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.

November 27, 2012

Bishop defends church amid abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A local bishop has defended the Catholic Church in relation to child sexual abuse, saying individuals should not be mistaken for a whole organisation.

Bishop Greg O’Kelly from the Port Pirie diocese says he welcomes the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

However, in a letter to parishioners, he says it was not the Catholic Church that committed or shielded any crimes but individuals within the church.

He says claims that people were told not to report crimes are untrue and that members of the church encourage anyone to tell the police if they have been abused.

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

Catholic Church hires security after protesters vented over clerical sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

Stephen Drill
From:Herald Sun
November 27, 2012

A SECURITY guard who patrolled St Patrick’s Cathedral during weekend masses kicked out people protesting against clerical sexual abuse.

The security presence comes as the Catholic Church continues to deal with the fallout from the announcement of a royal commission and a Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child abuse.

Victims’ rights groups say the security tactic showed the church was putting the protection of property before the rights of the abused.

But the Archdiocese of Melbourne, which oversees St Patrick’s, said the security guard was employed to make sure masses were not disrupted.

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.

November 26, 2012

SNAP Asks Victims to Speak Out

MISSOURI
ABC 17

A watch group is urging victims of molestation by priests to come forward and contact police in Columbia.

Gerald Howard is convicted of sex crimes and currently under investigation in Boone County. The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, also called SNAP, said Monday there could be multiple victims in Boone County.

Howard worked at the now closed Charter Hospital in Columbia after he was a priest in Boonville where he faces child molestation charges. If Howard molested children in Columbia, advocates say it would have been recent enough for a statute of limitations not to apply. This could keep Howard behind bars for good, so SNAP is asking victims to come forward and appealing to the church for help.

“We suspect very strongly that there are others out there who are still struggling in isolation and shame and self blame,” said David Clohessy the Director of SNAP.

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.

Trial continued for ex-minister facing sex charges

MISSISSIPPI
WAPT

A Hinds County Circuit Court judge granted a request Monday to delay the trial of a former Clinton High School choir director and music minister accused of sex crimes.

John Langworthy was the music minister at Morrison Heights Baptist Church before his arrest in September 2011. He is facing an eight-count indictment charging him with sexually molesting five boys ages 10-13 at various locations between 1980-1984, authorities said.

Clinton police charged Langworthy with two counts of gratification of lust and Jackson police filed six charges, authorities said.

Langworthy’s trial was set to begin Monday in Hinds County Circuit Court, but was continued after “prolonged negotiations” fell through, said Hinds County Assistant District Attorney Jamie McBride.

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.

Final Results of Survey on Clergy Abuse

UNITED STATES
The Garden of Roses: Stories of Abuse and Healing

Virginia Jones

In 2007, inspired by several survivors of Catholic clergy abuse I constructed a survey of survivor wants of needs related to healing. I received some positive support from survivors and advocates and an instructor of Social Work from PSU. I approached SNAP, therapists, the instructor of Social Work,, the media, and several clergy abuse lawyers but received little help in distributing and publicizing the survey. I had previously approached three Victim Assistants who worked for the Catholic Church and was essentially told to let professionals handle this. I attempted to work with the local Voice of the Fruitful and was told that I was too angry and hurt and drove people away.

I was hurt and angry. I was baptized Catholic along with my young children in 2001. After baptizing me, he proceeded to groom me and my 5 year old son although I have to stress that nothing bad ever happened. My son sat on the priests lap for almost 2 hours one time, but I and my daughter were present the whole time. I was aware that this was unusually familiar, but my son, who I had been told was on the autism spectrum, had severe separation anxiety and would only interact with about 6 adults other than me. I was happy to see that he was bonding with another adult. Church leadership knew about accusations of abuse against this priest for 20 years when this happened, but had never bothered to tell parishioners. If I had known about these accusations, I would not have entered that priests office with my children, but then, he probably wouldn’t have remained a priest if the accusations against him had been made public.

So even though no one in my family has been abused by a priest, we ended up in the middle of the clergy abuse scandal. When the priest was removed, forums were held. People were angry and hurt and divided between people who could not believe the severity of abuse the priest had perpetrated and those who could not understand people who would support a pedophile. I struggled, knowing that my private story cast doubt on the priest’s innocence. I remained silent even when a Youth Minister came forward with a story that cast even more doubt on the priest’s innocence. She was harassed so badly by other parishioners she left the Catholic Church. Who knows what would have happened if I had spoken out in the forum, but I needed time and space and support to come forward and ended up having to struggle mostly by myself to come to terms with what had happened. I formed a prayer group to support the priest, but I also researched the clergy abuse scandal on the internet. Eventually I read enough to firmly believe the survivors. I handed out newspaper articles about the clergy abuse scandal in my parish and was thrown out.

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

Sex abuse trial starts for B’klyn rabbi accused of molesting 12-year-old girl

NEW YORK
New York Post

From By JOSH SAUL
Last Updated: 7:38 PM, November 26, 2012

The trial of a prominent Brooklyn rabbi accused of sexually abusing a young girl began in Brooklyn Supreme Court today with a focus on the strict rules of ultra-Orthodox Judaism.

Williamsburg rabbi Nechemya Weberman is charged with molesting a 12-year-old girl over three years after her parents sent her to him for counseling.

“It doesn’t sound like modern Brooklyn, it sounds like the Salem witch trials,” said assistant district attorney Kevin O’Donnell, describing how the alleged victim’s parents sent her to Weberman after she was chastised and shunned from the Satmar Hasidic community because she questioned authority and acted immodestly.

O’Donnell alleged that Weberman fondled the young girl in his office and forced her to perform oral sex on him, “Over and over again.”

Defense attorney George Farkas called the jury’s attention to the seeming strangeness to outsiders of Hasidic Judaism, warning jurors not to judge Weberman on his adherence to religious dictum.

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

Sex abuse trial of prominent Orthodox leader Nechemya Weberman begins as insular Satmar Hasidic sect becomes Exhibit 1

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

By Oren Yaniv / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, November 26, 2012

The explosive sex abuse trial of prominent Orthodox leader Nechemya Weberman began Monday, and the insular Satmar Hasidic sect both he and the teen accuser belonged to became Exhibit 1.

“It’s pretty much an entirely different world that’s just a couple of minutes away from this courthouse,” said Assistant District Attorney Kevin O’Donnell of the Williamsburg-based community.

Weberman, 53, is charged with touching the alleged victim’s genitals and forcing her to perform oral sex on him starting in 2007 when she was 12. He counseled her after the teenager was deemed heretic because she questioned religious teachings and “did not follow the modesty rules,” such as the required thickness of hosiery, prosecutors said.

“A woman questioning authority is not allowed,” said O’Donnell.

The defense agreed the teen was “a free spirit” who wrote poetry and read forbidden magazines like Cosmopolitan and People.

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

Church accuses insurers in child sex investigation

AUSTRALIA
Insurance Business

By Trevor Treharne | 27/11/2012

The Anglican Church has made the astonishing accusation that the royal commission into child sex abuse should be focusing on the actions of the insurers for inhibiting the Church from “acting as it would wish”.

The Church claims some insurers refuse to allow religious organisations to settle financial compensation and instead insist on fighting victims in court.

The controversial submission, one of more than 300 contributions received by Attorney-General Nicola Roxon, argues that often the Diocese is “inhibited from acting as it would wish” by insurance companies that want to “litigate rather than settle”.

In his statement to the government, the general manager of the Diocese of Brisbane, Peter Read, urges the commission to examine the “constraints insurers impose on institutional responses” to child sexual abuse.

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.

Convicted Brother taken back by Patrician Order

AUSTRALIA
ABC – Lateline

[with video]

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 26/11/2012

Reporter: Emma Alberici

A Patrician brother convicted of molestation and buggery charges was taken back into the order under a new name after serving his jail time

Transcript
EMMA ALBERICI, PRESENTER: The Federal Government’s recently announced royal commission is being asked to specifically examine institutional responses to allegations of child sexual abuse.

Tonight, Lateline looks at how one order of Catholic brothers has dealt with alleged child sex abuse cases.

Brother Thomas Grealy, who was jailed on molestation and buggery charges in 1997, has been welcomed back to the order. Not only has he been reinstated as a Patrician Brother, a recent newsletter produced by the order refers to him as a Patrician “treasure”.

Lateline has learned that police soon expect to arrest another two men who had been at the Patrician Brothers school at Blacktown over sexual abuse allegations.

The Entrance, a popular beachside town an hour and a half north of Sydney, is one of several places across New South Wales that the Patrician Brothers’ Catholic order call home.

It’s where Thomas Grealy has been living, a convicted paedophile who spent four years in jail for the rape and indecent assault of two boys at the Patrician Brothers’ Primary School at Granville in Western Sydney.

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

Archdiocese Of Hartford Sues Insurer Over Payments In Sex-Abuse Cases

CONNECTICUT
The Hartford Courant

By DAVE ALTIMARI, daltimar@courant.com
The Hartford Courant

6:07 p.m. EST, November 26, 2012

The Archdiocese of Hartford is suing one of its longtime insurers, claiming the company owes it more than $1 million to offset payments the church has made to plaintiffs in priest sex-abuses cases.

In a federal lawsuit, the archdiocese is claiming that over the past two years Interstate Fire & Casualty Co. Inc. of Chicago failed or refused to make payments to cover four lawsuits settled by the church.

Two of the lawsuits involved abuse allegations against Ivan Ferguson, a Hartford-area priest who died in 2002. The others involved settlements in cases involving charges against former priests Stephen Crowley and Robert Ladamus.

Stewart emphasized that the diocese made the initial settlement payments and that the lawsuit is an attempt to reclaim some of that money.

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.

SNAP seeks help in finding victims of priest

MISSOURI
Connect MidMissouri

Mark Slavit

Members of a group supporting the sexually abused victims of priests want people to call police, not church officials.

Members of a group called “SNAP”, or the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests have started a new letter campaign in search of more victims.

Earlier this month, Boone County prosecutors disclosed that they are investigating a catholic priest and former local counselor who molested children, but may soon walk out of jail.

His name is Father Jerry Howard. For more than two years, Howard has been in the Cooper County Jail facing charges of molesting three boys at Boonville’s Saints Peter and Paul Church. Within weeks, a judge will decide whether the statute of limitations on Howard’s alleged crimes has expired. If so he will be released. The victims said the abuse happened between 1984 and 1987. SNAP members held signs outside the Columbia Police Department on Monday afternoon looking for more recent victims that would not fall under the statute of limitations.

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.

Convicted St. Paul priest should get new trial, Appeals Court rules

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JOY POWELL and ROSE FRENCH , Star Tribune
Updated: November 26, 2012

The state Court of Appeals found that a priest was improperly convicted on the basis of church doctrine, and not for a crime, in violation of Constitutional rights.

A Catholic priest who served eight months for having a sexual relationship with a woman, allegedly while he was meeting with her for spiritual counseling, will get a new trial because his Constitutional rights were violated, the Minnesota Court of Appeals ruled on Monday.

