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.

December 19, 2013

Former Norwich Catholic priest denies sexually abusing boys

UNITED KINGDOM
EDP24

Staff Reporter
Thursday, December 19, 2013

A former Norwich Catholic priest and a former children’s home manager denied sexually abusing a string of boys more than 30 years ago.

Father Tony McSweeney, 66, and wheelchair-bound John Stingemore, 71, are accused of molesting lads at the now closed Grafton Close Children’s Home in Hounslow, west London.

McSweeney – who officiated at the 1990 wedding of boxing legend Frank Bruno and his ex-wife, Laura – was a trainee priest at the time of the alleged attacks.

The once part-time chaplain at Norwich City FC, was leading the congregation at St George’s Church in north Norwich when the claims against him emerged.

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

New bishop for Maine who ‘understands poor, disenfranchised’

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

By Kelley Bouchard kbouchard@pressherald.com
Staff Writer

The Rev. Robert P. Deeley, newly appointed bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, promised Wednesday to protect children, serve the poor and the sick, and continue efforts to strengthen Maine’s parishes and grow the priesthood.

Maine Catholics and people who know Deeley have great expectations for Maine’s new bishop, seeing shades of Pope Francis in the Boston-area native who has served in the Vatican.

Others are concerned that Deeley, who is now auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston, is a “company man” who won’t bring the change that critics want in the way the church handles issues such as gay rights, abortion and sexual abuse by clergy members.

The Vatican announced Deeley’s appointment by Pope Francis at 6 a.m. Wednesday, ending a 17-month wait for news of a new leader for Maine’s 193,392 Catholics. Deeley will be formally installed as bishop during a special Mass on Feb. 14 at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Portland. …

PLAYED ROLE IN CLERGY ABUSE RESPONSE

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is a cadre of bishops in Rome that since the abuse scandal has largely been responsible for responding to hundreds of complaints against clergy members. Deeley was assigned to help reduce the backlog, Garabedian said.

Cafardi, the expert on church law, dismissed the idea that, because Deeley was in the Boston archdiocese during the abuse scandal, he was in some way directly involved. Cafardi, a co-author of the National Review Board’s report on the abuse scandal, said that in the extensive research and interviews done to assemble the 2005 report, Deeley’s name never came up.

“That’s the kind of guilt by association that I hope most Christians would avoid,” Cafardi said.

Local and national anti-abuse groups have called for Deeley to open the diocese’s records on abusive clergy members, and do what more than two dozen archdioceses around the nation, including the Archdiocese of Boston, have done already: publish the names and judicial outcomes of priests who are accused of abuse.

In a statement issued shortly after Deeley’s appointment Wednesday, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, a national victim advocacy group, said the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was integral in an orchestrated cover-up of abuse, and called for transparency about priests’ past crimes.

“This is a bare-minimum public safety step that every prelate should take,” the group 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.

Former Christian Brother will appeal jail term for indecent assault

AUSTRALIA
Courier

By Pat Byrne Dec. 19, 2013

A FORMER Christian Brother, convicted in 1997 over the indecent assault of two Ballarat school boys, was today jailed for three months over a fresh charge of indecent assault dating back to 1974.

Yet Stephen Francis Farrell, 62, who pleaded guilty to molesting his now third school boy victim, walked from Ballarat Magistrates Court after lawyers immediately appealed the jail term.

Magistrate Michelle Hodgson said Farrell had exploited his position of power to sexually abuse a 10-year-old boy in his care, adding the community must know that the courts denounce such behaviour.

“Slowly but surely we have come to realise many of these sexual predators are people who have taken advantage of positions of power,” Ms Hodgson said.

“We forget in a more secular 2013 the power the church wielded over families.”

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.

Ex-priest from Moree/Armidale NSW faces court again

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated on 18 December 2013)

A former Catholic priest (aged 60 in 2013), who is charged with sexual offences against children in towns (including Moree and Armidale) in northern New South Wales, appeared in Armidale Local Court again on 18 December 2013 for an administrative procedure. The court extended his bail. The prosecutors and the defence have reached “substantial agreement” in relation to many of the facts regarding the case and the defence team is expected to submit a written plea-offer, the court has been told.

The ex-priest is charged with a total of 138 sexual offences against boys and girls.

These charges relate only to those alleged victims who have spoken to a special team of detectives (named Strike Force Glenroe) in the NSW Police. The investigation is continuing and detectives are prepared to hear from any more persons who have information about this matter.

The court decided to continue (until further notice) a non-publication order regarding the ex-priest’s name and residential details. This non-publication order can be reviewed at an approprite stage in the prosecution process.

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.

DK And The Marist Brothers (Or: Towards Hurting)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Abuses by the Marist Brothers order of the Catholic Church have continued to be the focus of the current hearings of the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. It has heard further evidence from the Marists’ former Sydney head, Alexis Turton (see yesterday’s posting), and a victim known only as DK.

DK was abused by three brothers at the Marist Brothers’ school, St. Augustines (see previous posting) in the city of Cairns, in QueenslandState. One of the abusers was Brother Ross Murrin (see previous posting), who is still in prison for abuse offences at a Marist primary school at Daceyville, and at St. Gregory’s College in Campbelltown. He pleaded guilty to those offences in 2009.

DK told the enquiry that, after the abuse by Murrin, “I received a number of floggings, and was treated differently by the Brothers. I remember being excluded from school event, and feeling like they were trying to get me to leave the school.”

Marist Alexis Turton further enhanced the bad reputation of the Catholic Church with regards to cover-ups. One Brother had been the subject of several complaints, including that he abused a student who then suicided. In 2009, another Brother provided a list of 18 children who might bring claims against him. This list was placed on the Marist secret files, and a copy was sent to the Catholic Church Insurance company.

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.

DelBianco Decision Delayed

CANADA
Blackburn News

By Chelsea Vella on December 18, 2013

Final Crown and defence counsel submissions were made in the trial of a former priest at Sarnia’s courthouse Wednesday.

Gabriele DelBianco is being tried on 18 counts including sexual assault and gross indecency allegedly involving four teenage girls during the 1980′s.

In Crown submissions, Aniko Coughlan alleges that DelBianco abused his position of trust and authority within the church and used his role to create opportunities to be alone with the complainants. She says parents trusted him with their children, even allowing them to go on overnight trips.

DelBianco’s lawyer Andrew Bradie argues none of the complainants claimed they engaged in the sexual acts because DelBianco was an authority figure, but rather because he was charismatic. More than one woman describes him as being like “rock star”, testifying that it made them feel special to be chosen by him.

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 Vic Christian brother granted bail

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A former Victorian Christian brother and teacher must be jailed for exploiting his position of power to sexually abuse a 10-year-old, a magistrate says.

But Stephen Francis Farrell walked from the Ballarat courtroom after appealing against his three-month jail term for molesting the boy, his third schoolboy victim.

Magistrate Michelle Hodgson jailed Farrell, 62, for indecently assaulting the boy while teaching at St Alipius School in Ballarat in the mid 1970s.

She said a message needed to be sent to the wider community that those who abused their roles of trust would be punished.

“Slowly but surely we have come to realise many of these sexual predators are people who have taken advantage of positions of power,” she said on Thursday.

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

Former Catholic Brother charged …

AUSTRALIA
New South Wales Police Force

Former Catholic Brother charged with historical assaults upon two school boys – Strike Force Avia

Thursday, 19 December 2013 12:43:53 AM

Sex Crimes Squad detectives have arrested a former Catholic Brother for alleged historical sexual offences against two children at a western Sydney school.

Strike Force Avia was established in October 2011 to investigate alleged assaults upon a number of children on school grounds at a Catholic college at Blacktown and a Catholic primary school at Lalor Park in the 1980s.

Three men – two teachers and a former Catholic Brother – have previously been arrested and charged by Strike Force Avia detectives.

About 11.30am yesterday (Wednesday 18 December 2013) a fourth man, a former Catholic Brother, was arrested at Penrith Railway Station and taken to Penrith Police Station.

The 58-year-old Lithgow man was charged with 20 offences in total, comprising two counts of buggery, 13 counts of indecent assault on male, and five counts of indecent act with male, relating to offences against two boys aged between nine and 11.

The incidents are alleged to have occurred between January 1980 and May 1981 when the former Brother worked at the Catholic college in Blacktown.

He was refused bail to appear at Penrith Local Court today (Thursday 19 December 2013).

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.

Tasmanian needed in Sydney child abuse case

AUSTRALIA
The Advocate

An unnamed Tasmanian could help NSW police investigate allegations in a case of child sex offences.

Yesterday, a former Catholic Brother was arrested in relation to alleged assaults upon a number of children on school grounds at a Catholic college at Blacktown and a Catholic primary school at Lalor Park in the 1980s.

NSW police say the Tasmanian person could be integral to the case.

The 58-year-old Lithgow man was arrested in Penrith and charged with 20 offences: two counts of buggery, 13 counts of indecent assault on male, and five counts of indecent act with male, relating to offences against two boys aged between nine and 11.

Anyone with information about sexual abuse should call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or use the Crime Stoppers website. Information is handled in confidence.

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.

Fourth man arrested in child-sex case

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A former Catholic Brother has become the fourth person charged in relation to historical sexual offences against two children at a western Sydney school.

Strike Force Avia was established in October 2011 to investigate alleged assaults upon a number of children on school grounds at a Catholic college at Blacktown and a Catholic primary school at Lalor Park in the 1980s.

Three men – two teachers and a former Catholic Brother – have previously been arrested and charged by Strike Force Avia detectives.

Sex Crimes Squad detectives arrested a fourth man, a former Catholic Brother, at Penrith Railway Station about 11.30am (AEDT) on Wednesday and took him to Penrith Police Station.

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

A former Catholic brother will face court today charged over historic sex abuses at a Sydney college back in the 1980’s.

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A former Catholic brother will face court today accused of sexually abusing two boys at a western Sydney school in the 1980’s.

Police arrested the 58-year-old Lithgow man at Penrith railway station around midday yesterday and charged him with a total of 20 sex offences against two boys who were aged between nine and 11.

The charges include two counts of buggery, 13 counts of indecent assault and five counts of indecent acts.

The incidents are alleged to have occurred between January 1980 and May 1981 when the former brother worked at a Catholic College at Blacktown.

He is the fourth man to be charged by detectives investigating alleged assaults on a number a children at the college, as well as a Catholic primary school at Lalor Park in the 1980’s.

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

Founder of SNAP still seeks justice

TOLEDO (OH)
Blade

BY KEITH C. BURRIS
COLUMNIST FOR THE BLADE

This week, I met a courageous woman. She lives in Chicago now, but she comes from Toledo: Barbara Blaine. She is founder and president of SNAP — Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests.

Back in 1985, as a victim of abuse, she chose to speak up. Her road was a lonely one. She was told two big lies: Your case is unique. And, we will do something about it. Ms. Blaine says those lies hurt as much as the sexual abuse.

She started SNAP as a support group. It grew to become a watchdog with chapters in every state and many other nations.
SNAP and the people involved with it love their church. They are not destroyers. They are injured believers. They believe the church cannot heal until it really changes how it deals with clergy child abuse.

Ms. Blaine maintains that this has not happened, that abuse still goes on, and that the institutional response is to cover up.

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

St. Paul police, archdiocese officials meet after chief turns up heat

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: CHAO XIONG , Star Tribune Updated: December 18, 2013

No details of the discussion were disclosed, but more talks are set.

St. Paul police investigators and archdiocese representatives met Wednesday to discuss clergy sex abuse allegations after Chief Thomas Smith had criticized church leaders for not cooperating.

Investigators met with the Rev. Charles Lachowitzer, the vicar general of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, as well as an attorney. Smith’s department said before noon that it would release “basic details” of the meeting later.

But by 4 p.m., the only update provided by the police, via Twitter, was that “officials answered some questions and set plans for discussions in near future to answer others,” adding that further details “will not be public at this time.”

The archdiocese issued a brief statement: “We had a productive and amicable meeting today and concur with the St. Paul Police’s account of our meeting.”

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.

INTERVIEW: U of St. Thomas Prof., Expert on Catholicism Discusses Church Abuse Allegations

MINNESOTA
KSTP

[with video]

By: Cassie Hart

St. Paul police met with the lawyers for the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, as well as two top clergy members to talk about the laundry list of misconduct allegations against priests.

Archbishop John Nienstedt was not there. He volunteered to temporarily step down, while police investigate the case against him.

A young man claims Nienstedt inappropriately touched him in a public setting, during a confirmation ceremony in 2009.

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.

Rabbi launches legal action against sex abuse victims’ advocate

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN DECEMBER 19, 2013

ONE of Victoria’s most senior Jewish figures questioned over allegations of child sexual abuse has launched legal action against the head of a victims’ advocacy group.

In a writ lodged in the Victorian Supreme Court this week, Rabbi Abraham Glick accuses victims’ advocate Manny Waks of defaming him in a series of online articles and Facebook posts.

