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 5, 2013

Borja priest in custody for fraud and sexual abuse

SPAIN
Euro Weekly News

FLORENCIO GARCES, priest in the parish of Borja in Zaragoza has been remanded in custody for an alleged €185,000 fraud and sexual abuse.

The parish shot to international fame when an elderly local lady decided to repaint a picture of Jesus in the church. The unprofessional restoration became a media sensation and international laughing stock, but has since brought thousands of visitors and Euros to the church and town.

Guardia Civil arrested six people in total; five are all from the same family and have been released with charges. Florencio Garcés is currently in prison with no bail, although only a few days ago he had been released with charges.

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.

More Vatican talk on abuse; SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON DECEMBER 05, 2013

December 5

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

“Commission,” “survey,” “policies” – these are the words being used to describe the Vatican’s announcement.

Another commission surveying bishops and recommending policies is meaningless. It’s like offering a band aid to an advanced cancer patient.

These crimes and cover ups have gone on for centuries quietly and decades publicly. Only decisive action helps, not more studies and committees and promises.

No institution can police itself, especially not an ancient, secretive, rigid, all-male monarchy. Yet that’s what Catholic officials have long claimed and tried to do. This move is more of the same. Rather than show courage and creativity, top Catholic officials are repeating the same self-serving patterns of the past that have proven to be effective public relations but ineffective prevention and healing steps.

Like his predecessors, the pope knows precisely what must be done to protect kids and expose the truth. Like his predecessors, he lacks the strength of character to do it.

Clergy sex crimes should be dealt with by secular authorities. And more of could be if the pope punished bishops who conceal these crimes and ordered bishops to publicly disclose their child molesting clerics. This simple step would immediately make kids safer. But instead, parents and parishioners are being offered yet another toothless church panel.

The pope should also insist that bishops push secular officials to reform archaic barriers to justice like the statute of limitations. This simple step would also make kids safer.

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 setting up commission against sexual abuse of minors

VATICAN CITY
CNN

By Hada Messia, CNN

Rome (CNN) — Pope Francis is creating a commission to prevent the abuse of minors and to support victims of abuse, Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley announced Thursday in Rome.

The new commission is expected to tell church officials to collaborate with civil authorities and report cases of abuse, O’Malley said.

But he also said that the church has focused on the judicial aspect of sexual abuse in the past — and that Pope Francis wants to focus on the pastoral side, and caring for victims.

The Pope has not yet chosen the members of the new commission but it will be international in composition and include experts, O’Malley added.

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

Pope Francis to set up Vatican commission …

VATICAN CITY
The Tablet (UK)

Pope Francis to set up Vatican commission for child protection and care of victims of abuse by priests

05 December 2013 13:20 by Christopher Lamb

Pope Francis is to set up a Vatican commission devoted to child protection and the pastoral care of victims of sexual abuse by priests, it was announced today.

The commission will look at child protection programmes across the worldwide Church and work with dioceses to encourage best practice.

According to the US-based Catholic News Service, it will advise the Pope on improving the safeguarding of children and pastoral care to the victims of abuse.

It will also focus on the way candidates for the priesthood are screened, the formation of priests, and safeguarding codes of conduct.

The new commission was announced by Cardinal Sean O’Malley, one of Pope Francis’ eight-member Council of Cardinals, at a press conference in the Vatican.

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 to set up special committee on child sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
swissinfo

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – The Vatican is to set up a special committee to improve measures to protect children against sexual abuse within the Church, the archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, said on Thursday.

“Up until now there has been so much focus on the judicial parts of this but the pastoral part is very, very important. The Holy Father is concerned about that,” O’Malley told reporters, referring to Pope Francis.

The commission of experts would “study these issues and bring concrete recommendations” for the Pope and the Vatican, he said.

O’Malley was speaking on the third and final day of a series of closed-door meetings between Pope Francis and a special commission of eight cardinals who are discussing the Vatican’s troubled administration.

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

Pope Francis to set up Vatican commision to protect children

VATICAN CITY
Scottish Catholic Observer

Pope Francis (above) is to set up a Vatican child protection commission to combat child abuse, it was announced this morning.

Following a Council of Cardinals meeting at the Vatican, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston said that Pope Francis had accepted the cardinals’ proposal for a special commission established for the protection of children. Cardinal O’Malley said that the commission will survey child protection programmes and work with bishops and religious.

The commission will include lay people and will focus on supporting victims of abuse and advising the Pope on prevention policies and pastoral outreach for victims. The Vatican commission will look at guidelines in place, priestly formation programmes, codes of conduct and screening candidates for the priesthood. The Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith’s role in investigating and trying accused priests won’t change.

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 announces new papal advisory commission on sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Dec. 5, 2013

VATICAN CITY Pope Francis has ordered the creation of a new commission in the church’s central bureaucracy tasked with advising the pontiff on safeguarding children from sex abuse and working pastorally with abuse victims, the Vatican said Thursday.

Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the lone American serving among the eight cardinals advising the pope on church reform, announced the new group at a press briefing. Creation of the new commission, he said, came at the suggestion of the cardinals’ group, known formally as the Council of Cardinals.

While O’Malley said the pope has not determined the specifics of how the commission will function or where it will fit into the Vatican’s bureaucracy, the cardinal said it is to be composed of an international range of experts and is to focus on the pastoral aspect of the continuing clergy sex abuse crisis.

“Up to now, there’s been so much focus on the judicial parts of this, but the pastoral response of the church is very, very important and the Holy Father is concerned about that,” said O’Malley.

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

Pope forms commission to advise on sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
Clarion-Ledger

by Nicole Winfield, Associated Press

VATICAN CITY (AP) – Pope Francis is assembling a panel of experts to advise him on sex abuse in the clergy – a task that will involve looking at how to protect children from pedophiles, how to better screen men for the priesthood and how to help victims who have already been harmed.

But it remains unclear if the experts will take up one of the core issues behind the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal: how to make bishops who shelter abusive priests accountable.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston, announced the creation of the commission Thursday at the conclusion of a meeting between Francis and his eight cardinal advisers who are helping him govern the church and reform the Vatican bureaucracy.

Boston was the epicenter of the 2002 clerical sexual abuse scandal in the U.S.

O’Malley told reporters that the commission, made up of international lay and religious experts on sex abuse, would study current programs to protect children, better screen priests, train church personnel and suggest new initiatives for both the Holy See to implement inside the Vatican City State and for bishops to implement around the world.

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

Pope Francis announces new Vatican commission to combat abuse

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (UK)

Pope Francis will set up a Vatican child protection commmission in order to combat child abuse, it was announced this morning.

Following a Council of Cardinals meeting at the Vatican, Cardinal Sean O’Malley told reporters that Pope Francis had accepted the cardinals’ proposal for a special commission established for the protection of children.

According to Catholic News Service, Cardinal O’Malley said that the commission will survey child protection programmes and work with bishops and religious.

The commission will include lay people and will focus aswell on supporting victims of abuse and advising the Pope on prevention polcies and pastoral outreach for victims.

The Vatican commission will look at guidelines in place, priestly formation programs, codes of conduct and screening candidates for the priesthood.

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 POPE TO CREATE A COMMISSION FOR THE PROTECTION OF MINORS, UPON REQUEST BY THE COUNCIL OF CARDINALS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 5 December 2013 (VIS) – This morning’s briefing on the work of the Council of Cardinals involved the extraordinary participation of Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, who communicated the Pope’s approval of a proposal submitted by the eight cardinals – the creation of a Commission for the protection of minors.

“Continuing decisively along the lines undertaken by Pope Benedict XVI, and accepting a proposal presented by the Council of Cardinals, the Holy Father has decided to establish a specific Commission for the protection of minors, with the aim of advising Pope Francis on the Holy See’s commitment to the protection of children and in pastoral care for victims of abuse. Specifically, the Commission will study present programmes in place for the protection of children; formulate suggestions for new initiatives on the part of the Curia, in collaboration with bishops, Episcopal conferences, religious superiors and conferences of religious superiors; and indicate the names of persons suited to the systematic implementation of these new initiatives, including laypersons, religious and priests with responsibilities for the safety of children, in relations with the victims, in mental health, in the application of the law, etc.

“The composition and competences of the Commission will be indicated shortly, with more details from the Holy Father in an appropriate document”.

The Cardinal went on to mention lines of action for the future Commission: guidelines for the protection of children, the development and extension of norms, procedures and strategies for the protection of children and the prevention of abuse of minors, educational programmes for children, parents, and all those who work with minors, guidelines for catechists, and for the formation of seminarians, the ongoing formation of priests, protocols for environmental safety codes of professional conduct, proof of suitability for priestly ministry, screening and checking of previous offences, the state of action of requests for psychiatric evaluation, co-operation with the civil authorities, reporting of crimes, compliance with civil law, communications regarding clergy declared guilty, pastoral care for victims and their families, spiritual assistance, mental health services, collaboration with experts in the research and development of the prevention of abuse of minors, psychology, sociology, legal sciences; collaboration with bishops and religious superiors, optimisation of procedures, implementation of laws and guidelines, relations with the faithful and with means of communication, encounters with victims, supervision and rehabilitation of clergy guilty of abuse.

The director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J., subsequently communicated that the work of the Council, which will be concluded this afternoon, continued its examination of the various congregations of the Roman Curia yesterday and this morning.

“The Pope participated in the meetings held yesterday afternoon and this morning”, said Fr. Lombardi, clarifying that Pope Francis is well and that yesterday’s meeting with the cardinal archbishop of Milan, Angelo Scola, who accompanied a delegation from EXPO MILAN 2015, was cancelled as the Holy Father was tired following the general audience celebrated in St. Peter’s Square and therefore preferred to postpone the event to a more suitable occasion.

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7 acts Australia must do for humanity’s good motivated by the Victorian Inquiry that slams the Vatican (Roman) Catholic Church!

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

TOP 10 BEST NEWS from Australia on the JP2 Army. Pope Francis new Apostolic letter is reminiscent of John Paul II’s Luminous Mysteries

We would like to thank Australia’s finest journalists for giving us comprehensive news on the heinous crimes committed by the JP2 Army in Australia – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army of Biblical Proportions named aptly after the longest reigned pope who said nothing and did nothing to save and protect children during his world trotting years as John Paul II “the Great”.

We also compare Pope Francis’ new Apostolic letter Evangelii Gaudium or Joy of the Gospel which us Pope Francis’ answer to Australia’s Victoria Inquiry…just like Luminous Mysteries was John Paul II’s answer to USA’s Boston pedophile priests in 2002

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Supporters accompany pastor charged with sex abuse to court

NEW YORK
Niagara Gazette

Channel 4 News
Niagara Gazette

A small group of Community Fellowship Church members accompanied their pastor into Town of Yates Court on Wednesday night in a show of support.

The Rev. Roy Harriger Sr. is facing charges of molesting children.

About eight members of the Community Fellowship Church in the Town of Hartland accompanied the 70-year-old pastor into Town of Yates Court where he pleaded not guilty to charges of incest and sodomy of a young boy and girl about 12 years ago.

Harriger is free on bail after posting a quarter million dollars bail last week. His supporters have a hard time believing the charges against him.

Supporter Donna Kidney does not believe the allegations.

“He’ll bend over backwards to help people and I think these charges are ridiculous,” she told Channel 4 News. “I know he did not do it. He’s innocent. I know in my spirit that he’s innocent.”

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Pastor Pleads Not Guilty to Child Sex Abuse

NEW YORK
WKBW

[with video]

By Kendra Eaglin

December 5, 2013

With his attorney, wife and other supporters by his side 70 year old Roy Harriger Sr. entered the Town of Yates courthouse Wednesday night leaving all the talking to his attorney who made an interesting comment.

“Eyewitness News reporter: Do you have any comments tonight before you go in?”

“Attorney Larry Koss: I hope Michigan State beats North Carolina.”

Harriger pleaded not guilty to felony sexual conduct, sodomy and incest. These charges surround incidents between 2000 and 2001 involving Harriger’s own grandchildren who now live in Pennsylvania.

“I would have never thought in my lifetime that he would’ve done this,” said Teresa Harriger, mother of the two victims.

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Pastor charged with sex abuse pleads not guilty

NEW YORK
WHEC

An Orleans County pastor has pleaded not guilty to multiple charges of felony sex abuse.

Revered Roy Harriger was charged with several charges of incest, sexual conduct and sodomy. Our NBC affiliate in Buffalo WGRZ reports that he pleaded not guilty Wednesday in a Niagara County court.

Harriger was arrested in November after a possible victim came forward, and the investigation lead police to several other possible victims.

Investigators say there may be crimes dating back to the 1970’s, but Harriger can only be charged with the claims from two of the victims, a man and a woman, who claim the abuse happened between 2000 and 2001.

