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.

April 25, 2012

„Nicht die ganze Wahrheit“

DEUTSCHLAND
taz

Pater Mertes bekommt von SPD-Chef Gabriel den Heinemann-Preis für besonderen Bürgermut. Ein anonymer ehemaliger Canisius-Schüler über den Mut der anderen.

Blick aus dem Canisius-Kolleg in den Innenhof. Bild: dapd

taz: Pater Klaus Mertes bekommt am Donnerstag einen Preis als Aufklärer der sexuellen Gewalt gegen Schüler am Canisius-Kolleg. Wieso bekommt er ihn zu Recht?

Anonymus: Weil er es war, der als Vertreter der Institution die Zugbrücke herunterließ. Zu uns, die wir von draußen jahrelang versucht hatten, auf die sexuelle Gewalt aufmerksam zu machen. Pater Mertes sagte den wichtigsten Satz, den es für einen Betroffenen überhaupt geben kann: „Ich glaube euch!“

Dennoch sagen Sie, Pater Mertes musste zu diesem Satz bekehrt werden. Warum?

Weil Mertes und der Orden schon seit Jahren von den Missbrauchsfällen wussten. Er hat wiederholt erklärt, dass er bereits 2006 gemeinsam mit der Ordensleitung in München über den Umgang mit Missbrauchsfällen durch den Täter S. beraten hat. „Die Täternamen habe ich dem Pater Provinzial [Chef der Jesuiten in Deutschland, d. Red.] mitgeteilt“, sagte er in einem Interview. „Ich war bei den Beratungen dabei.“

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.

NOTE FROM THE SECRETARIAT OF STATE

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 25 April 2012 (VIS) – Given below is the text of a note released this morning by the Secretariat of State:

“In the wake of recent leaks of reserved and confidential documents on television, in newspapers and in other communications media, the Holy Father has ordered the creation of a Commission of Cardinals to undertake an authoritative investigation and throw light on these episodes.

“His Holiness has determined that the said Commission of Cardinals, which will act at all levels on the strength of its pontifical mandate, shall be presided by Cardinal Julian Herranz, and shall have as its members Cardinal Jozef Tomko and Cardinal Salvatore De Giorgi.

“The Commission of Cardinals celebrated its first sitting on 24 April to establish the method and timetable for its activities”.

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.

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin says it is ‘difficult’ for bishops to pass on information

IRELAND
RTE News

[Murphy Report: Fr. Benito – BishopAccountability.org]

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said that it is even more difficult now for bishops to pass on sensitive information about sexual abuse allegations about priests than before.

Archbishop Martin was speaking about the resignation of a child safety officer in a Dublin Catholic Parish who resigned after she learned of allegations of child sexual abuse made against a priest who had served there.

The priest had put on restricted Ministry for years as a result of the allegations.

However Archbishop Martin said that he removed him from Ministry when new information about an old allegation came to light.

Archbishop Martin said he understood and sympathised with the woman, who he said, must have felt betrayed.

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.

Tom White, Voice Of The Martyrs Director, May Have Committed Suicide Amid Abuse Probe

OKLAHOMA
Huffington Post

By JUSTIN JUOZAPAVICIUS 04/23/12

TULSA, Okla. — Oklahoma authorities are investigating whether the executive director of an international Christian ministry killed himself amid allegations he’d molested a 10-year-old girl, police said Monday.

Tom White had been reported missing last Tuesday, the same day police in Bartlesville received a report about the alleged molestation, said Bartlesville Police Capt. Jay Hastings. White was the executive director for The Voice of the Martyrs, a nonprofit headquartered in in the city 50 miles north of Tulsa that says it provides medical supplies, food and clothing to persecuted Christians worldwide.

Police found the 64-year-old’s body at the organization’s Bartlesville headquarters Wednesday. Employees discovered a letter in White’s vehicle indicating he was “suicidal or possibly fleeing to avoid investigation” and turned it over to police, Hastings said.

“You can take it either way,” Hastings said. “It was kind of a goodbye letter. You don’t know if he was talking about himself.”

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.

VOM director’s death, allegations a sad shock

OKLAHOMA
Peoria Journal-Star

By Mike Miller

The death of Tom White, executive director of Voice of the Martyrs, on April 17 was a profound shock.

White, who experienced persecution himself while imprisoned for 17 months in Cuban jails, took his own life.

VOM reports that he was facing allegations of “inappropriate contact with a young girl.”

“Rather than face those allegations, and all of the resulting fallout for his family and this ministry and himself, Tom appears to have chosen to take his own life,” the statement says.

The Associated Press had more information, according to The Christian Post:

The AP also revealed that the police had requested from the Washington County District Court an order to have White’s cell phone carrier provide “real time GPS pinging” of his phone in hopes of discovering his whereabouts. Authorities had noted in the document that White “had been reported to have molested a 10-year-old juvenile female” and disappeared as the investigation got underway.

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.

Death of Voice of the Martyrs director may be suicide

OKLAHOMA
Christian Today

Posted: Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Walter Thomas “Tom” White, head of Voice of the Martyrs, may have taken his own life amid abuse allegations.

Mr White, 64, was reported missing last Tuesday and found dead at the Christian ministry’s headquarters in Oklahoma the following day.

On the day he disappeared, police in Bartlesville received a report that Mr White had molested a 10-year-old girl.

Employees found a letter in his vehcile indicating that he was “suicidal or possibly fleeing to avoid investigation”, which was given to police.

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.

Slipper shattered by allegations

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

[with video]

A church leader says controversial MP Peter Slipper is shattered by the allegations of fraud and sexual harassment against him, which have been followed by calls for him to step down from his religious roles.

Archbishop John Hepworth said on Wednesday he had asked Mr Slipper to stand aside as an ordained priest and legal officer for the Traditional Anglican Communion.

Archbishop Hepworth, the primate of the pro-Rome breakaway conservative Anglican movement, said the allegations had hurt the Queensland independent MP.

‘Well, he’s obviously quite shattered by this,’ he told ABC Radio.

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.

Philly church official facing triple accuser

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WTRF

By MARYCLAIRE DALE
Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA (AP) – A key witness is set to testify Wednesday in a groundbreaking clergy-abuse case in Philadelphia.

The former altar boy says he was raped by two priests and a teacher in the late 1990s.

And he says the Archdiocese of Philadelphia had an earlier complaint against 1 of them.

Defense lawyers have attacked the man’s credibility based on his history of drug and legal problems.

But one defendant, defrocked priest Edward Avery, pleaded guilty days before trial.

Jurors don’t know about the plea, but could learn of it if defense lawyers go too far in challenging the witness.

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.

‘Shattered’ Peter Slipper asked to stand aside as priest

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

A CHURCH leader says controversial MP Peter Slipper is shattered by the allegations of fraud and sexual harassment against him, which have been followed by calls for him to step down from his religious roles.

Archbishop John Hepworth said he has asked Mr Slipper to stand aside as an ordained priest and legal officer for the Traditional Anglican Communion.

Archbishop Hepworth, the primate of the pro-Rome breakaway conservative Anglican movement, said the allegations had hurt the Queensland independent MP.

“Well, he’s obviously quite shattered by this,” he told ABC Radio.

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.

From trauma to transformation – St Joseph’s Home looks to a brighter future

MALTA
DI-VE

by Gabriel Schembri – editorial@di-ve.com
Current Affairs — 25 April 2012

St Joseph’s Home is looking towards a brighter future after nine years of infamy as the place where the notorious child abuse cases by priests took place.

In an interview, the home’s director Fr Frankie Cini told di-ve.com, “The cases are now a part of the home’s history. It is a dark chapter in the story of St Joseph’s Home, but we have to move on.”

Fr Cini said this is a case where they either come out as the victims, or survivors. The approach towards the future of the home is definitely one of survival, just as the title of this year’s Annual Booklet suggests, the House is moving from ‘Trauma to Transformation’.

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 takes temporary leave of absence as porn row rumbles on

NORTHERN IRELAND
Tyrone Times

Published on Wednesday 25 April 2012

A PRIEST at the centre of a media storm surrounding the showing of sexually explicit to parents who had gathered in Pomeroy to hear a presentation about their children’s First Holy Communion, has taken a temporary leave of absence at his own request.

Following a stormy meeting on Friday night between around 25 of the 30 parents who had witnessed the offending imagery and representatives of the Archdiocese of Armagh, Fr Martin McVeigh’s future remains uncertain.

According to weekend newspaper reports, an 800 word Church statement clearing Fr McVeigh of any wrongdoing was read out, but was not released publicly after the lengthy meeting with parents.

When the statement suggested Fr McVeigh had given great service to the Archdiocese of Armagh, there were said to be loud objections from the floor.

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.

Journalists Tout Dissident Nuns and Rehash Decades-Old Scandals To Bash Catholic Church Again

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

Dave Pierre

Since when have journalists been so concerned about internal doctrinal matters in the Catholic Church? Why are journalists suddenly fretting about the status of nuns in America?

It has been no secret that many Catholic women religious (nuns) in recent years have been in open dissent of a number of gender-related components of Church teaching, such those regarding the all-male priesthood, celibacy requirements, and, in some cases, abortion.

Because of this open dissent, the Vatican has finally taken efforts to review and monitor the leadership of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). These efforts simply seek to align the conference – a Church-recognized body – with the teachings of the Church and with Church law.

Now it seems that the Vatican’s actions have journalists worked up all over the country.

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.

Brooklyn DA Won’t Release Names Of Orthodox Jewish Sex Offenders

NEW YORK
Gothamist

Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes has consistently refused to divulge the identities of Orthodox Jews accused and convicted of sex crimes, giving a blanket exemption to sex offenders who commit their crimes in tight-knit Orthodox communities. Now his office has been compelled to formally explain why it won’t name the accused and convicted. In response to a Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) request by The Forward, Assistant District Attorney Morgan Dennehy argues that releasing the names of suspects would allow others in the community to identify their victims. She writes:

The circumstances here are unique. Because all of the requested defendant names relate to Hasidic men who are alleged to have committed sex crimes against Hasidic victims within a very tight-knit and insular Brooklyn community, there is a significant danger that the disclosure of the defendants’ names would lead members of that community to discern the identities of the victims.

But the Forward points out that last year Hynes announced the arrests of 85 Orthodox Jews on sex crimes charges since 2008, refusing to release the suspects’ names, citing the need to protect the victims. “Yet that same week, Hynes issued a press release publicizing the name of a non-Jewish man convicted of raping his girlfriend’s daughter,” The Forward’s Paul Berger notes. “Hynes released the man’s name, the neighborhood where he lived and the victim’s age, enough information for any neighbor to identify the girl.”

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.