Rabbi Glick has alleged Mr Waks published articles that falsely implied he had perjured himself in court, was guilty of child sexual abuse and had admitted to abusing children.

Rabbi Glick, the former principal of prestigious Jewish school Yeshivah College, was stood down last week after allegations he raped a student in the school’s synagogue were levelled at him.

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

Vatican outsources more financial reform

VATICAN CITY
Kansas City Star

December 19
The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican is outsourcing more of its financial reform to big-name consulting firms, tapping McKinsey & Co. and KMPG to advise it on modernizing its communications operations and bring its accounting up to international standards.

The decision was made Thursday by the commission of inquiry into the Vatican’s overall financial health created by Pope Francis as part of his reforms.

Already, regulatory compliance firm Promontory Financial Group has installed two dozen people at the troubled Vatican bank to review its accounts and make sure they conform to international norms to fight money-laundering and terror financing. Promontory is also advising the Vatican’s other main financial institution, APSA, which administers Vatican real estate.

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.

Press for Vatican reform extends to PR, accounting

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Dec. 19, 2013 NCR Today

Rome

The press for Vatican reform in the Francis era continued to gather force today, as the Vatican announced it has awarded contracts to two major international consulting firms to ponder a reorganization of its communications operations, as well as to bring its accounting procedures in line with international standards.

Among other things, the moves confirm that the Vatican’s traditional reluctance to compromise its independence by allowing outsiders to examine its internal workings has given way under Francis to a new desire to tap secular expertise.

In both cases, the consultants have been selected by a papal commission to study the Vatican’s economic and administrative structures set up by Francis in July. That body is composed of eight members, all but one of whom are laity, and is led by Maltese economist and businessman Joseph F.X. Zahra.

The Vatican said the contracts were awarded after what it described as a “competitive bidding process,” but it did not specify how much is being paid for the firms’ services.

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In Francis’ First Year, A ‘Radical Pope’ Seeks To Save His Church

UNITED STATES
NPR

[with audio]

“Who am I to judge?” With those five words, Pope Francis “stepped away from the disapproving tone, the explicit moralizing typical of popes and bishops,” writes columnist James Carroll. Francis made that statement in July, in response to a reporter’s question about the status of gay priests in the Church. In a new article about Francis in The New Yorker, Carroll describes the pope as having “unilaterally declared a kind of truce in the culture wars that have divided the Vatican and much of the world.”

Carroll was a seminarian and a priest during another great period of change — Vatican II, which, under the leadership of Pope John XXIII, led to reforms that modernized the church. As a priest from 1969 to 1974, he served as Boston University’s Catholic chaplain. He left the priesthood in part over his disagreements with the leadership after the death of Pope John and the beginning of what Carroll describes as a counterrevolution. He’s now an author and a columnist for The Boston Globe. His New Yorker article is called “Who Am I to Judge? A Radical Pope’s First Year.”

“It’s not new for popes to be critical of the free market economy, and it’s not new for popes to be concerned about the plight of the poor,” Carroll tells Fresh Air’s Terry Gross. “But with Pope Francis there’s a centrality, a passion and an urgent insistence that’s unique that we haven’t seen before.”

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

The activist pope

UNITED STATES
Arkansas Times

by Gene Lyons

Somewhere in the midst of an avalanche of sickening revelations about child sex abuse by Catholic clergy it occurred to me that if the Vatican sought an appropriate penance for its sins, it would go mute on issues of sexual morality for about 100 years.

Needless to say, that’s not about to happen.

Instead, habemus papam. (We have a pope.) Catholics have witnessed the unprecedented resignation of Pope Benedict, widely seen to have failed utterly to cope with the church’s grave crisis — perhaps even in his own estimation — and the remarkable accession of Pope Francis.

During the months since his selection, the 76-year-old Argentine has stirred an outsize response throughout the world — galvanizing not only the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, but members of other faiths and even the irreligious with a shrewd blend of public theater and spiritual humility.

Writing in the New Yorker, James Carroll reports that “even ‘kick the Pope’ Orangemen in Northern Ireland love Pope Francis. The press is obsessed with him. Time recently named him Person of the Year.”

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

Vatican’s punishment for Lismore paedophile priest …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 20, 2013

THE punishment for a Lismore paedophile priest as ordered by the Vatican was to live a life of prayer and penance and offer mass every Friday for his victims.

This was despite him admitting to his numerous “crimes”, the royal commission into institutionalised responses to child sex abuse has been told.

He remains a priest living in retirement in the Lismore presbytery and has not been stripped of his rank or had his “faculties removed”, as the Catholic Church describes being returned to the lay world.

The revelations came during damning evidence by the Bishop of Lismore, Geoffrey Jarrett, who said that he had not known for five years that the Vatican had required bishops to report all child sex abuse complaints to Rome. However, the commission heard that the first letter to the world’s bishops from the Vatican’s Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith about the new edict in 2002 was written in Latin.

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

Royal commission: bishop ‘unaware’ he should have reported abuse to Rome

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Wednesday 18 December 2013

A New South Wales bishop was unaware for five years of a directive from the pope to refer complaints of child sexual abuse containing “a semblance of truth” to Vatican investigators.

The royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse on Thursday heard investigators acting on orders from the pope decreed in 2002 that some complaints of sexual abuse had to be referred to Rome.

Bishop Geoffrey Jarrett of Lismore told the commission he was not aware of the decree, first issued in 2001, until 2006.

“Any awareness of that requirement, even though it existed in 2001 … really didn’t come to my attention until much later,” Jarrett said.

Since becoming aware of the directive, Jarrett has referred three priests to the Vatican. He said he has been waiting more than two years for a response from Rome on one complaint.

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.

Witness Comes Forward About Teacher’s Alleged Abuse

ILLINOIS
Comcast Sportsnet

A follow-up to an NBC5 Investigates report about a teacher accused of sexual abuse. Last month we told you about a suburban mom who accused a woman named Cherie Carlson of sexual abuse years ago. Carlson is now a middle school teacher in Buffalo Grove but used to work at a Chicago church and religious camp in Wisconsin. Now another woman tells NBC5 that she witnessed the alleged abuse.

“Were you surprised by the allegations against Cherie Carlson?” Rob Stafford asked.

“Not at all,” Monika Ebly said.

In the summer of 1996, Monika Ebly was 16 years old. She was a member of the North Side Gospel Center in Chicago who worked at the church camp in Wisconsin. She says one night inside this cabin she saw girls camp director Cherie Carlson fondling a girl we are calling Jane Doe.

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.

Child sexual abuse victims angry over perpetrator’s jail term

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

December 19, 2013

Adam Cooper

Victims of a man who sexually assaulted 11 boys more than three decades ago when he was a community leader are angry at what they consider a light jail term.

Barry Francis Watson, 73, will serve a minimum of 2 1/2 years in prison for abusing boys in his care as young as seven when he was a leader in the Anglican Church’s youth group, CEBS, between 1969 and 1979.

Watson was found guilty in October of 12 charges of indecent assault on a boy aged under 16. He then pleaded guilty to another six charges.

On Thursday County Court Judge Rachelle Lewitan imposed a maximum jail term of four years but the sentence has upset some of Watson’s victims.

One called out to Watson as he was led from the dock, and outside court, he and others spoke of their disappointment to prosecutors.

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.

COGIC Pastor Accused of Molesting 16-year-old Family Member

TENNESSEE
WREG

[with video]

December 18, 2013, by George Brown

(Memphis) A COGIC pastor was arrested for sexual battery by an authority figure.

Michael Bryant, 48, is accused of molesting a 16-year-old family member for years.

Investigators said for the last two years, Bryant would sneak into her bedroom when her mother was asleep or at work, expose himself and fondle her.

He’s been the pastor at Hour of Restoration COGIC in Hickory Hill for the past three years. He was also an elder at Greater Community Temple COGIC.

“Knowing him, I wouldn’t believe it,” said Leonard Gray.

Gray says he never saw any signs. He looked up to Bryant at his church.

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

Catholic Bishop of Lismore …

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Catholic Bishop of Lismore admits during Royal Commission into child sex abuse he failed to report cases to the Vatican

BY THOMAS ORITI
December 19, 2013

A Catholic Bishop in northern New South Wales has admitted to a child abuse inquiry he did not abide by an instruction from the Pope for five years.

The Bishop of the Diocese of Lismore, Geoffrey Jarrett, has been recalled to give evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney.

In 2001, the Pope ordered Bishops around the world to report any allegations of child sexual abuse to the Vatican if there was a “semblance of truth” in the case.

Reverend Jarrett became a Bishop in the same year.

A complaint was made against Lismore priest Father Paul Rex Brown in 2002, but it was not referred to the Vatican at the time.

Reverend Jarrett has conceded he was not aware of the Pope’s requirement until 2006, saying some directives “may not be remembered or acted upon”.

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

Royal Commission hears Vatican told priest to offer a Mass every Friday for his victims

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

December 19, 2013

Catherine Armitage
Senior Writer

A Lismore Catholic priest who sexually abused children was ordered by the Vatican to “live a life of prayer and penance” and offer a Mass every Friday for his victims, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has been told.

But the “overwhelming majority” of clerical sex abuse cases are not reported to Rome because the Vatican wants to know only about incidents which occurred within the past 10 years, the Commission heard. The Bishop of Lismore, Geoffrey Jarrett, did not pass on any complaints for five years, probably because a directive from the Pope to do so was filed in a drawer and forgotten, he told the Commission.

In a day of astonishing revelations about the Australian Catholic church’s lackadaisical attitude to child sex abuse allegations, Bishop Jarrett admitted he did not pass on a 2002 complaint in which a woman alleged she “walked in on Father [Paul Rex] Brown in the act of sexually abusing a child in the sacristy of the cathedral” in 1959. That alleged incident preceded Father Brown’s abuse of Mrs Jennifer Ingham in the late 1970s by two decades.

When Bishop Jarrett eventually reported the separate case of a Lismore priest accused of “numerous” incidents of child sex abuse, with reparations of $50,000 already paid, the Vatican took two years to issue the punishment of offering Mass on Fridays. That priest is retired and lives in the presbytery with other priests in Lismore, Bishop Jarrett said. The Bishop has opted not to let him keep his priestly faculties, but said he would have written to the priest in 2004 to tell him he was not allowed to have contact with children. “I can’t recall whether I have written to remind him of it ever since,’’ Bishop Jarrett 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.

Vatican’s representative seeks immunity over sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Stephen Crittenden
theguardian.com, Thursday 19 December 2013

The Vatican’s representative in Australia is claiming diplomatic immunity in response to repeated requests for documents that might assist the NSW inquiry into child sex abuse.

Copies of correspondence released by the commission this week reveal the diplomatic stand-off between the papal nuncio, Archbishop Paul Gallagher, and the chair of the special commission of inquiry, Margaret Cunneen SC.

The Cunneen inquiry was established last November to investigate sexual abuse by two priests of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, Father Denis McAlinden and Father James Fletcher (both deceased), following allegations made by a NSW police whistleblower, chief inspector Peter Fox.

The NSW crown solicitor’s office made the request on Cunneen’s behalf on 30 August and again on 22 October, asking for copies of any relevant documents held in the archives of the Apostolic Nunciature in Canberra or the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) in Rome.

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 claims kept secret allowed priest to minister and teach sex ed

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

By Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio
Dec. 19, 2013

When beloved priest Harry Walsh retired two years ago, parishioners of St. Henry’s Catholic Church in Monticello, Minn., decorated a VFW hall with paper shamrocks and musical notes to say goodbye.

They sang, gave speeches and cried. Walsh, then 77, had served as the parish’s music minister for nearly a decade.

Harry Walsh, former pastor of St. Henry Catholic Church, during festivities in his honor Nov. 12, 2011 at the Monticello VFW Post.

“You developed close personal relationships with everybody and that gave us all the ability to trust you with all of our personal lives,” one person wrote on a tribute website for the Irish-born priest. “You have blessed this community immeasurably.”

But Walsh had a secret. He’d been accused of sexually abusing a 15-year-old girl and 12-year-old altar boy decades earlier, according to church documents obtained by MPR News, and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis contributed to a financial settlement for the girl.

Nonetheless, archbishops Harry Flynn and John Nienstedt allowed him to continue working in parishes until the fall of 2011. And neither bishop called police or warned the public.

More recently Walsh wasn’t included on a list of 30 “credibly accused” priests released Dec. 5 by the archdiocese. Nienstedt said the disclosure of those names was important to restoring trust and could help protect children from harm.

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.

December 18, 2013

St. Paul police meet with archdiocese vicar general

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Mara H. Gottfried
mgottfried@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 12/18/2013

St. Paul police met with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis vicar general Wednesday, the day after the police chief said the archdiocese has not cooperated with investigations into alleged clerical sex abuse.

“At today’s meeting, officials answered some questions and set plans for discussions in near future to answer others,” St. Paul police said in a statement Wednesday afternoon.

