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.

October 20, 2013

Posted

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

The page for Father Norbert Dufault omi is posted but not finished. I am heading off to the States now to visit daughter and family. I have a pdf document which I was trying to post but it’s too large – will see what I can do to get it up tonight when I stop en route. I may have to break it down into three part – will do so if I must.

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.

Flynn leaves St. Thomas board amid questions about priest abuse investigations

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: KELLY SMITH , Star Tribune Updated: October 20, 2013

The former Twin Cities archbishop is the second high-profile official to quit as a school trustee after questions about the handling of clergy abuse cases.

Former Archbishop Harry Flynn, who led the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis during a time when recently revealed clergy sex abuse allegations were secretly being investigated by church officials, has resigned from the University of St. Thomas Board of Trustees.

The private Catholic university based in St. Paul announced Saturday that Flynn had stepped down Thursday, “effective at the end of the day.” The board elected Michael Dougherty, a trustee since 2003 and chief executive officer of Dougherty Financial Group LLC in Minneapolis, as interim chairman. The trustees expect to elect a permanent chairman and vice chairman on Feb. 13.

Flynn served as archbishop from 1995 to 2008, a period during which the archdiocese investigated reports of cases that have recently come to light, including that of the Rev. Michael J. Keating, a priest who has been a prominent professor at St. Thomas. Flynn had chaired the St. Thomas board since 1995. He was succeeded as archbishop by the Rev. John Nienstedt. …

Calls to many members of St. Thomas’ 43-member board resulted in refusals to comment or were not answered or returned on Saturday night.

Dougherty, the new interim St. Thomas board chairman, issued this statement: “On behalf of the board of trustees, I want to thank Archbishop Flynn for his many years of dedicated service to the board and to the university.”

Reached late Saturday, Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul attorney who handles clergy sex abuse cases, called Flynn’s exit from the board a “superficial gesture” that only protects the reputation of St. Thomas and the archdiocese.

“It’s going to take more than people stepping down from high positions to protect our kids,” Anderson said, continuing his call for the church to identify abuse offenders and details. “More has to be done.”

Although Flynn was one of the top decisionmakers at the archdiocese, Anderson said that he was in a “ceremonial position” at St. Thomas and that he expects more fallout from the recent uncovering of allegations of past abuse. “There will have to be fundamental changes,” he said.

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

Pope Francis launches reform of Vatican bureaucracy, with cleanup of

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By Anthony Faiola, Published: October 18

VATICAN CITY — Seven months after ascending the throne of Saint Peter, Pope Francis is in the midst of a crusade against the sins of Vatican City.

Since succeeding Benedict XVI, Francis has publicly sought to transform the tone of his office, extending surprise olive branches to everyone from gays and lesbians to professed atheists. But much more quietly, Vatican officials and observers say, the new pontiff has also begun to alter the atmosphere inside the Holy See, taking steps to shed light on the notoriously opaque Vatican Curia.

Before Benedict stepped down, documents leaked to the Italian news media detailed a lurid opera of rivalries and corruption inside the sprawling bureaucracy of 2,900 clerics and lay functionaries operating in the shadow of St. Peter’s Basilica. Reform is seen as key to restoring the faith of the world’s 1 billion Catholics in the Vatican’s administration.

Observers say it is too early to gauge the depth or success of the pope’s internal reform effort. But even many longtime Vatican critics say the new pope has already begun to confront the problem head-on in a way his predecessor never did.

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.

Mosque worker attacked and hospitalised after allegedly sodomising a nine-year-old boy

INDIA
The Freethinker

BY BARRY DUKE – OCTOBER 18, 2013

AN outraged father in Nagpur, India, attacked a volunteer mosque worker after he learned that his son, 9, had been lured by the man into the mosque storeroom and raped.

Others reportedly joined in the assault on Mohd Ashfaque Sheikh Nazir, who rushed to Sadar police station to lodge a complaint. While a bleeding Ashfaque was taken to Mayo hospital, the boy’s father and others were charged with assault.

Police said Ashfaque had joined the mosque as a volunteer cleaner after he had been being released from jail, where he had served time for “a serious offence”.

Nearby residents claimed Ashfaque had frequently been offering lozenges, toffees and money to local boys in the narrow lane behind the mosque.

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.

Esme’s Blog: A Widening Scandal

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

Esme Murphy

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — What exactly is the standard in the Catholic Church these days? Among the lurid revelations in the past few weeks there is one that I keep coming back to.

It is not the most graphic, but it is one that those at the highest levels of the Archdiocese knew about. In 2006, Father Kevin McDonough, then the Vicar General for the Archdiocese, knew that Father Michael Keating had told another Catholic priest that he had “a passionate encounter” with a 14-year-old Italian girl.

McDonough investigated. Keating told McDonough that the words “passionate encounter” did not mean what they appeared to mean. Both the girl and Keating denied any impropriety. McDonough at the time was investigating another underage girl’s claims against Keating, claims that the Chisago County Attorney’s office declined to prosecute.

McDonough concluded there was insufficient evidence to remove Keating from the priesthood, but put restrictions on Keating when it came to dealing with adolescents and young adults. At the time of the investigation Keating was a professor at the University of St. Thomas, where he lived on campus until last weekend when he took a voluntary leave.

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.

Questions remain regarding Salem’s abrupt dismissal

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Kelly Urban
kurban@tribdem.com

JOHNSTOWN — It has been more than seven months since Bishop McCort Catholic High School’s trustees placed former Principal Ken Salem on administrative leave with no explanation as to why, and questions regarding his dismissal remain.

The action occurred following allegations by former students who said they had been molested by Brother Stephen Baker, who worked at McCort from the early 1990s through the early 2000s as a religion teacher and in the athletic department.

Those involved continue to be tight-lipped.

Salem was named principal in 2006, replacing Sr. Donna Marie Leiden, who had served in the position for nine years.

Leiden was appointed to the position of director of education for the the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, a position she still holds.

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.

McCort search for principal moving ahead

PENNSYVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Kelly Urban
kurban@tribdem.com

JOHNSTOWN — The search for a new principal at Bishop McCort Catholic High School continues.

Ken Salem, the school’s former principal, was placed on administrative leave without explanation March 1 by McCort’s Board of Trustees after claims surfaced by former students that they had been molested by Brother Stephen Baker.

Baker was of the Franciscan order and worked at McCort from the early 1990s through the early 2000s as a religion teacher and in the athletic department.

Baker committed suicide

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

Royal Commission examines “Towards Healing”

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites resercher (article posted 4 October 2013)

In the fortnight beginning 9 December 2013, Australia’s national Royal Commission (into institutional responses to child sexual abuse) will hear evidence about the establishment and operation of the Catholic Church’s so-called “Towards Healing” process. The Commission will explore how this process works in practice with evidence from a number of people who have participated in it.

For years, Broken Rites has pointed out that the Catholic Church in Australia is set up cleverly as a property trust, so that victims cannot sue the church for the damage caused to their life by the church’s child-abuse. The church prefers that victims seek compensation through its own in-house system (such as Towards Healing), rather than through civil litigation. Towards Healing gives a victim a much smaller amount than what he or she would receive through civil litigation. To receive the token amount from Towards Healing, victims must sign a settlement deed giving up their right to sue the church for the proper amount.

Since the Royal Commission began its work in early 2013, church spokesman have claimed that the Catholic Church is prepared to make a few improvements to the Towards Healing system to make it more “independent”.

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.

Police charge a De La Salle Brother re child-abuse allegations at BoysTown, Queensland

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated on 16 October 2013)

On 8 October 2013, Queensland police charged a man with having sexually abused children at a Catholic boys’ institution in the 1980s. On the same day, 8 October 2013, the Catholic order of De La Salle Brothers issued a media statement confirming that the charges involve a De La Salle Brother. Broken Rites has ascertained that the charges were laid by a police unit which is investigating allegations about BoysTown (at Beaudesert, south-west of Brisbane). This institution was formerly operated by the De La Salle Brothers to hold troubled boys.

This Brother faces 11 charges for offences allegedly committed between September 30, 1984, and December 1, 1986. These include nine counts of indecent treatment of boys under 14, plus one count of carnal knowledge and one count of physical assault.

On 8 October 2013, the Brother (now aged 58 and living in New South Wales) was issued with an order that he must appear in Brisbane Magistrates Court on a certain date for a preliminary step in which prosecutors would file the charges with a magistrate. This magistrate would then schedule the case to come up again for mention in court on a later date to determine the subsequent step in the prosecution process. Under Queensland law, a defendant’s name cannot be published until after a magistrates court decides to commit him for trial.

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.

FULL STORY: How the church harboured Father David Rapson for two decades

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated on 16 October 2013)

This Broken Rites article tells how the Catholic Church harboured Father David Edwin Rapson for two decades, while he endangered children in Victoria, Tasmania and New South Wales.

David Edwin Rapson (born 30 July 1953) was recruited in the early 1970s as a trainee Catholic priest in Melbourne in a Catholic religious order, called the Salesians of Don Bosco. From Day One, he (and certain colleagues of his) put schoolboys at risk.

At various times in the 1970s and 1980s, Rapson worked at Salesian College (then known as “Rupertswood”), a boarding school in Sunbury (north-east of Melbourne), where he had easy access to boarders. During that same time-span, he also had easy access to boys during stints at other Salesian schools, including one school in Tasmania and one in New South Wales.

According to evidence in court in 2013, Father Rapson used his authority over the boys (as young as twelve), enticing them to his office with the invitation to play computer games, drink alcohol and smoke cigarettes before sexally abusing them. However, if boys complained about Rapson, they tended to merely tell Rapson’s colleagues and friends in the priesthood, some of whom might be offenders themselves. And the church does not arrest any priests – only the police do this.

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

Judge ponders sexual abuse statute of limitations

OREGON
The Register-Guard

By Greg Bolt
The Register-Guard
OCT. 20

A judge will decide next month whether time has run out for a $5.25 million sexual abuse lawsuit against the Boy Scouts filed by a former Scout from Eugene.

At issue is whether the statute of limitations has expired for claims raised by the plaintiff in the case, who is known only by the initials F.D. A Lane County judge heard arguments on the issue last week and set another court date for mid-November.

The case is unusual because it involves allegations of child sexual abuse that took place almost 50 years ago, starting in 1964. Even more unusual is the fact that the alleged abuser, a one-time Scoutmaster named Ed Dyer, was shot dead by one of his teenage victims in 1986.

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.

Inside the Vatican: how the Catholic Church got into such a mess

IRELAND
Irish Independent

TONY FLANNERY – 19 OCTOBER 2013

Available with free P&P on www.kennys.ie or by calling 091 709350

SILENCED IRISH PRIEST TONY FLANNERY ON THE NEW BOOK FROM THE CENSURED SWISS CLERIC AND REBEL THEOLOGIAN HANS KUNG

Hans Kung is a remarkable man. Now in his mid-eighties, the famous Swiss theologian continues to write and publish books, and to play a significant part in Catholic Church debate.

He has long ago come under censure from the Vatican, and hasn’t been allowed to teach in a Catholic college or seminary for many years. But that has in no way restricted his work or his influence. If anything, it has given more weight to his voice during the long years of the pontificates of John Paul and Benedict.

His new book is very readable, accessible to people who have no theological training. It is also extraordinarily timely. Pope Francis is only six months in office, and already he has changed the atmosphere in the church, talking openly about the urgent need for change.

Even before he was elected, during the six-week interregnum after the resignation of Benedict, most of us were amazed at the open way in which the assembled cardinals spoke about the need for reform, especially reform of the Vatican Curia. If people want to know why the Pope is talking like this, and why the call for change is so urgent, I cannot recommend anything more appropriate than this opportune book.

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

Ex-Minn Archbishop Flynn resigns University of St. Thomas post amid report on abuse response

MINNESOTA
Fox News

Published October 19, 2013
Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS – The retired Archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Harry Flynn, has resigned as chair of the University of St. Thomas Board of Trustees, the school announced Saturday, becoming the second leader to quit the board of the St. Paul-based Roman Catholic institution this month amid fresh criticism over the handling of clergy sexual misconduct cases.

The university said in a statement that the board accepted Flynn’s retirement as chair and board member at its regular meeting Thursday. The statement also confirmed the board’s vice chair, the Rev. Kevin McDonough, a former vicar general of the archdiocese, resigned from the board Oct. 4.

The statement did not give reasons for Flynn’s or McDonough’s resignations, and university spokesman Doug Hennes declined to comment.

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.

Northboro priest’s fall laid to gambling addiction

NORTHBORO (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

By Shaun Sutner, TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
ssutner@telegram.com

NORTHBORO — In his last pastoral note to parishioners before he was placed on leave for allegedly embezzling more than $230,000 from the church and school he ran, the Rev. Stephen M. Gemme argued for forgiveness.