Paprocki on panel to review nuns’ leadership group

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
The State Journal-Register

By STEVEN SPEARIE
The State Journal-Register

Springfield Bishop Thomas John Paprocki is one of three U.S. Catholic bishops tapped to address what the Vatican says are “serious doctrinal problems” in views espoused by the leadership body representing the majority of the country’s nuns.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious, founded in 1956, represents 83 percent of the nearly 56,000 women religious in the United States.

Its leader, in a speech in 2007, talked of some religious “moving beyond the church or even beyond Jesus” — a statement Paprocki described as “pretty radical.”

The delegation of bishops, appointed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith after a four-year review, will be led by Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain, who served as bishop of the Joliet diocese from 2006 to 2010. Paprocki, who has been bishop of Springfield since 2010, was tapped for his acumen in church law. The third member is Bishop Leonard Blair of Toledo, Ohio, who carried out the original inquiry.

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

Sarasota ministry worker convicted of child sex charges, police say

SARASOTA (FL)
TBO

By TBO.com
Published: April 24, 2012

A Sarasota man who said he worked for a ministry has been convicted in a child sex case, the Sarasota Police Department said.

Joe Harrison Jr., 42, was found guilty Monday of three counts of sexual battery on a child and one count of lewd or lascivious molestation of a child.

Harrison is scheduled to be sentenced April 30.

Harrison said he was a bishop for Liberty Central Ministries International. At the time of his arrest, he listed his home address in the 1000 block of Four Seasons Circle in Sarasota.

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.

Sarasota Bishop found guilty of Sexual Battery on a Child

SARASOTA (FL)
ABC 7

SARASOTA – A Sarasota man was found guilty Monday of several counts of sexual abuse of a child.

42-year-old Joe Harrison, Jr. was arrested last year and charged with three counts of Sexual Battery on a Child over 12 years of age but less than 18 years of age by a Person in Familial or Custodial Authority and one count of Lewd or Lascivious Molestation of a Child over 12 years of age but less than 16 years of age.

The cases were prosecuted by Assistant State Attorney Stickley and Assistant State Attorney Buff. Joe Harrison Jr. is scheduled to be sentenced on April 30th.

Joe Harrison Jr. identifies himself as a Bishop of Liberty Central Ministries International.

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Vatican Diary / New senators in the curia. A ranking

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

After the latest appointments, here are the cardinals with the largest number of positions in the central offices of the Church. Among the curia, Bertone, Ouellet, and Levada. Among the residential cardinals, Scola and George

VATICAN CITY, April 25, 2012 – On Saturday April 21, a little more than two months after the last concistory, the new cardinals were finally assigned their positions as members of the various dicasteries of the Roman curia, the most important of which are the nine congregations.

This procedure indicates the real and specific influence of each cardinal in assisting Benedict XVI in the governance of the universal Church.

The decision to number a cardinal among the members of a dicastery belongs to the pope, but an important role in this kind of decision is played by the secretariat of state, headed by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, while more secondary and not infrequently nonexistent is the influence of the prefect of the congregation that is receiving the new appointee.

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.

Lawsuit: Mt. Greenwood parish altar boy claims abuse in 1980s

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Andy Grimm
Tribune reporter

9:31 p.m. CDT, April 24, 2012

A man who served as an altar boy at a Mount Greenwood Roman Catholic parish claims in a lawsuit filed today that he was molested by a priest in the 1980s.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of a plaintiff listed as “John Doe,” claims that Fr. John Curran, a priest who served at St. Christina’s Church, 11005 S. Homan Ave., lured young boys to his room in the church rectory and molested them, and that church leaders were aware of the abuse and did nothing to remove Curran from his post or keep him away from children.

An Archdiocese of Chicago registry lists Curran among priests against whom there are “substantiated claims” of abuse. The registry also shows Curran died in March 2000.

In 2005, the archdiocese settled lawsuits filed by 24 parishioners who claimed they were abused as children by 14 priests, including Curran.

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.

Closed NY Catholic church rectory being auctioned

JAMESVILLE (NY)
WCAX

JAMESVILLE, N.Y. (AP) – The rectory of a shuttered Catholic church in the Syracuse diocese is being auctioned off.

Bishop Robert J. Cunningham says the building is being sold because St. Mary’s Church in Jamesville is no longer a parish and has no need for it. Cunningham says the church building will not be sold.

Meanwhile, parishioners of St. Mary’s are asking Cunningham to expedite repairs to the church so it can re-open. In a letter sent Tuesday to the bishop, they say they’re concerned about the possible demolition of the church.

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

How to properly spank a nun

UNITED STATES
San Francisco Chronicle

By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Funny how no one ever talks about the nuns.

I suppose it makes sense. After all, Catholic nuns are so rarely embroiled in sex scandals. They are never caught pants down in the rectory with a 10-year-old altar boy, teaching him of the “mystical secretions” of the Lord. They never cost the church billions in litigious payouts for rape, abuse, millennia of pedophilic atrocity and shame. For that, you gotta look to the priests.

The nuns, they keep to themselves. They work quietly, faithfully in the background, the humble and resolute handmaidens to the patriarchy, performing their work without media glare, without need to draw obnoxious battle lines around every sexual or moral issue under the sun. Or so it would seem.

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.

Cardinal Bevilacqua Appointed A Known Pedophile As Assistant Pastor

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog

Ralph Cipriano

The therapist, Dr. Thomas J. Tyrrell, warned in the secret archive files in 1989 that his patient, Father Peter J. Dunne, was “a very sick man” who should be “relieved from active ministry.”

Father Dunne was, according to the archdiocese’s secret files, an extremely intelligent homosexual with addictive sexual behavior. He was also an untreatable pedophile, and a narcissist with an obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. “We are sitting on a powder keg,” Dr. Tyrrell warned in 1989.

Archdiocese officials had known since 1986 that Father Dunne had sexually abused a 13-year-old member of his Boy Scout troop. The archdiocese knew that the abuse went on for three years, and that the priest had paid the victim $40,000 to keep quiet. They also knew there had to be other victims. In the archdiocese’s secret files, Dr. Terrell stated that he suspected the priest was guilty of being involved in a “myriad number of sexual misconduct cases.”

In 1989, a second therapist, Dr. Eric Griffen-Shelley, reported to the archdiocese that Father Dunne was skipping out on his mandatory group therapy sessions. The therapist said he was “wondering if the archdiocese is putting itself at risk with someone so uncooperative on the loose.”

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

Judge orders SNAP to turn over abuse records

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Catholic News Agency

Kansas City, Mo., Apr 25, 2012 / 12:07 am (CNA).- A Missouri judge has ordered a group that works with victims of sexual abuse by clergy to turn over decades of records to an accused Catholic priest’s lawyers who want to determine whether the group has been coaching alleged victims and plaintiffs to say they repressed memories of abuse.

Attorneys representing priests in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph sought the records from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP.

Although the group strongly denied that it coaches victims, Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Ann Mesle said she will order the material to be turned over to the priest’s lawyers and the diocese’s lawyers.

“I believe they are entitled to have information on repressed memory,” she said April 20.

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.

April 24, 2012

Slipper told to step aside from church job

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Anglican Archbishop John Hepworth says he has advised Peter Slipper he should stand aside as the church’s senior legal officer.

Archbishop Hepworth, the primate of the Traditional Anglican Communion, a breakaway conservative Anglican movement, said Mr Slipper remained an ordained priest as well the church’s chancellor, the senior legal adviser.

“I have said to Peter that I think it is not appropriate to stand aside from the speakership and not stand aside from an importance office in a church position,” he told ABC Radio.

“We are having an exchange of texts. I am meeting him later in the week in Brisbane and his wife. They both actually have flu at the moment.”

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.

Update: Victim Of Guilty Former Priest Set To Testify

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
My Fox Philly

Kristen Byrne, Blogger
MyFoxPhilly.com

Blogger Kristen Byrne is in the courtroom at the Philadelphia Archdiocese priest-abuse trial.

The defense in a landmark priest-sex-abuse case involving the Philadelphia Archdiocese will have to tread softly as they question a former priest’s victim tomorrow. Defrocked priest Edward Avery, whom pleaded guilty, is no longer on trial with Monsignor William Lynn and Rev. James Brennan.

Though Avery does not stand on trial he has become a prominent player this past week.

Defense attorneys and prosecutors argued over whether the jury should be informed of Avery’s guilty plea in lieu of his victim’s testimony. The defense argued that Avery’s plea could incriminate Lynn, who is charged with conspiracy and endangering the welfare of a child.

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.

Suit: Ex-altar boy claims priest molested him in ‘80s

CHICAGO (IL)
Southtown Star

A man filed a lawsuit Tuesday claiming a now-deceased priest molested him more than 20 years ago while he was a parishioner at St. Christina Parish in Chicago’s Mount Greenwood community.

The plaintiff, listed only as John W. Doe, filed the suit in Cook County Circuit Court against the Archdiocese of Chicago.

In it, he claims the Rev. John Curran sexually abused him in 1987 while he was a child and a parishioner of St. Christina, 11005 S. Homan Ave.

The suit claims the plaintiff, who was then an altar server at the parish, came from a devout Catholic family and trusted Curran, even though the Archdiocese previously had received reports that he was sexually abusing minors.

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

Child advocate quits parish after discovery of ‘restricted’ priest

IRELAND
The Irish Times

[Murphy Report: Fr. Benito – BishopAccountability.org]

PATSY McGARRY, Religious Affairs Correspondent

A WOMAN who was the child safeguarding representative in a Dublin Catholic parish for over a decade has resigned following her discovery last month that a priest serving there until recently had been on “restricted ministry” for years. It followed allegations of child sex abuse against him.

She had also not been informed that the same priest was the subject of a chapter in the 2009 Murphy report on clerical sexual abuse.

The parish pastoral council was not given any of this information about the priest either. It remains unclear just how much information the current parish priest there had been told about the priest, who was given the pseudonym Fr Benito in the Murphy report.

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.

Records: Archdiocese ignored warnings about ‘powder keg’ pedophile

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

An Archdiocese of Philadelphia priest active in schools and scouting was allowed to work in suburban parishes for five years after doctors diagnosed him as a pedophile, called him “a very sick man,” and told church officials he was a “powder keg” waiting to explode.

The priest, the Rev. Peter F. Dunne, paid off one accuser himself and repeatedly resisted or ignored recommendations for therapy, according to internal church records shown Tuesday to a Common Pleas Court jury.

When the pastor overseeing Dunne at a Bucks County parish in 1990 petitioned archdiocesan officials in a “very urgent plea” to get the priest some help, they responded by transferring Dunne to a parish 25 miles away in Montgomery County, the records show. Prosecutors introduced the documents as part of their bid to show that Msgr. William J. Lynn, the former secretary of clergy, enabled child sex abuse by failing to remove priests suspected of sexual misconduct. Lynn is accused of endangering two boys who were allegedly sexually assaulted by priests in the late1990s.

Prosecutors say the files on Dunne and other priests suggest Lynn and other church leaders had long recognized the signs and depth of clergy sex abuse but chose not to act.