The meeting was with Vicar General the Rev. Charles Lachowitzer and an archdiocese attorney, according to police, who also said additional details wouldn’t be public at this time. Archdiocese spokesman James Accurso said church officials had no immediate comment about the meeting.

Police Chief Thomas Smith expressed frustration Tuesday that investigators’ request to speak with clergy staff had been refused, and that the archdiocese planned to make only an attorney available to police. After Smith’s public comments, the archdiocese issued a statement saying that Lachowitzer would accompany an attorney to the meeting.

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Vatican’s punishment for Lismore paedophile …

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 19, 2013

THE punishment for a Lismore paedophile priest as ordered by the Vatican was to live a life of prayer and penance and offer mass every Friday for the intention of his victims.

This was despite him admitting to his numerous “crimes”, the royal commission into institutionalised responses to child sex abuse has been told.

The priest involved remains a priest although he is in retirement and $50,000 was paid to a victim by the church.

His identity remains a secret although he was reported to Grafton Police, to the NSW Ombudsman and to the Commissioner for Children and Young People and has been banned from unsupervised contact with children.

The Bishop of Lismore, Geoffrey Jarrett, has been recalled to the commission to be quizzed about how many priests he has referred to the Vatican under its 2001 edict that cases of clerical child sex abuse must be referred to the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith.

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Meeting Between Police, Archdiocese Ends With Agreement

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

Esme Murphy

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – St. Paul police met with a top official from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis Wednesday as part of an ongoing criminal investigation into allegations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy.

The meeting comes a day after an explosive allegation against Archbishop John Nienstedt, who’s since agreed to step aside until the investigation is complete.

The meeting was also a response to a public claim by St. Paul police that the archdiocese is not cooperating with abuse investigations.

In a brief statement on Twitter, St. Paul police said Wednesday afternoon that officials of the archdiocese answered some police questions and agreed to meet again to answer other questions.

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Sex Abuse and the Church

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

A Pope’s New Path on Child Abuse” (editorial, Dec. 7) rightly commends Pope Francis for establishing a commission to deal with the sexual abuse of minors. Such abuse is a sin and a crime, one especially heinous when perpetrated by a representative of the Catholic Church.

But contrary to a suggestion in the editorial, the church has been responding vigorously to this crisis for years. In 2002, the American bishops established the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.” It draws respect worldwide, as the church in other countries and organizations here address a problem that crosses every level of society and that occurs in families, schools and youth programs.

Both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI instituted concrete steps, including declaring the possession of child pornography as possible grounds for exclusion from the clerical state.

Over the last decade, instances of sexual abuse have plummeted, as we instituted a zero-tolerance policy on sexual abuse of minors, background checks, education in how to maintain a safe environment, and removal of credibly accused clerics. …

(Bishop) R. DANIEL CONLON
Joliet, Ill., Dec. 11, 2013

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Another Swiss guard: Finance officer works to protect the Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — News headlines in 2013 about turmoil at the Vatican bank and an arrested monsignor who served as a Vatican accountant seem to be modern-day illustrations of a famous line from the First Letter of Timothy in the New Testament: “For the love of money is the root of all evils, and some people in their desire for it have strayed from the faith and have pierced themselves with many pains.”

But from his office near the Vatican gas station, a young Swiss lawyer is working to prevent the greedy or corrupt from misusing the Vatican’s financial structures, which serve its own operations and those of dioceses, schools, hospitals and charitable activities around the world.

Rene Brulhart, 41, is director of the Vatican’s Financial Intelligence Authority, charged with establishing procedures and checks to ensure Vatican institutions cannot be used for money laundering or the financing of terrorism. He also investigates suspicious transactions and works internationally with other government financial-intelligence units to fight financial crime.

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IOR continues the process of closing down lay clients’ bank accounts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The IOR is closing down all accounts belonging to account holders who do not fit one of five categories of people and institutions which the Vatican bank is allowed to have as clients

VATICAN INSIDER STAFF
ROME

The Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR) is continuing the process of closing down the accounts of lay account holders, who do not fit into any of the five categories of clients the Vatican bank is legally allowed to have. The process, which began last July, is proceeding as scheduled and has not yet concluded. This is partly because not all of the letters sent to clients who are no longer allowed to have any relationship with the IOR (over a thousand of them) specify the same deadline for the closure of each respective bank account, ANSA reports.

“In July 2013, the IOR updated its policy in relation to the categories of clients which the Vatican bank can offer its services to. These categories are: Catholic institutions, clergy, employees or former employees of the Vatican with salary and pension accounts, embassies and diplomats accredited to the Holy See,” an IOR spokesman told ANSA. This was a joint decision of the IOR’s supervisory board and the Commission of Cardinals and was published on the IOR website on 31 July. “Relations with clients that do not fit one of these categories, will cease,” the IOR informed.

The account closing down process “must not be confused with the interruption or suspension of relations with clients suspected of violating the anti-money laundering laws in place. This responsibility lies with the Vatican authorities that have been tasked with enforcing the law and supervision.”

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FRANCIS UPDATES:John Allen and Vatican Pied Pipers toot Francis-mania…while Hans Kung points out “the Pope and his ‘double’” shadow pope Ratzinger!

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

Time’s Person of the Year Pope Francis. John C. Nienstedt suggests St. Josephine and Eucharist to solve clergy abuse. Baloney, David Quinn! (Again)

Pope Francis the miser of dark secrets vs. Edward Snowden the herald of truths

Francis lives in the Vatican Palace surrounded by PR media stunts army vs. Snowden living in asylum at the kindness of an atheist country Russia

The sharp contrast between Time’s Person of the Year, Pope Francis, and its runner-up, Edward Snowden, are morally apart: Pope Francis perpetuates Vatican secrecy and its cover-up of thousands of bestial pedophile priests in all Catholic churches worldwide…while Edward Snowden reveals the NSA’s Top Secret files about all Americans and all peoples and all nations worldwide.

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Donohue goes too far … and he’s DEAD WRONG

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on December 18, 2013

I try to steer clear of commenting on the actions of William Donohue, the president of the Catholic League. I would tell you why, but that’s another post in itself.

Bill, you screwed up.

But I can’t stay silent on this: Today, Donohue issued a press release called St. Paul & Minneapolis Archbishop Nienstedt Deserves Justice. I have no disagreement with the title: everyone deserves justice. But the press release goes on to call for vigilante justice against a boy who disclosed alleged abuse to an employee of the largest Minnesota Archdiocese. And that’s a HUGE problem.

He says in the release:

The Catholic League is asking those who were there to share with us any information they have. Specifically, we are interested in obtaining a tape recording, or set of photos, of any Confirmation ceremony in 2009 where Archbishop Nienstedt was present; presumably, the alleged victim was standing next to the archbishop. Also, we are asking anyone who knows anything about the accuser (someone knows who he is) to come forward.

Let’s talk about the problems with his argument.

There is the obvious: he is trying to bully an alleged sex abuse survivor. Not only that, but he is drawing a line in the sand, saying that he is going to go after anyone PERSONALLY who comes forward to disclose abuse. I don’t have words to describe my rage and disgust at his actions.

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Pope Francis and Archbishop Nienstedt

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

If the child abuse scandal is Pope Francis’ Achilles Heel, then Archbishop Niensted’s Minneapolis/St. Paul Archdiocese is the pressure point. Nine months have passed since Francis became Pope. He has not yet directly and convincingly either condemned this abuse and the clerics who enable it or offered a proposed solution to curtailing it.

Moreover, has Pope Francis ever really publicly criticized any bishop over child abuse, in Rome or when he was in Argentina? Indeed, as recently reported, the first compensation payments to Argentine priest abuse survivors were just made recently to victims of a priest convicted almost a decade ago, while Francis was the senior local Church leader, see:

[GobalPost]

Even Francis’ recent appointment as a US bishop of a cleric, who reportedly admitted under oath to destroying approximately 50 suspected abuser priests’ files, suggests that Francis may underestimate the seriousness of the abuse crisis.

[SNAP]

The rapidity with which Archbishop Nienstedt stepped aside after a single allegation of improper touching is surprising.

See:

[Minnesota Public Radio]

This is especially surprising, since Kansas City’s Bishop Finn has continued to serve as bishop even after a criminal conviction relating to his failure to report timely a priest child pornographer.

Of course, Archbishop Nienstedt has also been a key leader of the anti-gay marriage crusade. As the US bishops gear up again to make this a key political “wedge issue” in their new efforts to help conservatives try to gain control of the US Senate in 10 months (and thereby help maintain a conservative US Supreme Court majority), Archbishop Nienstedt’s absence may be desirable for the hierarchy’s political purposes as well.

Archbishop Nienstedt’s sudden withdrawal surely suggests that more troubling revelations about other Minneapolis scandals could soon be coming. Depending on the police investigation results, this could possibly even include the establishment of a grand jury and even potential indictments.

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St. Paul Police, Archdiocese of St. Paul and Mpls. Meet; Details Not Public Yet

MINNESOTA
KSTP

St. Paul police say some questions have been answered and they set plans for more discussions during a meeting with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis Wednesday.

The meeting comes after St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith said Tuesday archdiocesan officials have not been very cooperative on priest sex abuse cases. He urged the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to be more forthcoming with information on previous allegations of sex abuse.

Two clergy and attorneys were in attendance for the archdiocese at Wednesday’s meeting. No details will be made public, according to a Tweet from St. Paul police.

In a news conference Tuesday Smith, “I want to let the public know one thing: let me be very clear on this. We have through written and verbal requests made clear our desire to speak to individuals connected to the archdiocese and we have been told no.”

Smith says police have not had the access to interview clergy members in recent investigations into the previous allegations. As late as last week, Smith said they were told no.

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Newly appointed bishop destroyed sex abuse records

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

The Green Bay-area priest tapped Tuesday by Pope Francis to lead the Diocese of Marquette, Mich., testified in a 2011 deposition that he destroyed documents relating to priests accused of sexual abuse.

Father John Doefler, 49, an Appleton native and vicar general of the Diocese of Green Bay, will be installed as the bishop of Marquette early next year. In announcing his appointment Tuesday, Green Bay Bishop David Ricken said, “I could not be more delighted.” Ricken said Doerfler “has excelled in his service to this dioceses…and has been a trusted adviser on moral and canonical issues.”

But the advocacy group, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, blasted Doerfler’s selection, saying he destroyed what may have been criminal evidence, including psychological reports of priests accused of sexually assaulting minors.

“We find this decision really perplexing,” said SNAP Midwest Director Peter Isely of Milwaukee. “Doerfler destroyed virtually all of the abuse records in Green Bay.”

Doerfler, who is a part-time lecturer in moral theology at Sacred Heart School of Theology in Franklin, testified in a lawsuit involving convicted pedophile John Patrick Feeney that he destroyed the records as part of a record retention policy put in place by then-Bishop David Zubik. He said psychological reports, except those involving current claims, were destroyed to comply with federal privacy laws.

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Mainers react to new bishop, who played key role in Vatican efforts to clean up sex abuse problems<

MAINE
Bangor Daily News

By Seth Koenig, BDN Staff
Posted Dec. 18, 2013

PORTLAND, Maine — The newly appointed bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland is credited with playing a key role as the Vatican purged priests accused of sexual abuse, and then as the Archdiocese of Boston took the step of identifying abusive priests openly on its website.

Both were considered significant moves in the effort to overcome sex abuse scandals that came to light over the last decade and a half and tarnished the Catholic Church’s reputation.

Now, as Catholics and others in the state react to Wednesday’s announcement of new Diocese of Portland Bishop Robert Deeley’s appointment, some of the strongest statements come from Maine clergy abuse victims and their supporters, who hope Deeley will continue his reconciliation work locally.

In 2011, after seven years away, Deeley rejoined the Archdiocese of Boston and served as one of the top aides to Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who that year opened the vault on the archdiocese’s sex abuse cases by posting a database of priests who had been accused, as well as what became of them.

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Diocese bankruptcy: More abuse victims, church property listed

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Dec. 18, 2013

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE — The Diocese of Gallup filed for Chapter 11 reorganization just over a month ago, but already a number of significant events have taken place.

The following is a summary of some of the case’s more important developments and issues:

Higher abuse numbers

During the first court hearing Nov. 15, the diocese’s lead bankruptcy attorney Susan Boswell said the Gallup Diocese was aware of 105 men and women who were alleged victims of clergy sex abuse in the diocese. In less than two weeks, Bishop James S. Wall submitted a document to the court revising that number upward to 121. In an upcoming court hearing Thursday, that figure may once again rise.

Creditors committee formed

Seven individuals were selected to serve as members of the unsecured creditors committee Tuesday. Because they are all believed to be victims of clergy sex abuse, their names are not being published without their consent. One member, Criss Candelaria, was contacted Tuesday and consented to being publicly identified. An attorney in private practice in Pinetop, Ariz., Candelaria is a former Apache County Attorney and a longtime Arizona prosecutor. He has previously spoken out about being targeted for sexual abuse as a child by the Rev. James M. Burns. Along with Candelaria, the committee is made up of five men, four of whom are Hispanic, and two women. It is believed at least one committee member is Navajo.

