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.

March 28, 2014

Salvation Army commander accused girl of lying in sex case

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

SARAH CRAWFORD THE DAILY TELEGRAPH MARCH 29, 2014

A SALVATION army commander asked a woman if she was lying when she revealed years of sexual abuse at the hands of her Sunday school teacher, including being raped at age 10.

Envoy John Lane was sentenced to jail in 1997 for indecently dealing with the woman, known as JG, and abusing another girl, JD, from the age of four at the Fortitude Valley Salvation Army Corps in Brisbane in the 1970s.

The two women went to police after receiving no satisfaction from the head of the Salvation Army in southeast Queensland, Colonel Stan Everitt who asked them: “Are you sure you are not lying?”

The women told the child sex abuse royal commission that Colonel Everitt warned them not to call police or go to the media about Lane.

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.

Visiting nun in Bermuda to discuss sexual abuse

BERMUDA
Royal Gazette

By Jessie Moniz Hardy

Child sex abuse isn’t about sex, it’s about an abuse of power, said a visiting nun who is an expert on bioethics.

Dr Nuala Kenny, a member of the order of Sisters of Charity, is the author of Healing the Church: Diagnosing and Treating the Clergy Sexual Abuse Scandal. She will speak today and tomorrow on several topics include sex abuse within the church.

She was born in New York, but now describes herself as an “adopted Halifaxer”. She joined the Sisters of Charity in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada in 1962 before graduating from Dalhousie medical school in 1972. She became a paediatrician four years later. Having worked in Ontario in the early 1980s, Dr Kenny returned to Halifax in 1988 as a professor and head of the paediatrics department at Dalhousie University and chief of paediatrics at the Izaak Walton Killam Children’s Hospital (now the IWK Health Centre) and later as deputy health minister for Nova Scotia.

“I am a paediatrician by training,” she said. “I am a Roman Catholic Sister who is a doctor. I did paediatrics with special attention to end of life care with children. I also did an extra year of training in paediatric cancer care.”

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.

Prayer List: Victims of Church Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
Christian Post

On Monday Matthew McKelvey plead guilty to abusing two girls sexually and received a 15-year prison sentence.

According to The Des Moines Register, “McKelvey was a youth pastor at the Heritage Assembly Church … until he lost his job last summer. Church leaders had become aware that McKelvey had violated church policy by being alone with female juveniles, according to a statement from the church on Monday.”

Last month protestors in Nigeria opposed a church-run orphanage from relocating because the pastor was accused of abusing two orphans. Vanguard reported, “The protesters demanded that the orphanage be closed until the suspect is acquitted by the court of law.”

How often is church sex abuse reported in the United States? More often than most people realize.

Just one insurance company reports more than 200 such claims a year. In 2010 the Denver Post reported, “Wisconsin-based Church Mutual Insurance Co. has 100,000 client churches and has seen a steady filing of about five sexual molestation cases a week for more than a decade, even though its client base has grown.”

Prayer List

Pray for the victims of sexual abuse to heal emotionally and physically.
Pray for the victims to receive the emotional support needed while recovering from trauma.
Pray for the perpetrators to stop their abuses.
Pray for justice on behalf of the victims.
Pray for congregations and youth groups that have been damaged by sexual abuse to grow in their faith and relationship with God as it is being tested.

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.

Westminster pastor accused of sexually assaulting child

COLORADO
KWGN

[with video]

March 27, 2014, by Matt Farley

WESTMINSTER, Colo. — A Westminster pastor was arrested this week, accused of sexually assaulting a child who belonged to his church.

Gerald Clark, leader of Jericho Ministries International, was being held on suspicion of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust, the Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office said.

Clark allegedly engaged in a pattern of unwanted sexual touching with a member of the church between 2009 and 2012, according to the arrest affidavit. The alleged victim was 13 years old in 2009.

At the time, the teen’s family was very close with Clark and his wife, according to the affidavit. After her family moved out of state in 2009, the girl spent summers and some holidays with the Clarks.

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.

Westminster pastor arrested on child sex charges

COLORADO
9 News

[with video]

WESTMINSTER – A Westminster pastor was arrested Wednesday for alleged sexual abuse of a teenage girl who was a member of his church.

Gerald Clark, 51, was booked on a $20,000 bond. He bonded out Thursday.

According to an arrest affidavit, Clark is the pastor of Jericho Ministries International, which meets at Greenway Club House at 110 Greenway Drive in Broomfield. Clark previously served as a leader of a Westminster church.

The affidavit says the abuse occurred over a period of several years, beginning in 2009. The victim lived with Clark and his wife during the summer months, according to the affidavit.

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.

Westminster pastor, Gerald Clark, arrested on allegations he sexually assaulted girl over 3 years

COLORADO
TheDenverChannel

[with video]

Alan Gathright
11:26 PM, Mar 27, 2014

WESTMINSTER, Colo. – A Westminster pastor has been arrested on allegations he sexually assaulted a girl over a three-year period, starting when she was 13 years old, according to court records obtained by 7NEWS.

Gerald Leroy Clark, 51, was arrested by Westminster police Wednesday on investigation of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust, involving a pattern of abuse. He appeared in Jefferson County court Thursday where he was advised of his rights and why he was being held, said District Attorney spokeswoman Pam Russell.

Clark was released from jailed in the afternoon after posting a $20,000 bond.

Clark is pastor of Jericho Ministries International, which initially met at the West View Recreation Center in Westminster, but now holds services at the Greenway Club House in Broomfield, court records state.

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.

Band instructors fired after reports of alleged abuse

MISSOURI
KCTV

By Laura McCallister, Multimedia Producer

KANSAS CITY, MO (KCTV) –
A Catholic school band teacher and assistant band instructor have been fired after reports of alleged abuse.

A 53-year-old Catholic school teacher is in police custody after he allegedly groped a student’s breast on multiple occasions.

In a letter to families, St. Thomas More Elementary Principal Brian Borgmeyer said that a second person at the school is on leave after a separate incident. No charges have been filed.

St. Thomas More School Principal Brian Borgmeyer sent a letter to parents and guardians Thursday saying that Gregg Briggs and Tod Barnard have been fired after both men were placed on leave earlier in the month.

On March 14, the Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office filed charges against 53-year-old Barnard after an 11-year-old student said he had groped her chest.

Barnard was charged with two counts of second-degree child molestation and two counts of third-degree assault, all misdemeanors.

Court documents said the student’s parents noticed she began exhibiting signs of anxiety about attending band class and they contacted the school when she unexpectedly told them she no longer wanted to participate in band activities. The girl told a counselor that she had been touched inappropriately by the band teacher’s assistant on several different occasions as far back as December, a police report stated.

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.

Savile sex fears for Yorkshire schools and children’s home

UNITED KINGDOM
Yorkshire Post

by Rob Parsons and Sam Casey

Published on the 28 March 2014

TWO Yorkshire schools and a children’s home in the region are at the centre of new inquiries into alleged child sex abuse by disgraced presenter Jimmy Savile.

Education Secretary Michael Gove yesterday ordered probes to be carried out at Northways Residential School, Beechcroft Children’s Home and Notre Dame Grammar School.

He said allegations about the shamed Leeds DJ’s connections to 21 schools and children’s homes across the country dating back to the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s were handed to the Department for Education after a review by the Metropolitan Police.

Leeds City Council promised to investigate the allegations at the two city-run institutions named in Mr Gove’s list, but said it was unaware of any sites called ‘Beechcroft Children’s Home’ in the Leeds area.

Northways Residential School, which was based in Clifford, near Wetherby, closed in 1997. Of the three named institutions, only Notre Dame Grammar School, now known as Notre Dame Catholic Sixth Form College in Woodhouse, Leeds, is still running.

John Grady, spokesman for the Diocese of Leeds, which runs the school, said it carried out its own investigation after the revelations first emerged about Savile in 2012. He said it “could find no evidence that Jimmy Savile had any contact with Notre Dame school or any of our [diocesan] children’s homes”.

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.

Claudia Vercellotti commentary: Statute of limitations on sexual abuse needs a fix

OHIO
Columbus Dispatch

Supposedly to give child sex-abuse victims a chance to expose their perpetrators, Ohio legislators passed a unique law in 2007. It’s called a “civil registry” for those found in a civil proceeding to have molested kids. There is just one problem: It doesn’t work.

We know this because recently The Dispatch was the first news outlet in seven years to follow up on the measure. It reported that the registry has never once been utilized.

I predicted it never would be because the registry was unfunded, complicated and likely unconstitutional. I also know how child sex-abuse victims think. That’s because I am one. The “ grooming” started when I was 12; the sexual abuse ended when I left for college. For years, I had silently suffered from shame, guilt and self-destructive behavior. And I had shouldered a quiet burden. I believed — and still believe — that if I didn’t speak up and another kid got hurt by the church leader who molested me, I was somehow responsible.

In 1996, I learned the man who assaulted me was still on the diocesan payroll and was taking young girls to the same places where he abused me. Consumed with fear, I went to my bishop in Toledo and painfully spared him no graphic detail. He didn’t tell me that 12 months prior, four other victims had already reported being abused by the same church official. I went to the police but was told that the statute of limitations had expired, and my perpetrator couldn’t be criminally charged. Like many, I had no recourse.

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.

American diocese sues Irish diocese for sending them pedophile priest

UNITED STATES/IRELAND
Irish Central

James O’Shea @irishcentral March 28,2014

In an unprecedented legal move a diocese in Minnesota is suing a diocese in Ireland, alleging it sent a priest to Minnesota knowing he was a child abuser.

The New Ulm diocese has filed a lawsuit against the diocese of Clogher, which encompasses four northern Irish counties: Monaghan, Fermanagh, Tyrone and Donegal.

The lawsuit alleges that Clogher sent a pedophile priest, Father Francis Markey, to Minnesota in 1981 without revealing his past. The lawsuit also names the the Servants of the Paraclete religious order.

The New Ulm Diocese says it never would have accepted the Rev. Francis Xavier Markey in 1981 if it had been told about the allegations.

Markey was ordained in Ireland in 1952, but documents in several court cases show he was accused of sexually abusing numerous boys as early as the 1960s, long before he was transferred to Minnesota.

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

Abuse victims ridicule George Pell’s apology

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

CARDINAL George Pell’s apologies to victims of sexual abuse by priests and others within the Catholic Church have been labelled hypocritical by an advocacy group.

Dr Pell will leave Australia for the Vatican on Monday to take up a new post as chief of the Holy See’s finances after 13 years as the eighth Archbishop of Sydney.

He used his farewell sermon at St Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney on Thursday night to ‘‘apologise once again to the victims and their families for the terrible suffering that has been brought to bear by these crimes’’.

The apology came just hours after Dr Pell appeared at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and read out a statement to ‘‘publicly say sorry’’ to former alter boy John Ellis, who was abused by a priest.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests leader Nicky Davis said both apologies were ‘‘completely hypocritical’’.

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.

Anti-abuse groups dismiss Australia cleric apology

AUSTRALIA
Press TV (Iran)

[with video]

Child rights advocates have dismissed as “hypocritical” an apology from Australia’s senior Catholic cleric George Pell over sex abuse in the Church.

Cardinal Pell, who is set to get a job as head of a new Vatican Finance Ministry next week, said on Thursday in his last sermon before leaving Australia for the Holy See that child sexual abuse was a “terrible blight” on the Church.

He also admitted that priests, religious leaders and others linked to the Church had sexually abused those they were expected to protect.

“I apologize once again to the victims and their families for the terrible suffering that has been brought to bear by these crimes,” he added.

Earlier in the day he personally apologized to a former altar boy, John Ellis, who was abused by a pedophile priest.

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.

JOANNE McCARTHY: Moral leadership lacking

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE McCARTHY March 28, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell has failed as a moral leader. Abysmally and absolutely.