Christopher Thomas Wenthe, 46, was convicted last year of one count of third-degree criminal sexual conduct during a religous-advice meeting. He maintained that it was a consensual relationship and that no crime was committed.

On Monday, the appellate court agreed, in part, and ordered a new trial for Wenthe in Ramsey County District Court.

In a two-part decision, the appellate judges upheld a Ramsey County judge’s decision that the state statute is based on secular standards — which do not involve religion matters — and therefore doesn’t violate the Establishment Clause, which holds that states can’t make laws establishing or preferring a religion, on its face.

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

Child sexual abuse inquiry hears from victim support groups

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

A Victorian parliamentary inquiry has been urged to question Catholic Church employees about the whereabouts of documents that might show sexual abuse being covered up.

The American-based founder of an international victims support group appeared before the inquiry on Monday.

Barbara Blaine of the ‘Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests’, told the inquiry the church uses many of the same tactics to conceal abuse in Australia as it does worldwide.

She says the inquiry will need to do more than request documents from the church to prove senior officials chose to ignore to paedophilia.

“Bring in the employees and former employees and ask them to swear under oath what documents exist,” she told the inquiry.

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

Court: Too much religion in prosecution of priest

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

November 26, 2012 by Bob Collins

The Minnesota Court of Appeals has apparently narrowed the ability of prosecutors to try clergy charged with having sexual relationships with people who seek religious or spiritual advice.

The court ordered a new trial for Christopher Wenthe, a priest who was convicted last year of having sex with a 21-year old woman. A jury convicted him of sexual assault under Minnesota’s third degree sexual conduct statute, which contains this clause in the definitions:

the sexual penetration occurred during a period of time in which the complainant was meeting on an ongoing basis with the actor to seek or receive religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort in private. Consent by the complainant is not a defense;

But the prosecutor in the case, in attempting to show Wenthe held power over the woman, introduced the Roman Catholic Church’s doctrine on the religious authority of priests, chastity, and the church’s “moral prohibition on engaging in sexual reltionships.” The prosecutor also provided testimony from a church staff member about the archdiocese’s “emphasis on maintaining boundaries with parishioners.”

That’s too much religion, the Court of Appeals said, noting it “presents a serious risk of excessive government entanglement” in religion. It said the prosecutor provided the jury with “religious standards for judging (Wenthe’s) conduct. “It invited the jury to determine appellant’s guilt on the basis of his violation of Roman Catholic doctrine, his breaking of the priestly vows of celibacy, and his abuse of the spiritual authority bestowed on Roman Catholic priests.”

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.

Majority Of Sexual Abuse Crimes Against Children Go Unreported (VIDEO)

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Crimes against children happen everywhere in the world and seem to thrive through a conspiracy of silence and intimidation. Peter Isely, a survivor of child sexual abuse and a founding member of SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests) joined HuffPost Live host Ahmed Shihab-Eldin to discuss why he chose to break the pattern of silence.

“Childhood sexual abuse is one of the most underreported crimes in the U.S.,” Isely said. “The reporting rate is about six or seven or eight percent at best. Offenders know they have a 1 in 20 chance of getting away with it.”

Isely, who was abused by a Roman Catholic priest, believes that institutions need outside intervention because they cannot police themselves.

“Things only change from the outside,” he told HuffPost Live. “Institutions cannot reform themselves. They cannot change themselves. They have to be pressured from the outside.”

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

Child sex abuse inquiry told of Jesuit cover-up

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

SALLY SARA: Victoria’s parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious organisations has been told the Jesuit order of priests is not immune from allegations of child sexual abuse and that it too has been involved in a cover up.

The inquiry today took evidence from members of the group SNAP Australia, or the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

The international group is currently involved in a case in the International Criminal Court which alleges the Pope and three senior Vatican officials are guilty of crimes against humanity through the direct cover up of abuse.

Alison Caldwell reports.

ALISON CALDWELL: Chicago-based Barbara Blaine is the founder and president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. She’s worked with victims of child sexual abuse for over two decades.

Speaking at Victoria’s inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious organisations, she spoke about SNAP’s complaint to the International Criminal Court, which alleges the Pope and three other senior Vatican officials have been engaged in a cover up.

BARBARA BLAINE: The Pope is held in such high regard, and yet here I am alleging that he’s involved in committing crimes against humanity.

Just three ways that they do this are by priest shifting, by transferring predator priests from one place to another, by their refusal to cooperate with the civil authorities, and this is, I’m assuming, experienced here in Australia.

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St. Paul: Former priest convicted of sex with parishioner gets new trial

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.comtwincities.com
Posted: 11/26/2012

A former St. Paul priest convicted of having sex with a 21-year-old penitent has won a new trial.

Christopher Wenthe, formerly of Nativity of Our Lord parish in St. Paul, was convicted in November 2011 of criminal sexual conduct in a case that involved a female parishioner. He was sentenced to a year in the Ramsey County workhouse and was released early for good behavior.

He appealed the conviction.

On Monday, Nov. 26, the Minnesota Court of Appeals overturned the conviction and sent the case back to Ramsey County District Court for a new trial.

Wenthe, now 48, got sexually involved with the young woman after she sought his advice and guidance in her struggles with an eating disorder and past sexual abuse. She said that he took advantage of her vulnerability and that she trusted him because he was a priest.

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Dysfunctional Church stares into the abuse abyss

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Michael Kelly November 26, 2012

Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities begins: ‘It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.’ If we take St Paul seriously, the worst of times can be the best of times for Christians. In his biblical account of faith, he sees adversity, trial, rejection and hardship as the nodal points for growth. ‘We have no other boast but the Cross.’

This time in the Church in Australia is tragic. The intervention by Cardinal Pell in mid-November highlighted an all too familiar pattern of defensiveness that generated plenty of heat, lots of ‘I told you so’ observations from his critics and no advance in understanding that this is a time of unmatched shame for the Church.

Fortunately, other voices among the bishops — and not just retired ones — have weighed in with appropriate contrition and compassion.

While countless Catholics, me among them, feel nothing but shame and sorrow at both the abuse of victims and its insensitive and selfish handling by authorities in dioceses and religious congregations, it is far from clear how best an ordinary Catholic could and should respond to this spectacle of culpability.

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‘We just want to help each other’

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By Emma Swain
Nov. 27, 2012

When the survivors of the Hunter region’s widespread clergy abuse gather in Civic Park, Newcastle, tonight it won’t be in loud criticism of the church.

But with plans for a Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse now under way, the vigil will instead be a quiet protest against the silence of powerful institutions.

“This will be our third Silence Against Silence vigil and it will be our biggest because of everything that has come out,” event organiser and fellow survivor Bob O’Toole, of Maitland, said. “We’ve had numerous messages and emails from people saying they will be there so we are expecting a very big turn out.”

As part of the one-hour vigil, people will also have the opportunity to leave a message in a journal.

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.

Pedophile ‘treasure’ tag dreadful: Brother

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP
November 27, 2012

The description of a convicted pedophile by his religious order’s newsletter as a “treasure” is shattering, the head of the Patrician Brothers says.

Brother Philip Mulhall said Brother Thomas Grealy, who was convicted and jailed for the rape of boys in western Sydney in 1997, said featuring a photo of Br Grealy in the order’s newsletter was a dreadful mistake.

Br Mulhall said the contributor should have picked up the inclusion and he himself should have.

“I’m shattered by that,” he told ABC television.

Asked why Br Grealy was allowed back into the order after his release from jail, Br Mulhall said the policy at the time was to take responsibility for the members of the order.

“He’s our member, he’s our problem and we have a responsibility to see that he’s not a problem for other people.

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

Man who smashed Mendham monument …

NEW JERSEY
The Record

Man who smashed Mendham monument to victims of sex abuse by priests likely going with insanity defense

Written by
Peggy Wright
@peggywrightDR

A man with a history of mental illness, who is accused of using a sledgehammer to destroy a monument in Mendham dedicated to victims of sex abuse by priests, will possibly pursue an insanity defense, his lawyer said Monday.

Borough resident Gordon Ellis, 38, appeared in Superior Court, Morristown, for a brief status conference on charges filed against him in connection with the destruction Nov. 18, 2011, of a 400-pound millstone memorial outside St. Joseph Church.

The memorial, originally erected in 2004, has since been rebuilt and rededicated. The now-defrocked James Hanley had been a priest at St. Joseph, and he had admitted sexually abusing more than a dozen children during his tenure as a priest.

Ellis, who has received further psychiatric treatment since his arrest, is slated for examination by Dr. David Greenfield, a psychiatrist, according to defense lawyer Neill Hamilton. The lawyer later said he expects to pursue a mental disease defense or a finding that Ellis is not guilty by reason of insanity.

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.

Youth sex crimes trial delayed …

MISSISSIPPI
Carion-Ledger

Youth sex crimes trial delayed for former Clinton High educator John Langworthy

Attorneys say the trial for John Langworthy, a former Clinton High School teacher and church music director accused of molesting young boys several years ago in Mississippi and Texas, looks like it will be continued.

Officials in the District Attorney’s office as well as Langworthy’s attorney Jeff Rimes said that his trial, set to begin today in Hinds County Circuit Court. It was set to start at 9 a.m. and then was listed on the docket at 1 p.m.

Both Rimes and the DA’s office confirmed that the 1 p.m. listing is neither a trial nor a motion hearing. Rimes said he expects that the trial will be continued.

Langworthy was arrested in September 2011. He was indicted on eight counts of sexually molesting five boys ages 10-13 between 1980 and 1984, authorities said. Two of those counts are in Clinton, and six are in Jackson.

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MO – Victims write 9 local pastors

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will announce that they are writing
–nine Catholic pastors in three mid-Missouri counties about a now-jailed predator priest, urging the clerics to help them find others who he molested, and
–Jefferson City’s Catholic bishop asking him to divulge whether any other current or former church employees have legally changed their names after having been accused or proven guilty of crimes.
They will also urge law enforcement officials in Boone, Cooper and Callaway counties to do “everything possible” to seek out other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers.

WHEN
TODAY, Monday, Nov. 26 at 1 p.m.

WHERE
Outside the Columbia Police Department headquarters, 600 East Walnut, Columbia, MO (573-874-7652)

WHO:
Two-three child sex abuse victims who belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including a Columbia man and a St. Louis man (who is the organization’s long time director)

WHY
Earlier this month, Boone County prosecutors disclosed that they are investigating a Catholic priest and former local counselor who molested kids but may soon walk out of jail.

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.

Weberman Rape Trial Begins

NEW YORK
Failed Mesiah

The trial of accused Williamsburg rapist Nechemya Weberman has begun. And there is some interesting news.

As the trial of accused Williamsburg rapist Nechemya Weberman began this morning, there was a bit of good news.

Weberman allegedly raped and sexually abused a young hasidic girl who was sent to him for counseling. The rapes and abuse allegedly began when she was 12-years-old and ended when she was 15.