Steep fees

In an attempt to keep administrative expenses and professional fees “as low as reasonably possible,” the Office of the U.S. Trustee, a Department of Justice program that monitors bankruptcy cases, has submitted “limited objections” to the applications authorizing the employment of three law firms and one accounting firm to represent the Gallup Diocese. Those firms, however, are already collecting steep fees. The diocese paid Quarles & Brady LLP $200,000 on Nov. 8, it paid Walker & Associates, P.C. more than $22,000 on Oct. 29, and it paid Keegan, Linscott & Kenon, P.C. $75,000 on Nov. 8. Lead attorney Boswell is billing the diocese $375 per hour for the first 125 hours of representation. After 125 hours, her fee will increase to $495 per hour.

Separate or subsidized

The Chapter 11 reorganization only involves the Diocese of Gallup’s chancery office, which includes Gallup’s Sacred Heart Retreat Center, and Gallup Catholic School, aka Sacred Heart Catholic School. In early bankruptcy documents, the Gallup bishop presented a picture of parish priests not being employees of the diocese and parish churches along with their assets as being separate from the diocese. Catholic schools in the diocese were also presented as being separate from the diocese. However, Wall’s more recent financial statement lists 11 parishes receiving salary subsidies from the diocese, two parishes receiving financial assistance from the diocese, and five parishes that are owed priest subsidy payments. In addition, Chancery officials advertise and approve the hiring of school principals and those principals answer to a diocesan education superintendent.

Trust property

According to the Gallup Diocese, much of its real estate is “trust property” in which the diocese “holds mere legal title” but which is actually owned and controlled by parishes. Some parishes only have one piece of property the land the church occupies, while others have as many as ten pieces of property. St. John the Baptist Parish, located in St. Johns, Ariz., owns the G-Bar Ranch, which was the subject of a civil lawsuit in recent years, and Gallup’s Sacred Heart Parish which is the bishop’s cathedral is listed as owning commercial property where one of Gallup’s Lowes grocery stores is located.

Real property

The Gallup Diocese lists 85 pieces of property across Arizona and New Mexico as “real property,” which is defined as “any property in which the debtor holds rights and powers exercisable for the debtor’s own benefit.” The list includes vacant land, houses and mobile homes, office and school buildings, cemeteries, and subdivision property. Some is located outside the diocese, as in the city of Rio Rancho. All the property is listed as having an “unknown” value. Based on documents provided by the diocese, it is unclear of the listing for the bishop’s home, his nearby “Cure of Ars House of Discernment,” and his private chapel, which he renovated and decorated with artist Arlene Sena’s Spanish colonial-styled paintings.

Third party liability

In its financial documents, the diocese states it “may have claims against certain third parties who are or have been co-defendants in certain litigation alleging abuse claims against the Diocese of Gallup or who have not been named in such suits but may still be liable to the Diocese of Gallup …” Regarding allegations against diocesan priests who came from other dioceses or members of religious orders who are credibly accused of sexual abuse in the Gallup Diocese, their home diocese or religious order may be financially drawn into the bankruptcy case.

Multiple creditors

A list of creditors holding secured claims shows diocesan officials owe nearly $113,000 to Pinnacle Bank for a $200,000 promissory note signed in June 2011, and another list of creditors holding unsecured nonpriority claims shows diocesan officials owe the Archdiocese of Santa Fe for a $29,000 loan and the Diocese of Phoenix for a $200,000 loan. The Gallup Diocese also owes more than $15,000 to Saint Luke Institute in Maryland and $35,000 to the Guest House in Michigan both mental health treatment facilities for Catholic clergy. Among its many debts, the diocese continues to owe unpaid legal fees to law firms in Los Angeles, Phoenix and Gallup, and even owes $6,600 to its own fundraising organization, the Catholic Peoples Foundation.

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Catholic League Seeks To ID The Archbishop’s Alleged Victim

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – With St. Paul police investigating Archbishop John Nienstedt, who’s accused of inappropriately touching a boy’s behind, the Catholic League wants to independently identify his accuser.

It’s the first time the religious and civil rights organization has sought to identify an alleged victim, asking Twin Cities-area Catholics for any videotapes or photos from the 2009 event, where it’s alleged Nienstedt touched the boy’s buttocks after a confirmation ceremony.

“Somebody knows who this character is who is making these accusations — I can’t wait to get to the bottom of this,” said Catholic League President Bill Donahue. “Nienstedt has been the subject of a non-stop crusade orchestrated by enemies of the Catholic Church. The time has come when people need to fight back.”

Donahue also took aim at St. Paul police investigators, accusing them of pursuing an agenda while investigating clergy members and archdiocesan leadership.

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Maplewood priest accused of sex misconduct appears in court

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 12/18/2013

A Maplewood priest appeared in court for the first time Wednesday on a charge of criminal sexual conduct involving a woman in his parish.

Wearing a black suit and a clerical collar, the Rev. Mark Huberty waived his right to have an omnibus hearing within 30 days. That hearing, in which the judge will determine if there’s probable cause to try him, was scheduled for Jan. 28.

Huberty, 43, has not been held in custody. He is released on his own recognizance.

Therese Galatowitsch, a special assistant Ramsey County attorney prosecuting Huberty, said the state will have “voluminous discovery” in the case. It will share that with the defense, as required, she said.

Huberty is on leave from his position as pastor of Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary at 1695 Kennard St.

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Bishop-to-be of Marquette, Mich., destroyed sex abuse records in 2011

MICHIGAN
UPI

MARQUETTE, Mich., Dec. 18 (UPI) — The newly appointed bishop of Marquette, Mich., destroyed documents relating to priests accused of sexual abuse in 2011, a victims’ advocacy group said.
The Rev. John Doefler, 49, vicar general of the Green Bay, Wis., diocese, is set to be installed as Marquette bishop early next year, after he was named to the position Tuesday by Pope Francis.

The advocacy group Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests was critical of the appointment, saying he destroyed what may have been criminal evidence, including psychological reports of priests accused of sexually assaulting minors.

“We find this decision really perplexing,” said the organization’s Midwest Director, Peter Isely. “Doefler destroyed virtually all of the abuse records in Green Bay.”

Doefler testified, in a 2011 deposition in a lawsuit involving convicted pedophile John Patrick Feeney, that he destroyed the material as part of a record retention policy already in place, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.

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Archdiocese, St. Paul police in closed-door meeting

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
St. Paul police were meeting with lawyers for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on Wednesday, but the meeting was not open the public or members of the media.

Archbishop John Nienstedt has voluntarily stepped aside from all public ministry during the investigation of an allegation that he inappropriately touched a boy on the buttocks during a 2009 confirmation ceremony.

Nienstedt called the allegation “absolutely and entirely false,”and the archdiocese said they “stand ready to cooperate fully with the St. Paul police.”

But during a Tuesday press conference, St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith aired his frustrations with claims made by the archdiocese that church officials have been fully cooperative.

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Choi: No grand jury in archdiocese probe

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

[with audio]

Ramsey County Attorney John Choi reaffirmed his determination Wednesday not to convene a grand jury while police are still investigating allegations of child abuse in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

“I have to make some tough calls, and I believe in a certain way to get to a conclusion,” he said on The Daily Circuit. “An investigative grand jury at this moment, when there’s an active police investigation going on, would be really inappropriate and an abuse of my power.

“Let’s let the police investigation come to some completion, and then they can present information to us, and we can make appropriate decisions based upon that.”

Choi praised St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith for going public Tuesday with his complaints about the archdiocese’s lack of cooperation in the police probe. Smith said his investigators had been denied access to people they want to interview, except through their lawyers.

Choi said he hoped Smith’s press conference would produce results.

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No grand jury for archdiocese … yet

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

Not yet, anyway. MPR says: “Ramsey County Attorney John Choi reaffirmed his determination Wednesday not to convene a grand jury while police are still investigating allegations of child abuse in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. ‘I have to make some tough calls, and I believe in a certain way to get to a conclusion,’ he said on The Daily Circuit. ‘An investigative grand jury at this moment, when there’s an active police investigation going on, would be really inappropriate and an abuse of my power. Let’s let the police investigation come to some completion, and then they can present information to us, and we can make appropriate decisions based upon that.’ ”

An editorial in the Marshall Independent goes fairly easy on the archbishop: “We credit Archbishop John Nienstedt for his frankness when commenting publically Sunday on the allegations of sexual abuse by priests in Minnesota, but we’re not surprised if what he said fell on a lot of deaf ears across the state. … Nienstedt didn’t make excuses, apologized for overlooking the issue and admitted he should have investigated it ‘a lot more than I did.’ We respect his candor and willingness to take responsibility, but that won’t wipe his slate clean. And saying he was ‘surprised as anyone else,’ surely didn’t help his cause, or the church’s. In a position of such great leadership, Nienstedt should’ve done his due diligence, regardless of what he was told. Had he, perhaps those blinders wouldn’t have been put on and he wouldn’t have been so ‘surprised.’ This issue is just too damaging, too sensitive and personal, for him to have assumed anything.”

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With Nienstedt inquiry, archdiocese now likely ‘has the Vatican’s attention’

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

With the announcement Tuesday that Archbishop John Nienstedt is stepping down while police investigate allegations that he touched a young man inappropriately, the sex-abuse scandal sweeping through the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis ratcheted to a new level, according to abuse survivors’ advocates and prosecutors.

Even as observers speculated whether Nienstedt would retain enough credibility to return to ministry if cleared of allegations he touched a boy during a public photo shoot, St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith blasted the archdiocese for failing to cooperate with its efforts to investigate other abuse allegations.

Smith shared a Dec. 4 letter to Nienstedt in which the chief complained that church leaders had repeatedly tried to speak to the church official responsible for investigating sex-abuse allegations. Without more information, police would have a hard time obtaining search warrants, the chief said.

Police refused to address the allegations against Nienstedt himself, though, saying only that adequate resources had been assigned to investigating the pending cases. Even the Archbishop’s most vocal critics cautioned that there’s nowhere near enough evidence to speculate about the claim. ,,,

‘They’re usually treated as different or special’

“Sometimes they hunker down, sometimes they resign,” said Terry McKiernan, president of Bishop-accountability.org, a watchdog group that has tracked the allegations for years. “But to treat them as a priest — that usually doesn’t happen. They’re usually treated as different or special.”

Complaints lodged against the vast majority of the bishops whose cases are cataloged by the group have not been conclusively resolved. In many, an internal church investigation failed to substantiate the claims, which are virtually always denied.

Two other things stand out as unusual for McKiernan. For starters, if the Vatican was not tracking the Twin Cities scandal before now — entirely possible given that there are some 4,000 bishops around the world — the new allegation is almost certainly under discussion in Rome, he said.

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Rabbi Motti Elon Gets Slap on Wrist for Sex Abuse

ISRAEL
Jewish Daily Forward

JERUSALEM — Rabbi Mordechai “Motti” Elon, an Israeli Modern Orthodox leader, was sentenced to six months of community service for his conviction on two charges of sexually assaulting a minor.

Elon was sentenced Wednesday in Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court for incidents that took place in 2003 and 2005. The student had come to Elon, the former rosh yeshiva of Yeshivat HaKotel in Jerusalem, for advice.

He was also sentenced to 15 months probation and must pay nearly $3,000 in compensation to the victim.

“I welcome my sentencing of community service – I’ve been doing such work for 40 years, and will be happy to continue till I’m 120 years old,” Elon said following the sentence.

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ARCHBISHOP NIENSTEDT DESERVES JUSTICE

MINNESOTA
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the decision by Saint Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop John C. Nienstedt to temporarily step down:

Archbishop Nienstedt has been the subject of a non-stop crusade orchestrated by ex-Catholics, and Catholics in rebellion against the Church, simply because he stands for everything they are not: he is a loyal son of the Catholic Church.

Now—out of the blue—comes an unidentified male who claims he was touched on his buttocks in 2009 by the archbishop while posing for a group photo. Nienstedt denies the charge, adding that he has never inappropriately touched anyone. Moreover, he has not been told the identity of his accuser.

The Catholic League is asking those who were there to share with us any information they have. Specifically, we are interested in obtaining a tape recording, or set of photos, of any Confirmation ceremony in 2009 where Archbishop Nienstedt was present; presumably, the alleged victim was standing next to the archbishop. Also, we are asking anyone who knows anything about the accuser (someone knows who he is) to come forward. Please email us at pr@catholicleague.org.

I know of no other leader, religious or secular, who would step down pending an investigation because some guy says he was touched on his behind four years ago in a group photo. It’s time the bishops revised their “zero tolerance” policy. Too often, it means zero justice for the accused, thus undermining the legal principle of innocent until proven guilty.

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Archbishop Steps Down

MINNESOTA
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

Kristine Ward

The early reports out of Minneapolis-St. Paul regarding the accusation against Archbishop John Nienstedt and his stepping aside carry two items we call to our readers’ attention.