“Human beings are fragile. They fall into sin, they get scared and make choices that are not always good,” the 43-year-old priest wrote in the July 28 note in the online newsletter of St. Bernadette Parish. “If there is a person that you need to forgive and you find it hard, please pray for them.”

By Aug. 8, officials of the Worcester Catholic Diocese had removed Rev. Gemme from his posts and sent him to residential treatment at an undisclosed location for a self-confessed gambling addiction.

This month, after poring over financial records of the school — the diocese’s biggest elementary-middle school, with more than 500 students from around MetroWest — and the church, diocesan officials referred the matter to the district attorney’s office for criminal investigation.

Diocesan officials said the pastor, who was appointed to the parish in 2003, had stolen methodically from two separate church and school accounts since at least 2009. It went undetected until a member of the school’s advisory board flagged a financial irregularity in a school account and informed Bishop Robert J. McManus in mid-July. Rev. Gemme immediately acknowledged a gambling problem.

“We’re looking at a lot of activity over four years,” said the diocese’s spokesman, Raymond L. Delisle.

The initial suspicion of Rev. Gemme came less than two weeks after the pastor sparked local controversy and national media attention by publicly criticizing the Worcester Art Museum for backing gay marriage.

He said his parish would not support the museum after it used its social media channels to congratulate the gay community after the U.S. Supreme Court’s June decision that a law banning federal recognition of same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. The museum also offered to host gay weddings.

Meanwhile, though Bishop McManus declared that he would pursue “full restitution” from the pastor, it is unclear from where that money would come.
Mr. Delisle said the diocese may look to see what its insurance may cover.

But Rev. Gemme’s only known financial asset is the small, red ranch house he owns in his hometown of Westminster, where his parents, Jacqueline and Raymond Gemme, now live. That house is valued for tax purposes at $160,000, according to town assessors’ records.

Mrs. Gemme answered a knock at the front door one evening last week, saying “no comment” to a reporter before quickly shutting the door.

Mr. Delisle said it is not known whether Rev. Gemme gambled online, at the nearby Connecticut casinos, or elsewhere.

The money that the pastor allegedly stole was only a fraction of the school’s annual budget of about $3.5 million, Mr. Delisle noted. He maintained that the school and 760-family parish are still on sound financial footing.

On Oct. 7, the bishop was given the totals of what was lost. Rev. Gemme resigned Oct. 10.

Mr. Delisle said the thefts occurred over four years because audits generally only happen when there are changes in personnel, making it difficult to catch such problems while a priest is at a certain parish for many years.

But while “everyone will kind of look at their own policies,” he said the bishop is not planning on changing the frequency of audits.

“This is viewed more as an anomaly than a rule,” he said. “I think the point is, as soon as it was identified, it was dealt with.”

While the diocese annually releases its audited financial reports, which include budgets for diocesan schools in Worcester and Fitchburg, the reports do not include finances of individual parishes and parish schools such as St. Bernadette. The Northboro school does not provide any financial reports on its website.

St. Bernadette Principal Deborah O’Neil refused to comment for this story. Members of the 10-person school advisory board did not return calls seeking comment or could not be reached for comment.

However, parishioners exiting an 8:30 a.m. weekday Mass at the small brick church last week expressed surprise about Rev. Gemme, but also deep concern about the thefts his superiors say he committed.

“Everyone has their own problems. He was very religious, but I’m disappointed in him and the church,” said one man, who appeared to be in his 70s and declined to give his name.

“I think everyone’s been pretty upset about this,” said another churchgoer, who also declined to be identified. “We couldn’t see it coming at all.”

By most accounts, Rev. Gemme was a popular leader of his flock.

Before graduating from a Baltimore seminary and being appointed to head the parish in 2003, he taught history, economics and public speaking at St. Peter-Marian Central Catholic Junior-Senior High School in Worcester in the mid-1990s.

At St. Bernadette, he replaced the Rev. Chester J. Devlin, who had been removed after an allegation of sexual misconduct.

“He was very well thought of in this community, very affable, a very regular guy,” said Northboro’s police chief, Mark K. Leahy.

Nevertheless, instances of Catholic priests getting caught up in embezzlement scandals are not uncommon, say church critics.

Terence McKiernan, president of Waltham-based BishopAccountability.org, maintained that a similar dynamic is at work in clergy embezzlement cases and clergy sexual abuse cases.

“It’s the same managerial behavior we see in the abuse crisis; it’s not a surprise,” Mr. McKiernan said. “The guiding principle is the same, to protect the church from scandal. There aren’t very many controls on how money is handled.”

As for where Rev. Gemme is at the moment, diocesan officials won’t say.

As of now, Connecticut is the only state in New England with an inpatient treatment program for gamblers, run by the Midwestern Connecticut Council on Alcoholism.

In the past, Catholic priests and others affiliated with the church have been sent for treatment for sexual abuse issues, addictions and other problems to the church-affiliated St. Luke Institute in suburban Washington, D.C.

Brian Wallace, spokesman for the Bridgeport, Conn., Catholic Diocese, said that while his diocese has not had a priest with a gambling addiction, residential treatment for gambling could easily be made available at other addiction facilities by contracting with a problem gambling counseling provider.

A few major cases of church officials with gambling problems have cropped up in recent years, notably in Las Vegas and Chicago.

But gambling-related embezzlement in general is increasingly common, asserted Robert H. Steele, an anti-casino activist from Connecticut who was involved in the battle against a proposed slot machine parlor in Millbury over the summer.

Mr. Steele said Rev. Gemme’s is a “very sad story.”

“These incidents are spread across profession over profession over profession,”said Mr. Steele, a former congressman and the author of a recent anti-casino novel. “These stories are never-ending and are recurring. People have no idea how big a problem this is.”

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.

Priests, survivors form alliance

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

BY JILL TATGE-ROZELL
jrozell@kenoshanews.com

When Peter Isely, the Midwest director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, asked Monica Barrett to sit alongside priests and help form a cooperative alliance, Barrett thought “he had lost it.”

Her initial reaction was, “You want me to sit down with a bunch of priests? Are you off your freakin’ rocker?”

“When I went into it, it was half-hearted,” admits Barrett, a victim of clergy abuse as a child. “I really believed they (clergy) were all bad.”

Isely assured her there are priests who will speak out on behalf of survivors. She now works with them as part of the Survivor and Clergy Leadership Alliance, members of which applied for non-profit status in August, nearly three years following the first joint meeting.

“There are clergy of integrity who are in this vocation for the right reasons,” she said. “This is one of the biggest revelations I have had since joining the alliance. I realize that these priests have been lied to as well. They were used, too.”

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.

‘I remember wishing I could die and wondering why God wasn’t coming to help me’

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

BY JILL TATGE-ROZELL
jrozell@kenoshanews.com

Monica Barrett, 52, brought moral support with her Oct. 8 when she returned for the first time to the church where she said she was sexually abused at age 8 by the Rev. William Effinger.

“I wasn’t sure how it would affect me,” Barrett, who grew up in Kenosha and attended parochial schools there, said.

St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Lake Geneva looks different than it did that Saturday afternoon in 1968. But the white rectory where the alleged act took place and the tree Barrett remembers crying beneath are still there.

“He kept saying, ‘You’re no good. You’re no good,’” she recalled. “He stood up, smoothed his hair back and said, ‘If you tell anyone, they won’t believe you’ and then he gave me penance to do.”

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.

‘He may have stolen my youth, but I won’t let him have my faith’

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

BY JILL TATGE-ROZELL
jrozell@kenoshanews.com

It’s been 11 years since Donna Johnson Polencheck, now 68, reported the sexual abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of a local priest.

She said there is satisfaction in knowing her abuser, Joseph Savage, has been unmasked. It allowed her to begin the healing process.

“I still don’t necessarily trust people who are in a position of authority in the church,” Polencheck said. “But I am a Catholic and no one is ever going to take that away from me. He may have stolen my youth, but I won’t let him have my faith.”

Polencheck wasn’t the only one to issue allegations against priests who served at Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in Wilmot in the 1950s. John Riesselmann and Wesley Woodall brought official complaints before the Archdiocese of Milwaukee regarding alleged abuse by former priests Harold Herbst and Joseph Savage.

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.

Group creates Healing Garden at parish

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

BY JILL TATGE-ROZELL
jrozell@kenoshanews.com

The Healing Garden at Holy Family Parish in Chicago is a place where victims of clergy abuse can go to feel free from fear, shame and judgment.

“We want it to be a place where people will find compassion, comfort and healing,” Donna Polencheck, a member of the planning committee, said.

Polencheck, of Twin Lakes, is one of four victim-survivors who were asked by the Archdiocese of Chicago to help make the garden, dedicated on June 9, 2011, a reality. The committee also included two diocesan priests and staff from the Office for the Protection of Children and Youth.

“Being able to serve on the Healing Garden Committee has been a tremendous catalyst in my growth,” Polencheck said. “I can now manage my anger and overwhelming fears.”

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Fighting clergy abuse: Victim-survivors call for full disclosure, change within Catholic Church

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

BY JILL TATGE-ROZELL
jrozell@kenoshanews.com

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee has made strides in preventing future sexual abuse of children by clergy.

But it can do more to correct the wrongs of the past and prevent further crimes, said two local women who were abused by priests serving in Kenosha churches decades ago.

Donna Polencheck and Monica Barrett are just two of hundreds of survivors of clergy abuse who are calling for:

— The release of all the documents related to reports of sexual abuse by clergy.

— Those who knew about the abuse to be held accountable.

— More systemic change to help prevent future abuse.

— Financial transparency.

The archdiocese released about 6,000 pages of documents in July as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court. Victims said the files only “scratch the surface.”

“They need to release all of the documents, in all of the files of all the offenders,” Barrett said. “Healing will never happen until the archdiocese accepts responsibility and accountability for these crimes.”

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Reporting abuse

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

— Reporting sexual abuse by clergy or church personnel:

If the victim was abused as a minor and is now an adult:

Archdiocese of Milwaukee: Contact the Victim Assistance Coordinator at 414-758-2232 to make a formal complaint of abuse to the diocese. For more information and resources, visit www.archmil.org/Offices-Services/abuse-info.htm

The Healing Center: To make a formal report outside of the archdiocese, you may contact the Healing Center at 414-671-4325, or call the civil authorities. For more information, visit www.thehealingcenter.org

If it is abuse of a minor, under 18 years of age:

Contact the civil authorities

— Clergy abuse support services

Catholic Charities: 262-658-2088

Women and Children’s Horizons/Pathways of Courage: 262-652-9900; 800-853-5303

— Financial impact of clergy abuse

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In letter to parishioners, archbishop outlines efforts to prevent abuse

WISCONSIN
Kenosha News

BY JILL TATGE-ROZELL
jrozell@kenoshanews.com

Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki recently shared the annual report on the diocese’s response to the ongoing issue of sexual abuse by clergy.

The annual report on what the diocese is doing to reach out to victims of clergy abuse and prevent futher abuse is required to comply with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. It was released in September.

In a letter to parishioners, Listecki said the Archdiocese of Milwaukee’s efforts include national and state background checks, sexual abuse prevention and awareness training, and the development of an office dedicated to offering total victim/survivor support.

“Most importantly, no priest with a substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor is allowed to publicly minister in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee,” Listecki wrote.

The statement comes at a time when Listecki is under scrutiny by the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests for not taking quicker action concerning the Rev. Robert Marsicek.

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October 19, 2013

Retired archbishop Harry Flynn resigns from St. Thomas trustees

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio
October 19, 2013

Former Archbishop Harry Flynn has resigned from the board of trustees at the University of St. Thomas amid a growing clergy sexual abuse scandal.

His departure comes less than two weeks after the resignation of another church leader, former vicar general Kevin McDonough.

Flynn oversaw the handling of sexual misconduct cases from 1995 to 2008 as the leader of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. An MPR News investigation found Flynn kept the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer in ministry despite Wehmeyer’s sexual addiction and sexual misconduct.

Wehmeyer is now in prison for sexually abusing two children and possessing child pornography. Flynn also failed to tell police about a church investigation that found “borderline illegal” pornography on a priest’s computer in 2004, and he approved extra payments to priests who sexually abused children.

The University of St. Thomas announced Flynn’s departure from the board in a news release late Saturday afternoon. It said Flynn resigned on Oct. 17 – the day of the installation of the new president of St. Thomas, Julie Sullivan.

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Archbishop Flynn resigns from St. Thomas trustees

MINNESOTA
WDAZ

The Associated Press – ST. PAUL, Minn.

