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.

July 17, 2013

Former Catholic priest charged with historical child assault offences

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

POLICE have laid 13 additional charges against a former Catholic priest relating to alleged historical child assault offences.

The 59-year-old man faced Armidale Local Court on Wednesday on charges relating to alleged child-sex offences against six boys and three girls in the 1970s and 1980s.

During his appearance, the man was additionally charged with 13 offences relating to alleged assaults against a boy, aged 12 to 14, between 1981 and 1984 in Moree.

They include nine counts of sexual intercourse without consent and four counts of indecent assault.

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

The YU Impasse: Putting A Price On Sexual Abuse

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Wed, 07/17/2013

Gary Rosenblatt

A few days before Tisha b’Av, the saddest day on the Jewish calendar, I sat down and read a modern-day version of Eichah, the Book of Lamentations.

This was not an ancient prophet’s eloquent or poignant rendition of the destruction of the ancient Temple; it was the dry, legalese words of a lawsuit that lays out the case of alleged indifference, and fraud, accorded to high ranking and highly respected members of the administration and faculty of Yeshiva University in the 1970s and ’80s regarding the sexual abuse of high school students.

Centuries apart, the warnings — that immoral behavior, left unchecked, leads only downward — still resonate.

The litany of woes said to have resulted from the abuse, and the lack of acknowledgment that it was taking place, is painful to read: case after case, 19 teenagers at the time claiming physical, emotional and psychological distress and trauma; depression leading to drugs, alcohol or sexual addiction; inability to trust others; loss of relationships with loved ones; loss of faith; and suicidal tendencies.

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.

Controversial Austrian Catholic to speak here

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

OSCAR CASTILLO, Daily News Staff Writer castilo@phillynews.com, 215-854-5906
POSTED: Wednesday, July 17, 2013

THE REV. Helmut Schüller, one of the most controversial figures in the Catholic Church, is making a stop in Philadelphia as part of his 15-city U.S. tour.

The Austrian priest will speak at 7 p.m. Friday at Sugarloaf Hill, across Germantown Avenue from Chestnut Hill College.

Schüller’s reformist views are at the center of a controversy in which the Vatican stripped him of his monsignor title last year.

In 2011, Schüller organized more than 400 Austrian priests in an “Appeal to Disobedience,” calling for the ordination of women and married men, the permission of divorced and remarried Catholics to receive sacraments and an end to celibacy for 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.

UPDATED: Senior priest aware of McAlinden rumours in late 1980s

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By IAN KIRKWOOD July 17, 2013

A SENIOR diocese priest says he cannot independently recall saying that he wanted ‘‘to contain as much as possible’’ an allegation against then priest Jim Fletcher.

Father James Joseph Saunders, who held various positions under Bishop Leo Clarke and his successor Bishop Michael Malone, was giving evidence to the special commission of inquiry in Newcastle on Wednesday.

The commission heard from counsel assisting, Warwick Hunt, of an internal church email that included quotes attributed to Father Saunders, in relation to a ‘‘new allegation’’ against Fletcher, who was eventually convicted of child sexual abuse offences and died in jail.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen asked Father Saunders whether, as the email said, he wanted to contain the matter as much as possible and preferred not to provide even a dot-point report at this time.

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.

Priest told to be ‘careful with McAlinden around children’

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By ELLE WATSON July 17, 2013

A senior Maitland Newcastle Catholic Church official told a special commission of inquiry today that he knew of rumours circulating about paedophile priest Denis McAlinden in the 1980s and was warned by a Hunter primary school principal to “be careful with him around children”.

Father James Saunders, who was Vicar General to Bishop Michael Malone in 2001, said the bishop warned him about “vague assertions” to do with the behaviour of convicted priest James Fletcher when he began the job but couldn’t recall whether he told him about McAlinden.

Father Saunders shared a parish with McAlinden for a year in the 1970s but said the only warning he received from the then Bishop Leo Clarke was that he might be a “difficult man”.

After some time with the priest he took that to mean he had a “ferocious temper”.

He said he was warned by a school principal: “You have to be careful with him [McAlinden] around children,” but could not remember the date.

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Protesters target priests at inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By IAN KIRKWOOD July 17, 2013

THREE protesters, one with a sign saying ‘‘Paedophilia No More’’, followed Catholic Father William Burston out of Wednesday’s Special Commission of Inquiry in Newcastle.

Buttabah man Frank Scaysbrook verbally taunted Father Burston as he left the hearing with his advisers and a Newcastle woman, Pat Garnet, walked beside him holding the sign for the cameras.

This very public display of protest came minutes after Commission Margaret Cunneen warned the public gallery over its behaviour towards witnesses.

At the close of proceedings Ms Cunneen said Father Burston had been been approached in the waiting area outside the commission room and ‘‘subjected to rudeness’’.

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 balks at child abuse law that lengthens time to sue

CALIFORNIA
The Washington Times

By Cheryl K. Chumley-The Washington Times

A bill weaving through the California Legislature that would give alleged victims of child abuse more time to sue is raising red flags with the Catholic Church.

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles, along with several other private groups, say the bill unfairly targets them because it exempts public schools, The Associated Press reported.

The bill opens the doors to more lawsuits. It changes existing laws that restrict — by age or time — alleged child abuse victims from suing. The bill would also let alleged victims confront their abuser’s employer, AP said.

The Catholic Church didn’t try to stop a similar bill that was introduced in 2002. But now, church officials are calling the measure a step back in time and are fighting its passage, AP reported.

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, private schools lobby against California childhood sex abuse bill

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Fox News

LOS ANGELES – Making its way through the California State Legislature is a bill seeking to give more alleged child abuse victims time to sue.

If passed, the bill would permit victims unable to file a lawsuit due to time or age restrictions the chance to confront their abuser’s employer.

The Catholic Church did not fight a similar 2002 bill that opened the flood gates for hundreds of alleged victims.

This time, however, the church is battling hard against the proposed legislation and calling it a step backward.

The Los Angeles archdiocese and other private groups say they have been unfairly targeted because the bill does not apply to public schools.

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 Lobbies Against Abuse Bill

LOS ANGELES (CA)
ABC News

By SARAH PARVINI Associated Press
LOS ANGELES July 17, 2013

Tony Quarry suppressed his memories of being abused by a Roman Catholic priest for nearly 30 years and decided to sue only after finding out that his five brothers were molested by the same man — just to discover that it was too late.

The state’s high court ultimately tossed out the brothers’ lawsuit because they missed a special legal window that allowed victims to sue over abuse claims decades after the fact. Their plight, however, has inspired new sex abuse legislation in California a decade after a similar bill cost the church hundreds of millions in civil settlements.

“I still believed in the tooth fairy when these things happened to me,” Quarry, 51, told The Associated Press in a phone interview Tuesday. “It’s a good thing for these other people to have the opportunity to step forward.”

Like the previous law, Senate Bill 131 would permit many victims who would otherwise be unable to file a civil suit due to time and age restrictions — like the Quarry brothers — to sue their abuser’s employer in civil court.

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Garry Wills on Pope Francis: he’s been “doing wonderful things,” but canonizing John Paul is not one of them

UNITED STATES
Washington Monthly

By Kathleen Geier

Over at the New York Review of Books, progressive Catholic icon and public intellectual extraordinaire Garry Wills has written a a terrific blog post about the politics of canonization in the Catholic Church — i.e., the process by which the Church declares someone a saint. In it, Wills includes some fascinating history and analysis, such as this, about the much-misunderstood concept of “papal infallibility”:

Modern popes have been chary of invoking the suspect “charism,” or divine gift, of infallibility, a power Pius IX [who reined from 1846 to 1878] wrested from his captive Vatican Council. It is a power used only once in the technical sense, in Pius XII’s 1950 definition of a non-controversial doctrine (Mary’s assumption into heaven). But, in place of infallibility, recent popes have found many ways of describing their acts as almost-infallible, irreversible, universal. That is where the canonization process comes in so handily. It gives the pope a kind of back-door infallibility. He says definitively that a person is in heaven, and can work miracles, and worked particular ones (or, for John XXIII, a single one).

Wills’ main argument is that the Vatican’s recent canonization of Pope John Paul II is extremely ill-advised, largely because John Paul “presided over the church during its worldwide pedophile scandal.” Wills asks, rather brutally but, I think, completely fairly, “Who can think that a saint in heaven ever protected a predatory priest?” Indeed.

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.

Churchgoers Defend St. Louis Priest Accused of Sex Abuse, Pray in Private Meetup Group

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Riverfront Times

By Sam Levin Wed., Jul. 17 2013

Earlier this week, local victims’ rights advocates were outraged when they saw an invitation to a meet-up at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis to pray for the “defense and exoneration” of Father Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang, a priest accused of repeatedly molesting a teenage girl. Representatives of the Archdiocese of St. Louis said they were not aware of the event until Daily RFT reached out and ultimately canceled it and had the meetup.com listing removed.

The organizers behind the event, however, went forward with the prayer last night — moving it to a private home. These churchgoers and supporters of Jiang emphasize that they are not affiliated with the Archdiocese and have no gripes about church leaders’ decision to cancel.

“We completely believe in his innocence,” says Lucy Hannegan, who has known Jiang for years and has organized informal efforts to back him in the wake of the criminal charges. “We support him and we stand behind him.”

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

Teacher not reported for molesting children reoffends in US

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

RACHEL BAXENDALE From: The Australian July 17, 2013

A JEWISH Orthodox school in Melbourne failed to report a teacher’s molestation of four boys in the early 1990s to police, enabling the man to leave Australia and reoffend overseas, the Victorian County Court has heard.

David Kramer, 52, pleaded guilty to five charges of indecent assault and one of indecent acts with a child in relation to incidents which occurred at Yeshivah College in St Kilda East.

The American, whose elderly parents, ex-wife and 11 adolescent and adult children live in Israel, admitted to groping the four boys through their clothing between 1990 and 1992.

Prosecutor Brett Sonnet told a plea hearing today (Wednesday) that Yeshivah College had initially declined to sack Kramer, out of concern for his welfare, until angry parents staged a protest outside his house, across the road from the school.

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.

Yeshiva College principal delayed acting…

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Yeshiva College principal delayed acting on teacher David Kramer who has molested students, County Court told

Shannon Deery
From: Herald Sun
July 17, 2013

THE principal of a Jewish college refused to report a teacher who admitted molesting students to police because he was concerned for his welfare, a court has heard.

Rabbi David Kramer, 52, pleaded guilty to molesting four young boys while teaching at ultra-orthodox Yeshiva College in the 1990s before fleeing to the US where he was jailed for further offending.

A County Court plea hearing heard today the father of two victims made a formal complaint to then principal Rabbi Abraham Glick who refused to take immediate action.

“The accused admitted touching some of the children but claimed that it was initiated by the complainants,” prosecutor Brett Sonnet told the court.

“Rabbi Glick advised (the victim’s father) that he did not intend to immediately suspend the accused from teaching because he was concerned for his welfare.”

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Victorian school sent pedophile teacher aboad

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A Victorian Jewish school covered up the offences of a pedophile teacher by sending him overseas, a court has heard.