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Adams now has more baggage than an A380 aircraft

IRELAND
Irish Independent

IVAN YATES – 05 DECEMBER 2013

As a Wexford TD, I came to know and like Bishop Brendan Comiskey, appointed Bishop of Ferns in April 1984. I was extremely friendly with two priests of the diocese. I enjoyed dinner parties at which Brendan was also a guest. All three men were strong advocates of ecumenism, pioneering new protocols for mixed marriages.

When allegations first emerged of clerical sex abuse, my instinct was one of sympathy and support for the bishop’s handling of the matter. Eventually, Comiskey had to resign in 2002 for his stewardship of deviant priests such as Father Sean Fortune.

My judgment was proven mistaken as events unfolded. He tried to handle matters through internal church procedures, rather than as overt criminal activity requiring instant referral to the gardai and judicial processes.

The conviction and jailing of Liam Adams in Belfast for repeated rape and abuse of his daughter Aine last week reminded me of parallels between Gerry Adams and Brendan Comiskey. Much can be undone by a serious error of judgment. For a period of nine years (2000 to 2009), Adams did not tell the police what he knew from his brother about his guilt. He treated this information as a private family matter.

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.

Dutch bishops give Pope Francis a bleak picture of Catholic Church in decline

NETHERLANDS
Reuters

By Tom Heneghan DECEMBER 3, 2013

Dutch bishops visiting Rome this week have given Pope Francis a dramatic snapshot of the steep decline of Roman Catholicism in its European heartland.

Both Catholic and Protestant Christian ranks have shrunk dramatically across Europe in recent decades, and hundreds of churches have been sold off to be turned into apartments, shops, bars or warehouses.

In the Netherlands, churches have been closing at a rate of one or two a week. The bishops told the pope in Rome on Monday that about two-thirds of all Roman Catholic churches in the Netherlands would have to be shut or sold by 2025, and many parishes merged, because congregations and finances were “in a long-term shrinking process”.

Their five-yearly report blamed a “drastic secularization” of society, although a critical group of Dutch lay Catholics said the scandal of sexual abuse of minors by priests, which has afflicted many Catholic dioceses around the world, had also driven many people away, as had the closures themselves.

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Painful fall to insolvency

CALIFORNIA
The Record

By The Record
December 05, 2013

These are difficult times for the Diocese of Stockton – not just the entity, but the thousands of parishoners, too.

Stating that the diocese is out of options, Bishop Stephen Blaire penned a letter to the quarter million parishoners in six counties that a final decision on bankruptcy could come after the first of the year.

The financial situation is dire. It was preventable.

The Chapter 11 protection is needed because the diocese has been drained financially from settlements for sex-abuse lawsuits involving priests. Through 2010, the diocese had settled 22 cases at a cost of $18.7 million.

There could be more cases pending. “We have no apparent way to meet the expenses of pending lawsuits and possible future claims,” the bishop said in an earlier letter.

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PRIEST ABUSE: Half of metro parishes touched by scandal

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

[with video]

[Doe 1 Order Releasing Names of Credibly Accused Priests]

On Thursday, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis will comply with a court order to name priests who have been sued, criminally charged, or publicly identified in a child sex abuse case by releasing a list of names and locations where each credibly accused priest worked.

Some Catholics in the metro area may be in for a shock because half of the parishes in the state — 92 of 188 — have been notified that at least one of the men touched by the sex abuse scandal was assigned to their church.

“It’s going to shock them — the level and depth of clergy abuse that surrounds them,” Bob Schwiderski, of the victims’ advocacy group SNAP, said.

For some parishes, like St. Wenceslaus in New Prague, Minn., multiple priests allegedly passed through — including Father Clarence Vavra, now 74, who admitted to molesting several boys in the 1970s at the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota.

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‘Credibly accused’ priests to be named Thursday

MINNESOTA
KARE

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is preparing its priests for the release of a list of 29 priests who it says have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

The accused priests have served at nearly half — 92 of the 188 — of the parishes in the archdiocese, according to an email sent to priests today by Vicar General Charles Lachowitzer, the archbishop’s top deputy.

The archdiocese plans to release the names on its website Thursday. It will also release each priest’s birth year, ordination year, parish assignment history, current status and city of residence. For the deceased priests, it will also provide the year of death. The planned disclosure comes after Ramsey County Judge John Van de North ordered the archdiocese on Monday to release the names of all priests with credible allegations of child sexual abuse who had been included on a sealed list by Dec. 17. The 33 names were disclosed to attorneys in a 2009 clergy sexual abuse lawsuit, but a judge had ordered they remain private.

A spokesman for the archdiocese said the list will not include four of the 33 names. Three of the priests have allegations against them that church officials believe to be unsubstantiated, Tom Wieser, an attorney for the archdiocese, said Monday. The other priest’s name is not being released because there is no record that he served in the archdiocese, Wieser said.

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St. Paul Archdiocese to disclose names of at least 29 priests credibly accused of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
The Republic

By AMY FORLITI Associated Press
December 05, 2013

MINNEAPOLIS — In response to months of criticism and allegations that church leaders mishandled cases of clergy sexual misconduct, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said it planned Thursday to disclose the names of at least 29 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

Archbishop John Nienstedt, who has been under fire for the way sexual misconduct cases were handled, said last month that he would reveal the priests’ names to show that he is committed to transparency and the safety of youth. But those familiar with similar cases say publishing the list is unlikely to do much to restore church leaders’ credibility.

“I think it’s going to be hard for him to really win back public opinion in this, because it has been such a long time,” said Terry McKiernan, president of BishopAccountability.org.

In 2004, the archdiocese compiled a list of 33 priests deemed to have been credibly accused of sexual abusing a minor. The list was put together as part of a nationwide study to determine the scope of clergy sex abuse. Across the country, roughly two dozen archdioceses and dioceses already have made such lists public.

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December 4, 2013

LA Times details Cardinal Mahony’s complicity in clergy sex abuse

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Digital Journal

By Brett Wilkins
Dec 4, 2013

Los Angeles – The Los Angeles Times has published extensive details chronicling Cardinal Roger Mahony’s complicity in a massive child sex abuse scandal involving hundreds of priests and other clergy members.

The Times’ lengthy report is based on more than 23,000 pages of internal documents from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, which was presided over by Archbishop Mahony for nearly a quarter century until his retirement in 2010. The article details Mahony’s active involvement in covering up clergy sex abuse and protecting pedophile priests from prosecution, going back to 1986, his first year as archbishop, when a priest told him he molested two boys.

That priest, Father Michael Baker, raped or molested at least 23 boys, some as young as five years old, over the course of 26 years. He was convicted and sentenced to 10 years behind bars in 2007. But long before that, Mahony decided to not report Baker to police. Instead, the archbishop sent him for ‘treatment’ in New Mexico. After completing therapy, Baker was welcomed back into the fold. He continued to abuse children for many years.

The Times article details how Mahony repeatedly refused to report child-raping clergy to police, transferring criminal abusers out of state to avoid investigations. Many of those transferred clergy continued to rape and molest children.

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L.A. Now Live: Discuss Roger Mahony’s legacy, clergy abuse

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

Join Times reporters Ashley Powers and Victoria Kim for an L.A. Now Live chat at 9 a.m. Thursday to discuss their series on Cardinal Roger Mahony and his role in the Catholic Church’s child abuse sex scandal.

FULL STORY: Clergy abuse cases were a threat to agenda

Powers, Kim and reporter Harriet Ryan examined Mahony’s role and actions in a two-day series of stories.

They wrote:

In the child sex abuse scandal that has shaken the Catholic Church, Mahony is a singular figure.
He became the leader of America’s largest archdiocese at the very moment the church was being forced to confront clergy molestation. Because he was just 49 when he took office, he was in power for the entire arc of the abuse crisis. Long after peers had retired or died, Mahony was around to face the public’s wrath. Because of the unique way abuse lawsuits played out in California, his files on molesters became public while in most other corners of the church, they remain under lock and key. …

Readers can submit questions live during the chat or by tweeting @lanow.

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Laura Robinson seeks court order against John Furlong

CANADA
Straight

FREELANCE WRITER Laura Robinson has applied for a judicial order to force former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong to set aside $100,000 as security for costs in a defamation suit.

The application, which was filed by Bryan Baynham of Harper Grey LLP, seeks to have the funds provided in cash or through a letter of credit to the district registrar in B.C. Supreme Court.

It’s scheduled to be heard on Monday (December 9).

“I am concerned that Mr. Furlong will not have assets in British Columbia to pay an award of costs after trial,” Robinson said in a December 3 news release. “Based on a search of the Land Titles Office, Mr. Furlong does not own real property in British Columbia.”

Furlong is suing Robinson for defamation in connection with an article she wrote in the Georgia Straight in September 2012, as well as for an email she sent two months later to Own The Podium, which Furlong chairs. The feature article revealed that Furlong arrived in Burns Lake in 1969 as a missionary and volunteer teacher at a Catholic school with a large aboriginal population.

Eight former students have sworn affidavits alleging that they experienced or witnessed verbal or physical abuse from Furlong. He has publicly declared that this abuse never happened and alleged that Robinson has a “vendetta” against him, which she has denied.

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Boulder police ticket VineLife Church senior pastor for failing to report alleged sexual abuse

COLORADO
Daily Camera

By Mitchell Byars, Camera Staff Writer
POSTED: 12/04/2013

Boulder police have ticketed VineLife’s senior pastor Walt Roberson for failing to report alleged sexual abuse of a child by his son, Jason Allen Roberson, a youth pastor at the church.

Walt Roberson was issued the summons on Nov. 25, according to Boulder police spokeswoman Kim Kobel. Four other church officials — Executive Pastor Robert Phillip Young, 65, Pastor Luke Michael Humbrecht, 30, and church elders Edward Charles Bennell, 65, and Warren Lloyd Williams, 66 — were also ticketed back in early November, but Walt Roberson was out of the country at the time and so could not be issued a summons, Kobel said.

Jason Roberson, 35, is facing six felony charges in relation to the alleged abuse after Danielle DesGeorges, 24, went to police in April and told investigators that she and Roberson had an inappropriate relationship that began when she was 15 and continued for seven years.

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Former youth pastor charged in Harrison County on sex abuse charges

KENTUCKY
WKYT

HARRISON COUNTY, Ky. (WKYT) – a former Cynthiana youth minister has been indicted on sex charges.

State Police say a Harrison County Grand Jury indicted 25-year-old Brent Smith on 14 counts, including rape, sexual abuse, and using someone younger than 16-years-old in a sexual performance.

Police say the victims were female teenagers in Smith’s church program.

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El Vaticano no compartirá con la ONU su información sobre abusos a menores

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO
RT

El Vaticano se ha negado a proporcionar a un comité de derechos de Naciones Unidas información sobre las investigaciones internas en materia del abuso sexual de menores por parte del clero.

Según informa Reuters, en respuesta a una serie de preguntas del Comité de los Derechos del Niño (CRC) la Santa Sede dijo que no revelaría información sobre sus investigaciones internas a menos que sea requerida por una solicitud de un Estado o de un Gobierno como parte de procedimientos legales.

La Santa Sede, que seguirá siendo interrogada directamente por el grupo especial en enero de 2014, será seguida de cerca mientras trata de poner punto final a los escándalos financieros y de abusos sexuales por parte de sacerdotes que han dañado la reputación de la Iglesia Católica Romana en todo el mundo.

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Archdiocese braces parish leaders for disclosure

MINNESOTA
Enquirer-Herald

BY AMY FORLITI
Associated PressDecember 4, 2013

MINNEAPOLIS — Nearly half the parishes in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis have been served by priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing a minor.

In an email sent Wednesday to priests and parish leaders, the archdiocese said 92 parishes have had at least one accused priest assigned to them at some point. The email, obtained by The Associated Press, was designed to brace parish leaders for Thursday’s disclosure of the names of at least 29 priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse.

There are currently 188 parishes in the archdiocese, which serves about 825,000 Catholics. There were 213 parishes in 2010, before several merged.

The affected parishes were notified in a separate email. The main email offers reassurances to others, saying if they didn’t receive a notification, “that means that none of the men who will be disclosed this week were ever assigned at your parish in the past.”

The number isn’t shocking, said Mike Finnegan, an attorney who has worked on several clergy abuse cases.

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Vatican refuses to give UN panel full details of clerical sex abuse cases

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

Lizzy Davies in Rome
theguardian.com, Wednesday 4 December 2013

The Vatican has refused to give a United Nations panel information it requested on clerical sex abuse, in a move that it said was part of its confidentiality policy but which was criticised as “a slap in the face” for victims.

In a series of questions asked in the runup to a public hearing scheduled for January, the UN committee on the rights of the child had requested the Holy See provide details of abuse cases and specific information concerning their subsequent investigation and handling.