The retired Archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Harry Flynn, has resigned as chair of the University of St. Thomas Board of Trustees, the school announced Saturday, becoming the second leader to quit the board of the Roman Catholic school this month amid fresh criticism of their handling of clergy sexual misconduct cases.

In a statement Saturday, the school said the board accepted Flynn’s retirement as chair and board member at its regular meeting Thursday. The statement also confirmed the board’s vice chair, the Rev. Kevin McDonough, a former vicar general of the archdiocese, resigned from the board Oct. 4.

The statement did not give reasons for Flynn’s or McDonough’s resignation, and university spokesman Doug Hennes declined to comment.

But the statement did say St. Thomas has retained outside counsel to lead an independent investigation of “matters related to clergy sexual abuse allegations that impact the university” and has appointed a special committee to oversee the investigation and review the findings and recommendations.

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Board of Trustees Announces Leadership Changes

MINNESOTA
University of St. Thomas

19 OCT 2013

During its regularly scheduled meeting on Thursday, Oct. 17, the University of St. Thomas Board of Trustees accepted the retirement of the Most Reverend Harry Flynn as chair and member of the board, effective at the end of the day. Flynn served as board chair since 1995.

The board elected Michael Dougherty as interim chair. Dougherty, a St. Thomas trustee since 2003, also is chair of the board’s Executive Committee. He is chairman and chief executive officer of Dougherty Financial Group LLC in Minneapolis.

“On behalf of the Board of Trustees, I want to thank Archbishop Flynn for his many years of dedicated service to the board and to the university,” Dougherty said.

As previously announced, Father Kevin McDonough resigned Oct. 4 as vice chair and member of the board. He had been a member since 1991. He also has resigned from the advisory boards for the School of Law and the Center for Catholic Studies at St. Thomas.

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Flynn leaves St. Thomas board after investigation into priest misconduct

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: KELLY SMITH , Star Tribune Updated: October 19, 2013

The former archbishop is the second high-profile official to step down from the Catholic university’s board.

Another top Catholic church official has left the University of St. Thomas board of trustees in the wake of widespread questions about the handling of priest sex abuse investigations.

The university announced Saturday that the Rev. Harry Flynn, former archbishop of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and chairman of the board since 1995, has retired.

The board of trustees accepted the resignation on Thursday, according to a university statement. The board elected as interim chair Michael Dougherty, a St. Thomas trustee since 2003 and chief executive officer of Dougherty Financial Group LLC in Minneapolis.

“On behalf of the board of trustees, I want to thank Archbishop Flynn for his many years of dedicated service to the board and to the university,” Dougherty said in a statement.

Flynn’s exit follows the resignation from the St. Thomas board earlier this month of the Rev. Kevin McDonough, a former vicar general who was closely involved in the handling of three controversial sexual misconduct investigations of fellow priests. The St. Thomas board expects to elect a permanent chair and vice chair at its Feb. 13 meeting.

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Alleged financial improprieties uncovered at Tulare parish church

CALIFORNIA
Modesto Bee

Published: October 19, 2013

The Fresno Bee

An audit of financial records at a Catholic church in Tulare has uncovered discrepancies and sparked an investigation by the Tulare Police Department, the Diocese of Fresno announced Saturday.

This week, the police department turned over its investigation of St. Rita Church to the Tulare County District Attorney’s Financial Crimes Unit for review and potential prosecution, the diocese said.

The alleged financial discrepancies dated back to a previous administration at St. Rita, and a priest has been removed from administrative duties pending completion of the law enforcement investigation, the diocese said.

In a statement, Bishop Armando X. Ochoa noted that church officials must be accountable and good stewards of the funds provided to churches.

“I am deeply concerned about the impact this situation is having on all those involved; especially, the faith community of St. Rita Church in Tulare and the priest in question,” Ochoa said. “My ongoing prayerful support is with the parishioners, staff and the current administrator, Rev. Ivan Hernandez, of whom I have great confidence.”

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Tulare priest investigated over financial concerns

CALIFORNIA
The Bakersfield Californian

By THE BAKERSFIELD CALIFORNIAN

A priest in Tulare county has been relieved of his administrative duties after financial discrepancies were found in church records, according to a press release from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno.

The Diocese did not name the priest but said the discrepancies were discovered at St. Rita Church in Tulare.

Tulare police have turned the case over to the District Attorney’s financial crimes unit for review.

The Diocese implemented new financial management, reporting and monitoring systems to increase transparency in 2008. As part of that implementation, church financial records were thoroughly examined.

It was during that process that discrepancies at St. Rita were discovered, “raising serious concerns,” according to the Diocese release.

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Tebartz-van Elst: Chronik eines Skandals

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutsche Welle

Das Schicksal des Limburger Bischofs entscheidet sich in Rom. Kann sich Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst trotz der Skandale im Amt halten? Wir analysieren die turbulenten Ereignisse der letzten Monate.

“Pass auf, das Amt kann den Charakter verderben!” Diese gut gemeinte Warnung bekam einst der katholische Erzbischof von Hamburg, Werner Thissen, von einem Amtsbruder mit auf den Weg, wie er jüngst der ZEIT-Beilage “Christ & Welt” erzählte. Da schlugen die Wellen der Empörung über das Amtsgebaren des Limburger Bischofs Tebartz-van Elst bereits hoch, immer neue Details über seine verschwenderischen Ausgaben wurden bekannt, bei der Staatsanwaltschaft gingen Anzeigen gegen ihn ein.

Womit erregte Tebartz-van Elst so viel Unmut?

Schon Anfang 2012 geriet der Limburger Bischof mit einem Flug nach Indien in die Schlagzeilen: Er sei zur Unterstützung sozialer Projekte nach Bangalore gereist, sagte er nach seiner Rückkehr, um Kindern zu helfen, “die in Steinbrüchen tätig sind”. Ein edles Motiv, doch das Nachrichtenmagazin SPIEGEL fand wenig später ein pikantes Detail heraus: Tebartz-van Elst war erster Klasse geflogen – “First Class in die Slums”, wie der SPIEGEL titelte – eine Reise im Wert von 7000 Euro, die zum Teil durch die Einlösung von Bonusmeilen und Zuzahlung aus der Privatschatulle des Bischofs bestritten wurde.

Im Sommer 2013 sickerten dann Einzelheiten über den Neubau des Bischofssitzes in Limburg durch: Statt der ursprünglich veranschlagten 5,5 Millionen Euro standen plötzlich Kosten in Höhe von knapp 10 Millionen Euro im Raum. Mehrere deutsche Medien bohrten nach – und kamen zu dem Schluss, dass die Kosten noch viel höher liegen müssen.

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Tebartz-van Elst nicht zu Amtsverzicht bereit

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[Summary: Limburg Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz van Else is not willing to voluntarily resign as bishop.]

Der Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst ist nach Informationen der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Sonntagszeitung (F.A.S.) bisher nicht bereit, sein Amt freiwillig aufzugeben. Vielmehr lebt er in der Vorstellung, eine immer markanter hervortretende Mitschuld der Bistumsgremien werde für seine Entlastung sorgen. Auch die von der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz eingesetzte Untersuchungskommission werde die gemeinsame Verantwortung für die auf 31 Millionen Euro gestiegenen Baukosten der neuen Bischofsresidenz erweisen. Tebartz-van Elst beruft sich, wie die F.A.S. berichtet, auf einen Sinnspruch, der den früheren Bischof von Münster Kardinal von Galen in seinem Kampf gegen die Nationalsozialisten stärkte: „Nicht Menschenlob, nicht Menschenfurcht soll uns bewegen!“

Tebartz-van Elst harrt seit vergangenem Sonntag in Rom aus. Bis auf ein Gespräch mit dem Präfekten der Bischofskonkregation, Kardinal Marc Ouellet, zu Anfang der Woche wurde bisher kein weiterer Termin des Bischofs im Vatikan bekannt. Der Kanadier Ouellet spricht neben dem Papst das gewichtigste Wort, sollte es zu einer Amtsenthebung kommen. Er hatte Tebartz-van Elst Anfang September „volles Vertrauen“ in dessen Amtsführung ausgesprochen, ist jedoch nach F.A.S.-Informationen inzwischen zu einer wesentlich kritischeren Einschätzung gelangt.

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Former archdiocese official resigns from University of St. Thomas board

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Rupa Shenoy, Minnesota Public Radio,
Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio
October 19, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — A former top deputy of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has resigned from the board of trustees at the University of St. Thomas.

The Rev. Kevin McDonough resigned from the board on October 4. His departure came amid growing concern over McDonough’s handling of clergy sexual abuse cases in the church.

McDonough served as the vicar general for the archdiocese for more than a decade. He led an investigation in 2006 into allegations that a priest who taught at St. Thomas sexually abused a teenage girl.

A University spokesman said McDonough resigned from the board so that his work for the archdiocese would not be a distraction.

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Harrowing memories surface as victim confronts the past

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

October 19, 2013

Paul Bibby
Court Reporter

The woman sat in the witness box – tall, neat, fair-haired – and told the jury in a calm voice that at the age of 16 she had tried to jump from a moving car after being raped by Father Finian Egan.

”I actually tried to kill myself – I wanted to die,” the 59-year-old said, as one juror in the back row cried quietly. ”I didn’t know what to do, I didn’t know how to make it end. I felt in my heart that the only thing I could do was to kill myself. I was too scared that they wouldn’t believe me. A Catholic priest and a young girl? Back then you never heard about that stuff. I opened the door as the car was going … He tried to grab hold of me … He took me in his arms and said he was sorry.”

The woman, who cannot be identified, told the Downing Centre District Court that she was raped and indecently assaulted by Egan on separate occasions while he was working as the parish priest at The Entrance on the central coast in the early 1970s.

She is one of four alleged victims who will give evidence against the 78-year-old priest on eight counts of indecent assault and one of rape in relation to alleged incidents in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

The woman told the court that as one of three siblings being raised by a single mother, she saw Egan – the local priest and basketball coach – as a father figure.

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Former players defend Holy Cross women’s basketball coach accused of abusive tactics

WORCESTER (MA)
Ottawa Citizen

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS OCTOBER 18, 2013

WORCESTER, Mass. – Former Holy Cross women’s basketball players are coming forward to defend longtime coach Bill Gibbons following a lawsuit by a former player that accused him of physical and emotional abuse.

More than 50 former players, managers and coaches have signed a letter that refers to Gibbons as a “father figure” and someone they consulted when facing critical life decisions.

“Above all, he was a leader who always taught us to do right and — more importantly — to be ‘men and women for others’ in the Jesuit tradition,” the letter reads.

Gibbons, who’s coached at Holy Cross for 28 years, voluntarily went on paid administrative leave this week while the college looks into allegations by former player Ashley Cooper. The 20-year-old says Gibbons grabbed her, shook her and struck her at different times, including once during a game when he left a red hand print.

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Holy Cross basketball alumni support coach Bill Gibbons in letter

WORCESTER (MA)
MassLive

[with copy of the letter]

By John F. Hill, MassLive.com
on October 18, 2013

A group of 40 former Holy Cross women’s basketball players, managers and coaches have signed a letter in support of coach Bill Gibbons.

Earlier this week, a former player sued the coach, Holy Cross, and several college officials, alleging Gibbons was verbally, emotionally and physically abusive.

The letter, issued to media outlets, disputes Ashley Cooper’s claim that alumni are “demoralized” by the time they leave the program by the coach’s abusive tactics.

“[Gibbons] was, and still is, a father figure for those of us without fathers, and a sounding board for some of us with critical life decisions. His family took each and every one of us in and made us feel at home. Above all, he was a leader who always taught us to do right and – more importantly – to be “men and women for others” in the Jesuit tradition.”

The letter says the 40 signatures represent only those alumni who were able to be reached in the 24 hours following news of the suit.

Cooper’s lawsuit was filed Tuesday in New York, where she now lives after transferring to New York University from Holy Cross in the spring, following her sophomore year. Among other things, it alleges Gibbons once struck Cooper during a game so hard he left a red handprint on her back.

Read a copy of the lawsuit and an interview with Cooper’s attorney.

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THE LETTER: Our support for Holy Cross women’s basketball coach Bill Gibbons

WORCESTER (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

The lawsuit recently filed against Bill Gibbons alleges incidents of verbal and physical abuse. If there is any truth to these allegations, then we trust the College of the Holy Cross will take appropriate action. However, Ashley Cooper is not the voice of the more than one hundred women that have played for Coach Gibbons in his nearly 30 year tenure. These allegations are far from the Coach Gibbons that we know. Our hope in writing this letter is to tell the story that the media has, thus far, ignored.

From the moment we set foot on the Holy Cross campus as recruits, the idea of being a part of something bigger than ourselves took hold. Each year we had one goal – to become a “true team.”