He failed in 2004 and 2005, when he accepted John Ellis’s allegations he was sexually abused by a priest were true, but instructed lawyers to ‘‘vigorously’’ and ‘‘strenuously’’ defend the matter in court.

In Pell’s own words this week to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, from a ‘‘Christian point of view’’ the Church did not deal fairly with Ellis.

He failed again as a moral leader, repeatedly, when the Archdiocese of Sydney issued statements over the years defending the ‘‘key facts’’ of the Ellis case, while failing to mention its ‘‘mean’’ and ‘‘grotesque’’ initial offers of compensation to him under Towards Healing, its rejections of his offers to mediate and settle the action, and pursuit of Ellis over a $500,000 legal costs bill for several years, despite knowing of his fragile emotional state.

Pell failed as a moral leader again this week, when he blamed and minimised, justified and waffled his way through answers to the most basic of questions about what he did and did not do when Ellis turned to the Church with its ‘‘commitment to justice and compassion’’.

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.

Judge warns against delays in Gallup, N.M., bankruptcy case

NEW MEXICO
National Catholic Reporter

Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola | Mar. 28, 2014

GALLUP, N.M. The Gallup diocese is the ninth Catholic diocese in the country to file for bankruptcy protection since 2004, but Judge David Thuma says he doesn’t want to see Gallup follow in the contentious path of number eight, the Milwaukee archdiocese.

Thuma, presiding over Gallup’s case in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the District of New Mexico, recently cautioned attorneys in the case to get “to the end zone” and work toward settlement.

“We need to figure out a way to get the minimum facts before the committee and the debtor that they would need to settle this case, and we need to start thinking about how we get a whole lot closer to the end zone, to use a sports metaphor,” Thuma said in a Feb. 14 hearing. “Because I don’t want this case to be like the Milwaukee case where the debtor says all the money that could have been paid to creditors has been spent on litigation. I would be pretty unhappy if that happens in this case.”

It’s been more than six months since Bishop James Wall announced the Gallup diocese would file a Chapter 11 petition. He broke the news by instructing priests across this sprawling rural diocese to read his announcement to parishioners during Labor Day weekend Masses.

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.

March 27, 2014

Child sex abuse royal commission…

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Child sex abuse royal commission: Salvation Army victim says he was beaten and held in solitary confinement at Riverview Farm

ABC

BY THOMAS ORITI
March 28, 2014

A victim of child sexual abuse says he was beaten and held in solitary confinement during his time at a Queensland boys’ home run by the Salvation Army.

A man known only as JE has told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that when he was a young boy he was forced to protect his sisters and mother who were being abused by his father.

His father sent him away, telling a judge JE was out of control.

JE ended up at the Salvation Army’s Riverview Farm, south-west of Brisbane, when he was 15 years old in the late 1960s.

The man has told the hearing staff at the home in Ipswich “would have been more suitably engaged in a Middle Ages slavery camp”.

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.

Salvation Army locked boy in room for days without toilet, royal commission told

March 28, 2014
AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Paul Bibby
Court Reporter

A man who was locked in solitary confinement for days without a toilet at a Salvation Army boys home says the organisation’s “redress scheme” effectively continued the abuse, likening the organisation’s uniformed officers to “the Gestapo”.

The man, referred to as JE, told the Royal Commission into child sex abuse on Friday that he was sent to the Riverview boys’ home in Queensland in the late 1960s when he was about 15.

“I remember being locked in a small room in solitary confinement with some boys who were wog bashing me,” JE said, fighting back tears.

“There was no toilet, not even a bucket … If you had to go to the toilet, you had to just go and they threw some newspaper to clean it up.”

“I had to sleep on the same floor.”

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.

Jewish care home named in Jimmy Savile child abuse investigation

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

By Marcus Dysch, March 27, 2014

Paedophile Jimmy Savile is believed to have abused children at a Jewish care home, it has been revealed.

The Sarah Laski Home, in Crumpsall, Manchester, opened under the auspices of the city’s Jewish Board of Guardians in 1953.

It was today named by the government alongside 20 other homes now being investigated for links to Savile.

The home – which later became known as the Manchester Jewish School for Disabled Children – closed in 1974 due to lack of funding and a feeling that it was unable to provide “a family atmosphere”.

Education Secretary Michael Gove told Parliament that information about Savile dating back to the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s had been uncovered by police.

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

Former Kingsport priest seeks appeal of sex abuse conviction

TENNESSEE
Times-News

March 27th, 2014 8:30 pm by MATTHEW LANE

KINGSPORT — A former Kingsport priest, convicted of sexually abusing an alter boy in the 1970s, is attempting to appeal his conviction to the Tennessee Supreme Court.

William Casey, previously of Greeneville, was convicted in Sullivan County Criminal Court in 2011 of first-degree sexual misconduct and two counts of aggravated rape. Prosecutors charged Casey sexually abused an altar boy shortly after becoming a priest at St. Dominic’s Catholic Church in the 1970s.

Casey received a 35-year prison sentence.

During trial, the victim, now in his mid-40s, testified Casey raped him twice — once when he was 13 and once when he was 14 — and performed oral sex on him in his mother’s trailer shortly before his 15th birthday. The victim testified he “felt obligated” to reciprocate the act and described feeling powerless to resist a man he believed to be “representative of God on earth.”

The victim further testified Casey committed in excess of 50 sexual acts against him when he was between 10 and 16 years of age, with most of the offenses occurring in Sullivan County, but others also taking place in Greene County, McDowell County, N.C., and Scott County, Va.

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

Abuse victims criticise Pell apology

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

A group representing victims of sex abuse by clergy are unhappy with Cardinal George Pell’s apology.

Cardinal George Pell’s apology to victims of sexual abuse by priests and others within the Catholic church have been labelled hypocritical by an advocacy group.

Dr Pell will leave Australia for the Vatican on Monday to take up a new post as chief of the Holy See’s finances after 13-years as the eighth Archbishop of Sydney.

He used his farewell sermon at St Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney on Thursday night to “apologise once again to the victims and their families for the terrible suffering that has been brought to bear by these crimes”.

The apology came just hours after Dr Pell appeared at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and read out a statement to “publicly to say sorry” to former alter boy John Ellis who was abused by a priest.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) leader, Nicky Davis, said both apologies were “completely hypocritical”.

Ms Davis, who was in the commission’s public gallery when he read out his statement, described the cardinal as showing “no emotion”.

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.

UA Fairbanks priest charged with DUI

ALASKA
KTVA

FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) – A 52-year-old Roman Catholic priest who serves in the University of Alaska Fairbanks parish has been placed on administrative leave following his arrest on a driving under the influence charge.

Father Sean P. Thomson also is charged with misdemeanor drug and weapons counts.

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (http://bit.ly/1gukD0P) reports Thomson was stopped Monday on the Parks Highway near McKinley Village.

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.

Fairbanks campus priest charged with DUI, drugs and weapons

ALASKA
News-Miner

By Sam Friedman / sfriedman@newsminer.com

Update: This article has been updated to reflect the date of Thomson’s next court date.

FAIRBANKS—A University of Alaska Fairbanks parish priest has been arrested on charges of driving under the influence and misdemeanor drugs and weapons offenses.

Father Sean P. Thomson, 52, was stopped Monday at 228 Mile Parks Highway near McKinley Village, according to a criminal complaint filed against him Tuesday. He pleaded not guilty at an initial court hearing and has been released on $5,000 bail. Thomson remains a priest for the Catholic Diocese of Fairbanks but has been placed on administrative leave, said Ronnie Rosenberg, legal coordinator and the director of human resources for the diocese.

Thomson was driving a blue 2002 GMC Sierra pickup truck that was weaving, crossing the center line and speeding 79 mph in a 65 zone, trooper Christopher Bitz wrote in the criminal complaint. Bitz said Thomson seemed disoriented and produced a receipt when asked for his vehicle registration. Asked if he had any weapons, Thomson mentioned a .357 in the back seat but neglected to mention a 9mm pistol in his back pocket, Bitz said. Thomson had a bag with a small quantity of marijuana in the pocket of his hoodie sweatshirt, Bitz 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.

Akron-area priest defrocked

OHIO
WKSU

by WKSU’s M.L. SCHULTZE

The former priest at more than a half-dozen Roman Catholic parishes in Northeast Ohio has been defrocked.

George Bailey was accused of molesting at least 10 girls in his parishes dating back to the 1960s.

The Beacon Journal is reporting that Bishop Richard Lennon sent a memo to priests through the Cleveland Diocese today that Bailey was stripped of his clerical status after “credible accusations of sexual misconduct.”

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.

St. Paul archdiocese gets more time to file documents on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 03/27/2014

The Twin Cities archdiocese has gained more time to turn over documents related to priests “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors, but the depositions of top officials will take place as scheduled.

During a lengthy hearing Thursday in Ramsey County District Court, attorneys in the case of Doe 1 disagreed about whether the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis should be held to a judicially mandated deadline of Monday to turn over certain files that will not be under seal.

Judge John Van de North had ordered church officials to disclose all files by the end of the day Monday relating to 33 priests “credibly accused” before 2004.

But attorneys for the archdiocese said that a wholesale disclosure was impossible — they said the files contain victim names and information subject to attorney-client privilege. Some of that will need to be designated non-public, they 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.

Cardinal George Pell uses sermon to apologise to victims of sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Thursday 27 March 2014

Cardinal George Pell has used his farewell sermon to offer a frank apology to victims of sexual abuse by “priests, religious leaders and others” within the Catholic church.

The apology, delivered from the pulpit of St Mary’s cathedral in Sydney, was dismissed by a small group of protesters, including an alleged victim of church sexual abuse, who were barred from the service and stood outside.

“I apologise once again to the victims and their families for the terrible suffering that has been brought to bear by these crimes,” Pell told a mass of thanksgiving on Thursday night.

Speaking to a congregation of several hundred people, Pell acknowledged that child sexual abuse within the Catholic church had caused a “terrible blight”.

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.

St. Paul police to reopen two cases related to Archdiocese investigation

MINNESOTA
KARE

ST. PAUL – The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office has asked the St. Paul Police Department to reopen two cases related to its investigation into the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

A St. Paul police spokesman confirmed the cases pertain to Archbishop John Nienstedt, and Curtis Wehmeyer, a St. Paul priest serving time in prison for child sexual abuse.

Ramsey County Attorney John Choi announced earlier this month there was insufficient evidence to charge the archbishop, who in December was accused of groping a boy several years ago at a public event.

Nienstedt has denied any wrongdoing.

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

Former Rochester youth pastor arrested for child porn

MISSOURI
Post-Bulletin

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

ST. CHARLES, Mo. — The arrest of a man in Missouri has church officials in Rochester answering questions about their former youth pastor.

Matthew D. Luetke, 35, was associate pastor at Ascension Evangelical Lutheran Church from 2006-2013. He was the youth and evangelism minister and, as such, was also the principal of Precious is the Child Preschool associated with the church.

“It’s been a rotten week,” said Brian Kom, lead pastor of Ascension Lutheran. He learned of Luetke’s arrest in St. Charles County on March 19.

“I received word the day Matt was arrested,” Kom said. He called an emergency meeting with the council members and elders of the church to discuss the allegations.

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.

Nieuwe beschuldiging foutief beheer erfenis bisdom

NEDERLAND
Katholiek

door Eric van den Berg – 26 maart 2014

Een tweede grote erfenis zou het aartsbisdom Utrecht niet goed hebben besteed. Dat meldde NRC Handelsblad gisteren. “Tonnen zijn verdwenen uit de nalatenschap”, aldus René Schaepman. “Een nicht berekende dat het miljoenen moeten zijn. Hoe dan ook, dat er geld verdwenen is, en dat het aartsbisdom ten onrechte geld in eigen zak gestoken heeft, staat wel vast.”

