wadeson isn’t the only scandal affecting the Church, but the public outcry against the Archbishop for making allegations of financial mismanagement.

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Letter from the Bishop of Tewkesbury

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Diocese of Gloucester

The following is a letter from the Bishop of Tewkesbury, the Rt Revd Martyn Snow, to members of the Diocese:

You will by now have seen the statement issued by the Diocesan Communications Department last Friday indicating that Bishop Michael has stepped back from his ministry as Bishop of Gloucester. I know that, like me, you will have been deeply saddened by this news.

Various news outlets are carrying a story that this is an investigation by the Metropolitan Police into allegations of indecent assault on a child aged under 18 years and indecent assault on a second female aged over 18 years. The police have confirmed that no arrest has been made. You will all realise that this is therefore a traumatic time for Bishop Michael, his family and for those who have made the allegations. Please hold them in your prayers.

I am sorry that we have not been able to say more until now. I know many people have found this frustrating but I hope you will understand our reasons for this and will appreciate that we have been liaising very closely with Lambeth Palace.

Yesterday the Archbishop of Canterbury signed an Instrument of Delegation that allows me to act as diocesan bishop. I am working closely with senior colleagues in the diocese to ensure diary commitments are covered in the coming weeks. We will communicate to you directly where this is not possible, but please do contact my office with any queries you have. The Dean, the Archdeacons and I also want to make ourselves available to you for conversations either by phone or in person.

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Bishop ‘steps back’ and helps police with inquiries

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by Madeleine Davies

Posted: 08 Aug 2014

THE Bishop of Gloucester, the Rt Revd Michael Perham, withdrew from ministry in his diocese on Saturday, shortly before being questioned by police about historic allegations of indecent assault.

A tweet from a diocesan officer on Saturday read: “For personal reasons, Rt Revd Michael Perham has stepped back from his ministry as the Bishop of Gloucester.”

On Tuesday, a spokesman for the Metropolitan Police confirmed that, on Tuesday, a 66-year-old man attended a police station in Gloucestershire by appointment, “where he was interviewed under caution on suspicion of indecent assault on a child aged under 18 years; and indecent assault on a second female, aged over 18 years. He was not arrested.

“The alleged incidents are said to have occurred between 1980 and 1981 and are being investigated by officers from the Metropolitan Police Service’s Sexual Offences, Exploitation and Child Abuse Command.”

In a letter to the diocese issued on Wednesday, the Bishop of Tewkesbury, the Rt Revd Martyn Snow, confirmed that, the previous day, the Archbishop of Canterbury had signed an Instrument of Delegation, allowing him to act as diocesan bishop.

Referring to the police investigation, he said: “You will all realise that this is therefore a traumatic time for Bishop Michael, his family and for those who have made the allegations. Please hold them in your prayers.”

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‘Calvary’ presents a dramatic spin on clergy abuse

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Tom Russo | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT AUGUST 07, 2014

The biblical theme of a messiah dying for our sins gets a ripped-from-the-headlines workout in “Calvary,” a weighty Irish indie from writer-director John Michael McDonagh and lead Brendan Gleeson (“Harry Potter,” McDonagh’s “The Guard”). Taking its title from the site where Christ was crucified, the controversy-courting film has a lot of Catholic church business (and doctrine) on its mind, and veers from poetically eloquent to jarringly blunt in hashing it all out.

The provocative discourse frequently elevates the movie above what’s ultimately a familiar pedigree — arthouse import showing us around a picturesque British Isles outpost exaggeratedly populated by characters who are odd, if not flat-out messed-up. But the mood also keeps some mischievous touches from providing the black-comic relief that McDonagh intends, and even slightly undermines the suspense.

The movie opens with Gleeson’s sage Father James in a confessional, listening to the unseen parishioner on the other side of the screen reveal in very graphic terms that a priest repeatedly molested him as a boy. (“Certainly a startling opening line,” says Gleeson’s distressed character, in a darkly self-referential bit of dialogue.) The man is murderously vengeful, and with his old tormentor long dead, he’s deliberately targeting an innocent clergyman to make his statement more shocking and impactful. Some supporters of sexual abuse survivors have charged McDonagh with turning victim into villain. Mostly, it feels like it’s left to us to judge.

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‘Calvary’: A decent priest hears from his disaffected flock

UNITED STATES
Chicago Sun-Times

By CLAUDIA PUIG Gannett News Service August 7, 2014

‘Calvary’ offers a fascinating look at contemporary attitudes toward the priesthood and Catholicism, as well as an impeccable lead performance by Brendan Gleeson and darkly sharp wit.

Gleeson is a masterful actor whose indelible roles include key parts in “The Guard” and “In Bruges.” His portrait of Father James, an Irishman who found his vocation late in life, is brilliant in its blend of compassion, weariness, humility and faith.

Set in the starkly picturesque fishing village of Easkey in County Sligo, Ireland, this comic drama is worth seeing if only for Gleeson’s soulful portrayal. “Calvary” is also profoundly compelling for the light it shines on how public attitudes have changed toward the clergy in the wake of the abusive-priests scandal.

A multilayered and compelling film, Calvary explores forgiveness, revenge, faith and the loss of belief. But it trips up slightly with its broad characterizations. A couple of supporting characters come off as caricatures, and one of them, a male prostitute, seems to have wandered in from another movie.

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Retired Owensboro priest sentenced 5 years

KENTUCKY
WFIE

By Emily Busby, Reporter

OWENSBORO, KY (WFIE) –
Retired Owensboro Priest Louis Piskula has been sentenced to five years in prison in a sex abuse case.

Piskula pleaded guilty to one count of 1st degree sexual abuse of a minor.

The guilty plea was part of plea agreement for charges relating to incidents in 1978 at Blessed Mother Church in Owensboro.

Piskula must now register as a sex offender for 20 years and undergo treatment at the state penitentiary.