While wins and losses were a barometer of our success, what mattered most was how we treated our teammates, our opponents, and our family and friends. The familiar words of post-game locker room speeches after a loss resound, “we tip our hats to the other team.” It was always about sportsmanship, and understanding the bigger picture of moving through life with determination and integrity. And it was always about us becoming our best selves.

He was, and still is, a father figure for those of us without fathers, and a sounding board for some of us with critical life decisions. His family took each and every one of us in and made us feel at home. Above all, he was a leader who always taught us to do right and – more importantly – to be “men and women for others” in the Jesuit tradition.

There were never just fifteen players on a team each year. There were always the stories of those who came before and an understanding of the legacy we had the responsibility to leave for those yet to come. It does not matter that many of us never set foot on the court together – the bond that brought us together as Holy Cross Women’s Basketball players transcends ages and the person who brought us together and guided us every step of the way was Bill Gibbons, a man that we will forever call “Coach.”

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Letter of support for Holy Cross coach Bill Gibbons

WORCESTER (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

[the lawsuit]

[letter of support]

By Jennifer Toland, TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
jtoland@telegram.com

Nearly 60 former Holy Cross women’s basketball players, assistant coaches and team managers have attached their signatures to a letter of support for coach Bill Gibbons.

In a lawsuit brought by a former player earlier this week, Gibbons was accused of verbally and physically abusing his players at games and practices. On Wednesday, Gibbons stepped aside from his coaching duties while the college reviews the claims.

“These allegations are far from the Coach Gibbons that we know,” the letter said.

Gibbons’ assistants have assumed all coaching duties while he is on administrative leave with pay.

In the 21-page lawsuit filed in New York, Ashley Cooper, who was a backup guard at Holy Cross the last two years, claims Gibbons struck her on the back of the neck on more than one occasion. Cooper accused Gibbons of shaking her by the shoulders, yanking her by her shirt collar, and squeezing the back of her neck in anger on several occasions. The suit alleges Gibbons struck another player on the back during a Patriot League Tournament game against Lehigh in March 2013.

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Por primera vez habla la menor que acusa a un cura de Cotuí de abuso sexual

REPUBLICA DOMINICANA
Noticias Sin

[con video]

BONAO, República Dominicana.- Familiares de la menor supuestamente abusada por el sacerdote Alberto Zacarías Cordero dicen estar sorprendidos por la sentencia que deja en libertad al cura. Por primera vez la adolescente habla en cámara y narra lo que asegura sucedió con el religioso

Esta joven de 16 años, se armó de valor y decidió contar lo que alegadamente vivió con el sacerdote Zacarías Cordero, quien recientemente fue descargado de las acusaciones por un tribunal en Bonao.

Según los familiares de la joven, el juez tomó como prueba una carta que supuestamente escribió la víctima.

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Quinn orders abuse fund to destroy reports on survivors

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SHANE PHELAN PUBLIC AFFAIRS EDITOR – 19 OCTOBER 2013

EDUCATION Minister Ruairi Quinn has ordered the state body in charge of a €110m fund for victims of institutional abuse to destroy internal reports following an embarrassing gaffe.

The move follows a major row between survivors and the Residential Institutions Statutory Fund (RISF) after officials there breached strict rules governing the use of abuse victims’ personal data.

The fund was set up earlier this year to administer money pledged by religious congregations to support the needs of 15,000 survivors of institutional abuse.

But objections were raised when the RISF used data supplied by the Redress Board, a previous compensation scheme for victims of institutional abuse, to analyse gender, age and geographical patterns of survivors.

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Brooklyn Assemblyman Dov Hikind helps Jewish group fight child abuse

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY SIMONE WEICHSELBAUM / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2013

Assemblyman Dov Hikind has quietly steered nearly $1 million in state cash to a little known orthodox Jewish group aiming to combat child abuse throughout Brooklyn’s black hat enclaves.

The controversial pol tapped Project Innocent Heart — a Far Rockaway based organization headed by Rabbi Moshe Bak — to teach Hasidim about keeping kids safe from pedophiles, kidnappers and other criminals, according to a source with knowledge of the deal.

It’s been four years since Hikind scored the $950,000 payout from the state’s Office of Family and Children’s Services.

The money was first requested to fund Shomrei Yeldainu — Hebrew for “Guardians of our Children” — which nonprofit Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty was going to run.

Hikind wouldn’t return calls explaining what happened to Shomrei or why Project Innocent Heart ended up with the dough.

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Rabbi Gary Lieberman, ex-Hebrew Academy of Nassau County teacher, arraigned on sexual abuse charges

NEW YORK
News 12

[with video]

WEST HEMPSTEAD – A Nassau County rabbi was arraigned Friday on sexual abuse charges.

Police say Gary Lieberman, 56, of Far Rockaway, sexually abused a 10-year-old over a period of six months starting in May 2009. According to police, the abuse allegedly happened in a resource room and bathroom at the Hebrew Academy of Nassau County in West Hempstead.

Police say Lieberman told his victim that he should remain silent because no one would believe a rabbi would commit such acts.

Lieberman was fired from the academy in August 2010, the reasons for which are currently unknown. However, school officials say it was not until recently that they learned of the claims.

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Ontario woman testifies starting relationship with priest at 15, having his baby

CANADA
Sun News

NEIL BOWEN | QMI AGENCY

SARNIA, ON – A Catholic priest’s former lover accused him of preferring young teenage girls after learning she was pregnant, a Superior Court trial heard Friday.
Former priest Gabriele DelBianco, 57, is on trial for on 16 sexual offences involving four teenage girls during the 1980s.

A woman in her early 40s testified DelBianco fathered a child with her when she was in her early 20s, but their romantic relationship started when she was 15 or 16 and he was 29.

He fondled her in his car, but they did not have sex until she was 20, she said, adding she felt like the luckiest person because he had chosen her.

By the time she was 21, they were a secret couple, she said, and she stayed at his church residence several times a week.

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Woman in her 40s says romantic relationship with priest started at age 15 or 16

CANADA
London Free Press

By Neil Bowen, Sarnia Observer
Friday, October 18, 2013

In her early 20s a Catholic priest’s former lover accused him of preferring young teenage girls after learning she was pregnant, a Superior Court trial heard Friday.

The trial of former priest Gabriele DelBianco, 57, on 16 sexual offences involving four teenage girls during the 1980s, finished its third day Friday with testimony from a woman in her 40s.

During her early 20s, the woman said DelBianco fathered a child with her, but their romantic relationship had started when she was 15 or 16 and when he was a 29-year-old priest

He fondled her in his car, but they did not have sex until she was 20, she said.

During repeated encounters in the car, DelBianco had told her he could hug her all day, she said, adding she felt like the luckiest person because he had chosen her.

By the time she was 21, she and DelBianco had become a secret couple, she said, noting she stayed at his church residence three to five times weekly.

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Tribune Watchdog: South Austin pastor lives lavishly while West Side project languishes

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By David Jackson and Gary Marx, Chicago Tribune reporters
12:15 a.m. CDT, October 19, 2013

West Side pastor John Abercrombie says his mission is to lift a struggling community and serve its most vulnerable residents.

In addition to tending his church flock, he has made himself a key player in City Hall’s planning and development efforts in the South Austin neighborhood.

City, state and federal agencies have poured millions of dollars into several projects in which Abercrombie played a leading role.

Yet a Tribune investigation found that Abercrombie has at best a mixed record of success as a developer and landlord, mirroring city officials’ haphazard efforts to assist one of the city’s hardest-hit neighborhoods.

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Mom of alleged sex assault victim suing pastor for failing to protect girls from ex-music director

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By David Jackson and Gary Marx, Chicago Tribune reporters
October 20, 2013

One after another, teenage girls or their mothers approached their prominent West Side minister and accused the music director at his rapidly growing church of rape and molestation.

Instead of alerting police, Apostle John Abercrombie in three instances confronted the frightened girls in his church office with the music director present, according to interviews with the alleged victims and their families, as well as police reports and other government documents obtained by the Tribune.

In 2009, a church member brought Abercrombie a recorded cellphone conversation in which the 40-year-old music director, David Gardner, allegedly invited her 15-year-old daughter on a shopping trip to New York and told the girl not to tell her family.

Only then — a decade after the first girl came forward — did Abercrombie call police, records and interviews show.

Abercrombie acknowledged to detectives that “numerous allegations of sexual misconduct on the part of Gardner against numerous female minors had been reported to him,” a 2009 Chicago police report obtained by the Tribune states. “Abercrombie provided the reporting detective with information needed to initiate investigations into each allegation.”

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Memos: Priest remained in ministry despite awareness of allegations

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/18/2013

The Twin Cities archdiocese was aware of allegations in 2006 that the Rev. Michael Keating had at best emotionally intense and at worst sexually abusive relationships with as many as four young women or girls, yet kept him in ministry during the course of its two-year internal investigation, according to memos from a high-ranking official.

A series of five memos obtained by Minnesota Public Radio details steps taken by the Rev. Kevin McDonough, then-vicar general of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, in response to allegations about Keating.

The investigation appeared to begin when a young woman from Chisago County reported to McDonough and other officials that Keating had molested her when she was 13. McDonough said in a Feb. 2, 2006, memo to the archbishop that archdiocese officials had either turned the case over to law enforcement or were about to do so.

The Chisago County attorney’s office declined to file charges after a 2006 investigation.

The young woman filed suit Monday in Ramsey County District Court against Keating, alleging sexual battery. Keating, 57, took a leave as a religion professor at the University of St. Thomas. He has denied the allegations.

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Attorney for U of St. Thomas Priest Calls Allegations in Lawsuit ‘False and Defamatory’

MINNESOTA
KSTP

By: Cassie Hart
Father Michael Keating’s attorney has issued a response following a recent sexual abuse lawsuit filed against him.

In a release, Keating’s attorney, Fred Bruno of Bruno Law said, “The allegations in this lawsuit are false and highly defamatory. The plaintiff’s attorney is merely recycling claims that were thoroughly discredited over six years ago and are being originally lofted. The plaintiff’s accusations were independently investigated by the Chisago County Sheriff, the Chisago County Attorney, the Archdiocese and two independent forensic psychologists.”

A woman known as “Jane Doe 20” filed the lawsuit, accusing Keating of sexually abusing her more than a decade ago.

No charges were ever filed.

Click here to read the full statement.

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October 18, 2013

Catholic official who investigated priest quits St. Thomas board

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: TONY KENNEDY , Star Tribune Updated: October 18, 2013

Friday’s resignation is second involving high-ranking church official this month.

The Rev. Kevin McDonough, a Catholic official who was involved in the handling of three controversial sexual misconduct investigations of fellow priests, has stepped down from the University of St. Thomas board of directors, a university source confirmed Friday.

The news followed a week of allegations that one of the school’s Catholic studies professors sexually abused a teenage girl. McDonough was involved in the archdiocese’s investigation of claims against the Rev. Michael Keating in 2006. On Thursday, e-mails that Keating sent to the girl from Rome in 1999 and 2000 were made public by her attorney, Jeff Anderson.

McDonough, a former vicar general in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, is the second high-ranking church official to step aside since allegations began surfacing that the archdiocese did not take action against priests accused of sexual improprieties. He reportedly resigned Oct. 4.

The Rev. Peter Laird resigned as vicar general Oct. 3, the same day that lawyers for the archdiocese presented a police report in court that described allegations that a Hugo priest had kept pornographic images on his computer. He now is on a leave of absence.

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After 10 years, Cardinal O’Malley finally meets with Mass. lawmakers

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Catholic Insider

BCI has quite a backlog to catch-up on. We are going to go in reverse order on some of the more recent news.

The local media reported last week, “Cardinal O’Malley moves to raise Beacon Hill profile.”

BOSTON (AP) – Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley is moving to raise his profile on Beacon Hill by inviting more than 100 state lawmakers to breakfast.

The Boston Globe reports that the invitation said legislators would be given an overview of the church’s political, educational and social programs. The invitation to the continental breakfast at the Union Club on Park Street in Boston was sent to lawmakers who represent the 144 cities and towns in the archdiocese.

“We want them to get to know us better so they understand the broader value of the church in the community,” said Terry Donilon, spokesman for the archdiocese. “If the Catholic Church went away tomorrow, there would be millions upon millions of dollars put on the backs of cities and towns in Massachusetts.”

If we are to understand Terry Donilon correctly, the reason the Catholic Church and our ministries are important to the state is because if not for the Catholic Church, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts would be spending millions upon millions more dollars to support cities and towns? Really?! Could someone at 66 Brooks Drive please enroll Terry in a faith formation class so he can learn Catholicism 101?