Het bisdom kreeg in 1920 het beheer over de nalatenschap van de weduwe Adelaida Schaepman-Ehrhardt. Haar nalatenschap bestond voor 150.000 gulden aan contanten, effecten en sieraden, vier Utrechtse herenhuizen en een boerderij met landerijen in Nieuwegein. Omgerekend naar euro’s van nu een bezit van enkele miljoenen.

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.

Uitkomst intern onderzoek naar Stichting Caritas Moeder Theresa

NEDERLAND
Aartzbisdom Utrecht

[Summary: An investigation was made of the Mother Teresa Charity Foundation and how its funds were used. Since 1995 money from the foundation was intended in particular for victims of sexual abuse.]

Naar aanleiding van de berichtgeving in NRC Handelsblad van 8 maart 2014 over de besteding van gelden uit de Stichting Caritas Moeder Theresa, heeft het Aartsbisdom Utrecht direct een intern onderzoek ingesteld. NRC Handelsblad kwam namelijk met de ernstige aantijging dat het aartsbisdom “een erfenis misbruikt” door een deel daarvan te besteden aan “de kantoorkosten voor de afhandeling van klachten van misbruikslachtoffers.”

Het gaat hier om de in 1995 opgerichte Stichting Caritas Moeder Theresa. Deze stichting is opgericht op verzoek van een erflaatster, met als doel ervoor te zorgen dat, zo mogelijk, de zusters van de congregatie van de Missionaries of Charity, opgericht door Moeder Theresa in Calcutta, in staat worden gesteld in Utrecht te komen werken “voor de meest verlatenen en uitgestotenen van de maatschappij.” De twee bestuursleden van de stichting waren destijds kardinaal Simonis en econoom J.M.Chr. Klok van het Aartsbisdom Utrecht.

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Pell’s mixed legacy to Australia

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

Cardinal George Pell leaves Australia for Rome having protected the Catholic church’s financial assets, but at what cost to the human assets?

Cardinal George Pell leaves behind a legacy his church would be proud of – the net assets of the Sydney archdiocese have increased 86 per cent to $190 million since he took over. Gross assets of the archdiocese are now estimated at $1.2 billion.

As the cardinal explained to the royal commission into child sexual abuse every bishop has an obligation to maintain the patrimony his diocese possesses and not to expend it unless forced to do so.

That means make sure what you inherit stays intact and don’t spend it unless you are absolutely forced to by circumstances.

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Thank You BUFF!

UNITED STATES
skipshea

Posted on March 27, 2014 by skipshea

Today’s papers report on President Obama visiting Pope Francis saying he is a great admirer of the man. Making it the first time Obama fell for a FOX News PR campaign.
He is even quoted in the Boston Globe as saying; ‘‘Given his great moral authority, when the pope speaks it carries enormous weight’’

The Boston Globe. You remember them, winning that Pulitzer for reporting on clergy sexual abuse.

If you do remember, you may want to remind them. I think they forgot.

The Pope’s latest pat on the back was for forming his Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. It even included Boston’s Cardinal O’Malley. Another very wealthy man who points to his sandals to prove how humble he is. The focus on the panel will be about healing. Because the best place for a person to heal from abuse is at the hands of the abuser.

Of course at the same time he names Cardinal Pell to head a powerful new department that will oversee the entire management of the Holy See.

Cardinal Pell was notorious for his viscous attacks on abuse victim John Ellis as a way to dissuade other victims from coming forward. Because, well, healing or justice weren’t his top priority. He behavior was so horrible that he was called in front of a commission investigating his actions.

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Former Knoxville priest convicted of child rape to appeal to Tenn. Supreme Court

TENNESSEE
WATE

KNOXVILLE (WATE) – Attorneys for a former Knoxville priest convicted of child rape have filed with the Tennessee Supreme Court in an effort to appeal his conviction.

William Casey was convicted in 2011 in Sullivan County of criminal sexual conduct and aggravated rape in a case that dated back to the 1970s.

He was sentenced to a 35-year prison term. The Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled the conviction was not a violation of Casey’s right to due process to try his case more than 30 years after the crimes were committed.

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New Ulm Diocese Files Suit Against Irish Diocese

MINNESOTA
KEYC

In a rare legal move, the Diocese of New Ulm is suing another diocese.

The lawsuit against the Diocese of Clogher in Ireland and the Servants of the Paraclete religious order claims they sent a priest to Minnesota without warning about past accusations of sexual abuse.

The New Ulm Diocese claims it never would have accepted the Rev. Francis Xavier Markey in 1981 if it had been told about his past allegations.

Markey is accused of abuse in the New Ulm Diocese.

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Minnesota diocese sues Ireland diocese over priest accused of sex abuse

MINNESOTA/IRELAND
The Salt Lake Tribune

Associated Press

New Ulm, Minn. • In a rare legal move, a Roman Catholic diocese in Minnesota is suing a diocese in Ireland, alleging it transferred a priest to Minnesota without warning that the man had been accused of sexual abuse.

A report by Minnesota Public Radio News and KARE-TV said the Diocese of New Ulm filed the lawsuit in February against the Diocese of Clogher in Ireland and the Servants of the Paraclete religious order.

In it, the New Ulm Diocese claims it never would have accepted the Rev. Francis Xavier Markey in 1981 if it had been told about the allegations against him.

Markey was ordained in Ireland in 1952, and documents in several court cases show he was accused of sexually abusing boys as early as the 1960s. The documents also show he had gone to treatment before coming to the U.S., and also received treatment at a Paraclete facility in New Mexico.

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Rare legal twist pits one diocese against another

MINNESOTA/IRELAND
Minnesota Public Radio

Trisha Volpe St. Paul, Minn. Mar 27, 2014

The Diocese of New Ulm is suing another diocese and a religious order, accusing both of sending a priest to New Ulm in the early 1980s without telling the diocese that the priest had a long history of being accused of child sexual abuse.

In a rare legal move, the diocese filed suit in February against the Diocese of Clogher in Ireland and a religious order known as the Servants of the Paraclete for sending the Rev. Francis Xavier Markey to Minnesota.

Markey became a priest in Ireland in 1952. Documents filed in several court cases show that he was accused of sexually abusing young boys as far back as the 1960s, and received treatment several times in Ireland and England before coming to the United States.

The New Ulm Diocese lawsuit stems from another lawsuit filed in 2013 by a man who accuses Markey of groping him and his two brothers at the family’s home in 1982.

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Ramsey County asks St. Paul to re-open Nienstedt and Wehrmeyer cases

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

I hope someone is keeping a running diagram of which of these cases has been (a) Opened, (B) Closed, (C) Re-opened, or (D) Returned to limbo. Sasha Aslanian of MPR reports: “The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office has asked the St. Paul Police Department to reopen two cases related to its investigation into the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. A St. Paul police spokesman confirmed the cases pertain to Archbishop John Nienstedt, and Curtis Wehmeyer, a St. Paul priest serving time in prison for child sexual abuse.”

And now the New Ulm Diocese is suing … a diocese in Ireland. Says Trisha Volpe of MPR: “The Diocese of New Ulm is suing another diocese and a religious order, accusing both of sending a priest to New Ulm in the early 1980s without telling the diocese that the priest had a long history of being accused of child sexual abuse. In a rare legal move, the diocese filed suit in February against the Diocese of Clogher in Ireland and a religious order known as the Servants of the Paraclete for sending the Rev. Francis Xavier Markey to Minnesota.”

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SC- BJU should investigate charges re Rev. Gothard

SOUTH CAROLINA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, March 27, 2014

Statement by Cathy Winterfield of SNAP ( 704-207-1300 cathywinterfield@gmail.com )

We are child sex abuse victims who belong to an independent support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. We are here to help protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded and expose the truth.

We are urging Bob Jones University officials to

–launch an independent investigation into alleged cover-ups of child sex crimes and/or sexual harassment accusations that have surfaced recently against a nationally-known minister, and

–permanently post the names of proven, admitted and credibly accused sex offenders who are or have been at the university on the school’s website.

Earlier this month, a prominent Illinois-based Protestant minister, Rev. Bill Gothard, was put on administrative leave after as many as 34 women said that he sexually harassed them. At least four women said that he molested them as youngsters. And Gothard also allegedly hid sexual harassment by his brother, along with Bob Jones officials, according to a recent Washington Post article.

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Many Voices Try to Shape Pope Francis-Obama Meeting

UNITED STATES
The Wall Street Journal

By
TAMARA AUDI
March 26, 2014

In anticipation of Pope Francis’ Thursday meeting with President Barack Obama, activist Judie Brown sent the pontiff an unsolicited 12-page memo that detailed what she said is the administration’s hostility toward the church on issues such as abortion and contraception.

The meeting also spurred 10-year-old Jersey Vargas to travel to Rome from Los Angeles to ask the pope to help her and other American children of undocumented immigrants by supporting changes to U.S. immigration law.

And a group critical of the church’s handling of priest sex-abuse cases wants the president to push Pope Francis to get tougher on the issue.

As this president and this pope meet for the first time, in Vatican City, America’s Roman Catholics are clamoring to influence the agenda, lobbying both men on issues from immigration to health care. While meetings between popes and presidents are largely symbolic, some activists see this one as a chance to gain traction on several issues that are coming to the fore, at a time when the American church grapples with demographic and social changes.

Groups pushing to overhaul immigration laws in the U.S. see Pope Francis—the first pontiff from Latin America and one who has largely emphasized poverty and social justice since he was chosen as pope last year—as a receptive audience. Church membership in the U.S., home to an estimated 7% of the world’s Catholics, has been boosted largely by immigration from Latin America in recent years. Next week, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston will lead a group of American bishops to the Arizona border with Mexico to pray for migrants who have lost their lives crossing the desert.

“We feel that we finally have a true friend that understands what we’re all going through in America with this immigration crisis, and who seriously believes that we urgently need to do something about it,” said Juan José Gutiérrez, an immigration-rights activist who traveled to Rome with a group including 10-year-old Jersey.

On Wednesday at the Vatican, Jersey, whose father was in the U.S. illegally and was detained by immigration authorities, worked her way to the front of the crowd after the pope’s general audience and asked him to help her family and others like hers, according to a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles Archdiocese, which helped arrange access.

The meeting also comes as the U.S. church clashes with the Obama administration over a provision in the health-care law requiring businesses to provide access to contraceptives to employees, notwithstanding any religious objections that employers might have. The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments over the issue this week and is expected to rule in late June.

Ms. Brown, the president of the American Life League, a Catholic group that advocates for church positions on contraceptives and abortion, said the contraceptive mandate in the health-care law “is imposed on Christian faith by a government that holds faith in disdain.” Ms. Brown, a former member of a pontifical academy on bioethics, said she wasn’t asking the pope to raise a specific issue with the president but wanted the pope to have her memo on the administration’s stance on birth control and abortion in light of the current debate in the U.S. Supreme Court.

Before the meeting, the pope was to be briefed on the health-care law, both on “positive aspects from the point of view of Catholic social teaching, and the religious freedom” aspect, a person familiar with the plans said. The pope, while focusing on issues other than certain cultural ones, hasn’t changed traditional church teachings on those issues and is expected to defend them.

The Vatican said in a statement Wednesday that the meeting would “take place in the context of a complex phase of the administration’s relations” with the U.S. church on issues such as the health law and gay marriage. The White House said the president would look “forward to discussing with Pope Francis their shared commitment to fighting poverty and growing inequality.”