Weberman’s supporters have been very vocal in support of Weberman, filling a wedding hall with more than 1000 supporters for a fundraiser for him and demonizing the alleged victim (who is now 18-years-old).

Four Weberman supporters were later arrested and charged with witness intimidation, obstruction of justice and extortion after trying to bribe the girl’s fiancee in an attempt to get the girl to flee the country and not testify against Weberman.

And in the courtroom today, George Farkas, an attorney for Weberman, told the court that the alleged victim “”wants to bring down this community which she hates” as he launched into a statement meant to demonize her.

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

Court of Appeals reverses priest’s conviction

MINNESOTA
San Francisco Chronicle

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The Minnesota Court of Appeals has ordered a new trial for a priest accused of having sexual conduct with a female parishioner he was counseling.

Christopher Wenthe (WHEN’-thee) was working at Nativity Catholic Church in St. Paul 2003 when the woman sought spiritual counseling. A jury found him guilty last year of third-degree criminal sexual conduct.

But the appeals court says Wenthe’s conviction was unconstitutional because prosecutors obtained it “based on evidence that was excessively entangled in matters of religion.” It says that evidence improperly shaped the verdict by giving the jury religious instead of secular standards for judging the priest’s conduct.

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Focus on abuse-case insurers: church

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Milanda Rout and Jared Owens
From:The Australian
November 27, 2012

THE Anglican Church in Brisbane has called for the royal commission into child sex abuse to put insurance companies under the microscope, saying some refuse to allow religious organisations to settle financial compensation and instead insist on fighting victims in court.

The submission, one of more than 300 contributions received by Attorney-General Nicola Roxon last night after a week-long consultation on the structure of the national inquiry, argues that often the diocese is “inhibited from acting as it would wish” by insurance companies that want to “litigate rather than settle”.

The Brisbane Diocese, headed by Anglican Primate Phillip Aspinall, also says the commission should review mandatory reporting processes to deal with occasions when adult survivors report child abuse to churches but say they do not want to go to the police.

The deadline for responses to the government’s consultation paper on the commission’s terms of reference ended last night at 5pm, with state governments, victims’ advocacy groups and churches among many making submissions.

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Variety of experts sought for child abuse commission

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

November 27, 2012

The overwhelming response to the royal commission on child sex abuse has highlighted the need for multiple commissioners, some with expertise in child protection, the Attorney-General Nicola Roxon says.

After submissions closed on Monday, the federal government has less than four weeks to set the terms of reference for the royal commission on how child sex abuse allegations have been handled by religious, community and state institutions.

The tight deadline reflects Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s wish for the inquiry, which is likely to take years and involve thousands of individuals, to be established by the end of this year so it can begin work in early 2013.

Ms Roxon told Parliament on Monday the ”overwhelming” response had ”enthusiastically come from all corners of the country”.

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Shattuck-St. Mary’s sex scandal: Third former teacher accused of abusing student

MINNESOTA
City Pages

By Aaron Rupar
Wed., Nov. 21 2012

Last month, two former teachers at Shattuck-St. Mary’s boarding school in Faribault were accused of sexually assaulting students — Lynn Phillip Seibel and the late Len Jones.

Those revelations apparently prompted former Shattuck student “JJ” to come forward on October 9 with accusations that art and photography teacher Joseph Machlitt sexually abused him in the summer of 1980. JJ was 14 years old at the time. …

The charging document goes on to say that “JJ did not tell anyone about the abuse until he was 29… He [has] told several therapists.”

During a subsequent interview with investigators, Machlitt confirmed he had a sexual relationship with JJ that summer. He left Faribault to take a job in New Hampshire before the next school year began.

As the Faribault Daily News reports, all of the recent sexual abuse allegations involve incidents that “happened on S-SM grounds — either in a closed classroom setting or in the dormitories.”

Last month, we spoke with attorney Gregg Myers of Jeff Anderson & Associates, a law firm known for litigating sexual abuse cases. Myers said the abuse allegations at Shattuck are “discouragingly similar to cases like Penn State.”

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Fr. Georg Secretary. Confirmed

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

He will remain beside the pope, contrary to the rumors of his removal. Security has been reinforced in the pontifical apartment. And for six months, Ingrid Stampa has been deprived of access to it

by Sandro Magister

ROME, November 23, 2012 – Tomorrow’s consistory with the creation of six new cardinals has been hailed with a fireworks display of conjectures.

It was above all the bestowal of the scarlet to the American archbishop James Michael Harvey that uncorked the more or less bizarre hypotheses on the future configuration of Vatican leadership.

Last October 24, in proclaiming the consistory, Benedict XVI had announced Harvey’s appointment as archpriest of the papal basilica of St. Paul’s Outside the Walls.

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Pope’s private secretary will remain, despite rumors, Vatican-watcher reports

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

Msgr. Georg Ganswein will remain in his post as private secretary to Pope Benedict XVI, despite rumors of a shake-up in the staff of the apostolic palace, according to Sandro Magister of L’Espresso.

Speculation about imminent changes in the Pope’s immediate staff were triggered in October, with the announcement that Archbishop (now Cardinal) James Harvey, the longtime prefect of the pontifical household, would become archpriest of the Vatican basilica of St. Paul Outside-the-Walls. Some Vatican-watchers suggested that Msgr. Ganswein would become the new prefect, while others said that he might leave the Vatican entirely, as part of an overhaul following the “Vatileaks” scandal. Neither change will take place, Magister reports; Msgr. Ganswein will remain at the Pope’s side.

(The Vatican has made no announcements about changes in the pontifical household, apart from the new assignment for Cardinal Harvey.)

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Church taken to ICC

AUSTRALIA
Leader

By Barney Zwartz
Nov. 27, 2012

AN ABUSE survivors group has complained to the International Criminal Court that the Catholic Church is guilty of crimes against humanity over child sexual abuse – and says nothing will change within the Australian church until a bishop is jailed for covering up abuse.

A crime against humanity was when someone knew crimes were happening and had the power to stop them but chose not to, the state inquiry into how the churches handled child sex abuse heard on Monday.

Barbara Blaine, founder and president of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), told the inquiry: ”I recognise how extreme that sounds, but the evidence backs it up in three ways: priest-shifting [of abusers], refusal to co-operate with civil authorities and refusal to remove predators from ministry and keep them from children.”

Melbourne researcher, advocate and lawyer Judy Courtin is preparing a report about abuse in Australia, and especially suicides, to be given to the international court as additional evidence. More than 20,000 documents from other countries have already been presented.

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New Details in Suspension of Bedford VA Chaplain

MASSACHUSETTS
Patch

By Christopher Gambon

The Archdiocese for Military Services has removed the faculties of Father Luke Odor, a chaplain with the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs employed at the VA Medical Center in Bedford, following allegations of boundary violations against the chaplain.

The Archdiocese for Military Services has initiated an investigation into the allegations against Odor, which date back to the mid 1990s when Odor was working in the Archdiocese of St. Paul Minneapolis and the Diocese of Fargo, according to a statement released Nov. 25 by the Archdiocese for Military Services.

These allegations follow a Nov. 23 statement by the Archdiocese of Boston barring Odor, of Aba, Nigeria, from functioning as a priest within the Archdiocese.

The allegations do not involve physical sexual abuse, and “appear to have been resolved by all parties,” according to the statement.

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Priest at Mass. VA hospital suspended

BEDFORD (MA)
Boston Globe

BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) — A Roman Catholic chaplain at the Veterans Administration hospital in Bedford has been suspended pending a church investigation into what the Archdiocese of the Military calls allegations of ‘‘boundary violations with minors.’’

The archdiocese said in a statement the allegations against the Rev. Luke Odor date to the early 1990s when he served in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Fargo, N.D. and do not involve physical sexual abuse.

The Boston Archdiocese says Odor had been living at the rectory at St. Isidore in Stow, although he had no official functions with the diocese. He no longer lives there.

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Queensland’s Child Safety Department …

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

Queensland’s Child Safety Department could be called on to participate in child sex abuse royal commission

Korin Helbig, Renee Viellaris
From:The Courier-Mail
November 27, 2012

A STATE department charged with protecting Queensland children could be called on to give evidence at the Gillard Government’s royal commission into child sex abuse.

The Commonwealth has confirmed Queensland’s Child Safety Department could be asked to “participate” in the major inquiry.

Federal Attorney-General Nicola Roxon has stressed co-operation would be “paramount”.

Queensland Attorney-General Jarrod Bleijie has promised full access to key documents and staff.

But he did not rule out seeking protection from prosecution for Child Safety officers, saying indemnity would be determined on a “case by case basis according to the details of the incident”.

It came as the Newman Government yesterday dug in its heels and refused to bow to a grieving mother by changing its own inquiry’s terms of reference to allow her case to be reviewed.

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Scrap time limits on child sex abuse cases, urges head of bishops

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 27, 2012

Peter Munro

THE head of Australia’s Catholic bishops says alleged child sexual abuse offenders, including members of the clergy, should be barred from using statutory limitation restrictions to escape justice for their victims.

The Archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart, who is president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, which is meeting in Sydney on Tuesday, said all states and territories should abolish time limits on victims seeking compensation in civil proceedings.

”There shouldn’t be any artificial restriction on our society’s ability to redress such matters,” he said. ”The evil of sexual abuse is so serious and so awful that the only way in which the victims will come to any sense of peace is if their matter can be dealt with by the offender being brought to justice.”

Archbishop Hart also called for mandatory reporting by priests of suspected cases of child abuse, in line with legal obligations on childcare workers, teachers and doctors.

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God’s banker linked to Pablo Escobar

ROME
The Telegraph (United Kingdom)

A Vatican banker found hanged under Blackfriars Bridge in 1982 had previously undisclosed links to the notorious Colombian drug smuggler, Pablo Escobar, the author of a new book has claimed.

Nick Squires in Rome
3:46PM GMT 26 Nov 2012

Roberto Calvi, who earned his nickname for his close ties to the Vatican Bank, was found hanged beneath Blackfriars Bridge amid strong suspicions that he was murdered.

Ayda Suarez Levy, the widow of a Bolivian druglord, claims that Calvi was laundering drug cartel money through an account in Nassau, in the Bahamas, on behalf of South American drug lords.

The Cocaine King sheds new light on Calvi’s death, which remains one of the Vatican’s darkest chapters and most contested mysteries.

Mrs Levy, the widow of Roberto Suarez Gomez, claimed in an interview on Italian television on Monday that Mr Calvi was her husband’s “Italian contact”.

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Catholic Bishops to discuss sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Melissa Matheson
The Daily Telegraph
November 27, 2012

THE “scourge on society” that is sexual abuse will be addressed by Catholic bishops from across Australia today.

Up to 42 bishops will meet at Mary MacKillop Place in North Sydney for the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference. They will discuss how the Church deals with the royal commission into sexual abuse and are expected to appoint a national spokesperson for the duration of the commission.