The Globe gives more details on the actual meeting that took place, with more commentary from Terry Donilon:

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley hosted some 60 state lawmakers at a breakfast meeting this morning that was meant to help rebuild his church’s rapport with the Legislature.

The meeting…was the first in which the cardinal has met with a large group of legislators since he became the Roman Catholic archbishop of Boston in 2003.

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Latest In Case Of Former Philadelphia Priest After Alleged Victim Found Dead

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Matt Rivers

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The prosecution of a Catholic priest accused of molesting a former altar boy is on shaky ground, after the accuser was found dead, the victim of an apparent drug overdose (see related story).

Father Robert Brennan was arrested last month after a month long investigation by the Philadelphia District Attorney (see related story). A former altar boy who was supervised by Brennan at Resurrection of Our Lord Church said he was abused for three years from 1998 until 2001.

Brennan had also been accused of abuse on at least twenty separate occasions, all of them laid out in a grand jury report released in 2005. He was never charged, however, because at that time, none of the accusations fell within the crime’s statute of limitations.

Last month’s accuser was the first person to allege crimes that fell within the statute’s timeframe.

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MN – Catholic college may have ignored recommended restrictions

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 18, 2013

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

At first, there were no signs of Fr. Keating committing misconduct with adults.

Now, there are several.

And at first, there were recommendations that restrictions be put on Fr. Keating.

Now there is proof that those recommendations were ignored, says Minnesota Public Radio.

[Minnesota Public Radio]

And now there’s evidence that archdiocesan officials take reports of suspected child sex crimes from their own priests just as casually as they do reports by victims themselves.

Many Catholic officials refuse to follow secular law. Many refuse to follow their own church abuse policies. So it should surprise no one that they also refuse to follow recommendations by Archbishop John Nienstedt’s hand-picked abuse panel.

What now?

For starters, the lay Catholics whose recommendations were apparently ignored should speak up. They should identify themselves and publicly criticize Archbishop Nienstedt, Fr. Kevin McDonough and every other Catholic official who knew about but ignored their recommendations.

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Bishop Quinn dies at Westlake home

OHIO
Chronicle-Telegram

The Most Rev. A. James Quinn, auxiliary bishop emeritus of Cleveland, died Friday morning at his home in Westlake, according to the Diocese of Cleveland.

The Diocese said the cause of death was apparent natural causes. Quinn was 81.

Quinn was born April 8, 1932, and ordained a priest of the Diocese on May 24, 1958, according to the Diocese. He was appointed as an auxiliary bishop on Oct. 14, 1983, and he was ordained bishop on Dec. 5, 1983. He retired June 14, 2008.

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Diocese of Cleveland’s Auxilliary Bishop A. James Quinn Has Passed Away at 81

OHIO
Cleveland Leader

The Diocese of Cleveland is mourning the loss of Rev. A. James Quinn, Auxilliary Bishop Emeritus of Cleveland, who passed away at his Westlake home on Friday, October 18. He was 81.

Quinn became an ordained priest on May 24, 1958, and was appointed as an Auxilliary Bishop of the Diocese of Cleveland in Octoer 1983. He retired in 2008, and resided at St. Ladislas Parish in Westlake.

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Documents show restrictions on University of St. Thomas priest were ignored

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio
October 18, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Internal archdiocesan documents obtained by MPR News raise questions about what the University of St. Thomas knew about sexual abuse allegations against a professor in 2006.

The documents show top church deputy Kevin McDonough investigated several allegations in 2006 that the Rev. Michael Keating sexually abused women and he planned to communicate his findings to an administrator at the University of St. Thomas.

Keating, 57, is an associate professor of Catholic Studies at the University of St. Thomas and a priest in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. He went on temporary leave Oct. 11. Three days later, a woman filed a lawsuit in Ramsey County accusing Keating of sexually abusing her in the late 1990s when she was 13 to 15 years old.

Keating did not respond to requests for comment. On Thursday, his attorney, Fred Bruno, called the allegations in the lawsuit “false and highly defamatory.

The woman’s family first reported the allegations to the archdiocese in 2006. The archdiocese’s clergy review board investigated and concluded in November 2007 that there was insufficient evidence of child sexual abuse. Nonetheless, it recommended to Archbishop Harry Flynn that Keating not be allowed to mentor teenagers and young adults.

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Goodbye party for teacher convicted of not reporting abuse canceled after victims groups’ involvement

ARKANSAS
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Oct. 18, 2013

Two sexual abuse victims groups crashed a party planned for a former Arkansas high school athletic director convicted of failing to report the sexual abuse of a minor.

The National Survivor Advocates Coalition and the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests alerted Little Rock, Ark., Bishop Anthony Taylor in a letter Wednesday about a going-away party for Kathy Griffin, who in September was found guilty of not reporting a sexual relationship between a fellow teacher and a high school student at the all-girls Mount St. Mary Academy.

Griffin, who also worked as a guidance counselor and dean of discipline, was sentenced to a year of probation and fined $2,500. She is appealing the decision.

The event for Griffin, promoted on Facebook and through an online invitation website, asked friends to gather at a Little Rock restaurant Saturday “as we say a heart felt good-bye as she moves on to the next phase in her life.” It asked people to share memories and create a money tree “to show her what she has meant to all of us.”

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TN – “No whistleblowing” says prominent Baptist preacher; SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 18, 2013

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

A prominent Baptist official is telling church members “don’t take matters to the press.”

[Associated Baptist Press]

We hope every Baptist rejects this self-serving, unhealthy and often dangerous advice, especially when it comes to sexual and financial crimes, whether known or suspected.

There may be some “unbelievers” who can better fix the church roof or who give a lower bid to replace the church boiler. And there are definitely some “unbelievers” who can better protect kids, investigate suspicions, prosecute predators and prevent abuse. They are the experienced and unbiased professionals in law enforcement. They should be called promptly – and anonymously, if need be – every time a Baptist church member or staffer suspects that a child has been or is being hurt.

And especially when police or prosecutors are reluctant or unable to help, victims, witnesses, and whistleblowers in churches should call journalists.

We suspect that Rev. Patterson will claim to have “misspoken” or been “misinterpreted” or been “imprecise.” But his words are pretty clear. He apparently doesn’t mention any exceptions to his “no whistleblowing” advice, not even for child sex crimes and cover-ups.

Though our focus is on child sex crimes and cover ups, we also advise church-goers to call police about possible financial misconduct in churches for two reasons. First, it’s our duty as citizens to call law enforcement about ANY suspected crimes. Second, it’s our experience that often clergy steal money to buy expensive gifts for victims or pay “hush money” to them.

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SBC leader says don’t talk to press

UNITED STATES
Associated Baptist Press

Southwestern Seminary President Paige Patterson says churches should settle disputes internally and not talk about them to the media.

By Bob Allen

There’s no room in the church for whistleblowers, a Southern Baptist seminary president said in a chapel sermon Oct. 15.

Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary President Paige Patterson said the prohibition in First Corinthians 6 on church members suing one another in secular court means “we don’t take matters before unbelievers.”

“This also means that you don’t take matters to the press,” Patterson said. “What goes on in the church of God doesn’t go to the press.”

“If I had fifty dollars for every time that I have told somebody from the press: ‘I’m not going to comment on that because, frankly, it’s none of your business; it’s the church of God’ — if I had fifty dollars for every time I’ve done that, this would be a wealthy institution and you wouldn’t have to pay any tuition at all,” he said.

Patterson said that response is never popular. “‘Well, don’t you believe in a free press?’ Yes. ‘Don’t you believe in a free ministry?’”

“I’m not going to talk to the press about things that are matters internal to the church of the Living God,” Patterson said. “It is none of their business. And they can’t possibly get it right, and they don’t get it right, so why do you take it to the world of unbelief? Whether that be the court, whether that be the press? ‘Well there’s just no other way to handle it.’ Yes there is. Commit it to the Lord God Almighty.”

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Statement Regarding Reporting of Sexual Abuse to Law Enforcement

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

We join in solidarity with the St. Paul Police Department, and all civil authorities, in continuing to encourage anyone who suspects abuse of a minor or vulnerable adult within Church ministry—or any setting including the home or school—to first contact law enforcement. Any act of abuse against a minor or vulnerable adult is reprehensible and morally repugnant and we will not tolerate it.

Since 2002 we have implemented a long list of policy and procedural reforms to clarify guidelines and strengthen enforcement. Some of the actions we have taken include completing more than 3,000 adult safe environment training sessions for approximately 70,000 adults; conducting 105,000 background checks on clergy, staff and volunteers; and providing over 100,000 children with age-appropriate lessons to help keep them safe.

As a further demonstration of our commitment to handling these matters aggressively and consistently, an independent, lay task force has been formed and they will conduct a full review of our policies and practices. Their findings will be made public when final.

We are deeply sorry for any harm that has come from clergy misconduct. Eliminating any form of abuse is the highest priority for the Archdiocese. Our record is not perfect, but we have made great progress, and we are determined to do whatever is necessary to eliminate this problem.

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Priest sent e-mails expressing love to girl who says he abused her

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

[the emails]

Article by: TONY KENNEDY and DAVID CHANEN , Star Tribune Updated: October 18, 2013

In e-mails sent from Rome, he expressed his love and affection for teen girl he is accused of sexually abusing. His lawyer said claims were “discredited.”

The University of St. Thomas priest accused of sexual contact with a young girl expressed love and affection for her in e-mails he sent her from Rome when she was 14 and 15 years old.

“Be really sure that I love you lots and lots and never think of you without a smile coming to my mind,” the Rev. Michael J. Keating wrote in one of at least 19 e-mails made public Thursday on the website of her attorney, Jeff Anderson of St. Paul. Anderson said the writings were presented to the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis seven years ago in a church review of his client’s sexual abuse claims, but officials disregarded them.

The e-mails, which the girl’s mother has described as “quite seductive,” were part of the case the girl’s family brought to church authorities in 2006. The church sided with Keating, and the woman maintained a public silence until she sued Keating last week, alleging three years of harmful sexual contact that caused her deep psychological trauma.

The archdiocese responded Thursday with a statement supporting the St. Paul police’s call for victims to first report clergy sexual abuse to law enforcement.

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Nassau Hebrew Academy Rabbi Sexually Abused Student, Cops Say

NEW YORK
Long Island Press

By Rashed Mian on October 18, 2013

A 56-year-old rabbi has been accused of sexually abusing a student at a Hebrew Academy of Nassau County school where he was a religious teacher before his termination three years ago, Nassau County police said.

Gary Lieberman of Far Rockaway will be arraigned Friday at First District Court in Hempstead on two counts of first-degree sexual abuse from incidents stemming from Nov. 4, 2009 through May 2010, police said.

Detectives said Lieberman allegedly sexually abused a 10-year-old student student twice at the Hempstead Avenue school, first in a learning resource room on the second floor of the building and a second time inside a school restroom. A police spokesman said the department was not identifying the school by name to protect the victim.

“Lieberman told the victim that if he tells anyone about this they would not believe him because he is a rabbi,” police said in a news release.

The chairman of the Board of the Education of the Hebrew Academy notified police about the alleged sexual abuse, police said.

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Rabbi Accused of Sexually Abusing Student in Nassau County

NEW YORK
LongIsland.com

By Joe Randazzo Published: October 18 2013

Gary Lieberman was accused of abusing a young child as a teacher in 2009.

A Queens rabbi has been accused of sexually abusing a young boy at a religious school four years ago. The abuse took place between November 2009 and May 2010 at the Hebrew Academy of Nassau County in West Hempstead. At the time Gary Lieberman, 56, of Rockaway, was a teacher at the school.

School officials learned of the abuse earlier this year and Lieberman was arrested Thursday.

“There was an allegation regarding an incident which allegedly occurred years ago which was recently brought to our attention regarding a teacher that has not worked at the school for several years,” the Academy said in a statement.“The school was proactive in reporting the allegation to the police and we are continuing to cooperate with their investigation.”

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Rabbi Accused Of Sexually Abusing Long Island Student Enters Not Guilty Plea

NEW YORK
CBS New York

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – A rabbi has been accused of sexually abusing a student at a religious school on Long Island four years ago.

Gary Lieberman, 56, of Far Rockaway pleaded not guilty on two counts of first-degree sexual abuse in First District Court in Hempstead on Friday. He was expected to post $100,000 bail.

Lieberman repeatedly abused a student between November 2009 and May 2010 at the Hebrew Academy of Nassau County in West Hempstead, where he was a teacher, police said.

The student was 10 years old when the alleged abuse began, investigators said.

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Cops: Rabbi Charged with Sexual Abuse

NEW YORK
Patch

Posted by Heather Doyle (Editor) , October 18, 2013

A rabbi was arrested Thursday after cops say he sexually abused a student, according to Nassau County Police.