A liberal Catholic group, Catholics for Choice, took out a full-page ad in the International New York Times to remind the president that the pope “is not our political leader,” said Jon O’Brien, the group’s president. “The majority of Catholics believe Pope Francis is leading our church in a positive direction, but the Vatican’s draconian rules on sex and sexuality…still do not reflect the real lives of lay Catholics.”

Advocates for victims of priest sex abuse are urging Mr. Obama to press the pope for greater church accountability. Last week, the Vatican announced appointments to a new commission to help the church confront the problem.

BishopAccountability.org, which documents sex-abuse cases in the church, sent a letter to Mr. Obama asking him to push the pope to help federal officials track abusive priests who have fled the U.S. “Use your historic meeting…to achieve something of substance,” the group wrote in a letter to Mr. Obama.

—Liam Moloney contributed to this article.
Write to Tamara Audi at tammy.audi@wsj.com

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Cultures of cover-up

The Economist

Erasmus

IN MANY international organisations (including the European Union), there are internal tensions caused by different attitudes towards truth-telling. At the risk of dealing in huge stereotypes, it’s a commonplace of social anthropology that there are some cultures and sub-cultures that attach high importance to truth-telling and regard telling direct lies as shameful; and others which foster a keen sense of the importance of “saving face” (one’s own, or the family’s, or the organisation’s) and feel it’s okay to tell fibs to keep up appearances. Within both Europe and the United States (again, sorry for the stereotype), the latter mindset seems more prevalent in southern regions than northern ones.

A similar cultural fault-line apparently runs through the global Catholic church, and it has affected the response to child abuse allegations. That at least is the implication of some public testimony that Australia’s top Catholic cleric has just given, before heading off to Rome to take on a job that will include responsibility for the Vatican’s murky finances.

Cardinal George Pell (pictured) told a Royal Commission on child abuse that despite its failings, the English-speaking Catholic world had been ahead of the Vatican in facing up to the fact that terrible abuses had taken place. When such allegations surfaced in the mid-1990s…

…The attitude of some people at the Vatican was that if accusations were being made against priests, they were being made exclusively or at least predominantly by enemies of the church to make trouble and therefore they should be dealt with sceptically. I think there was more of an inclination to give the benefit of the doubt to the defendant rather than listen seriously to the complaints…I think in many ways, the English-speaking world made a significant contribution to the universal church in this area.

It wasn’t this part of Cardinal Pell’s testimony that grabbed headlines. People were more interested in what he had to say about a specific matter: a former altar boy and sex abuse victim who lost a battle in Australia’s court of appeal after it was decreed that the Catholic church was not an entity that could be sued. In his testimony, Cardinal Pell acknowledged that although the church had fought a hard and technically correct legal battle in the case, Mr Ellis had been treated unfairly from a Christian perspective. “From my point of view, from a Christian point of view, leaving aside the legal dimension, I don’t think we did deal fairly.”

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Priest accused of sexual abuse in Akron and Bedford loses clerical status

OHIO
Beacon Journal

By Colette M. Jenkins
Beacon Journal religion writer

George F. Bailey, a Roman Catholic priest who resigned in 1989 as pastor of Medina’s St. Francis Xavier Parish, has essentially been defrocked by the Vatican over sexual abuse allegations dating back to the 1960s in Akron.

On Thursday, priests and deacons throughout the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland received a memo from Bishop Richard G. Lennon, informing them that Bailey “was granted a dispensation from the clerical state” by the Holy See.

“In response to credible accusations of sexual misconduct involving a minor, George Bailey requested a dispensation from the clerical state for the good of the church. Dispensation from the clerical state means that in accordance with Canon Law, George Bailey is unable to function in any capacity as a priest anywhere, with the exception of offering absolution to those in danger of death,” the memo read.
Bailey, 76, severed ties with the local diocese when he resigned in 1989 and diocesan officials have no record of his whereabouts.

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Pell ‘shows sociopathic lack of empathy’

AUSTRALIA
Echo Netdaily

Sydney [AAP]

Cardinal George Pell insists he acted truthfully when he instructed lawyers to vigorously dispute the claims of a sexually abused former altar boy in court, even though he knew the claims were true.

Dr Pell, appearing before the royal commission into child sexual abuse, admitted the Catholic church did not deal fairly with victim John Ellis ‘from a Christian point of view’, but in a legal sense it did nothing improper.

He said he defended the Ellis case vigorously to discourage other complainants from going to court, revealing he was worried that payments for abuse cases in the US sent some churches bankrupt and he wanted to ensure similar situations could not occur in Australia.

At the end of his second day of evidence to the commission, Dr Pell’s admissions were condemned by victims’ families.

‘We’ve seen a sociopathic lack of empathy this morning from this man,’ said Anthony Foster whose two daughters were raped by a priest in Melbourne.

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St. Paul archdiocese gets more time to file documents on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: March 27, 2014

Files on abusive priests are given later deadline, in court action.

The Twin Cities archdiocese was granted more time to produce roughly 60,000 pages of documents related to its priests accused of child sexual abuse, under a ruling in Ramsey District Court Thursday.

The archdiocese, facing a March 31 deadline for producing the files, argued that the scope of the work for the court required considerably more time.

But with sworn testimony by Archbishop John Nienstedt slated for April 2, Judge John Van de North ordered the church to provide all documents related to sex abuse that occurred under Nienstedt’s tenure to be filed with the court by March 31.

The remainder of the documents have a May 30 deadline, he said.

Van de North also set a Sept. 22 court date for the trial to begin.

“We’re pleased,” said attorney Jeff Anderson, who represents an alleged clergy abuse victim identified as John Doe 1. “The judge is requiring them (the archdiocese) to adhere to some deadlines. We’re moving forward on the depositions. We’re going to get some of the files.’’

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CA- Gov. Brown may appoint Catholic defense attorney to bench; SNAP objects

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, March 27, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

General counsel Maria Rullo Schinderle is being considered for a possible judgeship in Orange County. We are disheartened by this potential appointment.

[Orange County Weekly]

[The Worthy Adversary]

Schinderle has worked as the General Counsel/Human Resources Director of the Diocese of Orange since 1998 and played a crucial role in assisting the Diocese of Orange in fighting sexual abuse allegations. In addition, she aided in the cover-up of crimes, did not aid law enforcement, manipulated victims, and consistently displayed moral ambiguity when dealing with child sex crimes.

We hope Governor Brown will reconsider this appointment and nominate someone with a strong moral background. Lawyers who aid in the cover-up of sex abuse crimes do not fit the bill.

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Taking a new approach to the Bible this Lent

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Renée Schafer Horton | Mar. 27, 2014 NCR Today

Lent is not my favorite time of the liturgical year. I’ve always been more of an Advent person and never understood some of my fellow Catholics’ actual joy during the 40 days preceding Easter. Call me a Lent weakling.

This year, however, I took up a challenge offered by Christian author and speaker Margaret Feinberg to read the New Testament straight through during Lent. I’ve read the Bible before but never this way. It has given me a purpose during these 40 days that keeps me from focusing on the sugar withdrawals I’m having. So far, doing this Bible journey seems to be working on lots of levels.

One of the great things about reading the New Testament straight though instead of the sliced-and-diced version offered throughout the three-year cycle of Mass readings is seeing, once again, how Jesus is portrayed in each of the Gospels. The scholar notes are particularly illuminating, especially in the Gospel of John, which we’ve been reading this week.

Two notes regarding the story of Jesus interacting with the Samaritan woman at the well really struck me. The first comes at John 4:27, where the disciples were “amazed” that Jesus was speaking to a woman. The note on that line reads, “Talking with a woman: a religious and social restriction that Jesus is pictured treating as unimportant.”

The second comes at John 4:39, which reports that many people from the woman’s hometown came to believe in Jesus because of what she told them after her encounter with him. The scholar note on that line reads, “The woman is presented as a missionary.”

This story was Saturday’s Gospel reading and came on the heels of the news that Pope Francis has appointed the first eight members to the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, it seemed oddly appropriate. Of the commission’s initial members, four are women. More importantly, one of the women is a victim of priestly abuse.

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CPS statement on prosecution of former bishop

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

Statement from Jaswant Narwal of the Crown Prosecution Service, on the decision to charge Peter Ball, former Bishop of Gloucester, with sex offences:

“After a thorough and careful review, I have decided that Peter Ball should be prosecuted for misconduct in public office and two indecent assaults. It is alleged that he sexually abused a number of young males between 1977 and 1992.

“The misconduct alleged is that he misused his position and authority to manipulate and prevail upon others for his own sexual gratification. […]

“In accordance with the Code for Crown Prosecutors, there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and it is in the public interest to prosecute.”

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Former Bishop To Be Prosecuted Over Alleged Sex Offences

UNITED KINGDOM
4 NI

A former bishop is to be prosecuted for alleged sex offences.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said it was in the public interest to prosecute Rt Reverend Peter Ball, a former bishop of Gloucester and former bishop of Lewes.

Jaswant Narwal, Chief Crown Prosecutor for CPS South East, said: “After a thorough and careful review, I have decided that Peter Ball should be prosecuted for misconduct in public office and two indecent assaults. It is alleged that he sexually abused a number of young males between 1977 and 1992. The misconduct alleged is that he misused his position and authority to manipulate and prevail upon others for his own sexual gratification. During this time Mr Ball was serving as a Bishop in the Church of England.

“In accordance with the Code for Crown Prosecutors, there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and it is in the public interest to prosecute. Criminal proceedings are now underway and the defendant has a right to a fair trial. It is extremely important that there should be no reporting, commentary or sharing of information online which could in any way prejudice these proceedings.”

The charges are:
• Misconduct in public office between 1977 and 1992
• Indecent assault on a boy, aged 12 or 13, in 1978
• Indecent assault on a man, aged 19 or 20, between 1980 and 1982

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Retired bishop faces sex charges

UNITED KINGDOM
Littlehampton Gazette

A retired Church of England bishop who was formerly the Bishop of Lewes is due in court over sex offences and misconduct charges, the Crown Prosecution Service said.

Peter Ball, who had been Bishop of Gloucester and Bishop of Lewes, will be prosecuted for historic offences dating back to 1977.

They include indecent assault on a boy, aged 12 or 13, indecent assault on a man aged 19 or 20, and misconduct in a public office.

Ball, 82, is due to appear at Brighton Magistrates’ Court next month.

Jaswant Narwal, chief crown prosecutor for the CPS in the south east, said: ” After a thorough and careful review, I have decided that Peter Ball should be prosecuted for misconduct in public office and two indecent assaults.

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Peter Ball: Former Bishop of Gloucester to Face Trial for Sex Offences Against Young Boys

UNITED KINGDOM
International Business Times

By Samantha Payne March 27, 2014

A retired Church of England bishop will face trial for allegedly carrying out a string of sex offences against men and boys over 30 years ago, the Crown Prosecution Service announced today.

Peter Ball, 82, formerly the Bishop of Gloucester and Lewes, is charged with indecent assault on a boy, aged 12 or 13, in 1978 and on a man aged 19 or 20 between 1980 and 1982.

Ball also faces charges of misconduct in public office between 1977 and 1992. He will appear at Brighton Magistrates’ Court on 10 April.

Jaswant Narwal, Chief Crown Prosecutor for Cps South East, said: “The misconduct alleged is that he misused his position and authority to manipulate and prevail upon others for his own sexual gratification.

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Bishop is charged over sex-assault offences

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by Madeleine Davies

Posted: 27 Mar 2014

A FORMER Bishop of Gloucester, the Rt Revd Peter Ball, will be prosecuted for indecent assaults on young men, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) announced on Thursday.

Jaswant Narwal, Chief Crown Prosecutor for CPS South East, said: “It is alleged that he sexually abused a number of young males between 1977 and 1992. The misconduct alleged is that he misused his position and authority to manipulate and prevail upon others for his own sexual gratification. During this time Mr Ball was serving as a Bishop in the Church of England.”