But, in its response, the Holy See said that although it had answered the questions in a general way, it was not its practice to disclose information on specific cases unless requested to do so by another country as part of legal proceedings.

In the 24-page document, the Holy See said it had been “deeply saddened by the scourge of sexual abuse” and regretted the involvement of some members of the Catholic clergy.

It added that it had “amended norms” regarding the suitability of candidates for the priesthood, and had taken other steps including the revision of some canon law rules “to ensure that clerics and religious are properly disciplined”.

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Archdiocese Braces Parish Leaders For Disclosure

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is bracing parish priests and leaders for its upcoming disclosure of a list of clergy who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

In an email sent to priests Wednesday and obtained by The Associated Press, the archdiocese says 92 parishes have had at least one priest on the list assigned to them at some point.

Those parishes were notified in an email last week that they would be affected.

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Winona Diocese to Release List of Accused Priests

MINNESOTA
KSTP

By: Scott Theisen

The Diocese of Winona says it will comply with a judge’s order and release a list of 13 priests credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

A Ramsey County judge on Monday ordered the Winona diocese and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to release the names of accused clergy by Dec. 17.

KAGE Radio reports Bishop John Quinn says the Winona diocese will cooperate with the judge’s order.

In a statement, Quinn says the diocese “is committed to the protection of children and the safe environment of our parishes, schools and greater communities.”

The Winona Daily News reports the exact date and procedure for releasing the information has not yet been determined.

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Is Pope Francis Ignoring Clergy Sex Abuse? Some Are Beginning To Wonder

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Religion News Service | By David Gibson
Posted: 12/04/2013

(RNS) Pope Francis has spent his first nine months buoyed by a wave of good will and positive coverage generated by his disarming style and frank talk about the need to reform the Catholic Church. But the pontiff may be in for a rough patch as media attention begins to shift to an issue that has bedeviled Rome for more than a decade: the clergy sexual abuse crisis.

The pope himself put the spotlight on the crisis this week when he told bishops visiting from the Netherlands — where a 2011 report found that more than 20,000 children may have been abused in past decades — to support victims “along their painful path of healing.”

But critics said that the pontiff’s comments seemed almost perfunctory, coming at the end of a prepared speech that he handed to the bishops before they met privately for 90 minutes to discuss the grim prospects for Dutch Catholicism.

Moreover, the brevity of Francis’ remarks, their careful phrasing and the lack of any direct apology stood in pointed contrast to his powerful statements on issues such as economic justice and the need for the church to preach mercy and strip itself of pretensions.

Francis has also captivated the public by embracing disfigured pilgrims at the Vatican, cold-calling the downtrodden and washing the feet of young people at a detention center, but he has yet to meet with abuse victims.

“The world is starting to wonder if Pope Francis has forgotten the crisis,” Anne Barrett Doyle of BishopAccountability.org said after Francis’ meeting with the Dutch bishops on Monday (Dec. 2).

The pope, she said, “must address publicly the problems of clergy sexual abuse and its mismanagement with the same candor he has shown on a range of topics, from homosexuality to mediocre homilies. He has shown zest in ridding the Vatican of financial corruption. He must apply the same energy and determination toward ridding the church of bishops who have enabled abuse.”

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New Vatican secretary of state says change will come to his office

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Dec. 4, 2013

ROME The new archbishop serving in the post traditionally considered one of the most powerful in the Vatican said Wednesday he knows Pope Francis intends to reform his office but not what those reforms might entail.

Archbishop Pietro Parolin, who took over as the Vatican’s secretary of state Oct. 15, said the pope and the group of eight cardinals advising him on church reform have made clear they are looking at reforms to his office, which has typically controlled both the diplomatic and political functions of the Vatican.

“I don’t know if it’s a different name or if they want to give it a new structure,” Parolin told members of the press Wednesday on the sidelines of a book release event a few blocks east of St. Peter’s Basilica.

“The important thing is for it to become a structure that is at the service of the pope as it has always been, but that it can be enhanced,” he said.

The event Wednesday was for a new book-length version of the wide-ranging interview between Pope Francis and an Italian Jesuit priest, printed in September by 16 Jesuit publications around the world. The book, La mia porta è sempre aperta (“My door is always open”), was released in November by a publishing house that also owns one of Italy’s largest newspapers.

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The Best and Worst Holiday Albums of 2013

UNITED STATES
Y108

By Robert Ham

The Season — you know, the one that ‘Tis — has officially begun, and with it comes the overwhelming flood of holiday music, old and new, upon our tender, frostbitten ears. If that weren’t enough, the rush to capture the attention of potential customers is faster than ever with many Noël-themed releases arriving on the physical and virtual shelves of retailers as early as October. Although it’s easier than ever to sort through the deluge to find the gems amid the lumps of coal, if you still have questions about what album to use to soundtrack your holiday festivities, allow us to provide some answers with five must-have collections (on the Nice List) and five to send back to Santa (on the Naughty List). You know, like the song. …

NICE

Bad Religion – Christmas Songs (Epitaph)
Release date: 10/29/13

Once you’ve wiped the cognitive dissonance out of your eyes upon seeing that a band named Bad Religion is giving their SoCal pop-punk attack over to a collection of Christmas covers, you’ll hopefully be ready to give this nine-song album a fair shake. Not only because the group is donating a portion of their profits to The SNAP Network, the Survivors Network of those Abused By Priests, but also simply because it’s a blast to hear “O Come, O Come Emmanuel” and “Little Drummer Boy” spun out with such fury and fire. True to form, the band gets the last word in, tacking a version of their well-known original “American Jesus” on to the end.

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Archdiocese: 92 parishes affected by “credibly accused” priests to be named Thursday

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

[Doe 1 Order Releasing Names of Credibly Accused Priests]

by Laura Yuen, Minnesota Public Radio,
Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio
December 4, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is preparing its priests for the release of a list of 29 priests who it says have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

The accused priests have served at nearly half — 92 of the 188 — of the parishes in the archdiocese, according to an email sent to priests today by Vicar General Charles Lachowitzer, the archbishop’s top deputy.

The archdiocese plans to release the names on its website Thursday. It will also release each priest’s birth year, ordination year, parish assignment history, current status and city of residence. For the deceased priests, it will also provide the year of death. The planned disclosure comes after Ramsey County Judge John Van de North ordered the archdiocese on Monday to release the names of all priests with credible allegations of child sexual abuse who had been included on a sealed list by Dec. 17. The 33 names were disclosed to attorneys in a 2009 clergy sexual abuse lawsuit, but a judge had ordered they remain private.

A spokesman for the archdiocese said the list will not include four of the 33 names. Three of the priests have allegations against them that church officials believe to be unsubstantiated, Tom Wieser, an attorney for the archdiocese, said Monday. The other priest’s name is not being released because there is no record that he served in the archdiocese, Wieser said.

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Human Rights Commission Submission (Or: The Rights of the Child)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The submission of the Australian Human Rights Commission to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse indicates it has limited experience of both child sexual abuse complaints, and of the Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” process which is to be the subject of hearings beginning on 9th December.

It points out that there are certain articles in the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) which are particularly pertinent to the handling of child sexual abuse complaints. These are articles 19,34,39,12 and 3.

Articles 19, 34 and 39 of the CRC oblige Australia to take all appropriate measures to protect children from sexual abuse and sexual exploitation by:

1. Implementing mechanisms to report abuse against children

2. Providing clear guidance and training on when and how to refer the issue of abuse to the responsible agency

3. Investigating instances of abuse

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Archdiocese alerts parishes to Thursday’s release of abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

[Doe 1 Order Releasing Names of Credibly Accused Priests]

Article by: RICHARD MERYHEW , Star Tribune Updated: December 4, 2013

E-mail notices says there are 92 parishes where at least one priest on the list was assigned.

In a heads-up to parish priests and administrators, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis Wednesday sent an e-mail to all clergy and church trustees preparing them for the disclosure of its list of clergy who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

The e-mail, from Vicar General Charles Lachowitzer, did not identify how many priests would be on the list, which the archdiocese has said it plans to release Thursday.

Lachowitzer, however, wrote that the archdiocese has mailed notices to 92 parishes where at least one priest on the list had been assigned at one point during his career.

“We expect that most parishes will receive these letters by the end of the day Wednesday, but some may arrive on Thursday,” Lachowitzer said.

Wednesday’s e-mail follows a ruling earlier this week by a Ramsey County district judge ordering the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona to release the names of 46 priests accused of sexually abusing minors by Dec. 17.

The Twin Cities archdiocese has held secret the names of 33 credibly accused abusers since it compiled the list in 2004 and won a 2009 ruling allowing the list to remain private. In court Monday, archdiocesan officials said they were prepared to identify 29 of the 33 priests, but Judge John Van de North ordered all 33 identified by Dec. 17.

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Bankruptcy Chronicles

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on December 4, 2013

All of the cool cats are doin’ it this season!

The Milwaukee Archdiocese bankruptcy is sloggin’ through the courts, complete with mysterious monetary maneuvers, secret payouts and cardinal denials that would make St. Peter blush. And that’s just the beginning.

In the Diocese of Gallup, the 341 meeting with creditors is scheduled for December 19. This first big public hearing is the chance for creditors (in this case, victims of abuse) to ask questions of Bishop Wall and his attorneys about the bankruptcy. In other dioceses, such as Wilmington, Delaware, these hearings have been a window into the soul of the diocese.

From the Associated Press‘ coverage of the Wilmington 341 hearing:

But [Wilmington Diocese CFO Joseph] Corsini drew a hostile reaction when, in response to a question from a victims’ attorney about the diocese’s assets and liabilities, said he was looking at “a roomful of liabilities” [referring to the victims in the courtroom]. He quickly apologized for the remark.

Now, the Diocese of Stockton is doing the pre-bankruptcy dance. Saying that “no viable option has emerged other than reorganizing financially under the protection of bankruptcy court,” Stockton Bishop Stephen Blaire announced that the California diocese will probably declare bankruptcy after the first of the year.

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ECPAT files amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court

UNITED STATES
ECPAT

For victims of child pornography the abuse continues, even after the primary abuser has been caught and prosecuted. This is because images and video of children being sexually abused are often shared between thousands of people online.

Amy* is a victim of child pornography living in the United States. When she was just nine years old, Amy was raped by her uncle, who documented and shared the abuse online. Now a young adult, Amy receives a court notification when someone has been arrested for viewing sexual abuse materials of her. These notifications arrive almost every day.

“It is hard to describe what it feels like to know that at any moment, anywhere, someone is looking at pictures of me as a little girl being abused by my uncle and is getting some kind of sick enjoyment from it,” Amy wrote in a victim impact statement. “It’s like I am being abused over and over and over again.”

Amy is seeking compensation for the damages she has suffered as a result of her images being viewed. In January, the US Supreme Court will decide what amount of compensation Amy is entitled to from the men who viewed her abuse.

ECPAT International, in partnership with ECPAT-USA, filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in the case Doyle Randall Paroline v. Amy Unknown and United States. ECPAT’s brief aims to give some background for the Court on the context of online child pornography, including the global scale of the problem, the harm caused to the victims, and the international legal framework in this area. ECPAT asks the Court to rule in favour of Amy, giving victims of child sexual exploitation in the United States the right to restitution from their abuser(s).

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Vatikanstaat will Kinderschutzprogramm einführen

VATIKAN
KIPA

New York, 4.12.13 (Kipa) Der Vatikanstaat arbeitet derzeit an einem eigenen Kinderschutzprogramm. Das geht aus einer Stellungnahme des Heiligen Stuhls gegenüber dem Kinderrechtskomitee der Vereinten Nationen (UNCRC) hervor. Laut dem Schreiben des Staatssekretariates, das auf den 25. November datiert und jetzt im Dokumentationsdienst der Vereinten Nationen veröffentlicht wurde, soll bis Ende 2014 ein entsprechendes Dokument verabschiedet werden. Eine Anpassung des vatikanischen Strafrechts an internationale Kinderschutznormen sei derzeit in Prüfung.

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Vatikan weist Vorwurf der Verzögerung zurück

VATIKAN
Frankfurter Allgemeine

04.12.2013 · Der Heilige Stuhl hat einen Fragenkatalog der UN nach Maßnahmen gegen Kindesmissbrauch in der Kirche nicht fristgerecht beantwortet. Gleichwohl tritt er dem Vorwurf entgegen, sich hinter „juristischen Formalitäten“ zu verschanzen.