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Introducing Frank Bruni and Ross Douthat as the Moviegoers

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By FRANK BRUNI and ROSS DOUTHAT AUGUST 7, 2014

Welcome to The Moviegoers, an occasional new series in which the Op-Ed columnists Frank Bruni and Ross Douthat banter about movies, pop culture, television and other real-world distractions. From 1993-95, Frank was a movie critic for The Detroit Free Press, and he has written frequently on culture for The New York Times Magazine and for the Arts & Leisure section. Ross is the film critic for National Review and frequently writes about film and TV on his Times blog.

Frank Bruni: Ross, maybe because you’d told me that you were going to roll with the crowds and buy a ticket for “Guardians of the Galaxy,” or maybe because I’d done “Godzilla” and the “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” and it was time to swerve in the opposite direction, I went and checked out “Calvary” the other night.

My summer moviegoing tends to cling to the poles. I hop aboard one of the loud, frenetic, big-budget blockbusters that supposedly define the season, then I sneak away to one of the quiet, independent movies that utterly defy it. I binge and I purge. And I’d like to circle back to the binges, but first: “Calvary.”

Have you seen it? I think you should. I think you will: You’re Catholic, and it’s a serious look at the tattered repute of the Roman Catholic Church today. I spent many years writing about the crisis of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy and long ago published a book on the topic, and that crisis is the context and starting point of “Calvary,” whose hero (played by the Irish actor Brendan Gleeson) is a priest in the midst of a casually and sometimes caustically disobedient flock.

Most of the people in his seaside village in Ireland seem to feel no intimidation around him, no obligation even to feign rectitude. To several of them he’s a relic, a curiosity, a prompt for mockery, a magnet for anger. In one subtly devastating scene, a father finds his daughter walking and talking alone with the priest on an isolated country road and yanks the girl away, as if removing her from the clutches of a predator. It’s a reminder that the casualties of the crisis include many good priests who work under a cloud of suspicion, trying to recapture a trust that was once a given and is now a luxury.

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Former deacon, teacher in Mahoning County loses teaching license

OHIO
Vindicator

Published: Fri, August 8, 2014
Staff report

YOUNGSTOWN

A former deacon and teacher at two schools in Mahoning County has lost his teaching license.

Ernest Formichelli taught at Cardinal Mooney High School from 1976-2013 and St. Christine School from 1971-76, according to diocese records. He no longer is employed by the Diocese of Youngstown and no longer is a deacon.

In September 2013, the Ohio Board of Education accepted a resolution “to accept the voluntary surrender and to enter an order to revoke permanently the five-year professional high school teaching license and permanent nontax teaching certificate” of Formichelli.

In an email, the group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said the information about Formichelli was a “random discovery” it made on the state board of education website, www.education.ohio.gov.

During a news conference in June, Judy Jones, Midwest associate director of SNAP, said a SNAP member had been abused by a deacon, and another person also had accused that deacon of abuse. SNAP would not name the deacon at that time, but Jones said Thursday that the accusations were against Formichelli.

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Pedophile former priest’s death a relief to his victims

CANADA
The StarPhoenix

BY DAVE BATTAGELLO AND ANDREA HILL, POSTMEDIA NEWS, THE STARPHOENIX
AUGUST 7, 2014

A former Basilian priest and Catholic high school teacher found guilty of a lengthy history of abusing male students, including two in Saskatoon, died last week in Toronto at the age of 92.

William Hodgson (Hod) Marshall, pleaded guilty in 2013 to sexually assaulting two Saskatoon boys in 1959 and 1961. Two years earlier, he had pleaded guilty to 16 counts of indecent assault of minors and one count of sexual assault for incidents that occurred between 1952 and 1986 while he taught at high schools in Windsor, Toronto and Sudbury.

“I wouldn’t mind knowing where they’re burying him so I could go urinate on his grave,” said Tim Ryans of Saskatoon, who was “felt up” by Marshall while the priest was a physical education teacher at St. Paul’s High School. He came forward with his story after he heard of Marshall’s convictions in Ontario.

Ryans, now in his 60s, said he doesn’t dwell on the encounter much and made an effort to avoid Marshall throughout his high school years, but he knows other classmates who remain traumatized by Marshall’s advances.

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Archbishop John Nienstedt is CEO of idiot Catholics and he is impotent to re-produce Christ’s flesh & blood in Eucharist Satanic Mass in Minneapolis-St. Paul

MINNESOTA
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

With news compilation.

Machiavellian Archbishop John Nienstedt replies to media calls for his resignation

Ever since a lay woman and canon lawyer Jennifer Haselberger released her affidavit where she described the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis as a place where child abusers were given repeated opportunities to remain in the priesthood by (her boss) Archbishop John Nienstedt, several newspapers have called for Nienstedt’s resignation. The Star Tribune was one of those newspapers and oddly, it allowed Nienstedt to defend himself on August 1st in its “Editorial counterpoint: Archdiocese is working to restore trust, Nienstedt says” wherein he wrote, “In the end, it comes down to this: Eighteen years ago, Pope John Paul II chose me to serve the church as a bishop, an authentic successor of the Apostles. A bishop’s role is more like that of a father of a family than that of a CEO. I am bound to continue in my office as long as the Holy Father has appointed me here”.

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August 7, 2014

SNAP…

GUAM
Pacific News Center

SNAP: Archbishop Ignored Warnings About Predator Priest; Recommended Wadeson to San Francisco Archdiocese

Friday, 08 August 2014

Guam – The Survivors Network Against Those Abused by Priests [SNAP] has issued another statement accusing Guam Archbishop Apuron of ignoring warnings about the predator allegations against Father John Wadeson, and then recommending Father Wadeson to the San Francisco Archdiocese.

The latest SNAP release points out that the attorney for the Los Angels Archdiocese had warned Archbishop Apuron in 2011 that Father Wadeson had been accused of abusing 2 children in the 1970s, and that he had been banned from acting as a priest in the LA Archdiocese.

Yet, the Archbishop gave Father Wadeson a recommendation to practice his ministry in San Francisco, says SNAP. The San Francisco Archdiocese later revoked Father Wadeson from ministry after Archbishop Apuron himself removed Wadeson from active ministry here on Guam.