From the official statement of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis:

The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis today announced that an allegation has been brought by a mandated reporter within the Church to the St. Paul Police of inappropriate touching of a minor male on the buttocks by Archbishop John Nienstedt. The single incident is alleged to have occurred in 2009 during a group photography session with the archbishop following a confirmation ceremony. Archbishop Nienstedt emphatically denies the allegation. Upon learning of the allegation last week, the archdiocese instructed the mandated reporter to make the matter known to the police. The archbishop and the archdiocese stand ready to cooperate fully with the St. Paul Police.

You read correctly — the “Archdiocese instructed the mandated reporter to make the matter known to police.”

This will be praised in many circles.

But it is clearly an indication that the understanding of what a mandatory reporter is is not understood. The mandatory reporter reported to the archdiocese and then to the police.

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ME – New Maine Catholic bishop is named; SNAP responds

MAINE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2013

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

The elevation of Boston’s Bishop Robert Deeley to head Maine’s Catholic archdiocese is yet another in a string of disappointing promotions made in recent months. (Others include new Hartford Bishop Leonard Blair, El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz, Bridgeport Bishop Frank Caggiano and Dubuque Archbishop Michael Jackels.)

Deeley admits working closely with then-Cardinal Josef Ratzinger at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which oversees – and hides – clergy sex crimes from across the globe. We suspect Deeley knows of hundreds of credibly accused child molesting Catholic clerics and we doubt if he’s reported even one to law enforcement.

He was also a high ranking official in the Boston archdiocese which enjoys – unjustly, we feel – a reputation of being somewhat better than other dioceses regarding children’s safety. During Deeley’s time there, the archdiocese was found twice to be violating the US church abuse policy by refusing to provide sufficient abuse prevention training. This is a particularly egregious violation because the mandated abuse provision is one of the few worthwhile parts of the national policy.

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MN – SNAP to Catholics: “Don’t Donate until Fr. McDonough is defrocked”

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday December 18, 2013

Statement by Bob Schwiderski, SNAP Minnesota director ( 952 471 3422, skibrs@q.com )

Enough is enough. Catholic officials should start defrocking Fr. Kevin McDonough. And Catholic parishioners should donate elsewhere until this happens.

Fr. McDonough knows more about clergy sex crimes and cover ups than anyone else in the archdiocese. His name and fingerprints are on many church records about concealing known and suspected crimes.

But the final straw came late yesterday when St. Paul’s police chief named Fr. McDonough as one of the archdiocesan clerics who refuse to be questioned by police.

[KAAL]

[Pioneer Press]

By this decision, Fr. McDonough has lost any shred of or claim to any moral authority he may have once had.

And by tolerating this, Archbishop Nienstedt and Bishop Piche – and every other chancery office staffer – are also besmirching themselves and the church they purport to love.

It’s absurd for them to claim that they “cannot speak for Fr. McDonough and his choice not to speak with the police.”

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A tiny ray of hope, finally, from Pope Francis

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY DAVID CLOHESSY ON DECEMBER 18, 2013

Finally, finally, there’s a tiny, tiny ray of hope with this pope and the abuse/cover up crisis.

It’s not his signs of humility.

It’s not his compassionate words.

It’s not his touching gestures.

It’s his ever-so-slight snub of two dreadfully corrupt prelates – Cardinal Raymond Burke and Cardinal Justin Rigali.

Pope Francis hasn’t denounced, disciplined, demoted or defrocked either of them, though their incredibly irresponsible actions in dozens and dozens of predator priest cases certainly warrant such moves.

But the pontiff has declined to re-appoint them to the Congregation for Bishops, which helps select bishops throughout the world

That’s a tiny, tiny step in the right direction.

But the pope needs to punish – not just snub – those who are reckless in clergy sex cases, not just pompous in their own demeanor.

He needs to penalize those who are “outliers” in child protection, not “outliers” in clergy attire.

And he needs to do it publicly– so it may have a deterrent effect. That’s what’s long been missing – harsh, clear church-imposed consequences for those who put kids in harm’s way.

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Tom Corbett signs child-abuse laws inspired by Jerry Sandusky, priest cases

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By The Associated Press
on December 18, 2013

Pennsylvania has its first new laws in the state Legislature’s wide-ranging response to the Jerry Sandusky and Roman Catholic clergy scandals.

Gov. Tom Corbett made the bills official during a Wednesday signing ceremony at the Pennsylvania Child Resource Center outside Harrisburg.

Lawmakers have approved a half-dozen bills that update nearly 20-year-old state laws on how cases of suspected child abuse are defined, investigated and punished.

About 20 bills are part of the legislative package.

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St. Paul cops: Archdiocese not cooperating in investigations

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

You know the old adage about how if you find yourself in a hole, you should stop digging …? Following Tuesday’s news out of the archdiocese, Tom Scheck and Madeleine Baran at MPR write: “St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith said the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is not cooperating with an ongoing criminal investigation into clergy sexual abuse. … In a statement released after the news conference, archdiocese officials said they hope to better understand police requests for information at Wednesday’s meeting.”

The PiPress story, by Nick Woltman and Emily Gurnon, says: “A clearly frustrated St. Paul Police Chief Thomas Smith said Tuesday that investigators have not gotten cooperation from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on sexual abuse cases. ‘We have through written and verbal requests made clear our desire to speak to individuals connected with the archdiocese, and we’ve been told no,’ Smith told reporters at a news conference. At the same time, the archdiocese has made repeated statements that it is working to assist police on the abuse cases, Smith said. If that’s the case, ‘you need to have access to individuals that work within that institution,’ the chief said. … During Tuesday’s press briefing at police headquarters, Chief Smith named one archdiocesan official who had declined — through his attorney — to talk with police. That official is the Rev. Kevin McDonough, who served for years as vicar general, the archbishop’s top deputy, and was deeply involved in many of the archdiocese’s decisions about accused priests.”

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Cops Trying To Investigate Sex Abuse At St. Paul Archdiocese: ‘We Have Been Told No’

MINNESOTA
New Civil Rights Movement

by DAVID BADASH on DECEMBER 18, 2013

An accusation of inappropriate touching of a minor against one of America’s top Catholic Archbishops has opened the Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota Archdiocese to national attention, and it’s not looking good.

Yesterday, Archbishop John Nienstedt voluntarily stepped aside as he was accused of inappropriately touching the buttocks of a young boy in 2009. He denies the charges.

Now, the nation is learning that there are other sex abuse investigations taking place by police of Nienstedt’s archdiocese — and they are being stalled by an uncooperative church.

“I want to let the public know one thing: let me be very clear on this,” St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith told reporters yesterday. “We have through written and verbal requests made clear our desire to speak to individuals connected to the archdiocese and we have been told no.”

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The Tragedy in St. Paul

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Dec. 18, 2013 Distinctly Catholic

The meltdown in the Archdiocese of St. Paul is tragic in the strict, Shakespearean sense of the word. In a Shakespeare tragedy, either circumstances conspire to ruin the protagonists (think “Romeo and Juliet”), or the character flaws of the protagonist bring about his ruin (think “Julius Caesar”). In this case, both the circumstances and the character flaws are operative and profoundly tragic.

Let me start by saying that nothing I write today should be understood as lending credence to the charge that Archbishop Nienstedt touched a young man inappropriately on the buttocks. The charge smells fishy to me and, besides, all are presumed innocent until proven otherwise. Nonetheless, false or not, the charge exposes the deeper and more consequential reasons why Archbishop Nienstedt must resign.

The bishops of the United States, as a body, now lack the credibility on the issue of clergy sex abuse that they have tried for eleven years to fashion for themselves. The lack of accountability for bishops who violate their own rules, set forth in the Dallas Charter for the Protection of Children, has been so pronounced that the people in the pews are, sadly, prepared to believe the worst about a prelate who is accused of either engaging in inappropriate conduct or of covering up such conduct on the part of others. If Bishop Robert Finn has been sacked the day he pled guilty to the charge of criminal negligence, things might be different. If Bishops Bruskewitz and Vasa had been told that they must either comply with the annual audits of their child protection procedures or resign, things might be different. If Archbishop Myers had been told to resign, rather than to accept a coadjutor, things might be different. But, none of those if’s came to pass and we are where we are.

Earlier this month, the Vatican announced a commission to help address the issue of clergy sex abuse. At the press conference announcing the new commission, Cardinal Sean O’Malley was asked whether or not the new commission, or some other body, would be tasked with holding bishops accountable. He said that this needed to be done but that it was unclear, as yet, how and who would undertake that work. It is imperative that at the February meeting of the Council of Cardinals, followed by the meeting of the full consistory, a process and a procedure – preferably with due process and transparent procedures – be rolled out for assessing charges that a bishop has failed to follow the norms for handling sex abuse case and disciplining those bishops who are determined to have so failed.

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Abuse of Dominican boys ‘like a dagger through the Pope’s heart’

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- San Francisco (northeast) Diocese bishop Fausto Ramon Mejia revealed Tuesday that Pope Francis has said his heart feels “like it’s been crossed by a dagger” from the abuse to several Dominican minors by his ousted envoy Józef Wesolowski.

“I was in Rome around one month ago at a gathering of bishops and had a meeting with Pope Francis on the last day. He arrived very simply and spoke with all of us was one by one and after that when I talked with him, he had a clear smile, but when I told him that I was from the Dominican Republic, that smile turned to very serious and told me this phrase: I feel my heart as if it was crossed by a dagger from t he pain for what happened in the Dominican Republic,” the prelate said, quoted by elcaribe.com.do.

Mejia said the Pontiff discussed the issue with him at length and told him that the church’s work cannot be halted because of what the former Vatican’s envoy committed. ” I couldn’t remain standing after that and had to sit and the other bishops even asked me why Pope Francis spent more time with me than with all the others… “The Pope was moved and very strongly.”

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St. Paul Police Chief Says Minn. Archdiocese is Uncooperative

MINNESOTA
KAAL

[with video]

By: Megan Stewart

St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith said Tuesday archdiocesan officials have not been very cooperative on priest sex abuse cases. He urged the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul to be more forthcoming with information on previous allegations of sex abuse.

In a news conference he said, “I want to let the public know one thing: let me be very clear on this,” Smith said. “We have through written and verbal requests made clear our desire to speak to individuals connected to the archdiocese and we have been told no.”

Smith says police have not had the access to interview clergy members in recent investigations into the previous allegations. As late as last week, Smith said they were told no.

“In order for us to bring these cases to the next step in the process of concluding investigations and to bring them to closure, we again, now publicly, call upon those individuals to speak with us,” Smith said.

“That’s why we are here today.”

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Nienstedt speaks out

MINNESOTA
Marshall Independent

December 17, 2013

We credit Archbishop John Nienstedt for his frankness when commenting publically Sunday on the allegations of sexual abuse by priests in Minnesota, but we’re not surprised if what he said fell on a lot of deaf ears across the state.

During his public statement (he didn’t take questions), Nienstedt told media that upon his arrival he was told “this whole issue of clerical sex abuse had been taken care of” and that he didn’t have to worry about it. He believed it and moved on. Now he is paying the price before the judges in the court of public opinion.

Nienstedt didn’t make excuses, apologized for overlooking the issue and admitted he should have investigated it “a lot more than I did.” We respect his candor and willingness to take responsibility, but that won’t wipe his slate clean. And saying he was “surprised as anyone else,” surely didn’t help his cause, or the church’s. In a position of such great leadership, Nienstedt should’ve done his due diligence, regardless of what he was told. Had he, perhaps those blinders wouldn’t have been put on and he wouldn’t have been so “surprised.” This issue is just too damaging, too sensitive and personal, for him to have assumed anything.

Through this all, we need to remember that most of the allegations of sexual abuse against the priests listed happened decades ago, and while that doesn’t take away the sharp pain felt by victims and their families still trying to heal, parents of young children today, no matter how much their faith in the Catholic church is shaken, must continue to support their church and those who lead it.

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Tevlin: The Catholic Church’s long, weird week

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JON TEVLIN , Star Tribune

Patrick Marker has run a website dedicated to exposing abusive priests and offering a platform for victims for more than 10 years, so he’s used to getting mail.

Some e-mails are like the one he received Monday, in which a victim told him of being sexually abused by a brother at St. John’s University in 1960, but never getting a response after he reported the incident to the abbey.

But Marker was shocked to get an e-mail last week filled with obscenities.

“I hope you die in a car accident,” the e-mail said. “You are more of a victimizer than any of them. … Die a hundred deaths you worthless crap stain of a human being.”

Even more surprising, Marker was able to determine the note came from St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville, Minn., where he had been sexually abused as a youth. He finally determined the person who sent it and wrote to the man, suggesting the e-mail was threatening.

Brother Peter Sullivan, a member of the abbey’s Peace and Justice committee, wrote back: “I’m sorry for what I said. And I’m sorry for what happened to you. I just got really mad when someone told me I was on the website so I checked it out and there I was.”