Von JÖRG BREMER, ROM

Der Heilige Stuhl in Rom will doch auf den Fragenkatalog des UN-Ausschusses für die Rechte von Kindern bei der Menschenrechtskommission in Genf antworten, mit dem dieses Gremium die Vergehen pädophiler Geistlicher in aller Welt an ihren Schutzbefohlenen untersuchen will. Das sagte am Mittwoch Monsignore Massimo De Gregori von der ständigen Vertretung des Heiligen Stuhls bei der UN-Menschenrechtskommission in Genf. Er wies damit eine Meldung der BBC vom Vortag zurück. Allerdings habe man den Abgabetermin am 1. November nicht einhalten können. Doch die ersten Fragen seien schon bearbeitet worden, und die übrigen Antworten kämen rechtzeitig vor der Anhörung Mitte Januar.

Die BBC hatte am Dienstag mit Berufung auf die „National Secular Society“ britischer Humanisten berichtet, der Vatikan weise die Beantwortung zurück und verberge sich dabei hinter „juristischen Formalitäten“.

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Erzbistum darf Namen Beschuldigter preisgeben

MINNESOTA
Die Tagespost

Minnesota (DT/KNA) Das katholische Erzbistum St. Paul und Minneapolis darf die Namen von 46 des sexuellen Missbrauchs beschuldigten Priestern veröffentlichen. Auf gerichtliche Anweisung sind neben den Namen und dem Geburtsdatum auch das Jahr der Priesterweihe, bisherige Einsatzorte, die aktuelle Tätigkeit und die Wohnadresse zu publizieren, wie die Tageszeitung „Star Tribune“ (Dienstag) berichtet. Dafür setzte das Distriktgericht in Ramsey County eine Frist bis 17. Dezember. Das Erzbistum begrüßte der Zeitung zufolge die Entscheidung. Die Namen würden Donnerstag auf der Bistumswebsite und in der Kirchenzeitung aufgelistet.

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Kurie muss nicht zahlen

ITALIEN
Tageszeitung

von Artur Oberhofer

Roland Riz will das Urteil nicht kommentieren, der Professor sagt nur: „Ich freue mich für die Kurie.”

Am Oberlandesgericht in Bozen hat es am Mittwoch einen Paukenschlag gegeben: Das Oberlandesgericht hat nämlich die Vollstreckbarkeit des Urteils im Fall Don Giorgio Carli ausgesetzt.

Um was geht es?

Die Erste Sektion der Abteilung für Zivilsachen am Landesgericht in Bozen hatte im August die Diözese Bozen-Brixen bzw. die Pfarrei San Pio X. zur Zahlung des Schadenersatzes im Fall Don Giorgio Carli verurteilt.

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Catholic sex abuse scandal: how will Pope Francis make the Church accountable?

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Wed, 04 Dec 2013 17:11 by Terry Sanderson

Did you know that the Pope “sneaks out” of the Vatican at night dressed as an ordinary priest so that he can minister to the homeless and destitute on the streets of Rome?

Isn’t it marvellous?

Did you know that Pope Francis once worked as a bouncer at a nightclub?

How wonderful – he’s just like one of us – a working man.

As the propaganda piles up, Pope Francis basks in the adulation of the uncritical masses.

But wait. What’s this? The sex abuse scandal that so tormented his predecessor seems to be emerging again after being swept under the rug during Francis’s honeymoon period.

The Holy See (the political wing of the Vatican) has at last responded to questions put to it by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child about the global issue of child rape by priests.

Or, more accurately, it has not responded. It says that it has nothing to do with what goes on in the dioceses and parishes of its churches. Therefore it cannot be held responsible in any way for the unspeakable things that some of its priests do to defenceless children.

And just when the Vatican thought it had distracted us from the horrors that thousands of its priests have perpetrated, it all starts slithering back again.

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Vatican decision to rebuff UN’s abuse inquiries a serious misstep

CANADA
National Post

Charles Lewis | 04/12/13

The BBC is reporting that the Vatican has rebuffed a United Nations request for information concerning sexual abuse.

The Vatican, the report says, insist that the only valid jurisdictions are the ones where the alleged abuse took place.

“The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child put a wide-ranging questionnaire to the Holy See — the city state’s diplomatic entity — last July, asking for detailed information about the particulars of all sexual abuse cases notified to the Vatican since 1995,” the BBC reported.

“The questions included whether priests, nuns and monks guilty of sexual crime were allowed to remain in contact with children, what legal action had been taken against them, whether the Church required clergy to report abuse to secular authorities and whether complainants were silenced.”

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5 diocesan priests ‘credibly accused’ of sexual abuse still alive (12/04/2013)

MINNESOTA
Winona Post

[Doe 1 Order Releasing Names of Credibly Accused Priests]

By Chris Rogers

On Monday, a St. Paul judge ordered the Diocese of Winona to release a list of names of 13 priests or former priests credibly accused of sexual abuse. That list includes five living priests from the Winona Diocese, none of whom are currently serving the church, and eight deceased priests, according to diocesan officials. Winona Diocese leaders indicated Tuesday they would comply with the court order.

The attorney seeking the release, Jeff Anderson, called the ruling a “turning point” for justice in priest abuse cases. Officials from the diocese said that the release might condemn accused individuals without a fair trial.

The diocese created the list in 2004 and argued against its release on Monday, as well as during previous court proceedings. The order requires the diocese to release the names, city of residence, ordination date, and assignment history of the 13 priests by December 17, and the same information by January 6, 2014, for any priests who have been credibly accused since 2004. The archdiocese of St. Paul is also required to release a list of 33 priests under the order. The lists are of “credibly accused” priests as determined by the diocese and archdiocese. The priests have not necessarily been found guilty. Diocese of Winona Director of Mission Advancement Joel Hennessy said that he was not privy to all instances of credible accusations since 2004, but acknowledged one such case involving a priest in Blue Earth. According to a Pioneer Press report, Father Leo Koppala was arrested for allegedly sexually assaulting an 11-year-old girl. A statement from Bishop John Quinn said that the diocese had not received any reports of sexual misconduct by Koppala prior to his arrest in that incident.

“There may not be a shocking number of new names” revealed in the list, but even one is incredibly important to victims and to public safety, said Anderson.

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Belgian activist determined to see next fugitive priest brought to justice

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

DAVID MURPHY

Lieve Halsberghe tracked down the disgraced Belgian priest Eric Dejaeger and helped bring him to trial in Nunavut.

Now, she’s going after another priest accused of historic sex crimes — because of a promise she made to the late Marius Tungilik, whose lifelong struggle with childhood trauma finally ended a year ago, in December 2012, with his sudden death.

“I wanted to go to France to confront this man with this before [Joannis Rivoire] dies because that’s a promise I made to Marius,” Halsberghe said.

Fugitive priest Father Joannis Rivoire faces four charges related to his time spent in Nunavut starting in the 1960s. A warrant for his arrest was issued in 1998, but not much has happened since.

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THE FINANCIAL INFORMATION AUTHORITY SIGNS A MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING WITH ITS GERMAN COUNTERPART

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 4 December 2013 (VIS) – The Autorita di Informazione Finanziaria (AIF), the Financial Intelligence Unit of the Holy See and Vatican City State, signed today a Memorandum of Understanding with its German Counterpart, the Zentralstelle fur Verdachtsmeldungen at the Bundeskriminalamt (BKA).

The Memorandum was signed in the Vatican by Cardinal Attilio Nicora, president of the AIF, and Michael Dewald, director of the Zentralstelle fur Verdachtsmeldungen at the Bundeskriminalamt (BKA).

A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) is standard practice and formalises the co-operation and exchange of financial information to fight money laundering and terrorist financing across borders between the competent authorities of both countries. It is based on the model Memorandum of Understanding prepared by the Egmont Group, the global organisation of national Financial Intelligence Units, and contains clauses on reciprocity, permitted uses of information and confidentiality.

“This Memorandum is strengthening AIF’s international reach and further integrates the Holy See and Vatican City State with a co-ordinated global effort to fight money laundering and the financing of terrorism”, said AIF director Rene Bruelhart. “Today’s signing underlines our fruitful relationship and will further facilitate our joint efforts”.

The AIF became a member of the Egmont Group earlier in July this year and signed in the last months MOUs with the Financial Intelligence Units of the U.S.A., Belgium, Italy, Spain, Slovenia and the Netherlands. More are expected to be signed in the course of the coming months.

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THE COUNCIL OF CARDINALS CONTINUES ITS WORK WITH SERENITY AND OPENNESS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 4 December 2013 (VIS) – The meetings of the Council of Cardinals continued, as planned, yesterday afternoon with the participation of the Holy Father.

“The work of the Council took place in an environment of great serenity, with an open and cordial exchange between all participants”, communicated the director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J.

“As mentioned yesterday morning, the new secretary of State Archbishop Pietro Parolin was invited to the afternoon session to greet the members who wished him well in his new role, and in to establish contract in the hope of fruitful collaboration in the service of the Holy Father for the governance of the Church.

“This morning the Holy Father was not present due to the regular Wednesday general audience, but work continued as usual. The council considered the various dicasteries of the Roman Curia in turn (for example, the Causes of Saints, Catholic Education, Evangelisation of Peoples and so on).

“It is possible that during the meetings scheduled for these days, a first round of considerations on the Congregations may be completed, to be followed by an examination of the Pontifical Councils and the other dicasteries.

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Author makes case for Bergoglio’s conversion

National Catholic Reporter

Ken Briggs | Dec. 4, 2013 NCR Today

POPE FRANCIS: UNTYING THE KNOTS
By Paul Vallely
Published by Bloomsbury Continuum, $20.95

Well into Paul Vallely’s absorbing portrait of the show-stopping new pope, we see Jorge Bergoglio as archbishop of Buenos Aires, Argentina, presumably offering Communion to any and all takers in his born-again mission to the city’s poorest neighborhoods.

“When you’re working in a shanty town 90 percent of your congregation are single or divorced,” says Fr. Augosto Zampini, a diocesan priest who serves as one of Vallely’s key sources. “You have to learn to deal with that. Communion for the divorced and remarried is not an issue there. Everyone takes Communion.”

Vallely doesn’t explicitly place Zampini at the scene — nor is it clear how well he knew the archbishop — but the implication is clear. Faced with a choice of inviting the few or the many to partake, Bergoglio allowed pastoral needs to trump church rules.

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Ex-pastor sentenced on sex charges

INDIANA
Daily Reporter

By Noelle Steele
Staff Writer
First Posted: December 03, 2013

GREENFIELD — A former New Palestine youth minister pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct with a minor Tuesday morning after admitting to the court he fondled a young girl at his church.

Steve Harding, 61, was sentenced to two years in Hancock County Community Corrections and one year of probation after accepting a plea agreement in which he pleaded guilty to the Class D felony charge. Harding’s community corrections sentence could include participation in work-release, a program that allows offenders to leave the facility to go to and from their jobs, or home detention.

State law does not require someone convicted of sexual misconduct with a minor to register as a sex offender.

Harding did not address the court in detail about his misconduct but was required to answer a series of yes-or-no questions as part of a plea agreement. When asked if he had touched the girl in a sexual manner, he answered, “Yes.”

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Ex-youth pastor admits sexual contact with girl

INDIANA
KPC

Associated Press

A former youth pastor at a suburban Indianapolis church has pleaded guilty to charges that he had sexual contact with a girl who attended the church.

A Hancock County judge sentenced 61-year-old Steve Harding to spend two years in a community corrections program and a year on probation. Harding pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a felony charge of sexual misconduct with a minor for his actions while he was a youth pastor at New Palestine United Methodist Church.

The Daily Reporter reports ( http://bit.ly/1k9SYA7) prosecutors dropped a more serious charge of child molesting.

Judge Richard Culver told Harding he took advantage of the girl’s trust in him as a family friend and mentor.

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Reverend John A. Koonz

MASSACHUSETTS
Republican

[Springfield Diocese List of Priests with Credible Allegations 08.30.11 via BishopAccountability.org]

WEST SPRINGFIELD
The Reverend John A. Koonz, 76 of West Springfield, MA died Wednesday November 27, 2913 at his home surrounded by his family. He was born in Cornwall, NY son of Joseph H. and Theresse (Gunther) Koonz. He attended St. Columba Elementary School in Chester, NY until 1946, when the family moved to North Adams. He then attended the former St. Joseph’s Elementary School and graduated from the former St. Joseph’s High School with the class of 1955. He graduated from St. Anselm’s College in 1959 and completed his theological studies at St. Mary’s University of Theology Seminary in Baltimore, MD in 1963. On May 26, 1963, Rev. Koonz was ordained to the Priesthood by Bishop Christopher J. Weldon at his home parish of St. Francis of Assisi in North Adams, MA.

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Vatican and Germany sign cooperation document in fight against money laundering

VATICAN CITY/GERMANY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The Financial Intelligence Unit of the Holy See (AIF) on Wednesday, December 4, signed a Memorandum of Understanding with its German counterpart, the “Zentralstelle für Verdachtsmeldungen at the Bundeskriminalamt” (BKA).