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.

Will Father Avery Return to Court In a Jump Suit, Part 2

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog

Ralph Cipriano

The issue of whether former priest Edward V. Avery would return to Courtroom 304 in a jump suit was argued again in court Tuesday, and the judge decided to keep all options open.

Avery is the defrocked archdiocese priest who pleaded guilty on the eve of the archdiocese of Philadelphia sex abuse trial to charges of conspiracy to endanger children, and the rape of a 10-year-old boy. The jury in the case was never told why Avery suddenly disappeared from the defense table.

On Wednesday, the former altar boy that Avery raped is scheduled to appear in court as a witness. He’s going to tell his story of abuse, and then the defense lawyers in the case will have to decide how hard to go after the witness in cross-examination.

As it stands now, the former altar boy poses all the risks of a suicide bomber. If the defense decides to aggressively challenge the witness’s credibility, Judge M. Teresa Sarmina may grant the prosecution permission to tell the jury about Avery’s guilty plea.

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.

Parents outline decades of alleged abuse by priest

ALBANY (NY)
Albany Times Union

By Bryan Fitzgerald

Updated 06:41 p.m., Tuesday, April 24, 2012

ALBANY — The parents and a younger sister of two victims of alleged sexual abuse by a Greene County priest railed against the church Tuesday afternoon. Standing on a sidewalk a few hundred feet from the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese offices on North Main Avenue the family detailed the painful fallout from what they say was decades of abuse.

With their arms around each other’s shoulders, Ivan Morales Sr. and his wife, Carol Morales, spoke about their sons, Ivan Jr. and Martin, and how they say Rev. Jeremiah Nunan slowly lured each of them into a web of abuse that lasted for years.

The Morales’ 20-year-old daughter, Maria, says she was not abused by Nunan, but that when she was at church with her brother Martin, the priest would tell her to wait outside and be “a good little girl” while he took Martin into a nearby room.

“I never put two and two together,” the College of Saint Rose junior said.

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Local priest under investigation for sexual abuse

ALBANY (NY)
Fox 23

The Albany Roman Catholic Diocese is investigating a priest following allegations of abuse.

A press conference was held Tuesday in front of the Albany Diocesan Headquarters by the group Road to Recovery.

A lawsuit claims Father Jeremiah Nunan, Pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Cairo and Our Lady of Knock Mission in East Durham, abused two people.

The alleged victims’ family says their two sons were abused over the course of many years.

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Catholics4Change Supporting Victims at Trial Tomorrow

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change

April 25, 2012 by Susan Matthews

Kathy Kane and I will be at the Philadelphia priest sex abuse trial tomorrow at 9:15 a.m. to support victims who are testifying. They bravely revisit the past and put their personal and professional lives at risk for the truth. As parents seeking protection for our children, we thank them. As citizens seeking justice, we thank them. As Catholics seeking the truth, we thank them.

Criminal Justice Building, 13th and Filbert, Rm. 304 at 9:15.

Remember: No electronic devices. No cell phones.

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Slipper a complex man of faith, says Anglican head

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Alison Caldwell, ABC

Updated April 25, 2012

The head of the Australian Anglican Church says Speaker Peter Slipper is a “complex” man who has taken a “strong” stand on “conservative moral issues” but has another side to his character.

Mr Slipper, who is facing allegations he rorted Cabcharge vouchers and sexually harassed a male staffer, is an ordained priest in the Traditional Anglican Communion.

Earlier this week, Anglican Archbishop John Hepworth asked Mr Slipper to stand aside from his role as a priest and legal adviser to the synod until the harassment allegations are resolved.

So far Mr Slipper has failed to do so.

This morning, Archbishop Hepworth told AM Mr Slipper was “in the tradition of the Australian larrikin MP … that is, people who are interesting, have bad patches and very good patches”.

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Documents: Accused Pa. priest kept in parishes

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Beaver County Times

Posted: Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Associated Press

Two Roman Catholic archbishops moved a troubled priest to new parishes despite dire warnings he was having sex with minors, according to church documents read in a Philadelphia court Tuesday.

Cardinal John Krol of Philadelphia assigned the late Rev. Peter Dunne to a suburban Warminster parish in 1987, a year after a therapist warned about any access to children.

And Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua sent Dunne to a northeast Philadelphia parish in 1989 _ after a church therapist had diagnosed him as a pedophile and ticking time bomb.

Defense lawyers for Monsignor William Lynn noted that at least three other top aides at the archdiocese knew of the diagnosis. Yet Dunne refused requests to seek laicization, and remained an active priest until his 1994 retirement _ and a priest until the day he died, in 2010.

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Datalek bij Oostenrijkse Klasnic-commissie

OOSTERIJK
Klokk

Wenen, 24 april 2012 • Roel Verschueren

Uit een bericht in Der Standard-online blijkt dat de door de Oostenrijkse bisschoppen opgerichte “Klasnic”-commissie intieme gegevens over misbruik heeft doorgegeven aan de bisschoppenconferentie. De sinds haar oprichting betwiste “onafhankelijkheid” van deze commissie staat nu totaal op de helling.

Herbert L. richtte zich vorig jaar met een vraag over welke data over hem werden bewaard tot de Klasnic-commissie en de Stichting Slachtofferbescherming. Herbert L. is een erkend slachtoffer van seksueel misbruik en kreeg door de kerk 10.000 euro uitbetaald. Wat dit Weense slachtoffer nog precies wou navragen was, welke data met betrekking tot zijn persoon werden bijgehouden. In februari 2012 kwam het antwoord. De aangetekende brief met het antwoord die de krant in bezit heeft, draagt het briefhoofd van de Generaalsecretaris van de Oostenrijkse Bisschoppenconferentie.

De uitleg staat al in de eerste paragraaf: “Beide inrichtingen hebben het akkoord over schadevergoeding naar de Commissie voor bescherming van privaatgegevens van de Katholieke Kerk doorgegeven.” Daaruit blijkt dat eigenlijk de Katholieke Kerk verantwoordelijk is voor de privacy van de gegevens die de zogezegde ‘onafhankelijke’ Klasnic-commissie heeft verzameld.

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Testimony …

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Washington Post

Testimony: Philadelphia priest called pedophile, powder keg by therapist stayed on job

By Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — Jurors in a clergy-abuse trial heard Tuesday about a priest who was left in ministry for years after therapists called him a manipulative pedophile and a ticking time bomb.

The evidence was presented by prosecutors in the child-endangerment trial of Monsignor William Lynn, the longtime secretary for clergy in Philadelphia. Prosecutors say he helped keep dangerous priest-predators in jobs where they could continue to abuse children.

Tuesday’s evidence focused on the late Father Peter Dunne, who had served as a Boy Scout leader and director of a Bucks County school for delinquent boys and at one point had two young men living with him at a parish in Oxford, Pa.

The archdiocese had Dunne evaluated after an Oregon doctor complained in 1986 that he had been abused by Dunne, his former priest and Scout leader. The doctor later lost his license for molesting patients, leaving his wife and children deeply in debt, according to a 2005 grand jury report.

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Abuse Case Dates Suggest Brooklyn DA Is Cooking Numbers For Kol Tzedek Hotline

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Hella Winston
Special To The Jewish Week

At least eight sex abuse cases identified by the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office as Kol Tzedek cases were actually reported years before the advent of the confidential hotline, The Jewish Week has learned. This information calls into question the reliability of the statistics the DA has used to tout the success of the hotline.

The Jewish Week submitted a list of more than 30 names to the Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes, asking for confirmation of those who were reported through Kol Tzedek, which was established by the DA in April of 2009 to encourage the reporting of sexual abuse among Brooklyn’s Orthodox Jews.

In statements to the media, Hynes has claimed that approximately 90 people were reported through the hotline since its advent, 14 of whom have been convicted.

The DA has for months refused to divulge the names of those reported through Kol Tzedek, but recently agreed to confirm cases if given names by The Jewish Week.

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Bishop Michael J. Bransfield

WHEELING (WV)
BishopAccountability.org – Assignment Record

Summary of Case: Bransfield began his career as a priest of the Philadelphia archdiocese. He was a parish priest, then a teacher, chaplain and vice-principal of an archdiocesan high school. Bransfield left Philadelphia when appointed director of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington DC, becoming its rector when the National Shrine was made a basilica. In 2005 Bransfield was elevated to bishop of the Wheeling-Charleston diocese. In a 2012 trial of other Philadelphia clergy, Bransfield was accused of having sexually teen boys in the late 1970s or early 1980s. Another of the trial’s witnesses stated that when he was a minor Bransfield spoke to him in a lewd way. A prosecutor at the trial said Bransfield was accused in a separate case of fondling a student. Bransfield denied the allegations.

Ordained: 1971

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SALLY QUINN’S WAR ON CATHOLICS

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on Sally Quinn’s “On Faith” blog at the Washington Post:

It’s no secret that Sally Quinn (who is not Catholic) has a problem with the Catholic Church (save for soup-kitchen Catholics). But today she outdid herself: Of the three lead stories on her Washington Post blog, three are on Catholicism. One is positive, and two are decidedly negative.

The one positive piece doesn’t count. Why? Because it’s about Connecticut Governor Dan Malloy, a Catholic, who is about to sign into law a bill to outlaw capital punishment. The reason this issue doesn’t count is because it’s all window-dressing: exactly one person has been executed in Connecticut in the past 37 years. Now if Malloy were to outlaw abortion in Connecticut, that would be big news.

Anthony M. Stevens-Arroyo raises the question, “Is the Church Corrupt?” You already know the answer. He ends by saying, “Catholics are loyal enough to Jesus and to each other to prevail against the Gates of Hell that now besmirch the institutional church.” Then they are no longer Catholic. Being Catholic means belonging to, and faithfully participating in, the Catholic Church. Even a fraternity insists on fidelity.

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Wineke: Catholic Church reasserting control of nuns underlies hypocrisy

UNITED STATES
Channel 3000

By Bill Wineke
Special to Channel 3000

Something very strange is going on within the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church.

Each week brings revelations seemingly more bizarre than those of even the week before.

Last week, the Vatican took over the leadership of American nuns and appointed an archbishop to act, in effect, as a receiver for the group. Archbishop Peter Sartain, of Seattle, now has power to remove the elected leaders of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, approve speakers at the group’s conferences, set policy for the group and tell the nuns with whom they might affiliate.

The Vatican announced all this in a press release. That’s how the nuns learned about it. The contempt shown the nuns couldn’t have been more pronounced if the pope had mooned them in public. …

The document doesn’t say the nuns have actually done something immoral. It’s not as if, say, they had numerous members of their orders who sexually abused children, or had mother superiors who covered those crimes up.

Not to be too subtle about this: The Vatican did not put the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops into receivership.