The Victorian County Court was told David Kramer, 52, was “shuffled out the back door to Israel” rather than investigated when allegations that he molested boys at Melbourne’s Yeshivah College were first aired.

Kramer has pleaded guilty to five charges of indecent assault and one count of indecent acts with a child.

The American-born teacher admitted groping four boys through their clothing between 1990 and 1992.

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.

Yeshivah College accused of covering up sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Age

July 17, 2013

Adam Cooper
Reporter for The Age

A lawyer representing a teacher who has pleaded guilty to sexually abusing students more than 20 years ago has told a court that Melbourne’s Yeshivah College covered up the scandal rather than contact police.

And even after David Kramer admitted to abusing one victim, the school’s then principal told the victim’s father that the teacher would not be suspended because of concerns for his wellbeing, the County Court was told.

Kramer, a primary school teacher at Yeshivah College between 1989 and 1992 and known to his pupils as “Rabbi Kramer” although not ordained, has pleaded guilty to five charges of sexually abusing four 10-year-old boys in 1990 and 1991, and one charge of committing an indecent act with a child.

Kramer, 52, was extradited last year from the US, where he served 4 years in jail for sodomising a 12-year-old boy in a St Louis synagogue.

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VIDEO: Daughter of Stephen Budd Breaks Silence

FLORIDA
WBZT

Child porn charges could be filed against a former private school teacher already accused of engaging in sexual acts with two nine year old girls.

At the time of the alleged activity, Stephen Budd was working at the Rosarian Academy in West Palm Beach.

The Palm Beach County state attorney’s office now says they received a new search warrant and investigators are looking at new shocking evidence. Budd’s own daughter told police that her father would quote “Do things to her friends that she knew were wrong and made her uncomfortable.”

She says she lived with Budd in Boynton Beach while in high school and her Dad made one of her ninth grade friends dance for him in a catholic school uniform inappropriately touching herself while he videotaped it.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 17 July 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father:

– appointed Fr. Francis Duffy, of the clergy of Kilmore, Ireland, as bishop of Ardagh and Clonmacnois (area 2,437, population 84,700, Catholics 79,600, priests 72, religious 177), Ireland. The bishop-elect was born in Bawnboy, Ireland in 1958 and was ordained a priest in 1982. Following ordination he taught Irish history and language at St. Patrick’s College in Cavan, and in the diocesan school of St. Felim in Ballinamore, where he went on to become head teacher. He served as diocesan secretary and chancellor from 2008 to 2012. He currently assists in the parish of Laragh and in St. Michael’s Church, Clifferna, and is completing his doctorate in Education. He succeeds Bishop Colm O’Reilly, whose resignation from the same diocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age limit.

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Depressing but not surprising: how the Magdalene Laundries got away with it

IRELAND
New Statesman

As a child, Anna Carey saw the dead-eyed women who had been forced to work for free in the laundries sit among the congregation at Mass, seen and yet ignored. Now, as the religious orders responsible refuse to contribute towards financial compensation, it’s not difficult to see how Irish society allowed these abuses to go on for so long.

BY ANNA CAREY PUBLISHED 17 JULY 2013

I loved High Park when I was a kid. The rambling grounds of the convent were just across the road from the quiet Dublin housing estate where I grew up in the 1980s, and every Sunday my family went to Mass in the convent chapel. The chapel was a pretty little Victorian building; when I was very small, I used to jump slowly down the wooden steps of the choir stalls and pretend to be Professor Yaffle from Bagpuss.

Away from the cluster of convent buildings, the grounds were beautiful, with meadows full of wild flowers and a small herd of cows. We would go on nature walks, looking out for squirrels and gathering leaves and flowers. It was all rather idyllic, apart from the fact that we were playing in what had, for decades, essentially been a forced labour camp.

Run by the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, High Park Convent was the site of Ireland’s largest Magdalene Laundry. Until well into the twentieth century, girls deemed to be “difficult” – because they were sexually active, or sexually abused, or simply poor – were sent to laundries by their families or the state. Despite having committed no crime, they were not allowed to leave the institutions and were forced to work for no pay, making them literally slaves. Many women spent their entire lives there, remaining long after the actual laundries closed down. They had nowhere else to go.

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Taoiseach rules out going down the legal route to force orders to contribute to Magdalene fund

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Enda Kenny does not want to take legal action to force religious orders to contribute to the Magdalene fund.

The Taoiseach played down speculation that the Government will force them to foot up some of their multi-million euro redress scheme for survivors of the institutions.

The scheme is expected to cost between €34.5 million and €58 million, depending on how many women apply.

Mr Kenny said he would like to think they would reconsider their decision but he “can’t force them to”.

He added: “I have no interest in going down the legal route of confrontation with the religious orders.”

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.

Outrage as Magdalene Laundry nuns refuse to pay victims compensation

IRELAND
Irish Central

The four religious congregations that ran the Magdalene Laundries have announced they will not contribute to the compensation fund for victims.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity and the Good Shepherd Sisters have informed Minister for Justice Alan Shatter in recent days that they will not pay into the fund, the Irish Times reports.

However the religious orders said they were willing to cooperate fully with other recommendations made by Mr Justice John Quirke.

In his recent report Quirke recommended that the Irish government pay at least €34.5 million ($45 million) in restitution to laundry survivors.

A spokesperson for Shatter said he was ‘disappointed’ with the decision of the religious orders.

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Magdalene survivors: strip orders of state funding

IRELAND
BBC News

A group representing survivors of the Magdalene laundries has urged the Irish government to cease state funding and strip the religious orders that ran them of their charitable status.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity and the Good Shepherd Sisters refused to financially compensate the survivors.

Magdalene Survivors Together said it was appalling that the Irish government could not hold the religious orders to account.

“The perpetrators of the crimes and the enormous suffering with which these women have suffered is being made a mockery of by the religious orders,” group spokesperson Steven O’Riordan said.

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Shatter says he cannot strip religious orders of charitable status

IRELAND
RTE News

Minister for Justice Alan Shatter has said he cannot strip the four religious orders who owned the Magdalene Laundries of their charitable status.

It follows their refusal to contribute to the Government’s multimillion euro redress scheme for survivors of the institutions.

Magdalene Survivors Together called on the Government to remove the orders’ charitable status and to cease State funding in response to their decision.

The orders concerned are the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Mercy, the Good Shepherd Sisters and the Religious Sisters of Charity.

The nuns have offered to help the women in other ways, such as caring for about 100 of them in residential settings.

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Moral onus on nuns to compensate Magdalenes, says Shatter

IRELAND
Irish Times

Michael O’Regan

The four religious congregations that ran the Magdalene laundries had a “moral and ethical’’ obligation to contribute to the fund to recompense former residents, Minister for Justice and Defence Alan Shatter told the Dáil.

“As I stated, the majority of people outside the House would expect such a contribution and many of the former residents expect such contributions,’’ he said.

“I do not believe anything can be achieved by me as a Minister being abusive of those who are members of these congregations.’’

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Kenny: I can’t force orders to contribute to Magdalenes redress fund

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Taoiseach Enda Kenny has said he cannot force the religious orders to make a contribution to the redress scheme for former residents of the Magdalene laundries.

Four orders of Catholic nuns – The Good Shepherd Sisters, The Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, The Sisters of Mercy and the Sisters of Charity – have refused to contribute to the fund, which is expected to cost between €34m and €58m .

Speaking in the Dáil this morning Mr Kenny said he was not going to “get into a fight” with the orders about money, as the survivors don’t have time on their side.

“I would like to think that the religious orders would make a contribution here,” he told the house.

However, he added, “I can’t force them to”.

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.

Kenny asks orders to ‘reflect’ on refusal to pay redress

IRELAND
Irish Times

Taoiseach Enda Kenny has called on the four religious orders who ran the Magdalene laundries to “reflect” on their refusal to pay into a redress scheme for the survivors.

The four orders have told the Government they will not contribute to the redress scheme set up to compensate the former residents of the laundries. The scheme is expected to cost between €34 million and €58 million.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity and the Good Shepherd Sisters have informed Minister for Justice Alan Shatter in recent days that they will not pay into the fund.

Minister for Justice Alan Shatter has said he is disappointed with the response of the religious congregations regarding former residents of Magdalene laundries and urged them to reconsider the approach they were taking.

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Donations to Magdalene fund urged

IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

17 JULY 2013

Taoiseach Enda Kenny has urged religious orders to reconsider contributing funds to a compensation scheme for survivors of the Magdalene laundries.

He repeated claims from Justice Minister Alan Shatter that no legal action could be taken to force the four congregations that ran the workhouses to give financial support – after they refused to pay into the multimillion-euro scheme.

“I would ask them to reflect on the question of a monetary contribution,” Mr Kenny said. “I can’t force them to do that. I can’t take away their charitable status that some have been talking about. This is an issue that they know about themselves and that’s the position.”

More than 210 women who worked in the Catholic-run workhouses have already applied to the compensation programme, which was announced by the Government last month.

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Magdalene nuns ‘have moral obligation to pay victims’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

FIONNAN SHEAHAN POLITICAL EDITOR – 17 JULY 2013

THE Government isn’t planning to take legal action against a number of religious orders refusing to contribute to the compensation fund for Magdalene Laundries victims.

Justice Minister Alan Shatter can’t force religious orders to give any funding towards the redress scheme but feels they have a “moral obligation” to assist.

The Coalition is preparing to pay out up to €58m in compensation to Magdalene survivors. And the Government is seeking a financial contribution from four religious congregations involved in running the institutions: The Good Shepherd Sisters, The Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, The Sisters of Mercy and the Sisters of Charity.

The four orders came back to say they don’t intend to make a contribution. But the Coalition is not examining the option of taking legal action to force some form of payment.

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Church Fights Calif. Bill to Extend Time for Abuse Suits

CALIFORNIA
Chronicle of Philanthropy

Catholic leaders in California are waging a battle to defeat state legislation aimed at giving some alleged victims of clergy sexual abuse additional time to file civil lawsuits against the church, according to the Los Angeles Times.

A church-linked group, the California Council of Nonprofit Organizations, has retained five lobbying firms and spent $75,000 fighting the measure. In a church newspaper last month, Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez urged parishioners to contact legislators about the bill, which he said “puts the social services and educational work of the Church at risk.”

California dioceses took no position on a 2002 law that loosened the statute of limitations on molestation claims and have since paid $1.2-billion in settlements. A key provision of the new bill would lift the statute for one year for some accusers who missed previous deadlines.

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Jehovah’s Witness leaders …

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Jehovah’s Witness leaders ordered to give evidence in sex scandal trial after claiming they had a ‘duty to God not to breach confidence’

By ANNA EDWARDS

Church elders refused to comment on a child abuse scandal because they had a ‘duty to God’ to keep the sex attacker’s confession a secret, a court heard.

Jehovah Witness ministerial servant Gordon Leighton admitted sexually abusing a child when he was confronted with allegations before elders at his church,Newcastle Crown Court heard.