Bishop Ball, who is 82 years old, and lives in Langport, Somerset, is charged with misconduct in public office between 1977 and 1992, indecent assault on a boy, aged 12 or 13, in 1978, and indecent assault on a man, aged 19 or 20, between 1980 and 1982 .

Between 1977 and 1992 Bishop Ball was Bishop of Lewes. He became Bishop of Gloucester in 1992 but resigned in 1993, after being formally cautioned by Gloucester Police for “one offence of gross indecency, contrary to the Sexual Offences Act of 1956” (News, 12 March 1993). The offence involved a 17-year-old novice from what was described as “an embryo order”. No charges were brought, but a formal caution implies an admission of guilt.

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Former Church of England Bishop who describes Prince Charles as a ‘loyal friend’ charged with sex offences dating back to 1977

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By JILL REILLY

A retired Church of England Bishop is due in court over sex offences and misconduct charges, the Crown Prosecution Service said.

Peter Ball, formerly the Bishop of Gloucester and Bishop of Lewes, will be prosecuted for historic offences dating back to 1977.

They include an alleged indecent assault on a boy, aged 12 or 13, indecent assault on a man aged 19 or 20, and misconduct in a public office.

Ball, 82, is due to appear at Brighton Magistrates Court next month.

Ball, former bishop of Lewes and later Gloucester, has connections with Prince Charles whom he has described in the past as a ‘loyal friend’.

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Former Bishop Peter Ball faces sex offence charges

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A retired Anglican bishop is to be prosecuted for alleged sex offences dating back to the 1970s.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said it was in the public interest to prosecute the Rt Rev Peter Ball, a former bishop of Gloucester and former bishop of Lewes in East Sussex.

It is alleged Bishop Ball, 82, indecently assaulted a boy aged 12 or 13 and a man aged 19 or 20.

He is due to appear before Brighton magistrates on 10 April.

Bishop Ball is also to be charged with misconduct in public office between 1977 and 1992.

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Church of England bishop charged with indecently assaulting two young males

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sandra Laville
theguardian.com, Thursday 27 March 2014

A former bishop in the Church of England has been charged with indecently assaulting two young males and abusing his position for his own sexual gratification over a 15-year period.

An investigation by Sussex police into allegations of assault by Peter Ball, the former bishop of Gloucester and Lewes, resulted on Thursday in the Crown Prosecution Service announcing he was being charged.

Ball, 82, is accused of the sexual abuse of a number of young males between 1977 and 1992. Jaswant Narwal, chief crown prosecutor for CPS south-east, said: “After a thorough and careful review I have decided that Peter Ball should be prosecuted for misconduct in public office and two indecent assaults.

“It is alleged that he sexually abused a number of young males between 1977 and 1992. The misconduct alleged is that he misused his position and authority to manipulate and prevail upon others for his own sexual gratification. During this time Mr Ball was a bishop in the Church of England.”

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Trip To Vatican Opens Doors For Clergy Abuse Documentary

MASSACHUSETTS
PR Web

Boston, Massachusetts (PRWEB) March 27, 2014

Attempting to battle the cover-up, shame and silence of clergy sexual abuse, three survivors from Boston Massachusetts, travel to Rome reaching behind the secret walls of The Vatican. Their week long effort evolves into a decade long mission that exposes mind blowing statistics and unexpected global response.

The unlikely film producer of BASTA is Gary Bergeron, 51, a carpenter by trade, who lives in the greater Boston area. Gary and his brother came forward to their parents in 2002 about their abuse at the hands of a Boston priest. Gary consequently discovered his 77 year old father had also been abused by his priest. “Finding out that two generations of my family had lived with this painful secret was a pivotal moment. Now not only was I a victim of clergy sexual abuse, I was the brother and the son of clergy abuse victims. I decided to do whatever was necessary to insure I would never be the father of a clergy abuse victim. Regardless of the consequences, the Vatican was the next step.” said Bergeron

The documentary is punctuated by a graphic timeline of staggering statistics. The facts are delivered in a way that allows viewers to draw their own conclusions. The audience joins Bergeron, his father and fellow survivor Bernie McDaid, on their initial journey to Rome in a quest for answers and actions, from the Pope, to halt the continuing cover-ups and bring healing to survivors. BASTA documents these simple men’s emotional journey of commitment and determination, men seeking help, hope & aid in healing a nation impacted by the effects of the abuse crisis. A decade into his personal journey for justice, Bergeron learns that success isn’t always defined by achieving a goal, sometimes, it’s defined by the attempt itself, and in that attempt… you may also find out who you are.

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NC- Pastor charged with sexual battery, SNAP responds

NORTH CAROLINA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, March 27, 2014

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

A North Carolina pastor has been charged with sexual battery after harassing a woman at a hotel yesterday.

[Fox 8]

It is extremely troublesome when a trusted member of the community is charged with any kind of sexual offense. We hope, although are doubtful, that this was an isolated incidence.

We urge anyone else, who may have been hurt by Pastor Robert Harris to speak up, report to police and start healing. We especially urge any current or former staff or members at his church to call police if they have any information or suspicions that might help them learn more of the truth about this case.

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Star Advertiser: Toughen laws against child-sex predators

HAWAII
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on March 27, 2014

From the editorial in today’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser:

Children who are raped, sodomized and otherwise sexually abused must cope with the emotional and physical pain of these heinous acts for the rest of their lives. Just as there is no statute of limitations on the trauma they suffer, there should be no statute of limitations on bringing to justice the criminals who inflict this terror on Hawaii’s most vulnerable victims.

So we applaud the Hawaii Legislative Women’s Caucus’ continuing efforts to make it more difficult for pedophilic predators to get away with sex crimes against minors, and to hold accountable private employers and institutions that are proven culpable in the abuse. However, extending the window to file civil lawsuits in limited instances of past abuse, as bills pending in the Legislature seek to do, strikes us as a relatively minor response.

This important issue deserves a broader approach, especially in the Internet age, when the money to be made producing online child pornography for a sick global market heightens an insidious profit motive for criminals already inclined to exploit minors in this way.

It’s fair to say that American society has had its consciousness raised about childhood sexual abuse over the past several decades, as an abuse scandal engulfed the Roman Catholic Church. Other religious, educational and recreational organizations entrusted with children’s welfare also were found to have harbored predators in their ranks. Unthinkable crimes were uncovered and victims were finally heard, many after decades of silence. Yet, quite often, perpetrators escaped punishment, because the statute of limitations on the crimes had expired.

One legitimate response, including in Hawaii, has been to temporarily lift that time limit, although here that provision is limited to the filing of civil lawsuits, and only against the individuals directly involved and associated private entities proven negligent and therefore partly responsible. The state and its agencies are exempt, a glaring hypocrisy given that compulsory public schools, for just one example, also risk employing sexual predators.

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Valencia teacher suspected of ‘inappropriate contact’ with student, more victims sought

CALIFORNIA
LA Daily News

By City News Service
POSTED: 03/26/14

VALENCIA — A 35-year-old teacher at Legacy Academy School in Valencia was arrested today for allegedly having inappropriate contact with a student.

Carl Astrera, of Panorama City, was booked at the sheriff’s Santa Clarita Valley station and is being held in lieu of $20,000 bail, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

Sheriff’s officials said the alleged inappropriate conduct appeared to have occurred over the past 18 months.

Since Astrera has worked at the school for a number of years, investigators said they believe there may be additional victims. Anyone with information was asked to call the sheriff’s Special Victims Bureau at (877) 710- 5273.

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UPDATE: Legacy teacher arrested for inappropriate conduct

CALIFORNA
Signal

By Jim Holt
Signal Senior Staff Writer

A teacher at a private Santa Clarita elementary and middle school was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of inappropriate contact with an 11-year-old student, investigators with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said Wednesday.

Carl Astrera, 35, who lives in Panorama City and has worked at Legacy Christian Academy for years, was arrested by detectives with the department’s Special Victims Bureau, according to a news release issued by the department Wednesday afternoon.

Astrera was arrested after the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office filed one misdemeanor count against him for allegedly annoying/molesting a child.

Astrera teaches computers and information technology as part of the private school’s Enrichment/Exploratory Program, according to the school’s website.

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Teacher, 35, Accused Of Inappropriate Contact With Student At Private School

CALIFORNIA
CBS Los Angeles

[with video]

VALENCIA (CBSLA.com) — A 35-year-old Panorama City man is under arrest for alleged inappropriate conduct with a student.

Authorities said they first began investigating Carl Astrera last month.

Astrera is a teacher at the Legacy Christian Academy School located in the 27600 block of Dickason Drive in Valencia.

Officials said Astrera was arrested following a nearly month-long investigation.They said the alleged inappropriate conduct lasted a year-and-a-half.

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Valencia teacher accused of inappropriate contact with student

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

By Robert J. Lopez
March 26, 2014

A 35-year-old teacher at a Valencia Christian school was charged Wednesday on suspicion of inappropriate contact with a student, authorities said.

Carl Astrera is accused of engaging in the inappropriate behavior during the last 18 months at Legacy Christian Academy, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said. The school has students from kindergarten throughout 8th grade, according to its website.

Detectives launched an investigation on Feb. 28. Prosecutors charged Astrera Wednesday with one count of annoying/molesting a child, according to the department.

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Pell closes with a profuse apology to abuse victim Ellis

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

CARDINAL George Pell has marked the end of his appearance before the royal commission into child sexual abuse with a public apology for the suffering endured by abused former altar boy John Ellis.

Reading from a statement, Cardinal Pell said the church had failed Mr Ellis and, as archbishop, he took ultimate responsibility for the suffering and the terrible impact on his life.

“At the end of this gruelling appearance for both of us at this royal commission, I want to publicly say sorry to him for the hurt caused him by the mistakes made,” Cardinal Pell said.

Observers in the room became agitated during Cardinal Pell’s statement, with some calling out, “Look at him”.

Cardinal Pell kept his eyes down while reading the statement but, after being excused, acknowledged Mr Ellis, who had sat in the front row throughout the hearing.

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On sex abuse, asking the right questions

UNITED STATES
dotCommonweal

Mollie Wilson O’Reilly March 25, 2014

The announcement over the weekend of the new Vatican Commission for the Protection of Minors made me think that at least I was asking the right questions at the panel discussion with Cardinal O’Malley last Wednesday. Leadership roles for women? They make up half the membership of this commission (so far), a good start. Will O’Malley be advising Francis on appointments to the commission, or sex-abuse-related policies and priorities? Obviously (as he must have already known).

As for accountability: it’s something the commission may (and should) decide to take up. I think Mark Silk has it right. After quoting the Vatican’s official description of the commission’s duties, he writes:

I would suggest to Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the big dog on the commission, that the key item on this list is “civil and canonical duties and responsibilities.” In the U.S.and many other places around the world, there’s been plenty of attention to education and the discipline of abusers, to say nothing of symbolic acts of ecclesiastical apology. What’s needed are binding and enforceable legal procedures.

All the best practices in the world aren’t going to be much help if there’s no visible, consistent, appropriate policy for dealing with bishops and others who ignore them. Silk is encouraged by the presence on the commission of Baroness Sheila Hollins, who, he says, “is notable for calling on the Vatican to punish church officials (read: bishops) who fail to implement or enforce church rules on pedophile priests.

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Jeff Kennett warned Pell to deal with abuse

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

March 28, 2014

Josh Gordon, Catherine Armitage

Jeff Kennett has confirmed he bluntly warned Cardinal George Pell in the 1990s to resolve allegations of child sexual abuse or possibly face a royal commission.

The former premier said he recalled telling the cardinal to deal with abuse complaints or face significant consequences for the church. But Mr Kennett said he had made no judgment on the adequacy of the response at the time.