Rabbi Gary Lieberman, 56, of Far Rockaway, abused a then 10-year-old boy between Nov. 4, 2009 and May 2010 while he was a teacher at Hebrew Academy of Nassau County in West Hempstead, police said.

Lieberman victimized the boy in a second floor learning center, where the two would be alone, as well as a bathroom in the school, police said. Lieberman allegedly told the victim that if he reported the abuse to anyone, “they would not believe him because he is a Rabbi,” police said.

A Special Victims Squad investigation led to Lieberman’s arrest Thursday after the academy’s chairman of the board of education reported the incident, police said. How the abuse was discovered was not reported.

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Nassau County Rabbi Gary Lieberman accused of sex abuse

NEW YORK
News 12

WEST HEMPSTEAD – Police say sex abuse charges have been filed against a rabbi from the Hebrew Academy of Nassau County.

Police say Gary Lieberman, of Far Rockaway, sexually abused a 10-year-old over a period of six months.

According to police, the abuse allegedly happened at the HANC West Hempstead location between November 2009 and May of 2010.

News 12 Long Island has been told Lieberman was fired from the academy in August of 2010, but it’s not clear why.

Lieberman may have worked in other schools.

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Ex-Rabbi At Long Island Yeshiva Abused Student, Cops Say

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

10/18/13
Staff Report

Rabbi Gary Lieberman sexually abused a 10-year-old student at Hebrew Academy of Nassau County when he was a teacher there, police said Friday.

The abuse allegedly took place at the yeshiva’s lower school campus in West Hempstead between between November, 2009 and May 2010. The rabbi, who lives in Far Rockaway, was fired from the yeshiva for unspecified reasons in the summer of 2010.

“There was an allegation regarding an incident which allegedly occurred years ago which was recently brought to our attention regarding a teacher that has not worked at the school for several years,” said its executive director, Bob Shelley, in a statement emailed to The Jewish Week Friday.

“The school was proactive in reporting the allegation to the police and we are continuing to cooperate with their investigation. We have been asked not to comment any further.”

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Germany; Lefebvrists; papal cold calls; Legionaries; and Lampedusa

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Oct. 18, 2013

Over the centuries, the first tremors of earthquakes in Catholicism often have been felt in Germany. That nation gave birth to the Protestant Reformation, and it was also where the theological energies that erupted in the Second Vatican Council began to swirl.

Ralph Wiltgen captured the second point in the title of his famous 1967 history of Vatican II, The Rhine Flows into the Tiber.

Given that history, it’s worth casting an eye on Germany these days to track the fallout of the “Francis effect.” Two recent storylines are intriguing in that regard.

First, the Freiburg archdiocese recently issued a 14-page pastoral manual outlining circumstances under which divorced and civilly remarried Catholics might be readmitted to the sacraments, including Communion. That move compelled the Vatican to issue an Oct. 8 statement urging church leaders to wait for reforms to be adopted in Rome before implementing them on the ground.

Second, Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Limburg is currently basking in global celebrity as the “bling bishop” because of widely circulated accounts of how much he’s spent on remodeling his residence — $42 million in all, including almost $22,000 for a bathtub. Francis dispatched an investigator to Limburg in September, and this week, Tebartz-van Elst was in Rome for meetings while calls for his resignation mount.

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Could Pope Francis make women cardinals? A pipe dream, and an opening

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

David Gibson Religion News Service | Oct. 18, 2013

Could a woman vote for the next pope?

Pope Francis has said repeatedly he wants to see greater roles for women in the Catholic church, and some argue he could take a giant step in that direction by appointing women to the College of Cardinals — the select and (so far) all-male club of “princes of the church” that casts secret ballots in a conclave to elect a new pope.

Whether it’s even possible is a matter of debate. But that hasn’t stopped the feverish speculation, which was sparked last month by an article in a Spanish newspaper in which Juan Arias, a former priest who writes from Brazil, wrote that the idea “is not a joke. It’s something that Pope Francis has thought about before: naming a woman cardinal.”

Arias quoted an unnamed priest — a Jesuit, like Francis — who said: “Knowing this pope, he wouldn’t hesitate before appointing a woman cardinal. … And he would indeed enjoy being the first pope to allow women to participate in the selection of a new pontiff.”

That was enough to start the ball rolling. The report was quickly picked up by Catholic media in Italy and then raced around a church that, in the months since Francis’ election, has been primed to expect the unexpected from this pope.

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MN – Catholic officials hid more disturbing evidence; SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 18, 2013

Statement by Bob Schwiderski of St. Wayzata, Minnesota Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 952 471 3422, skibrs@q.com )

Weeks ago we learned that several top Twin Cities Catholic officials concealed for years the “borderline illegal” pornography on Fr. Jon Shelley.

Today, we learn that they also concealed for years “inappropriate (email) correspondence with a minor” sent by Fr. Shelley.

[Minnesota Public Radio]

In both cases, concerned Catholic lay people warned high-ranking archdiocesan staff. In both cases, police were not called and little, if any, effective steps were taken to protect others.

Nearly every day we learn more about known and suspected clergy sex crimes, misdeeds and cover ups in the Twin Cities archdiocese. And without exception, what we learn portrays Archbishop John Nienstedt or his staff in a worse light.

The Bible says “The truth will set you free.” It doesn’t say anything about 25% of the truth or 50% of the truth. Only the full truth about heinous crimes and inexcusable cover ups will enable Nienstedt – and his increasingly distraught flock and staff – “turn the corner” on this dreadful scandal.

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Mother held in newborn’s death in convent; Samoan came to become nun

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Washington Times

By Andrea Noble-The Washington Times Thursday, October 17, 2013

Sosefina Amoa came to the United States this month and joined a convent in the District with an eye toward studying to become a nun.

She didn’t know she was pregnant.

So when she delivered a baby boy alone on the floor of her room with the Little Sisters of the Poor last week, police said the 26-year-old Samoan woman panicked and put a cloth over the infant’s mouth and nose, suffocating the boy minutes after he was born.

The disturbing details were laid out in an affidavit filed by D.C. police in support of a warrant charging her with first-degree murder in the child’s death.

The court papers said that on Oct. 10, leaning on her bed for support, Ms. Amoa birthed the child onto the floor. She named him Joseph, and she laid with him for a time.

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Woman studying to be a nun gave birth in convent in secret and smothered the baby boy so no one would hear him cry

WASHINGTON (DC)
Daily Mail (UK)

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

A 26-year-old woman studying to becoming a Catholic nun smothered her newborn son to death because she didn’t want anyone to find out she had sex, police said today.

DC Police say Sosefina Amoa gave birth to the boy on October 10 in her room at the Little Sisters of the Poor elderly care facility.

Afraid the nuns would hear the newborn’s cries and discover she lied about sexual activity, police say Amoa told investigators she smothered him. The hospital called police.

A day later she and a nun took his body to a hospital in a small, black luggage bag.

She allegedly told detectives she ‘heard the child cry for two to three minutes’ and then, worried that someone would hear, she covered the baby’s mouth with a wool garment.

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Sosefina Amoa, Woman Studying To Be Nun, Smothered Child To Cover Up Sexual Activity: Cops

WASHINGTON (DC)
Huffington Post

WASHINGTON (AP) — D.C. police have charged a 26-year-old woman studying to becoming a Catholic nun in the death of her newborn son.

Police say Sosefina Amoa gave birth to the boy Oct. 10 in her room at the Little Sisters of the Poor elderly care facility. Afraid the nuns would hear the newborn’s cries and discover she lied about sexual activity, police say Amoa told investigators she smothered him. A day later she and a nun took his body to a hospital.

Amoa was charged Wednesday with first-degree murder after the death was ruled a homicide by asphyxiation.

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Police: Woman studying to be nun smothered own baby to hide sexual activity

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Raw Story

By David Edwards
Friday, October 18, 2013

A woman who was studying to be a Catholic nun in Washington, D.C. was arrested on Wednesday after police said that she smothered her own newborn baby so that others would not hear the crying and know that she had been sexually active.

Washington D.C. police said that Sosefina Amoa arrived at Little Sisters of the Poor on Oct. 5 and the 6-pound 2-ounce infant was born in her bedroom on Oct. 10.

According to The Associated Press, police concluded that Amoa was afraid that the nuns would discover that she had lied about being sexually active and smothered the child to prevent it from crying.

She later smuggled the child out of the facility in “a small black luggage bag” to Providence Hospital, which immediately contacted police.

“She said that she placed a black wool garment over the child’s nose and mouth and applied pressure with her hand for two to three minutes,” a court document said. “The mother said that prior to placing the wool garment over the child’s nose and mouth, the child was breathing and had cried. The mother said that after she removed the garment from the child’s nose and mouth, the child was not breathing and she knew the child was dead.”

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Polish archbishop under fire for linking pornography with child abuse

POLAND
Telegraph (UK)

By Matthew Day, Warsaw1:26PM BST 18 Oct 2013

The head of Poland’s Catholic Church has been attacked for suggesting that child abuse resulted from pornography.

It is the second time in as many weeks that the opinions of Archbishop Jozef Michalik have sparked outrage. Last week he was forced to apologise for saying sexual abuse by priests occurred because children from broken homes “were looking for love”.

In his latest controversial comments the archbishop said abuse stemmed from homes broken on pornography, “selfish” love and “the ideology of gender that raises legitimate concerns, because it goes against the laws of nature, promotes marriage between persons of the same sex and fights for the right to legalize adoption of children by these couples.”

A series of recent child sex abuse scandals involving priests has sent the Polish Catholic Church reeling and scrambling to regain its position but the archbishop’s comments appearing to try to deflect the blame from the perpetrators onto modern society or even the victims themselves provoked a furious backlash.

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AR – Group cancels fundraiser for criminal

ARKANSAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Group cancels controversial fundraiser
Victims & advocates called event “callous”
It was intended to help a convicted teacher
She refused to report suspected child sex crimes
Organizations wanted bishop to denounce the event
Advocates: “Public displays of support for proven molesters is wrong”
It deters other victims of other child sex crimes from speaking up, groups say

For immediate release: Friday, October 18, 2013

For more information: Barbara Dorris ( 314-862-7688 home, 314-503-0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com ), David Clohessy ( 314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

A group of Little Rock Catholics has cancelled a fundraising event for a teacher convicted of refusing to report suspected child sex crimes.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests was notified of the cancellation by a call and email from Stuart Hiserodt (512-482-0040), a Texas lawyer representing one of the event’s organizers. (A copy of the email, received late yesterday, is below.)

SNAP and NSAC, the National Survivors Action Coalition, had harshly criticized the event as “hurting at least one child sex abuse victim and deters other child sex abuse victims from speaking up.” They had written Little Rock’s Catholic bishop urging him to “rein in” his flock and discourage attendance and future such events.

The fundraiser was to happen tomorrow and benefit Kathy Gene Griffin, a former Mount St. Mary (MSM) teacher who was found guilty last month of failing to report known or suspected child sex crimes by a fellow teacher, Kelly O’Rourke, to authorities.

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Ontario priest officiated at wedding of alleged sex assault victim

CANADA
Sun News

NEIL BOWEN | QMI AGENCY

SARNIA, ON — A former priest charged with sexual assault officiated at the wedding of one of his alleged victims, court heard Thursday.

Gabriele DelBianco, 57, is on trial for 16 sexual offences involving four women during the 1980s.

He has pleaded not guilty.

The woman, now in her 40s, testified she would move away when DelBianco tried to kiss her but did submit to his request to remove ingrown hairs from his genital area. She was 14 at the time.

Another time she stayed overnight at a cottage with DelBianco, with her parents’ permission. They drank alcohol and, she said, she became tired and then paralyzed as DelBianco got on top of her while they were watching television. At that point, her vision was blurry, but she realized he was having intercourse with her.

“I felt myself trying to push him away, but I couldn’t,” she said.

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

Bnei Brak man suspected of raping young boys in haredi town of Modi’in Ilit

ISRAEL
The Jerusalem Post

By BEN HARTMAN
10/17/2013

Modi’in Illit Police have arrested a 20-year-old resident of Bnei Brak suspected of involvement in attacks on several victims, including a sexual assault on a nine-year-old boy.

Police noted that the victim’s father went to his rabbi and asked whether or not he should notify authorities of the alleged abuse. The rabbi told the man to go to police immediately, and he filed the complaint on Tuesday.

The child told police that he was on his way back home from school when he asked a young man to help him cross the street. The boy said the man then asked him to come with him to a nearby building, underneath a synagogue, where he sexually assaulted him.

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Definition met

CANADA
The News Watch

By Jamie Smith, tbnewswatch.com

Stan Beardy says Canada’s historical treatment of First Nations people was genocide.