But during the official police investigation the 53-year-old, who hit the headlines in the 1990s when his wife Yvonne, 28, died after refusing a blood transfusion after childbirth on religious grounds, denied any illegal wrongdoing.

When detectives asked elders Simon Preyser, Harry Logan and David Scott to make statements about the confession, all three refused and said what they had heard was confidential.

The elders knew about the admissions for three years, but refused to cooperate with the criminal investigation, the court heard.

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Jehovah’s Witness Church Elders Covered Up Sex Abuse By Paedophile

UNITED KINGDOM
Sky Tyne and Wear

By Kevin Donald

Jehovah’s Witness church elders covered up a child sex scandal in their congregation and refused to co-operate with the police.

Ministerial servant Gordon Leighton admitted sexually abusing a child when he was confronted with allegations before elders at his church.

But during the official police investigation the 53-year-old, who hit the headlines in the 1990s when his wife Yvonne, 28, died after refusing a blood transfusion after childbirth on religious grounds, denied any illegal wrongdoing.

When detectives asked elders Simon Preyser, Harry Logan and David Scott to make statements about the confession, all three refused and said what they had heard was confidential.

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Vatican silence on abuse likely to continue despite UN plea

UNITED KINGDOM
The Conversation

Philip Gilligan

Last week the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) asked the Vatican to disclose details of child sexual abuse cases involving Catholic clergy for the period November 1995 to January 2014.

According to officials, the aims of the questionnaire include seeking to establish what legal action is taken against “perpetrators of sexual crimes” and what support is provided for victims. However, in England and Wales, as elsewhere, the Church is unlikely to be in any position to answer such questions in sufficient detail to satisfy either the UNCRC or survivors such as those represented by Minister and Clergy Sexual Abuse Survivors (MACSAS).

During the dozen years since the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales declared it was fully committed to implementing all the recommendations of the Nolan Committee, research suggests there is a large gap between the Church’s rhetoric and the reality of its practice, while systems have been insufficiently robust to collect the information required.

In 2006, MACSAS suggested victims and survivors had not felt listened to, believed or supported, or “helped towards their healing” by the church. In 2011, following a survey of survivors’ experiences, the organisation concluded that victims “continue to be ignored and their needs disregarded by Church”.

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Bishop’s advisor ‘contained’ abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

An advisor to the former bishop of the Catholic Church in the New South Wales Hunter Valley says he tried to contain child sexual abuse allegations against a priest so he did not hinder the police investigation.

Father James Saunders was the former bishop Michael Malone’s vicar general from 2001.

He has given evidence at the special commission that is investigating claims the Maitland-Newcastle diocese covered-up child sexual abuse by Denis McAlinden and James Fletcher.

Fr Saunders shared the Belmont parish with McAlinden from about 1981 and said he was warned the priest “might be a difficult man”.

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Former Catholic priest charged …

AUSTRALIA
NSW Police Force

Former Catholic priest charged with 13 additional offences – Strike Force Glenroe

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Police have laid 13 additional charges against a former Catholic priest relating to alleged historical child assault offences.

The 59-year-old man faced Armidale Local Court today (Wednesday 17 July 2013) on charges relating to alleged child-sex offences against six boys and three girls in the 1970s and 1980s.

During his appearance, the man was additionally charged with 13 offences relating to alleged assaults against a boy, aged 12 to 14, between 1981 and 1984 in Moree.

They include nine counts of sexual intercourse without consent and four counts of indecent assault.

In total, the man has been charged with 137 alleged child-sex offences and remains on strict conditional bail.

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Accused ex-priest named in book

AUSTRALIA
Armidate Express

By VICTORIA NUGENT July 17, 2013

A BOOK naming an ex-priest whose identity remains gagged has been submitted to Armidale Local Court during the man’s hearing on child sexual abuse charges.

The non-publication order remains on naming the former priest, 59, who today faced 13 fresh charges.

The book was submitted to Magistrate Karen Stafford by defence solicitor Glen Kee.

He asked the magistrate to consider taking action against the author.

But Magistrate Stafford said she would only consider the matter, although continuing to suppress the identity of the defendant until at least September 4.

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New charges on former priest

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

NSW police have laid 13 additional charges against a former Catholic priest relating to alleged historical child assault offences.

They say that the 59-year-old man faced Armidale Local Court on charges relating to alleged child-sex offences against six boys and three girls in the 1970s and 1980s.

‘During his appearance, the man was additionally charged with 13 offences relating to alleged assaults against a boy, aged 12 to 14, between 1981 and 1984 in Moree,’ police said in a statement.

‘They include nine counts of sexual intercourse without consent and four counts of indecent assault.

‘In total, the man has been charged with 137 alleged child-sex offences and remains on strict conditional bail.

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Catholic Church, private schools lobby against Calif. childhood sex abuse bill

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Daily Journal

SARAH PARVINI Associated Press
First Posted: July 17, 2013

LOS ANGELES — Tony Quarry suppressed his memories of being abused by a Roman Catholic priest for nearly 30 years and decided to sue only after finding out that his five brothers were molested by the same man — just to discover that it was too late.

The state’s high court ultimately tossed out the brothers’ lawsuit because they missed a special legal window that allowed victims to sue over abuse claims decades after the fact. Their plight, however, has inspired new sex abuse legislation in California a decade after a similar bill cost the church hundreds of millions in civil settlements.

“I still believed in the tooth fairy when these things happened to me,” Quarry, 51, told The Associated Press in a phone interview Tuesday. “It’s a good thing for these other people to have the opportunity to step forward.”

Like the previous law, Senate Bill 131 would permit many victims who would otherwise be unable to file a civil suit due to time and age restrictions — like the Quarry brothers — to sue their abuser’s employer in civil court.

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July 16, 2013

State Attorney’s office reviewing new allegations against Stephen Budd including child porn images

FLORIDA
WPTV

By: Brian Entin
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – A spokesman with the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office says they received a new search warrant and investigators are going over the new evidence that could lead to more charges for former Rosarian Academy teacher Stephen Budd.

According to West Palm Beach Police, they found dozens of child porn images on a hard drive in Budd’s car after he was arrested in April on sex charges involving two nine year old girls.

Now, new allegations are surfacing from his own daughter.

According to the search warrant from June, Budd’s daughter told police her father “would do things to her friends that she knew were wrong and made her uncomfortable.”

According to the search warrant, she told police while she was in high school and living with her father in Boynton Beach, her dad made one of her ninth grade friends dance for him in a Catholic School uniform inappropriately touching herself while Budd video taped it.

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Hungry aboriginal kids, adults were subject of nutritional experiments: paper

CANADA
Times Colonist

BOB WEBER / THE CANADIAN PRESS
JULY 16, 2013

Recently published historical research says hungry aboriginal children and adults were once used as unwitting subjects in nutritional experiments by Canadian government bureaucrats.

“This was the hardest thing I’ve ever written,” said Ian Mosby, who has revealed new details about one of the least-known but perhaps most disturbing aspects of government policy toward aboriginals immediately after the Second World War.

Mosby — whose work at the University of Guelph focuses on the history of food in Canada — was researching the development of health policy when he ran across something strange.

“I started to find vague references to studies conducted on ‘Indians’ that piqued my interest and seemed potentially problematic, to say the least,” he said. “I went on a search to find out what was going on.”

Government documents eventually revealed a long-standing, government-run experiment that came to span the entire country and involved at least 1,300 aboriginals, most of them children. …

The research spread. In 1947, plans were developed for research on about 1,000 hungry aboriginal children in six residential schools in Port Alberni, B.C., Kenora, Ont., Schubenacadie, N.S., and Lethbridge, Alta.

One school deliberately held milk rations for two years to less than half the recommended amount to get a ‘baseline’ reading for when the allowance was increased. At another, children were divided into one group that received vitamin, iron and iodine supplements and one that didn’t.

One school depressed levels of vitamin B1 to create another baseline before levels were boosted. A special enriched flour that couldn’t legally be sold elsewhere in Canada under food adulteration laws was used on children at another school.

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Bishop’s ‘right-hand man’ to front sexual abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Senior members of the Hunter Valley’s Catholic Church are today expected to front an inquiry into claims the diocese covered-up abuse by two paedophile priests.

The Special Commission has heard that members of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese knew about the abuse of Denis McAlinden for 50 years but did not tell police until 2003.

The inquiry was set up last year after senior policeman Peter Fox claimed the Church tried to protect McAlinden and another Hunter Valley priest, James Fletcher.

The public hearings will continue in Newcastle this morning after the former bishop, Michael Malone, gave further evidence in-camera yesterday.

Father James Saunders, a former advisor to bishop Malone, is scheduled to give evidence followed by Father William Burston and Monsignor Allan Hart.

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Chile- Victims Applaud Appeals Court Judge Case Against Archdiocese

CHILE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA BLAINE ON JULY 16, 2013

Judge Juan Manuel Munoz from the Appeals Court in Santiago, Chile has decided to move forward with a pre-lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Santiago and predator priest Fernando Karadima.

In January 2011, Karadima was found guilty of sexual abuse after at least four men came forward with accusations that they had been abused as minors. The statute of limitations prevent Karadima from serving a jail sentence but he was forced from ministry to retire to “a life of prayer and penitence.”

[New York Times]

The purpose of the pre-lawsuit is to find out the level of involvement and the cover up provided by Cardinal Francisco Javier Errázuriz, Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati and most of the members of the Chilean Catholic hierarchy who reportedly knew about the abuse as early as 1958 yet said and did nothing about it over the past four decades. Victims believe the investigation will also focus on the four bishops who came from Karadima’s inner circle and, according to court documents and witness accounts, knew of and witnessed Karadima’s abuse yet remained silent. These bishops are Juan Barros, Andrés Arteaga, Tomislav Koljatic and Horacio Valenzuela.

Church officials who were reckless with the safety of children should be held accountable. They should not be allowed to keep their positions of authority if they have misused it. Protecting the Chilean children should be the highest priority of the court and the church. If the investigation shows disregard for the safety of children we hope those who covered up and enabled the crimes will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Victims believe that the church officials who could have intervened to prevent additional abuse and sexual violence refused to do so. In addition, it appears that the same church officials also refused to help victims in need. Lastly, we are disappointed that Pope Francis selected Cardinal Francisco Javier Errázuriz to be a part of the committee chosen to develop ways of reforming the Catholic Church. Considering his track record of putting the interest of predators and reputations ahead of the best interests of children we question the wisdom of this decision.

Now, more than ever, it is important that anyone with information speaks up. We urge anyone who experienced, saw or suspects wrongdoing by Karadima to report it to police immediately. If anyone knows about the involvement of Cardinal Errazuriz and Archbishop Ezzati or any other bishop please speak up so they will be held accountable and children will be safer.

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Y.U. Credit Rating Downgraded Amid $380M Abuse Lawsuit Fears

NEW YORK
Jewish Daily Forward

By Doni Bloomfield
Published July 16, 2013.

Yeshiva University’s credit rating has been downgraded by a major ratings agency amid large and growing deficits, a falling endowment and fears of costly litigation stemming from recent allegations of sexual abuse at its high school.