It follows the public outrage over Cardinal George Pell’s comments this month that the commission would sort “fact from fiction” and reveal which claims of sexual abuse were a “significant exaggeration”.

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart – favoured to be spokesperson – said bishops wanted to help with the terms of reference for the commission, which accepted submissions up until yesterday.

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Woman attempted suicide in office of archbishop

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Stuart Rintoul
From:The Australian
November 27, 2012

A VICTIM of church abuse attempted to kill herself in the office of the Melbourne Catholic Archbishop to draw attention to the failures of the church, the Victorian parliament’s abuse inquiry has heard.

Nicky Davis of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests told the inquiry the woman took an overdose in Denis Hart’s office and was rushed to a private room at St Vincent’s hospital in Melbourne.

Last night, the woman told The Australian she had taken an overdose of valium at James Goold House, one of the church’s main offices in Melbourne, in about 2004 while attempting to discuss her case and the broader issue of pedophile priests with Archbishop Hart. She said she had attempted suicide on church premises three times and identified herself as the subject of an intervention order taken out by Archbishop Hart.

The Melbourne Magistrates Court heard in 2004 that Archbishop Hart told a woman who had been sexually abused by priest Barry Whelan to “go to hell, bitch”, after she knocked on his door at 1.20am. When the court documents became public in 2009, Archbishop Hart said he “did not recall” the comments, which magistrate Anne Goldsborough described as “appalling”. In a statement last night, the church said the suicide attempt “did not involve Archbishop Hart”.

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Good Reads

UNITED STATES
Patrick J. Wall

Author Jim Dunlap’s first novel MILLSTONE debuts tomorrow (November 26) on Amazon. Ten percent of the proceeds from the book go to nonprofits that help victims of child sexual abuse.

Jim was recently on the Dr. Carol Francis Show, where he talked about the book and the inspiration and facts behind it. The show’s podcast is archived here. It’s worth a listen.

According to Joelle Casteix, the thriller is adapted from his screenplay of the same name. Read more about the book here.

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Vigil to be held for clergy sex suicide victims

AUSTRALIA
SNAP Australia

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos, clergy sex abuse victims will
–hold a vigil to remember dozens of men and women who were molested as children by clergy and committed suicide,
–present small gifts to their families from the families of US clergy sex abuse suicide victims, and
— urge anyone who saw, suspected, or suffered child sex crimes or cover ups to “call police, expose wrongdoers, protect kids, and start healing.”

WHEN
Tuesday November 27 at 12.45 pm

WHERE
Ballarat: Midlands Golf Club – Club Lounge, Heinz Lane, Invermay Park VIC 3350

WHO
Two leaders of an international support group called SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priest) including an American woman, who is the organisation’s president and founder (She will also meet with Ballarat child sexual abuse victims and families of victims of abuse who took their lives.)

WHY
The Catholic Diocese of Ballarat has seen a large number of suicides stemming from childhood abuse at the hands of priests. Police are investigating at least 40 suicide cases with a link to clerics.

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Poison pen letter writer gets pardon and a job outside the Holy See

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The act of clemency for Paolo Gabriele is being formalised. He has a job in an entity linked to the Holy See waiting for him

GIACOMO GALEAZZI
Vatican City

Paolo Gabriele, the Pope’s former butler gets a pardon for Christmas and a job outside the Roman Curia. The Pope’s act of clemency for Paolo Gabriele who was sent to prison in the Vatican for stealing confidential documents belonging to the Pope.

The General Regulation of the Roman Curia entails the most serious disciplinary measure, which is dismissal and a ban from occupying any new post within a dicastery or office of the Holy See. After his release, the former butler will take up a position outside the Holy See, in a related entity.

Gabriele’s main supporter, James Michael Harvey, was created cardinal in today’s mini Consistory in St. Peter’s. Gabriele had worked for Harvey in the Prefecture of the Pontifical Household.

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Commission must not forget the victims

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By DOUG CONWAY
Nov. 26, 2012

It’s always the poor little victims who get forgotten, and it’s happening again in the hail of words prompted by Julia Gillard’s royal commission into child abuse.

Kids have no power and no voice. That’s why evil priests, and others, prey on them in the first place.

Well, it’s high time they had a voice.

The highly popular royal commission may well be politically motivated, as Gillard’s opponents charge.

It may well run for longer than it ought, cost more than it should, make big institutions feel uncomfortable, lead to litigation and uncover hitherto unimagined problems.

So what? This is a boil that needs to be lanced, and the sooner the better.

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Child rapist still a Patrician Brother

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Mike Duffy, 7News Sydney
Updated November 26, 2012

Australia’s Catholic Bishops are meeting in Sydney to plan their response to the Royal Commission on child sex abuse.

One item they might consider is why a child rapist remains a Patrician Brother, and was recently praised as a living treasure.

Brother Thomas Grealy looks just like any other senior citizen, but he is a convicted paedophile who raped a 10-year-old boy.

After four years in jail, his Catholic brethren welcomed him back, keeping his title, housing and financial support.

Known as Brother Augustine, Grealy was principal of Patrician Brothers School in Granville.

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Maddens’ abuse register draws nationwide response

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

By PETER COLLINS
Nov. 26, 2012

HUNDREDS of people from across Australia have contacted a Warrnambool legal company to register their interest in a forthcoming royal commission into child sex abuse by institutions.

Maddens Lawyers told The Standard it was inundated with calls after it launched a victims register a week ago.

“We’ve had hundreds of people from all over Australia, many of whom said they had never told their stories before,” the firm’s personal injury department chief Gary Foster said.

“The response is sending a message to the government that it needs to consider setting up a compensation scheme.

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Ambassador: No instructions to raise Royal Commission with the Pope…

AUSTRALIA
ABC – Mornings with Jon Faine

Monday morning, and host Jon Faine speaks to Australia’s new Ambassador to the Holy See, John McCarthy QC. His Excellency says he has not been asked to raise the Royal Commission into child sexual abuse with the Pope, but he would respond to any questions during his next audience with the Holy Father.

He says the commission’s terms of reference have not been settled, and he wouldn’t be expected to speculate to the Holy See.

“I certainly have not been instructed by the Australian Government, or indeed, anyone on behalf of the Government, to take these matters, which are of specific reference at the moment to Australia to any of the organs of the Holy See or the Holy Father,” he says.

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OMG! – I’m going to be a bishop, Canon tells parish

IRELAND
Irish Independent

By Majella O’Sullivan

Monday November 26 2012

OMG – it’s an appropriate response to unexpected good news, even from a bishop-elect.

Canon William Crean (60) revealed to his parishioners yesterday his reaction when Papal Nuncio Dr Charles Brown told him the Holy Father wished him to become Bishop of Cloyne.

“Within the first three sentences he had asked me and I thought: ‘Oh my God’,” Canon Crean told the congregation at 12pm Mass in Cahersiveen, Co Kerry, where he has served for the past six years.

He also appealed for prayers from his parishioners to support him in his new role.

No ordination date has been fixed yet, but the Tralee native has already said he would use his appointment to try to bring “healing” to the Co Cork diocese that has been wracked by controversy over child abuse.

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Pope ‘determined’ to revamp church here with new posts

IRELAND
Irish Independent

By Ralph Riegel

Monday November 26 2012

POPE Benedict is to reshape the church here, with two more bishops to be appointed within weeks after the Diocese of Cloyne finally got its new bishop.

The Pope chose St Colman’s Day, feast of Cloyne’s patron saint, to confirm the appointment of Canon William Crean (60) as successor to Dr John Magee in the sprawling Cork diocese.

Significantly, he chose a senior cleric noted for his outstanding parish abilities rather than a Vatican-based academic.

Church officials stressed that the emphasis on pastoral ability reflects the Pope’s determination to “reshape and renew the Irish Church”.

Six other Irish dioceses either have no bishop or have prelates serving beyond their retirement age.

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Accused Aussie paedo priest flees to Sri Lanka

NEW ZEALAND
Times Live (South Africa)

A former Catholic brother wanted in Australia on more than 250 child sex charges was reported to have fled New Zealand for Sri Lanka before his extradition could be secured.

Bernard McGrath is facing 252 child sex charges in Australia relating to his time in church-run institutions in the 1970s and 1980s and was due to be extradited from New Zealand earlier this year.

But McGrath’s brother Clem told Australia’s Fairfax newspapers he had flown out of Christchurch several months ago after being contacted by a friend who said: “Why don’t you come to Sri Lanka? You’ve got nothing here.”

According to Fairfax, McGrath was now living on a tea plantation in the Sri Lankan highlands.

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Priest sues woman over sex claims

CANADA
Winnipeg Free Press

By: Aldo Santin

A veteran priest of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church is suing a former parishioner, alleging a damaging letter of complaint she wrote to his superiors resulted in his forced retirement.

Rev. John A. Melnyk, 84, said the woman’s letter alleged inappropriate sexual advances and contact, which Melnyk said never happened.

In a statement of claim filed recently, Melnyk said the woman’s letter of complaint “injured his credit and reputation” and resulted in him being “brought into scandal, odium and contempt.”

Melnyk is asking the court to award him unspecified special and general damages and his court costs.

The woman filed a statement of defence, insisting her letter of complaint was truthful, accurate and justified, and she denied her letter caused any damage to Melnyk’s reputation.

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Priest remanded on sex charges

SOUTH AFRICA
IOL

November 26 2012 at 12:27pm
By KUTLWANO OLIFANT

Johannesburg- A 62-year-old Soweto priest has been remanded in custody after appearing briefly at the Protea Magistrate’s Court on Friday on charges of rape and sexually assaulting a number of young girls.

According to police spokesman Kay Makhubela, the Zola man, who cannot be named until he pleads, had allegedly raped a 12-year-old girl and sexually assaulted two others, aged 13 and 15.

He said the two other girls came forward after the 12-year-old reported the matter. The girls told the police that the man had fondled them.

“There is a spaza shop in his yard and that’s how he [allegedly] managed to get the girls when they came to buy.

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50 Reasons to Boycott the Catholic Church

AlterNet

By Adam Lee

November 26, 2012

Last month in Ireland, Savita Halappanavar died, and she shouldn’t have. Savita was a 31-year-old married woman, four months pregnant, who went to the hospital with a miscarriage in progress that developed into a blood infection. She could easily have been saved if the already doomed fetus was aborted. Instead, her doctors did nothing, explaining that “this is a Catholic country,” and left her to suffer in agony for days, only intervening once it was too late.

Savita’s death is just the latest in a long line of tragedies directly attributable to the doctrines and beliefs of the Roman Catholic church. I acknowledge that there are many good, progressive Catholics, but the problem is that the church isn’t a democracy, and those progressives have no voice or vote in its governance. The church is a petrified oligarchy, a dictatorship like the medieval monarchies it once existed alongside, and it’s run by a small circle of conservative, rigidly ideological old men who make all the decisions and choose their own successors.

