ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

November 14, 2017

Former NSW priest charged with child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press (AAP)

November 13, 2017

By Jamie McKinnell

A former Anglican priest has been charged with sexually assaulting a 15-year-old boy in the NSW Hunter region in the early 1990s.

Newcastle detectives began investigating the now 75-year-old in 2016 after a referral from the child sexual abuse royal commission.

Police say the man is a former “senior” priest who allegedly abused the boy in 1991.

He was arrested on Tuesday morning at a home in Kotara.

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.

Could Murder Of Sister Cathy Be Connected To Other Killings?

BALTIMORE (MD)
CBS Baltimore

November 13, 2017

By Denise Koch

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — Could a nearly 50-year-old secret be behind the murders of several Baltimore teenagers?

WJZ continues its investigation into the murder of young nun Sister Cathy, who was silenced right before she was about to blow the whistle on a powerful sex ring run by priests and police.

WJZ has learned that police are now looking into whether other unsolved murders could be connected.

Sister Cathy Cesnik’s decomposing body was found frozen in a ditch in Lansdowne in January 1970.

The murder of this popular nun has never been solved, and neither have the murders of five young people killed over the next decade.

Now, Baltimore County police are actively trying to determine whether the cases are linked.

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

November 13, 2017

Prosecutors will meet with son of former Boston TV anchor who accused actor Kevin Spacey of sexual assault

Nantucket (MA)
Mass Live

November 12, 2017

By Scott J. Croteau

The Cape and Islands district attorney will meet with the son of Heather Unruh after he accused actor Kevin Spacey of sexually assaulting him on Nantucket in 2016.

The Boston Globe reports the meeting will take place soon and District Attorney Michael O’Keefe wants all the information relevant to the alleged sexual assault.

In an announcement last week, former WCVB-TV news anchor Heather Unruh accused Spacey of sexually assaulting her then 18-year-old son at the Club Car bar in Nantucket in July 2016. Unruh’s son worked as a busboy there.

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

Sex abuse prevention resources available at sbc.net

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist Press

November 13, 2017

By Diana Chandler

NASHVILLE (BP) — While a growing international storm of sexual abuse allegations and revelations has swirled for more than a month, the Southern Baptist Convention has long encouraged churches to be proactive in preventing abuse, SBC resources show.

Spiritual leaders, churches and seminaries should model, exhort and teach the highest standards of moral and ministerial integrity, and churches should use legal resources and avenues to exclude sexual predators from leadership and influential positions including pastors and counselors, the SBC said as early as 2002.

“We call on our churches to discipline those guilty of any sexual abuse in obedience to Matthew 18:6-17 as well as to cooperate with civil authorities in the prosecution of those cases,” the SBC said in its resolution that year On the Sexual Integrity of Ministers . “We pray for those who have been harmed as a result of sexual abuse and urge our churches to offer support, compassion, and biblical counseling to them and their families.”

A Hollywood sexual abuse scandal that began in early October with accusations against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein revived a “Me Too” campaign birthed 10 years ago by activist Tarana Burke, according to Ebony.com, “to unify those who’ve been victimized by sexual violence.” The revived campaign, widely attributed to Alyssa Milano and identified in social media as #MeToo, drew support from scores, some of whom alleged sexual abuse in church settings.

Living Proof Ministries Founder Beth Moore and Saddleback Church Cofounder Kay Warren are among Southern Baptists sharing personal stories at #MeToo.

Apart from the #MeToo campaign, a civil lawsuit alleging sexual abuse-related offenses against First Baptist Church of Columbia, S.C., was filed Oct. 10 in Richland County, S.C., Fifth Judicial Circuit Court, according to online court documents.

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Former Massachusetts priest re-indicted on Maine sex abuse charges

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald

November 13, 2017

By Edward D. Murphy

The abuse of boys allegedly took place in Kennebunk in the late-1980s

A York County grand jury has re-indicted a former priest from Massachusetts who is accused of repeatedly sexually abusing two boys he brought to Maine in the 1980s.

Ronald Paquin now faces 31 counts of sexual abuse in York County. He was originally indicted in February on 29 counts of sexual abuse for acts he allegedly committed in the mid- to late-1980s when he brought the boys to Maine for “short-term stays,” Kennebunk Police Chief Craig Sanford said at the time Paquin was charged. Sanford would not say where the alleged abuse occurred, other than to describe it as “a seasonal location,” or provide any other information on the charges.

Paquin, 74, has been held at the York County Jail since he was arrested and formally charged in February.

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Sex abuse victims says priest forced boys to undress and take turns sitting on his lap

GUAM
Pacific News Center

November 13, 2017

By Janela Carrera

There are over 130 sex abuse lawsuit filed against the church so far.

Guam – The latest sex abuse lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Agana describes some of the routine practices of the alleged pedophiles against the victims.

The latest lawsuit comes from B.F. who names two individuals, Father Louis Brouillard and Boy Scout Leader Edward Pereira. B.F. says that he was not a member of the Boy Scouts or officially an altar server but often participated in their events and outings.

The sexual abuse began in the mid 1960s when B.F. was 10 years old. At the church rectory, B.F. alleges that Brouillard would instruct B.F. and his friends to take turns sitting on his lap with both priest and minors fully naked. According to the complaint, Brouillard would fondle the victims and force them to perform the same to him.

The victims says Pereira also sexually abused him by groping his private parts outside of his clothing.

B.F. is seeking $10 million in damages.

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In scandal’s wake, Guam’s interim archbishop works to heal fractured church

GUAM
USA Today

November 12, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

HAGÅTÑA, Guam — A year since stepping into a fractured community of faith, Archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes continues to work on bringing people back to church pews with stronger faith than they had before.

There’s still brokenness but everything can be overcome, he said.

“I think we’ve begun,” Byrnes said about fixing that brokenness of the soul, given the betrayal of trust by spiritual leaders, based on more than 140 clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed against priests and others associated with the Catholic Church.

With his groups of advisers and people he has met along the way, Byrnes is leading efforts to rebuild trust in the church. He says hope and healing ultimately comes from one’s faith in God.

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Ex-Members Say Church Uses Power, Lies to Keep Grip on Kids

SPINDALE (NC)
Associated Press

Nov. 13, 2017,

By Mitch Weiss and Holbrook Mohr

An Associated Press investigation has found that a secretive evangelical church has used positions of authority, deception and intimidation to bring children into the sect or keep them from leaving.

SPINDALE, North Carolina (AP) — As a court-appointed advocate for two foster boys, it was Nancy Burnette’s job to ensure they were in good hands. So as part of her casework, she visited Word of Faith Fellowship, the evangelical church they attended with the couple seeking to adopt them.

What happened next haunts her: In the middle of the service, the chanting and singing suddenly stopped, Burnette said, and the fiery pastor pointed at Burnette, accusing her of being “wicked.” ”You are here to cause strife!” she recalled Jane Whaley shouting, as she sensed congregants begin to converge upon her. “You don’t think these kids are supposed to be here!”

Terrified, Burnette left, but not before promising the boys, ages 4 and almost 2, that she would return — a promise she ultimately could not keep.

“What I didn’t know was how hard Word of Faith would fight — and the tactics they would use — to keep the kids,” Burnette told The Associated Press.

That was not the only time Word of Faith Fellowship’s leaders and members have used positions of authority, intimidation or deception to bring children into the church’s folds or keep them from leaving — often at Whaley’s behest, according to dozens of interviews and hundreds of pages of court records, police reports and social services documents obtained by the AP.

As a result, children have been introduced to sometimes violent church practices that run counter to the North Carolina laws designed to protect them, the AP found.

The state promotes “family preservation,” designed to prevent the “unnecessary placement of children away from their families.” But the AP found that some young congregants have been separated from their parents for up to a decade — bounced from family to family — as leaders strive to keep them in the church.

In addition, three single mothers told the AP that a longtime Word of Faith Fellowship member who was a county court clerk bypassed the foster system and eventually won permanent custody of their children, even though a judge called the clerk’s conduct inappropriate. Two of the mothers said the clerk approached them and offered to temporarily keep the children while they served their jail time.

The AP interviewed a dozen former congregants who said they had personally witnessed the three children living with the clerk being subjected to intense screaming sessions called “blasting” aimed at casting out demons, or being held down, shaken or beaten.

Even as she battled desperately for her young son, one of the three women had told a judge that, if she could not have him, the boy would be better off in foster care due to the church’s abusive nature.

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.

North Carolina church accused of ‘kidnapping’ children with help from a county clerk

SPINDALE (NC)
Raw Story

November 13, 2017

By Sarah K. Burris

The Word of Faith Fellowship, a North Carolina church facing a slew of investigations, is now being accused of kidnapping the children of at least one mother.

According to the Associated Press, the church in Spindale, North Carolina, used its relationship with a social worker to take more than a dozen children from their families.