SNAP is calling on Archbishop Apuron to release the names of all accused clerics who have worked in the Archdiocese, turn over priest files to police and prosecutors, and reach out to all parishes, urging victims to report abuse to the police, not the archdiocese.

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Ex-priest’s sex pleas in Armidale court

AUSTRALIA
Armidale Express

By VICTORIA NUGENT Aug. 8, 2014

AN alleged child sex abuse victim who came forward after hearing his priest’s name on the radio will give evidence at a committal hearing.

The former priest was committed to Armidale District Court in September for 76 historic child sex offences yesterday.

He pleaded guilty to 45 charges, and not guilty to 31 charges at Armidale Local Court. Fifty charges were dismissed.

However, three charges relating to one victim, now a truck driver, must face a committal hearing to see if there is enough evidence to proceed.

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Seeing what leaders miss

UNTIED STATES
Harvard Gazette

By Christina Pazzanese, Harvard Staff Writer

Although they may seem disparate at first glance, crises like the Catholic Church clergy sex-abuse scandal, investor Bernie Madoff’s multibillion dollar Ponzi scheme, and the 2008 global financial meltdown all have at least one commonality: For years, some very smart people failed to notice or act on critical information that could have limited the damage.

More recently, executives at the Veterans Administration and General Motors have been criticized for failing to see and cure corrupt organizational cultures that led to accusations of criminal harm done to patients and consumers by negligent employees.

So why didn’t the leaders of these organizations, or others in similar straits, identify key problems and act before things turned catastrophic?

“They don’t want to see, they can’t see, the organization isn’t designed to see, and there’s other people who are doing their best to keep us from seeing,” said Max Bazerman, the Jesse Isidor Straus Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School and co-director of Harvard Kennedy School’s Center for Public Leadership,

Social scientists have long identified our tendency to overlook bad news when it suits us as “motivated blindness,” a term that refers to a systemic failure to notice unethical behavior in others when it’s not in our interest to do so. The condition affects virtually everyone. Even leaders who have gained tremendous success through focus and application in one arena sometimes lack the self-awareness to routinely question whether information on which they’re basing decisions is reliable.

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Residential school records should be destroyed after 15 years: court

CANADA
CTV

Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press
Published Thursday, August 7, 2014

TORONTO — Sensitive testimony from survivors of Canada’s notorious residential school system should be kept for 15 years then destroyed, an Ontario court has ruled.

In a decision released Thursday, Superior Court Justice Paul Perell said the time should be used to see whether those involved might agree to have their records transferred to a new national archive.

“During the 15-year retention period, there shall be a court-approved program to advise the survivors of their choice to transfer some of the documents instead of having (them) destroyed,” Perell wrote.

Residential school survivors have respiratory damage, hearing loss, broken bones
Court urged to seal, not destroy, residential school records

The justice said that destroying the documents is necessary to protect the confidentiality and privacy of the information, and to safeguard the assessment process itself.

If survivors want their records kept, the material will have to be redacted to protect perpetrators or other third parties.

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El Paso diocesan school board member admits to downloading child pornography, according to affidavit

TEXAS
KVIA

EL PASO, Texas –
Victor J. Reza, an El Paso diocesan school board member, admitted to investigators to downloading child pornography, according to the affidavit in the case.

Reza was arrested on Tuesday on a federal child porn charge. According to jail records, Reza has been charged with in transit/receipt and distribution of child sexual exploitation material.

In the affidavit Reza told investigators that he works in the computer and information technology (IT) field.

Reza stated in the affidavit that he likes all kinds of pornography, but prefers “rape pornography,” “heavy action pornography but not gang rapes,” and pornography that includes young girls “coming of age.”

He also said he searches for “PTHC,” which Reza explained means “pre-teen hardcore” and it involves children performing sex acts who are “underage.”

Reza said in the affidavit that “underage” to him is “around 16 years or younger. and that he would search, download, view and pleasure himself to child pornography about one time a month for the last three to five years.

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Baptist leader in Missouri arrested for seeking sex with animal

MISSOURI
Associated Baptist Press

By Vicki Brown

Windermere Baptist Conference Center in Missouri will choose a new executive following the arrest of Jerald “Jerry” Hill on charges of soliciting sex with an animal, its board chair said Aug. 7.

According to several news reports, Hill, 56, was arrested Aug. 5 by an undercover investigator with the Boone County Sheriff’s Department Cyber Crimes Task Force. Tipped that an advertisement had been posted on Craigslist, the officer offered a dog and arranged a meeting in a Columbia, Mo., park.

Hill, Windermere’s president and chief executive officer, was released from the Boone County Jail after posting a $1,000 bond.

Windermere board members discussed the arrest by telephone on Aug. 6, chairman Arthur Mallory said. “The board is very supportive of [Hill] and grateful for his work at Windermere,” he said.

Mallory added the board sees the action as “a personal issue with Jerry” and that trustees are concerned about both Hill and the conference center.

“We are concerned for the well-being of Jerry … and we are also concerned with the well-being of Windermere,” Mallory said. “Windermere will continue to function in a good way…. It is a significant piece of God’s kingdom’s work.”

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Man arrested on suspicion of attempting to have sex with dog

MISSOURI
ABC 17

Heather Hourigan, Reporter, heather.hourigan@kmiz.com
POSTED: 09:35 PM CDT Aug 06, 2014

COLUMBIA,Mo. –
For the first time in the Boone County Sheriff’s Department Cyber Crimes Task detectives arrested a man on charges of trying to have sex with an animal.

Wednesday we learned through sources and viewer tips Hill was a church leader at Windermere Baptist Conference Center.

We have contacted to the church several times Wednesday for comment, but have not heard back.

“This is a reality of what we see in cyber crimes is that bestiality and this kind of act is an ongoing issue out there,” said Detective Tracy Perkins with the Boone County Sheriff’s Department Cyber Crimes Task Force.