It was that kind of week for the Catholic Church in Minnesota, from the St. John’s incident, to the archbishop’s odd news conference, to his announcement that he would step down temporarily because of an allegation he inappropriately touched a child, a claim he vigorously denies.

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Abuse royal commission: victim details years of abuse by ‘angry, cruel’ Marist Brothers

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Thomas Oriti

A man has detailed six years of abuse at the hands of three Marist Brothers while he was a child in northern Queensland, saying they had more control over him than his parents.

The man known only as DK has told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he was abused by the Marist Brothers as a boarder at Saint Augustine’s College in Cairns, between 1976 and 1981.

DK said when he was 11, a man known as Brother Leonidas watched him showering daily.

He said the brother removed curtains from the showers so the boys had no privacy.

DK said when he turned 12 in 1976, he injured his foot and went to the after-hours infirmary.

A Marist Brother, who has not been named, sexually abused the victim, leaving him “completely and utterly confused”.

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Marist Brothers healing program like being abused again, victim says

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN DECEMBER 18, 2013

A MAN who was sexually abused by three members of a Catholic religious order while at school says the experience of going through the church’s Towards Healing program for dealing with such claims was like being abused again.

The victim, who cannot be named, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, that he eventually received $80,000 in compensation from the Marist Brothers after “an aggressive and destructive” meeting in March 2010.

“The mediation that day made me feel quite dirty and filthy,” the victim told the commission.

“From 1976 to 1981, I was sexually abused; there was horrendous physical abuse and there was control by angry, cruel men who ruled my life.

“I put my trust back in them for Towards Healing and … I just felt the same angry, cruel men had done the same thing to me 35 years later. It’s the same abuse.”

After contacting the Marist Brothers as an adult, the victim, who was an 11-year-old schoolboy when the abuse began, said he was initially told “the abuse was a long time ago and I should just get over it”.

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Abuse victim says Towards Healing process was a sham

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

The Royal Commission into child sexual abuse has heard how a victim of sexual abuse felt scarred by the Catholic Church’s pastoral and redress scheme known as Towards Healing.

Transcript

MARK COLVIN: The Royal Commission into child sexual abuse has heard how a victim of sexual abuse felt enraged and scarred by the Catholic Church’s Towards Healing scheme.

The victim known as “DK” has recounted the abuse he suffered at the hands of three Marist Brothers at St Augustine’s in Cairns from 1976 to 1981.

The victim told the inquiry he believed senior Marist Brothers knew that he was being abused, condoned it and covered it up.

Emily Bourke reports.

EMILY BOURKE: The 49-year-old known as “DK” has detailed how three Marist Brothers abused him during his six years at Saint Augustine’s College in Cairns.

One of his abusers was Brother Ross Murrin, who was convicted in 2008 and 2010 for child sex offences committed at schools in Sydney.

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Royal Commission: ‘I was betrayed three times by Marist Brothers’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

December 18, 2013

Catherine Armitage
Senior Writer

The 49-year-old father of three spoke angrily, detailing his horrible experiences at the hands of the Marist Brothers.

He said he had put his faith in the Marist Brothers three times, but each time had been betrayed.

The first time was when he was a student at St Augustine’s College Cairns. He was abused by three different Marist brothers from when he was 11 in 1976. He was made to shower naked in front of Brother Leonidas. A brother who was supposed to be tending to his injured foot made him take his pants off and tried to masturbate him.

In 1981, Brother Ross Francis Murrin “put his hand down my pants, fondled my genitals and tried to kiss me”. This hurt the most because he had turned to Brother Murrin “in my time of need and fear” and thought they were good friends.

The witness known as DK told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he believes other brothers at the school and its principal Brother Gerald Burns knew of the abuse and condoned it.

“After the abuse by Brother Murrin, I received a number of floggings and was treated differently by the brothers. I remember being excluded from events and feeling like they were trying to get me to leave the school”, he testified. His grades suffered.

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Pope names new bishop for Maine Catholics

MAINE
Sun Journal

Judy Harrison, Bangor Daily News
Maine | Wednesday, December 18, 2013

PORTLAND — An auxiliary bishop in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston has been named by Pope Francis to lead Maine’s Catholics, according to a press release issued early Wednesday morning.

Bishop Robert Peter Deeley, 67, was ordained a priest in July 1973, and consecrated a bishop in January.

“As I prepare to serve the faithful of the Diocese of Portland as their new bishop and shepherd, I wish to offer my gratitude first to our Holy Father Pope Francis for entrusting me with this honor and responsibility and to Cardinal Seán O’Malley, who has taught me much of what it means to be a faithful shepherd through his word and example,” Deeley said in a statement released by the diocese early Wednesday.

“Kindly pray for me and for all God’s holy people that we may be what the Lord calls us to be, the community of the Church showing forth the love that God has shown us in his Son, Jesus,” he said.

Deeley will hold a press conference at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Chancery.

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Police say Catholic officials are NOT cooperating – SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Dec. 17

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

According to the Pioneer Press, “St. Paul police Chief Thomas Smith said Tuesday that investigators have not gotten cooperation from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on sexual abuse cases.”

[Pioneer Press]

This is, in our view, the most serious and damning disclosure yet in the Twin Cities Catholic crisis – that even now, even to law enforcement, Catholic officials say one thing and do another, and that even now, Catholic officials refuse to do the absolute bare minimum – responding to questions from the police.

We’re deeply saddened but not the least bit surprised by this. For decades, and even now, Catholic officials make and break promises – to parents, parishioners, police and prosecutors. They will say almost anything to gain a short term public relations advantage, knowing that when they later break their pledges, there are rarely any repercussions.

It’s easy for Catholic officials to banter around words like “cooperation.” But it’s apparently very hard for them to break decades-old patterns of self-serving secrecy.

It takes a stunning degree of arrogance and callousness to rebuff police inquiries about known and likely child molesters. How corrupt must these Catholic bishops and priests be – that they would refuse direct questioning by police?

This revelation should be the most severe “wake up call” yet to Minnesota law enforcement officials – it’s time for a full-court press to expose the truth and pursue the wrongdoers in the church, including both those who commit and those who conceal child sex crimes.

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A Failed Bishopric: The Servants Strike Back?

MINNESOTA
Nick Coleman: The State I’m IN

Posted by Nick Coleman on Dec 16, 2013 in Catholics, Featured | 14 comments

Update: With comic good timing, the Archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis has now been accused of playing patty fingers with the Holy Water…only it’s nothing that amusing. Instead, the Saint Paul police have opened an investigation into an allegation that John Nienstedt fingered a boy inappropriately (there are not really many ways to finger a kid appropriately) at a Confirmation ceremony in 2009.

Ish, Bish.

Really, there is no way of knowing at this point whether the charge is true, and I will put my trust in the cops to sort it out. But this is exactly the kind of thing that happens when a House of Cards is collapsing: Fingers start pointing in the darnedest directions. Whether the charge has merit, it clearly indicates disarray and skullduggery in the Bishop’s Bunker, otherwise known as The Chancery, across Summit Avenue from the great Cathedral of Saint Paul. Just Sunday, Nienstedt seemed to try to throw blame on his staff for the growing scandal in his administration. Now the staff may have struck back: It seems likely the charge that Nienstedt was careless with his Bishop’s staff may have come from his other staff, the folks who may not like the prospect of being thrown under the bus by an imperious and tone-deaf prince of the Church who has made a complete cock-up of things.

Here’s a column I wrote for a defunct newspaper in 2007 about the in-coming Archbishop’s hard-line attitude towards gays and his convicting them of mortal sin… Is that the Pot calling the Kettle black?

Stay tuned.

More later. Meanwhile, here is the post I published yesterday: The dude in the Top Hat has to go; now more than ever.

That derisive laughter you heard Sunday was the response of many Twin Cities Catholics to Archbishop John Nienstedt’s pre-Christmas “apology” for letting down his flock — again. As reported by local media with a straight face, Nienstedt’s humbug homily was supposed to be taken as an effort to come clean by a guy who seems to have missed the past 30-year history of efforts to rein in sexual abuse in the Church. Nienstedt’s words weren’t an apology; they were just another cover up. This time, it was his own back end he was trying to cover.

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Pope Francis Appoints the Most Reverend Robert P. Deeley, J.C.D., as the 12th Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland

PORTLAND (ME)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland

Pope Francis has appointed the Most Rev. Robert P. Deeley, J.C.D., Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston, as the 12th Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland.

The Holy Father’s appointment was announced on Wednesday, December 18, at 6 a.m. EST at the Vatican. The date of Bishop Deeley’s Installation Mass will be Friday, February 14, 2014, at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Portland.

“As I prepare to serve the faithful of the Diocese of Portland as their new bishop and shepherd, I wish to offer my gratitude first to our Holy Father Pope Francis for entrusting me with this honor and responsibility and to Cardinal Seán O’Malley, who has taught me much of what it means to be a faithful shepherd through his word and example,” said Bishop Deeley in a statement. “Kindly pray for me and for all God’s holy people that we may be what the Lord calls us to be, the community of the Church showing forth the love that God has shown us in his Son, Jesus.”

The Most Rev. Robert P. Deeley, 67, was ordained Auxiliary Bishop of Boston on January 4, 2013, at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston. He has served as Vicar General and Moderator of the Curia of the Archdiocese of Boston since September 1, 2011.

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NOMINA DEL VESCOVO DI PORTLAND (U.S.A.)

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Bolletino

Il Santo Padre Francesco ha nominato Vescovo di Portland (U.S.A.) S.E. Mons. Robert Peter Deeley, finora Vescovo titolare di Kearney ed Ausiliare dell’arcidiocesi di Boston (U.S.A.).

S.E. Mons. Robert Peter Deeley

S.E. Mons. Robert Peter Deeley è nato il 18 giugno 1946 a Cambridge (Massachusetts), situata nell’arcidiocesi di Boston. Dopo aver ottenuto il Baccalaureato in Filosofia presso la “Catholic University of America” a Washington, D.C. (1969), ha frequentato il Pontificio Collegio Americano del Nord (1969-1973), ottenendo il Baccalaureato in Teologia presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana. In seguito ha conseguito la Licenza (1981-1983) e il Dottorato (1983-1985) in Diritto Canonico presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana.

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Cardinal Burke dropped from key Vatican agency

UNITED STATES
John Thavis

Pope Francis’ plan to reform the Roman Curia is primarily a two-pronged approach: changing the bureaucratic structures and changing the members of Vatican agencies.

Today we saw yet another sign that the new pope wants people in synch with his more pastoral vision of the church, and in particular with his views on what makes a good bishop.

U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke has been dropped from the Congregation for Bishops, an office that wields tremendous influence in shaping the world’s hierarchy. Burke has been a kind of folk hero to conservative Catholics, in particular for his statements criticizing Catholic politicians who support legal abortion. Moreover, he has said that bishops who refuse to withhold Communion from such politicians are weakening the faith.

It was significant that the new American named today to the Congregation for Bishops, Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, has publicly defended his decision not to deny Communion in such situations.

The change means that Cardinal Burke will no longer be among the approximately 30 members of the congregation who oversee the vetting process for bishops’ nominations.

Just last week, Cardinal Burke appeared to take issue with Pope Francis’ low-key approach on some topics. The pope said earlier this year that the church cannot keep hammering only a few issues, including abortion and gay marriage. Asked about this by the Catholic network EWTN, Burke expressed some perplexity at the pope’s comments and said the church “can never talk enough” about abortion and marriage; he said abortion today is “literally a massacre of the unborn.”

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Victims of notorious residential school in court to access police documents

CANADA
Toronto Star

[with video]

By: Joel Eastwood Staff Reporter, Published on Tue Dec 17 2013

Former students of the notorious St. Anne’s residential school will be in a Toronto court this morning fighting for access to police and court documents which could support their abuse claims.

Hundreds of children were boarded at the former Catholic residential school in northern Ontario between 1904 and 1976.

The aging survivors, who allege physical and sexual abuse, want access to the documents, which were produced during a five-year OPP investigation into former workers and supervisors at the school. That investigation concluded in 1999 with several criminal trials and convictions.

Edmund Metatawabin, 66, who was at St. Anne’s for eight years, remembers staff putting children in a homemade electric chair for entertainment.

“They used to come to the boys room and put us little ones in the electric chair and turn the current on,” he said outside court Tuesday.

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St. Anne’s Residential School survivor wants justice from Ottawa

CANADA
CBC News

By Karina Roman, CBC News Posted: Dec 18, 2013

Former students of St. Anne’s Residential School in Fort Albany, Ont., say their dispute with the federal government over disclosure of documents shows true reconciliation is a long way off.

Edmund Metatawabin, 66, is one of several survivors pushing for the government to release documents they say would corroborate their claims of abuse.

His own story is like so many others, but also unique. He is a success story in Fort Albany.

But when he was seven, he had no idea what was in store for him.