As a child advocate, Nancy Burnette was tasked with visiting the church to ensure two foster children were safe while a family was working to adopt them. Out of the blue, the pastor pointed to Burnette and accused her of being “wicked.”

″You are here to cause strife!” she recalled pastor Jane Whaley shouting during a fiery sermon. At that point she said she felt the church members converge upon her. “You don’t think these kids are supposed to be here!”

North Carolina’s social services laws cite “family preservation,” so as to prevent “unnecessary placement of children away from their families.” Yet, many children have been taken from their families and put into the custody of church members. Thus far, three single mothers have come forward to allege a county court clerk bypassed the foster system so that church members were able to obtain custody of their children, despite a judge calling the conduct inappropriate.

“What I didn’t know was how hard Word of Faith would fight — and the tactics they would use — to keep the kids,” Burnette said.

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

Investigators face big hurdles in church child abuse cases

SPINDALE (NC)
Associated Press

November 13, 2017

By Mitch Weiss and Holbrook

SPINDALE, North Carolina – When Rutherford County’s child protection agency seeks to investigate allegations of abuse at Word of Faith Fellowship, it runs smack into two major obstacles: a habitual lack of cooperation from church members and a court-ordered compromise that limits what can trigger an inquiry and how social workers can question minors.

Word of Faith has been investigated numerous times over the course of decades without serious consequences, in large part because church leader Jane Whaley orders congregants to lie to and mislead authorities, according to dozens of former followers interviewed by The Associated Press.

In 1995, for example, the State Bureau of Investigation interviewed Whaley, sect leaders and dozens of former members about abuse allegations. Investigators determined congregants — including children — had been mistreated, but the district attorney ultimately declined to prosecute, saying any case would be undermined by most victims’ recalcitrance.

Whaley and a dozen church families sued the Rutherford County Department of Social Services in 2003, contending they were being targeted because of their religious beliefs. The agency settled the lawsuit two years later, agreeing to a list of stipulations dictating how it can investigate reports of child abuse.

Word of Faith received guarantees that abuse inquiries could no longer be solely based on objections to such core practices as “blasting,” when congregants surround a church member and shriek for hours in an attempt to expel demons.

The agreement also placed limits on where social workers can interview children and barred them from asking questions about religious beliefs or practices.

And the church won the right to refuse to admit any child to its K-12 school whose parents do not consent to the use of corporal punishment.

Several experts who reviewed the stipulations at the Associated Press’s request called the agreement highly unusual and spoke of a potential chilling effect on investigations.

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Not So Cold Cases, After All

UNITED STATES
Inside Higher Ed

November 13, 2017

By Colleen Flaherty

What’s to be done about the numerous reports of faculty misconduct dating back years and even decades?

As more and more sexual harassment cases involving faculty members come to light, a significant share of them date back 10, 20 and even 30 years. The last few months have seen a series of high-profile cases in which the accused professors are now senior in age as well as status, retired or even deceased. While these so-called cold cases certainly pose practical challenges in terms of dwindling institutional memory and evidence, experts say institutions are often (if not always) eager to help right past wrongs — and that they must.

“The deep question here is, ‘What is the purpose of making these allegations after so many years?’” said Michele Dauber, the Frederick I. Richman Professor of Law at Stanford University. “To a certain extent, it’s not unlike debates about Confederate memorials showing up in states that have never really been forced to come to terms with what they’ve done. It is wrong to say that people who were wronged by institutions in the past should simply let it go, with no acknowledgment of their suffering.”

Issues of moral responsibility are arguably more relevant and important in an educational setting, and indeed academic institutions have grappled with these parallel issues of legacy, Dauber said. “We really need to think about who we’re honoring … Seo-Young Chu is clearly owed an apology, at minimum.”

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Anglican priest charged over historical child sex abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

November 12, 2017

By Rebekah Cavanagh

A FORMER Anglican priest has been charged with multiple counts of indecent assault and gross indecency against two young girls.

Timothy Cohen, 63 has been charged with multiple counts of indecent assault and gross indecency in regional Victorian towns in the 1980s.

He is also accused of sexual penetration with one of the victims.

The Melbourne Magistrates Court heard on Friday that Cohen planned to contest the charges at a three-day hearing in April.

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Archdiocese of St. Louis reports sexual abuse allegation against retired priest

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

November 13, 2017

By Blythe Bernhard

A retired priest from St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Sullivan has been accused of sexually abusing a child in the late 1970s, the Archdiocese of St. Louis reported Monday.

Rev. Dennis B. Zacheis denies the allegations, according to the report.

Zacheis was assigned to St. Anthony’s in 2005 and served at St. Alban Roe in Wildwood for the previous 17 months before resigning. The report does not note where Zacheis worked in the 1970s.

Zacheis retired in 2010 over alleged financial indiscretions while serving as pastor at St. Anthony’s. The Archidocese refunded $60,000 to the church for a budget shortfall. Zacheis spent church money on expenses related to his vacation home at the Lake of the Ozarks, according to an audit. Zacheis’ lawyer at the time said the priest denied any wrongdoing.

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In Israel, Australian Sisters Recount Alleged Sex Abuse by ultra-Orthodox Principal

ISRAEL
HAARETZ

November 13, 2017

By Dina Kraft

The three women seek the extradition of the headmistress whose lawyer says she’s unfit to face trial. The sisters tell Haaretz about their experiences in a close-knit community back home

Growing up in an especially cloistered ultra-Orthodox home and community in Melbourne, Australia, the three sisters were required to have their books vetted by their school or parents. Any depictions of male-female interaction of any kind were whited out and taped over – even fairy tales.

Television and movies were prohibited. Even mail-order clothing catalogs weren’t allowed into their home. They learned nothing about their own bodies or sex.

But they say the kind attention they received from their charismatic headmistress at their all-girls ultra-Orthodox school evolved into sexual abuse, assault and rape – as they told the Australian police. They say they didn’t even have the words to describe it; each kept her experiences to herself. They were unaware, they say, until years after the alleged abuse began, that all three had become the headmistress’ victims.

“We didn’t know what our bodies even were, we didn’t have biology lessons,” said Elly Sapper, 28, the youngest of the three sisters who have accused the headmistress, Malka Leifer. “Everything was taboo. You didn’t even know about getting your period. You didn’t know when someone touches your body it was wrong. She said that was love, so we believed her.”

Last week, Sapper and her sisters Nicole Meyer, 32, and Dassi Erlich, 30, spoke with Haaretz in Tel Aviv about the abuse they say took place between about 2001 and 2008.

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Catholic priest Glen Walsh who was to give evidence in Archbishop Philip Wilson’s trial has died

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

November 11, 2017

By Andrew Dowdell

A CATHOLIC priest has died weeks before he was scheduled to give evidence in Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson’s trial for concealing child sex abuse.

Father Glen Walsh was a Hunter Valley priest and campaigner against child sex abuse within the Catholic Church.

He was due to appear as a prosecution witness later this month in Archbishop Wilson’s trial in New South Wales.

Archbishop Wilson is accused of concealing abuse committed by Hunter Valley paedophile priest Jim Fletcher in the 1970s.

He has denied the charges and is scheduled to face trial from November 27.

Father Walsh is being remembered as being one of the first to put the interests of abuse victims above those of his church as the magnitude of abuse emerged in recent years.

The NSW Coroner will hold an inquiry into his death but there are no suspicious circumstances and Father Walsh is believed to have taken his own life last Monday.

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Ex-div school prof had history of sexual abuse

NEW HAVEN (CT)
Yale Daily News

November 13, 2017

By Britton O’Daly & Adelaide Feibel

Former Yale adjunct professor Jaime Lara, who taught at the Divinity School and the Institute for Sacred Music for over a decade, sexually abused minors when he served as a priest in the Catholic Church from 1973 until his removal in 1992, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn confirmed on Thursday.

In the 25 years since his removal from the church, which the diocese hid from the public until last week, Lara has become a renowned scholar of sacred art history, writing five books and winning prestigious awards and fellowships. He served as a professor of Christian art and architecture and chair of the program in religion and the arts at Yale from 1995 to 2009 and also taught at the University of Notre Dame and Columbia University. Since 2013, he has served as a research professor at Arizona State University in the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. After learning of Lara’s history of sexual abuse, Arizona State officials requested he resign, effective immediately, The Arizona Republic reported.

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Diocese passes audit for safe environment

PORTLAND (ME)
Fiddlehead Focus

November 12, 2017

PORTLAND, Maine — An independent, on-site audit of safe environment procedures has found the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland in full compliance with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

The on-site audit, which reviewed the period of July 1, 2016, to June 30, 2017, was conducted by StoneBridge Business Partners of Rochester, N.Y., said diocesan officials in a Nov. 8 press statement.