Hill is accused of taking to Craigslist days ago posting he wanted a dog to engage in sexual activities with.

Users of the website are the ones who hold the power to regulate the site by flagging things found inappropriate, which happened to Hill’s post when a Craigslist user saw what he was asking for, flagged it, and then left a tip for the Cyber Crimes Task Force.

“As the cyber crimes unit our responsibility is to protect children and when these types of tips come to us and we know someone is wanting to do such a behavior to an animal we have to step out of our zone that we work in and do the same thing for an animal,” said Perkins.

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.

Task force arrests man on suspicion of trying to find animals for sex

MISSOURI
Colombia Tribune

By THE TRIBUNE’S STAFF
Wednesday, August 6, 2014

The Boone County Sheriff’s Department Cyber Crimes Task Force on Tuesday arrested a 56-year-old Camden County man after he allegedly used the Internet to try to find a dog to have sex with.

Jerald L. Hill of the 500 block of Forest Circle in Roach was arrested in Columbia at 11:35 a.m. yesterday on suspicion of attempted unlawful sex with an animal and attempted animal abuse, Boone County sheriff’s Detective Tracy Perkins said in a news release. Hill was released from the Boone County Jail after posting bond totaling $1,000.

The investigation began last week when the task force got a tip that someone had posted an ad on Craigslist looking for two types of animals with which to have sex, Perkins said. One of the animals he sought was a dog. Perkins declined to say what other type of animal Hill sought.

A detective with the task force exchanged emails with Hill under the guise of offering a dog that Hill could have sex with, Perkins said in a news release.

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.

Baptist Church Leader Arrested for Soliciting Dog Sex on Craigslist

MISSOURI
Gawker

Jay Hathaway

A Missouri Baptist conference center is seeking a new CEO after its current leader was arrested while allegedly trying to arrange sex with a dog and an unnamed other animal on Craigslist.

Police said Jerry Hill, of Boone County, Mo.’s Windermere Baptist Conference Center, was arrested Tuesday afternoon for attempted unlawful sex with an animal and attempted animal abuse.

The Columbia Tribune reports the investigation started with a Craigslist ad seeking two types of animals—one was a dog, police declined to comment on the other. Investigators responded to the ad, offering up a dog for sex, and Hill was arrested when he showed up to meet them.

“We are concerned for the well-being of Jerry…and we are also concerned with the well-being of Windermere,” Windermere chairman of the board Arthur Mallory said, according to Baptist news site Word and Way. “Windermere will continue to function in a good way…. It is a significant piece of God’s kingdom’s work.”

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.

MO–Another St. L predator priest “outed”

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Aug. 7

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 )

Another predator priest has been “outed.” But more than 50 St. Louis predator priests identities are still under wraps because Catholic officials continue to protect wrongdoers rather than kids.

We hope that anyone who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by Fr. Alexander P. Lippert will come forward, get help, and call police (so those who may have shielded this priest or destroyed evidence or intimidated witnesses or obstructed justice or lied to authorities might be prosecuted.)

[St. Louis Review]

Local Catholic officials were forced recently to disclose that there are at least 115 credibly accused child molesting clerics in the archdiocese. Now, largely because of the courage of victims, St. Louisans know the names of about 50 predators. (See BishopAccountability.org) So most child molesting clerics are still being protected by Archbishop Robert Carlson and his staff.

So today’s disclosure is a tiny, belated and begrudging step forward down a long, long road. And disclosing the identity of predators is a bare minimum first step. Catholic officials – past and present – must do much more to warn parishioners and the public about child molesting clerics and aggressively seek out and support those who could put those predators behind bars – victims, witnesses and whistleblowers.

Finally, Carlson claims that his staff has “sent an announcement for the bulletins of the parishes where Father Lippert served or resided.” That’s not good enough. He should order parish staff to post those announcements on parish websites, publish them in parish bulletins, and read them aloud from parish pulpits. And he should lead by example, by listing all proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics on his archdiocesan website, like some 30 other US bishops have done.

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.

Sir Hugh warns on inquiry resources

UNITED KINGDOM
Belfast Telegraph

07 AUGUST 2014

One of Britain’s top policemen has warned that forces in England and Wales are ill-equipped to deal with inquiries into past wrongdoing.

Sir Hugh Orde said there is increased demand for dealing with historical matters and current inquiries risk being under-resourced.

The president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) addressed an event in Belfast.

He said: “We are seeing a demand to look into the past more and more and the police services of England and Wales are ill-equipped to deal with that.

“You cannot under-resource a historic inquiry; bizarrely, you can under-resource current inquiries.”

Sir Hugh established the Historical Enquiries Team (HET) of independent detectives in Northern Ireland to deal with more than 3,000 unresolved murders.

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.

Court rejects Atlanta Catholic Diocese’s argument that child sex abuse victim is a ‘legal nullity’

GEORGIA
The Raw Story

By David Ferguson
Thursday, August 7, 2014

A Georgia appeals court ruled that the Fulton County District Court judge was incorrect to toss out a suit filed by an anonymous sex abuse victim against the Atlanta Catholic Diocese.

According to the ALM’s Daily Report Online, the three-judge Georgia Court of Appeals panel ruled that Fulton State Court Judge Patsy Porter was wrong when she ruled in 2013 that the suit filed against Holy Cross Catholic Church was invalid because the plaintiff’s name was listed as “Jane Doe” and that it was too late for the plaintiff to include her name.

“Because we hold that the trial court erred in concluding that the complaint was void, we reverse,” the panel said in its decision.

“We further hold that the trial court has the discretion to consider whether Doe is
entitled to proceed under a pseudonym and, therefore,” the judges said, the suit against Holy Cross and the Atlanta Diocese may proceed.

In Jane Doe v. Archdiocese of Atlanta, et al., the plaintiff alleged that Holy Cross Catholic Church was negligent in failing to stop a music minister then in its employ from sexually assaulting her when she was 14 years old.