Moody’s downgraded Y.U.’s debt from A2 to Baa1, putting it below the median credit rating for similar institutions.

The agency says that the litigation prospects of the alleged sexual abuse victims will largely determine if the debt is downgraded further.

Since its peak in 2007 Y.U.’s endowment has cratered, falling 45%, doing handily worse than the stock market. Y.U.’s reliance on hedge funds, in particular, has been extremely damaging. It was also slammed by the financial crisis and damaged by its entanglement with Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scam.

Meanwhile, the federal lawsuit filed last week by former students at Y.U.’s affiliated high school, alleging administrative negligence in response to abuse they suffered there, is demanding over $380 million in damages. According to Moody’s the attendant publicity may have large consequences for Yeshiva’s fundraising efforts.

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Archdiocese Responds to Prayer Vigil for Accused Priest

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KMOX

ST. LOUIS (KMOX)– The Archdiocese is responding to criticism that it was apparently showing public support for a priest accused of sexual abuse.

The Survivors Network of those Accused by Priests held a news conference saying it was wrong for church officials to call a prayer meeting for the “exoneration” of Father Joseph Jiang. Jiang has been charged with sexual abuse of a minor, and with witness tampering for allegedly leaving a check for $20,000 on the windshield of a car belonging to the family of the alleged victim.

“There was supposed to have been a prayer vigil for Father Jiang for his ‘exoneration,’” said SNAP spokeswoman Judy Jones, “This priest has been arrested, and charged for sexually abusing a minor, a girl under the age of seventeen.”

Jones says the gesture in support of the priest would have a “chilling” effect on victims of clergy abuse, making them feel the church gives the benefit of the doubt to accused priests.

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MO- Parishioners praying for arrested priest; It’s Carlson’s fault

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Judy Jones of St. Louis, Assistant Midwest Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 974 5003, SNAPjudy@gmail.com )

Those who commit child sex crimes are sick. They largely cannot help themselves.

Those who publicly back child sex offenders, however, are even more morally culpable. They deliberately choose to act in ways that hurt children. They should be ashamed of themselves.

This includes a group of young adults at the Cathedral parish. Tonight they were to hold a prayer service for Fr. Joseph Jiang. Fr. Jiang is accused of repeatedly molesting a girl last year. He’s been arrested and charged

[Riverfront Times]

These parishioners were not praying for “justice to be done.” They weren’t praying “for the truth to emerge.” They weren’t praying for “all parties involved.” They were praying for an arrested, charged and credibly accused predator priest’s “defense and exoneration.”

Shame on them.

And shame on their pastor, who claims he didn’t know what was happening at his parish. Frankly, we find this hard to believe, especially since this event was apparently planned for months.

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Congregations urged to back Magdalenes redress scheme

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

More than 210 women who worked in the Catholic-run workhouses have already applied to the multi-million euro compensation scheme announced by the Government last month.

Mr Shatter revealed he met with the four religious congregations who ran the workhouses – The Good Shepherd Sisters, The Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, The Sisters of Mercy and the Sisters of Charity – about the redress scheme.

“Regrettably, all four religious congregations have informed us that they do not intend to make a financial contribution,” said Mr Shatter.

“I regard their response as very disappointing.

“It is my view that the congregations have a moral obligation to make a reasonable contribution to the fund required under the scheme and that view is shared by my Cabinet colleagues.

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UPDATE: St Ambrose College statement …

UNITED KINGDOM
Messenger

UPDATE: St Ambrose College statement after former teacher charged with 47 sexual assaults on pupils

A FORMER teacher has been charged following an investigation in historic sexual abuse at St Ambrose College, in Hale Barns.

Alan Morris, aged 63, has been charged with 47 sexual offences against pupils at the school. from the 1970s to 1990s.

Morris, of Rivington Road, Hale, was a teacher at the school at the time.

The allegations involve 29 former pupils of the boys-only school, who were aged between 11 and 17 at the time.

John Dilworth, head of the CPS North West complex casework unit, said: “Following investigations by Greater Manchester Police into allegations that Alan Morris, a former teacher at St Ambrose School, sexually assaulted pupils at the school between 1972 and 1991, I have reviewed all the evidence that they have gathered and have authorised the police to charge him with 41 offences of indecent assault on a male, one charge of outraging public decency and five charges of inciting gross indecency with a child.”

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Former priest faces court

AUSTRALIA
Armidale Express

A FORMER priest facing historic child sex abuse charges will appear in Armidale Local Court today.

The 59-year-old man, who cannot be named under a non-publication order, is facing 125 child sex abuse charges, of which 61 relate to the alleged sexual abuse of three girls and six boys during the 1970s and 1980s.

A further 64 offences relate to the alleged abuse of a further two girls and one altar boy in Moree and Armidale in the early 1980s.

The man’s bail conditions prevent him from visiting Armidale except for legal or medical reasons.

He is also forbidden to approach Crown witnesses, his accusers or people aged under 16.

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Victims to new pope: Honor the treaty, provide the information, meet the deadline

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, July 16

Statement by Mary Caplan of Manhattan, NY area director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 917 439 418, mcaplan@aol.com )

Last week, a United Nations committee requested information from the Vatican about clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

It’s a straightforward and reasonable request. But it’s also an historic and encouraging request.

It’s historic because, until now, no truly independent, international body has ever really sought extensive information from high-ranking Catholic officials about this on-going crisis.

It’s encouraging because it may prod other secular authorities – especially at the international level – to take similar steps to document, investigate, or prevent more violence by Catholic clerics against innocent children and vulnerable adults. And it’s encouraging because it may indicate that the long standing and dangerous preferential treatment of Catholic officials by secular officials is slowly waning.

We urge Pope Francis to provide this information and meet this deadline. He seems to be the master of symbolic gestures. But symbolic gestures don’t protect kids. Tangible, courageous action protects kids.

Others in the Vatican will no doubt pressure the pontiff to do as church officials have always done and resist anything that even seems like external oversight. We hope those well-entrenched, reactionary forces won’t prevail. We predict, however, that they will.

The UN’s request is a simple one. Pope Francis presents himself as a simple man. And he’s carefully fostering an image as a reformer. But kids don’t need an image of reform. They need real reform.

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CA- Bishops lobby against child sex abuse law; SNAP responds

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, July 16

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

According to today’s LA Times, California Catholic officials are waging an expensive lobbying campaign against a bill that would expose predators, help victims, protect kids and deter wrongdoing.

[Los Angeles Times]

Since the early 1990s, America’s bishops have claimed they’ve adopted tough new procedures, policies and protocols to prevent abuse. If that’s true, why are they now still so dreadfully afraid of child sex abuse and cover up cases.

Here’s why the bill focuses on private institutions, not public ones: because that’s where the problem largely is. When abuse happens in a public school, a parent can file a Freedom of Information Act request, speak up at a school board meeting, campaign against board members, run for the board, and fight against bond issues and tax levies. So there are some “checks and balances” and some avenues for redress.

When abuse happens in a private school, no such remedies exist. And private schools depend heavily on their reputations so are more apt to cover up abuse cases.

Once real strides are made to clean up private institutions, we hope lawmakers will focus more on public institutions.

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PA- Former registered sex offender priest resurfaces in community non-profit

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

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

A former priest and registered sex offender has resurfaced at a non-profit in Wilkes-Barre. Robert Timchak works for In The Gap, a group that helps turns vacant lots into residential buildings.

This is why we urge bishops to post the names of proven, admitted, and credibly accused child molesting clerics on their website so that neighbors, friends and prospective employers can be warned about potentially dangerous employees.

We urge anyone with more information about this or any other case to please come forward so that predators are not allowed to be employed within communities near children.

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Editorial: Vatican bank oversight lacks independence

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Editorial Staff | Jul. 16, 2013

EDITORIAL
The Vatican bank, officially known as the Institute for the Works of Religion, is scandal-plagued and has been for years. Pope Benedict XVI took important steps in bringing reform to the bank, not the least of which was insisting that the Vatican follow the international standards set by Moneyval, the European anti-money-laundering agency. Moneyval reviewed Vatican financial procedures last year and will return in 2014 to see if the mandated improvements have been made. For example, Moneyval insisted the Vatican establish an independent Financial Information Authority with the power to investigate suspicious transactions. This agency is headed by René Brülhart, a highly respected Swiss lawyer and expert in the field who in May revealed more than a dozen suspicious activities since 2011. That is real progress.

At the time of his election, Pope Francis received a clear mandate from the College of Cardinals to move the reform ahead faster and further. Francis has said he wants “to allow Gospel principles to permeate [the church’s] economic and financial activities, too.”

We applaud these efforts and encourage a thorough examination of the Vatican bank’s processes and practices.

The resignations of a director and deputy director of the Vatican bank and the arrest of Msgr. Nunzio Scarano underscore the importance of a speedy, efficient housecleaning. But obstacles may impede this cleaning.

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Magdalene survivor groups criticise nuns over refusal to contribute to redress

IRELAND
RTE News

Groups representing survivors of the the Magdalene Laundries have criticised religious congregations that owned laundries for their refusal to contribute towards the redress fund for survivors.

London-based Irish Womens Survivors Network Sally Mulready said she was concerned that survivors would feel that the nuns were saying that they did not think much of the women’s plight.

Magdalenes Survivors Together spokesman Stephen O’Riordan said he was flabbergasted by the refusal given that the orders of nuns concerned were responsible for most of the injustice suffered by the women detained in the institutions.

The four orders of nuns have said that they will contribute to the support package for the women in other ways including caring for about 100 of the women.

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SF seeks debate on nuns’ refusal to contribute to Magdalene scheme

IRELAND
Irish Times

Sinn Féin has sought a Dáil debate on the refusal of the four religious orders that ran the Magdalene Laundries to make a financial contribution towards the redress scheme put in place for the survivors.

The four religious congregations have told the Government they will not make any financial contribution to the multimillion-euro fund set up to recompense former residents.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity and the Good Shepherd Sisters have informed Minister for Justice Alan Shatter in recent days that they will not pay into the fund, which could cost up to €58 million.

It is understood they have said they are willing to assist fully in all other aspects of the package recommended by Mr Justice John Quirke in his recent report, including the assembly of records and looking after former residents who remain in their care.

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Catholic League President: Brutal Treatment of Women at Ireland’s Infamous Magdalene Laundries Is “All A Lie”

UNITED STATES
Village Voice

[MYTHS OF THE MAGDALENE LAUNDRIES – Catholic League]

By Anna Merlan Tue., Jul. 16 2013

So, what’s perpetually aggrieved Catholic League president Bill Donohue mad about this week? Is it gay people? Is it the “bizarre” notion of gay people getting married? Is it all those gay priests sneaking into the Catholic Church (who are the real problem over there, in Donohue’s mind anyway, rather than all that child abuse)?

The man has a bit of a theme, is what we’re saying. But Donohue switched gears yesterday, taking time away from his busy schedule of gay-hating and light art criticism to declare, bizarrely, that Ireland’s infamous Magdalene Laundries were “a myth” and “a lie.”