The Charter, which originated in 2002, calls for an effective response from the diocese to any report of sexual abuse by church personnel, background checks on all diocesan employees and volunteers who work regularly with minors, and other mandates for the protection of children.

Auditors found 100 percent of all diocesan employees and active clergy had had background checks. Auditors also reviewed the implementation of the Think First/Stay Safe Prevention Program for children in Catholic schools and religious education, and the implementation of the Protecting God’s Children Program for all those working and volunteering in the Diocese of Portland.

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Priests given wallet-size help cards for handling abuse claims

IRELAND
The Irish Times

November 13, 2017

By Patsy McGarry

Bishops accused of ignoring church guidelines and denying priests’ rights

The Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) has issued a portable information card to assist priest’s faced with abuse allegations.

It was claimed at its annual meeting in Athlone last week that guidelines prepared for the handling of such cases by the church’s own child protection watchdog, its National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC), were not being followed by bishops and religious superiors.

The seven pointers on the information card, designed in a credit card size to fit handily in a wallet, “are in keeping with recommendations” by the NBSC, the ACP says.

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Ex-teacher facing 99 sex abuse charges excused from court on account of his age

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 13, 2017

By Amber Wilson

A former teacher and Catholic brother accused of 99 historical sex offences will be absent from a pre-trial committal hearing in Melbourne due to his age.

Lawrence Fitzpatrick, 90, appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on Monday charged with abusing 18 victims, including children under 14, at Sale, Briagolong, Stratford and Rosedale between 1971 and 1977.

The court was told the Marist brother is unsteady on his feet, has recently fallen multiple times, suffers back pain, fatigue, confusion, and is hearing impaired.

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November 12, 2017

Suspenden a sacerdote de Purén por denuncia de abuso sexual

CHILE
Biobiochile.cl

November 12, 2017

Publicado por Manuel Stuardo

La Información es de Carlos Martínez

[The bishop of the diocese of San José de Temuco, Héctor Vargas, has suspended a priest, Carlos Aedo Méndez, after receiving an allegation that Méndez sexually abused a minor 27 years ago.]

.Suspendido del ejercicio público como sacerdote, tras ser denunciado por el delito de abuso sexual, permanece el párroco de Purén.

La medida, asumida por el obispo de la Diócesis San José de Temuco, Héctor Vargas, deriva de una denuncia formal por abuso sexual que el 7 de octubre de este año fue recibida en la Vicaría Judicial del Obispado de Temuco.

Esta fue realizada por la persona afectada en contra del presbítero, Carlos Aedo Méndez, párroco de la Parroquia San Enrique de Purén, respecto de hechos ocurridos en Galvarino hace 27 años, cuando la presunta víctima era menor de edad.

Ahora, ante la denuncia acerca de esos mismos hechos, el obispo Vargas aplicó lo dispuesto por la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile, para este tipo de situaciones.

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Assignment History– Rev. Chester John “Chet” Warren, o.s.f.s.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Chester John “Chet Warren” was ordained for the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales in 1957. He was on staff at a boys’ high school in Philadelphia until 1960, when he was assigned to his order’s monastery in Toledo, Ohio. From 1963 to 1974 Warren was an assistant priest at Toledo’s St. Pius X parish and school. In 1974 he was transferred to a Taylor, Michigan parish in the Archdiocese of Detroit, then was returned in 1978 to the Oblates’ headquarters in Toledo. Warren resided during at least 1986-1992 at the St. Francis de Sales High School faculty house, while working as a chaplain at St. Vincent Medical Center.

In 1985 a young woman, Barbara Blaine, reported to the Oblates and later to the diocese that Warren had sexually abused her from the time she was a 13-year-old 7th-grader in 1969 at St. Pius X school, until she was a senior in high school. She said that the order told her that no one else had complained about Warren. In 1989 Blaine founded the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). After she named Warren publicly in 1992, two women contacted her to say that they, too, had been sexually abused by the priest as girls; both said they reported the abuse to Warren’s superiors in the early 1970s. By 2002 at least eight women had come forward with similar allegations. In 2003 a woman said she was abused by Warren as a preschooler in the context of ritual abuse involving a group of priests. In a 2005 press conference a nun stated that she was raped by Warren at age 6.

Warren was allowed to stay in ministry until 1992, just before he was named as a perpetrator by Barbara Blaine on national television. (Blaine had informed the Oblates that she was going to name him.) He was suspended, and later dismissed by his order. He was not laicized.

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Activists want priest accused of sex abuse removed from church

NEW YORK (NY)
NY1 News

November 9, 2017

Attorneys are calling on Cardinal Dolan to remove a priest accused of sexually abusing two children in the Bronx.

Lawyers Helping Survivors of Child Sex Abuse held a press conference in Midtown Thursday asking Father Lawrence J. Quinn be removed from service at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church in Upper Manhattan.

He’s accused of abusing children while assigned to Our Lady of Mercy in Fordham Heights between 1990 to 2001.

Attorneys for survivors of clergy sex abuse say the archdiocese needs to do more to protect children.

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Priest who was to testify against archbishop has died

AUSTRALIA
Sunday Mail

November 11, 2017

By Andrew Dowdell

Catholic priest Glen Walsh who was to give evidence in Archbishop Philip Wilson’s trial has died

A Catholic priest has died weeks before he was scheduled to give evidence in Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson’s trial for concealing child sex abuse.

Father Glen Walsh was a Hunter Valley priest and campaigner against child sex abuse within the Catholic Church.

He was due to appear as a prosecution witness later this month in Archbishop Wilson’s trial in New South Wales.

Archbishop Wilson is accused of concealing abuse committed by Hunter Valley paedophile priest Jim Fletcher in the 1970s.

He has denied the charges and is scheduled to face trial from November 27.

Father Walsh is being remembered as being one of the first to put the interests of abuse victims above those of his church as the magnitude of abuse emerged in recent years.

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Archbishop Martin accused of being ‘very negative’ about Church

IRELAND
Irish Times

November 12, 2017

By Patsy McGarry

‘No reconciliation’ with Dublin priests following his response to 2009 Murphy report

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has been criticised for what a Dublin parish priest has called his negativity towards the Catholic Church in Ireland.

“It’s quite plain really,” said Fr Gregory O’Brien.

“He publishes statistics about 2 per cent (Sunday) Mass attendance when there are 1,000 people at Mass here and 1.2 million in the whole country. I don’t think it helps the morale of priests or people particularly”.

Fr O’Brien is parish priest at St Jude the Apostle in Willington, south Co Dublin. Archbishop Martin, he said, was “very negative, overly negative.”

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Child bride-related charges dropped against polygamist

UTAH
Salt Lake Tribune

November 11, 2017

By Nate Carlisle

Child bride-related charges dropped against polygamist; details of Mexico ranch killings emerge

Pennie Petersen says Orson William Black will be free within days unless sex-abuse charges are reinstated.

In this photo provided with a redaction by the law enforcement in the Mexican state of Chihuahua, Orson William Black, 56, stands while being detained Nov. 5, 2017. Black is a former member of the polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints who has been on the run from child sex abuse charges in Arizona since 2003. Courtesy Photo.

Arizona prosecutors eight months ago dropped charges against a polygamist who had allegedly married underage girls on the Utah line, said a woman who has been working for 14 years to bring the polygamist back from Mexico.

Following the slaying of three of his family members in Mexico, Orson William Black, 56, finally returned to the United States on Thursday and is being held at a detention center in El Paso, Texas. But the woman who has been pursuing him, Pennie Petersen, on Saturday said he’ll be free this time next week if the Arizona attorney general doesn’t reinstate the child sex-abuse charges.

“When he gets out of that jail cell in El Paso, if he thinks the heat is on him, he’s gone,” Petersen said in a phone interview.

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Warren Jeffs’ daughter speaks out about what she endured in his polygamist cult

UNITED STATES
Business Insider

November 11, 2017

By Michelle Mark

Rachel Jeffs, the daughter of polygamist cult leader Warren Jeffs, spoke out on “Megyn Kelly Today” about the sexual abuse she endured at her father’s hands when she was a child.

Warren Jeffs is the self-described “prophet” of the FLDS Church, a Mormon fundamentalist cult that has been disavowed by mainstream Mormons.

He was convicted in 2011 of child sexual assault and is serving a life sentence, though he continues to control the church to this day.

Rachel Jeffs, who escaped the church in 2015, said her father began sexually abusing her when she was eight years old.

The daughter of the polygamist cult leader Warren Jeffs spoke out on “Megyn Kelly Today” about her upbringing as a member of the FLDS Church and the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of her father when she was a child.

Rachel Jeffs, who also details the abuse in an upcoming book titled “Breaking Free,” told Kelly in an interview that aired Friday that her father abused her “way more times than I can count,” starting with an incident that occurred when she was eight years old.