The appeals panel said that Judge Porter’s decision was wrong because the plaintiff’s name was revealed to the trial judge and to the church in the case, but had only been withheld from legal filings.

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.

Baptist church ordered to pay $350,000 in sex abuse investigation

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star

BY MARK MORRIS
THE KANSAS CITY STAR
08/07/2014

A split verdict Thursday in a lawsuit alleging that a local clergyman sexually exploited a former church staff member gave both sides something they wanted.

The jury ruled just after noon Thursday that the Rev. Stan Archie’s Christian Fellowship Baptist Church must pay $350,000 to the former staffer and her husband for misrepresenting that its 2007 investigation into her abused allegations was a serious inquiry aimed at learning the truth.

“I think this is a good and fair verdict,” said Rebecca Randles, who represented the couple. “I hope our clients are able to heal.”

Archie resigned as president of the Missouri State Board of Education in January 2013 after two women filed lawsuits accusing him of sexual misconduct.

The former staffer alleged that Archie had taken sexual advantage of her by abusing his position as a pastoral counselor at the church. Three other women testified at trial this month that Archie also had sexually abused them during counseling sessions.

Yet jurors rejected claims alleging that Archie and the church had defrauded the staffer by misrepresentating that the pastor was a “safe and competent” counselor.

The jury appeared to have ruled either that the no misrepresentation had occurred, or that the staffer had not been injured.

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.

Parents Call Rabbi a Sexual Predator

CHICAGO (IL)
Courthouse News Service

By JACK BOUBOUSHIAN

CHICAGO (CN) – A rabbi in charge of four Orthodox seminaries in Israel sexually assaulted girls in his charge, and threatened to ruin their marriage prospects if they reported him, the girls’ parents claim in a federal class action.

Gary Miller and six other named plaintiffs sued Elimelech Meisels, Rachel Slanger, Peninim of America, Yaakov Yarmish, Tzvi Gartner and four subsidiary Jewish seminaries in Jerusalem, on Monday in Federal Court.

“From approximately 2004 until the present date, defendant Elimelech Meisels engaged in a fraudulent and unlawful scheme to induce Orthodox Jewish parents from across the United States to send their daughters to various seminaries in Israel that he controlled under the guise of educational and spiritual development,” the complaint states. “In truth, defendant Meisels’ true aim was to fraudulently and unlawfully take thousands of dollars from each of these parents and to induce these girls, by telephone, mail, wire and other means, to travel thousands of miles outside the United States and away from their parents for the purpose of sexually assaulting these vulnerable young girls.”

Orthodox Jewish children are traditionally sent to study the Torah for one year after high school in Israel. For girls, their attendance at a seminary “profoundly shapes and influences their marriage prospects within a quasi arranged marriage system known as the Shidduch (translated literally as Introduction) system,” the complaint states.

“This influence is so important that it causes Orthodox Jewish parents to save money for years in hopes of being able to afford the annual tuition that regularly exceeds twenty thousand dollars ($20,000).”

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Five Families Sue Meisels, Yarmish and Rabbi Gartner Demanding Refunds and Alleging Fraud

UNITED STATES
Frum Follies

A lawsuit was filed in a US federal court on Monday August 4th by five families who registered their daughters to attend the post-HS, Jerusalem-based, ultra-orthodox but non-Hassidic seminaries operated at the time by Elimelech Meisels. Meisels has since confessed to sexually abusing students to a Chicago rabbinical court (aka, Special Beis Din, Chicago Beis Din, or CBD).

The parents of the prospective students paid hefty deposits toward the 2014-2015 tuition of over $20,000. The CBD revealed the abuse and recommended not sending students to these seminaries in a ruling released on July 10. The CBD subsequently declared on July 30th:

We stand by our July 10 statement that we do not recommend prospective students attend these seminaries, and also note, based on evidence including testimony by victims and staff and admissions by Elimelech Meisels, our conclusion that certain senior staff members failed in their responsibilities toward students.

The CBD issued that statement because an Israeli Beit Din (IBD) attempted to whitewash the seminaries and declare they were sold, Meisels was out, all the other staff were good and no other seminary was allowed to accept students who were registered with Meisels.

The lawsuit was reported yesterday in Court House News, They quote from the suit:

From approximately 2004 until the present date, defendant Elimelech Meisels engaged in a fraudulent and unlawful scheme to induce Orthodox Jewish parents from across the United States to send their daughters to various seminaries in Israel that he controlled under the guise of educational and spiritual development,” the complaint states. “In truth, defendant Meisels’ true aim was to fraudulently and unlawfully take thousands of dollars from each of these parents and to induce these girls, by telephone, mail, wire and other means, to travel thousands of miles outside the United States and away from their parents for the purpose of sexually assaulting these vulnerable young girls……

Defendant Meisels, like many other sexual predators, preyed on the vulnerable. He did this by developing mentor-mentee relationships with girls and exploiting these relationships to lure the girls into late night coffee meetings and other private settings and then sexually assaulted them.

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MO- Predatory preacher is guilty; SNAP responds

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Aug. 7, 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 )

We are deeply grateful that now women and girls will be safer because a jury has found Rev. Stan Archie guilty of sexually assaulting a woman. His church must pay her $350,000. While no amount of money can adequately compensate a victim of clergy sexual violence, this sum makes it clear that an impartial jury found that church officials acted recklessly with the safety of their flock.

We are also deeply grateful to every woman who found the courage to speak up about this predator and testify against him in court. They are to be commended for acting bravely and responsibly. Because of their strength, others will be spared the trauma caused by clergy sex crimes.

Rev. Archie’s lawyer claimed the minister could not have committed the crimes because of a window in a door to the room where he assaulted this woman. The notion that a window would stop a predator is just silly. Many times, clergy who prey on the vulnerable are ‘out of control’ and sometimes act impulsively and in ways that defy common sense.