In case you’re not up on your Irish history, the Magadalene Laundries were workhouses where women and girls were incarcerated, starting from the late 18th century and continuing till the middle of the 20th. Inhabitants of the laundries were referred to as “penitents.” Contrary to popular belief, one that was helped along by a Hollywood movie about the laundries, they weren’t solely meant for unmarried pregnant women or prostitutes; some of their inhabitants were also neglected children, some as young as nine or 10, referred by social service agencies. Women with minor criminal convictions were also sent to the laundries. And some of their inhabitants were simply desperately poor and voluntarily committed themselves. (You can see a few surviving photos of a typical laundry and its inhabitants here.)

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Former Teacher Stephen Budd Can Soon Face Child Porn Charges

FLORIDA
CBS 12

WEST PALM BEACH – A former private school teacher in West Palm Beach who was arrested on sex charges involving two girls could soon face charges of possession of child pornography.

Authorities say they found images on Stephen Budd’s hard drive which contained 41 images of child pornography and 19 videos containing more than two-hours of sexual abuse.

The 51 year old was arrested in April for allegedly offering two girls in his class candy in exchange for sex acts.

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MO- Prayer event for arrested priest is cancelled, SNAP Responds

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Prayer event for arrested priest is cancelled, SNAP Responds
Victims want pastor & organizer disciplined
They tell Carlson: Stop tolerating hurtful actions
Group blasts archdiocese’s “good cop-bad cop” routine
SNAP: “Archbishop takes ‘high road,’ but his staff & flock attack victims”

What
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will disclose that a Cathedral prayer event, for the “defense and exoneration” of an arrested local predator priest, was just cancelled.

Victims will urge St. Louis’ archbishop to

–punish the layman who organized it and pastor who approved it, and

–teach his flock about how to act appropriately when child sex charges surface.

They will also prod:

–anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered the priest’s crimes to contact law enforcement immediately, and

–parishioners and the public to keep open minds and avoid taking actions and making comments that might discourage any other victims, witnesses or whistleblowers from stepping forward.

When
Tuesday, July 16 at 1:00 p.m.

Where
On the sidewalk outside the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica, Lindell & Newstead in the CWE

Who
Two-three victims of clergy sex crimes who belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org)

Why
For weeks or months, the Cathedral Young Adults group planned an event to “offer our prayers for the Defense and Exoneration” of Fr. Xiu Hui Joseph Jiang.” It was to be held tonight but was cancelled late yesterday after a reporter asked Archbishop Robert Carlson’s public relations staff about it.

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Don Mantia patteggiò per abusi…

ITALIA
Blitz quotidiano

Don Mantia patteggiò per abusi su minori: ora in oratorio, genitori insorgono

CREMONA – Don Luigi Mantia ha patteggiato una pena di due anni per abusi sui minori. Il reato gli fu contestato a Martignana Po, in provincia di Cremona, nel 2009. Oggi, dopo il patteggiamento dello scorso febbraio, don Mantia sostituisce il parroco di Pumenengo e i suoi parrocchiani sono tranquilli e bendisposti nei suoi confronti. Ma l’idea che don Mantia frequenti l’oratorio e possa partecipare ad una gita a Zambla con i ragazzi ha scatenato le polemiche, mentre la Curia rassicura: “Non andrà”.

Giuliana Ubbiali e Pietro Tosca spiegano sul Corriere della Sera che il polverone si scatena quando all’oratorio di Casirate d’Adda, che organizzava una gita a Zambla, si diffonde la voce che parteciperà anche il prete “in prestito a Pumenengo”:

“Qualche genitore si informa e apprende che è don Luigi Mantia. Scoppia il polverone, perché è il sacerdote che il 26 febbraio ha patteggiato due anni (pena sospesa) per atti sessuali con minorenni, due bambini di 8 e 12 anni”.

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Bergamo, prete condannato per pedofilia è tornato in oratorio: i genitori insorgono

ITALIA
la Repubblica

Don Luigi Mantia aveva patteggiato due anni (pena sospesa) per abusi su due bambini: ora gli è stata affidata a titolo provvisiorio la parrocchia di Casirate d’Adda. La curia: “Non andrà in montagna con i ragazzi”

Il 26 febbraio scorso aveva patteggiato due anni, con pena sospesa, per atti sessuali con minorenni, due bambini di otto e 12 anni. A meno di cinque mesi di distanza don Luigi Mantia è in servizio all’oratorio di Casirate d’Adda, paese della Bassa bergamasca dove i genitori dei ragazzi che frequentano la struttura hanno sollevato un polverone dopo aver appreso che anche il sacerdote avrebbe partecipato, da lunedì prossimo, alla vacanza dei loro figli in montagna a Zambla.

In realtà don Luigi, che abita al santuario di Caravaggio, è in servizio a Pumenengo, sempre in provincia di Bergamo, ma ‘in prestito’, visto che il parroco è andato in pensione a maggio e il successore arriverà a settembre. Alle accuse don Luigi ha sempre replicato di essere innocente e di aver voluto patteggiare solo per chiudere la vicenda prima possibile, mentre dalla curia di Cremona (Casirate, Pumenengo e Caravaggio, pur in provincia di Bergamo, appartengono a quella diocesi) spiegano che il sacerdote non andrà in vacanza a Zambla. Ma la polemica è ormai scoppiata a Casirate, dove il sacerdote ha contatti con i ragazzi dell’oratorio proprio come a Pumenengo.

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Violenza sessuale su allievo, condannato economo dei Salesiani

ITALIA
Il Giorno

Don Gabriele Corsani, molto vicino alla famiglia Berlusconi (concelebrò ad Arcore la Messa funebre di Maria Antonietta Berlusconi, sorella del Cavaliere), nel 2007 ha proposto ad un ragazzo di una scuola di ispirazione cattolica di Sesto San Giovanni di dormire insieme e poi lo avrebbe palpeggiato sui genitali

Pavia, 15 luglio 2013 – Tre anni di reclusione per violenza sessuale su un ex allievo. Questa la condanna a don Gabriele Corsani, 45 anni, economo del collegio salesiano di Pavia. Il prelato – molto vicino alla famiglia Berlusconi – avrebbe molestato un giovane, 20enne nel 2007 quando sarebbe avvenuto il fatto in una camera di albergo di Rimini, dove il gruppo si trovava per un seminario.

Secondo l’accusa, il sacerdote aveva attirato in una stanza l’ex allievo, di una scuola di ispirazione cattolica di Sesto San Giovanni, proponendogli di dormire insieme per poi palpeggiarlo sui genitali. Il ragazzo era riuscito a fuggire. Nel corso delle indagini affidate ai carabinieri sarebbe emerso un altro episodio, raccontato ma non denunciato da un diciannovenne che, nel 2005, don Gabriele avrebbe tentato di baciare sulle labbra. Per l’episodio del presunto bacio don Gabriele Corsani è stato assolto, mentre per la violenza in camera d’albergo il giudice ha stabilito, oltre alla condanna a tre anni, anche una provvisionale di 5mila euro. La parte civile, rappresentata dall’avvocato Monica Gnesi di Monza, aveva chiesto almeno 20 mila euro.

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Don Gabriele Corsani: il prete amico dei Berlusconi condannato

ITALIA
Giornalettismo

di Dario Ferri – 16/07/2013

Tre anni di galera per Don Gabriele Corsani, salesiano di Pavia che è stato riconosciuto colpevole di aver molestato sessualmente un giovane in un albergo a Rimini. La storia la racconta la Stampa:

L’inchiesta della Procura di Rimini nei riguardi del sacerdote – vicino alla famiglia Berlusconi – era partita il 5 luglio 2011, con la denuncia del ragazzo, che oramai 24enne aveva trovato il coraggio di raccontare tutto. Secondo l’accusa, il sacerdote aveva attirato in una stanza l’ex allievo di una scuola di ispirazione cattolica del milanese, proponendogli di dormire insieme per poi palpeggiarlo.

Il ragazzo era riuscito a fuggire:

Don Corsani era stato il primo sacerdote ad accorrere a casa di Rosa Bossi Berlusconi, madre di Silvio Berlusconi, alla notizia della sua morte nel febbraio 2008 aMilano.Un anno dopo il religioso aveva concelebrato ad Arcore la Messa funebre di Maria Antonietta Berlusconi, sorella dell’allora premier.

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Berlusconi family priest jailed for sex attack

ITALY
The Local

Father Gabriel Corsani, a friend of the Berlusconi family, was sentenced to three years in prison on Monday after being convicted of sexual assault.

Corsani was treasurer of the Salesian College of Pavia, in north-east Italy, for 45 years.

He was convicted of sexual assault on a 20-year-old man, a student at the college at the time of the attack, in a hotel room in 2007.

Father Corsani was the first priest to rush to the house of Rosa Bossa Berlusconi, the mother of former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi, upon news of her death in 2008.

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Anger over return of ‘sex abuse’ priest

ITALY
The Local

Protests are being planned by parents in the northern Italian town of Casirate d’Adda, in Bergamo, after it emerged that a priest who plea-bargained a suspended sentence for having sex with two boys would take part in a week-long parish holiday.

Father Luigi Mantia plea bargained the two-year sentence in 2009 after being convicted of having sex with the boys, aged 8 and 12 at the time, Bergamo news reported. Though he has always maintained his innocence, he is reported to have hurried the bargain just before the case closed.

At the time, he was pastor of a church in the town but is now “on loan” to another church within Bergamo.

He is expected to accompany his former parishioners on the mountain holiday, a move that has provoked outrage among parents in Casirate.

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Catholic Church Abuse: New York Cardinal Attempted To Protect $130 Million From Victims of Sexual Abuse

UNITED STATES
Latin Post

By Stefan Lopez (s.lopez@latinpost.com)

The Catholic church has long been scrutinized for its inability to keep sexual predators out of its midst. Now, it is coming to light that one prominent cardinal from New York did very little to protect several children from a sexually deranged priest but had little problem shielding tens of millions of dollars from

It has been alleged that Cardinal Timothy Dolan was aware of the sexual improprieties made by one of the Church’s priests. He then advised the Vatican that it would be wise to move funds from easily-accesible accounts to much more secretive ones.

“Cardinal Dolan’s moves involving church assets have come under particular scrutiny. Lawyers for the victims said the documents would prove that he transferred $130 million from the church’s books — about $55 million in a cemetery account, and $75 million in an investment account — to shield the money from abuse victims,” noted the New York Times.

The news has come out after numerous claims against the Catholic Church against one of its priests, the Reverend John O’Brien. Dolan was allegedly aware of his transgressions around 2003. New documents that have been requested in the plaintiff’s case against the Catholic Church confirm those allegations.

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The Bishops v. Birth Control: It’s Not About the Money

UNITED STATES
RH Reality Check

by Angela Bonavoglia

In announcing its final rule concerning the Affordable Care Act’s guarantee of access to birth control without a co-pay for all American women—including the Catholics and non-Catholics who work in religiously sponsored schools, hospitals, and social service agencies—the Obama administration bent over backwards to accommodate the Church’s concerns. The goal was to spare Church fathers from the anguish of getting their pristine hands dirty by, as the Bishops charged, being forced to sell, buy or broker birth control coverage for women, including students. The final rule allows that either the insurance company used by the institution will have to pay for birth control—or, if the institution is self-insured, the plan administrator will have to provide or arrange payment—with reimbursement coming through a series of convoluted steps.