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I have a confession – the Catholic Church’s sins

IRELAND
Irish Central

November 12, 2017

By Cormac MacConnell

“We laity in the past placed ye on a pedestal that was far too high and uncomfortable for any mortal men.”

By the time ye are reading this I will possibly be roasting eternally already in the hottest corner of hell for having dreadfully broken the centuries-old sacred tradition of the Seal of Confession of the Catholic Church.

Mighty priests and saints were burned at the stake in the past for refusing to break that seal, so this is a heavy moment indeed for all of us. Maybe ye should stop reading here at this point to not become even laterally complicit in MacConnell’s. Those of you who are devoutly Catholic should take this suggestion seriously.

Anyway, for those of you still here, the context is that I also was devoutly Catholic and a regular Mass-goer until about 25 years ago when the frightening tide of scandals attached to my church began to surface in turgid waves.

It was a shock here in holy Ireland, for example, when it was revealed that both Bishop Eamon Casey and Father Michael Cleary, the hierarchy’s brightest stars of the time, were biological fathers as well as priests sworn to celibacy. They were both good and charming men and that was a minor enough matter on the scale of things.

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Arizona professor quits in wake of clergy sex abuse scandal

PHOENIX (AZ)
Associated Press via KVOA-TV

November 11, 2017

A research professor at Arizona State University has resigned after the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn made public this week details about his removal from the priesthood years ago over cases of clergy sex abuse involving minors.

University officials requested that Jaime Lara resign after they learned of his history as a priest. His resignation was tendered Thursday, The Arizona Republic reported .

Lara could not be reached for comment Friday.

He was ordained in 1973 and was in active ministry until 1992 when he was removed from the priesthood by the Vatican. The information was posted Wednesday on the diocese website along with the names of other former clerics who had been defrocked.

It was between 1979 and 1981 that Lara is accused of sexually abusing three children ranging in age from 9 to 11 years old at St. Francis Xavier Church in Brooklyn, New York, according to the victims’ attorney, Mitchell Garabedian.

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Embattled San Jose Catholic girls school places two teachers on leave

SAN JOSE (CA)
San Jose Mercury News

By Ethan Baron

November 11, 2017

Move comes the same week former Presentation High graduate publishes essay alleging she was sexually molested by now-deceased instructor

Two teachers were put on forced leave Friday at a Catholic girls high school that was already reeling from a high-profile claim that school officials kept a teacher on staff after he molested two students in 1990.

The Presentation High School teachers were placed on paid administrative leave after two students and a former student came forward earlier in the week with information regarding two separate, more recent situations — at least one of which was serious enough to warrant a call to police.

The statements to the school from the students and former student came three weeks after the Washington Post published an essay by Presentation High graduate Kathryn Leehane describing her frustration after she reported to school officials and police that a teacher had sexually molested her and another female student in 1990. The teacher, who was not named, remained at the school but has since died.

“Eventually, I lost hope for justice,” Leehane wrote.

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A day in the life of Guam’s archbishop

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 12, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

A more in-depth look into the life of Archbishop Michael Byrnes from his interview with Pacific Daily News reporter Haidee Eugenio on Oct. 27, 2017.

A year since stepping into a fractured community of faith, Archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes continues to work on bringing people back to church pews with stronger faith than they had before.

There’s still brokenness but everything can be overcome, he said.

“I think we’ve begun,” Byrnes said about fixing that brokenness of the soul, given the betrayal of trust by spiritual leaders, based on more than 140 clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed against priests and others associated with the Catholic Church.

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November 11, 2017

Falleció monseñor Edgardo Gabriel Storni

SANTA FE (ARGENTINA)
Infobae [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

November 11, 2017

Read original article

El religioso, que en 2009 fue acusado por abuso sexual, falleció en una casa de retiro de La Falda, según informó la agencia de noticias DyN

Fuentes eclesiásticas confirmaron que Storni murió a las 17:30 en la casa donde residía en Córdoba, desde que había sido aceptada su renuncia, con anticipación, por las acusaciones en su contra.

Storni fue separado de su cargo en 2002 luego de la denuncia por delitos sexuales en su contra, la cual derivó en un proceso judicial que en 2009 lo condenó en primera instancia a ocho años de prisión por abuso sexual agravado, aunque un tribunal superior ordenó el año pasado la anulación de la sentencia y dispuso que la causa vuelva a fojas cero.

Storni nació en Santa Fe el 6 de abril de 1936 y fue ordenado sacerdote el 23 de diciembre de 1961. Elegido obispo auxiliar de Santa Fe el 31 de diciembre de 1976 por Pablo VI, fue ordenado obispo el 25 de marzo de 1977 y promovido a arzobispo de Santa Fe el 28 de agosto de 1984, cargo del que tomó posesión el 30 de setiembre de 1984.

El prelado debió renunciar anticipadamente el 1 de octubre de 2002, envuelto en un escándalo por denuncias de abusos sexuales y acoso a 47 seminaristas.

En diciembre de 2009, monseñor Storni fue condenado por la jueza santafesina María Amalia Mascheroni a ocho años de prisión por abuso sexual agravado contra el ex seminarista Rubén Descalzo, aunque no fue a la cárcel sino que cumplió arresto domiciliario por su edad avanzada.

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Op-Ed: Roy Moore’s alleged pursuit of a young girl is the symptom of a larger problem in evangelical circles

UNITED STATES
The Los Angeles Times

November 10, 2017

By Kathryn Brightbill

We need to talk about the segment of American culture that probably doesn’t think the allegations against Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore are particularly damning, the segment that will blanch at only two accusations in the Washington Post expose: He pursued a 14-year-old-girl without first getting her parents’ permission, and he initiated sexual contact outside of marriage. That segment is evangelicalism. In that world, which Moore travels in and I grew up in, 14-year-old girls courting adult men isn’t uncommon.

I use the phrase “14-year-old girls courting adult men,” rather than “adult men courting 14-year-old girls,” for a reason: Evangelicals routinely frame these relationships in those terms. That’s how I was introduced to these relationships as a home-schooled teenager in the 1990s, and it’s the language that my friends and I would use to discuss girls we knew who were in parent-sanctioned relationships with older men.

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The Swine of Conservatism

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

November 11, 2017

By Ross Douthat

Lately we have been given an extended education in the different varieties of liberal pigs.

There’s the industrial-scale predator who buys indulgences from Planned Parenthood. And the male feminist who respects women so very much — especially when they’re too drunk to resist him. And the Great Man of Letters creeping on his co-workers. And the let-it-all-hang-out artist who thinks it can’t be assault if the only person you’re touching is yourself.

But this week our era of exposure has reminded us that cultural conservatism has its own distinctive swine.

So while we wait to see what becomes of Alabama Senate candidate and professional Christian Roy Moore, who is credibly alleged to have spent his thirties pursuing high school girls with the “I get older, they stay the same age” gusto of Matthew McConaughey’s character in “Dazed and Confused,” it’s worth doing a quick typology of the predators that flourish among the godly and moralistic and traditional.

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ASU professor resigns amid Catholic Church child sexual-abuse scandal

ARIZONA
The Arizona Republic

By Jason Pohl

November 10, 2017

A renowned professor of medieval art history at Arizona State University was forced to resign Thursday after the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn announced he had sexually abused minors decades ago while he was an East Coast priest.

Professor Jaime Lara was ordained in 1973 and was in active ministry until 1992 when he was laicized by the Vatican for sexually abusing children, the Diocese of Brooklyn confirmed Wednesday on its website.

Upon learning of his history as a priest, ASU officials on Thursday requested he resign from his role as a research professor from the university’s Tempe campus, school officials confirmed to The Arizona Republic.

His resignation was tendered that same day and effective immediately.

The laicization, which prohibits Lara from carrying out priestly duties, was handed down by a decree from the Vatican office “authorized to deal with cases involving sexual abuse of minors by a cleric,” the Diocese said.

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Victim claims abuse on Manchester United trip

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC

November 10, 2017

By Reevel Alderson

A 61-year-old man from Glasgow has told the BBC he was sexually abused on a football trip to Manchester United in the late 1960s.

James, who wants to keep his anonymity, believes he was “trafficked” to English football clubs by the Marist Brothers, a Catholic order which ran his school.

He said he was repeatedly abused by the brothers at his primary school.

In a statement, Manchester United said it had found no information relating to the Marist Brothers in its review.

The Old Trafford club looked into historical abuse as part of the English FA’s inquiry, led by barrister Clive Sheldon QC.

It is looking at the way clubs or the FA dealt with concerns over child sex abuse between 1970 and 2005.

However, James said he thought his abuse happened on a trip in 1969, when he was 12 or 13.
Initiation ceremony

The UK’s National Crime Agency told the BBC it had concluded James was a victim of “modern slavery”.

It is unusual for the agency to investigate such historical allegations.

James told the BBC he was in a group of “elite” young footballers who were selected by his school to take part in a tournament in Manchester.