This means that, whatever individual Catholics may do, the resources of the church as an institution are bent toward opposing social progress and positive change all over the world. Every dollar you put into the church collection plate, every Sunday service you attend, every hour of time and effort you put into volunteering or working for church organizations, is inevitably a show of support for the institutional church and its abhorrent mission. When you have no voice, there’s only one thing left to do: boycott. Stop supporting the church with your money and your time. For lifelong Catholics, it’s a drastic step, but it’s more than justified by the wealth of reasons showing that the church as an institution is beyond reform, and the only meaningful response is to part ways with it. Here are just a few of those reasons:

1. Throughout the world, Catholic bishops have engaged in a systematic, organized effort going back decades to cover up for priests who molest children, pressuring the victims to sign confidentiality agreements and quietly assigning the predators to new parishes where they could go on molesting. Tens of thousands of children have been raped and tortured as a result of this conspiracy of silence.

2. Strike one: ” What did the pope know and when did he know it? ” The current pope, when he was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, was personally implicated in a case from the 1970s in which at least three sets of parents reported that a priest in his diocese had sexually abused their children. In response, Ratzinger assigned the priest to therapy, without notifying law enforcement, and washed his hands of the matter. That priest was back on duty in just a few short days and went on to molest more children.

3. Strike two: In 1981, again when the current pope was Cardinal Ratzinger, he got a letter from the diocese of Oakland asking him to defrock a priest who had acknowledged molesting two children. Ratzinger ignored this letter, and several followup letters, for four years. Finally, in 1985, he wrote back saying that more time was needed, and that they had to proceed very slowly to safeguard ” the good of the Universal Church ” in light of “the young age of the petitioner” — by which he meant not the victimized children, but the pedophile priest. (By contrast, when a rogue archbishop ordained married men as priests, he was laicized six days later. )

4. Strike three: In 2001, Cardinal Ratzinger wrote a letter, De Delictis Gravioribus , to all Catholic bishops advising them how to handle accusations of sex crimes by priests. There was no recommendation to contact the police, but rather an instruction for them to report such cases only to the Vatican and tell no one else: ” Cases of this kind are subject to the pontifical secret. ”

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The case for an end to religious privilege

AUSTRALIA
On Line Opinion

By Moira Clarke – posted Monday, 26 November 2012

It would be difficult, at this stage, for anyone to deny that the perpetuation and cover-ups of the sexual abuse of children and vulnerable adults is entrenched and systemic in certain religious institutions within Australia. It would be equally difficult to deny that the Catholic Church, ostensibly one of Australia’s leading ‘charities’, is disproportionately involved. Evidence for this has existed for years, but only now have our political leaders agreed to a Royal Commission, and only under the pressure of overwhelming public outrage.

Almost as recently, the Australian Parliament has passed a piece of legislation that has received much less fanfare. The Australian Charities and Not for Profit Commission (ACNC) was established on 1st November of this year. Its purpose is to simplify and regulate the charities and not-for-profit sector at the national level. Since religious institutions fall under this umbrella they, too, are affected by this legislation.

At this point in time, a charity is defined at common law and largely based on the preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth, passed by the English Parliament in 1601. One of the first tasks of the ACNC will be to introduce a statutory definition of charity; however, the Australian Tax Office, being a de facto regulator of charities, has already delivered its definition in October of last year, and there is little likelihood that the ACNC will take a different approach or that this will change in subsequent reviews.

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Many commissioners wanted: Roxon

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Attorney-General Nicola Roxon says submissions on the terms of reference for the royal commission into child sex abuse want multiple commissioners.

The overwhelming response to the royal commission into child sex abuse has highlighted the need for multiple commissioners, some with expertise in child protection, Attorney-General Nicola Roxon says.

After submissions closed on Monday, the federal government has less than four weeks to set the terms of reference for the royal commission into how child sex abuse allegations have been handled by religious, community and state institutions.

The tight deadline reflects Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s wish for the inquiry, which is likely to take years and involve thousands of individuals, to be established by the end of this year so it can begin work in early 2013.

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No govt response to abuse bid: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Then foreign minister Kevin Rudd did not respond to a request asking how the government would help support victims of church sexual abuse.

The federal government donated more than $1 million to the Catholic Church towards the canonisation of Mary MacKillop but refused to acknowledge a request to contribute any money to sexual abuse victims, an inquiry has heard.

Abuse survivor Mark Fabbro approached then foreign minister Kevin Rudd at the canonisation celebrations in Rome in 2010 after hearing of the $1.25 million contribution made by the Labor government.

Mr Fabbro told the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious and other organisations on Monday that he wrote a letter to Mr Rudd while in Rome, asking him how the government would help financially struggling abuse survivor groups.

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Alex Gibney On What The Pope Knew…

UNITED STATES
Movieline

Alex Gibney On What The Pope Knew (And Why He Did Nothing) In ‘Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence In The House of God’

By: Frank DiGiacomo

Sundays are a good time for soul-searching — which makes it a good time to check in with filmmaker Alex Gibney, whose chilling documentary about sexual abuse in the Catholic church, Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God, is a must-see for anyone interested in the subject as well as the larger issue of what happens when religion becomes big business.

Gibney’s documentary, which is in its second week of theatrical release and will run on HBO in February, begins with the headlines-making case of Father Lawrence Murphy, who, in a letter to the Vatican in 1998, admitted to abusing some 200 boys since the 1950s at the St. John’s School for the Deaf in St. Francis, Wisconsin. Although the Vatican had been aware of Murphy’s actions since 1963, he was never defrocked and, in fact, was allowed to remain at the school until 1974 (when he was transferred). Mea Maxima Culpa, which translates to “My Most Grievous Fault,” takes Gibney all the way to the Vatican, and in this interview, the filmmaker talks about the surprisingly integral roles that the late Pope John Paul II and his successor Pope Benedict XVI (then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) played in this tragic tale as well as his doubts that the church will ever openly confront this issue in a way that will bring some measure of peace to its many victims.

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Child sexual abuse inquiry hears from victims support groups

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC
Updated November 26, 2012

A Victorian parliamentary inquiry has been urged to question Catholic Church employees about the whereabouts of documents that might show sexual abuse being covered up.

The American-based founder of an international victims support group appeared before the inquiry on Monday.

Barbara Blaine of the ‘Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests’, told the inquiry the church uses many of the same tactics to conceal abuse in Australia as it does worldwide.

She says the inquiry will need to do more than request documents from the church to prove senior officials chose to ignore to paedophilia.

“Bring in the employees and former employees and ask them to swear under oath what documents exist,” she told the inquiry.

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Brother on sex charges flees to Sri Lanka

NEW ZEALAND/AUSTRALIA
TVNZ

A former Catholic brother charged five months ago with hundreds of counts of sexual abuse against children and young adults is currently residing on a tea plantation in Sri Lanka because the authorities dragged their feet in extraditing him to Australia.

The former St John of God brother, Bernard Kevin McGrath, who recently served two years in a New Zealand prison for sexually abusing boys there, had 252 abuse charges laid against him in a Newcastle court on June 27.

The 65-year-old is alleged to have repeatedly raped, molested and abused dozens of young boys at church-run institutions in the Newcastle-Maitland diocese during the late 1970s and 80s.

It is understood that a number of the charges relate to McGrath’s time as a brother at the notorious Kendal Grange College in Morrissett.

Yesterday, the Sun Herald revealed that McGrath was one of three brothers being sued by Sydney’s so-called “playboy rapist” Simon Monteiro, who is currently serving a seven year nine month sentence for aggravated rape and claims that the abuse he suffered has left him with severe psychological disorders.

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Catholic brother faces new charges

AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND
The Press

PAUL BIBBY, RORY CALLINAN AND MARTIN VAN BEYNEN

A former Catholic brother charged five months ago with hundreds of counts of sexual abuse against children and young adults, is living on a tea plantation in Sri Lanka because the authorities dragged their feet in extraditing him to Australia.

The former St John of God brother, Bernard Kevin McGrath, who recently served two years in a New Zealand prison for sexually abusing boys here, had 252 abuse charges laid against him in a Newcastle court on June 27.

The 65-year-old is alleged to have repeatedly raped, molested and abused dozens of young boys at church-run institutions in the Newcastle-Maitland diocese during the late 1970s and 80s.

It is understood some charges relate to McGrath’s time as a brother at the notorious Kendal Grange College in Morrissett.

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Police quiet over pedophile’s flight

NEW ZEALAND/AUSTRALIA
7 News

NZ Newswire
Updated November 26, 2012

Police on both sides of the Tasman are staying quiet about how a former Catholic brother accused of sexually abusing children in Australia fled after tardy extradition attempts to bring him back from New Zealand.

St John of God ex-brother Bernard Kevin McGrath, who served two years in a New Zealand jail for sexually abusing boys, had 252 abuse charges laid against him in Newcastle court on June 27.

But the convicted pedophile flew out of Christchurch on the advice of a friend to Sri Lanka, with which Australia has no extradition treaty, Fairfax Media said.

NSW police wouldn’t comment on their investigation, telling media that “speculation may jeopardise current lines of inquiry”, nor confirm if they were investigating McGrath.

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Catholic brotherhood could be vicariously liable for alleged acts of sexual abuse at school

UNITED KINGDOM
Maitland Walker

26 November 2012
The Supreme Court has unanimously held that a Catholic Institute (a brotherhood of teachers) was vicariously liable for alleged sexual abuse by brother-teachers of children at a boys’ school. Although the brother-teachers were employed by the school’s management rather than the Institute, the Institute was sufficiently closely connected with the brother-teachers to create an employment relationship for vicarious liability purposes. Further, the alleged abuse was sufficiently closely connected with the employment for the Institute to be liable.

The Supreme Court approved the recent Court of Appeal decision in JGE v Trustees of Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust [2012] IRLR 846, in which a bishop was held to be vicariously liable for a priest’s sexual assault on a resident of a children’s home. (Catholic Child Welfare Society and others v Various Claimants and others [2012] UKSC 56.)

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In his own words…

MALTA
Times of Malta

Possessing the innate ability of wise scrutiny, Mgr Charles Scicluna has never shied away from saying it how it really is. Ariadne Massa traces some of his significant quotes.

“The Catholic Church knows well that whenever one of its ministers… sexually abuses a minor, a tragic wound is inflicted on the community… it inflicts untold damage to the minor concerned… and is cause of scandal to Christians and non-Christians alike, a stumbling-block on many a pilgrim’s progress in faith.”
November 2011, speaking on the Church’s role in child protection during a historic meeting in Rome.

“Bishops who mishandle abuse cases should be punished using existing canon law… Church leaders must be held accountable to their people.”
February 2012, during a four-day symposium in Rome on sexual abuse.

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Victims welcome inquiry into child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
Blacktown Sun

By Callan Lawrence
Nov. 26, 2012

THE Royal Commission into child sexual abuse will touch the lives of thousands of victims across western Sydney.

Founder of Bravehearts Hetty Johnston said the public would be “shocked” by the extent of child abuse uncovered by the inquiry.