In a repeat of the Church battle over the Affordable Care Act, Sister Carol Keehan, head of the Catholic Health Association, last week publicly approved the administration’s final rule, issuing an explanation for the association’s members about how to implement it. Not so the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The week before, its head, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, released his statement expressing dissatisfaction with the compromise, saying that the bishops are subjecting it to further “analysis,” feel their “religious freedom” is still under threat, and plan to continue “defending our rights in Congress and in the courts.” Count on the 60+ lawsuits by Catholic diocese and universities around the country, joined by secular employers who also don’t like birth control and want to exclude it from their insurance policies, proceeding apace.

It is maddening that the Administration had to go to such extremes to placate the Church fathers, who dare to put “moral” and “money” as it applies to this deeply compromised institution in the same sentence. How pure, really, were the hands of the Church fathers who began decades ago to secretly spend millions of dollars in hush money to silence child victims of clergy rape and sodomy, and rid themselves of the evidence of their paternal crimes? Hush money that came from the faithful in the pews, who paid for all those ever-escalating insurance premiums, and from selling the churches and schools out from under those same working-class Catholics? The victims merited all the compensation they got and more, but the Church fathers literally stole that money from the Catholics they served and lied about it.

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St. Louis Archdiocese Cancels Event to Pray for “Exoneration” of Priest Accused of Sex Abuse

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Riverfront Times

By Sam Levin Tue., Jul. 16 2013

Yesterday, we published an update on the investigation into Father Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang, a St. Louis priest accused of molesting a teenage girl on multiple occasions. Notably, in what appears to be a first, prosecutors have subpoenaed Archbishop Robert Carlson in this criminal case.

Archdiocese officials declined to comment on the pending case, but victims’ advocates have pointed us to one place where church officials made a very troubling statement about the accused priest: A meetup.com listing for an event at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis to pray for the “defense and exoneration of Fr. Joseph Jiang.”

Organizers from Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) say they are outraged by the stated purpose of the event, which is offensive and hurtful to the victim and her family. But after Daily RFT reached out to the Archdiocese about this meet-up, church officials took down the website and canceled the event.

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Sex offender priest working at nonprofit

PENNSYLVANIA
Times-Tribune

BY CHRISTOPHER HONG (STAFF WRITER)
Published: July 16, 2013

A former priest and registered sex offender hopes his past won’t hurt his employer’s bid to improve neighborhood blight in Wilkes-Barre.

Robert Timchak, 47, works as the office manager for In The Gap, a fledgling grass roots organization that wants to build affordable townhouses on vacant properties owned by the city. Larissa Cleary, a local real estate agent and the group’s founder, will speak to city council today to ask the city to sell her lots on Hickory and South River streets.

However, there will likely be public input at the meeting about the Rev. Timchak’s past. In 2009, state police received an anonymous tip alleging the Rev. Timchak, who at the time was serving as an assistant pastor for the Diocese of Scranton in Pike County, downloaded child pornography. Police searched his computer and found photographs of naked, underage boys – many around 11, authorities said – and evidence that he tried to delete them. The Rev. Timchak pleaded guilty to 17 counts of possessing child pornography in 2010 and was released from prison last June.

The Rev. Timchak, who is from Wilkes-Barre and has worked at Bishop Hoban High School, returned home after prison. Although he’s technically still a priest, he’s been on a leave of absence from the diocese and is banned from performing religious duties. He’s become an active member of the First Baptist Church of Wilkes-Barre. There, he met Ms. Cleary, who hired him last month.

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Paedophile victim speaks out as Quedgeley former priest admits further charge

UNITED KINGDOM
The Citizen

A PAEDOPHILE former priest, who lives in Gloucester, has admitted further charges of sexually molesting an underage boy in the 1980s.

Malcolm McLennan, who lives in Quedgeley, appeared at Medway Magistrates’ Court in Kent last Monday.

The 69-year-old admitted indecent assault against a minor and was released on bail until his sentencing at crown court.

His victim, now in his 30s and with a family, said he felt ‘sick’ when he discovered McLennan was living near children in the cul-de-sac.

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Priest likely headed to trial

CALIFORNIA
The Record

A Colombian priest who was arrested in Lodi in connection with a Yuba City sexual molestation case is likely headed to a jury trial.

Jose Guarin-Sosa will appear in Sutter County Superior Court on Aug. 16 for a trial readiness conference, according to the court’s calendar.

Guarin-Sosa, 43, was arrested by Yuba City police officers at St. Anne’s Parish in Lodi in March, after it was alleged he molested a 17-year-old girl at a private Mass inside a residence in Yuba City.

Guarin-Sosa, a visiting Colombian priest, faces allegations that he touched the girl in a private area against her will and that he molested a person younger than 18, according to court files. Both counts are misdemeanor charges.

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Internal conflict in Polish church leads to a popular priest resigning from his post

POLAND
Warsaw Business Journal

Father Wojciech Lemański, a Catholic priest known for his role in Polish-Jewish dialogue and for his recent public statements on a number of social issues, has effectively stopped being parish priest at Jasienica near Warsaw. He is in conflict with his superior Archbishop Henryk Hoser, who ordered him out of the parish for disobedience and failing to comply with some of the teachings of the Catholic Church.

Father Lemański did not agree with the decision and said that he would appeal against it. Initially, he refused to leave the parish, in which he was supported by a large group of parishioners. In the afternoon, he issued a statement saying that he has decided to leave.

Father Lemański’s conflict with Archbishop Hoser has been closely watched by the Polish media for the past few weeks. In a radio interview, he accused the archbishop of antisemitism, claiming Archbishop Hoser had asked him in a private conversation, whether “he was circumcised” and whether he “belonged to that nation.”

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Progressive priest agrees to vacate parish

POLAND
The News

A leading Church advocate of Polish-Jewish dialogue has belatedly agreed to leave his parish in Jasienica, central Poland, despite vocal support from the local community.

According to a ruling by Archbishop Henryk Hoser, Father Wojciech Lemanski ceased to be vicar of the parish at 9 pm on Sunday night, but he initially declined to step down, and local parishioners made a show of solidarity.

However, on Tuesday morning, Father Lemanski held a mass in Jasienica in which he thanked his parishioners for their support but encouraged them to accept that he is leaving – for the time being, at the very least.

“If you create an atmosphere around our parish that we have ‘Jasienica hooligans’ here who are are already beyond listening to another priest… you will do the greatest harm to me, and to the whole Church,” he declared, as cited by Polish Radio.

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Magdalene: Orders Refuse to Compensate

IRELAND
98 FM

The religious orders responsible for running the Magdalene Laundries have told the Government they won’t contribute to the fund set-up for survivors.

The Mercy Sisters; the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity; the Sisters of Charity – and the Good Shepherd Sisters have told the Justice Minister they will not pay into the scheme – which could cost up to 58 million euro.

It’s believed the orders will assist in the assembly of records and looking after former residents who remain in their care.

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Nuns say they will contribute nothing to Magdalene Laundry survivors’ compensation

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society (UK)

The four orders of nuns that ran the notorious Magdalene Laundries in Ireland have said they have no intention of contributing anything towards the compensation fund set up by the Irish Government.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity and the Good Shepherd Sisters told the Minister for Justice Alan Shatter that they will leave it to the taxpayer to pick up the bill and will pay nothing towards the compensation fund which could total €58 million.

They have said they will continue to look after elderly former residents who have not been able to find anywhere else to live — but that’s all.

The Government announced the scheme last month after Mr Justice Quirke had inquired into the options available to compensate the women who had been incarcerated in the laundries and used as forced labour.

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Nuns say they will not pay Magdalene compensation

IRELAND
Irish Times

Harry McGee

Tue, Jul 16, 2013

The four religious congregations that ran the Magdalene laundries have told the Government they will not make any financial contribution to the multimillion-euro fund set up to recompense former residents.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity and the Good Shepherd Sisters have informed Minister for Justice Alan Shatter in recent days that they will not pay into the fund, which could cost up to €58 million.

However, it is understood they have said they are willing to assist fully in all other aspects of the package recommended by Mr Justice John Quirke in his recent report, including the assembly of records and looking after former residents who remain in their care.

A spokeswoman for Mr Shatter said he was “disappointed” with the decision of the four orders not to make a financial contribution.

He will brief his ministerial colleagues about the situation at the weekly Cabinet meeting this morning.

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Religious orders refuse to contribute to Magdalene Laundries survivors fund

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

The religious orders responsible for running the Magdalene Laundries have told the Government they will not contribute to the fund set-up for survivors.

The Mercy Sisters, the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity, the Sisters of Charity, and the Good Shepherd Sisters have told the Minister for Justice they will not pay into the scheme, which could cost up to €58m.

It is believed the orders will assist in the assembly of records ,and looking after former residents who remain in their care.

Chief Executive of Barnardos, Fergus Finlay, said the Government should insist that the orders pay compensation.

“I don’t think it’s adequate for the government to say ‘we’re very disappointed’,” he said.

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Free Legal Service for Child Abuse Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Pro Bono Australia

A free legal advisory service has been launched to give advice and support for people seeking to engage with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Details of the independent legal service, called Knowmore, were announced by the Federal Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus.

The Government funded service will provide expert, free legal advice over the phone and in face-to-face meetings in key locations for members of the public considering speaking with the Royal Commission.

The Federal Government has provided $18 million in funding for the service over four years from 2012-2013.

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Attorney-General launches Royal Commission legal advisory service

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

The Federal Attorney-General, Mark Dreyfus, has launched a free national legal advisory service for people wanting to give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The service will be run by the National Association of Community Legal Centres and will be independent of the Royal Commission and Government.

Transcript

ELEANOR HALL: The Federal Attorney-General, Mark Dreyfus QC, has launched a free legal service for people wanting to give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Mr Dreyfus told Samantha Donovan that the service will be independent of the commission and will be run by the National Association of Community Legal Centres.

MARK DREYFUS: This is a service which is going to provide advice to anyone attending the Royal Commission, including the people that are attending the private sessions of the Royal Commission.

It won’t be providing legal representation as such, but it’ll assist people in providing legal representation if that’s required.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: What sort of issues do you think people will primarily be seeking advice on?

MARK DREYFUS: I think that people will be seeking advice on how the Commission is going to operate, what sort of things they will be called on to do, and quite possibly people will ask for assistance in getting a lawyer.

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Free legal advice for abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

ANYONE thinking about speaking to the royal commission into child sex abuse can now get free legal advice.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus on Tuesday launched Knowmore, a free national legal advice line for people interested in providing information to the commission.

Mr Dreyfus said the government will spend $18 million over four years on the service as part of a $62 million fund for legal advice related to the commission.

“A great deal of work has already gone into the setting up of this legal advisory service and it’s now up and running,” he told reporters in Sydney.