The boys were taken to Old Trafford and the club’s training ground, where they played matches and toured the stadium, the boot room and directors’ offices.

James said he had visions of becoming a Manchester United player like his heroes George Best and Bobby Charlton but he said he was taken from the hostel where the boys were staying and sexually abused.

He said he did not know who abused him but he was taken outside as part of an “initiation ceremony”.

“It was non-consensual sex,” he said.

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November 10, 2017

Assignment Record – Rev. Adam F. Prochaski

BROOKLYN (NY)
BishopAccountability.org

November 11, 2017

Summary of Case: Adam F. Prochaski was a priest of the Diocese of Brooklyn ordained in 1968. He spent his entire career at Holy Cross parish and school in Maspeth, Queens, which was established by and served the Polish community. Prochaski was an assistant priest unitl 1989, when he was named pastor. Prochaski left the parish in 1994 and, through 2002, was indexed in the Official Catholic Directory as “Absent on Leave” or “Absent on Sick Leave.”

In September 2017 a former Holy Cross teacher, Linda Porcaro, stated publicly that in 1990 seven of her female students told her that Prochaski was sexually abusing them. Porcaro said she reported this to the school principal, whose response was to laugh and say that “everyone knew about Father P.” Porcaro said she later told a new principal, who reported the allegations to the diocese, but that “not much was done.” The diocese claimed that it first received allegations against Prochaski in 1994 and that he left the priesthood soon thereafter. The diocese denied responsibility for Prochaski after 1994, despite his having been indexed in the Directories through 2002.

By October 2017, twenty-three women had come forward with allegations that Prochaski sexually abused them when they were students at Holy Cross. The abuse allegedly occurred between 1972 and 1994, and was of girls ages 5 to 16. Many of the girls were Polish immigrants, brought to the U.S. via a special program run by Prochaski. Porcaro said that she had heard from “hundreds” of former students who said that the priest had abused them.

Prochaski reportedly went on to marry and to work as an addictions counselor.

The New York Police Department initiated an investigation. The statute of limitations for child sexual abuse in New York state prevents criminal or civil litigation after the alleged victim reaches age 23, with the exception of rape.

Ordained: 1968

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Rachel Jeffs, daughter of Warren Jeffs, describes abuse she endured in FLDS church

UNITED STATES
The Spectrum

November 10, 2017

By Emily Havens

For the first time, Rachel Jeffs appeared on national television to discuss what her life was like as the daughter of Warren Jeffs, the former FLDS prophet.

Rachel Jeffs’ story will be shared on NBC’s “Dateline” on Friday night. On Friday morning, Rachel Jeffs appeared on “Megyn Kelly TODAY” to answer questions about life inside the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, what it was like being a sister wife, and the abuse she endured from her own father when she was a child.

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Brooklyn Diocese: ASU professor sexually abused children as a priest years ago

ARIZONA
The State Press

November 10, 2017

By Reilly Kneedler

The University asked for Lara’s resignation Thursday and he is no longer with ASU

ASU research professor James “Jaime” Lara had his priesthood revoked by the Vatican in 1992 for sexually abusing children, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn said in a statement Thursday.

The University asked for his resignation Thursday in light of the announcement, according to an ASU official. Lara agreed to resign and is no longer associated with the University, according to a University statement.

“Jaime Lara is no longer affiliated with Arizona State University, effective Thursday,” the statement read.

The ASU official said the University found out about Lara’s history with the clergy when the diocese announced it on its website Thursday.

“We found out when the diocese posted it and somebody walked over to his office and said ‘You need to resign or we’re going to fire you,’” the official said. “And he said ‘OK, I’ll resign.’”

Lara did not respond to requests for comment.

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Kansas priest removed from parish after hiking trip with children

WICHITA (KS)
The Wichita Eagle

November 10, 2017

By Stan Finger and Katherine Burgess

A Catholic priest has been removed from the pulpit after taking a hiking trip with parish children and no other adults.

The Rev. Andrew Seiler was removed from ministry at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Conway Springs last month after an Oct. 9 hiking trip, according to a letter from the diocese sent to parishioners Thursday and provided to The Eagle.

The letter said there were no allegations of abuse against Seiler and that “no harm was done to the children.” Being alone with a minor goes against behavioral boundaries set by the diocese.

A statement announcing Seiler’s leave was read at each of the Masses at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Conway Springs on the weekend of Oct. 14-15, and Seiler has not returned to the pulpit.

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OPINION: Proposed archdiocese act a recipe for abuse

CANADA
The Chronicle Herald

November 10, 2017

By Tom Urbaniak

Last month, Bill 30 was introduced in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. It was unanimously given second reading by MLAs after less than a minute of debate. This new Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth Act is still before the standing committee on local and private bills, where it was rightly deferred for more consideration.

The implications are anything but local or private.

This proposed law would grant to Roman Catholic Archbishop Anthony Mancini regulatory powers that are currently held only by officials of the government. He would become, in effect, his own registrar of joint stock companies, with the unilateral power to create, dissolve, modify and completely control dozens of civil corporations.

The new act would also allow him to use provincial law, not just church law, to require parishes to “work collaboratively” with him on all matters.

I am a practising Catholic in the neighbouring Diocese of Antigonish. Our diocese, like so many others, was ravaged by sexual abuse of children by some priests. For decades, bishops covered up those crimes and transferred sexual predators from one unsuspecting parish to another.

This continued because the bishops claimed to have personal control over all personnel, accounts and property in the diocese. When finally faced with civil liability, they took money and property from the parishes, but kept the old, secretive structures going.

The parishes could not vet these priests or supervise them in any way. The bishop himself was answerable to no council and accounted to no lay people. There was no transparency.

In 2009, the then bishop, Raymond Lahey, was arrested in turn. He was eventually convicted and jailed for the possession of child pornography.

Mancini should be aware that the scandals were enabled by a system of no oversight or accountability. But now, he has asked the Nova Scotia House of Assembly to enshrine and protect that very sick system in the laws of the province.

MLAs should respectfully decline. They should allow the future parish corporations to have the same rights and responsibilities in law as any other corporations or societies in Nova Scotia. Their own bylaws could still reflect their Catholic identity and membership in the archdiocese.

On the surface, Bill 30 might appear to protect parishes by giving them their own civil incorporation to shield their assets in the event of crimes by the bishop and his priests in other parishes.

But this bill actually further disenfranchises parishioners and makes it virtually impossible for parishes to guard themselves against abuses.

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The Bristlecone Project expected to help survivors come forward

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

November 3, 2017

By Oliver Lewis

[Note: The Bristlecone Project exhibition runs from Monday, November 6 to April 1, 2018, at Canterbury Museum.]

An installation telling the stories of male survivors of sexual abuse is expected to help other men open up about their own trauma.

The Bristlecone Project exhibition, featuring black-and-white photographs of 24 New Zealand men abused in childhood, opens at Canterbury Museum on Monday.

“People have been trying to hide this for so long, and now it’s going to be in the public’s face,” said Ken Clearwater, manager of the Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse Trust.

“We’re taking the lid off a can of worms and throwing the lid away. We’ve been carrying this shame and guilt for so long, it’s time people understand the damage it does.”

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Manhattan Priest Accused Of Abusing Two Boys In The 1990s

MANHATTAN (NY)
CBS (WCBS 880)

November 9, 2017

By Alex Silverman

NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Two men are accusing an active upper Manhattan priest of abusing them decades ago, and calling on the archdiocese to keep him away from children.

Minnesota-based attorneys Patrick Noaker and Jessica Arbour who work for the group Lawyers Helping Survivors of Child Sex Abuse, say their clients, whom they did not name, filed claims with the archdiocese’s victim compensation program in September and October. They claim Fr. Lawrence Quinn abused them when he was assigned to a parish in the Bronx throughout the 1990s.

“One boy was an altar boy at Our Lady of Mercy, and the other was trying to become an altar boy,” Noaker said. One of the accusers was 5 years old when the alleged abuse began; the other was 12.

Quinn is now assigned to Our Lady Queen of Martyrs in Inwood, which has an elementary school on the property.

“The archdiocese has done nothing to inform these parishioners that there may be a lone wolf in their midst,” Arbour said.

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Circle of Accusers Expands in Sexual Misconduct Investigation at Presentation High

SAN JOSE (CA)
NBC

November 9, 2017

By Vicky Nguyen and Michael Bott

The group of teachers and staff accused of sexually assaulting or harassing students at a Catholic high school for girls in San Jose is growing after an explosive essay published in the Washington Post last month described the sexual assault of two students by a former Spanish teacher nearly three decades ago.

Since Presentation High School graduate Kathryn Leehane published that essay, NBC Bay Area’s Investigative Unit has learned of accusations against several other teachers or staff members, including at least one that’s still employed at the school.