We hope every single person who saw, suspected or suffered Rev. Archie’s crimes will come forward, get help, call police, protect others and start healing. Every single church or agency that ever gave Rev. Archie access to innocent kids and vulnerable adults should now work hard to find others he has hurt. We especially call on the KC police department, where Rev. Archie was a chaplain, to seek out anyone he may have assaulted using his police title or position.

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: Sex abuse report on deceased priest deemed credible

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Review

SUBMITTED ON AUGUST 06, 2014

The Archdiocese of St. Louis has deemed credible a report alleging sexual abuse of a minor by the late Father Alexander Lippert in the early 1970s. The Archdiocesan Review Board made the determination, and Archbishop Robert J. Carlson accepted the board’s recommendation citing credible evidence.

Father Lippert died in April 2000, before the allegations were made. Therefore, he can’t defend himself, so officially the allegation is considered “credible though unsubstantiated.” However, there is enough evidence to conclude the abuse could have occurred as reported, according to the archdiocese.

In 33 years as a priest, Father Lippert served or resided at 11 parishes. He was assigned to Holy Guardian Angels in south St. Louis in April 1956; Immaculate Conception in Union in July of 1959; St. Liborius in north St. Louis in 1961; St. Teresa in north St. Louis in 1963;St. Ferdinand in Florissant in 1965; St. Aloysius in Spanish Lake in May of 1968; St. Paul the Apostle in Pine Lawn (resided, during leave of absence) in July of 1970; Basilica of St. Louis, King of France (Old Cathedral) in Downtown St. Louis in June of 1980; St. Catherine of Alexandria in Coffman in November of 1980; St. Ambrose in south St. Louis in May of 1983; and St. Thomas of Aquin in south St. Louis in April of 1986.

Father Lippert took a sick leave in July 1988, then the archdiocese relieved him of priestly duties and granted retirement in January of 1991.

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Ex-priest to be sentenced for school district misconduct

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

BY GUILLERMO CONTRERAS : AUGUST 7, 2014

SAN ANTONIO — A former priest who later went on to be a top San Antonio Independent School District employee is to be sentenced Friday for awarding himself contracts to perform maintenance work on classrooms for the district.

Anthony “Tony” Mayhan, 67, took a plea deal in October in which he pleaded guilty to one count of bribery so three other bribery charges could be dismissed. His lawyer, Don Flanary, is hoping his client’s cleric past can win him leniency. His past was previously undisclosed, but was made public this week in a court document Flanary filed.

Mayhan was ordained a priest in 1978 and was granted rare special permission from the Vatican to leave the priesthood in 1991 in good standing. That allowed him to serve as a communion minister and to marry his wife in the church, Flanary wrote in a sentencing memorandum to Chief U.S. District Judge Fred Biery.

Mayhan also was director of teacher personnel for the Archdiocese of San Antonio before joining SAISD as the compliance monitor of its federal programs department.

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.

Guam- Victims blast archbishop: Come clean about priest

GUAM
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, August 07, 2014

For more information: David Clohessy ( 314-566-9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

Victims blast archbishop: Come clean about priest
He knew about banned cleric, sex abuse allegations
LA lawyers even called and warned him, but
Archbishop told San Francisco cleric had “good standing”

Come clean, protect kids, SNAP says

Victims of child sex abuse are asking why the Guam Archbishop ignored warnings about a predator priest and kept the priest in active and prominent ministry. They are also demanding direct action to prevent future abuse and cover-ups.

Members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), the nation’s largest support group for men and women abused in religious and institutional settings, are questioning why Hagatna Archbishop Anthony Sablan Apuron allowed Fr. John H. Wadeson to remain in ministry after allegations of sex abuse against him became well known.

According to the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, Wadeson has been accused of abuse by two children in the 1970 and has been banned from acting as a priest there.

Michael Hennigan, attorney for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, said in a recent interview that the archdiocese called Apuron’s offices in 2011 to warn them about Wadeson and his past.

[ABC News]

Despite this, Apuron gave Wadeson a recommendation to work in San Francisco, which was revoked when Apuron removed Wadeson from ministry and the allegations against Wadeson made the national news.

[ABC News]

Members of SNAP are blasting Apuron’s reckless behavior and demanding concrete action.

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Haselberger: South Africa’s post-apartheid commission a way forward for church on accountability

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Aug. 7, 2014

CHICAGO

Among a veritable “who’s who” list of speakers who played major roles in revealing the Catholic church’s clergy sexual abuse crisis, perhaps no one at the annual conference of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests last week generated as much anticipation as Jennifer Haselberger.

The former canonical chancellor for the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese, Haselberger received a standing ovation before uttering a word. Other presenters — who included Fr. Tom Doyle, former National Review Board member Illinois Justice Anne Burke, journalist Jason Berry and author Michael D’Antonio — frequently referenced her role in exposing missteps and oversights in the archdiocese’s handling of abuse allegations, with one speaker even recapping portions of her dissertation.

But Haselberger opted not to use her time to delve into her April 2013 decision to resign, her experiences and frustrations in the Twin Cities, or the fallout that followed her disclosure of documents to Minnesota Public Radio and local authorities. Rather, she sought to offer a possible path forward for the church.

“I think it’s important not to just point out the problems but also to help try and articulate a solution,” she told NCR Saturday following her speech.

Haselbeger used as a starting pointing Pope Francis’ message in a July homily at a Mass during his meeting with abuse survivors, requesting the church make reparations for its crimes. “I ask for the grace to weep, the grace for the Church to weep and make reparation for her sons and daughters who betrayed their mission, who abused innocent persons,” the pope said.

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Canada- Predator priest passes away, SNAP responds

CANADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Aug. 6, 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 )

We are sad for the family of a notorious serial predator priest, Father William Hodgson Marshall, who has passed away. But we are relieved that he can no longer devastate any young lives.

We hope this child molesting cleric’s death brings some degree of comfort and closure to those he has so severely hurt. .

Finally, we hope that every single person who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by this priest will step forward and get help.