”I was reassured that George said ‘yes’, he’d get stuck into it,” Mr Kennett said. ”A couple of months later I was told that he had put together a response … and I just assumed that, right, he is on top of it and it’s not for me to sit in judgment … of whether the response was adequate or not.”

Cardinal Pell this week admitted he wanted to avoid big damages claims. As a result, he set up the ”Melbourne Response” to deal with complaints, which included a $50,000 cap on payouts.

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Archdiocese agrees to pay more than $1 million to settle sex abuse suit

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

The Archdiocese of Chicago agreed to pay $1.68 million to $2.1 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged former priest and convicted sex offender Daniel McCormack sexually abused a former fifth grade student at Our Lady of the Westside School, the plaintiff’s attorney announced Wednesday.

The agreement settles a suit brought against the archdiocese and Cardinal Francis George in December, 2011, the Chicago Sun-Times is reporting.

The suit was filed by a male Chicago plaintiff, now 23, who chose to remain anonymous and is identified as John Doe.

It alleged that at various times in the 2000 to 2001 school year, McCormack “inappropriately sexually touched, hugged, rubbed and/or abused” the plaintiff and “maintained a sexually abusive relationship with Doe, under the guise of counseling” him.

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Pastor in Gaston Co. charged with sexual battery

NORTH CAROLINA
Fox 8

GASTON COUNTY, N.C. – A pastor in Gaston Co. has been charged with a sexual offense after police say he harassed a woman at a hotel Wednesday.

The woman told police that she was staying in a hotel when a man identified as Robert Harris knocked on her door and asked for sex.

According to WSOC, Harris is listed as pastor of Harriett’s Memorial Freewill Baptist Church in Forest City.

The woman refused his advances and the man left.

He then returned while she was on the phone with police, and they heard Harris make a vulgar request.
The woman then said he tossed a $20 bill at her.

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Pastor charged with sexual battery: ‘I allowed the devil to motivate my mind’

NORTH CAROLINA
WSOC

[with video]

By Ken Lemon
GASTON COUNTY, N.C. — A Gastonia pastor said the devil led him to a Super 8, where police said he asked a woman for sex.

Officers told Channel 9 that the pastor said he thought the woman was a prostitute and threw a $20 bill at her.

Robert Harris said Wednesday he will tell his congregation that he asked for sex from a woman in a Gastonia motel.

He said he will ask for their forgiveness and it will be up to them to decide if they keep him as their leader

Harris has been the pastor at Harriett Memorial Freewill Baptist Church in Forest City for the past 13 years.

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Salvation Army developed ‘matrix’ to calculate payouts to abuse victims, commission hears

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 27, 2014

Louise Hall

The Salvation Army took a “largely litigious approach” towards victims of horrific physical and sexual abuse, especially those who sought compensation payments, a royal commission has heard.

A “matrix” was developed in 2005 to calculate the amounts to be offered to victims based on the age of the child at the time of the abuse, the length of time they spent in Salvation Army run homes, the kind of abuse suffered and impact it had on their lives.

Counsel Assisting the Commission, Simeon Beckett, said ex gratia payments made over the past two decades ranged from $5000 to $150,000, with an average of $50,758.

One claimant, known as EF, who had suffered multiple acts of anal rape by Major Victor Bennett, was offered $11,000.

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Salvation Army leader sorry for abuse

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

March 27, 2014

Tony Moore
brisbanetimes.com.au senior reporter

A leader of the Salvation Army has apologised for breaching the ‘‘trust’’ of the community as he launched the Salvation Army’s Red Shield Appeal for 2014 in Brisbane.

Commissioner James Condon told more than 1000 people that he felt “shocked, ashamed and aggrieved” by what he heard at the February hearings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses into Child Sexual Abuse.

The commission has been told boys were abused – both sexually and physically – while in the Salvation Army’s care.

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Abuse accused allowed to rejoin Salvos

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL
March 27, 2014

A Salvation Army officer who was dismissed for abusing an eight-year-old girl in 1990 was allowed to rejoin, an inquiry has heard.

Three years after he admitted assaulting the girl, Colin Haggar rejoined the army which is only now conducting an internal investigation into his conduct following his forced retirement last year.

The second royal commission hearing into the Salvation Army, which opened in Sydney on Thursday, has also been told that abuse victims who went to the charitable group for help were not always believed.

Simeon Beckett, counsel advising the commission, said victims were offered payments varying between $5,000 and $100,000.

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John Ellis surprised by apology from Pell

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

The man at the centre of the landmark legal case involving the Catholic Church says he’s surprised by the open and personal apology from Cardinal George Pell. John Ellis has told PM that the last fortnight has been exhausting but the royal commission’s scrutiny of the Church’s actions has been meaningful.

Transcript

MARK COLVIN: It’s been an extraordinary week for the man at the centre of the legal case. Now it’s over John Ellis says he was taken aback by the Cardinal’s apology.

He spoke to Emily Bourke.

JOHN ELLIS: Well the last fortnight’s just been totally draining and now that it’s finished, I just feel exhausted is my primary feeling about it.

I think probably what I need to do is just sit back and reflect on some of that. It’s very meaningful to have all of the actions that were taken over those years put under scrutiny and to get some answers for the reasons why things went the way that they did.

And I was a bit surprised at the Cardinal’s apology at the end, and I’m just not sure how I feel about it. It’s better that he’s said he’s sorry than that he didn’t say that, but I just think I need to sit with that.

EMILY BOURKE: What do you think the future is for people like yourself who might be planning on bringing cases to court?

JOHN ELLIS: Well I hope that part of the future is that people don’t need to bring their cases to court, that they would be able to have a gentle and more compassionate process that still delivers justice to all parties, but it’s a very important part of that and this has been our experience over many years, that people need to have the right to bring actions in court if they can’t be sorted out otherwise, and that the Church needs to be told very publicly that it’s not above the law and that it’s subject to the same principles that apply to any other corporation.

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Salvation Army promoted despite a known history of child sex abuse commission told

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH MARCH 27, 2014

HE had a history of sexually assaulting little girls but Colin Haggar was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Salvation Army, the child sex abuse royal commission has been told today.

The Salvos knew as long ago as 1989 what Mr Haggar had done and dismissed him from their ranks but readmitted him in 1993.

He got to know the first girl he sexually assaulted because her mum worked at the local Salvation Army’s op-shop in a central western NSW town. The girl told her parents what he had done and Mr Haggar met with them.

They were shocked when he told them: “It wasn’t that serious. I only fingered her.”

He has admitted his abuse to the Salvation Army and at one stage even went to the police, accompanied by another Salvation Army officer, Commander James Condon, the current Territorial head.

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Pell apologises to John Ellis, denies Church interests are above those of abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

During a third day of questioning of Cardinal George Pell at the royal commission, the departing Sydney Archbishop defended the Church’s decision to take ‘every proper legal defence,’ but he conceded the courtroom tactics were hurtful to abuse victim John Ellis. He denied that the Church put its own financial interests ahead of Mr Ellis’s needs. But he issued a personal and public apology to the man who first suffered at the hands of an abusive priest and then spent years of his life fighting the Church in court.
pics: child-abuse, catholic, royal-commissions, melbourne-3000, australia

Transcript

MARK COLVIN: The Archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell finished giving evidence at the child abuse royal commission today. But despite his new job in the Vatican, it was au revoir rather than adieu.

And before he went, the Cardinal issued a personal and public apology to the abuse victim John Ellis whose case has dominated events at the commission this week.

It was the Archbishop’s third day trying to explain how and why the Church took such a hard line over so many years against Mr Ellis.

Despite the apology, Cardinal Pell defended the Church’s decision to take “every proper legal defence”. And he denied that the Sydney Archdiocese had put its own financial interests ahead of Mr Ellis’s needs.

The commission has also been told that without significant changes to the Church’s legal structure and insurance policies, abuse victims will continue to face a labyrinthine process of trying to seek justice through the courts and compensation from the Church.

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Ellis surprised by Pell’s apology

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

AAP

A FORMER altar boy preyed upon by a pedophile priest has been surprised by an apology from Cardinal George Pell.

Dr Pell concluded two-and-a-half days of evidence to the royal commission into child sex abuse on Thursday by apologising for what he had described as regrettable mistakes and misunderstandings over years of dealing with John Ellis.

Reading from a statement, Dr Pell said that, as the former archbishop of Sydney and speaking personally, the church had failed Mr Ellis in many ways.

Mr Ellis later said he had been “a bit surprised” by the cardinal’s apology.

“I am just not sure how I feel about it,” he told ABC.

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Cardinal George Pell gives final mass before leaving for Vatican

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 27, 2014

Saffron Howden
Reporter

Hours after apologising to the victim of a paedophile priest at the royal commission into child sex abuse, Cardinal George Pell made his final address to the faithful at a mass in St Mary’s Cathedral.
Cardinal Pell takes over as head of the Vatican’s finances in Rome on Monday after 13 years as the archbishop of Sydney.

Before hundreds of worshippers, including federal and NSW politicians, at a packed mass, he again apologised to the victims of child sex abuse.

“I apologise once again to the victims and to their families for the terrible suffering that has been caused to them by these crimes,” he said.

Cardinal Pell said he was “shedding one set of burdens for another” and called on the congregation to stay true to Catholic teachings – and to spread the word by going into politics and reaching out through schools and hospitals.

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Chicago Archdiocese Settles Suit Claiming Abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

The Archdiocese of Chicago has agreed to settle for $1.68 to $2.1 million a lawsuit alleging former priest Daniel McCormack sexually abused a Catholic school student.

The lawsuit filed against the archdiocese in 2011 alleged that during the 2000-2001 school year, McCormack maintained a sexually abusive relationship with a fifth-grader. The lawsuit also alleged the archdiocese was aware of McCormack’s history of sexual misconduct, but chose to place him in a ministry that gave him access to youth.

The plaintiff, who is choosing to remain anonymous, told the Chicago Sun-Times he’s pleased with the settlement.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to abusing five children. He was sentenced to five years in prison and removed from the priesthood. He’s currently confined to a state mental health facility.

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Cardinal Pell unable to look John Ellis in the eye

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By CATHERINE ARMITAGE March 27, 2014

In his last words at the child sex abuse Royal Commission, Cardinal George Pell apologised to the lawyer John Ellis for “the hurt caused him by the mistakes made, admitted by me and my Archdiocesan personnel”.

But he could not bring himself to look at the frail, exhausted Ellis, who sat three metres away.

On Monday the Cardinal takes up a new position in charge of Vatican finances in Rome. He went from the commission to speak to the faithful at Mass at St Mary’s Cathedral. So this was, in its way, a farewell to the Australian public.

But Cardinal Pell’s request to make a statement from the witness box in the final moments of the twelfth day of the hearing on Mr Ellis’ tragic case – “Might I say a few words in conclusion, have permission to, please?” – was refused by the Royal Commission chair, Justice Peter McClellan.

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Court won’t seal deposition of St. Paul archbishop in priest sex abuse case

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

A Ramsey County judge reasserted Wednesday that Archbishop John Nienstedt’s deposition in a case involving former priest Thomas Adamson not be sealed.

“I had no intention of providing a protection order to the depositions coming up. … I thought that was pretty clear,” District Judge John Van de North told attorneys in court for another priest sexual abuse lawsuit.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis had asked Van de North to prevent a plaintiff’s attorneys from questioning Nienstedt and his former deputy, the Rev. Kevin McDonough. Van de North denied that request.

In a memorandum filed Monday, the archdiocese asked that those depositions be sealed once completed unless the plaintiff “bring(s) a motion to show good cause as to why such information should be publicly disclosed.”