Several sources who spoke with NBC Bay Area also described reporting incidents of sexual misconduct they witnessed or learned of to school Principal Mary Miller, but they question whether those incidents were ever reported to authorities.

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Raisman says she is victim of MSU doctor Nassar

UNITED STATES
The Detroit News

November 10, 2017

By Charles E. Ramirez

Six-time Olympic medal-winning gymnast Aly Raisman said she is also a victim of Larry Nassar, the former Michigan State University doctor accused of sexually assaulting more than 100 girls.

Raisman confirmed the abuse to TV news magazine “60 Minutes,” which will broadcast the interview set to air Sunday, according to USA Today. The three-time gold medalist and captain of the 2012 and 2016 Olympic teams also describes it in her book, “Fierce,” which will be released next week.

“I am angry. I’m really upset,” Raisman told “60 Minutes.” “I see these young girls that come up to me, and they ask for pictures or autographs, whatever it is … I just want to create change so that they never, ever have to go through this.”

Her disclosure of the attack comes about a month after her teammate on the so-called “Fierce Five” gymnastics team, Olympic gold medalist McKayla Maroney she was sexually assaulted by Nassar when she was young.

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Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman says she was abused by Larry Nassar

UNITED STATES
ESPN

November 10, 2017

John Barr/The Associated Press

Aly Raisman, a six-time Olympic medalist and two-time national team captain, said she was sexually abused by former Michigan State and USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar, according to CBS’ “60 Minutes.”

Nassar already faces 22 counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and could receive a sentence of life in prison.

Raisman told “60 Minutes,” in an interview scheduled to air Sunday, that she spoke to FBI investigators after serving as national team captain at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro. In the interview, Raisman said she didn’t know why it took so long for allegations against Nassar to come forward.

“Why are we looking at why didn’t the girls speak up? Why not look at what about the culture?” she said. “What did USA Gymnastics do, and Larry Nassar do, to manipulate these girls so much that they are so afraid to speak up?”

Now 23, Raisman told “60 Minutes” that she started seeing Nassar when she was 15. She details the abuse in her book “Fierce,” which will be released on Nov. 14.

USA Gymnastics said in a statement Friday that Raisman sharing her personal experience took “great courage” and it is “appalled by the conduct of which Larry Nassar is accused.”

Raisman, who was also captain of the team for the 2012 Games in London, is the second member of the “Fierce Five” U.S. women’s gymnastics team — and third Olympian overall — to allege abuses by Nassar. Just last month, Raisman offered her support to McKayla Maroney after she alleged abuse by Nassar dating back to 2009, when she was just 13.

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Aly Raisman says she was sexually abused by U.S. national team doctor

UNITED STATES
CBS News

November 10, 2017

In an interview with 60 Minutes, the Olympic gold medalist says she spoke with FBI investigators after the Rio games

One of America’s biggest Olympic stars has come forward to accuse the former U.S. women’s gymnastics team doctor of sexual abuse. Aly Raisman, who won six medals, three of them gold, for the U.S. at the last two Olympic Summer Games, says she was sexually abused by Dr. Larry Nassar. Raisman tells her story to Dr. Jon LaPook for a 60 Minutes report to be broadcast Sunday, Nov. 12 at 7:00 p.m. ET/PT.

Raisman, 23, says she was first treated by Dr. Nassar when she was 15. She talks about her experiences in a new book called “Fierce.” It’s the story of a girl who dreamed of going to the Olympics, and how she realized her goal, but it also includes new insights into a scandal that goes to the highest level of Raisman’s sport.

Dr. Nassar, who worked with the U.S. women’s national gymnastics teams for more than two decades, is now in jail. He pleaded guilty to child pornography charges but not guilty to charges of sexual assault. More than 130 women, many of them former athletes, have filed civil lawsuits alleging that Nassar sexually abused them under the guise of treating them for hip, back, and other athletic injuries. Raisman tells 60 Minutes that after the Rio Olympics she spoke to FBI investigators about Dr. Nassar.

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Inwood Priest Sexually Assaulted Children At Bronx Parish: Lawyer

INWOOD (NY)
Washington Heights Patch

November 9, 2017

By Brendan Krisel

A priest at Our Lady of Martyrs Church in Inwood allegedly molested two boys while serving at a parish in the Bronx.

INWOOD, NY — A catholic priest accused of molesting two boys at a Bronx church is now stationed at an Inwood parish, lawyers told Patch Thursday.

Two men have accused Lawrence Quinn of molesting them at Our Lady of Mercy Church in the Bronx, but the priest still serves the New York Archdiocese as a Parochial Vicar at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church in Inwood on Arden Street, the accusers’ lawyer Patrick Noaker told Patch.

Quinn preyed on his first victim when he served as an altar boy at the Bronx church between 1990 and 1996, Noaker told Patch. The boy was between 5- and 11-years-old at the time of the abuse, the lawyer said. The second victim was between 12- and 14-years-old when Quinn molested him between 1999 and 2001, Noaker said. The boy was training to become an altar boy at the time of the assault, the lawyer told Patch.

Both men have filed claims against Quinn with the New York Archdiocese through its Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, but Quinn continues to serve the church to this day, Noaker told Patch.

“Protecting kids must be our first priority,” Noaker said during a press conference in front of the archdiocese Manhattan headquarters Thursday. “It is extremely troubling that Father Lawrence Quinn is still serving in a parish after two survivors have come forward and alerted the Church with reports of his abuse.”

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Victim claims abuse on Manchester United trip

GLASGOW (SCOTLAND)
BBC Scotland

November 10, 2017

By Reevel Alderson

A 61-year-old man from Glasgow has told the BBC he was sexually abused on a football trip to Manchester United in the late 1960s.

James, who wants to keep his anonymity, believes he was “trafficked” to English football clubs by the Marist Brothers, a Catholic order which ran his school.

He said he was repeatedly abused by the brothers at his primary school.

In a statement, Manchester United said it had found no information relating to the Marist Brothers in its review.

The Old Trafford club looked into historical abuse as part of the English FA’s inquiry, led by barrister Clive Sheldon QC.

It is looking at the way clubs or the FA dealt with concerns over child sex abuse between 1970 and 2005.

However, James said he thought his abuse happened on a trip in 1969, when he was 12 or 13.

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Abuse allegation reported against retired priest

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Review

November 09, 2017

The Archdiocese of St. Louis has received an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Father Dennis B. Zacheis. The acts are alleged to have occurred while he was an associate pastor at St. Margaret Mary Alacoque Parish in Mehlville from 1975 to 1979. Father Zacheis denies the allegation.

Archbishop Robert J. Carlson, in consultation with the Review Board of the archdiocese, made the allegation known for the sake of openness and transparency.

Father Zacheis retired from ministry without priestly faculties in 2010 due to alleged irregularities in finances for which he was responsible as pastor of St. Anthony in Sullivan. He currently resides in a private residence.

Father Zacheis served as associate pastor at St. Mary Magdalen Parish in south St. Louis from 1979-85, Christ, Prince of Peace in Manchester from 1985-88 and St. Matthias in Lemay from 1988-92. He was pastor of St. Gertrude Parish in Krakow from 1994-2003, St. Alban Roe in Wildwood from 2003-04 and St. Anthony in Sullivan from 2005-09.

As pastor of the parish in Sullivan, Father Zacheis also was known for a large number of new Catholics joining the faith in a town that is largely nonCatholic.

Anyone with reports of abuse of a minor involving a member of the clergy or other church personnel to contact Sandra Price, executive director of the Office of Child and Youth Protection, at (314) 792-7271, the Missouri Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline at (800) 392-3738 and/or law enforcement officials.

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N.B. woman sues priest, Anglican church for damages over assaults

CANADA
Anglican Journal

November 9, 2017

By Joelle Kidd

A woman who claims a priest in the diocese of Fredericton tried to kill her is suing him, the Anglican Church of Canada, the diocese of Fredericton, and the Corporation of the Anglican Parish of St. Stephen (Christ Church Anglican), in St. Stephen, N.B.

Cynthia Mae Moore claims that she and the Rev. William Morton, who was rector at the Anglican Parish of St. Stephen, carried on an extra-marital affair between February 2012 and December 2015.

She alleges that on Nov. 24, 2015, while she was visiting Morton at his house, he threatened to skin her alive and scrape her breasts with a box cutter, according to a statement of claim filed with the Court of Queen’s Bench in Saint John, N.B., October 2.

After she left, Moore alleges that Morton came to her house and attempted to kill her. “He succeeded in cutting her breasts and abdomen with a box cutter,” the statement of claim reads.

Moore alleges that on December 8, 2015, Morton attacked her again and “attempted to kill her with a knife to her throat.”