In 1956, succumbing to pressure from Catholic priests, Metatawabin’s father dropped him off at St. Anne’s. He was the first of 10 siblings to attend the school.

He went in with his father and was sent to the bathroom while his father talked with the nun. And then he heard a door close.

“I looked out the little window and saw my dad walking by, head down, looking really sad,” said Metatawabin in an interview with CBC News. “I hear, ‘Come out of there, that’s enough, your daddy’s not here to protect you no more!’ As soon as I opened the door, she grabbed my shoulder, gave me a vicious slap across the face from behind. And I hit the wall on the other side.”

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Ottawa thwarting access to records in residential-schools case, court told

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

COLIN PERKEL
TORONTO — The Canadian Press
Published Tuesday, Dec. 17 2013

Survivors of a notorious residential school in Northern Ontario were in court Tuesday fighting the federal government for access to thousands of documents they say are crucial to their compensation claims.

The survivors accuse Ottawa of hampering their bid for financial redress by hiding documentary evidence related to a provincial police investigation into St. Anne’s Indian Residential School in Fort Albany.

“The St. Anne’s school is probably one of the most outrageous examples of the abuse of school children in Canadian history,” said commission lawyer Julian Falconer.

“The truth has to be told.”

The federal government has maintained it has no authority to turn over the police materials.

However, a lawyer for the Ontario Provincial Police told Ontario Superior Court he had no issue turning over the records – if authorized by the courts.

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Police chief says Minn. archdiocese uncooperative

MINNESOTA
Seattle PI

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — St. Paul Police Chief Thomas Smith says the Twin Cities archdiocese is not fully cooperating with investigations into alleged clerical sex abuse.

At a news conference Tuesday, Smith said the archdiocese has declined to make clergy available to investigators.

He did not provide details about an allegation against St. Paul-Minneapolis Archbishop John Nienstedt (NYNE’-sted). Nienstedt announced Tuesday that he’s stepping down from public ministry while police investigate an allegation that he improperly touched a boy during a public photo session four years ago, an accusation he strongly denies.

In a statement, the archdiocese repeated that it “seeks to cooperate with the police and all civil authorities.”

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Investigan a sacerdote de Carahue…

CHILE
Bio Bio

Investigan a sacerdote de Carahue por presunto abuso sexual y almacenamiento de pornografía infantil

[Summary: Carahue priest Carolos Ignes Olguin is being investigating by prosecutors for alleged sexual abuse of a 17-year-old and storage of child pornography.]

Un sacerdote de Carahue esta siendo investigado por un presunto delito de abuso sexual en contra de una adolescente de 17 años, además de almacenamiento de material pornográfico infantil.

El fiscal del Ministerio Público, Omar Mérida precisó que un profesor denunció que una de sus alumnas estaba sosteniendo una conversación por internet donde era invitada a mantener relaciones sexuales con un hombre, a quien identificó como uno de los sacerdotes que ejerce en la Parroquia de Carahue.

El sacerdote, Carlos Ignes Olguín de la Parroquia San Pablo de Carahue, fue citado al cuartel de la Brigada Investigadora de Delitos Sexuales en Temuco, donde si bien entregó voluntariamente su computador para ser periciado al reconocer que es consumidor de pornografía para adultos, por instrucción del Obispado de Temuco, optó por guardar silencio, según el fiscal Mérida.

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Dorm master removed shower curtains …

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

Dorm master removed shower curtains so he could watch boys washing, victim of sex abuse at 11 tells Royal Commission

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 18, 2013

A VICTIM of sexual abuse as a child at a Marist Brothers college has slammed the “angry, cruel men” who not only hurt him as a child but abused him again when he went through the Catholic Church’s Towards Healing process.

“I don’t call it Towards Healing. I call it Towards Hurting,” the man, 49, has told the royal commission into institutionalised responses to child sex abuse today.

“The mediation … made me feel quite dirty and filthy.

“From 1976 to 1981 I was sexually abused; there was horrendous physical abuse by angry, cruel men who ruled my life and had more control over me than my parents.

“I had put my trust back in to them for Towards Healing and by three of clock that afternoon (on the day of mediation) I just felt the same angry, cruel men had done the same thing to me 35 years later.”

The man, who has asked not to be identified, was sexually abused from the age of 11 at St Augustine’s College in Cairns by three different brothers. His dorm master removed the shower curtains so he could watch the boys showering.

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Victims of abuse want Church of England to support targeted independent inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Darlington and Stockton Times

By Julia Breen

THE Church of England has been accused of falling short of what is needed by campaigners wanting a public inquiry into the extent of child abuse.

The Stop Church Child Abuse alliance, which represents church abuse survivor groups, said it had been informed by Bishop of Durham elect Paul Butler in a meeting last week that the Church of England would not support an independent inquiry into child sex abuse in the Catholic Church and Church of England.

The Church confirmed last night it would instead support a “wide ranging” public inquiry into institutional child abuse in the church and other key national institutions – but not one specific to the churches.

Campaigners say this is a u-turn on the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby’s statement at the General Synod in July that the church would support an inquiry – and the Synod voted unanimously to apologise to victims of clergy abused and do everything necessary to help victims of abuse.

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Abuse victim’s anger at church mediation

AUSTRALIA
7 News

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL
December 18, 2013

The Catholic Church’s response to sex abuse was “Towards Hurting” rather than “Towards Healing” one of the victims has told an inquiry.

The man said he had no faith left after being abused by three Marist Brothers at school and then participating in the church’s mediation process Towards Healing, which he called a “sham.”

He felt this way when he learned that the order of brothers withheld the fact that an independent mediator in his case actually worked for the Catholic Church.

The 49-year-old identified as DK, who was abused while a boarder at St Augustine’s Marist College in Cairns from 1976-81, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse of his desire to forgive, and to educate his children in the Catholic system.

But this had changed because of the process to which he was subjected.

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OREGON LAWYER WHO WON SEX CASE VS. BOY SCOUTS DIES

OREGON
Crescent-News

TERRENCE PETTY Associated Press Published: December 18, 2013

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A Portland attorney who won a nearly $20 million judgment for a sex abuse victim against the Boy Scouts of America and forced the organization to release secrets on pedophiles contained in its so-called “perversion files” has died. Kelly Clark was 56.

Clark died Tuesday morning at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota from causes that appear to be cancer-related, said Paul Mones, Clark’s co-counsel in the case.

Clark was one of the most prominent American attorneys who fought for childhood victims of sexual abuse — bringing and winning cases against the Roman Catholic Church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Boy Scouts of America.

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Survivors group visits diocese

TOLEDO (OH)
Blade

BY TK BARGER
BLADE RELIGION EDITOR

A day after the Catholic Diocese of Toledo’s former bishop was installed as archbishop in Hartford, Conn., two prominent members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests went to the diocesan offices in Toledo to present a pen and a screwdriver as symbols calling for change.

Barbara Blaine, SNAP’s founder and president, a Chicagoan who formerly lived in Toledo, and Claudia Vercellotti, a Toledo SNAP leader, went into the Catholic Center at 1933 Spielbusch Ave. on Tuesday and gave the items to a receptionist.

Before making their presentation, the women stood on the sidewalk in front of the diocesan offices and held SNAP posters and a board of school-age pictures of people, including Ms. Blaine and Ms. Vercellotti, who say they were abused by clergy.

Ms. Vercellotti pointed to a prominent sign on a wing of the Catholic Center building designating it as “Monsignor Doyle Hall,” saying that the diocese paid a settlement to a woman who alleged she was abused as a child by Msgr. Michael Doyle, who died in 1987.

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Nienstedt, facing claim he touched boy, steps aside during investigation, denies allegation

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Tom Scheck, Laura Yuen, Mike Cronin · St. Paul, Minn. · Dec 17, 2013

Archbishop John Nienstedt, leader of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, has voluntarily “stepped aside from all public ministry” while police investigate an allegation that he touched a boy on the buttocks in 2009.

In doing so, Nienstedt becomes the first sitting U.S. bishop to voluntarily relinquish some of his duties because of a police investigation into alleged sexual misconduct, said the Rev. Thomas Doyle, a priest and canon lawyer who worked at the Vatican Embassy in Washington, D.C. Nienstedt denied the allegation.

“I must say that this allegation is absolutely and entirely false,” the archbishop wrote in a letter posted on the archdiocese’s website. “I have never once engaged in any inappropriate contact with a minor.”

The St. Paul Police Department began its investigation at 2 p.m. Monday after the archdiocese encouraged a person within the church who is required by law to report allegations of abuse to contact authorities. In a statement this morning, archdiocese officials said they learned of the allegation from that person.

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As Nienstedt steps back, an auxiliary bishop steps into the breach

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Tom Scheck · St. Paul, Minn. · Dec 17, 2013

Auxiliary Bishop Lee Piché will take over Archbishop John Nienstedt’s public duties while the Twin Cities Catholic church leader steps back from public ministry during a police investigation. Nienstedt is being investigated by police for allegedely touching a boy on the buttocks.

Piché, a Minnesota native, must temporarily be the public face of an archdiocese that is facing fierce criticism for how it handled clergy sexual abuse.

Raised in Minneapolis, Piché first started attending Mass at St. Charles Borromeo in the St. Anthony suburb. The oldest of seven children, he took a special interest in the church as a youngster.

The Catholic Spirit newspaper, which is owned and operated by the archdiocese, wrote in 2009 that Piché started talking about becoming a priest when he was in the eighth grade.

“We always respected the priesthood…and I think that was the thing that impressed him,” Piché’s father, LeRoy, told the newspaper. “We let the Holy Spirit do the work, as we do in every case.”

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Archbishop John Nienstedt’s years in the Twin Cities

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced Dec. 17 that Archbishop John Nienstedt voluntarily “stepped aside from all public ministry” while police investigate an allegation that he touched a boy on the buttocks in 2009.

In doing so, Nienstedt became the first sitting U.S. bishop to voluntarily relinquish some of his duties because of a police investigation into alleged sexual misconduct, said the Rev. Thomas Doyle, a priest and canon lawyer who worked at the Vatican Embassy in Washington, D.C.

Nienstedt denied the allegation.

“I must say that this allegation is absolutely and entirely false,” the archbishop wrote in a letter posted on the archdiocese’s website. “I have never once engaged in any inappropriate contact with a minor.”

During the investigation, Auxiliary Bishop Lee Piche will assume the archbishop’s public duties during the investigation, according to a statement from the archdiocese.

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Priest victim wins jail plea

UNITED KINGDOM
Lancaster Guardian

A priest jailed for sexual abuse could face more prison time after his victim demanded a review of his sentence.

Canon Stephen Shield, 53, of Balmoral Road, Lancaster, was found guilty last month of three counts of indecent assault following a trial at Preston Crown Court and was jailed for 12 months.

But his victim says the sentence was unduly lenient and has requested a review by the attorney general.

The attorney general’s office has until January 10 to decide whether the case should come under review.

Under the pseudonym Icare, the victim said: “I find it belittling to the many victims of such absolutely horrific criminality that such nonsensical sentences are handed out.

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Priests accused of sexual abuse: the list and what it means

MINNESOTA
Winona Post

By Chris Rogers
On Monday, the Diocese of Winona released the names of 14 diocesan priests “credibly accused” of sexual abuse, including a man still living in Winona and four other living men. A Ramsey County judge ordered the diocese to release the names earlier this month.

Bishop John M. Quinn issued a statement on Monday apologizing for “the insufferable harm to victims, their families, parishioners, and the Church” caused by accusations that diocesan priests sexually abused children and violated “the sacred trust placed in them.”

After four years of fighting for this disclosure, attorney Jeff Anderson said, “We believe that there are more that deserve to be known and exposed, but today we take this as a giant step forward.” Anderson’s firm specializes in clergy abuse cases and is representing an alleged victim in a suit that accuses the diocese of negligence in its response to past reports of abuse.

The diocese argued against publishing the names in court hearings last month, saying that it would condemn the men, who have never been convicted, without a fair trial. “We seek justice on all sides.” said Diocese of Winona Director of Mission Advancement Joel Hennessy in an interview this summer, pointing out that the deceased men named in the list have no way to defend themselves. Most of the priests are deceased. Four of the five others are ages 64, 79, 80, and 86, and the statute of limitations is believed to have passed on all of the allegations against them, precluding any criminal charges. Father Leo Koppala, 47, of Blue Earth, was charged with criminal sexual abuse of an 11-year-old girl this summer and was placed on administrative leave pending the result of prosecution.

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Editorial: Gallup Diocese should unseal abuse records

NEW MEXICO
ABQ Journal

By Albuquerque Journal Editorial Board

It was a dirty secret for years. Now the extent of sexual abuses by some priests in the Diocese of Gallup is being hidden behind legal maneuvering in bankruptcy court.

Thirteen lawsuits have been filed in Arizona Superior Court since August 2010 alleging sexual abuse by six priests in the diocese from the 1950s to the 1980s.