The Memorandum was signed in the Vatican by Cardinal Attilio Nicora, President of AIF, and by Dr. Michael Dewald, director of Zentralstelle für Verdachtsmeldungen at the Bundeskriminalamt (BKA).

A Vatican Comuniquè explains that a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) is standard practice and formalizes the cooperation and exchange of financial information to fight money laundering and terrorist financing across borders between the competent authorities of both countries.

It is based on the model Memorandum of Understanding prepared by the Egmont Group, the global organization of national Financial Intelligence Units, and contains clauses on reciprocity, permitted uses of information and confidentiality.

“This Memorandum is strengthening AIF’s international reach and further integrates the Holy See and the Vatican City State with a coordinated global effort to fight Money Laundering and the Financing of Terrorism,” said AIF Director René Bruelhart. “Today’s signing underlines our fruitful relationship and will further facilitate our joint efforts.”

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MO – Two predator priest cases end

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Each settled for six figure amounts
One man was assaulted by two clerics
A Catholic religious order resolved his suit
But Bishop Finn’s diocese refuses to do so
In the other case, predator admitted wrongdoing

What:
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, victims of clergy sex abuse and their supporters will disclose two recent settlements in local clergy sex abuse cases against two priests.

In one of them, a boy was assaulted by two priests. In the other one, a boy was assaulted by a priest who later admitted wrongdoing.

They will also

–prod Bishop Robert Finn to disclose the identities of predator priests (as a Minnesota judge just ordered a bishop there to do) and post their names on his KC diocesan website, and
–prod anyone who many have seen, suspected or suffered child sex crimes or cover ups to come forward, get help, expose predators, protect kids, deter wrongdoing and start healing.

When:
TODAY, Wednesday, December 4, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.

Where:
Outside the KC Catholic diocesan chancery office/headquarters, 20 W. 9th Street in downtown KC.

Who:
Three members of a support group called SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), including a St. Louis man who is the organization’s long time executive director

Why:
Two local pedophile priest lawsuits have settled.

1. – A high profile Kansas City clergy sex abuse victim has settled, for $125,000, with one of two Catholic defendants in a lawsuit that he filed two years ago.

[BishopAccountability.org]

In September 2011, Jon David Couzens Jr. filed a civil suit charging that two priests – Fr. Isaac True and Msgr. Thomas J. O’Brien – sexually assaulted him in the late 1970s and early 1980s when he was a nine and ten year old altar boy at Nativity parish in Independence.

Another defendant, Bishop Robert Finn’s KC diocese, has NOT settled with Couzens.

2. – John Doe M R has settled his case against Fr. James Urbanic, the KC diocese and Society of Precious Blood for $130,000. The case was filed in Feb. 2012 in Buchanan County, where the alleged crimes took place, at St. Francis Xavier’s Catholic church. The two met at Bishop LaBlond High School in St. Joseph.

In this case, all three defendants settled.

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Vatican Snubs U.N. Probe On Sex Abuse Cases

VATICAN CITY
Time

By Kharunya Paramaguru Dec. 04, 2013

The Vatican has told the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) that it will not disclose information on cases of alleged sexual abuse of children committed by members of its clergy.

The committee wrote to the Church in July asking for “detailed information” on the investigations, legal proceedings and outcomes of cases of alleged sexual abuses.

In a written response to these questions — hand-delivered last month but just published online by the U.N. on Tuesday — the Vatican wrote that “it is not the practice of the Holy See to disclose information on the religious discipline of members of the clergy or religious according to canon law.” It said this was “in order to protect the witnesses, the accused and the integrity of the Church process.”

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Vatican says not legally competent over abuses

VATICAN CITY
New Straits Times

[Read the list of questions from UN Committee on the Rights of the Child here.
Read the Vatican’s response here.
Read the SNAP-CCR report here.]

VATICAN CITY: The Vatican has told a UN investigating committee that it cannot be held legally competent over the abuses of children carried out by Catholic churchmen because they are subject to national laws, a spokesman said on Wednesday.

“When individual institutions of national churches are implicated, that does not regard the competence of the Holy See but rather the laws of the countries concerned,” Father Federico Lombardi said.

Lombardi said Vatican officials would explain their position at a meeting in Geneva on January 16 with the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, which is checking whether the Catholic Church is honouring the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

“The competence of the Holy See is at the level of the Holy See,” Lombardi said, explaining that the Vatican was among the first states to sign up to the convention.

Campaign groups for abuse victims have criticised the Vatican in the past for making the legalistic distinction between the central administration of the Church and the actions of individual clergymen.

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Gagging and wretching

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

A warmer day yesterday. No wind. It made a world of difference. As cold as it is was it almost felt balmy 🙂

Yesterday (Tuesday 03 December 2013) the sex abuse trial of Father Eric Dejaeger recessed for the day in early afternoon. Two female victims testified.

I have had issues getting things sorted out with net access during the day, – think that’s all in hand now so will be able to make use of the lunch hour tomorrow. Other commitments last evening kept me from the computer until evening. I have the testimony of one witness here – will finish tomorrow.

First, some general observations.

Yet again, with one exception, during testimony Father Dejaeger listens intently, and fixes his gaze on the witness, He occasionally strokes his beard, but for the most part sits with hands clasped under his chin.

I will come back to the one exception later when I touch on the testimony.

I mention Dejaeger’s demeanour during testimony – I saw another picture of the man when he was escorted into court after lunch this afternoon.

Dejaeger arrived at 1:28. Court was scheduled to resume at 1:30 pm.

First I must say that Dejaeger looks lithe and fit. He has obviously lost weight if we compare pictures from Belgium (ie, cheeks hollowed) – but he is by no means fading away, and, he moves with ease.

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Winona diocese says it will comply with judge’s order to release list of priests credibly accused of abuse

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

By Jerome Christenson jchristenson@winonadailynews.com

The Diocese of Winona said Tuesday it will not contest a judge’s ruling compelling the diocese to release the names of 13 priests credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

“The Diocese of Winona will fully cooperate with the order,” said Bishop John Quinn in a statement, referring to a Ramsey County judge’s decision Monday ordering both the Winona and Minneapolis-St. Paul dioceses to release their lists of priests.

The information released will include each priest’s name, date of birth, year of ordination, whether the priest is alive or deceased, all parishes where the priest served within the diocese, current ministerial status and most current address known, according to the ruling.

Joel Hennessy, director of communications for the Diocese of Winona, said the information will be released by the Dec. 17 deadline set by the court. The exact date and procedure for releasing the information has not yet been determined, and some information regarding the current address of some individuals will need to be verified before the release could be made.

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Lawyer: Russian priest accused of pedophilia remains in Israel

RUSSIA/ISRAEL
Interfax

St. Petersburg, December 4, Interfax – Russian Orthodox priest Gleb Grozovsky, who is accused of lewd acts with a child, remains in Israel but his exact whereabouts are unclear, according to his lawyer.

“He is in Israel, I don’t know where exactly. In this situation he has the status of a citizen and not that of a priest,” Artyom Bakonin told Interfax.

Investigators claim that the 34-year-old priest sexually abused girls aged nine and 12 at a hotel on the premises of an Orthodox children’s camp on the Kos Island in Greece in June this year. Grozovsky, who was afterward temporarily posted at a drug abuse help center in Israel, had an arrest warrant issued for him and put on an international wanted list.

In November, the Diocese of Gatchina, near St. Petersburg, announced that Grozovsky’s posting in Israel had been terminated and urged him to return to Russia. Grozovsky was suspended as a priest for the period the alleged crimes are being investigated.

Grozovsky protests his innocence.

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LA Times Readers Slam Cardinal Mahony’s Handling Church Sex Abuse Scandal

CALIFORNIA
Lez Get Real

Earlier this week we reported on an LA Times two part feature article on Cardinal Roger Mahony’s mishandling of the child sex abuse scandal in Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

The article paints the picture of a man who had ambitious plans for the archdiocese and his legacy, but hid the abuse of children, because he saw his greater agenda would be endangered by the revelation of the molestation scandal… A man who was and is more worried about that legacy, then he was about justice and the safety of children.

Mahony went as far as to keep law enforcement uninvolved. Instead of turning priests accused of abuse over to the police for prosecution, Mahony would, instead, send them to out of state “treatment centers” he knew would keep a secret. And under his administration of the LA Archdiocese, abuse victims were discouraged from contacting the authorities.

All the while Mahony kept detailed documentation and files of the abuse cases safely locked in his desk.

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Man fails in bid to sue disgraced Cardinal

SCOTLAND
Evening Times

A MAN has failed in an attempt to sue disgraced Cardinal Keith O’Brien over alleged sex abuse by a parish priest.

The 33-year-old from Bathgate, West Lothian, claims he was given cash and rosary beads to buy his silence.

The priest he blames for molesting him between 1989 and 1992 has since died.

The man went to the Court of Session in Edinburgh seeking £100,000 damages, and in papers submitted to the court his lawyers tried to argue that Cardinal O’Brien and other senior figures in the Catholic Church’s hierarchy in Scotland should legally carry the blame – in the same way that an employer can be sued over an employee’s wrongdoing.

The churchmen named in the action are the trustees of the Archdiosese of St Andews and Edinburgh.

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Man fails in bid to sue disgraced cardinal Keith O’Brien for £100,000 over claims he was abused by parish priest

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

THE 33-year-old, from Bathgate, who alleges he was molested by a priest between 1989 and 1992 says O’Brien and other church figures should take the blame but was told he had left it too late to raise action.

A MAN has failed in a bid to sue disgraced cardinal Keith O’Brien for £100,000 over sex abuse by a parish priest.

He claims he was given cash and rosary beads to buy his silence. The priest he blames for molesting him between 1989 and 1992 has since died.

The 33-year-old man, of Bathgate, West Lothian, went to the Court of Session in Edinburgh seeking £100,000 damages.

He claimed O’Brien and other senior figures in the Catholic Church in Scotland should carry the blame.

The churchmen named in the action are the trustees of the Archdiocese of St Andews and Edinburgh.

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Vatican rebuffs United Nations sex abuse inquiries

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

The Vatican has refused to provide information requested by the United Nations on the alleged sexual abuse of children by priests, nuns or monks.

The Vatican said the cases were the responsibility of the judicial systems of countries where abuse took place.

The UK National Secular Society accused the Vatican of hiding behind legal technicalities.

On his appointment in March, Pope Francis said dealing with sex abuse was vital for the Church’s credibility.

The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child put a wide-ranging questionnaire to the Holy See – the city state’s diplomatic entity – last July, asking for detailed information about the particulars of all sexual abuse cases notified to the Vatican since 1995.

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Pastor’s rape trial continued

MISSOURI
Lake News

The trial of a California, Mo. man charged with multiple counts of sexual child abuse in Moniteau County has been continued.

The pre-trial conference for Travis R. Smith, 43, has now been set for May 16, 2014 with the jury trial scheduled to begin Monday, June 2.

Smith is the pastor of First Baptist Church of Stover.

In September 2012, Smith was arrested by the Missouri State Highway Patrol on charges of forcible rape, sexual abuse and two counts of statutory rape in the second degree in alleged incidents that took place in March 1998 and February 1999. Smith was also then charged in Moniteau County Circuit Court with statutory rape in the second degree and statutory sodomy in the second degree related to incidents alleged to have occurred in 2005.

The allegations involve two different victims.

In June 2013, the charge of forcible sodomy for deviate sexual intercourse by forcible compulsion was added to the charges filed against Smith. This incident was alleged to have occurred in October 1999.

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Son of Pastor Charged with Sexual Abuse Speaks Out

NEW YORK
WKBW

[with video]

By WKBW News

December 3, 2013

Barker, N.Y. (WKBW) After decades of silence, George Harriger is speaking out for justice.
“I’ve left a predator on the streets,” said Harriger.

The predator in question, he says is his own father, Roy Harriger who now faces sexual assault charges after several alleged victims, all family members have a come forward, including George himself.

Roy Harriger is the pastor at this Community Fellowship Church in the Town of Hartland and was arrested on November 27 but one day later was bailed out of jail.

This past Sunday, Roy Harriger was in attendance for worship at Community Fellowship Church.

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Philomena: A Review (of Sorts)

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

I’d like to recommend to you a movie Steve and I saw on the day after Thanksgiving–Stephen Frears’s Philomena, starring Judi Dench. I don’t want to say too much about the plot, since I don’t want to spoil it for those who haven’t yet seen the movie. Many of you will already know that the film recounts the real-life story of an Irish woman, Philomena Lee, who gave birth to a child in one of those homes for unwed mothers run by nuns in Ireland. The little boy was taken from her and sold to a couple in the states, and she spent years searching for her son–the focus of the film’s plot.