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

Catholic journalist takes on new role ‘to shape coverage’

MASSACHUSETTS
The Catholic Free Press

By Father Paul J. Tougas
CFP Correspondent

John L. Allen Jr., a journalist well know for his coverage of the Catholic Church, has taken on a new role in the secular media. As an associate editor at The Boston Globe, Mr. Allen said he hopes to help shape the newspaper’s coverage of the universal Church.

In a recent email interview, Mr. Allen noted that all the Italian daily newspapers have someone to specifically cover the Vatican, “but it is a first in this country for a major daily to hire an analyst specifically focused on Catholicism.”

“This sort of thing is new to the United States; it’s unusual and it is a reflection of The Boston Globe’s desire to get it right,” Mr. Allen said.

Mr. Allen began his assignment at the Globe in February where he continues to pen the All Things Column he wrote while at the National Catholic Reporter. He worked for NCR, an independent national Catholic newspaper, for 16 years and was its Vatican correspondent. He has also been correspondent at the Vatican for CNN. He is the author of nine books and a regular speaker on Catholic issues. He can be followed on Twitter – @JohnLAllenJr – or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/JohnLAllenJr.

According to the journalist, The Boston Globe operates in a solidly Catholic location in New England but also across this country.

“For me to help shape the coverage of the Church in a major publication was too enticing to resist,” said Mr. Allen.

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OH- Board takes deacon’s license, SNAP seeks answers

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, August 7, 2014

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

Deacon loses teaching license
SNAP to bishop: “Tell parents why”
Four others were disciplined at same time
Each has been credibly accused of molesting kids
Victims say “Catholic officials must now finally ‘come clean’”

Education officials have permanently revoked the teaching license of a Catholic deacon and a victim’s support group is calling on Youngstown’s bishop and parochial school staff to explain why.

The group says that Deacon Ernest Formichelli, who also taught in several Catholic schools, has molested at least one child.

According to minutes of the September 2013 meeting of the Ohio State Board of Education, the board revoked Formichelli’s teaching license and “orders Formichelli be permanently ineligible to apply for any license issued by the State Board of Education.”

Formichelli “waived his right to a hearing,” the minutes say, and has forfeited both his five-year professional high school teaching license, issued in 2012, and permanent non-tax teaching certificate issued in 1978.

“We strongly suspect a victim or concerned parent reported to the state that Formichelli was accused of molesting at least one child,” said Judy Jones, the Midwest associate director of the Survivors Network of those Abuse by Priests (SNAP). “For the safety of kids and the healing of victims, Bishop George Murry must make public why this deacon’s license was revoked.”

Four other teachers lost their licenses at that same board meeting. All of them have been publicly accused of molesting kids. (They are Kelsey L. Hartmann, Mercades R. Blue, Thomas J. Mouat Jr. and Jeffery S. Rohrer Jr.) The wording in the state board’s minutes about all five cases is identical.

“Few adults voluntarily give up the chance to teach school, anywhere in Ohio, unless they fear what an investigation into their actions will reveal,” said David Clohessy, SNAP’s director. “I worked for a school district for five years. When state education officials take action and yank a teacher’s license, it’s not over something trivial.”

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Bistum soll Georg K. zu Geständnis bewegen

DEUTSCHLAND
WZ

[Summary: A priest has for the past week been in custody in Germany after being extradited from South Africa. Georg K. is accused of 37 cases of sexual abuse.]

Willich. Seit einer Woche sitzt er nun in Deutschland in Untersuchungshaft: Die Rede ist von dem aus Willich stammenden Pfarrer Georg K.. Ihm wird von der Krefelder Staatsanwaltschaft Missbrauch in 37 Fällen vorgeworfen, aus Südafrika war er deshalb ausgeliefert worden. Dort hatte der 56-Jährige wegen ähnlicher Vowürfe lange vor Gericht gestanden.

Bei der Aufklärung der Dinge, die K. zur Last gelegt werden, hatte Johannes Heibel von der deutschen Initiative gegen Gewalt und sexuellen Missbrauch an Kindern und Jugendlichen eine Schlüsselrolle inne. Heibel ist es auch, der sich nun in einem Brief an den Personalchef des Bistums Aachen, Pfarrer Heiner Schmitz, gewandt hat. Darin fordert er ihn auf, K. zu einem umfassenden Geständnis zu bewegen.

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Kaplan muss wegen Kinderpornografie vor Gericht

DEUTSCHLAND
Die Welt

[Summary: A chaplain in the Aachen diocese must answer in court on charges that he allegedly possessed and distributed child and youth pornography.]

Ein Kaplan aus dem Bistum Aachen steht im September wegen Besitzes und Verbreitung von Kinder- und Jugendpornografie vor Gericht. Dem 36-Jährigen werde in zwei Fällen die Verbreitung von Dateien mit kinderpornografischen Inhalten durch E-Mail-Versand vorgeworfen, teilte eine Sprecherin des Landgerichts am Mittwoch mit. In einem Fall soll er kinder- und jugendpornografisches Material auf einem Rechner gehabt haben. Das Bistum Aachen bestätigte, dass es sich bei dem Beschuldigten um einen 2012 geweihten Kaplan aus Heinsberg handelt. “Aachener Zeitung” und “Aachener Nachrichten” hatten zuvor berichtet.

Der Hinweis war nach Angaben der Staatsanwaltschaft Aachen von Ermittlern aus Ostdeutschland im Zuge eines Verfahrens gegen einen anderen Verdächtigen gekommen. Der Prozess am Amtsgericht Heinsberg findet nach Angaben der Gerichtssprecherin am 12. September statt. Sie konnte keine Angaben dazu machen, ob der beschuldigte Kaplan die Taten zugegeben hat.

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Neighbors shocked at Catholic Diocese employee’s child porn charges

TEXAS
Fox 14

[with video]

By Crystal Price

EL PASO, Texas — On Wednesday, Victor Jerome Reza, 53, made his initial appearance in federal court as he faces on charges of possession and distribution of child exploitation material.

Officers with the Department of Homeland Security arrested Reza at his home on Sundance Avenue in far east El Paso yesterday.
See video of Reza being escorted by authorities.