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Doctrinal Assessment of the LCWR: Safeguarding the Integrity of Consecrated Life

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

by MOTHER MARY ASSUMPTA LONG, OP

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith situates the introduction of its doctrinal assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious in the section of Pope John Paul II’s post-synodal apostolic exhortation Vita Consecrata entitled “Sentire Cum Ecclesia” (To Think With the Church).

The eight-page document, published April 18, summarizes the findings of a careful investigation of the LCWR begun in 2008 and has renewal as its primary purpose:

The renewal of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which is the goal of this doctrinal assessment, is in support of this essential charism of religious which has been so obvious in the life and growth of the Catholic Church in the United States.

Recent media coverage has displayed a variety of responses to the doctrinal assessment, and members of the LCWR have issued public responses.

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A Catholic ‘war on women’

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

Sally Quinn

Jesus would be rolling over in his grave if he hadn’t already left it. The pope is taking on the nuns.

The Roman Catholic Church is a hierarchical institution if there ever was one. Nobody does anything without consulting a superior. Eventually, that would lead to His Holiness. And this time he has gone too far.

When Vatican bishops issued a report condemning nuns, including those among the 55,000 members of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, for “radical feminism” and ordered disciplinary action, all hell broke loose. …

While the “radical feminist” nuns were taking care of the poor and the sick, what were the priests and bishops doing? More than a few were being accused of sexually abusing children and covering up for each other. Take the case of Cardinal Bernard Francis Law, who stepped down as archbishop of Boston in 2002 for covering up sexual abuse by priests in his archdiocese. Instead of leaving Boston in disgrace, Law was summoned to Rome by Pope John Paul II and given the plum assignment of archpriest of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore. He was allowed to keep his title of cardinal and participated in the papal conclave. He resigned last November at age 80 after throwing himself a big birthday party. Let’s hope the victims of the sexual abused he covered up have been able to on with their lives as fortuitously as he has.

The numbers of sexual abuse scandals are too numerous to mention, but include the recent charges against a priest who was head of the Office of Child Protection and Safety in Northern Virginia, and is being investigated for sexual misconduct with a boy and is now on administrative leave.

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Voice of the Faithful Takes Nuns’ Side

UNITED STATES
Voice of the Faithful

As the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith comes down on women religious in the United States for doctrinal impurity, Roman Catholic Church reform movement Voice of the Faithful supports the sisters.

On Wednesday, the Vatican mandated reform of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the largest leadership body of women religious in the United States, which represents about 80 percent of the 57,000 nuns in the country. Because of LCWR’s purported doctrinal impurity, the Vatican has appointed an archbishop to oversee the nuns’ reform.

The record of women religious in this country taking care of the most vulnerable in our society, creating the American hospital system, for example, is a primer on Gospel values. Their long service on the front lines of poverty and disease is worthy of the respect and admiration of all, VOTF among them.

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Datenleck in der Klasnic-Kommission

OSTERREICH
der Standard

Markus Rohrhofer, 24. April 2012

Die Unabhängigkeit der Klasnic-Kommission steht auf dem Prüfstand. Eine Datenanfrage eines Opfers offenbart, dass offensichtlich intime Details rund um Missbrauchsfälle bei der Bischofskonferenz landen

Wien – Herbert L. wandte sich im vergangenen Jahr mit einer sogenannten Datenanfrage an die Klasnic-Kommission und die Stiftung Opferschutz. Herr L. ist anerkanntes Missbrauchsopfer und wurde bereits mit 10.000 Euro von der katholischen Kirche entschädigt. Was der Wiener noch genau wissen wollte, ist, welche Daten zu seiner Person im Zuge seiner Missbrauchsaufarbeitung gespeichert wurden. Die Antwort kam im Februar 2012 und überraschte Herbert L. Der eingeschriebene Brief, der dem Standard vorliegt, trägt nämlich den Briefkopf des Generalsekretariats der österreichischen Bischofskonferenz.

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Memos: Pa. priest labeled pedophile stayed in job

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Evening Sun

By MARYCLAIRE DALE Associated Press
Posted: 04/24/2012

PHILADELPHIA—Jurors in a Philadelphia clergy-abuse trial are hearing about a priest left in ministry after therapists called him a pedophile and ticking time bomb.

The trial Tuesday is focusing on the late Peter Dunne, a Boy Scout leader who ran a school for troubled boys.

Church memos show a doctor complained in 1986 that Dunne had abused him, and asked for money for counseling.

Therapists evaluating Dunne warned he should never be around children.

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Records: Archdiocese ignored warnings about ‘powder keg’ pedophile

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia allowed a priest to remain in parish ministry in 1989 after psychiatrists diagnosed him as a pedophile, described him as “a very sick man” and strongly recommended that he never be allowed to work around young people, according to internal church records.

One of the doctors who evaluated the priest, the Rev. Peter J. Dunne, “stated quite bluntly that we are sitting on a powder keg,” a church official later noted in a memo.

Dunne’s records emerged Tuesday in the trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn, the former secretary of clergy accused of enabling child-sex abuse by failing to remove priests suspected of sexual misconduct. Prosecutors are introducing evidence about decades-old allegations against Dunne and other priests to suggests church officials for years understood the signs and depth of clergy sex abuse, but chose instead to hide the problem from parishioners, endangering children.

Dunne had been long active in scouting and archdiocesan schools when a California man reported in 1986 that the priest had pressed him into a sexual relationship when he was 13. Dunne privately arranged a settlement with his accuser. Dunne also resisted or ignored archdiocesan officials repeated attempts for treatment, despite telling one therapist that he may have had “six or seven” incidents of sexual misconduct, the records show.

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Compensatiecommissie benoemd en Compensatieregeling van kracht

NEDERLAND
Melding Hulp Klacht Schade

Per 1 december 2011 heeft het bestuur de compensatiecommissie benoemd en is de compensatieregeling voor minderjarigen van kracht. Met ingang van 1 maart 2012 is eveneens de compensatieregeling voor meerderjarigen van kracht.

De leden van de Compensatiecommissie zijn:

•Mr. B. Holthuis (JPR Advocaten), voorzitter
•Mr. R.Ph. Elzas (Dirkzwager advocaten & notarissen)
•Mevr. Mr. K.H. Faase (Achmea personenschade)
•Mevr. Mr. J.M. van de Laar (Beer advocaten N.V.)
•E.S. Groot (Groot expertisebureau)

In principe krijgen alle slachtoffers die seksueel zijn misbruikt en een gegrondverklaring via de Beoordelings- en adviescommissie (BAC), of via de klachtencommssie hebben, een brief en ontvangen een aanvraagformulier voor de Compensatiecommissie. Alle overige slachtoffers die seksueel zijn misbruikt en die over een bewijsstuk beschikken zoals in de regelingen is vermeld kunnen het aanvraagformulier hier downloaden of via het meldpunt aanvragen. Ook de regelingen zijn hier te downloaden.

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Why Go After the Nuns?

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service – Spiritual Politics

Mark Silk|Apr 24, 2012

The denunciation of the Leadship Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF, formerly known as the Roman Inquisition) puts this medievalist in mind of the Church’s 15th Ecumenical Council, which wrapped up its business in Vienne exactly 700 years ago next week.

It was not a happy time for the papacy. In 1305, the tumultuous politics of the Italian peninsula had forced Pope Clement V to relocate the curia to the north, ushering in the “Babylonian Captivity of the Church” in Avignon that lasted for most of the century. The move put Clement under the thumb of King Philip the Fair of France, who was vigorously consolidating administrative control of the monarchy. To that end, Philip arrested the Knights Templars, seized their property, and got them to confess to heresy and sodomy by torture and burning at the stake. The main business of the Council of Vienne was the suppression of the venerable crusading order, which Clement seems to have agreed to do in exchange for Philip dropping heresy charges against a previous pope, Boniface VIII.

While they were at it, the Council also suppressed a movement of pious lay women who wore a distinctive habit and lived together in hospices, impressing many by their teaching and the sanctity of their lives. To the men who ran the church, they were dangerously out of line. As the Council put it:

The women commonly known as Beguines, since they promise obedience to nobody, nor renounce possessions, nor profess any approved rule are not religious at all, although they wear the special dress of Beguines and attach themselves to certain religious to whom they have a special attraction. We have heard from trustworthy sources that there are some Beguines who seem to be led by a particular insanity.

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Archbishop Sartain Praises Women Religious as ‘Great Gift’ to the Church

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

by CATHOLIC NEWS AGENCY/EWTN NEWS
04/24/2012

Archbishop J. Peter Sartain of Seattle praised American religious women as a “great gift” days after being asked by Pope Benedict to help reform the Leadership Conference of Women Religious.

“What I hope and pray for every day is that I, first of all, do as the Lord asks and do as the Holy Father asks,” said the archbishop, describing the task of renewal ahead to CNA on April 23.

He said he hopes “to work in a positive way,” recognizing “the wonderful contribution of religious women in the United States, and to work in a way that shows our continued love and support for their extraordinary contribution.”

Archbishop Sartain made his remarks in Rome only days after Pope Benedict XVI also publicly praised the contribution religious women make to the U.S. Church and society.

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Mobilize: Support our Catholic sisters

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Dennis Coday on Apr. 24, 2012 NCR Today

Sisters Under Scrutiny is a new NCR blog that aims to be your one stop site gathering the latest news, actions and reactions arising from the Vatican ordered reform of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the umbrella organization for 80 percent of American Catholic sisters.

The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith April 18 ordered LCWR to reform its statutes, programs and affiliations to conform more closely to the teachings and discipline of the Church. Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain was appointed the “archbishop delegate” to oversee the organization. LCWR leaders say they were “stunned” by the move, which caught them by surprise. During the coming weeks NCR will feature on this blog the latest news and actions flowing out of this unprecedented move.

Also visit the Support our Catholic sisters Facebook page. We hope this page will become a space sisters can turn to for inspiration and that the sisters’ supports can use to organize that support.

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Latin American religious recall tough decisions, emphasis on dialogue

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Catholic News Service

By Ezra Fieser
Catholic News Service

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (CNS) — The decision to take over leadership of the largest U.S. group of Catholic nuns for its “serious doctrinal problems” was not the first time the Vatican reined in a group of religious.

Two decades ago, the Vatican appointed a bishop to oversee the work of the Latin American Confederation of Religious, known by its Spanish acronym as CLAR. At the time, the confederation represented 160,000 men and women religious in the region.

“It was a very difficult moment for the confederation,” said Father Gabriel Naranjo Salazar, a Vincentian priest involved in CLAR at the time and who is now secretary-general of the organization.

“It was not only difficult because it affected the (CLAR’s) ecclesial independence and its mentality, but also because it seemed completely unjustified,” Father Naranjo told Catholic News Service in mid-April.