The Ontario Regional Chief for the Assembly of First Nations agrees with a recent op-ed in the Globe and Mail by Phil Fontaine and Bernie Farber that states residential schools and the Sixties scoop are evidence that meets the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide’s definition.

“It definitely meets the criteria. What happened to First Nation people is in fact genocide,” Beardy said. “What happened to First Nation people is not just an Indian problem, it’s our collective history and a dark history of Canada and I think it’s important that we deal with it as what it is.”

No one knows how many children died as the result of Canada’s residential schools, which was enforced and maintained through a national policy. With the Sixties Scoop, children were taken from their families at birth. Beardy said the government sometimes went as far as issuing death certificates so that those families couldn’t trace their children after being given up for adoption.

“There again we lost many of our children,” he said.”When you talk about loss of life, it it’s forced upon you it can constitute genocide.”

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Former Orthodox Jewish counselor gets 15 years for child molestation

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Written by
Kathleen Hopkins
@Khopkinsapp

TOMS RIVER — After watching his former camp counselor try to avoid responsibility for molesting him during a nine-hour hearing on Thursday, a 16-year-old boy faced his abuser in court as a judge sentenced him to 15 years in prison.

Superior Court Judge Francis R. Hodgson imposed the prison term shortly before 11:30 p.m. on Yosef Kolko, 38, a former counselor at an Orthodox Jewish camp in Lakewood.

Before the sentence was handed down, the victim, who was 11 and 12 years old when he was molested by Kolko in 2008 and 2009, confronted his former camp counselor.

“Molesting may seem harmless to you, but the reality is, it kills people,” the victim said. “How can you ignore the tears and open wounds when you know how much you hurt me? You ganged up on me and hurt me again.”

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Kolko Gets 13 Years for Sex Abuse after Judge Refuses to Scrap Plea

NEW JERSEY
The Jewish Press

Published: October 18th, 2013

Yosef Kolko, 39, was sentenced late Thursday in Toms River, N.J. to close to 13 years, after the judge refused to let him take back a guilty plea to aggravated sexual assault which he had made in May, the AP reports.

Kolko’s victim, a 16-year-old boy who was 12 at the time the crime was committed, told the court about the hostile treatment he and his family had received from the Orthodox community where they live. Nevertheless, he urged other young people in a similar situation to his to come forward and speak out.

“I strongly urge you to go to the authorities and share your story. I can’t say it will be easy,” but “victims are getting stronger every day,” he said.

Prosecutors told the AP that the boy’s family was ostracized by the local Orthodox community for turning Kolko in and for pursuing the case in state court instead of letting religious leaders deal with it. The boy’s father, a prominent rabbi, lost his job and the family was forced to move to Michigan.

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NJ yeshiva teacher gets nearly 13 years for abuse

NEW JERSEY
Boston.com

By WAYNE PARRY / Associated Press / October 17, 2013

TOMS RIVER, N.J. (AP) — A former New Jersey yeshiva teacher who claimed he was pressured by his Orthodox Jewish community into admitting to sexually assaulting a boy was sentenced Thursday night to nearly 13 years in prison after a judge refused to allow him to withdraw his guilty plea.

Yosef Kolko, 39, had said in court papers that members of the Lakewood community carried out an unrelenting campaign to get him to plead guilty and to spare the community negative publicity. He claims they showed him YouTube videos ‘‘of how inmates kill people in jail for being molesters in order to pressure me into taking a plea and avoiding trial.’’

‘‘If not for the extreme pressure by members of my community, I would not have pled guilty as charged,’’ he said. ‘‘I reject plea bargains offered by the state because I am innocent of the crimes alleged.’’

But Superior Court Judge Francis Hodgson Jr. said Kolko ‘‘set out before he even pleaded guilty to game the system,’’ seeing an opportunity ‘‘to get a do-over’’ of a trial that was not going well for him.’’

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Updated: Rabbi Yosef Kolko Can’t Withdraw Guilty Plea; Sentenced To Almost 13 Years In Prison

NEW JERSEY
Failed Messiah

Kolko sexually abused an boy beginning in 2008 and continuing into 2009. He wanted to withdraw his guilty plea because, he claimed, Lakewood haredi rabbis and haredi community activists had coerced him to plead guilty to save the community further embarrassment and scrutiny. But testimony today showed that Kolko pleaded guilty in the middle of his trial after finding out more victims had come forward and his attorney told him that he was within minutes of being convicted.

Originally published at 8:37 pm CDT 10-17-2013. Last update at 11:15 pm CDT 10-17-2013.

ABC News reports:

…The judge sentenced Kolko to 12 years and nine months in prison after a hearing that lasted hours and included testimony from the victim, now 16.

When he pleaded guilty, Kolko admitted performing oral sex on the boy and attempting to have anal intercourse with him.

In court, the boy addressed Kolko directly: “How can you ignore the tears and open wounds when you knew how much you hurt me?”

Kolko declined to speak.…

Kolko is a nephew of the notorious haredi child molester Rabbi Yehuda Kolko.

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Victim of NJ Yeshiva Teacher: More Should Speak Up

NEW JERSEY
ABC News

By WAYNE PARRY Associated Press

A New Jersey boy whose family was shunned by their Orthodox Jewish community after he went to authorities to report being sexually abused by a teacher urged other victims of sex abuse to speak out and get help from prosecutors.

Testimony from the 16-year-old boy, who was 12 when the abuse occurred, helped put his abuser in prison. Yosef Kolko, 39, was sentenced late Thursday to nearly 13 years after a judge refused to let him take back a guilty plea to aggravated sexual assault he had made in May.

The Associated Press generally does not identify the victims of sexual abuse. Speaking just before Kolko was sentenced, the boy urged others who are being sexually abused to come forward and speak out.

“I strongly urge you to go to the authorities and share your story,” he said. “I can’t say it will be easy.”

But, he added, “Victims are getting stronger every day.”

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Gambling Northboro Priest Resigns Amidst Embezzlement Probe

NORTHBORO (MA)
GoLocalWorcester

Friday, October 18, 2013
Paige Pihl Buckley, GoLocalWorcester Contributor

St. Bernadette Parish priest Reverend Stephen A. Gemme resigned his post amidst allegations that he embezzled $230,000 from the parish in the last four years.

In a letter published on St. Bernadette’s website, Bishop Robert J. McManus of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester said Father Gemme had admitted to a gambling problem when confronted about the missing funds. He has been placed on medical leave and is being evaluated and treated at a residential addiction facility.

The casino effect

“This happens everywhere that convenience casinos are established,” said John Ribeiro, chairperson of Repeal the Casino Deal, a statewide organization fighting to include a casino repeal option on November 2014’s statewide ballot.

“The casino industry leverages some of the most sophisticated technology to understand and target people based on their financial status. The casinos this priest frequented likely knew that he was spending beyond his means,” he said. “There is no recourse for the parish to recover those funds from the casino. Any other business that had received stolen money would have to return it. The casinos enjoy a protected status above other businesses.”

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Worcester church pastor faces lawsuit

WORCESTER (MA)
Boston Herald

Friday, October 18, 2013
By: Associated Press

WORCESTER, Mass. — A Holden woman who said she was sexually abused by the pastor of a Greek Orthodox church in Worcester has filed a lawsuit against the priest and several other church officials.

The Holden woman’s suit filed in Worcester Superior Court seeking a minimum of $40,000 in damages from the ex-pastor of St. George Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral, the Rev. Charles Abdelahad, as well as some of his superiors.

The Telegram & Gazette (http://bit.ly/1cBeThU ) reports that the suit said that the defendants should have known about the abuse and should have reported it to authorities.

Abdelahad was sentenced to serve 90 days of a two-year jail term after being convicted in May 2012 of abusing the woman during counseling sessions at the church.

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Judge to rule on whether to commit accused sex offender

ILLINOIS
WPSD

Web Editor – Mason Stevenson
Story Created: Thu Oct 17, 2013

He was ordered to register as a sex offender and submit a DNA sample. Now, a court will decide whether to commit a former southern Illinois pastor accused of sexually abusing a child.

Police charged Bill Vandergraph in July 2010 with criminal sexual abuse of a 4-year-old girl.

The court found there was enough evidence to convict, but ruled Vandergraph’s dementia kept him from assisting in his defense.

A judge will decide in December if Vandergraph should be committed to the Department of Hhuman Services for treatment.

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Times Writers Group: Practice what you preach

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
Vicki Ikeogu
Times Writers Group

From an early age we are taught the merits of being responsible. We are taught the difference between right and wrong, and the means and importance of being accountable for those actions. These lifelong lessons come from our parents, our teachers, our mentors and even our religious affiliations.

That’s why I’m so frustrated with the latest scandal involving another Catholic priest. Based on news reports this week, it seems the Catholic Church in general, and a specific dioceses in particular, are not practicing what they preach.

According to Twin Cities news reports, a Twin Cities woman, now in her late 20s, claims she was sexually abused by the Rev. Michael Jerome Keating, who was serving as an associate professor of Catholic studies at the University of St. Thomas. A lawsuit filed Monday stated the woman, who has not released her identity, was exposed to abuse as early as age 13.

A criminal complaint was filed in Ramsey County about the suspected abuse in 2006. However, there was not enough evidence to formally charge Keating. An internal investigation conducted by the archdiocese also concluded evidence was insufficient. With the revelation of the lawsuit, Keating voluntarily stepped down from his position.

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St. Paul Police Seek Possible Clergy Abuse Victims, Emails Released in Lawsuit

MINNESOTA
KAAL

[the emails]

By: Stephen Tellier

The storm swirling around the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis continues to gather strength.

There were two big developments on Thursday. Affectionate emails surfaced that a young girl said she got from an older man studying to be a priest. She’s now suing him for sexual abuse. Also, police went public in their search for any potential victims of abuse by clergy.

The St. Paul Police Department’s plea to come forward was not prompted by the emails. They’re working an unrelated case. But both do involve priests, and some fear there may soon be more disturbing cases of misconduct to investigate.

Just days ago, Rev. Michael Keating was hit with a lawsuit, accused of sexually abusing a teenage girl more than a decade ago. On Thursday, the attorney who filed that lawsuit released more than 50 pages of emails he said were all sent from Keating to his client.

“The emails reflect the perverse kind of nature of the romantic relationship this adult, then a priest seminarian, had with her as a child,” said Jeff Anderson, the attorney who filed the lawsuit.

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Times Writers Group: Church must stop rhetoric

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
Karen Cyson
Times Writers Group

Earlier this week I took a quiz on Facebook: enter your age, education level, and on a long list of words, if you truly know the meaning of the word, check the box. Hit submit and an algorithm somewhere calculates how many words are in your vocabulary.

I was surprised that mine came in at 39,000, as in my daily routine I probably use fewer than 200: “Keep your hands to yourself.” “Yes, you do need a nap.” “Let’s go inside and wash our hands and have a snack.”

However, as I follow the local, national and international news on the sexual and financial scandals within the Roman Catholic Church, I notice there’s been a little vocabulary expansion in their excuses.

This week officials of the St. Paul/Minneapolis Archdiocese called a woman “imprudent and unsophisticated” for being a whistle-blower to law enforcement agencies after diocese officials failed to report a priest for possession of child pornography (online photos of adults and children having sex with children). The church’s moves — taking no action against the priest, hiding and possibly destroying the evidence — are apparently prudent and sophisticated.

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Minneapolis priest sent teenage girl he’s accused of sexually abusing 19 ‘seductive’ emails confessing his love for her

MINNESOTA
Daily Mail (UK)

By HELEN POW

A Minneapolis priest sent at least 19 ‘seductive’ emails confessing his love to a teenage girl who he was allegedly sexually abusing for a period of three years a decade-and-a-half ago.

The victim, who was 13 when the alleged abuse started and is in her late 20s now, filed a lawsuit against Reverend Michael Jerome Keating Monday claiming ‘dealing with what he did to me is an hourly battle.’

She alleges he fondled her breasts, made her lie on top of him while he was aroused, woke her in the middle of the night to ask for a back rub and french kissed her.

In the deeply personal emails, made public today by the girl’s lawyer, Keating expressed love and affection for the girl, regularly signing off ‘love you lots and lots’ and warning her that she will be popular with the boys because she was ‘pretty and charming.’

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Man who said priest abused him dies

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LAST UPDATED: Friday, October 18, 2013

PHILADELPHIA Two Philadelphia grand juries have described the Rev. Robert L. Brennan as a serial sexual predator who molested more than a score of boys over 15 years as he was transferred from one Catholic parish to another.

But until last month, after a 26-year-old former Northeast Philadelphia altar boy agreed to press charges, all the allegations against the 75-year-old Brennan were too old to prosecute.

Now, the complaining witness has died of an accidental drug overdose, putting the first criminal case against Brennan in jeopardy.