In reaction to the lawsuits and in expectation of more to come, the diocese has filed for Chapter 11 reorganization bankruptcy protection. In addition to the pending lawsuits, three lawsuits and at least a dozen complaints have been settled – in secret. That makes determining the scope of the abuse difficult.

The diocese’s attorney says she does not know how many cases the diocese has settled, when the settlements were made, or how much the diocese has paid. Bankruptcy court records list 121 “confidential claimants” who have filed abuse claims against the diocese.

Victims’ attorneys say the bankruptcy filing is a way to hide the scope of the abuse. They say it stops lawsuits from being filed and depositions from being taken, halts the discovery process attorneys use to find information, postpones lawsuits in progress and seals the case from the public. In a Sunday Journal story by staff writer Olivier Uyttebrouck, an attorney who has 18 claimants who have not filed lawsuits yet says the filing makes it unlikely lawsuits can be filed after bankruptcy proceedings are over.

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December 17, 2013

Archbishop Who Says Gay Marriage Is From ‘Satan’…

MINNESOTA
The New Civil Rights Movement

Archbishop Who Says Gay Marriage Is From ‘Satan’ Accused Of Inappropriate Contact With Youth

by DAVID BADASH on DECEMBER 17, 2013

An outspoken U.S. Archbishop has temporarily stepped down from his post after being caused of inappropriate contact with a young boy in 2009. John Nienstedt, head of the St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota Archdiocese, has denied the charge, which includes the “allegation that he inappropriately touched an underage male on the buttocks during a public photo session,” the AP reports.

“The St. Paul Police Department began its investigation at 2 p.m. Monday after the archdiocese encouraged a person within the church who is required by law to report allegations of abuse to contact authorities,” Minnesota Public Radio reports. “In a statement this morning, archdiocese officials said they learned of the allegation from that person.”

“The single incident is alleged to have occurred in 2009 during a group photography session with the archbishop following a confirmation ceremony,” the statement said.

In a letter to Twin Cities Catholics posted on the archdiocese’s website today, Nienstedt denied the accusation.

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Expert reacts to allegations against Archbishop Nienstedt

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Archbishop John Nienstedt, the head of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, has been accused of inappropriately touching a minor in 2009.

In light of the accusation, the Archbishop will step down from public ministry while the church and St. Paul Police investigate the incident. The accuser alleges Nienstedt touched his buttocks during a “public photo session” following a confirmation ceremony.

“The letter is a real shock,” best-selling author John Thavis said.

Thavis lived in Italy and covered the Vatican for 30 years before moving back to St. Paul, where he is writing another book.

“Obviously he is vehemently denying the accusation,” the author added.

The archbishop did write a public letter in which he says “this allegation is absolutely false.”

The alleged incident was reported to the Archdiocese on Thursday. Nienstedt learned about it Sunday evening and St. Paul Police say they were informed on Monday afternoon.

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Parishioners weigh in on accusations against Archbishop

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

Allen Costantini, KARE

MINNEAPOLIS – Reaction to Archbishop John Nienstedt’s suspension of his public ministry was mixed on Tuesday.

Nienstedt announced in a letter that he was “stepping aside” while an investigation is underway of an alleged sexual abuse involving the church leader.

According to information from the Archdiocese, a young man alleged that Nienstedt touched his buttocks during a public photo opportunity following a confirmation ceremony in 2009. A person required to report such allegations told the Archdiocese, then the police.

St. Paul Police are investigating the allegation.

Nienstedt denied the claim in his letter, writing “I do not know the individual involved; he has not been made known to me. I presume he is sincere in believing what he claims, but I must say that this allegation is absolutely and entirely false.”

Speaking after the noon Mass at the Basilica of St. Mary in Minneapolis, parishioners opinions varied on the cleric’s action.

“I think it is very sad,” said Robin Ayers, of Stillwater. “I am going into daily prayer and I will pray for Archbishop Nienstedt and hope that truth and transparency does come out.”

“I think that everyone is held accountable,” said Paul Lyverm of Plymouth. “I am a firm believer in my faith and the Catholic religion, but everyone is held accountable.”

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Fairfield pastor on trial for sexual assault

TEXAS
KXXV

By Kristianna Gross

FAIRFIELD –
It’s a case that’s rocked the central Texas town of Fairfield. The trial for the pastor accused of sexually assaulting a 15 year old member of his church began Tuesday.

A strange turn of events caused the trial to be recessed until tomorrow. They were able to get through opening arguments and the victims testimony before evacuating the freestone county courthouse.

That now 16 year-old girl confronted her alleged rapist face to face. Her tears overflowed as she described what she says happened to her.

The victim says Anthony Lynn Thibodeaux sexually assaulted her after attending a church revival with her two sisters and Ladonna Brackens in Teague, last year. She told jurors she and her sisters went swimming at brackens house before going to that event.

Brackens is a former Fairfield ISD Assistant Coach.

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Archbishop Steps Down Pending Investigation: Another Catholic Bishop Being Hounded

UNITED STATES
The Eponymous Flower

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Edit: when Benedict XVI. was trying to clean up house, there were approximately 2 dissident senior clergy forced to resign every month. Now it seems it’s open season on conservative clergy, or at least clergy that don’t cooperate when it comes to Aberromarriage and the consensus. For example, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Limburg, or in this case, Archbishop John Nienstedt of Minneapolis-St. Paul, who is being blamed for crimes committed mostly under his leftist predecessors.

Showing a great deal of desperation, the enemies within and outside of the Church locally have drummed up what looks to be a very fabricated charge against the Archbishop, whose resignation is highly sought after. Here’s his letter from the Spirit:

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
This is a difficult letter for me to write to you. This past weekend I learned of an allegation from a young man whom I anointed in the Sacrament of Confirmation who alleged that he believes I inappropriately touched his buttocks during a public photo session following the ceremony. Please allow me to say that I normally stand for those photos with one hand on my crozier (staff) and the other either on the right shoulder of the newly confirmed or on my pallium (the short stole), which hangs from my chest. I do that deliberately and there are hundreds of photographs to verify that fact.

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Pope Francis: step forward, step back with two Wisconsin related decisions

WISCONSIN
SNAP Wisconsin

Statement by Peter Isely, SNAP Midwest Director
CONTACT: 414.429.7259

Good News. Bad News.

Step forward. Step back.

While Pope Francis, perestroika fashion, continues to clear out the hardliners from Vatican positions of authority, like the notorious vestment obsessed Raymond Burke (from La Crosse, Wisconsin), on the sexual abuse front Francis made a very troubling decision today, or approved one, by appointing Green Bay’s Vicar General Fr. John Doerfler to become the new bishop for the diocese of Marquette, Michigan.

In a March 2011 deposition in the case of serial Green Bay child molester, Fr. John Feeney, Doerfler, then chancellor and Vicar General of the diocese, admitted under oath that in 2007 he deliberately and systematically destroyed nearly all records and documentation in the secret church files of at least 51 clergy reported to have sexually assaulted children. The shredding took place just after the Wisconsin State Supreme Court ruled that victims of childhood sexual abuse could file fraud suits against Catholic dioceses in the state for covering up for clerics like Feeney.

When specifically asked if it bothered Doerfler that clerics who abused children were being dumped into the community without public notice, Doerfler chillingly answered: “No”.

A recent national survey found that 70 percent of American Catholics believe that addressing the sexual abuse scandal must be the top priority for the Pope, well in front of any other issue facing the church. Of course, this is particularly relevant today with the current investigation by St. Paul police of an alleged child sexual abuse report against Archbishop John Neistadt. Regardless of the outcome of the Neistadt investigation, the Minneapolis archdiocese, like so many others, continue to unravel with revelations of long standing complaints of criminal child abuse and cover up.

While Francis is showing that he is going to remove self-styled “traditionalists” like Burke from power, it is still not clear what he intends to do about removing (much less promoting) those like Doerfler who have been directly involved in the concealment of child sex crimes.

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St. Paul Police Chief: Archdiocese Has Not Been Very Cooperative on Sex Abuse Cases, That Has to Change

MINNESOTA
KSTP

By: Megan Stewart

St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith said Tuesday archdiocesan officials have not been very cooperative on priest sex abuse cases. He urged the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul to be more forthcoming with information on previous allegations of sex abuse.

In a news conference he said, “I want to let the public know one thing: let me be very clear on this,” Smith said. “We have through written and verbal requests made clear our desire to speak to individuals connected to the archdiocese and we have been told no.”

Smith says police have not had the access to interview clergy members. As late as last week, Smith said they were told no.

“In order for us to bring these cases to the next step in the process of concluding investigations and to bring them to closure, we again, now publicly, call upon those individuals to speak with us,” Smith said. “That’s why we are here today.”

Smith said he sent a letter, in addition to numerous verbal requests, asking for access to members of the archdiocese who have relevant knowledge of the procedures within the archdiocese.

“It’s never good enough when someone tells us no and that’s why we have to work with our partners,” Smith said. “And let me clarify. I request to talk with people in voluntary interviews to learn more information to further our investigations, but you have to have probable cause. If someone tells us no, they don’t want to talk to us and the archdiocese says they’re cooperating you can come to the reasonable conclusion of where we are here today.”

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(UPDATED) Accusation: Archbishop Nienstedt Inappropriately Touched Boy

MINNESOTA
Patch

Posted by Chris Steller (Editor) , December 17, 2013

Updated below. Archbishop John Clayton Nienstedt is stepping aside from his ministerial duties pending an investigation into a new charge that he inappropriately touched a boy in 2009, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis said in a statement Tuesday.

See the full statement from the archdiocese and letter from the archbishop below, as well as a response from Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

Nienstedt “emphatically denies the allegation,” the statement said. The accuser “believes I inappropriately touched his buttocks during a public photo session,” Nienstedt wrote in a letter posted at the archdiocese website.

The archdiocese recently released a list of priests “credibly accused” of child sexual abuse. The Winona diocese also released its its own similar list.

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Archbishop Nienstedt Denies Inappropriately Touching Minor

MINNESOTA
KSTP

[with video]

By: Scott Theisen
The head of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is stepping aside from public ministry after an allegation that he touched an underage male.

Archbishop John Nienstedt denies the allegations, but is removing himself from ministry pending an investigation.

The archdiocese says the incident allegedly occurred in 2009 after a confirmation ceremony. Nienstedt is accused of inappropriately touching an underage male on the buttocks during a group photography session.

The archdiocese learned of the allegation last week and instructed the person who brought it forward to go to police.

In a letter posted Tuesday on the archdiocese website, Nienstedt says the allegation is “absolutely and entirely false.” He says he hopes the investigation will be thorough and quick so he can return to work.

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St. Paul police say archdiocese not cooperating; Archbishop accused of inappropriately touching boy

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon and Nick Woltman
Pioneer Press

St. Paul police Chief Thomas Smith said Tuesday that investigators have not gotten cooperation from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on sexual abuse cases.

He told reporter that police have made written and oral requests to talk with archdiocese officials and priests, and “we’ve been told no.”

“We again now publicly call upon these individuals to speak to us,” Smith said.

Smith’s comments came hours after the archdiocese reported that the top official of the Roman Catholic Church in the Twin Cities has been accused of “inappropriate touching” of a boy on the buttocks in 2009.

The allegation was brought to police by a mandated reporter within the church, and has prompted Archbishop John Nienstedt to step aside from his “public ministry” temporarily while an investigation takes place, a Tuesday statement by the archdiocese said.

Nienstedt vehemently denies the charge.

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Twin Cities Archbishop Nienstedt accused of inappropriately touching boy

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: December 17, 2013

Nienstedt vehemently denied allegations and will remove himself from public ministry. Police say church officials aren’t fully cooperating.

Archbishop John Nienstedt has been accused of inappropriately touching a boy, and has removed himself from public ministry while the matter is investigated, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced Tuesday.

The move comes after a young man alleged that Nienstedt touched his buttocks during a group photo session following a confirmation ceremony in 2009.

Nienstedt called the allegation “absolutely and entirely false.”

The incident was reported to St. Paul Police, which began an investigation Monday.

St. Paul Police Chief Tom Smith declined to comment on the allegation against Nienstedt at a Tuesday afternoon news conference. He said the public can rest assured that his department has assigned adequate resources to investigate that case and others.

But the chief took exception to the archdiocese’s assertion that it is cooperating fully with police. Smith said his investigators have been denied access to certain clergy members for informational interviews.

He specifically said that former vicar general Kevin McDonough has declined to be interviewed by the police.

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Portland lawyer Kelly Clark, champion of sex abuse victims, dies at 56

OREGON
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
December 17, 2013

PORTLAND, Oregon — Portland lawyer Kelly Clark, who won a landmark court decision forcing the Boy Scouts of America to release its “perversion files” on suspected child molesters in the organization, has died at 56.

His co-counsel in the Boy Scouts case, Paul Mones, said Clark died Tuesday of cancer-related causes at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.

Clark represented the victims of child molestation in suits against the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts of America.

In 2012, a suit he brought forced the Boy Scouts to release more than 1,200 files it kept on suspected abusers.

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