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Brooklyn D.A. Explains His Refusal to Name Orthodox Sex Abuse Suspects

NEW YORK
The L Magazine

Posted by Audrey Ference on Tue, Apr 24, 2012

Late last year, Brooklyn D.A. Charles Hynes announced that over the past three years, his department had arrested 85 Orthodox Jewish men and women for sex-related crimes, including crimes against children, but refused to release the suspects’ names. He would not even name the 14 people who had been found guilty of crimes and sentenced.

After continued press inquiry, including a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the Jewish Daily Forward, Hynes’s office released a statement today to the Forward to explain his continued withholding of information.

“The circumstances here are unique,” Assistant District Attorney Morgan Dennehy wrote in an April 16 letter to the Forward. “Because all of the requested defendant names relate to Hasidic men who are alleged to have committed sex crimes against Hasidic victims within a very tight-knit and insular Brooklyn community, there is a significant danger that the disclosure of the defendants’ names would lead members of that community to discern the identities of the victims.”

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Who will watch the watchmen of America’s women religious?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Eugene Cullen Kennedy on Apr. 24, 2012 Bulletins from the Human Side

The sound you hear all across Catholic America today is that of Rachel’s weeping again over the unnecessary and undeserved suffering that has been heaped by a righteous-sounding Cardinal William Levada, the pope’s man at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, on the women religious of this country.

This event is one of epic sadness because it symbolizes how an organized church undercuts the immense good it does at its best by doing near to its hypocritical worst in an attack as coordinated as a terrorist strike on the heroic women who deserve credit for building the church in America into the most successful realization of Catholicism in history.

Only ambitious men “making,” in the apt Italian phrase, “a career in the church” could have designed this bad-faith betrayal of the leaders of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious who had arrived in Rome for a dialogue with Cardinal Levada only to learn that the news of the empowering of a panel of bishops to supervise them had already been sent to the American bishops for public distribution. …

Archbishop Sartain, who has just politicized his parishes by delegating them to gather signatures against legislation on same-sex marriage, according to the website Christian Child Abuse, played a still-unclarified role while bishop of Joliet, Ill., in ordaining as a priest a seminarian on whose computer gay porn with young boys had been found a few months before. This priest was convicted the next year of sexual assault of an underage boy. The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, SNAP, observed: “Sartain, in our view, had a moral obligation to postpone the ordination, send [the priest] for treatment and inform the public.” SNAP president Dave Clohessy later said Sartain “did none of that.”

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Catholic sceptics get Swiss accolade

AUSTRIA
Austrian Independent

A critical Catholic movement from Austria has received a renowned award in Switzerland.

The Austrian Preachers’ Initiative – which consists of 400 preachers – was decorated with this year’s Herbert Haag Prize. The presentation took place in the city of Lucerne. Hans Küng, one of Europe’s best-known critics of the Vatican, lauded the Austrian movement for calling on priests across Europe to be disobedient towards conservative Church leaders. Küng said a well-argued appeal for disobedience by people who had trust in the future of the Roman Catholic Church was more credible and sensible than any kind of “pseudo-obedience”.

Helmut Schüller, who founded the Preachers’ Initiative in June 2011, said Küng was one of the most influential voices of a critical theology with intentions to lead the Church into a bright future in our modern society. The Herbert Haag Prize features a donation of 10,000 Euros. Schüller said he had not yet decided about how to use the money.

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Ohio priest files another appeal in nun’s killing

TOLEDO (OH)
Ohio News Network

Tuesday April 24, 2012

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — A Roman Catholic priest convicted of killing a nun in a hospital chapel in Ohio is making another appeal for a new trial.

The Blade newspaper (http://bit.ly/JsGUNr ) in Toledo reports that an attorney for the Rev. Gerald Robinson wants a state appeals court to throw out the priest’s conviction because police reports discovered after his trial could have changed the outcome.

A county judge in Toledo ruled in January that the police reports didn’t contain any relevant information.

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LCWR earthquake snaps tensions present since Vatican II

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Apr. 24, 2012
By Tom Roberts

Commentary

It is almost instinctively that one reaches, when attempting to explain what is going on today in the Catholic church, for metaphors out of the natural world — storms, earthquakes, seismic shifts — to get at the magnitude of events.

We search for the terms that explain what we’re experiencing: phenomena beyond the ordinary disturbances we’ve learned to weather one season to the next. Just as seismologists or climatologists begin to put together patterns over time, to construct a mega-image of what is happening, so are we. Another piece of the puzzle has just fallen into place for us with the delivery last week from the Vatican of the “Doctrinal Assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious.”

The 5.8 earthquake that hit the East Coast in August was insignificant by West Coast standards, yet it was felt hundreds of miles from its epicenter in Virginia. Geologists explained that the earth’s crust in this part of the world is more dense and less disturbed and fractured than that in the usual earthquake zones, allowing the seismic waves to travel further than they would, say, in Los Angeles or San Francisco.

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Bevilacqua May Have Leveraged Pedophiles for PR

PHILADLEPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change

April 24, 2012 by Susan Matthews

Click here to read: “What the Cardinal Knew, Or How to Hoover A Pedophile,” by Ralph Cipriano, The Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog, April 23, 2012

Excerpt: “Why would Cardinal Bevilacqua knowingly consort with two known pedophile priests, and indeed allow his Archdiocese PR machine to parade the two abusers out in public with him? Maybe because the cardinal thought he owned these guys, in the tradition of J. Edgar Hoover. Both Sicoli and Gana knew that their crimes were documented in the archdiocese’s secret archives, and that they served at the whim of the archbishop, who, at the scrawl of a pen, could send them packing. So when it came to Sicoli and Gana, the cardinal had them “Hoovered,” he had their unquestioned loyalty.”

Editor’s note: I had the “privilege” of covering Cardinal Bevilacqua in the 90s as an editor with The Catholic Standard & Times and later as a freelancer for a now defunct Philadelphia monthly magazine called The Player. To say The Tierney Group was hands-on regarding coverage is an extreme understatement. I always attributed it to Bevilacqua’s enormous ego and Machiavellian style. Ralph Cipriano is dead on. In hindsight, it’s clear Bevilacqua used pedophiles to aid in his publicity spin. I hope Brian Tierney and Jay Devine were not aware of the depth his depravity. They might as well have been billing the devil.

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Catholic church to pay $3.75M in Kelly claim

STOCKTON (CA)
Union Democrat

Written by Union Democrat staff
April 23, 2012

The Catholic Diocese of Stockton, which includes parishes in Tuolumne and Calaveras counties, has agreed to settle for $3.75 million a legal claim by a Fairfax man who argued former priest Michael Kelly molested him as a youth.

In exchange for the settlement, the plaintiff has agreed to drop his case against the diocese and Kelly, according to a statement from Bishop Stephen Blaire.

“The settlement brings an end to litigation that began more than 4 1/2 years ago and that has occupied a great deal of time and focus,” he said. “We respect the right of everyone to have their day in court and we abide by the decisions that were made.”

The settlement was the latest development in a week full of surprises in the case.

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Tyrone priest at center of porn scandal granted leave by Cardinal Sean Brady

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Central

By
ANTOINETTE KELLY,
IrishCentral Staff Writer

Published Tuesday, April 24, 2012

The Catholic priest at the center of a gay porn controversy has taken temporary leave from his duties as the parish priest of Pomeroy in County Tyrone.

According to the Irish Times, Father Martin McVeigh asked the Primate of All-Ireland, Cardinal Sean Brady for a temporary leave after a meeting between local parents and the representatives of the archdiocese on Friday night proved ‘inconclusive.’

The archdiocese, in an attempt to address the controversy, has reportedly been conducting an inquiry into how 16 pornographic images were ‘inadvertently’ shown by the priest to a group of about thirty parents and one child during a powerpoint presentation on children’s first Confessions on March 26.

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LAWYER SAYS PRIEST PLEADED GUILTY TO END CASE

SAN DIEGO (CA)
U-T San Diego

Written by
Greg Moran

SAN DIEGO — A Roman Catholic priest who pleaded guilty on Friday to a misdemeanor charge that he groped a woman in December did so only to put the case behind him and spare the community a trial, his lawyer said Monday.

The Rev. Jose Alexis Davila, 53, was placed on three years’ probation, fined $200, and ordered to do 150 hours of community service. He was also ordered to stay away from the now 20-year-old woman who initially complained that he had groped her when she visited his home on Dec. 30.

Earll Pott, one of Davila’s lawyers, said Monday that the priest entered his plea under a legal provision that allows someone to plead guilty, even though the person does not admit to the truth of the charges.

The plea has the same force and effect as a standard guilty plea, according to the San Diego City Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted the case.

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LCWR: A radical obedience to the voice of God in our time

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Jamie L Manson on Apr. 23, 2012 Grace on the Margins

In his Holy Thursday sermon, Pope Benedict XVI made headlines for criticizing those who refuse to obey the church’s position on the ordination of celibate men. He traced his argument back to Christ’s obedience to the will of God.

“His concern was for true obedience,” Benedict said, “as opposed to human caprice.”

Of course, the pontiff fails to point out that Jesus was obeying God while also radically disobeying the religious leaders and laws of his time. Like so many archconservative Roman Catholics, he is confusing God with the institutional church and its doctrine.

I suppose the pope is using some of this same logic in his treatment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. He views the sisters’ unwillingness to condemn gays and lesbians or contraception or women who feel called ordained ministry as an act of “caprice.”

But the basis on which the sisters focus their ministries is anything but shallow and whimsical. Their devotion is founded on a radical obedience to the voice of God as it emerges from the voices of the poor, the sick, the abandoned and the broken.

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Priest again appeals murder conviction

TOLEDO (OH)
Toledo Blade

BY DAVID YONKE
BLADE RELIGION EDITOR

Toledo priest Gerald Robinson has again asked the Ohio 6th District Court of Appeals to toss out his 2006 conviction for the 1980 murder of a nun, saying the state withheld key documents and his trial attorneys failed to adequately pursue “the most obvious” suspect, serial killer Coral Eugene Watts.

The latest filing states that Robinson’s trial attorneys mistakenly thought Watts was in prison on April 5, 1980, when Sister Margaret Ann Pahl was found brutally slain in the sacristy of the former Mercy Hospital near downtown Toledo. But Watts was a free man “in his killing spree or ‘on a rampage’ at the time,” living in Michigan about 40 miles from Toledo, the appeal states.

The appeals court in January, 2008, rejected Robinson’s direct appeal, and, 11 months later, the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the case. Robinson then began pursuing an amended petition for postconviction relief, which, unlike a direct appeal, allows the court to consider information other than what was included in the trial.

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Murdered Priest Honored in Crime Victims Ceremony

NEW JERSEY
Patch

By Laura Silvius

Law enforcement officials, elected representatives and family and friends of crime victims gathered in St. Patrick Church in Chatham Borough Monday to honor victims of crimes from Morris County.

Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi said each year the Prosecutor’s Office chooses one victim, usually a homocide victim from a prominent trial case the year before, to honor in their Recognition and Remembrance Ceremony held each April during Crime Victims’ Rights Week.

This year, the Prosecutor’s Office chose to honor the Rev. Edward Hinds, the former pastor of St. Patrick Church. Hinds, who was known to his congregation as “Father Ed,” was stabbed 44 times by Jose Feliciano, the church custodian.

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Church should not ignore signs of the times and turn its back on world

IRELAND
The Irish Times

SEÁN FREYNE

RITE & REASON: Vatican style of government models itself on pre-Christian Roman imperialism

THE RESULTS of the survey conducted by the Association of Catholic Priests, when taken in conjunction with the national census figures of those who still consider themselves as Roman Catholic, has opened a window on the state of Irish Catholicism that is alarming, yet altogether predictable.

There is of course an obvious explanation for some of this disaffection, namely the clerical sex abuse scandals and the cover-up by some bishops and senior clergy of the atrocities to protect the institution. However, this explanation should not excuse church leaders from any deeper analysis of what has been happening to religious belief and practice here, for several decades now.

The anaemic summary of the findings of the Apostolic Visitation that has been published shows just how out of touch Rome and the Irish bishops are with the real feelings of the vast majority of Catholics here. Nor could one place too much confidence in the upcoming Eucharistic Congress to address the core issues that are at stake for many people.

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Gesprek bisdombestuur en rector over de Priesteropleiding

NEDERLAND
RKnieuws

BREDA (RKnieuws.net) – Rector Schnell van de Priester- en Diakenopleiding Bovendonk was vrijdag te gast bij het bestuur van het bisdom van Breda om te spreken over de wijze waarop de priesteropleiding aandacht geeft aan de persoonsvorming van studenten.

Directe aanleiding voor het gesprek is een rapportage die het bisdombestuur voorbereidt vanwege de voorgenomen start van de Diocesane voortgangscommissie inzake seksueel misbruik. Na de presentatie van het Eindrapport van de Onderzoekscommissie (de ‘Commissie Deetman’) maakte het bisdom het voornemen bekend zo’n voortgangscommissie in te willen richten.

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Pembroke Priest Facing New Charges

CANADA
CFRA

Josh Pringle
Tuesday, April 24, 2012

A Pembroke priest is now facing 12 charges in relation into historic sexual assault allegations dating back 40 years.

Ontario Provincial Police charged Daniel Miller in February for alleged offences that occurred against then pre-teenage boys and an adult male between 1970 and 1980.

The OPP says the 67-year-old Miller was charged on Friday with six additional changes related to 3 additional victims in Arnprior, Deep River and Eganville dating back to 1969.

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Priest denies indecent assault

NORTHERN IRELAND
Derry Journal

A priest has denied indecently assaulting a woman 20 years ago.

Fr Eugene Boland, whose address was given on court papers as Parochial House, Killyclogher Road, Omagh, denied five charges of indecent assault alleged to have occured between June 28, 1990 and June 30, 1992.

The 65-year-old, who appeared in the dock in his collar, replied “not guilty” as each of the charges were put to him.

Derry Crown Court heard the trial, which is expected to last one week, had been listed for next month.

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Is the church corrupt?

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Anthony M. Stevens-Arroyo

The trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn, secretary for clergy under a late Philadelphia cardinal, exposes every day what Pope Benedict XVI has called “the filth of the church.” As the New York Times explained, Lynn is “the first Roman Catholic supervisor in the country to be tried on felony charges of endangering children and conspiracy — not on allegations that he molested children himself.” If the allegations that Lynn ignored child sexual abuse are true, file the Philadelphia case as another clerical cover-up that will have irrevocably stained the church’s image.

If this major scandal were not enough, other Catholic news haunts the conscience: According to a report by Reuters, JP Morgan closed the Vatican’s bank account for “lack of transparency.” Catholic nuns in America, who power the nation’s Catholic hospitals, schools and social service organizations are under attack from the Vatican. Pedophilia has put mighty Irish Catholicism “at the breaking point.”

Facing the scope of these stories, Catholics can legitimately ask: “Is the church corrupt?”

The answer to that question depends on perspective. If people join the church as sinners in order to become saints, human failures are no big surprise. If most priests and faithful live the Gospel, why label the whole institution as “corrupt”? Haven’t we heard this charge many times in history?

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Catholic church’s crackdown on poverty-fighting nuns all about dogma

UNITED STATES
The Star-Ledger

By Star-Ledger Editorial Board

The Vatican, in its infinite wisdom, has spoken: American nuns, out there on the front lines helping the sick and suffering, are spending way too much time fighting poverty and economic injustice, and not enough time agitating against abortion and gay marriage. Instead, they should just do what the bishops tell them to.

It even assigned an archbishop to knock all the wayward sisters back in line. The Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the most prominent U.S. Catholic nuns’ group, said it was “stunned” by the crackdown. But it shouldn’t be. This isn’t about faith. It’s about dogma and it’s about politics.

Problem is, American nuns have become too educated. They now lead their schools, hospitals and charities. They minister to people on the margins of society, those who are discriminated against. And they recognize the church hierarchy for what it is: woefully out of touch, hypocritical and determined to stifle any dissent about the priorities of the male leadership.

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Pat Cuneo: So who’s really betraying Catholic Church?

PENNSYLVANIA
Erie Times-News

Pat Cuneo

‘Vatican orders crackdown on American nuns,” the headline blared in last Wednesday’s Washington Post. The group representing most of America’s 55,000 Catholic nuns was “not speaking out strongly enough against gay marriage, abortion and women’s ordination,” the story read.

So, Rome named conservative Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain to overhaul the governance and plans of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious and its relationship with “certain groups the Vatican finds suspect.”

The LCWR does not directly represent the sisters in the Erie region, incidentally.

It’s an inside fight, right? It’s just a squabble about the uppity nuns’ obsession with a “prevalence of certain radical feminist themes (that are) incompatible with the Catholic faith,” as Rome pointed out. Religious groups can do whatever they want, right? Absolutely. Yet just how far will this kind of crackdown go before a good chunk of American Catholics, especially American Catholic women, tell Rome to go take a hike. I sense the last straw will be a lot sooner than I ever thought possible.

It turns out that the nuns’ advocacy for fairness on issues large and small is the true target. So is their audacity of having an opinion where it isn’t welcome. And so it is that Sister Joan Chittister, a Benedictine scholar, writer, lecturer and recognized as one of the world’s most respected moralists, was left “deeply distraught” by the news.

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Let’s remember what Peter Slipper is charged with, and what he is not

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

[with video]

Lenore Taylor

The statement last night by Tony Nutt, a former advisor to John Howard, is a timely reminder of exactly what Mr Slipper is charged with, and what he isn’t.

Mr James Hunter Ashby’s claim is about sexual harassment. It deserves to be taken seriously. It will be heard in court.

But Mr Slipper is not on trial – at least not in any court – for the allegation that he sought sexual relationships outside his marriage, however distasteful people might find that idea.

The lawsuit is not about consensual extra-marital sex, gay or straight. But the allegation that a conservative MP, married to a woman, who serves as a priest in the Anglican High church, sought a homosexual affair does seem to be a big part of the charges being debated in the court of public opinion.

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Charges dropped for Scientologist

AUSTRALIA
The Daily Telegraph

Janet Fife-Yeomans
The Daily Telegraph
April 24, 2012

PROSECUTORS this morning dropped charges of perverting the course of justice against one of the leading members of the Church of Scientology, Jan Eastgate.

Downing Centre Local Court was given no reasons for the decision behind the withdrawal of the charges that alleged Ms Eastgate had intimidated a then 11-year-old young girl and her mother who wanted to report sexual abuse allegations within the church back in 1985.

Ms Eastgate, who was instrumental in revealing the horrors of deep sleep therapy at the former Chelmsford Hospital in Sydney’s north in the 1980s, is international president of the Scientology-linked Citizens Commission on Human Rights, which attacks psychology.

Now based in Los Angeles where she counts Tom Cruise and John Travolta among her friends, Ms Eastgate released a statement to The Daily Telegraph.

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Prosecutors drop charges against Scientologist

AUSTRALIA
ABC Ilawarra

By court reporter Jamelle Wells

New South Wales prosecutors have dropped charges against a Scientologist who was accused of telling a child she should deny charges of sex abuse against another church member.

Jan Eastgate is the head of the church’s Citizens Commission on Human Rights, a group that works to discredit conventional psychiatric treatments.

In 2011 she was charged with perverting the course of justice.

Police claimed that in 1985 she told an 11-year-old girl she should deny any charges of sexual abuse to police and officers from the Department of Social Services.

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Senior Church of Scientology member cleared of sex abuse ‘coaching’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

CHARGES against a senior member of the Church of Scientology accused of coaching a child to lie about sex abuse have been dropped in a Sydney court.

Janice Meyer, an Australian citizen who lives in the US, had been charged with two counts of an act intending to pervert the course of justice in 1985 in Sydney.

She also goes by the name of Jan Eastgate.

The allegation involved threatening and intimidating an 11-year-old girl, causing her to give false information about being abused by a Scientologist to investigating police, the court has previously heard.

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Scientologist cleared of sex abuse cover-up charges

AUSTRALIA
Launceston Times

PAUL BIBBY

The NSW Director of Public Prosecutions has dropped its charges against a senior Scientologist who had been accused of telling an 11-year-old girl she should deny charges of sexual abuse against another member of the church.

Janice Meyer, also known as Jan Eastgate, is the head of the church’s Citizens Commission on Human Rights, a group which works to discredit a number of conventional psychiatric treatments, including the use of medications such as Ritalin and Prozac.

In May last year, Ms Meyer was charged with two counts of perverting the course of justice over an alleged incident in 1985. Police had claimed that Ms Meyer told the 11-year-old girl she should deny any charges of sexual abuse to police and officers from the Department of Social Services.

However, in Sydney’s Downing Centre Local Court this morning, a representative of the DPP informed the magistrate that they had dropped all charges against her.

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Judge grants Brothers pretrial date delay

KENTUCKY
The Gleaner

By Beth Smith

A former youth pastor charged here and in Colorado on sexual abuse charges will not go to trial here in May.

In Henderson Circuit Court on Monday, Ike Norment, defense attorney for John H. Brothers Jr., 42, asked Judge Karen Wilson to vacate the May 17 trial date, since Brothers is currently in custody in Colorado on sex abuse-related charges.

Norment said Brothers’ has a preliminary hearing in a Colorado court in late May and asked Wilson to grant a pretrial date of July 2. Norment said by that time, he and local prosecutors hopefully would know more about what’s happening with the Colorado case.

Wilson granted the July 2 pretrial date.

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Guilty former priest a focus of child-abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Edward Avery might be gone from the defense table at the landmark clergy-sex-abuse trial involving Archdiocese of Philadelphia priests, but he remains a pivotal figure in the case.