Lawyer Marci A. Hamilton, who said she represents the man’s family, confirmed that the man died Sunday, adding that the family had requested privacy. …

Sources said the family was “devastated” and that the young man had long struggled with drug problems.

That is not unusual for victims of sexual abuse, said David Clohessy, director of the St. Louis-based SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests).

“I would go so far as to say, 90 percent of the victims we have helped over the decades have responded to trauma through some sort of self-destructive behavior. . . . Something, anything, to try to numb the pain,” Clohessy said.

Clohessy said SNAP staffers tell all who call to seek professional help “no matter how long ago the abuse happened, who the person was, or how well you think you are coping.”

Clohessy praised the man for contacting authorities and said, “It is now more important than ever for people who have knowledge or suspicions about Brennan’s crimes to take a deep breath, pick up the phone, and call the police.”

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The high cost of negligence

UNITED STATES
World Magazine

Posted Oct. 18, 2013
by Jamie Dean

SEXUAL ABUSE | When pastors, churches, and other caregivers fail to report sexual abuse, they may aid and abet crime–and it some states are subject to prosecution themselves–along with subjecting abuse victims to lifelong trauma

BRADENTON, Fla.—From the floor-to-ceiling windows on the sixth floor of the Manatee County Courthouse, a sweeping view extends across the Manatee River as it spills into Tampa Bay. The skies darkened as heavy rains poured down here in Bradenton, Fla., on a September day. In courtroom 6-A, another storm brewed: Jeremy Bicha, 29, seated behind a wide defense table, heard testimony from two women he’d already admitted to sexually abusing when they were young girls.

The women gave shocking details about the abuse. When the district attorney asked the women to describe their relationship to the defendant, each gave equally shocking answers: “He is my brother.”

The tragedy of sexual abuse in a family once involved in local churches and stationed on a foreign mission field only deepens: Adults also connected to their community knew about the abuse while the girls were minors but didn’t report it to authorities. Those adults include a Christian schoolteacher, a longtime pastor—and the parents of Bicha and his sisters.

As adults, two of Bicha’s sisters he abused reported the abuse to police in 2010. Bicha pleaded no contest to charges of sexual battery. When Circuit Court Judge Thomas Krug sentenced him on Sept. 27 for crimes committed as a youth, he also castigated the adults who failed to report those crimes: “Frankly, they deserve to be in prison.”

Krug’s statement carries legal weight. Florida state law mandates any adult who suspects or knows about a case of child sexual abuse to report it to authorities. Failure to report carries a maximum penalty of $5,000 or five years in prison.

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Court documents indicate former pastor abused boy for 3 years

NORTH CAROLINA
WSOC

[with video]

CONCORD, N.C. — Channel 9 obtained a court complaint against former Concord Pastor Robert Price in the suspected sexual abuse between him and a boy at his church.

He was arrested Monday at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport after a two-year mission trip in Nicaragua.

The alleged victim joined Price’s Kings Way Church when he was almost 12 years old, according to court records. The pastor immediately formed a relationship as the two worked out together.

After workouts, Price would massage the alleged victim and that escalated to sexual abuse that continued for three years, according to the complaint.

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Exchange student sexually assaulted in Pen Argyl dorm sues Diocese of Allentown

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

By Riley Yates, Of The Morning Call
7:56 p.m. EDT, October 17, 2013

A South Korean teenager who was repeatedly sexually assaulted in a Pen Argyl dormitory for Pius X High School exchange students is suing the Diocese of Allentown, saying she told a priest about the abuse during confession, but it wasn’t reported.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday in Northampton County Court, comes more than a year after ACE Academy’s Richard Kim received five to 10 years in state prison for repeatedly abusing the then 14-year-old girl.

The suit charges the Catholic diocese and Pius X with failing to adequately protect the teen while she resided at ACE, which was run by Kim’s family and housed and mentored Korean students attending the high school.

During the time she was being sexually assaulted, the girl was attending confession at Pius X, and on four occasions disclosed the abuse to a priest, asking for advice on whom to tell and how to stop it, according to the suit.

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Abuse victim sues St. George’s former pastor, church

WORCESTER (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

By Bronislaus B. Kush, TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
bkush@telegram.com

WORCESTER — A Holden woman who charged in 2012 that she was sexually abused over a three-year period by the former pastor of St. George Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral has sued the clergyman, who was convicted, and several Antiochian church organizations.

Susan Manter recently filed a civil suit in Worcester Superior Court seeking a minimum of $40,000 in damages against the pastor, the Rev. Charles M. Abdelahad; the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America; the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Diocese of New England; the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Diocese of Worcester, and St. George’s.

Several individuals in leadership or staff positions at the cathedral or within the church network were also named as defendants in the suit.

They are: Fawaz Elk Khoury, Maureen Butler, Jeff Solof, Philip Saliba, John Abdalah, Robert Laham, Steve Husson, Mary Ann Kourey, Victor Kourey, Diane Kourey, Ed Hughes, Brian Hurley and Gregory Abdalah.

Bishop Saliba is the archbishop of the Diocese of New York and the Antiochian metropolitan of North America. Bishop Abdalah is the auxiliary bishop of Worcester.

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Alleged victim in priest sexual-abuse case dies

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

SOLOMON LEACH, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
LEACHS@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-854-5903
POSTED: Friday, October 18, 2013

THE CASE against a former Philadelphia priest accused of sexually abusing an altar boy at a Northeast Philadelphia parish is now uncertain after the alleged victim died over the weekend.

Rev. Robert L. Brennan, 75, was arrested last month and charged with rape, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, and aggravated sexual assault, for abuse that allegedly took place at Resurrection of Our Lord Parish between 1998 and 2001, starting when the boy was 11 years old.

District Attorney Seth Williams announced the victim’s death in a statement yesterday.

“The decadeslong demons and scars the victim in this case endured ended this weekend when he was found dead by Philadelphia Police Detectives,” Williams said. “I cannot say enough about the bravery this young man displayed in coming forward to bring these crimes to light. This young man’s courage should serve as an inspiration to us all.”

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Parishioner warned Archdiocese of priest’s possible correspondence with minor

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio,
Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
October 18, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — A parishioner in Mahtomedi, Minn., warned a top deputy at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in 2004 that a priest’s computer may have included inappropriate correspondence with a minor.

In a letter to then-vicar general Kevin McDonough, parishioner Kate Ternus described her concerns about the contents of the Rev. Jonathan Shelley’s computer. Her family received Shelley’s used computer in 2004, and the archdiocese later determined it contained “borderline illegal” pornography.

The letter dated Sept. 17, 2004 mentions a local Catholic high school and could indicate for the first time that Shelley’s behavior may have gone beyond pornography. It includes the first name of the person with whom Shelley corresponded and raised concerns that that person might be Shelley’s “boyfriend.”

“What if [the individual] is a freshman soccer player? What if he’s a recent graduate of St. Jude School?” Ternus wrote in the letter. “What if this actually is more than a matter of questionable taste? It feels like peeling an onion as layer after layer comes away.”

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October 17, 2013

Allentown Diocese priest didn’t report sex abuse disclosed during confession, lawsuit alleges

PENNSYLVANIA
The Express-Times

By Tom Shortell | The Express-Times
on October 17, 2013 at 6:28 PM

A South Korean student who was sexually abused at a Pen Argyl academy is suing Pius X High School and the Diocese of Allentown.

In a lawsuit filed today in Northampton County, the student said she alerted a priest at Pius X of the sexual abuse four times during confession. The priest never alerted authorities, according to the lawsuit.

Matt Kerr, a spokesman for the diocese, declined comment. The diocese does not publicly comment on ongoing litigation, he said.

The student was one of dozens who lived at Ace Academy USA in order to attend class at Pius X. Getting into a South Korean college or university is extremely competitive, so the students attended American schools to better their chances of getting into an American college, ACE Academy Director Richard Kim said in 2007.

Three years later, Kim began sexually assaulting the 14-year-old girl left in his care, according to police. The abuse lasted from November 2010 to February 2011 before police were notified, the lawsuit stated.

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Gabriele DelBianco on trial in Sarnia for sexual assault involving four girls

CANADA
Chatham Daily News

By Neil Bowen, Sarnia Observer
Thursday, October 17, 2013

Three women testifying at the Sarnia Superior Court trial of a former priest on sexual charges said they routinely spent time alone with the charismatic priest.

Gabriele DelBianco, 57, is on trial for 16 sexual offences involving four women during the 1980s in southwestern Ontario. He has pleaded not guilty.

During the trial’s first day a woman in her 40s said DelBianco had made her feel special as a teenager and they had a sexual encounter.

On Thursday, two women in their 40s testified DelBianco told them they were mature for their years and sought to kiss them. One said DelBianco told her the Virgin Mary was 13 when she gave birth to Jesus.

For one, the kisses turned to fondling her in a parked car but the other woman testified she would move away when DelBianco tried to kiss her.

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Police: Victims Of Clergy Sexual Abuse, Come Forward

ST. PAUL (MN)
CBS Minnesota

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — St. Paul police are not saying how many priests they might be looking at, but as they made a highly unusual appeal for victims of abuse to come forward, Commander Mary Nash said their could be one victim, and there could also be 100 victims.

St. Paul police are asking anyone who has been molested by a priest in the city of St. Paul to please contact them.

“I would like to say to those victims, whether you have come forward with your abuse, or whether you are working to cross that threshold of disclosure, you are stronger than you know,” she said.

She repeatedly declined to comment on what has sparked the obvious broadening of the investigation.

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St. Paul police urge victims of clergy abuse to come forward

ST. PAUL (MN)
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/17/2013

A St. Paul police commander appealed Thursday to victims of sexual abuse by priests, urging them to come forward and “share your story.”

Commander Mary A. Nash of the family and sexual violence unit told reporters at a news conference that the investigation into “the priest conduct case” continues.

That appeared to be a reference to the case involving Rev. Jonathan Shelley, formerly of St. John the Baptist Church of Hugo. Police reopened an investigation Oct. 4 into whether Shelley had child pornography on a desktop computer he owned in 2004. He has denied that allegation.

“Based on this investigation and previous investigations, the St. Paul police department is seeking victims of sexual abuse perpetrated by members of the Catholic Church,” Nash said.

“We believe this abuse has not yet been reported to law enforcement,” she said. “We could have one victim — which is one too many; we could have 100. We don’t know.”

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Minneapolis priest ‘fondled breasts of 13 year old and made her lay on top of him when he was aroused’

MINNESOTA
Daily Mail (UK)

By HELEN POW

A Minneapolis priest is being sued for allegedly fondling the breasts of a teenage girl and forcing her to lay on top of him while he was aroused during three years of abuse that occured a decade and a half ago.

The victim, who was 13 when the alleged abuse started and is in her late 20s now, filed a lawsuit against Reverend Michael Jerome Keating Monday claiming ‘dealing with what he did to me is an hourly battle.’

She alleges he fondled her breasts, made her lie on top of him while he was aroused, woke her in the middle of the night to ask for a back rub and french kissed her.

Keating, then-44 and 30 years the girl’s senior, was attending St Paul Seminary at the time, studying to be a priest. He is now an associate professor in Catholic studies at the University of St. Thomas.
According to her suit, Keating ‘engaged in multiple instances of unpermitted, harmful and offensive sexual contact with the girl from 1997 to 2000.

She said Keating repeatedly told her he loved her and she believed she loved him.

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Is veto of California bill on sex abuse suits cause for celebration?

CALIFORNIA
U.S. Catholic

By Scott Alessi

The Catholic Church in California breathed a sigh of relief last weekend when Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill that would have extended the statute of limitations on lawsuits in sexual abuse cases and opened up a one-year window for any and all past abuse victims to file suit against private institutions. The bill, SB 131, was strongly opposed by church officials, who of course realized it could have meant big financial losses for the church. But their jubilation over its demise seems rather unnecessary–if not downright offensive to the many past victims of sexual abuse on the church’s watch.

On the surface, Gov. Brown has sound reasons for his veto: The bill applied only to private entities and exempted public institutions from facing lawsuits. Brown argued, as did Catholic leaders, that this was unfair discrimination of victims in that it gave preference to those who suffered abuse from private institutions like the Catholic Church and left no recourse for victims who were abused in institutions like public schools. That makes sense–all victims should have been given an equal opportunity for justice, regardless of where their abuse took place.

Where Brown loses me is his comment that, “There comes a time when an individual or organization should be secure in the reasonable expectation that past acts are indeed in the past and not subject to further lawsuits.” Though I can’t personally speak of the horrors of enduring sexual abuse as a child, I can only imagine that for many victims, those “past acts” still have a profound influence on the present, no matter how long ago they may have happened.

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