According to the CBC, that same day, Morton was arrested and charged with two counts of assault with a weapon after “the St. Stephen RCMP received a 911 call about a disturbance involving a man and a woman, shortly before 1 a.m.” Morton, who pleaded not guilty to the charges, was ordered to undergo a 30-day psychiatric assessment. He later changed his pleas to guilty of both offences on August 23, 2016.

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Lawsuit: Priest made boys walk from Agana to Mangilao for refusing to swim naked

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 10, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

Father Louis Brouillard, around 1964, allegedly made young boys walk from Agana Springs to Mangilao after they refused to swim naked, and subjected them to repeated sexual abuse at the Mangilao parish, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court.

A plaintiff, identified only as B.F. in court documents to protect his privacy, filed a $10 million clergy sex abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Agana, the Boy Scouts of America, Brouillard and scout leader Edward Pereira, along with up to 50 others.

B.F., represented by attorney David Lujan, said he was about 10 to 11 years old when Brouillard, also a scout master, and Pereira, sexually abused and molested him.

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New book alleges gay sex in Vatican dorm, shady banking involving Mother Teresa

ROME
The Associated Press

November 10, 2017

By Nicole Winfield

Gianluigi Nuzzi, one of the journalists charged by the Vatican in 2015 in the Vatileaks II case, has written a new book covering scandals in the Vatican. He alleges sexual abuse of a minor took place at a seminary within Vatican City, and that Mother Teresa’s account at the Vatican Bank was so large, the institution would have defaulted if she removed the money.

ROME – The Italian journalist who was put on trial by the Vatican for publishing confidential documents has written a new book alleging a host of Catholic sins, including gay sex in the Vatican’s youth seminary.

Gianluigi Nuzzi’s Original Sin went on sale Thursday. At a news conference, Nuzzi said his lawyers had hand-delivered a copy to the Vatican’s criminal prosecutor, saying at least one of the seminarians was a minor at the time of the alleged escapades.

The Vatican didn’t immediately comment.

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Vatican turned blind eye to sex abuse in teenage dorm, claims new book

ROME
International Business Times

November 10, 2017

By Isabelle Gerretsen

Pope Francis is facing mounting pressure to crack down on clerical sex abuse.

A new book contains bombshell allegations that priests sexually abused teenage boys at a youth seminary in the Vatican, claiming reports of abuse were stifled.

Original Sin, Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi’s latest book, includes the shocking claim that a man, who recently became a priest, sexually assaulted a 17-year-old boy in 2012.

The abuse reportedly took place at the Vatican’s St. Pius X pre-seminary for middle- and high-schoolers, where many Catholic students are trained to become priests.

Kamil Tadeusz Jazembowski, the victim’s roommate, told Nuzzi that the adult seminarian repeatedly visited their bedroom, where he had oral sex with the boy.

Jazembowski said his roommate “felt obliged to go along with it”, describing the abuser as a man who exercised “a form of power and intimidation” over the students and imposed “bullying or sexual acts” on them.

When he raised his concerns with Vatican authorities, Jazembowski says he was told to leave the residence. The book reproduces a letter written by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to the ex-seminarian in 2014, which states that no sexual abuse of a minor had taken place and that the matter would be handed over to the Vatican’s office for clergy.

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My best mate at uni had a terrible secret. I only found out 30 years later

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

November 11, 2017

By Mark Dapin

Discovering his best mate from university was sexually abused as a child sends Mark Dapin on a quest for understanding.

I was drinking in a raucous, shallow bar at the Sydney Writers’ Festival with my UK publisher, Ravi Mirchandani, when Ravi told me he planned to publish a memoir by an author from the northern English town of Accrington, Lancashire.

I felt slightly nauseous. My forearms goose-pimpled.

“Is it Graham?” I asked. Twice.

“Yes …” said Ravi, carefully.

“Am I in it?” I asked. Twice.

“No,” said Ravi. “Is anyone with my name in it? Anyone who sounds like me?”

Ravi shook his head. I truly, deeply, viscerally did not want to be in Graham’s book.

“I think I should tell you what it’s about,” said Ravi.

“It’s the story of how Graham was sexually abused by his headmaster at school.”

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Call It What It Is: Child Sexual Abuse

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

November 10, 2017

By Vicki Tidwell Palmer, LCSW

The recent allegations about a 1979 incident involving then 32-year old Alabama Assistant District Attorney Roy Moore illustrate, once again, that we are woefully misinformed and misguided about the reality of childhood sexual abuse and assault.

When an adult—whether a teacher, clergy member, coach, or in this case a prosecutor in a courthouse—initiates a sexual conversation or has sexual contact with a minor child, the incident is child sexual abuse, period.

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Brooklyn Diocese Names 8 Priests Who Sexually Abused Children

BROOKLYN (NY)
The New York Times

November 9, 2017

By Sharon Otterman

Over the past 25 years, a university professor named Jaime Lara built an illustrious career in the academic world of sacred art history. He was a professor at Yale University for more than a decade, wrote five books and won more than a dozen prestigious awards and fellowships. Since 2013, he has been a professor of medieval and renaissance studies at Arizona State University.

But through his rise, Mr. Lara has kept a secret. On Thursday, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn revealed that 25 years ago, Mr. Lara, then known as the Rev. James Lara, was laicized by the Vatican for sexually abusing children.

The Brooklyn diocese hid Father Lara’s secret from the public, but quietly posted Mr. Lara’s name on its website on Thursday morning, confirming that he had been laicized, or defrocked, for the abuse. Later in the day, the diocese posted the names of seven more former priests who were defrocked for child sexual abuse offenses, in an effort to protect children who might come into contact with them.

The public posting was meant to partly answer victims and their advocates who have pleaded for decades for the publication of all of the names of priests credibly accused or defrocked for child sexual abuse, to prevent the abuse of additional children. About 15 dioceses around the country have published partial lists.

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November 9, 2017

Ex-Jehovah’s Witnesses Are Crashing Kingdom Hall Meetings to Talk About Abuse

UNITED STATES
Patheos

November 9, 2017

By Hemant Mehta

Last year, an Australian commission found that the Jehovah’s Witnesses were turning a blind eye to serious problems within their ranks. The Royal Commission’s report said kids were not “adequately protected from the risk of sexual abuse” in the organization.

And just last month, in Canada, a $66 million class action lawsuit was filed against the Witnesses by victims who said the religious group not only failed to prevent abuse but didn’t do much even after it was reported.

Part of the problem is the Watchtower Society’s own policies, like the “Two-Witness rule,” which says church elders shouldn’t take seriously a victim’s account of abuse unless another person witnessed it… even though the only other person around may have been the abuser himself.

In many cases, the accused abusers aren’t disciplined in any meaningful way. Sometimes they remain in the organization, giving them an opportunity to strike again. It’s all too similar to the problems that have long plagued the Catholic Church.

You would think that members of the Jehovah’s Witnesses would be appalled by all this. That they would demand reforms from the inside. That at least some people would leave the religion in protest.

But, unlike the Catholic Church, Jehovah’s Witnesses really live in a bubble where they’re insulated from outside criticism. They’re taught to avoid critics. They’re told that ex-Witnesses are notoriously litigious. The policy of disfellowshipping says Witnesses shouldn’t have any interactions with ex-Witnesses, even if they’re family members.

That makes it very hard to let members know about the awful things being done by the Watchtower Society, what critics are saying about them, and why. It’s not like their church elders are going to talk about it. And like Donald Trump writing off all criticism of him as “fake news,” Witnesses are likely to think any lawsuits against their church are being filed by “enemies” trying to persecute them.

The problem isn’t that no one is telling them the truth. The problem is that Witnesses are predisposed not to listen to the critics.

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New book alleges gay sex in Vatican dorm, shady banking

ROME
My Dayton Daily News

November 09, 2017

The Italian journalist who was put on trial by the Vatican for publishing confidential documents has written a new book alleging a host of Catholic sins, including gay sex in the Vatican’s youth seminary.

Gianluigi Nuzzi’s “Original Sin” went on sale Thursday. At a news conference, Nuzzi said his lawyers had hand-delivered a copy to the Vatican’s criminal prosecutor, saying at least one of the seminarians was a minor at the time of the alleged escapades.

The Vatican didn’t immediately comment.

The book reproduces documents from the Vatican’s scandal-marred bank, showing multi-million-dollar accounts in the names of Popes Paul VI and John Paul II and their private secretaries. And it alleges that hidden powers in the Vatican were blocking the reforms of Pope Francis and his predecessor, Benedict XVI.

The book delves into the case of one of the Vatican’s biggest mysteries, the 1983 disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi, the 15-year-old daughter of a Vatican employee.

And it gathers together years of exposes into the gay subculture of the Vatican. The new claims concern the Vatican’s St. Pius X pre-seminary for middle and high schoolers who are considering a possible vocation to the priesthood.