The plot has the makings of a political diatribe–evil nuns, censorious Catholic attitudes towards sex, lies, secrets, and silence. The cruelty and duplicity of the nuns with whom Philomena deals is breathtaking. A filmmaker with a heavier hand would no doubt have bulled the story along in a determined, monochromatic way that allowed us to leave the theater full of righteous indignation against those who did Philomena wrong, ruined her life, and (spoiler alert) thwarted her attempt to find her son. All in the name of Jesus and his divine mercy, it goes without saying, of course . . . .

Frears’s touch is much defter, however, and the story succeeds at getting under the skin as a result–and then won’t let one go. I’ve struggled for days now with the movie’s lack of clear resolution, its lack of the kind of moral indignation that would let me off the hook as I tussle with the thought of those evil nuns, those Catholic authority figures with their censorious notions of sex, the lies, the secrets, and the silence.

Instead, what Frears offers as the plot unfolds are quicksilver shifts from rage to tears to laughter, none of which allows one to nestle cozily down into a space of easy outrage. What we get instead is a story of unexpected redemption in which Martin Sixsmith (Steve Coogan), the English journalist who offers to help Philomena search for her son and tell her story, and who has all the appropriate enraged responses to the evil nuns we ourselves also have, becomes Philomena’s disciple in the spiritual life. Hearing from her a story of grace and forgiveness more complicated than the one he’d prefer to have heard and told–a story that ends up implicating him . . . .

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Bail extended to March for Catholic brother

AUSTRALIA
Wyndham Weekly

By Goya Dmytryshchak

A Catholic brother accused of sexually abusing two boys and two girls in the 1970s and ’80s in Melbourne’s west has been bailed until next March.

Brother Bernard Hartman, 73, has been charged with 14 counts of indecent assault. The charges relate to separate complaints from two men and two women, including Altona Meadows woman Mairead Ashcroft.

Taskforce Sano detectives allege the offences happened at a school and homes in the western suburbs of Melbourne between 1976 and 1982.

The Melbourne Magistrates Court last Thursday extended Hartman’s bail until a contested committal hearing on March 17.

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Pope left-wing slant and non-response to UN is no coincidence

UNITED STATES
City of Angels

Kay Ebeling

My theory: It was a deal. Francis got named Pope to derail child sex abuse charges with a Sudden Left Wing Turn in the church. He gets to steer to the left and help the poor, and the old monarchs get to keep the files secret. Just my paranoid, plot seeing brain at work as always. BUT IN FACT this sudden left-wing turn may affect UN prosecutors’ motivation. Just a thought.

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Vatican Responds to UN Questions on Sexual Violence Against Children

UNITED STATES
eNews Park Forest

New York –(ENEWSPF)—December 3, 2013. Today, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which represents SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), released the following statement on the Vatican’s response to a set of questions posed to it officially by the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child with regards to the handling of the widespread sexual violence against children in the church.

In its vague and delayed response to the committee, the Vatican has once again refused to accept responsibility for the policies and practices that allow, even facilitate and encourage, the proliferation of rape and sexual violence against children in the Catholic Church. In claiming it only bears responsibility for what happens inside Vatican City and blaming the lack of prevention and redress for these crimes by priests and others associated with the church around the world on local governments, the Holy See has taken one of its most explicitly disingenuous and misleading positions on the issue to date.

The Vatican conveniently ignores its strict policies regarding internal reporting and oversight and the ways in which it has blocked efforts at civil remedies, blocked efforts to ensure access to justice for victims by fighting reforms or the abolition of statutes of limitations, and rewarded bishops who have subverted and often thwarted criminal and civil investigations in many countries.

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Vatican balks at sharing sex abuse investigations with UN

VATICAN CITY
Deutsche Welle

The Vatican has refused to provide information to a UN panel about its investigation into sexual abuse of children by the clergy. The Church said it couldn’t be held responsible for the behavior of Catholics worldwide.

The Holy See on Tuesday said it wouldn’t release the details of its internal investigations into abuse cases unless required to do so by the request of a state or government in order to cooperate with legal proceedings. The Church’s refusal came in response to a series of questions posed by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, the main UN treaty that guarantees human rights for children.
The Vatican ratified the convention in 1990 and submitted its first implementation report in 1994, but then proceeded to not provide progress reports for nearly a decade. The Church finally provided one last year after coming under renewed pressure following an increase in child sex abuse cases in Europe in 2010.

The UN had asked the questions in response to the latest progress report, and a Vatican delegation is set to appear before the panel in person at a committee hearing in Geneva on January 16.

In its response to the panel on Tuesday, the Holy See said the details of its internal disciplinary proceedings were “not open to the public” in order to protect “witnesses, the accused and the integrity of the Church process.” It added that it cannot ratify international treaties on behalf of all the world’s Catholics, and that they can only be implemented in the territory it controls – the Vatican City State.

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Coach, ex-youth pastor charged with sexual assault of 13-year-old boy

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

By JENNIFER TODD
Staff Writer
jtodd@lnpnews.com

A Pequea Valley Junior High School basketball coach and former youth pastor has been charged with the repeated sexual assault of a 13-year-old boy.

Officials also charged Jonathan D. Masteller, 23, of Kinzer Road, Kinzers, with having images and videos on his computer depicting child pornography.

He was arraigned Tuesday by District Judge B. Denise Commins and committed to Lancaster County Prison after failing to post $250,000 bail.

Masteller is the junior high head boys’ basketball coach at Pequea Vallley, according to the district’s website.

On social media sites, Masteller also identified himself as being employed by Pequea Valley as an assistant in a third-grade emotional support classroom.

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Vatican dodges sex abuse questions

VATICAN CITY
3 News (New Zealand)

[Read the list of questions from UN Committee on the Rights of the Child here.
Read the Vatican’s response here.
Read the SNAP-CCR report here.]

By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican has dodged a series of questions posed by a UN committee about clerical sexual abuse by noting that the Holy See doesn’t control the actions of every Catholic in the world, much less regulate every Catholic priest, parish or school.

Rather, the Vatican asserted that local bishops are ultimately responsible for keeping children safe from paedophile priests, and that schools and workhouses where abuse occurred in Ireland and elsewhere are subject to local civil laws and regulations, not Vatican jurisdiction.

The Vatican’s position was laid out in a response to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child about its implementation of the 1989 UN Convention of the Rights of the Child, the main UN treaty guaranteeing a full range of human rights for children.

The Holy See ratified the convention in 1990 and submitted a first implementation report in 1994. But it didn’t provide progress reports for nearly a decade, and only submitted one last year after coming under renewed pressure following the 2010 explosion of child sex abuse cases in Europe and beyond.

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Winona Bishop Quinn Addresses Priest Abuse

MINNESOTA
KAAL

[with video]

(ABC 6 News) — A Ramsey County judge ruled Monday that the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis as well as the Diocese of Winona must release the names of priests accused of sexual assault.

This after a law suit where the victim demanded that the names be released for the public’s safety.

Back in August Bill Beardmore stood before us and told us of the sexual abuse he says he suffered at the hands of his own priest more than 50 years ago.

“I felt like I was the person that had done something bad, I was just a little kid, I was an altar boy,” said Beardmore.

Beardmore is just one of the victims that attorney Jeff Anderson has represented that has asked that the names of the priests that have been credibly accused be released.

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Vatican refuses to share sex abuse allegations with UN panel

VATICAN CITY
ABS-CBN (Philippines)

Reuters
Posted at 12/04/2013

[Read the list of questions from UN Committee on the Rights of the Child here.
Read the Vatican’s response here.
Read the SNAP-CCR report here.]

ROME – The Vatican refused to provide a United Nations rights panel with information on the Church’s internal investigations into the sexual abuse of children by clergy, saying on Tuesday that its policy was to keep such cases confidential.

In response to a series of tough questions posed by the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Holy See said it would not release information on its internal investigations into abuse cases unless required to do so by a request from a state or government to cooperate in legal proceedings.

The response of the Holy See, which will be directly questioned by the panel in January 2014, will be closely watched as it tries to draw a line under financial scandals and abuse by priests that have damaged the standing of the Roman Catholic Church around the world.

Since becoming the first non-European pontiff in 1,300 years, Pope Francis has largely succeeded in changing the subject after the resignation of Benedict XVI in February.

The questions from the panel aimed to assess the Church’s adherence to the 1990 U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child, a treaty guaranteeing a full range of human rights for children which the Holy See has signed.

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December 3, 2013

Pedophile Priest Handed Two-And-A-Half Year Prison Sentence

ITALY
FINNBAY

(FINNBAY-ANSA) – Pesaro, 3 December 2013. A judge on Tuesday handed a 43-year-old priest in the north-eastern city of Pesaro a two-and-a-half year sentence for having sex with a 13-year-old girl.

The case of Father Giangiacomo Ruggeri, a former spokesman for the bishop of Fano, began when a lifeguard saw the priest and the child passionately embracing on a beach last year. “She could have been my daughter”, said Marco Mandolini, who promptly called the cops.

Police later entered into evidence a covert videotape of Ruggeri, an ex girl-scout leader and diocese communications director, with his underage protegee on the beach on July 10 and 12, 2012. “I don’t know what came over me”, Ruggeri, who was the child’s spiritual adviser, told police when he was arrested. “We all, beginning with the church, are and live with imperfect men”, his employer, Bishop Armando Trasarti, said at the time.

Immediately suspended by the church after his arrest, the errant priest spent five months in jail, followed by a period of reflection in a convent, a few months working in a church library in the city of Perugia, and a move to Rome, where he now works as a cook at a canteen for political refugees.

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Vatican – Pope essentially rebuffs UN panel

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday December 3, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

The Vatican is ducking and dodging a United Nations Panel’s request for information about the churches ongoing clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis.

[Center for Constitutional Rights]

[National Secular Society]

On clergy sex crimes and cover ups, Pope Francis breaks no new ground. Like Benedict and John Paul before him, he parses words, splits hairs, hides information, and exploits legalistic technicalities.

The pope’s refusal to give straight answers and act exactly like his predecessors is especially disheartening because in so many other ways he seems like a tiny bit of fresh air. If he’s willing to bend and break some long standing church traditions, why is he so unwilling to do so about the safety of kids?

This is a simple sad story: the pope refuses to honor a deadline, tell the truth, and be accountable. New face, same outcome. Ultimately keeping children away from predators is far more important than carrying your own luggage and riding a bus.

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The Ellis Submission (Or: Final Vindication?)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

One of the submissions to the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse which is worthy of close study is that by John and Nicola Ellis, both of whom are lawyers who have represented victims. John Ellis is himself a victim. A past court action against the Catholic Church by Mr. Ellis resulted in the finding that the Catholic Church could not be sued, because it, technically, does not exist (see previous postings on “Ellis Defence”).

The submission covered here is one on the general principles on which the “Towards Healing” process (see previous postings) errs. Mr. Ellis has, apparently, also made a personal submission on his own experiences with the Catholic Church, which is private. There exists considerable anticipation of Mr. Ellis’ evidence to the hearings on the “Towards Healing” process at the Royal Commission, beginning on 9th December.

As stated previously, this author is not a lawyer (and not even a “bush lawyer”) so there will undoubtedly be technical errors. Apologies are given to the Ellis’ in advance, for any misinterpretations of their submission. Despite these disadvantages, it is important to give a general idea of what they feel about the “Towards Healing” process, since they are the acknowledged experts on it.

The focus of this posting will therefore be the 25 main points they make, with little interpretation of them, in terms of consequences and necessary regulatory changes required to address the problems they raise. For those who have the time, energy and expertise to do so, a look at their submission, available on the Commission’s web-site, is encouraged.

1. Complainants have to go to church which abused them. The church won’t allow independent contact person e.g. counselor, on the basis that this is too expensive for the church. It does not allow for victims’ lawyers. As indicated in yesterday’s posting, the church’s submission appears to be very anti-lawyer in terms of victim support persons. As a result, the primary concern of victims is that they won’t be believed. The situation creates a power imbalance (see previous postings on this issue in general). For example, the church representative is referred to as the “church authority”. Sometimes, delays in the process can be used to create a legal limitations problem – e.g. normally, one has a certain amount of time after becoming aware of the effects of abuse on oneself, so if the church delays the process longer than this time (the victims is assumed to be aware of the effects of the abuse when he or she first approaches the church), the victim is disadvantaged in the legal process.

2. Victims are discouraged, or filtered out, at the first contact point with the Professional Standards Office, which runs the process. Victims are sometimes told to “go away and think about it [the complaint]” which is seen as a rebuff.

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Priest convicted for child abuse

POLAND
The News

Loyal parishioners turned out in force yesterday as a Polish priest was sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in prison for molesting five boys from 2002 to 2009.