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Excarcelan a cura condenado por abuso sexual a menores

ARGENTINA
La Manana de Cordoba

[Summary: Priest Jose Antonio Mercau was sentenced to 14 years is prison for abusing children in Tigre who were between ages 7 and 10.]

El sacerdote José Antonio Mercau fue condenado a 14 años de cárcel en 2011 por abusar sexulamente de menores de entre 7 y 10 años en Tigre. El 11 de marzo pasado fue liberado por la Justicia.

El cura José Antonio Mercau, condenado a 14 años de prisión por abusar de al menos cinco niños que estaban a su cargo en el Hogar San Juan Diego, en Tigre, fue excarcelado “irrazonablemente” por el Tribunal Oral Criminal 7 de San Isidro, denunciaron hoy las Madres del Dolor.

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Cardinal O’Malley spills no secrets

NEW JERSEY
The Jersey Journal

By Rev. Alexander Santora/For the Jersey Journal
on March 27, 2014

The panelists were pumping the Prince of the Church about the Pope.

How will the Pope incorporate more women in the Vatican? What is one disagreement you have had with Pope Francis? What is one thing the Pope will do that will outlast him?

Sean Cardinal O’Malley of Boston wasn’t taking the bait. Even when asked whom will the Pope appoint to the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, O’Malley was tight-lipped. Then three days later, Pope Francis appointed O’Malley as the only cardinal and U.S. resident on the eight-member board. It’s almost certain that O’Malley knew that bit of information last Wednesday, March 19, when he addressed an overflow crowd of 200 at the American Bible Society in Manhattan talking about the first anniversary of Francis’ pontificate. …

O’Malley took a swipe at the media for elevating dissent in the church that he said was not there. But I think this is precisely why Francis is so popular: he has heard the people clamoring for a more humane church. And it’s taking a very human pope to win over people’s hearts and minds to at least listen, once again.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: George Pell publicly apologises to victim John Ellis

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY THOMAS ORITI
March 27, 2014

Cardinal George Pell has publicly apologised to a victim of child sexual abuse, saying the Catholic Church failed in its moral and pastoral responsibilities.

The former Archbishop of Sydney was called back to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney, to answer more questions about his role in the case of former altar boy John Ellis.

Mr Ellis sued the Church after he was abused by a priest in the 1970s, but lost the case on a technicality in 2007.

Cardinal Pell has previously apologised to the victim in a statement tendered to the royal commission, and today he conveyed that in the hearing room.

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Reform needed to stop Church from claiming legal immunity: Lawyer

AUSTRALIA
SBS

By Greg Dyett
Source World News Radio

A lawyer who represented a clergy sex abuse victim who lost his case against the Catholic Church, says changes are needed to ensure the church cannot keep claiming immunity from legal action.

It’s known in legal circles as the Ellis defence and it’s been used by the Catholic Church in Australia when victims of clergy sex abuse have tried to sue.

This week Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric, Cardinal George Pell faced intense cross examination about the Ellis defence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney.

Former altar boy and sex abuse victim John Ellis tried to sue the Catholic Church trustees and Cardinal Pell.

But in 2007, the New South Wales Court of Appeal ruled the Church’s assets are held in property trusts and are protected from lawsuits against clergy sex abusers.

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Retired former western Sydney parish priest …

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Retired former western Sydney parish priest Richard St John Cattell appears in court on child sex charges

A RETIRED western Sydney parish priest appeared at Tweed Heads local court this week charged with allegedly molesting and having sex with an altar boy.

Richard St John Cattell — who know lives at Robina on the Gold Coast — was charged with three counts of aggravated indecent acts, including alleged fondling and sex with a minor.

The 73-year-old, flanked by Nyst Lawyers senior associate Ron Behlau and a supporter, did not enter a plea during his brief appearance on Monday.

Mr Cattell’s alleged offences occurred over three years between 1984 and 1987. Court documents show that police allege Mr Cattell touched and fondled the young boy’s genitalia during that period.

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Ramsey Co. Reopens Cases Against Archbishop Nienstedt And Fmr. Priest

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — Prosecutors say they want St. Paul Police to reopen a sexual abuse case against Archbishop John Nienstedt, but not because of any new evidence.

The Ramsey County Attorney’s office said that it doesn’t want reports from the Nienstedt case being made public yet because of other elements that need to be investigated. They say those other elements don’t have anything to do with the archbishop.

A case involving former priest Curtis Wehmeyer was also reopened for similar reasons. Wehmeyer is in prison for child sexual abuse.

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Chicago archdiocese settles suit claiming sexual abuse by former priest Daniel McCormack

CHICAGO (IL)
Daily Journal

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — The Archdiocese of Chicago has agreed to settle for $1.68 to $2.1 million a lawsuit alleging former priest Daniel McCormack sexually abused a Catholic school student.

The lawsuit filed against the archdiocese in 2011 alleged that during the 2000-2001 school year, McCormack maintained a sexually abusive relationship with a fifth-grader. The lawsuit also alleged the archdiocese was aware of McCormack’s history of sexual misconduct, but chose to place him in a ministry that gave him access to youth.

The plaintiff, who is choosing to remain anonymous, told the Chicago Sun-Times (http://bit.ly/P2u6BE) he’s pleased with the settlement.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: Salvation Army abuse victim recalls rape and bashing

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY THOMAS ORITI AND SARAH DINGLE
March 27, 2014

A victim of child sexual abuse burst into tears at a public hearing as he recalled being raped by a Salvation Army officer at a boys’ home.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard the man’s account at its 10th public inquiry in Sydney.

The new inquiry is set to examine how the charity handled complaints against its staff in the Salvation Army’s Eastern Territory from 1993 until now.

The man, known as JF, was nine when heand some of his siblings weresent to the Alkira boys’ home in the Brisbane suburb of Indooroopilly.

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Forgive you, Father

MONTANA
Missoula Independent

Decades of abuse by the Catholic Church resulted in multimillion-dollar settlements and the bankruptcy of the Diocese of Helena, but it will take more than money to make things right for survivors.

by Jimmy Tobias

On a wall in the St. Ignatius Mission, amid periwinkle panels and gold-colored trim, a large mural depicts a pit of fire packed to the brim with agonized faces paying for their sins. Many of those faces are Native American, their brown complexion framed by black braids, surrounded by fire and brimstone.

“When we were bad, the nuns would bring us to that picture and say, ‘This is where you are going to go.’ And for me, I would just have nightmares. I believed it,” says SuSan Lefthand Dowdall, a member of the Kootenai tribe who attended boarding school at the St. Ignatius Mission for a year and a half as a small child. “So when the incident happened at the powwow grounds, I knew that—I hurt so bad that—you know, my starting to be in hell was starting that day.”

Dowdall’s hell began one early summer morning in 1963 when school was out and Arlee’s annual Fourth of July powwow was about to begin. She was a petite 5-year-old with chubby cheeks and a wide smile. Her parents left her and a little sister at their grandparent’s home while they partied at the powwow’s beer garden. The next morning, realizing that her mom and dad had not returned, Dowdall and her sister headed to the gathering.

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Cardinal Pell formally apologises to victim of paedophile priest

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Thursday 27 March 2014

Cardinal George Pell read out a formal apology to the victim of a paedophile priest at the royal commission into child sexual abuse on Thursday.

Pell marked the end of his appearance before the commission with a public apology for the suffering endured by former altar boy John Ellis as a result of his treatment by the church.

Reading from a statement, Pell said that, as the former archbishop of Sydney and speaking personally, the church had failed Ellis and that as archbishop he took ultimate responsibility for the suffering and the terrible impact on his life.

“At the end of this gruelling appearance for both of us at this royal commission, I want to publicly say sorry to him for the hurt caused him by the mistakes made,” Pell said.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: George Pell publicly apologises to victim John Ellis

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Thomas Oriti

Cardinal George Pell has publicly apologised to a victim of child sexual abuse, saying the Catholic Church failed in its moral and pastoral responsibilities.

The former Archbishop of Sydney was called back to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney, to answer more questions about his role in the case of former altar boy John Ellis.

Mr Ellis sued the Church after he was abused by a priest in the 1970s, but lost the case on a technicality in 2007.

Cardinal Pell has previously apologised to the victim in a statement tendered to the royal commission, and today he conveyed that in the hearing room.

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State forces Church back to its mission basics

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank Brennan | 27 March 2014

Prior to Cardinal Pell’s appearance before Justice McClellan at the Child Abuse Royal Commission, I wrote in the Fairfax press: ‘The spotlight on the Ellis case should lead to better church administration for the good of everyone, especially those abused or wronged by those in authority. Together, Pell and McClellan can provide us with a better-lit path through the thickets of past abuse and maladministration.’

It has been an excruciating week or two. But there can be no doubt that the Australian Catholic Church with the forced scrutinies of the State has been assisted in getting back to its mission and basic values, espousing truth, justice, compassion and transparency.

As an institution, we have been dragged kicking and screaming. Cardinal Pell has been put through the wringer, though admittedly nowhere near to the same extent as was John Ellis when the Church decided to unleash the legal attack dogs on him in litigation which was euphemistically described as vigorous and strenuous.

In his written statement to the Commission, Cardinal Pell was upfront in apologising again for the sexual abuse which Ellis had undoubtedly suffered at the hands of a priest. Pell wrote, ‘I acknowledge and apologise to Mr Ellis for the gross violation and abuse committed by Aidan Duggan, a now deceased priest of the Sydney Archdiocese. I deeply regret the pain, trauma and emotional damage that this abuse caused to Mr Ellis.’

Under cross examination on Wednesday, Cardinal Pell had to admit that he, his advisers and his staff had fallen well short of the standards expected of a model litigant, let alone a Christian organisation. He finally admitted to the vast chasm between Christian decency and the tactics employed in pursuing Ellis in the courts.

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Apology to victim from Cardinal George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

CARDINAL George Pell has ended his time before the royal commission into child sexual abuse with a public acknowledgement of the wrongs done to John Ellis, a former altar boy preyed upon by a paedophile priest.

But acknowledging Mr Ellis himself, when he was sitting just metres away, seemed to prove too hard for the cardinal.

Dr Pell concluded two-and-a-half days of evidence to the commission by apologising for what he had described as regrettable mistakes and misunderstandings over years of dealing with Mr Ellis.

Reading from a statement, Dr Pell said that as the former archbishop of Sydney and speaking personally, the Church had failed Mr Ellis in many ways.

“I want to acknowledge his suffering and the impact of this terrible affair on his life,” Dr Pell told the commission.

“As the then archbishop, I have to take ultimate responsibility, and this I do.

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March 26, 2014

St. Paul police to reopen two cases related to Archdiocese investigation

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Sasha Aslanian St. Paul, Minn. Mar 26, 2014

The Ramsey County Attorney’s Office has asked the St. Paul Police Department to reopen two cases related to its investigation into the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

A St. Paul police spokesman confirmed the cases pertain to Archbishop John Nienstedt, and Curtis Wehmeyer, a St. Paul priest serving time in prison for child sexual abuse.

Ramsey County Attorney John Choi announced earlier this month there was insufficient evidence to charge the archbishop, who in December was accused of groping a boy several years ago at a public event.

Nienstedt has denied any wrongdoing.

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Court won’t seal deposition of St. Paul archbishop in priest sex abuse case

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 03/26/2014

A Ramsey County judge reasserted Wednesday that the Archbishop John Nienstedt’s deposition in a case involving former priest Thomas Adamson not be sealed.

“I had no intention of providing a protection order to the depositions coming up … I thought that was pretty clear,” he told attorneys in court for another priest sexual abuse lawsuit.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis had asked District Judge John Van de North to prevent a plaintiff’s attorneys from questioning Nienstedt and his former deputy, Rev. Kevin McDonough. Van de North denied that request.