Ms Johnston, whose organisation has pushed for a national inquiry for more than a decade, said research showed one in five people were sexually abused before the age of 18.

“I don’t think the public has any real understanding of the extent of child abuse in the community,” she said.

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November 25, 2012

Former Montreal Institute for the Deaf students want justice for alleged abuse

CANADA
CTV

[with video]

CTV Montreal
Published Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012

Former students of the Montreal Institute for the Deaf say they want justice after alleged abuse at the hands of priests.

About 200 people gathered outside the former Institute for the Deaf at 7400 St. Laurent St. Sunday to say want the Clerics of St. Viateur to held accountable.

In what could turn out to be one of the largest cases of sexual abuse against deaf children, 60 former students are now pursuing a class action lawsuit against the religious order, which includes 28 priests and six other employees.

Each victim is seeking $100,000 in damages for abuse they say dates back as far as the 1940s.

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Bishop of Cloyne vows to bring healing to diocese

IRELAND
Irish Times

OLIVIA KELLEHER

The newly appointed Bishop of Cloyne Canon William Crean, parish priest of Cahirciveen in Co Kerry, has said he will make every effort to bring healing and hope to the lives of victims of abuse in the diocese.

Speaking at St Colman’s Cathedral in Cobh, Co Cork, on Saturday, the bishop-elect admitted he was experiencing a degree of apprehension about his new post.

“I am apprehensive because I am deeply conscious of the trauma of these years past. So much suffering endured by young people at the hands of a few.

“Sufferings compounded by the failure of those who didn’t believe them and of those who didn’t hear their cry for help. One thing I ask, however, is your patience to allow me time to grasp the full measure of this deep hurt.”

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Submissions to close for royal commission terms

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Church leaders and victim support groups are among those to suggest what terms of reference should be adopted for the royal commission into institutional child sexual abuse.

The deadline for submissions into the royal commission’s terms of reference passes today.

A submission from the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference says the commission should focus on preventing future abuse, promoting healing for past victims and identifying systemic institutional failures.

The bishops are meeting this week to discuss the church’s response to the royal commission and other matters.

Conference president Archbishop Denis Hart says victims must also be allowed to choose to give evidence in private.

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BlogWatcher – Vilification of clergy sexual abusers won’t fix problem

AUSTRALIA
CathNews

Published: November 25, 2012

BY MICHAEL MULLINS

For many Australians, the first media mention of clergy sexual abuse was broadcaster Derryn Hinch’s (pictured) vilification of Ballarat priest Fr Gerard Ridsdale around 25 years ago. Arguably Hinch set in motion a dynamic that would see offending abusers targeted rather than the institution of the Church. The announcement of the Royal Commission has seen that reversed somewhat, with the outpouring of anger towards the institution of the Catholic Church, with particular focus on the seal of confession.

The debate about whether to target “rogue” priests or the institution is alive in Ireland, where a prominent player is psychotherapist and UCD academic Marie Keenan. Her most recent book is reviewed in an Association of Catholic Priests blog titled “Vilification of abusers won’t contribute to solution”.

If we want to understand sexual violence, we have to get to know its perpetrators and the worlds in which they were formed… For their part, media outlets have helped uncover abuse, but they have also contributed to the vilification of clerical offenders, fixating on the category of pedophilia (at the expense of other abusive scenarios), and fomenting moral panic.

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A Worthy Book for a Worthy Cause – MILLSTONE

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 25, 2012

Tomorrow (Cyber Monday), Jim Dunlap is launching his long-awaited murder mystery/thriller MILLSTONE. He’s also donating 10% of proceeds from the book to nonprofits that support victims of child sex abuse and cover-up in the Catholic Church. Pretty worthy, don’t you think?

From the Amazon page:

Detective Danni Pierce only wants one thing: justice for the victims of sexual crimes. But she never dreamed that one case–a case involving a Catholic Priest–would lead her down a twisted path of betrayal, cover-up, and murder. When confronted with a danger greater than anything she has ever faced, will her resolve be enough to save her life?

Based on true events, Millstone is the tale of one woman’s pursuit of justice, and the only way she will survive is by relying on her dogged perseverance and her faith in those she loves.

Jim is a good friend and a good writer. The book, which adapted from his screenplay of the same name, is loosely based on events surrounding his son. It’s definitely worth your time and your $4.99 (for the Kindle version – or $14.99 for the paperback).

You can buy the book at this link Monday, November 26. If you like the book’s Facebook page, you can also participate in their Abuse Awareness Event tomorrow, too.

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New Bishop of Cloyne ‘conscious’ of trauma still felt in diocese over abuse

IRELAND
Irish Independent

THE new Bishop of Cloyne is “apprehensive” about his appointment given the trauma in the diocese over clerical child abuse.

Canon William Crean, 60, vowed that he will use his appointment by Pope Benedict to try to bring “healing” to the sprawling Cork diocese which has been wracked by controversy over clerical child abuse for over a decade.

The diocese is still reeling from Judge Yvonne Murphy’s devastating Cloyne report, which last year revealed that children had been left at risk by the diocese’s failure to implement the church’s own child-protection guidelines.

Cloyne has been without a bishop for almost four years after Dr John Magee, a private secretary to three popes, first stepped aside and then resigned over the controversy.

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Concerns a former priest will re-offend

NEW ZEALAND
Newstalk ZB

By: Newstalk ZB staff

A spokesman for Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse has serious concerns a former Catholic priest will re-offend against young children in Sri Lanka.

Bernard Kevin McGrath spent two years in jail in New Zealand, but he’s also wanted in New South Wales, where 252 sexual abuse charges were laid against him in June.

Authorities appear to have waited too long to file extradition procedures – and McGrath is now living on a tea plantation in Sri Lanka, where they can’t get at him.

The 65-year-old former St John of God brother is alleged to have repeatedly raped, molested and abused dozens of young boys at church-run institutions in the Newcastle-Maitland diocese during the late 1970s and ’80s.

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Top Catholic priests discuss sexual abuse response

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

[with audio]

Michael Vincent reported this story on Monday, November 26, 2012

TONY EASTLEY: The 42 members of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference are meeting in Sydney to discuss the Church’s response to the national Royal Commission into child sexual abuse.

Submissions for the royal commission’s consultation period close today.

The head of the bishops conference and Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart says not only will they discuss the inquiry, they’ll also be talking about the Church’s own past responses to victims and allegations, including its Towards Healing doctrine.

And he says he wants a regime of mandatory reporting of abuse to police to be put in place.

Michael Vincent reports.

MICHAEL VINCENT: The most senior 42 men of the Catholic Church in Australia will today hear that the royal commission is a “wake up call”.

DENIS HART: I think there has been a lot of attention to the Catholic Church, admittedly, but we’ve got to face that squarely and we do so and we are committed to doing so.

MICHAEL VINCENT: President of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and Archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart:

DENIS HART: I welcome the Royal Commission because it will enable these matters to be faced by all of us, it will enable the victims to tell their story, and it will enable us as Church and community together to really do our best to put in place regimes for the future that will really care for our children and avoid these awful events of which we’ve heard more recently.

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Pope elevates 6 cardinals for a less-European college

VATICAN CITY
Columbus Dispatch

By Nicole Winfield
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunday November 25, 2012

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI responded to criticism that the club of churchmen who will choose his successor is too Eurocentric, elevating six new cardinals from the United States, Colombia, India, Lebanon, Nigeria and the Philippines during a ceremony yesterday.

Benedict welcomed the prelates into the College of Cardinals during an hourlong ceremony in St. Peter’s Basilica, telling them that their presence among the other red-robed prelates was a sign of the “unique, universal and all-inclusive identity” of the Catholic Church.

The ceremony was both joyful and emotional: Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Tagle, seen by many to be a rising star in the church, visibly choked up as he knelt before Benedict to receive his three-pointed red hat, or biretta, and gold ring. He wiped tears from his eyes as he returned to his place.

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Sacrament of Confession protects criminals and persecutes their victims

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

The Sacrament of Confession is the VCC Vatican (not Roman) Catholic Church justice system that’s totally contrary to The Hague, to our American justice system and to all democratic countries’ of the United Nations justice system. The Vatican’s Sacrament of Confession is a system of injustice — because it deletes the sins of criminals and sets them free instantly and it does absolutely NOTHING for their victims. The Sacrament of Confession protects criminals and persecutes their victims…for centuries. The Sacrament of Confession — neither seeks justice nor compensation for victims of — criminals it pardons.

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Two major recommendations in Facing the Truth

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne

[with video]

Friday 23 November 2012

THE Catholic Church in Victoria supports the extension of the current requirements relating to Mandatory Reporting under the Children Youth and Families Act 2005 (Vic) to ministers of religion and other religious personnel with an exemption for imformation received during the Sacrament of Confession.

In its submission to the Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Non Government Organisations, the Catholic Church in Victoria also supports the reporting of all allegations of serious crimes to the Police in a way that does not infringe the confidentiality and privacy of victims who have come forward on that basis, or does not infringe on the sanctity of the confessional.

You can listen to Father Shane Mackinlay, spokesperson for the Catholic Church in Victoria, discuss these two recommendations contained in the Catholic Church in Victoria’s submission to the Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry at www.facingthetruth.org.au or below.

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Church backs change

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By TOM MCILROY
Nov. 25, 2012

RELIGIOUS ministers in Ballarat should be subject to new laws requiring them to report suspicions of child abuse to authorities, the Catholic Church said yesterday.

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart yesterday said an extension of Victoria’s mandatory reporting rules should be immediately made to include religious ministers across the state and for the establishment of new mechanisms for reporting offenders without exposing victims.

However, the proposal would not require priests to report information received during the sacrament of confession.

Archbishop Hart issued a statement in response to comments from Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu who forecast changes to the Crimes Act to compel priests to report suspicions of abuse.

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Abuse victims give parishioners a message

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 26, 2012

Jane Lee

VICTIMS of clergy abuse should report allegations and suspicions to police rather than to religious organisations, victim advocates say.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) handed out flyers to parishioners as they left Melbourne’s St Patrick’s Cathedral on Sunday, asking for victims, witnesses and people with suspicions to contact the police, a therapist or a support group. Most people accepted the pamphlets.

”Come forward and get the help you deserve,” the flyers say. ”If you reach out healing, justice, prevention and closure are possible. If you stay silent, they are not possible. Please don’t suffer in isolation, shame, anger and self-blame.”

It comes as psychologists, suicide helplines and support groups said they had been flooded with victims’ calls for counselling since Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced a royal commission on child abuse on November 12.

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Victims group takes message to masses

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Rowan Callick
From:The Australian
November 26, 2012

PARISHIONERS at morning mass at St Patrick’s Catholic Cathedral in Melbourne yesterday politely received flyers handed out by members of the international Survivor Network of those Abused by Priests urging them to “come forward with any information or suspicions of child abuse”.