Father Slawomir S. (full name withheld under Polish privacy laws) had pleaded not guilty and he was not present in court yesterday. The clergyman had led a parish in Rawa Mazowiecka, central Poland.
The five victims had served as altar-boys for the priest, and all of them had been under fifteen at the time of the abuse.

The priest has been banned for life from working with minors, and he is also forbidden from making any contact with the victims in future.

One of the abused, now an adult, told the TVN24 news station that he finally stepped forward as he “would have been furious if the priest abused someone else.”

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Man fails to sue Cardinal O’Brien over priest abuse

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

A MAN has failed in an attempt to sue disgraced Cardinal Keith O’Brien over alleged sex abuse by a parish priest.

The 33-year-old from Bathgate, West Lothian, claims he was given cash and rosary beads to buy his silence.

The priest he blames for molesting him between 1989 and 1992 has since died.

The 33-year-old went to the Court of Session in Edinburgh seeking £100,000 damages.

In papers submitted to the court, his lawyers tried to argue that Cardinal O’Brien and other senior figures in the Catholic Church’s hierarchy in Scotland should legally carry the blame – in the same way that an employer can be sued over an employee’s wrong doing.

The churchmen named in the action are the trustees of the Archdiosese of St Andews and Edinburgh.

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Angered by church sex abuse, readers turn against Cardinal Mahony

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

By Paul Thornton
December 3, 2013

During the Roman Catholic Church’s decades-long sex abuse crisis, then-Los Angeles Archbishop Roger Mahony went to great lengths to keep law enforcement uninvolved. Instead of handing priests accused of abuse over to police, he would send them to therapists he knew could keep a secret or to faraway rehab programs. Under his watch, the church discouraged abuse victims from talking to authorities.

That’s according to The Times’ two-part series Sunday and Monday on the 23,000 pages of documents ordered released by the courts that detail Mahony’s efforts to keep accusations of abuse in the Los Angeles Archdiocese from erupting into a public scandal. The stories portray Mahony, who retired as archbishop in 2011, as a politically active prelate whose behind-the-scenes maneuvering to cover up the abuse stands in stark contrast to the image of social consciousness he projected in public.

We’ve received more than two dozen letters on the series so far, and only two have defended Mahony. Some of the letters are from Catholics disgusted by their leaders’ conduct; a handful come from readers who say they’ve been abused themselves.

The reaction to Times articles on abuse in the church hasn’t always been this one-sided. As the scandal unfolded through the years, a good portion of the letters we received accused The Times of being too harsh on Mahony or of harboring an anti-Catholic bias. They said the cardinal possessed many redeeming qualities or did more than most bishops to rid his parish of sex abuse.

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Pedophile priest handed two-and-a-half year prison sentence

ITALY
Gazzetta del Sud

Pesaro, December 3 – A judge on Tuesday handed a 43-year-old priest in the north-eastern city of Pesaro a two-and-a-half year sentence for having sex with a 13-year-old girl. The case of Father Giangiacomo Ruggeri, a former spokesman for the bishop of Fano, began when a lifeguard saw the priest and the child passionately embracing on a beach last year. “She could have been my daughter”, said Marco Mandolini, who promptly called the cops. Police later entered into evidence a covert videotape of Ruggeri, an ex girl-scout leader and diocese communications director, with his underage protegee on the beach on July 10 and 12, 2012. “I don’t know what came over me”, Ruggeri, who was the child’s spiritual adviser, told police when he was arrested. “We all, beginning with the church, are and live with imperfect men”, his employer, Bishop Armando Trasarti, said at the time. Immediately suspended by the church after his arrest, the errant priest spent five months in jail, followed by a period of reflection in a convent, a few months working in a church library in the city of Perugia, and a move to Rome, where he now works as a cook at a canteen for political refugees. “I accept the court’s decision”, Ruggeri told defense attorney Gianluca Sposito at today’s sentencing. The victim’s family will sue for damages in civil court, family attorney Omar Severi said.

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Pope Francis Avoids Apology For Clergy Sex Abuse

VATICAN CITY
The Daily Beast

By Barbie Latza Nadeau
December 3rd 2013

Why doesn’t popular Pope Francis issue a straightforward apology for rampant child sex abuse by Catholic priests, instead of swerving time and again on the issue?

There is no question that Pope Francis has put a shine on the tarnished Catholic church through acts of humility and courage in the first eight months of his papacy. Cold calls to Catholics and random acts of kindness—including rumors that he regularly sneaks out of Vatican City at night to help feed the poor in Rome—have endeared him to the most ardent naysayers. But the first Latin American pontiff hasn’t won everyone over quite yet.

Advocates of the clerical child sex scandal say the pope still has done little to address the church’s disgraceful record on child abuse. And on Monday, he seemed to miss another big opportunity to apologize for the church’s sins. In a meeting with 13 Dutch prelates in Rome, he apparently intended to flick at the issue. According to prepared remarks given to those who attended the meeting, he was planning to say, “I wish to express my compassion and to ensure my closeness in prayer to every victim of sexual abuse, and to their families; I ask you to continue to support them along the painful path of healing, that they have undertaken with courage.” But those in attendance said he veered off script and instead held an open conversation with the clergy present, failing to focus on the sex abuse problem in the Dutch church as he may have intended, according to the prepared remarks. Last year, the Dutch government issued a harsh report against the Catholic church after investigating more than 20,000 valid claims of child abuse by priests since 1945. They called out the Dutch church’s failure to “adequately deal with the abuse.”

Monday’s missed opportunity is not the first time this popular pontiff has punted on the issue. In a broad interview published in several Jesuit magazines in September, he also chose not to address the issue at all, which disappointed many Catholics who were hoping to hear from the new pope on this contentious topic. In another interview in October, this time with La Repubblica the pope again remained silent on the subject of sex abuse, missing what many Italians felt was a golden opportunity to put his views on the record.

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Jason Berry on Evangelii Gaudium and the Catholic Clerical Sex Abuse Crisis

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Another take on Evangelii Gaudium, this by Jason Berry, who deserves tremendous credit for his persistence in reporting about the Catholic clerical sex abuse crisis long before anyone else dared to write about this: Berry notes that Francis and his pastoral formulation of Catholicism are enjoying great popularity in Europe, where unemployment for Spanish and Greek young people is now at Depression-era levels. But he also points out that the stress on open doors and on the need for a decentralized church which places service to the least among us first on its agenda will cause people to ask questions about how he intends to address the abuse crisis.

Berry writes,

Francis’s reference to a church “clinging to its own security” came on the same day a clergy abuse survivors’ group in Milwaukee, Wis. released a letter drafted by Father James Connell, a canon lawyer and former diocesan official, to the Congregation for Clergy in Rome, asking the Vatican to nullify a controversial $57 million transaction by Cardinal Timothy Dolan, as archbishop of Milwaukee six years ago, burying the money in a cemetery trust to avoid paying settlements to clergy abuse victims.

In 2007, Dolan shifted the $57 million from general funds into a special cemetery trust as lawsuits by abuse victims mounted. Dolan soon went to New York to become archbishop and subsequently a cardinal. In Milwaukee, the diocese faces 550 victim cases. The diocese filed for federal bankruptcy relief three years ago in an effort to bargain down the settlements; the bankruptcy turned into grinding litigation in which church lawyers challenged the validity of the victims’ claims.
A group of sympathetic clergy rallied to the cause of the victims. The letter that Father Connell wrote as part of the Survivors and Clergy Leadership Alliance, asks theVatican to rescind the $57 million transfer, approved by Cardinal Claudio Hummes, who was prefect of Congregation for Clergy at the time.

The Vatican policy on clergy abuse, such as it is, encourages bishops to report crimes to law enforcement and work within a given country’s laws. But with bishops bound by canon law to seek approval for shifts of funds over $5 million from Congregation for Clergy, the Vatican is in a position of de facto micromanaging certain decisions that bear on large settlement issues.

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L.A. Times exposes Cardinal Mahony’s decades-long pattern of shielding child-abusing priests

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Raw Story

By Scott Kaufman
Tuesday, December 3, 2013

The Los Angeles Times has published an exhaustive account — based on over 23,000 pages of internal documents from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles — of the former Archbishop of Los Angeles’s complicity in the Catholic Church’s child abuse scandal.

The article documents Roger Mahony’s involvement at all levels of the attempted cover-up of priests who molested children, beginning with the day in December 1986 when Father Michael Baker confessed to Mahony that he had molested two boys.

According to Mahony in a video deposition, his initial reason for not reporting Baker to the police was that “you only call the police when you’ve victims that you can talk to,” because “the suspected child abuse form” contains “a big section about each victim and the victim’s parent, so you, obviously, if you can’t fill out the form, you can’t send it in.”

Instead of reporting Baker to the police, he had him sent to a church-run clinic in Jemez Springs, New Mexico, where they “treat pedophilia.” When abusers were sent to therapists outside the church, Mahony and his aides selected ones they knew would not report the abuse to authorities.

Once the archdiocese was made aware of abuse allegations, Detective Dale Barraclough of the Los Angeles Police Department’s Sexually Exploited Child unit told the Times, “we knew that the suspect, 99% sure, that he was going to be out of the country or out of state.”

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Sex abuse survivors win as Catholic church in Minnesota forced to name pedo-priests

MINNESOTA
The Raw Story

By David Edwards
Tuesday, December 3, 2013

A county judge in Minnesota has given the Catholic Church just two weeks to turn over the names of at least 33 priests who are accused of abusing children.

After nearly 30 years of fighting for the names to be released, advocates finally convinced Ramsey County Judge John Van De North to order the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to reveal the name of the alleged abusers, according to WCCO.

The church compiled a list of the clergy accused of child abuse in 2004, but a 2009 ruling had kept it private. Judge Van De North also ordered the church to reveal any priests who have been accused since 2004.

“The era of secrecy around the identities of those offenders is now drawing to and nearing an end,” attorney Jeff Anderson, who represents victims of abuse, explained. “Survivors who suffered alone in silence, thinking they are the only ones abused now know they may not be alone”

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Italien: Gericht verurteilt Priester wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs

ITALIEN
KIPA

[Summary:A Catholic priest and former diocesan spokesman has been found guilty of sexually abusing monors and committing obscene acts in public and has been sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison.]

Rom, 3.12.13 (Kipa) Wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs einer Minderjährigen und obszöner Handlungen in der Öffentlichkeit ist ein katholischer Priester und ehemaliger Bistumssprecher in Italien zu zweieinhalb Jahren Haft verurteilt worden.

Wie italienische Medien am Dienstag berichteten, untersagte ein Gericht im mittelitalienischen Pesaro dem Geistlichen zudem für ein Jahr, in der Öffentlichkeit zu wirken, und schloss ihn für fünf Jahre von öffentlichen Ämtern aus.

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Pope Francis meets with Council of Cardinals

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Tuesday met for the second time with the 8-member Council of Cardinals to discuss the proposed reforms of the Roman Curia. The meeting will last until Wednesday. The first meeting took place in October.

In a press briefing, the head of the Holy See Press Office Father Federico Lombardi, SJ, stated the Cardinals have been gathering the insights of the bishops from their various regions of the world. The December meeting will focus on the various Dicasteries of the Curia, with the morning session devoted to the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments.

Father Lombardi reminded the journalists the Cardinals are not seeking “mere tweaks” to the current Apostolic Constitution Pastor Bonus, but will create a “substantial” revision, that will probably end with a new Apostolic Constitution on the Roman Curia.

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Pope gets boost for reform from unlikely source

VATICAN CITY
The Kansas City Star

December 3
The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis’ efforts to reform the Machiavellian Vatican bureaucracy have gotten a vote of confidence from an unlikely source.

Italian Premier Enrico Letta praised Francis’s undertaking Tuesday, saying it could be a model for Italian public institutions in similar need of an overhaul.

The proposed reforms include the creation of an advisory board of eight cardinals.

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THE ROMAN CURIA: KEY THEME OF THE SECOND ROUND OF THE COUNCIL OF CARDINALS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 3 December 2013 (VIS) – The Council of Cardinals instituted by Pope Francis to assist him in the governance of the universal Church and to draw up a plan for the revision of the Apostolic Constitution Pastor bonus on the Roman Curia, as announced by the Holy Father’s chirograph dated 28 September, began its second round of meetings this morning, to continue until 5 December. The first round took place from 3 to 5 October.

The Council is composed of eight cardinals from the five continents: Cardinals Giuseppe Bertello, president of the Governorate of Vatican City State, Francisco Javier Errazuriz Ossa, archbishop emeritus of Santiago de Chile, Chile; Oswald Gracias, archbishop of Bombay, India; Reinhard Marx, archbishop of Munich, Germany; Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, archbishop of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo; Sean Patrick O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, U.S.A.; George Pell, archbishop of Sydney, Australia, and Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga, archbishop of Tegucigalpa, Honduras, in the function of co-ordinator. The secretary is Bishop Marcello Semeraro of Albano, Italy.