On Monday, prosecutors and defense lawyers clashed over what jurors could and should be told about Avery, a defrocked priest who was removed as a defendant last month after his last-minute plea to charges that he sexually assaulted a 10-year-old altar boy.

Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina suggested that jurors could even hear from Avery himself.

The issue emerged as prosecutors signaled plans to call to the witness stand this week a former altar boy who said he was abused in the late 1990s by Avery and another priest, the Rev. Charles Engelhardt, when both were at St. Jerome’s Church in Northeast Philadelphia. Engelhardt faces a separate trial later this year because he belongs to an independent religious order, the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales.

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Delbarton monk accused of sex abuse allegations passes 2 lie detector tests, lawyer says

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Kevin Manahan/The Star-Ledger

MORRIS TOWNSHIP —The attorney for the Rev. Luke Travers, the former Delbarton School headmaster facing allegations of sexual misconduct, said today that Travers has taken and passed two polygraph exams regarding the accusations.

Gerard Hanlon, a criminal attorney in Morristown, said Travers passed a lie detector test ordered by St. Mary’s Abbey in January, then passed another, set up by Hanlon, in March.

“Luke was so adamant about what he hadn’t done, so I set up the second one with an expert who has worked with me and (is) someone I trust,” Hanlon said. “It’s the first time I’ve talked about this, but maybe it’s timely.”

Abbey spokesman Anthony Cicatiello said the abbey “will not comment any further on matters related to Father Luke.

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April 23, 2012

Will Father Avery Be Hauled Back Into Court In a Jump Suit?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Priest Abuse Trial Blog

Ralph Cipriano

The judge in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia sex abuse trial left open the possibility Monday that prosecutors may be allowed to haul into court a former priest who, on the eve of trial, pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy and rape of a 10-year-old boy.

Edward V. Avery, a defrocked former archdiocese priest, is now serving a prison sentence of between 2 1/2 to 5 years. But his chief accuser, namely the former altar boy that he raped, is due in court on Wednesday. The question is whether defense attorneys in the case will be allowed to challenge the victim’s credibility on cross-examination.

Assistant District Attorney Patrick Blessington told Judge M. Teresa Sarmina that if she rules that defense lawyers can challenge the victim’s credibility, “We’re back to square one, with Avery on trial here.” That’s when the judge suggested that the prosecution had the option of seeking permission to haul Avery back in court.

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Priest’s guilty plea throws wrinkle into Philadelphia sexual abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CNN

By Sarah Hoye, CNN

updated 7:09 PM EDT, Mon April 23, 2012

Philadelphia (CNN) — Attorneys in the child sexual abuse and conspiracy trial of two Philadelphia priests debated Monday over which potential witnesses jurors would be allowed to hear regarding a third defendant who pleaded guilty to molesting boys just days before opening remarks.

Defrocked priest Edward Avery of the Philadelphia Archdiocese pleaded guilty to involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and conspiracy to endanger the welfare of child after admitting that he sexually assaulted a 10-year-old altar boy during his 1998-1999 school year. Avery, 69, was sentenced to two-and-a-half to five years.

Rev. James Brennan is accused of attempted rape of a 14-year-old, and Monsignor William Lynn is accused of covering it up. Lynn is the first high-ranking church figure charged with child endangerment for shuffling predator priests from parish to parish.

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Vatican Reprimand Of U.S. Nuns Divides Faithful

UNITED STATES
NPR

[with audio]

The Vatican reprimanded America’s largest organization of Catholic nuns, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. The Holy See charged the LCWR with promoting programs with “radical feminist themes” that are incompatible with doctrine on issues ranging from homosexuality to women’s ordination.

NEAL CONAN, HOST:

This is TALK OF THE NATION. I’m Neal Conan, in Washington. Last week, the Vatican reprimanded America’s largest organization of Catholic nuns, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. While praising what it called a great contribution in schools, hospitals and among the poor, the Holy See charged the group with promotion of radical feminist themes incompatible with the faith on issues like contraception and abortion, gay and lesbian rights and the ordination of women.

Leaders of the group expressed shock and outrage. Other Catholics supported the church’s obligation to ensure that its organizations uphold its doctrine. And some pointed to this dispute as the latest example of a disconnect between the Vatican and large parts of its American congregation.

We want to hear from Catholics today: How does church doctrine inform your choices? Give us a call: 800-989-8255. Email us: talk@npr.org. You can also join the conversation on our website. That’s at npr.org. Click on TALK OF THE NATION.

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The Roman burden

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

April 24, 2012
Opinion

Dick Gross

It was embarrassing to observe Australian society trying to avert its gaze from the deaths of more than 40 young men. These men are purportedly suicide victims whose deaths appear to be consequent to sexual abuse in their churches. As the faces of the deceased stared out at me from reports in The Age, I felt that this loss of young life could surely not go unexamined in any civilised society.

I blogged on this matter last year based on some personal testimony I had heard about the suicide of a young victim relative of an abusing priest. Now my anecdotal evidence appears to have found support in police investigations. This is an epidemic of self-slaughter that cannot be ignored.

Yet without constant advocacy and evidence from affected Catholic parents, police and some innocent clergy, the dead and their stories would have gone unexamined. Now the growing forensic evidence of a link between Catholic child abuse and the apparent suicides of victims raises issues of church and state that could no longer be ignored.

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Three Groups Want Jesuit to Resign from Position on College Board

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Blaine on April 23, 2012

We are here today representing three different groups who want a Board member of Loyola University’s Board of Trustees to resign. The three groups are SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, CCC, Coalition of Concerned Catholics and VOTF, Voice of the Faithful.

Newly-revealed church documents show that Father Bradley Schaeffer did little or nothing to stop a notorious child molesting priest under his supervision. The cleric, Father Donald McGuire, is now serving a twenty-five year sentence in federal prison. But Schaefer could have and did not stop McGuire.

Sitting on the Board of Trustees of Loyola University is a position that Schaefer should not hold. Honoring men like this is hurtful in two ways. First, it rubs salt into the wounds of already-suffering victims and already-betrayed Catholics. Second, it sends a chilling, and depressing, message to victims, witnesses and whistleblowers: “Speak up if you want to, but know that nothing will change and wrongdoers will still be tolerated, praised and promoted in this organization.” So honors like this essentially discourage those with knowledge and information about heinous child sex crimes and cover-ups from stepping forward, calling police, reporting wrongdoing, protecting kids and preventing crimes.

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Cardinal Mahony dodges again

CALIFORNIA
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler
April 23, 2012

It’s a coincidence, no doubt, that the Stockton diocese settled a sex-abuse case just before Cardinal Roger Mahony, the former Bishop of Stockton, was scheduled to testify.

Actually Cardinal Mahony wasn’t ready to take questions. He had left for Rome, ignoring his date with the court, and the plaintiff’s lawyer was threatening to have the cardinal held in contempt. That threat went by the boards when the case was settled.

Stockton’s Bishop Stephen Blaire says that it was “in the best interest of everybody” to reach the mutually agreeable deal, in which the diocese paid $3.75 million to a single plaintiff. The bishop hopes that no one will think the settlement is an indication that the diocese admits culpability. And certainly we can all understand that sometimes it’s better to avoid a protracted legal dispute. But $3.75 million—payable to one alleged victim—is an awfully steep price to pay for avoiding the aggravation of a trial, especially when you consider that the trial was already underway.

The diocese was in an awkward position, of course, because another key witness in the case—beside Cardinal Mahony, I mean—had gone missing. Father Michael Kelly, the priest whose alleged misconduct had triggered the lawsuit, had also skipped town, flying home to his native Ireland just before he was supposed to testify. Bishop Blaire said that he was shocked by the priest’s flight.

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Child abuse: parliamentary inquiry welcomed

AUSTRALIA
Maroondah Weekly

BY MELISSA CUNNINGHAM

24 Apr, 2012

A YARRA Ranges parent has welcomed news of a parliamentary inquiry into the handling of alleged criminal abuse of children by religious organisations.

Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu announced the inquiry last week and said it would focus on abuse not only in religious organisations but also at children’s homes.

The inquiry was sparked by the recommendations of the landmark Protecting Victoria’s Vulnerable Children Inquiry conducted by retired Supreme Court justice Philip Cummins.

Healesville’s Ian Lawther, whose son was abused by a convicted St Brigid’s parish priest more than

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Brennan and Lynn – High profile Philadelphia Catholic abuse trial ongoing

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic Online

By Catholic Online (NEWS CONSORTIUM)
4/23/2012
Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)

It has been a month since the start of a high-profile trial in Philadelphia where Monsignor William Lynn stands accused of mishandling allegations of child abuse by priests. He is the highest-ranking church official to date to stand trial in the United States.

PHILADELPHIA, PA (Catholic Online) – Attorneys for Monsignor Lynn readily acknowledge the multiple cases of abuse, including the allegation of abuse by Rev. James Brennan who allegedly raped a 14-year-old boy in 1996.

Lynn was responsible for managing 800 priests throughout the archdiocese of Philadelphia and allegations of abuse landed on his desk. It was his responsibility to handle those notifications including those regarding Brennan.

Accusers say the Monsignor did not handle them correctly. Monsignor Lynn is accused of covering up the allegations and transferring accused priests to other parishes without notifying the parishioners.

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Victims’ attorney appeals ruling on sealed testimony of bishops

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

April 23, 2012 .

An attorney for 350 alleged victims in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy has appealed the judge’s April 5 decision to keep sealed depositions of retired Archbishop Rembert Weakland and Richard Sklba, along with related documents.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley refused to unseal the evidence saying it contains scandalous information and could inadvertently identify victims who are named in the documents. Weakland and Sklba, who also is retired, handled the archdiocese’s sex abuse cases for nearly three decades.

Minnesota attorney Jeffrey Anderson had argued that all names and identifying information would be redacted. He filed the appeal late last week, calling the release of the information a “public imperative.”

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Trial: Priest told of attempted seminary gang rape

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Palm Beach Post

By MARYCLAIRE DALE
The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — A Catholic priest admitting a sexual relationship with a teen said he had been the victim of an attempted gang rape by fellow seminarians, according to testimony in a clergy-abuse trial.

Testimony on Monday also mentioned Pope Benedict XVI, who weighed in on the priest’s 2005 censure when he was a Vatican official known as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

Documents show the priest had admitted to the Philadelphia archdiocese in 1992 that he had sex with the high school student for several years. An archdiocesan treatment center concluded the priest was not a pedophile, but was affected by his “traumatic sexual development.” He remained in ministry for another decade.

It’s not clear if the trauma reference was to the alleged seminary assault. The priest told a therapist he had been tied down by several seminarians who tried to rape him and that a friend came to his rescue. But the same friend later twice abused him, the priest told the therapist, according to documents read in court.