The president and founder of SNAP, American lawyer Barbara Blaine, said “many survivors are still suffering in secrecy and shame” and the group wanted to let parishioners know about its existence and encourage them to report crimes to police. The SNAP members were asked by cathedral security staff to remain outside the grounds.

Ms Blaine, who said she was abused when she was 12 and 13, has visited 12 countries in her campaign, and says SNAP has 12,000 members in 56 countries.

She said she remained a member of the Catholic Church. “My faith is in God, not in these church officials,” she said.

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Consultation paper

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Response to Child Abuse

The purpose of this document is to seek the input of interested individuals and organisations to the arrangements for the establishment of the Royal Commission, including the scope of the Terms of Reference, the form of the Royal Commission, the number and qualifications of Royal Commissioner/s and the reporting timetable for the Royal Commission. These factors will guide the Commissioner/s in their task of examining responses to instances or allegations of child sexual abuse in the context of public and private institutions or organisations in Australia. The explanatory material and questions below are provided as a guide to start discussions.

On 12 November 2012, the Prime Minister announced that she will be recommending to the Governor-General the establishment of a Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse in Australia.

Child sexual abuse is a horrific breach of a child’s right to a safe and happy childhood, with immediate and long term impacts on the victims and their families. Child sexual abuse is also a crime that requires the most serious and committed of responses by the whole community. It is important that claims of institutional and systemic failures be fully explored.

The Royal Commission announced by the Prime Minister will be asked to identify what can be done to ensure that child sexual abuse is prevented in the future and, where it does occur, that organisational responses are just and supportive of survivors.

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Legal shield on abuse ‘must be axed’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Sarah Elks
From:The Australian
November 26, 2012

CHRIS Wetherall was just 11 when he was first sexually abused by his teacher — later described by prosecutors as a “master pedophile” – at an Anglican school in the early 1980s.

But it wasn’t until the general practitioner was 34, and then governor-general Peter Hollingworth was under pressure over his past handling of separate abuse allegations at Dr Wetherall’s alma mater, St Paul’s, and other Anglican schools in Queensland, that it dawned on him just how traumatised he was.

By then it was too late. The Anglican Church’s Brisbane diocese invoked a legal defence to block Dr Wetherall’s $3 million civil damages suit, arguing he had missed his window by failing to bring his claim by the time he was 21.

In a historic decision in 2008, a Supreme Court judge ruled Dr Wetherall could sue even though the statute of limitations had expired, but the Court of Appeal and the High Court backed the church’s time-limit defence.

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Detective tells of suspicions

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Gary Adshead, The West Australian
Updated November 26, 2012,

He was a frustrated detective who should have been a fortune teller.

On September 16, 1996, Andrew Patterson wrote a memo to his WA Police bosses about the lack of resources for fighting the evil of paedophilia.

“Our current response to paedophile crimes, including the criminal use of computers by these persons, is insufficient,” he wrote. “In my view, this agency would be criticised should it become subject of an external inquiry similar to the Wood royal commission.”

That prophecy might soon be put to the test by a looming royal commission into how agencies and institutions across Australia have responded to child abuse.

Mr Patterson believes his old police force has a case to answer about the poor resourcing and eventual closure of the highly successful paedophile investigations team.

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Broad focus may blunt royal commission into child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
Adelaide Now

John White
adelaidenow
November 25, 2012

Public expectations of the royal commission into child sexual abuse may well outweigh what it can feasibly deliver, writes John White

THE Commonwealth Government has announced a Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

But what is the commission going to do? The Government has released a consultation paper for comment and you can find it online [here]

The submissions deadline (unless extended) is 4.30pm today. The address for submissions is royalcommissionsecretariat@pmc.gov.au. Read on, before you send off your submission.

What is a royal commission, and what can it, and can’t it, do? A royal commission is launched by a government, either state or commonwealth. The Commonwealth wants the states to join in the establishment of this commission. That is important for access to information.

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Catholics support royal commission

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

November 26, 2012

Barney Zwartz

CATHOLICS overwhelmingly support a royal commission on child sex abuse at nearly the same rate as other Australians, with 83 per cent approving the inquiry, according to a survey.

The survey shows that 88 per cent of Australians approve of the inquiry, 4 per cent oppose it and 8 per cent don’t know. Among Catholics, 6 per cent oppose it and the same percentage don’t know.

According to the survey, by Essential Media, 88 per cent of Anglicans support the inquiry, as do 93 per cent of Protestants, 86 per cent of people belonging to other religions and 91 per cent of those who profess no religion.

By political affiliation, 92 per cent of Labor voters, 87 per cent of Coalition voters and 95 per cent of Greens voters approve. The groups most likely to strongly approve were 65 and older (71 per cent), Greens voters (72 per cent), Protestants (68 per cent) and those on incomes under $1000 a week (70 per cent).

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Commission urged to hear prisoner victims of child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 26, 2012

Judith Ireland
Breaking News Reporter

THE victims support group Broken Rites will call on the federal government to directly contact prison inmates and people on government benefits to make sure they are included in the royal commission on child abuse.

A Broken Rites spokesman, Wayne Chamley, said both groups were likely to have experienced high rates of child abuse but may not be inclined to participate in the royal commission, due to issues with literacy or low levels of trust in authority figures.

”They run the risk of being the forgotten ones,” Dr Chamley said, suggesting that a letter could be sent to individuals.

He said about 40 per cent of prison inmates had a background of child abuse. Last year, a Department of Juvenile Justice report found 60 per cent of those in the NSW juvenile justice system had a history of child abuse or trauma.

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Those who created a culture of consent must be exposed

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 26, 2012

Amanda Vanstone

The royal commission on abuse needs to confine itself to cover-ups.

THE federal government’s commitment to a royal commission on child abuse, and the Coalition’s support of it, are welcome. Nonetheless, as they say, the devil is in the detail.

The scope of the commission may be critical to its success or otherwise. The government needs not only to be seen to be doing something but to actually achieve something.

The terms of reference therefore need to ensure the commission can effectively complete its task. Terms that fail to demand a sharp focus might result in many stories being told but little being achieved to protect children.

The commission should not be a field day for lawyers holding out the carrot of compensation. The states generally provide the avenues for complaints of abuse to be heard and if they have been inadequate, the states should confront that.

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New Child Sex Scandal Erupts in Australia

AUSTRALIA
Forward

By Dan Goldberg

Published November 24, 2012, issue of November 30, 2012.

Sydney — Another major Jewish organization in Australia is embroiled in a child sex abuse scandal, adding to the trauma triggered by recent revelations of similar cases involving students at two schools in Melbourne, run by Chabad and Adass Israel, respectively.

Because of a suppression order issued by an Australian court, the name of the organization, the alleged sexual abuser and the alleged victims cannot be disclosed.

The Forward can, however, reveal that a man faced Melbourne Magistrates Court on more than 25 counts of child sex abuse, including indecent acts with a minor and sexual intercourse with a child.

Despite the involvement of the unnamed Jewish organization in the case, the defendant is not believed to be Jewish. He entered a “not guilty” plea and is scheduled to face court again in December, with a trial date expected to be set for next year.

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New Australian Child Sex Abuse Scandal …

AUSTRALIA
Failed Messiah

New Australian Child Sex Abuse Scandal Involves Multiple Counts Of “Intercourse With A Child”

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

Australian journalist Dan Goldberg reports that the new branch of the Melbourne Jewish community’s child sexual abuse scandal involves 25 counts of sexual abuse, including multiple counts of “intercourse with a child.”

The defendant, who recently appeared in a Melbourne Magistrate’s Court and who has not yet been named publicly, is not thought to be Jewish. The abuse took place at a Jewish organization which has not yet been named because of a court suppression order.

However, FailedMessiah.com has learned that the organization involved is a Jewish community sports organization, and some of the alleged abuse may have taken place on a trip to the US approximately 10 years ago.

The accused pleaded “not guilty.” His trial is expected to begin next year.

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Au Canada, un scandale de pédophilie rattrape une communauté catholique

CANADA
Le Monde (France)

Par Anne Pélouas Montréal (Canada) – Correspondance Correspondance

Entre 1940 et 1982, 500 à 600 jeunes sourds de 8 à 17 ans auraient été abusés physiquement ou sexuellement dans un pensionnat de Montréal, par 34 pédophiles : 28 membres de la congrégation catholique des Clercs de Saint-Viateur et six employés laïcs. Carlo Tarini, porte-parole de l’Association québécoise des victimes de prêtres, est catégorique : “Au moins 300 ont été agressés sexuellement à répétition, ce qui en fait le plus gros scandale au monde concernant des enfants …

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Catholic officials knew of teacher’s abuse, court files indicate

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Sun

By Tricia Bishop, The Baltimore Sun

9:39 p.m. EST, November 24, 2012

The Catholic-school teacher had a pre-teen student pinned to the ground in his Baltimore classroom, the girl’s blouse open and her chest exposed when the doorknob suddenly turned and the school principal — a nun — burst in.

The screaming girl thought she was about to be rescued, according to court records that describe the scene at the Catholic Community Middle School in Locust Point. But Sister Eileen Weisman, who had a key to the room, merely chastised the teacher, John Joseph Merzbacher, for locking the door.

“[Weisman] looked down and her exact words were ‘John, oh John, I told you never to lock the classroom door,'” Linda Tiburzi, who described the incident in a civil court deposition in the mid-1990s, said in a recent interview. “And then she looked at me and said ‘I never want you staying after school again.’ … That’s all she said, that’s all she did, there was nothing, there was no investigation, there were no questions.”

That incident is one of several outlined in court documents, analyzed in a Baltimore Sun investigation, indicating that Weisman and other Catholic officials were aware of the lay teacher’s sexual abuse of students in the 1970s but did not report it until Merzbacher was criminally investigated in the 1990s.

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Leslie Hittner: We’re not going back to that church

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

By Leslie Hittner | Winona

Now that the election is over, my wife and I have had to ask ourselves a couple questions. You see, we have not gone back to our old church since I walked out. We chose not to do so for two reasons: We didn’t want to be counted as a part of the Mass attendees (The Winona Diocese counts Mass attendees every October.) and I did not want to make “walking out” a routine that could disrupt the religious ceremonies of other parishioners during those pre-election campaign prayers.

But now the election is over. “Our side” won. October is past. What do we do next? We believe that our church is still on the wrong side of the civil same-sex marriage debate. The hierarchy is still refusing to take full responsibility for the sexual abuse cover-up in the church. Vatican II initiatives — the hope of the church — are still being increasingly misrepresented and pushed aside.

We are not willing to return to “business as usual.” We are not willing to accept a regression to a pre-Vatican II church. We are not willing to abide by the demands of a hierarchy that is more concerned about its own organizational success and appearances than it is about teaching the rest of us what it means to be a follower of Jesus. We aren’t willing to go back to that church.

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Boy Scout sex abuse lawsuit in Idaho settled

IDAHO
The Idaho Statesman

Documents related to the landmark case in Idaho show suspicions over pedophiles were kept quiet.