In a memorandum filed Monday, the archdiocese asked that those depositions be sealed once completed unless the plaintiff “bring(s) a motion to show good cause as to why such information should be publicly disclosed.”

Van de North made it clear that he hoped the issue would not be rehashed Thursday morning, when attorneys in the Adamson case return to court.

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‘It’s a mystery to me’: George Pell pleads ignorance over abuse case

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

David Marr
theguardian.com, Wednesday 26 March 2014

Amazing claims are fine in the pulpit. You expect to hear them any time in a cathedral. But not at a royal commission.

George Pell was being asked to explain how his absolute conviction that John Ellis was abused as a boy by Father Aidan Duggan – a belief based on a five-month investigation by a church assessor – squared with the instructions he gave to contest the abuse in the New South Wales supreme court.

His claim: to dispute is not to deny. “I made it quite clear to the lawyers that we could not deny that an offence had taken place,” he explained. All they did in court was dispute Ellis’s claims, “put the plaintiff to proof”.

So Ellis was cross-examined for four days about the most private details of his life: the abuse, his marriage breakdown and his humiliating sacking by the law firm Baker & McKenzie.

Would it feel any different to Ellis whether his abuse was denied or disputed, wondered the commissioner, Justice Peter McClellan. “We were dealing with Mr Ellis as a senior and brilliant lawyer,” replied the cardinal. “I think he, as a lawyer, would have understood the distinction.”

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Royal commission: It seems lawyers do the devil’s work

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 27, 2014

Damien Murphy

”Do you understand now from your learning in the area of the effect and impact of child sexual abuse that the impact it had on John Ellis to have the very church he had gone back to dispute that he had ever been abused?”

The rain outside had streaked the windows with tears when Gail Furness, senior counsel assisting the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse suddenly turned the Catholic Church into a perpetrator.

In the public gallery, Mr Ellis, a man who long ago had been abused by his parish priest, raised a hand to his face like a shield and watched Cardinal George Pell start his penance without reconciliation.

Cardinal Pell, as the former Catholic archbishop of Sydney, had sanctioned a legal strategy that refused to recognise Mr Ellis had been abused, offered him derisory financial compensation, refused his offers of a settlement in the belief it would cause a rush of litigants demanding massive compensation payouts, and subjected him to a long demeaning legal case that eventually left him bankrupt.

Cardinal Pell: ”I regret that.”

Ms Furness: ”Only regret, Cardinal?”

Cardinal Pell: ”What else could I say. It was wrong that it [the court cross-examination of Mr Ellis] went to such an extent. I was told it was a legally proper tactic, strategy.”

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Archdiocese agrees to pay $1.68 to $2.1 mil to settle sex abuse suit

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY FRANCINE KNOWLES Religion Reporter March 26, 2014

The Archdiocese of Chicago agreed to pay $1.68 to $2.1 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged former priest and convicted sex offender Daniel McCormack sexually abused a former fifth grade student at Our Lady of the Westside School, the plaintiff’s attorney announced Wednesday.

The agreement settles a suit brought against the archdiocese and Cardinal Francis George in December, 2011.

The suit was filed by a male Chicago plaintiff, now 23, who chose to remain anonymous and is identified as John Doe.

It alleged that at various times in the 2000 to 2001 school year, McCormack “inappropriately sexually touched, hugged, rubbed and/or abused” the plaintiff and “maintained a sexually abusive relationship with Doe, under the guise of counseling” him.

It also alleged that the archdiocese was aware of McCormack’s past history of sexual misconduct stemming back to his time in a seminary but chose to place him in ministry service among youth.

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ANALYSIS: Pope Francis fired ‘Bishop Bling.’ Will more follow?

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By David Gibson | Religion News Service, Updated: Wednesday, March 26

The news that Pope Francis fired — or “accepted the resignation of” — the German churchman known as “Bishop Bling” because of his big-spending ways has touched off speculation among Catholics that other dismissals could be in the offing.

Here’s the answer in four words: Perhaps, but probably not.

Recent history shows why: Bishop Robert Finn of Kansas City, Mo., remains in office 18 months after his conviction — and $1.4 million spent on his defense — for failing to report a priest suspected of abuse. Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony enjoys a high-profile retirement in spite of the disapproval of his own successor over Mahony’s abuse record. Similarly, Cardinal Bernard Law, formerly of Boston, is still living a gilded existence in Rome years after he was plucked from the U.S. amid the clergy abuse scandal.

Not to mention Newark, N.J., Archbishop John Myers, who heads his diocese amid questions about his handling of abuse cases as well as pricey additions to his upscale retirement home.

Financially speaking, “Bishop Bling,” Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Limburg, Germany, was in a league of his own: He spent some $43 million on a luxurious new residence and office complex while cutting staff.

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‘Bishop of bling’ is out (for now); Pope Francis accepts resignation

GERMANY
Los Angeles Times

By Amy Hubbard
March 26, 2014

The cleric who became known as the “bishop of bling” has been removed from his ministry in Limburg, Germany, thanks to the conspicuously frugal Pope Francis.

The Vatican has accepted Monsignor Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst’s resignation, according to news reports. The announcement caps off the controversy swirling around the bishop over the $43 million spent on his residence complex in Limburg.

As the Los Angeles Times’ Carol Williams reported in November, Tebartz-van Elst broke the budget for renovations, overspending by 800% on items including a $20,000 bathtub, $620,000 in artwork and $1.1 million for landscaping.

He was placed on indefinite leave in October as a church inquiry was launched. Tebartz-van Elst said the hefty expenditures were actually for 10 projects and there were additional costs because the buildings were under historical protection.

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Rücktritte von Bischöfen

DEUTSCHLAND
Europe Online

Rom/Limburg (dpa) – Ob sexueller Missbrauch oder Geheimdienstkontakte – mehrere katholische Kirchenführer mussten nach heftiger Kritik auf ihr Amt verzichten. Beispiele:

Keith O‘Brien, Edinburgh (Schottland): Er legte das Amt des Erzbischofs von St. Andrews und Edinburgh im Februar 2013 nieder. Vorausgegangen waren Vorwürfe, O‘Brien habe sich jungen Priestern in «unangemessener» Weise genähert.

Walter Mixa, Augsburg: Nach wochenlanger Kritik bot er Papst Benedikt XVI. seinen Rücktritt im April 2010 an. Frühere Heimkinder hatten ihm körperliche Misshandlung vorgeworfen, zudem soll er Stiftungsgelder zweckentfremdet haben. Der Vatikan akzeptierte das Gesuch im Mai.

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Bischof Tebartz-van Elst muss gehen

DEUTSCHLAND
Sol

Rom/Limburg. Nach monatelangen scharfen Debatten um Amtsführung und Verschwendung des Limburger Bischofs Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst hat der Papst entschieden: Der beurlaubte Bischof darf nicht in sein Amt zurückkehren.

Franziskus stützte sich auf den Prüfbericht einer Expertenkommission, der am Mittwoch veröffentlicht wurde. Demnach trägt der 54-jährige Oberhirte maßgeblich Verantwortung für die Versechsfachung der Kosten für den millionenschweren Um- und Ausbau der Bischofsresidenz in Limburg, weil er kirchliche Vorschriften und Kontrollgremien umging und immer wieder Sonderwünsche hatte.

In der katholischen Kirche wurde die seit langem mit Spannung erwartete Entscheidung des Papstes mit Erleichterung aufgenommen und als Signal für einen Neuanfang gewertet. Der Skandal um Tebartz-van Elst hatte das Bistum zerrüttet und die katholische Kirche in ganz Deutschland in eine tiefe Vertrauenskrise gestürzt, in einigen Regionen traten mehr Gläubige als üblich aus der Kirche aus.

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LANDESKIRCHE: NULL-TOLERANZ-LINIE BEI SEXUELLEM MISSBRAUCH

DEUTSCHLAND
Evangelisch-lutherische Landeskirche Hannoversc

[Summary: The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hannovesr has adopted a policy of zero tolerance of sexual abuse.]

Hannover (epd). Die Evangelisch-lutherische Landeskirche Hannovers verfolgt nach eigenen Angaben im Blick auf sexuellen Missbrauch von Kindern und Jugendlichen weiterhin eine “Null-Toleranz-Strategie”. Die Kirche habe das Ausmaß der Prävention in jüngster Zeit erweitert, um einen größtmöglichen Schutz zu erzielen, sagte Oberlandeskirchenrätin Kerstin Gäfgen-Track dem epd. Am Montag hatte die katholische Deutsche Bischofskonferenz bekanntgegeben, Fälle von sexuellem Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche durch ein interdisziplinäres Forschungsteam aufarbeiten zu lassen.

In der evangelischen Landeskirche sei es in den vergangenen Jahren in der Arbeit mit Kindern und Jugendlichen nur in wenigen Fällen zu sexuellem Missbrauch gekommen, sagte Gäfgen-Track. Inzwischen müssten Mitarbeiter über 18 Jahre, die eine Jugendfreizeit mit Übernachtung leiten, nach Art, Umfang und Dauer der Freizeit ein erweitertes Führungszeugnis vorlegen. “Wir verfolgen die Devise: Lieber ein Führungszeugnis zu viel als ein halbes zu wenig.”

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Sieben Professoren …

DEUTSCHLAND
Volksfreund

Sieben Professoren sollen Missbrauch in katholischer Kirche aufarbeiten

[Summary: Although the German bishops are going ahead with a second study of causes of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, members of We Are Church, a reform movement, said although they welcome the research project they are not sure a study funded by the episcopal conference can filter out the basic causes of abuse that arise of the hierarchical structure and celibate clergy of the church.]

Die katholische Kirche nimmt einen zweiten Anlauf, um den sexuellen Missbrauch in den eigenen Reihen wissenschaftlich aufzuarbeiten. Das hat der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz, Triers Bischof Stephan Ackermann, verkündet.

Bonn. Der erste Versuch, den 2010 hochgekochten Missbrauchsskandal in der katholischen Kirche wissenschaftlich aufzuarbeiten, war Anfang 2013 unter gegenseitigen Vorwürfen des damaligen Projektleiters Christian Pfeiffer und der Bischöfe gescheitert. Im zweiten Anlauf haben die Bischöfe nun ein Team aus sieben Professoren mit einem neuen Forschungsprojekt zum sexuellen Missbrauch durch Priester und andere Kirchenverantwortliche beauftragt. Triers Bischof Stephan Ackermann stellte gestern in Bonn das Forscherteam um den Neurowissenschaftler Harald Dreßing vom Zentralinstitut für Seelische Gesundheit in Mannheim vor.

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When pope meets president, a ‘reset’ may not be in the cards

VATICAN CITY
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF MARCH 26, 2014

Though at first glance the two things may seem utterly unrelated, there’s something oddly fitting about the fact that Pope Francis accepted the resignation of the controversial bishop of Limburg, Germany, just 24 hours before his much-anticipated first meeting with President Barack Obama of the United States.

Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst became infamous last fall as the “bling bishop” who spent more than $40 million remodeling his own residence. When Francis ousted him in October it was a shot heard round the Catholic world, signifying that the new pope’s call for a “poor church for the poor” was more than mere rhetoric. Today’s formal denouement to the Limburg saga cements that impression.

The impression of a grand alliance on behalf of the world’s poor is, of course, very much at the heart of what Obama would like to get out of tomorrow’s session – both as part of his eventual legacy, and with an eye towards the mid-term elections looming this fall.

It’s tempting to augur that Obama and Francis ought to be able to do business, since both are identified with what Christians call the “social gospel,” meaning concern for the poor and for peace. Obama, who began his career as a community organizer with a group founded with the support of some Chicago Catholic parishes, is a great admirer of the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of Chicago, who had a passion for the kind of Catholic social teaching enjoying a renaissance on Francis’ watch.

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