In a briefing held today, the director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J., communicated that the cardinals will meet in the Santa Marta guesthouse at from 9 a.m. to 12.30 p.m., and will hold the afternoon sessions from 4 to 7 p.m. The morning began with the holy Mass concelebrated with Pope Francis in the chapel.

“This time, the cardinals have commenced work directly in the Santa Marta guesthouse, rather than meeting beforehand on the Third Loggia, as they did in October”, said Fr. Lombardi. “The Pope was present at the meeting and will probably also attend this afternoon. However, tomorrow he will not attend the morning session as he will hold the general audience in St. Peter’s Square. During the intervening months between one session and another, the cardinals have continued their work, both personally and in contact with each other; they have also gathered opinions and suggestions on the situation of the Church based on the events in which they have participated; for example, Cardinal Gracias has attended numerous meetings in Asia, while Cardinal Marx has held his own in Europe”.

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Vatican: Council of Cardinals undertaking ‘in-depth’ reform

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Dec. 3, 2013

VATICAN CITY As the pope meets for the second time this week with eight cardinals he has appointed to help him reform the church’s central bureaucracy, the Vatican said Tuesday the objective is not small changes but wide revisions.

The work of the group, known formally as the Council of Cardinals, “requires going in depth … to really go in depth,” said Vatican spokesman Jesuit Fr. Federico Lombardi at a press briefing.

“Their idea and their objective is not to make small changes … but a consistent and in-depth revision” of the papal document, known as an apostolic constitution, which governs the functions of Vatican bureaucracy, Lombardi said.

“We can even speak about a new apostolic constitution for the Curia,” he said.

The cardinals’ group is meeting Tuesday through Thursday at the Vatican. The group, which includes prelates from six of the seven continents, met for the first time Oct. 1-3. The lone American in the group is Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley. Honduran Cardinal Óscar Rodríguez Maradiaga serves as its coordinator.

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Vatican Responds to UN Questions on Sexual Violence Against Children

UNITED STATES
Center for Constitutional Rights

Read the list of questions from UN Committee on the Rights of the Child here.

Read the Vatican’s response here.

Read the SNAP-CCR report here.

Rights Group Calls Response Disingenuous, Vague
press@ccrjustice.org

December 3, 2013, New York – Today, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which represents SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), released the following statement on the Vatican’s response to a set of questions posed to it officially by the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child with regards to the handling of the widespread sexual violence against children in the church.

“In its vague and delayed response to the committee, the Vatican has once again refused to accept responsibility for the policies and practices that allow, even facilitate and encourage, the proliferation of rape and sexual violence against children in the Catholic Church. In claiming it only bears responsibility for what happens inside Vatican City and blaming the lack of prevention and redress for these crimes by priests and others associated with the church around the world on local governments, the Holy See has taken one of its most explicitly disingenuous and misleading positions on the issue to date.

The Vatican conveniently ignores its strict policies regarding internal reporting and oversight and the ways in which it has blocked efforts at civil remedies, blocked efforts to ensure access to justice for victims by fighting reforms or the abolition of statutes of limitations, and rewarded bishops who have subverted and often thwarted criminal and civil investigations in many countries.

The response is vague and general, where the committee sought concrete data and facts. If the Vatican does not have this information, then it has wholly failed in its obligation to investigate allegations of sexual violence by its clergy against children; more likely, it has failed to disclose information about the tens of thousands of cases brought to its attention. As demonstrated in our initial filing to the committee and as we will highlight in our forthcoming submission, the Vatican has certainly been able to track these cases when it comes to aggressively fighting or blocking victims’ efforts for compensation in civil actions.”

The Center for Constitutional Rights represents SNAP in their effort to hold high-level Vatican officials accountable for enabling and covering up widespread and systematic sexual violence against children in the Catholic Church.

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Vatican: Trial of prelate accused of cash smuggling opens

ITALY
adnkronos

Vatican City, 3 Dec. (AKI) – High-ranking Vatican cleric Monsignor Nunzio Scarano went on trial in Italy on Tuesday accused of corruption and slander over a 20 million euro smuggling plot.

A court in Rome said witnesses from the prosecution would be heard on 13 December .

Scarano, Vatican accountant, was arrested on 28 June together with Italian policeman and former secret service agent, Giovanni Maria Zito, and financial broker Giovanni Carenzio over the alleged smuggling plot.

All three suspects are accused of attempting to smuggle the cash to Italy from Switzerland on a private jet on behalf of wealthy ship owners from Naples.

Scarano allegedly paid a 400,000 euro bribe in the alleged plot which went awry when Carenzio failed to show up with the money that had been entrusted to him.

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Trial begins of senior Vatican cleric accused of money laundering

ITALY
France 24

AFP – The trial of a senior cleric accused of corruption and attempted money laundering at the scandal-plagued Vatican bank opened in Rome on Tuesday, Italian media reported.

The court immediately postponed the trial of Nunzio Scarano to December 13, when the first witnesses for the prosecution will be heard, the reports said.

Scarano, who was not present in court, was arrested in June on suspicion of having acted as an intermediary for suspect transactions at the Vatican bank — otherwise known as the Institute for Religious Works (IOR).

The prosecution accuses Scarano of acting as a front for suspicious payments made through the Vatican bank and “interrupting the traceability of money.”

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Vatican ducks questions from UN on the worldwide child abuse in Catholic institutions

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Tue, 03 Dec 2013

Vatican ducks questions from UN on the worldwide child abuse in Catholic institutions

The Vatican has failed to answer detailed questions by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child on cases of child sexual abuse committed by members of the clergy, brothers or nuns or brought to the attention of the Holy See. These formal questions were raised as part of the review of the reports the UN Committee require states that have ratified the Convention of the Rights of the Child to provide every five years.

In a formal response to the UN Committee’s ‘list of issues’ or questions, the Holy See based its failure to answer them on the legal technicality that it is “related but separate and distinct from the Catholic Church”. It added: “it is not the practice of the Holy See to disclose information on the religious discipline of members of the clergy or religious according to canon law, unless there is a related matter concerning international judicial cooperation with a State and the request by the State is made, generally, through specific procedures”.

The UN Committee prefaced its questions by pointing to “the recognition by the Holy See of sexual violence against children committed by members of the clergy, brothers and nuns in numerous countries around the world, and given the scale of the abuses”.

Keith Porteous Wood of the (UK) National Secular Society, which, together with victims groups, has submitted evidence about such abuse to the Committee earlier this year, commented: “Under the direct control of the Pope, the Church operates a firm ‘command and control structure’ over the worldwide Church, particularly over the handling of clerical rape and sexual violence offences. It requires that it is sent all records of the tens of thousands of these criminal offences, and secretes them centrally.

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Archdiocese Receives Approval of Court to Proceed with Disclosure

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date:Monday, December 2, 2013

Source: Jim Accurso

The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis is grateful for the approval of Ramsey County court to release information relating to priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors in our archdiocese. We anticipate releasing this information on Thursday, December 5 on a new page of our web site and in our archdiocesan newspaper, The Catholic Spirit.

Included in this disclosure will be the following information: the cleric’s name; year of birth; age; year of ordination; year of death (if deceased); prior assignments; current status (permanently removed from ministry, laicized, deceased, etc.); city and state where they presently reside. The information to be released is mostly related to reported incidents that occurred between the mid- 1950’s and 1980’s. Most of the men whose names will be released have been previously identified in media reports. All of these men who will be identified have been permanently removed from ministry or are deceased.

These disclosures are not intended to be final. A comprehensive review of clergy files is ongoing presently and the list will be updated regularly as additional announcements are made in the future. This new level of disclosure is part of a comprehensive and cohesive set of actions we have been taking this fall to address the issues associated with clergy sexual misconduct in our archdiocese. These disclosure practices may evolve in the future as we progress with our disclosure, including recommendations that may be made by the independent task force or through the review of our clergy files by an outside firm.

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Priest arrested over historic sex offences is bailed

UNITED KINGDOM
Eastbourne Herald

A priest arrested in Eastbourne this morning (Tuesday) on suspicion of sexual offences against a young boy has been interviewed and released on police bail this afternoon while enquiries continue.

The 56-year old man had been arrested this morning at his home address in Eastbourne, on suspicion of acts of indecency, indecent assault, and cruelty, against a boy then aged between 12 and 13, in East Sussex during 1988 and 1989.

The man is a Church of England priest who does not currently have permission to officiate.

He was bailed until April 3 next year.

There are currently no allegations of recent or current offending and police emphasise that there is nothing to suggest that any young people are currently at risk.

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Sussex priest bailed over child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A retired Church of England priest has been bailed after his arrest on suspicion of acts of indecency, indecent assault and cruelty against a boy.

The victim was aged 12 and 13 at the time of the alleged incidents in 1988 and 1989.

The 56-year old’s arrest in Eastbourne, East Sussex, follows a Diocese of Chichester-commissioned inquiry.

Earlier this year two other priests referred to in the report were jailed.

Helpline

They were convicted for sex attacks on children, but police have said the arrested man has no link with those offences.

A statement from the Diocese of Chichester said the priest did not currently have permission to officiate.

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Archdiocese to list accused priests; skepticism voiced about extent of compliance

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Beth Hawkins

Archdiocese of St. Paul and MinneapolisThe Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced Monday evening that it will comply on Thursday with a judge’s order to produce the names of priests accused of child molestation, as well as their past and present assignments and other details.

Ramsey County District Court Judge John Van de North gave the Archdiocese a Dec. 17 deadline for the release of a list of 33 priests it has substantial evidence sexually abused minors. The Diocese of Winona was ordered to release another 13.

In addition, Van de North gave the dioceses until Jan. 6 to release the names of abusers brought to its attention since 2004, when the lists were compiled.

Advocates for abuse survivors, however, were skeptical that the information released will mark a watershed moment. Commitments to full transparency in sex-abuse scandals in Roman Catholic dioceses here and worldwide have come peppered with caveats, they noted.

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The church protected Father Frank Klep during his life of crme

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (updated 3 December 2013)

Broken Rites research has revealed how the prominent Catholic order of Salesian Fathers harboured an Australian paedophile priest, Father Frank Klep, for four decades – allowing him to commit sexual crimes against defenceless boys. But, with help from Broken Rites, some of his victims finally managed to get Klep exposed during three court cases. Klep’s most recent court appearance was on 2 December 2013.

Frank Gerard Klep was ordained as a priest in Melbourne in 1972. He was convicted in Melbourne in 1994 for indecently assaulting vulnerable boys, aged 13, in the sick dormitory of a Salesian secondary school, Salesian College (also known as “Rupertswood”), at Sunbury in Melbourne’s north-west. The offences occurred in the 1970s but were covered up until the 1994 court case.

During the 1980s and ’90s, parents and ex-students from “Rupertswood” tried to get Klep removed from the priesthood but the Salesians obstinately protected him. The Salesians eventually transferred him from Australia to the Pacific island Samoa — and they illegally concealed his criminal conviction from the Samoan authorities. In Samoa, he was out of reach of the Australian police. In 2004, after more victims contacted the Australian police, Samoa deported Frank Klep back to Australia, where he eventually pleaded guilty regarding the additional victims. He was again convicted. Even as Klep entered jail in December 2005 (eleven years after his first conviction), his Salesian bosses still had not removed him from the priesthood.

In court again on 2 December 2013 (after more of his victims contacted Broken Rites and the police), Klep pleaded guilty to more crimes against boys, including buggery.

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“You are the real turkey”

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

What a beautiful spot! I had always thought Iqaluit was flat and barren, Not flat at all – it’s hilly and rocky – and today, windy, windy and oh so COLD. Thankfully I bought a good pair of boots on Sunday – my toes are warm 🙂

So, landed safe and sound – luggage put away and then myself and friend headed for the courthouse and arrived in time for the afternoon session.

And there he was. Convicted Oblate clerical molester Father Eric Dejaeger, sitting at the defence table. Long straggly gray beard. Balding. Navy sweat shirt, sweatpants and canvas (?) navy shoes.

I’m not sure what I expected, but, there he was. In flesh and blood.

The courtroom layout is quite different here in Nunavut. I would love to take a picture to post for all to see, but, not allowed 🙁 The witness stand faces the judge – I am told that is because Inuit believe that they look a person in the eye that person can not lie. I was struck by that particular change in layout, and the reason for the change.

Father Eric Dejaeger barely took his eyes off the witnesses. He stared intently, rarely ever breaking his gaze. I spotted him stroking his beard a couple of times, but most of the time he rested his chin on clasped hands, occasionally chewing at a thumb nail or fiddling with his fingers.

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