By MEGHANN M. CUNIFF — mcuniff@idahostatesman.com

The terms of the settlement of the Idaho suit against the Boy Scouts of America and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have not been disclosed, but a document filed Nov. 15 in U.S. District Court in Boise says both sides agreed to an undisclosed monetary settlement.

The federal lawsuit asked for $5 million. Lawyers for the LDS Church and the Scouts’ Ore-Ida Council were not available for comment Friday. Oregon lawyer Gilion Dumas, who sued on behalf of a Portland man who said he was sexually abused as a Boy Scout in Idaho, said she couldn’t discuss the settlement, which will be final once a judge approves a mutual request to dismiss the suit.

The lawyers began negotiating after U.S. District Judge Lynn Winmill ruled the case could proceed to trial. At issue was not alleged sexual abuse by Scoutmaster Larren B. Arnold of Nampa, but what Dumas described as institutional fraud by the Scouts and the church to portray the organizations as safe places for boys, despite knowledge of a pedophilia epidemic within its leadership ranks. The case was detailed in a Nov. 6 Idaho Statesman article.

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Mandatory reports for priests

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Farrah Tomazin
The Sunday Age’s state political editor.

PRIESTS who suspect a child is being sexually abused will have to report their concerns to police under a planned crackdown by the state government.

In an interview with Fairfax Media to mark two years in office, Premier Ted Baillieu foreshadowed changing the Crimes Act to compel priests and other religious workers to report suspicions of abuse within their organisations.

This would represent a shift in Victoria’s mandatory reporting regime, which currently exempts religious officials, and could involve clerics being prosecuted for failing to report.

But Mr Baillieu says he is yet to be convinced about the need for priests to disclose what is said in the confessional – an issue that is being considered by a parliamentary committee investigating sex abuse within the church and other institutions.

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Vatican names bishop for troubled Irish diocese

VATICAN CITY
Salon

By Nicole Winfield, Associated Press

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The pope on Saturday named a new bishop for the troubled Irish diocese of Cloyne, where for years its previous bishop ignored the Irish church’s own rules requiring suspected priestly sex abuse to be reported to police. The new bishop promptly vowed to do everything in his power to help abuse victims heal.

Cloyne has been without a resident bishop since John Magee, private secretary to three popes, resigned in disgrace as bishop in 2010 after a church-appointed commission found that he and his deputies fielded complaints from parishioners about two pedophile priests starting in 1995, but told police nothing until 2003, and little thereafter.

The findings were particularly galling since the Irish church, under mounting pressure and lawsuits stemming from revelations of wide-scale priest sex abuse and cover-up, had adopted a policy in 1996 requiring bishops to report abuse to police. The Cloyne report, however, found that Magee took no hands-on interest in enacting the policy until 2008.

Pope Benedict XVI on Saturday named the Rev. Canon William Crean, a parish priest in Cahersiveen, to replace the apostolic administrator who has been running the diocese in Magee’s absence. Crean, 60, has been a director of religious education in several Irish schools and received his theology degree from the Jesuit-run Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

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Tardy extradition bid allows abusing Catholic brother to flee to Sri Lanka

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 26, 2012

Paul Bibby, Rory Callinan and Martin Van Beynen

A FORMER Catholic brother charged five months ago with hundreds of counts of sexual abuse against children and young adults is now living in Sri Lanka because authorities dragged their feet in seeking his extradition to Australia.

Former St John of God brother Bernard Kevin McGrath, who recently served two years in a New Zealand prison for sexually abusing boys there, had 252 abuse charges laid against him in a Newcastle court on June 27.

The 65-year-old is alleged to have repeatedly raped, molested and abused dozens of young boys at church-run institutions in the Newcastle-Maitland diocese during the late 1970s and ’80s.

It is understood that a number of the charges relate to McGrath’s time as a brother at the notorious Kendall Grange College in Morissett, New South Wales.

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Ex-Hattiesburg resident shares her story of abuse in book

MISSISSIPPI
Hattiesburg American

Written by
Robyn Jackson
American Staff Writer

When Beth Taylor decided to tell the story of her childhood sexual abuse, she knew she had to be brutally honest, but that didn’t make it any easier to bare her soul in writing for the world to read.

“As the author, I could not be honest about some parts and dishonest about others,” Taylor said. “The reader deserves to know the accurate story, or not be told the story. As a journalist, I was always honest with my viewers and readers. If a journalist is not honest, then she or he has no business being a journalist. The same was true in writing the book, honesty was a given.”

Taylor, a former Hattiesburg resident, business owner and WDAM sports reporter, shares the story of her abuse by a priest — and the lasting repercussions of the abuse in her life — in “Bless Them Father, For They Have Sinned.” She will speak about the book at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Oak Grove Public Library.

Taylor was 5 years old when she says a Catholic priest first molested her at St. Anthony of Padua Church and School in New Orleans, and was 12 years old when she says it ended.

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November 24, 2012

Victims hand out leaflets at Cathedral

AUSTRALIA
SNAP Australia

WHAT
Handing out fliers to Catholics as they leave mass, child sex abuse victims will urge
–anyone who suffered, witnessed or suspects child abuse in institutional settings to “come forward, get help, and start healing,” and
–contact law enforcement officials “so that kids can be safer and cover ups can be exposed.”

WHEN
Sunday, November 25 at 11:45 a.m.

WHERE
Outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Gisborne St and Cathedral Place, in Melbourne

WHO
Three or four members of an international support group called SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests) including an American woman who is the organization’s president and founder and who has spent time in 12 nations dealing with the Catholic church’s abuse & cover up crisis

WHY
Over the past 24 years, members of SNAP have found that public outreach efforts encouraging child sex abuse victims to step forward can be effective. Now that the Catholic church abuse and cover up crisis is attracting more public attention in Australia, SNAP is strongly urging those with information or suspicions about clergy sex crimes to speak up.

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SNAP BLASTS PROFESSOR

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

Author: Jerry Berger

Leaders of SNAP are blasting a Columbia University professor who publicly defended the just-ousted voice of “Elmo,” Kevin Clash, who’s being sued for allegedly molesting a minor. In Sunday’s N.Y. Times, professor Katherine Franke defends Clash as “the most recent victim” of a “sex panic,” adding that “At precisely the moment when gay people’s right to marry seems to be reaching a positive tipping point, sexuality is being driven back into the closet as something shameful.” SNAP says, “These callous remarks seem to equate gay sex with pedophilia, which is wrong, hurtful, and irresponsible.”

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Murder of Bethany Deaton Has Similarities to Novel ‘House of Lies’

MISSOURI
Fox 4

[with video]

November 23, 2012, by Gia Vang and Sarah Clark

GRANDVIEW, Mo. — In a Grandview murder case involving sex, drugs and religion, some have come to believe it parallels the novel, “House of Lies.”

FOX 4′s Gia Vang talked to the author, Susan Claridge, who agrees — the murder of Bethany Deaton has some similarities to her book.

“From my regular readers who knew more about me and from personal friends — they were saying, ‘Have you seen this? Like, this is your book playing out in real life’ and that was kind of scary,” Claridge said.

Claridge’s “House of Lies” was released in early October. It’s about a woman who tries to save her estranged sister from a religious cult, only to find murder and a political agenda.

Many readers, and some FOX 4 viewers, are wondering if Claridge knows more than she says. The book is based out of Kansas City, and one of the murders is eerily similar to Deaton’s.

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Bernard Häring, a witness of critical love for the church

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Fr. Charles E. Curran | Nov. 24, 2012

The following is adapted from Fr. Charles Curran’s contribution to Not Less Than Everything: Catholic Writers on Heroes of Conscience, from Joan of Arc to Oscar Romero, edited by Catherine Wolff, which will be published by HarperCollins in February 2013. Redemptorist Fr. Bernard Häring would have been 100 on Nov. 10.

My appreciation for Bernard Häring was summed up in the dedication of my 1972 book, Catholic Moral Theology in Dialogue — “To Bernard Häring CSsR, teacher, theologian, friend, and priestly minister of the Gospel in theory and practice on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday.” As a very young priest of the diocese of Rochester, N.Y., I was doing doctoral work at the Alphonsian Academy in Rome from 1959 to 1961. I was scheduled to teach moral theology at the diocesan seminary in Rochester. After four years of theology at the Gregorian University, I was opening up somewhat from my conservative theological orientation and my commitment to the moral theology of the manuals. I did not write my dissertation with Häring, but I was truly thrilled and nourished by his classes (in Latin) in which he developed his approach to moral theology. At my invitation many fellow priests living with me at the American college in Rome came to hear him and were greatly impressed. …

In the summer of 1979, I was informed that I was under investigation from the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for my dissent on a number of moral issues. That fall I went to Rome to consult with Häring and others. Throughout the process I stayed in close touch with Bernard. After much correspondence back and forth it became clear in late 1985 that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was going to take action against me, which they ultimately did in declaring that I was neither suitable nor eligible to be a Catholic theologian. However, they did agree to have an informal meeting of myself with Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and some officials of the congregation in March 1986. I was able to bring one advisor. All along Häring had agreed that if there were such a meeting he would accompany me.

Häring’s presence was a source of great strength and consolation to me. He began the session by reading a two-page paper titled “The Frequent and Long-Lasting Dissent of the Inquisition/Holy Office/CDF.” It was Häring at his forthright best at speaking to power. In the end he strongly urged Ratzinger to accept a compromise that I would not teach sexual ethics at Catholic University and there would be no condemnation. The meeting ended without any solution or action.

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Zimbabwe: Sexual Abuse Unearthed

ZIMBABWE
allAfrica

The Herald

A SEXUAL abuse scandal has been unearthed at the Anglican Church’s Shirley Cripps Children’s Home in Chikwaka that has led to the arrest of one care-giver. Police at Juru have arrested a man who worked at the home in connection with the case after a report made by the Church of the Province of Central Africa led by Bishop Chad Gandiya.

Bishop Gandiya told journalists on Wednesday that his church had to quickly send a team of care-givers after receiving reports that most workers had left the home following the church’s victory at the Supreme Court.

“The reports we received were that the sexual abuse was widespread. We alerted the police, although we were not yet in control of the institution. Police responded swiftly and a suspected male abuser was arrested. I understand that the man is now out on bail,” said Bishop Gandiya.

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After abuse scandal, Pope names new bishop of Cloyne, Ireland

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

[Taoiseach Enda Kenny: Cloyne Report – YouTube]

CITY | Sat Nov 24, 2012

(Reuters) – Pope Benedict on Saturday named the new bishop of the diocese of Cloyne, Ireland, to succeed the prelate who resigned more than two years ago over accusations of mishandling cases of sexual abuse.

The Vatican named the new bishop as Father William Crean, 60, a native of Tralee who is currently working in Cahersiveen.

The diocese has been run since 2009 by an Irish bishop acting as a special administrator for the Vatican.

The previous bishop, John Magee, stepped aside in 2009 and formally resigned in 2010 after allegations that he had mishandled sexual abuse cases.

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