Run by the National Association of Community Legal Centres, it received 18 phone calls in its first three days last week.

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Scandal continues to rock the Vatican bank

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Jul. 15, 2013 NCR Today

The Vatican Bank continues to be in the news. You can listen to my interview about the bank on WBEZ Chicago. Click on the link under “Scandal continues to rock the Vatican bank,” or you will have to listen to 33 minutes of other interviews before you get to mine.

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Jehovah’s Witnesses hushed up child sex scandal

UNITED KINGDOM
Sunderland Echo

CHURCH officials hushed up a child sex scandal in their ranks and refused to co-operate with police.

Jehovah Witness ministerial servant Gordon Leighton admitted sexually abusing a child when he was confronted by his church elders, a court heard.

But during the official police investigation, the 53-year-old – who made headlines in the 1990s when wife Yvonne, 28, died after refusing a blood transfusion after childbirth on religious grounds – denied any illegal wrongdoing.

And when detectives asked elders Simon Preyser, Harry Logan and David Scott to make statements about the confession, all three refused and said what they had heard was confidential.

For three years, the elders refused to co-operate with the criminal investigation and kept up that stance when the case was brought before Newcastle Crown Court after the victim made a complaint to police.

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Washington church tried to keep child abuse secret

UNITED KINGDOM
The Journal

Church elders at Lambton Kingdom Hall in Washington knew that a ministerial servant had abused a young girl but fought against giving evidence in court

Gordon Leighton, a Jehovah’s Witness ministerial servant, admitted when confronted by elders at Lambton Kingdom Hall, in Washington, that he had abused a young girl.

But the churchmen refused to co-operate with the ensuing police investigation and had to be forced by a judge to give evidence against Leighton after a lengthy legal battle.

Now he is behind bars after being convicted of a series of sex offences against the youngster.

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Church ‘hushed up’ child sex scandal

UNITED KINGDOM
Shields Gazette

CHURCH officials in the North East hushed up a child sex scandal in their congregation and refused to co-operate with the police, a court heard.

Jehovah Witness ministerial servant Gordon Leighton admitted sexually abusing a child when he was confronted with allegations by elders at his church, but during a police investigation, the 53-year-old, who hit the headlines in the 1990s when his wife Yvonne, 28, died after refusing a blood transfusion on religious grounds, denied any illegal wrongdoing.

When detectives asked elders Simon Preyser, Harry Logan and David Scott to make statements about the confession, they refused and said what they had heard was confidential.

The elders refused to co-operate with the criminal investigation and kept that stance when the case was brought before Newcastle Crown Court. Each was issued with a witness summons and were ordered to testify by Judge Penny Moreland after months of legal wrangling.

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Catholic Church lobbies to avert sex abuse lawsuits

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

By Ashley Powers
July 15, 2013

At the height of the clergy sex-abuse scandal in 2002, Catholic leaders stayed silent as California lawmakers passed a landmark bill that gave hundreds of accusers extra time to file civil lawsuits. The consequences were costly.

California dioceses paid $1.2 billion in settlements and released thousands of confidential documents that showed their leaders, including Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of Los Angeles, had made plans to shield admitted molesters from law enforcement.

Now, state legislators are considering a bill that would give some alleged victims more time to sue. But this time, the church is waging a pitched battle in Sacramento to quash it.

A group affiliated with the church has hired five lobbying firms and spent tens of thousands of dollars fighting SB 131. Opponents argue that the bill unfairly opens the church, the Boy Scouts, and other private and nonprofit employers to lawsuits over decades-old allegations that are tough to fight in court. Two bishops have visited the Capitol to argue their case to the bill’s chief author.

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East Windsor priest faces sex abuse investigation

CONNECTICUT
Record-Journal

Posted: Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Associated Press

The Archdiocese of Hartford says police and state child welfare officials are investigating a child sexual abuse complaint against a Roman Catholic priest in East Windsor.

Church officials announced the investigation of Father Paul Gotta on Monday. They say Gotta has been placed on administrative leave until the matter is resolved in the legal system.

Gotta is the administrator of St. Philip and St. Catherine churches in East Windsor. He declined to comment and has not been charged with any crime.

Earlier this year, Gotta alerted authorities about an 18-year-old local man who allegedly was making bombs at his home. The man, Kyle Bass, was arrested and has pleaded not guilty to bomb and weapon charges.

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July 15, 2013

Truth Justice Healing Council supports additional funding …

AUSTRALIA
Christian Today

Truth Justice Healing Council supports additional funding for child sexual abuse support services

Mr Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Truth Justice and Healing Council, has welcomed the announcement by the Federal Government it will provide $45 million for additional support services for child sexual abuse victims and survivors who want to be part of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The funding, which will be shared by 28 support services around Australia, will help people submit evidence and attend hearings.

It will also be used for trauma-informed counselling as well as support, information and advice about what to expect from the process of engaging with the Royal Commission.

Mr Sullivan said the additional funding is an important part of the Royal Commission process which will help people who have been abused to tell their stories.

“Victims and survivors need to be supported and encouraged to speak their truth,” Mr Sullivan said.

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EXCLUSIVE: Rebel Priest From Austria Speaks To Eyewitness News

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

[with video]

By Pat Ciarrocchi

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – An Austrian priest, described by some as a rebel, is coming to Philadelphia this Friday, as part of a U.S. tour. His opinions are controversial within the official Church, he’s banned from speaking on church property.

His name is Father Helmet Schuller – a 60-year-old, parish priest who has strong words for Catholics and their leaders.

“I think the world wide church is in big trouble,” said Schuller in an exclusive Skype interview with CBS 3′s Pat Ciarrocchi.

His works are reverberating through layers of church hierarchy.

Father Schuller believes the Catholic Church needs a new model for leadership, beginning with the priesthood.

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Pedofilia, «l’ex prete ha pianificato le accuse alla Curia per vendetta»

ROME
Corriere della Sera

ROMA – Ci sarebbero diversi testimoni pronti a giurare quanto fossero pianificate a tavolino le denunce dell’ex sacerdote Patrizio Poggi, il cui scopo era screditare le alte sfere della Curia con accuse di pedofilia e prostituzione minorile. Il tutto per ottenere la restituzione dello stato clericale dopo aver scontato cinque anni per una storia di sesso con minorenni. È questo il contenuto dei verbali che lunedì mattina il procuratore aggiunto Maria Monteleone ha messo a disposizione del tribunale del riesame, che si è riservato di decidere sul ricorso dell’ex sacerdote contro l’ordinanza di custodia cautelare in carcere del 28 giugno scorso per calunnia.

CALUNNIE PIANIFICATE A TAVOLINO – La procura, dal suo punto di vista, ha insistito: Poggi (che non era in aula) deve rimanere in carcere perchè la sua attività calunniosa è stata estesa più di quanto si possa immaginare e studiata da tempo nei dettagli, alimentata da quel risentimento personale nutrito nei confronti di chi ha impedito il suo ritorno all’abito talare.

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Patrizio Poggi, “l’ex prete pianificò accuse di pedofilia in Curia per vendetta”

ROMA
Blitz

ROMA – “Una azione diffamatoria pianificata nei minimi dettagli per screditare la Curia romana”.

Quanto raccontato dall’ex sacerdote Patrizio Poggi, agli inquirenti, su un presunto giro di pedofilia in Vaticano, sarebbe secondo la procura di Roma, tutta una gigantesca menzogna diffamatoria atta ad ottenere la restituzione dell’abito talare dopo aver scontato una condanna a 5 anni per sesso con minori. Diversi testimoni sarebbero pronti a giurare che le denunce fatte dall’ex sacerdote erano in realtà “pianificate a tavolino”.

È questo il contenuto dei verbali che lunedì mattina il procuratore aggiunto Maria Monteleone ha messo a disposizione del tribunale del Riesame, che si è riservato di decidere sul ricorso di Don Poggi contro l’ordinanza di custodia cautelare in carcere del 28 giugno scorso per calunnia.

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Parallel lines: Pope responds on bank scandal and clergy sex abuse scandals

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

Jason Berry

Details of Pope Francis’ reform agenda emerged last week. He authorized new criminal laws governing Vatican officials and employees, just as a United Nations committee pressed the Holy See for details on its handling of clergy sex offenders.

The Motu proprio (“in his hand”), or decree by the pope, of sanctions for the Vatican City-State seems to have come in response to the Vatican Bank money laundering scandal. The new laws also cover child pornography and crimes involving children, with prison terms of up to 12 years.

“This is strong stuff,” Nicholas Cafardi, a canon lawyer and former dean of Duquesne University Law School told GlobalPost. “And don’t forget who is subject to these new laws – all Vatican officials, the officers and employees of the Roman Curia, apostolic nuncios (papal ambassadors), and diplomatic staff of the Holy See…This is very broad coverage.”

Across several decades, a core issue of the clergy abuse scandals has been the de facto immunity, under the Code of Canon Law, for cardinals and bishops who sheltered and recycled perpetrators. Canon law is an administrative code for the way bishops govern dioceses, and the rights of priests, nuns, lay people and parishes as church entities. Although priests can be defrocked by the Vatican for abusing youth, bishops occupy a unique standing, known as apostolic succession – as part of a lineage going back to the ancient apostles – which means that only the pope has the power to strip a bishop of his title, something popes in modern times have been loath to do.

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Former bishop prays for sexual abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

The former bishop of the Catholic Church in the NSW Hunter Valley has told an inquiry into clergy sexual abuse he prays every day for the victims of paedophile priests.

The former Maitland-Newcastle bishop, Michael Malone, will be excused from the inquiry after giving some final evidence in camera today.

He finished giving public evidence late yesterday, concluding with a statement that he read to the Commission and later the media.

“It will probably take some years to rebuild the confidence that’s been lost in the Catholic Church,” he said.

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Ex-Vatican bank officials broke anti-money laundering laws, prosecutors say

ROME
Reuters

Prosecutors suspect two former Vatican bank executives

* Allegations related to incomplete data on bank transfers
* Transfers alleged to have infringed money laundering laws
* Vatican bank has long been questioned over standards

By Lisa Jucca and Mario Sarzanini

ROME, July 15 (Reuters) – Prosecutors allege two former top executives at the Vatican bank repeatedly broke Italian laws on money laundering by failing to give sufficient information when ordering multi-million-euro bank transfers, according to judicial documents seen by Reuters.

While the prosecutors stopped short of accusing two men who were until recently the top officials at the Vatican bank of money laundering, they said confusion over the handling of IOR accounts had created the conditions where it could take place.

Key details missing on requested transfers included the identity of the owners of the funds and the reason for transfer.

The Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), as the Vatican bank is formally known, has long been in the spotlight for failing to meet international standards intended to combat tax evasion and the disguising of illegal sources of income.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Jules M. Convert, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: A native of France, Convert was ordained a Jesuit priest in 1940. After a year of studies at Alma College in CA, followed by two years in Port Townsend WA, Convert spent the better part of four decades living and working in small Alaskan villages along the Yukon River. According to Fairbanks diocesan officials in 2003, ill health prompted Convert in 1980 to return to France, where he worked in a small parish in the French Alps. He died in 1995. In 2003 accusations began to emerge that Convert sexually abused altar boys throughout his time in Alaska. Their stories were very similar. Convert’s modus operandi was reportedly to invite a boy to sleep over with him at his residence, as a special privilege. Most said he would sexually abuse them after they fell asleep. At least one said Convert molested him while they were watching a movie. The boys’ ages ranged from 6 to 15. Per the Fairbanks diocesan website in July 2013, there have been 37 reports of abuse by Convert.

Ordained: 1940
Died: July 28,1995

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Priest removed from consideration for Mount Olive post after sexual allegatio

NEW JERSEY
Mount Olive Chronicle

Posted: Monday, July 15, 2013

By PHIL GARBER, Managing Editor

MOUNT OLIVE TWP. – The Roman Catholic Diocese of Paterson did an about face on naming a Colombian priest to lead St. Jude’s Parish in Budd Lake after a Bergen County man claimed he had been involved in an abusive sexual relationship with the priest.

The diocese pulled the appointment of the Rev. Brando Ibarra and instead named the Rev. Jesus “Father Antonio” Givira, also a native of Columbia, to the St. Joseph post.

Givara was appointed after the former pastor, the popular Rev. Joseph “Father Joe” Orlandi left his post to care for his ailing mother in Italy.

And while Ibarra was not named to lead St. Jude’s Church, he remains the pastor at St. Anthony of Padua Church in Passaic.

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Local Priest Under Investigation for Sexual Abuse of a Minor

CONNECTICUT
Patch

Posted by Elyssa M. Millspaugh (Editor), July 15, 2013

An East Windsor priest is being investigated by the State Department of Children and Families for allegations of sexual abuse of a minor, the Archdiocese of Hartford announced.

Father Paul Gotta, administrator of St. Philip in East Windsor and St. Catherine in Broad Brook, has been placed on administrative pending the outcome of a police investigation.

Authorities are looking into the sexual abuse complaint and “other matters,” a statement on the Archdiocese Web site read.

“The Archdiocese of Hartford was surprised and disturbed to learn that such an allegation has been made,” read a statement. “The Archdiocese of Hartford condemns the type of misconduct that has been alleged and extends its sincere sympathies to those adversely affected by it.”

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Priest Who Reported 18-Year-Old To Police Placed On Leave

CONNECTICUT
The Hartford Courant

By CHRISTINE DEMPSEY, cdempsey@courant.com
4:19 p.m. EDT, July 15, 2013

HARTFORD — A priest who led police to an 18-year-old who then was arrested on bomb-making charges has been placed on leave by the Catholic Church after being accused of sexually abusing a minor, the Hartford Diocese said Monday.

Maria Zone, spokeswoman for the diocese, said the state Department of Children and Families has received a complaint of sexual abuse of a minor involving the Rev. Paul Gotta, administrator of St. Philip and St. Catherine churches, both in East Windsor.

Police also are investigating the allegation, she said in a written statement.

“The Archdiocese of Hartford has a protocol in place when such an allegation is made,” Zone said in the statement. “That protocol has been followed and Father Gotta has been placed on administrative leave until the matter is resolved through the legal system.”

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Suspenden interrogatorio a Fernando Karadima

CHILE
24 Horas

El ministro Juan Muñoz Pardo suspendió los interrogatorios a Fernando Karadima y otros dos sacerdotes por la demanda contra el Arzobispado de Santiago que presentaron tres víctimas del ex párroco de El Bosque.

El juez acogió la presentación que hizo el abogado defensor de Karadima, Cristián Muga, respecto a que se estableciera la calidad en que comparecerá su cliente y que se tomara en cuenta su presunto mal estado de salud.

En la resolución, el magistrado además detalla que no se logró realizar el trámite de aviso a las partes “no habiéndose notificado personalmente la resolución de fojas 77, con la de debida anterioridad legal y habiendo perdido ya su oportunidad, se suspenden, por ahora, las audiencias fijadas por dicha resolución mientras no se resuelva la incidencia planteada al respecto”.

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Sacred Monsters

CALIFORNIA
Mission & State

[with videos]

Interactive Timeline: A history of horrors

The Paper Trail: A directory to the Santa Barbara clergy sex abuse scandal.

Confronting the culture of sex abuse in the shadow of the Old Mission.

By Sam Slovick
July 12, 2013

Singing birds and shouting children announce another cacophonous end to a Garden Street Academy school day. A security guard patrols the lush property just behind the Old Mission Santa Barbara as girls and boys in bright colors greet the afternoon following a long day of sitting in hard seats. Though you won’t find any mention of it on the Academy’s website, prior to its current incarnation as a “progressive” K-12 private school, the facility was known for almost 100 years as St. Anthony’s Seminary, a vocational high school for boys studying to be priests. The Franciscan Friars Province of Saint Barbara, adherents of the ascetic spirituality of St. Francis of Assisi, ran the seminary. The friars lived across the narrow road at the Old Mission Santa Barbara.

The Franciscans originally started St. Anthony’s in 1896 in the Mission’s carpenter shop as a boys’ school called St. Anthony’s Seraphic College. It was intended to be a four-year high school with an optional year for students considering the priesthood to prepare for novitiate. The friars expanded the school in 1898 onto a 12-acre plot just a few hundred feet behind the Mission.

St. Anthony’s Seminary held its first classes at the Garden Street property in 1901, with the mission of grooming young men for the clergy, which it did for decades before closing ignominiously in 1987. By then, it had sealed its fate as one of the charter institutions in the Catholic clergy’s emerging sex abuse crisis.

With the children now gone for the day, the birds settle back into the tall trees around the Garden Street Academy, and the afternoon turns calm. Across the street, Paul Fericano can be found in a shady patch in the back of the Mission. He is contemplating a large boulder with a bronze plaque on its face and the larger context within which it exists. The boulder, a symbol of St. Anthony’s grim legacy, carries talismanic freight for Fericano.

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CT- Priest suspended after sex abuse of a minor allegation

CONNECTICUT
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

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

An East Windsor priest, Rev. Paul Gotta, has been placed on administrative leave while investigations take place over a complaint about the sexual abuse of a minor.

We hope that all parties involved will act responsibly and transparently throughout the investigation of these very serious allegations and encourage anyone with more information to come forward in order to insure that this predator is kept safely away from other minors.

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Groups urge Pope to open abuse files

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY DAVID CLOHESSY ON JULY 15, 2013

Groups urge Pope to open abuse files
UN panel pushes Vatican for information
SNAP & CCR call request “unprecedented”
Victims and advocates are encouraged by the move
Two organizations charge that Catholic officials violate treaty

What
At a sidewalk news conference, surrounded by signs and childhood photos, victims and advocates will

–applaud a United Nations committee for demanding detailed information from the Vatican about clergy sex crimes and cover ups across the globe,

–prod Pope Francis to provide all of the information promptly,

–urge other secular authorities to launch similar efforts to hold Catholic officials responsible for the church’s ongoing refusal to stop sexual violence by clergy, and

–beg anyone who has seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes or cover ups to report to independent sources (police, prosecutors, NGOs).

They will also explain why they believe international bodies should do more to investigate the crisis of sexual violence within the Catholic church and will discuss other recent efforts to do so.

When
Tuesday, July 16 at 1:00 p.m.

Where
Outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral, 460 Madison Ave, New York

Who
Leaders of two non-profit groups – the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP)

Why
Last week, in an unprecedented move, the Geneva-based United Nations’ Committee on the Rights of the Child released a detailed, four page list of information it wants Vatican officials to disclose about clergy sex crimes and cover ups and how Catholic officials are dealing with them. The panel set a November 1 deadline. In January, in a session that will be telecast live, Vatican staffers are expected to meet in person with the Committee to answer further questions.

The panel is charged with overseeing the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child, a treaty signed by almost every nation on earth. The Convention is a “legally binding international instrument” that “incorporate[s] the full range of human rights—civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights” for children (http://www.unicef.org/crc/).

Despite ratifying the Convention in 1990, the Vatican has largely ignored its reporting requirements and is violating its principle tenets, CCR and SNAP charge.

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Poland: Priest-bishop clash captures nation’s attention

POLAND
Vatican Insider

Mgr. Hoser has accused Fr. Lemański of being too philo-Semitic

MAREK LEHNERT
ROME

Not even Poland seems to be a “normal” country. The story you about about to read should be described as the tale of a relatively young priest who is full of enthusiasm for the faith and sometimes deaf to the words of his elderly, conservative and old-fashioned bishop. Instead, the story starring Fr. Wojciech Lemański, the 52 year old parish priest of Jasienica near Poland’s capital Warsaw and Henryk Hoser, the 70 year old Ordinary of the Archdiocese of Warszawa-Praga (located in the East part of Warsaw), has the whole of Poland on tenterhooks, when it should be focused on preparing for John Paul II’s imminent canonization.

The friction between Fr. Lemański and his bishop has nothing to do with age but with certain key issues. Artificial insemination (in vitro fertilisation is the preferred term in Poland) tops the list of these issues. One day the parish priest of Jasienica went around publicly apologising to all those who were born thanks to this method and expressed his regret when one of these people – a young woman – left the Catholic Church because she felt rejected. Polish bishops condemned his action outright.

The rebel priest’s bishop who is one of the main opponents of in vitro fertilisation gave him a major telling-off for defending his position on television. Fr. Lemański also complained about the hard line taken against paedophile priests and in church preached against the closed-mindedness of parish members, particularly with regard to the fear of foreigners and anti-Semitism.

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Priest sacking stirs controversy in Catholic Poland

POLAND
GlobalPost

A parish priest’s dismissal for criticising church doctrine on test tube babies, abortion, euthanasia and contraception has sparked debate in devoutly Catholic Poland.

Father Wojciech Lemanski, 53, was sacked by his superiors for speaking out against the dogma on his blog. The July 5 decree gave him until Thursday to quit his parish in the eastern village of Jasienica.

Henryk Hoser, archbishop of Warsaw-Praga, faulted Lemanski for “a lack of respect and disobedience”. Hoser is also the president of the Polish episcopate’s bioethics committee.

Backed by parishioners, Lemanski had refused to budge after his dismissal took effect late Sunday.

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Statement Regarding Fr. Paul Gotta

CONNECTICUT
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Hartford

The State Department of Children and Families has received a complaint of sexual abuse of a minor involving Father Paul Gotta, administrator of St. Philip in East Windsor, and St. Catherine in Broad Brook, and law enforcement authorities are currently investigating that allegation and other matters as well. The Archdiocese of Hartford was surprised and disturbed to learn that such an allegation has been made.

The Archdiocese of Hartford has a protocol in place when such an allegation is made. That protocol has been followed and Father Gotta has been placed on administrative leave until the matter is resolved through the legal system.

The Archdiocese of Hartford condemns the type of misconduct that has been alleged and extends its sincere sympathies to those adversely affected by it. If anyone has information relevant to this matter, please contact the East Windsor Police Department. The Archdiocese will continue to cooperate with the police in its ongoing investigation.

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