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Correction: Priest Abuse-Trial story

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
13 News

PHILADELPHIA —

(AP) — In a story April 21 about the priest abuse trial in Philadelphia, The Associated Press erroneously reported the name of the law school where Timothy Lytton teaches. It is Albany Law School, not the University of Albany law school.

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Sent from the confessional to be castrated

NETHERLANDS
Catholic Church Conservation

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Kerk drong bij chirurgen aan op castratie homo’s :: nrc.nl

The Roman Catholic Church in the fifties and sixties urged surgeons to castrate homosexual boys and men. This is evident from statements made by scientists who were interviewed this morning by the Second Chamber of the Dutch Parliament.

Professor of medical history, Mart van Lieburg reported that he had spoken with two surgeons. They confirmed that they received direct orders from a bishop to perform castration. van Lieburg did not identify the bishop. After the hearing van Lieburg nuanced his statement: “I spoke with two surgeons. From one of them I heard that the bishop, who incidentally is still alive, called for the castration of a homosexual man.” (Cathcon- seems he thought “order” was a bit strong- but, that said, in the

Historian Marnix Koolhaas also reported that priests who acted as confessors to homosexual boys referred them directly to surgeons. That numbers are involved, Koolhaas does not known. “But it could have been a practice that was not unusual,” said Koolhaas.

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German Jesuit Sees Causality Between Homosexuality and Abuse

GERMANY
The Eponymous Flower

The director of the Institute for Psychology at the Jesuit Gregorian University in Rome has spoken.

(kreuz.net) Child abuse isn’t a problem for the Catholic Church.

This is what the Vice Rector of the Jesuit led Papal University of the Gregorian in Rome, Father Hans Zollner, said to Polish news ‘Rzeczpospolita’.

The Jesuit leads the ‘Institute for Psychology’ at the Gregorian.

This is independent of the Church

For example the Jesuit mentioned the Islamic Schools in England, in which five hundred children were sexually abused in 2011.

The abuse of children is a general problem — independent of religious back ground.

Seventy percent of the cases occur in the family.

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VATICAN CRITICS GET LOOPY

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on the way some are reacting to the Vatican’s decision to reform the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR):

Over the years, I have met many nuns who have been distraught over the way some in their ranks have lost their way. Now that the Vatican is seeking reforms, these nuns feel vindicated. That is why it is disturbing to read the way some of the Vatican’s critics are trying to defend the indefensible. Keep in mind that only 3% of the 55,000 nuns in the U.S. actually belong to the LCWR, though one would never know this by reading the secular press. But facts don’t matter to those gone loopy.

Joan Vennochi of the Boston Globe wants to know why the pope doesn’t “crack down on protectors of pedophile priests” instead of nuns. But there is nothing to crack down about. As the latest report on priestly sexual abuse shows, no credible accusations were made in 2011 against 99.98% of the priests. Besides, the problem has been homosexuality, not pedophilia (less than 5% of the old cases dealt with pedophilia).

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SNAP TO APPEAL

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

April 23, 2012 11:28 am | Author: Jerry Berger

SNAP plans to appeal a KC judge’s ruling that the group must turn over hundreds or thousands of pages of communications between its leaders and victims, witnesses, whistleblowers, police, prosecutors and journalists. The group’s outreach director Barbara Dorris, who has been subpoenaed by Archbishop Robert Carlson’s lawyers in a clergy sex suit involving Fr. Joseph Ross, detects a double standard: “Bishops blast President Barak Obama saying it’s wrong to allegedly try to force someone to violate his or her conscience. But that’s precisely what Missouri Catholic officials are trying to do to us – by forcing us to turn over confidential communications from hundreds of deeply wounded child sex abuse victims, victims who have been promised – and who deserve – privacy.”

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Vatican: New transparency laws have now been made official

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The decree issued on 25 January which renewed Vatican financial laws according to the 2010 anti money laundering standards has been confirmed before the 90 day deadline. There has been ongoing controversy over the power given to the Vatican Financial Information Authority (AIF) led by Cardinal Nicora

Andrea Tornielli
Vatican City

Emergency decree No. 159 which contains the new anti money laundering laws published last 25 January has been an ordinary law since last 2 April, when it was confirmed as such by the Pontifical Commission for the Vatican City State. The law is to be published officially tomorrow, one day before the end of the 90 day deadline given for its enforcement (after which it would have lapsed, had it not been approved).

No significant modifications have apparently been made to last January’s version of the text – which Vatican Insider had published in full. The Council of Europe’s Moneyval team (a Committee of Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering Measures and the Financing of Terrorism) is currently monitoring the Vatican’s conformance to international financial standards. Meanwhile, the Vatican is hoping to be added to the “white list” of “virtuous” Countries.

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Week five begins in the Philly abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter

by Brian Roewe on Apr. 23, 2012 NCR Today

The fifth week in the trial of two Philadelphia clergy began this morning, following a week that presented more stories of abuse by former priests, as well as a surprising accusation.

The trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn is the first against a church official for the cover-up of sex abuse. He is charged with child endangerment and conspiracy for his role in an alleged cover-up of sexual abuse by priests in the Philadelphia archdiocese during his tenure as secretary of clergy from 1992-2004 under the late former archbishop Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua.

Lynn’s co-defendant in the trial is Rev. James J. Brennan, a priest accused of a 1996 attempted rape of 14-year-old boy. Both he and Lynn have pleaded not guilty.

The biggest stir from last week’s testimony centered on a West Virginia bishop, the Most Rev. Michael Bransfield of the Wheeling-Charleston diocese. On Wednesday, multiple reports told of a witness who testified that he had been sexually abused by the Rev. Charles Gana inside a home owned by Bransfield, and that Gana had told him that Bransfield, who was a friend from their seminary days, was having sex with a boy.

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Guilty priest now focus of child abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Prosecutors and defense lawyers at the conspiracy and child-sex abuse trial of two Philadelphia priests battled Monday over whether and what jurors can be told about a third defendant who was accused of assaulting multiple boys and pleaded guilty days before the trial began.

That defendant, defrocked priest Edward Avery, was sentenced to 2 ½ to five years in prison after admitting that he sexually assaulted a 10-year-old altar boy in the late 1990s.

Avery also pleaded guilty to conspiring with Msgr. William J. Lynn, the former Archdiocese of Philadelphia official on trial for allegedly endangering children by allowing Avery and another priest, the Rev. James J. Brennan, to live at parishes despite signs they might abuse minors.

The jurors have been told that Avery is no longer a defendant at the trial, but they have not been told why. His guilty plea did not require him to cooperate with investigators or testify at the trial.

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Priest: Seminarians Tried to Gang Rape Me

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

By MARYCLAIRE DALE

Monday, Apr 23, 2012

A Catholic priest admitting a sexual relationship with a teen said he had been the victim of an attempted gang rape by fellow seminarians in Philadelphia.

Testimony in a clergy-abuse case Monday also mentioned the pope, who weighed in on the priest’s 2005 censure before becoming Pope Benedict XVI.

Documents show the priest admitted to Monsignor William Lynn in 1992 that he had sex with the high school student for years. A church-run hospital concluded the priest was not a pedophile, and he stayed in ministry until the priest-abuse crisis broke in 2002.

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More Shocking Testimony In Philadelphia Priest Sex Abuse Case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Tony Hanson

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Another stunning allegation was disclosed during testimony today in the Philadelphia clergy sex abuse case: an attempted gang rape at the St. Charles Borromeo seminary several decades ago.

The newest testimony was presented as the prosecution tries to show that the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and some of its officials had a history of failing to act against alleged sexual predators.

The evidence from the church’s “secret archive” file said that a Father Thomas Wisniewski remained in active ministry for a decade after admitting in 1992 that he had had sex with a teenage boy for years.

During therapy after Wisniewski’s alleged admission, according to the archives, the priest claimed that he had been the target of an attack by other seminarians when he was at St. Charles Borromeo. He said a group of seminarians held him down and tried to have sex with him, but a friend saved him from the attack.

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Legislatively Speaking – Child abuse prevention

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Courier

By Senator Lena C. Taylor

Since becoming a mother twelve years ago, I have found a new and unexpected concern for the safety of my child and thousands of children like him. This is not to say that men or younger women cannot or do not worry about the safety of children. That said, the stress and great joy of motherhood has greatly shaped my priorities as both a private citizen and a public servant.

The matter of child abuse weighs heavily upon my mind. I have been disturbed the stories I have been reading. For example, Philip Caminiti, formerly a pastor at Aleitheia Bible Church here in Milwaukee, was found guilty of instructing congregants at his church that infants and toddlers were never too young to be beaten with wooden rods.

Caminiti claimed his teachings were in accordance with the Bible, but any true Christian would say that Caminiti knows nothing about the teaching of Our Lord Jesus Christ. In the Bible I read, Jesus proclaimed peace even against feared enemies. Caminiti distorted our faith and used it to excuse violence against children! In recent months, few news stories have so greatly affected me. How could this happen?

Though encouraging others to harm children is most certainly a terrible crime, I believe that protecting abusers may be a worse offense. Reverend Lawrence Murphy, who taught at a Milwaukee school for the deaf, died in 1998. He was accused of sexually abusing about 200 boys.

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Rev. Terry W. Specht

ARLINGTON (VA)
BishopAccountability.org – Assignment Record

Summary of Case: Specht was placed on administrative leave in April 2012, due to an allegation that he had engaged in “sexual misconduct” with a teenage boy in the late 1990s. Specht was ordained in 1996, after a 21-year Navy career, where he worked on submarines. As a priest he was a high school chaplain and assistant principal, as well as the diocese’s director of the Office of Child Protection and Safety, from 2004-2011. At the time of his removal from active ministry Specht was a parish pastor. Police launched a criminal investigation. Specht denied the allegations.

Ordained: 1996
Incardinated: Arlington diocese

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Katholischer Psychologe: Schwule sind eher Kinderschänder

DEUTSCHLAND
Queer

Der Vizerektor der Päpstlichen Universität Gregoriana in Rom warnt davor, dass sich Homosexuelle grundsätzlich eher an Kinder vergehen als Heteros.

Im Interview mit der polnischen Tageszeitung “Rzeczpospolita” erklärte der aus Regensburg stammende Psychologieprofessor Hans Zollner zwar, dass nicht jeder Schwule ein Kinderschänder sei und es auch “keinen direkten kausalen Zusammenhang” zwischen Homosexualität und dem sexuellen Missbrauch von Jungs gebe. Allerdings gehe von Schwulen ein “höheres Risiko” aus, Kinder sexuell zu belästigen. Aus diesem Grund müsse die Katholische Kirche bei der Auswahl von Priestern besonders auf die sexuelle Orientierung achten, erklärte der Jesuit. Er begründet seine Aussage damit, dass nach Angaben der vatikanischen Glaubenskongregation 70 Prozent der Opfer von Übergriffen durch katholische Geistliche Jungen gewesen seien.

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