Homeland Security Investigations officials said child porn videos and pictures were found in his home.

We have no word on the age of the children in the material or if they are local.

HSI officials said it is one of their main priorities to identify the victims.

The Diocese of El Paso’s Chancery Office confirmed late Wednesday that Reza is a member of the Diocesan School Board and has served since 2008.

According to that statement, Catholic school policies require that board members undergo a criminal background check and Safe Environment training for the diocese. The diocese added that Mr. Reza had completed those requirements.

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Indiegogo campaign helps survivors expand support groups

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

[with video]

Posted by Joelle Casteix on August 7, 2014

Even $5 can make a huge difference.

I have often mentioned my volunteer work with SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. They are the nation’s largest and oldest support group for adult survivors who were sexually abused as children in religious and institutional settings.

In the past few years, their mission has expanded dramatically to help a wide range of victims from many denominations, institutions, and organizations. Don’t let the word “priest” fool you—at their convention last week, I met survivors from/of universities, protestant churches, incest, orthodox, Judaism, Islam, boarding schools, group homes, and the list (quite tragically) goes on and on.

Some of SNAP’s volunteer leaders have come together for a project-specific Indiegogo campaign. They are raising the money to send 2 leaders to 3 cities to train other survivors to set up and grow support groups. It’s a small project, but will have a HUGE impact on survivors in the cities where new groups are formed.

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KY- Western KY priest is sentenced, SNAP responds

KENTUCKY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, August 7, 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 Kentucky priest, who pled guilty to child sexual abuse, has been sentenced to 5 years in prison and must register as a sex offender. We are glad that he will be going to prison, but believe he should have received a harsher punishment.

We are grateful to the victims of Fr. Louis Francis Piskula who stepped forward and worked with law enforcement. When victims stay silent, nothing changes. But when victims find the courage to take action, there’s at least a chance for prevention, healing and justice.

We urge Kentucky Catholic officials to visit every parish where Piskula worked and beg anyone who saw, suspect, or suffered child sex crimes to come forward and report abuse. It is never too late to speak up.

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Priest raped a boy, then ordered the boy to “confess” and keep it secret

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites Australia researcher (updated 7 August 2014)

This Broken Rites article is the most comprehensive account available about a Melbourne Catholic priest, Father James Scannell, who raped a boy during a sex-education lesson more than 40 years ago. After the rape, Scannell ordered the boy to “confess” and never to tell anybody about it. The victim (now in his fifties) finally reported this crime to the police after learning that his aunt’s funeral in 2010 was to be conducted by this priest.

In the Melbourne County Court on 1 July 2014 a jury convicted Father James Henry Scannell, 88, on a charge of buggery, committed against the 12-year-old boy in the early 1970s.

On 7 August 2014, Judge David Parsons gave Scannell a two-year jail sentence. He must serve 12 months before he becomes eligible for parole.

During the trial, the court was told that in the early 1970s, Father Scannell was doing some ministering in a Melbourne parish (St Anne’s, East Kew), where the 12-year-old boy lived with his mother and some sisters. The boy’s father was absent from the family. The boy’s aunt knew Father Scannell and she presumed that a Catholic priest would be a good “male role model” for the boy. The boy was paid to do some odd jobs at the priest’s house in East Kew.. Father Scannell was then aged in his mid-forties.

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Alleged paedophile David Edwin Rapson to be freed after court ruling

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SHANNON DEERY NEWS LIMITED AUGUST 07, 2014

A PRIEST accused of being one of the state’s worst paedophiles could be freed from prison today after serving just 11 months of a 13-year sentence.

The move is believed to have devastated many of David Edwin Rapson’s alleged victims who fought for more than 25 to bring him to justice.

The former priest was jailed last year after a County Court jury found him guilty of eight counts of indecent assault and five counts of rape of young boys.

But the convictions were today quashed by the Court of Appeal after a concession by the Office of Public Prosecutions that Rapson, 61, should have faced several trials.

They admitted because of the varying nature of Rapson’s alleged offending it was unfair for all the matters to be determined by a single jury. He will now face retrials in the County Court.

He rose to become vice-principal of Sunbury’s notorious Salesian College Rupertswood despite a string of allegations being levelled at him.

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Retired priest James Henry Scannell jailed for assaulting altar boy 40 years ago

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 7, 2014

Adam Cooper
Court reporter for The Age

An 88-year-old retired priest will spend at least one year in prison for sexually assaulting a boy in his care more than 40 years ago.

James Henry Scannell, who has worked as a priest across Melbourne for half a century and was a chaplain at Kew Cottages, was on Thursday jailed for two years, to serve a minimum of 12 months, for sexually assaulting a boy in Kew between 1970 and 1972.

Scannell, who is of poor health, had trouble getting to his feet and used a walking stick when led out of the County Court dock by security, as some of his large group of supporters cried.

Outside court, Bernard Barrett, from the victims’ support group Broken Rites, said Scannell was still working up until early last year, when he was suspended by the church pending the result of the trial. Dr Barrett called on the church to explain why Scannell’s offending was covered up for so long.

“Questions need to be asked of the Melbourne archdiocese about why and how this sort of thing could have happened and how it’s taken all these years for it to come out,” he said.

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Adulterous priest Luonde now sues Anglican church for money

ZAMBIA
Zambian Watchdog

August 7, 2014

Richard Luonde, the former priest who was kicked out of the Anglican Church for alleged adultery and other sins has now sued the church demanding money.

Luonde also wants the court to force the church to give him back his preaching job so that he continues getting paid, because, he claims he was called by God and wanted to die as a priest.

Lounde, a former St Peter’s Anglican Church priest-in-charge in Kitwe asked the Ndola Industrial Relations Court (IRC) to order the church to give him back his portfolio and pay him to his satisfaction.
“I was called as a priest and I want to die a priest. I want the church to give me back my portfolio and pay what is due to my satisfaction and what else the court will deem fit,” he said.

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