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Revered South Bay monsignor accused of covering up sex abuse

REDONDO BEACH (CA)
The Beach Reporter

November 9, 2017

By David Rosenfeld

For 22 years, until 2003, Monsignor Michael Lenihan led the congregation at St. Lawrence Martyr Catholic Church in South Redondo Beach where he continued to live until his death in 2011. By most accounts the Irish-born Lenihan was a revered spiritual leader.

Now, an attorney handling a child sex abuse case against former St. Lawrence priest Chris Cunningham claims Lenihan knew the priest was accused of sexual assault before Cunningham arrived at the Redondo Beach parish in 1998. The lawyer also said he has a witness prepared to testify that Lenihan was notified about the incident involving a child at St. Lawrence school before Cunningham was transferred to another parish in 2001 where he allegedly continued to molest young boys.

The St. Lawrence alleged victim was recently added to a 2015 case against Cunningham and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles for molestation reportedly committed at St. Louise de Marillac in Covina. That was Cunningham’s next post after the Redondo Beach parish.

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Vatileaks author on ‘choirboy abuse’

ROME
ANSA

November 9, 2017

Alleges multiple cases at San Pio X preseminary

(ANSA) – Rome, November 9 – Vatileaks author Gianluigi Nuzzi has written a new book on Vatican secrets, Peccato Originale (Original Sin) on alleged sexual abuse of choirboys.

Nuzzi, whose earlier tomes Your Holiness and Via Crucis saw him tried and acquitted in the Vatileaks 1 and 2 trials, reveals more alleged financial chicanery and background to the Manuela Orlandi disappearance.

But his main focus is on alleged sex abuse in the San Pio X preseminary, where dioceses send middle-school boys aspiring to become priests, who serve as choirboys in St Peter’s.

An ex-choirboy delivered a letter to Pope Francis in May, Nuzzi recounts.

But the first person to reveal abuses was Polish Kamil Tadeusz Jarzembowski, who entered the San Pio X at the age of 13, and in June 2014 sent various complaints to Church authorities.

He said he had witnessed at least 140 “sexual acts” on his underage roommate by an unidentified adult who later became a priest. The man had free access to the preseminary, was “well liked by various monsignori” and “able to exert a form of power and intimidation over the youngest seminarians”.

Kamil reported the alleged abuse to various high-ranking cardinals, Nuzzi says, but no action was taken.

He then turned to the Secretariat of State and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which handles abuse cases, also without any results, except for being expelled from the seminary, Nuzzi says.

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Abuse victims demand Royal Commission

DUNEDIN (NEW ZEALAND)
Otago Daily Times

November 9, 2017

By Tim Miller

A Dunedin survivor of sexual abuse says he and others like him are ready for a long fight for justice.

A resolution was passed in Christchurch yesterday at the South-South Institute conference, which is organised by the Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse Trust, asking the Government to commit to a Royal Commission or similar level of inquiry into the institutional abuse of children in New Zealand.

The resolution asks that any New Zealand inquiry be modelled on the Australian Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

Dunedin man Darryl Smith was one of about 100 male survivors of sexual abuse who backed the call for an injury earlier this week.

Mr Smith spent more than a decade in state care, in New Zealand and Australia, beginning as a 7-year-old boy in the early 1970s.

Speaking yesterday, Mr Smith, who also gave evidence for the Australian Royal Commission, said survivors were aware it was just the start of a long journey for justice.

”We fought to get this far and we will keep fighting to keep this moving forward, not just for us but for future generations.”

Any inquiry needed to be full and comprehensive, or it would not be worth the time and effort, Mr Smith said.

Labour has promised to launch an inquiry into the historic abuse of children in state care.

National advocate for male survivors of sexual abuse Ken Clearwater will present the resolution to the Prime Minister.

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Monk’s sex chat prompts immediate probe

THAILAND
Thai PBS

November 09, 2017

The dean monk in Wiengsa district of Nan province has appointed a fact finding committee to investigate after a post about a monk buying sex service with a boy went viral on the internet.

The dean monk Phra Khru Sirinantavit’s action came after a video clip showing a monk was chatting on Facebook with a boy about a sex deal. The boy agreed to meet the monk at the temple.

The monk was later located at a temple in Wiengsa district of Nan.

Phra Khru Sirinantavit said he would like to find out if the clip was posted by the monk himself or his Facebook was hacked and posted by the hacker.

If the monk posted the clip by himself , then he would be guilty for violating Buddhist disciplines and would be defrocked.

For the child sex abuse, the dean monk said it would be the action of the police to deal with him.

The Nan Office of National Buddhism director Sittha Moolhong said authorities are now trying to locate where the monk is attached to and will take action under the boundary of law.

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Manhattan priest still on the job despite allegations of sexual abuse from two former altar boys

MANHATTAN (NY)
New York Daily News

November 9, 2017

By Aaron Showalter, Laura Dimon, and Larry McShane

A Manhattan parish priest remains on the job despite allegations from two former altar boys that he sexually abused the pair, an attorney charged Thursday.

The Rev. Lawrence Quinn targeted the boys in two separate incidents while in a Bronx parish where he spent nearly two decades, according to lawyer Patrick Noeker.

“Protecting kids must be our first priority,” said Noeker. “It is extremely troubling that Quinn is still serving in a parish after two survivors have come forward and alerted the church with reports of his abuse.”

The first incident, with an altar boy under the age of 11, allegedly occurred between 1990-96. The second happened between 1999-2001 and involved a 12-to-14-year-old victim, said Noeker.

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Settlement reached with one insurer in Duluth diocese bankruptcy

DULUTH (MN)
Minn Post

November 9, 2017

Duluth Diocese bankruptcy update. The Duluth News Tribune reports: “One of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Duluth’s insurers will pay $8.95 million in a settlement that, if approved, will see a portion of the money go to child sexual abuse survivors in the organization’s bankruptcy case, according to St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson. … The proposed settlement calls for Catholic Mutual Relief Society of America to contribute to the case, although an agreement is “contingent on confirmation of a consensual plan of reorganization agreed to by all parties, which is not imminent despite negotiations,” according to a news release from Anderson’s office Thursday.”

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Duluth diocese insurer puts up $9M for clergy abuse settlements

DULUTH (MN)
MPR News

November 9, 2017

By Martin Moylan

An insurer for the bankrupt Diocese of Duluth has agreed to provide $9 million that could help compensate clergy sexual abuse victims.

But other insurers and the diocese have yet to agree on what money they may provide to more than 100 victims. Josh Peck, one of the attorneys representing abuse survivors, said it’s good to see the deal with an insurer but a resolution of the bankruptcy is not imminent.

“Well, we need the other insurers to step and participate,” he said. “And there’s a lot more negotiation and lot more work to be done on the case in general before we can get to a point where we have a consensual plan that everybody can agree to.”

In a statement, the diocese said it the deal with the insurer, Catholic Mutual Relief Society of America, is a major step forward.

“The diocese has always wanted to provide compensation to victims in the most just way possible and to emerge from bankruptcy as soon as we can,” the church said in the statement. “We know that compensation alone is not sufficient to address the pain caused by members of the clergy. Bishop Sirba and the clergy and faithful of the diocese continue to offer their prayers and support to all victims in hope of healing.”

The diocese filed for bankruptcy about two years ago, after a jury ordered it to pay $5 million to a sexual abuse victim. The church said it could not pay that judgment and also possibly compensate other claimants.

The diocese has admitted to having credible accusations of sex abuse against some three dozen priests.

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Diocese of Duluth insurer reaches $8.95 million settlement

DULUTH (MN)
Duluth News Tribune

November 9, 2017

One of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Duluth’s insurers will pay $8.95 million in a settlement that, if approved, will see a portion of the money go to child sexual abuse survivors in the organization’s bankruptcy case, according to St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson.

The proposed settlement calls for Catholic Mutual Relief Society of America to contribute to the case, although an agreement is “contingent on confirmation of a consensual plan of reorganization agreed to by all parties, which is not imminent despite negotiations,” according to a news release from Anderson’s office Thursday.

“This is promising and there is hope but the key is getting the other insurance companies to step up and honor their obligations,” Anderson said.

A judge will consider the settlement at a Jan. 4 hearing.

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Separan en San Juan al cura acusado en el Newman de inconducta con alumnos

SAN JUAN (ARGENTINA)
Tiempo de San Juan

November 7, 2017

[Google Translate: The school attended by President Macri and much of his entono, the prestigious Cardinal Newman, separated from his pastoral duties Fray Luis Lenzi, for “misconduct” with the students of the establishment.]

Es el padre Luis Lenzi hace más de 10 años trabaja en la comunidad dominica de San Juan.

El colegio al que asistió el presidente Macri y gran parte de su entono, el prestigioso Cardenal Newman, separó de sus tareas pastorales al Fray Luis Lenzi, por “inconducta” con los alumnos del establecimiento.

Tras la decisión del colegio porteño, la comunidad dominica de San Juan hizo lo propio, suspendiendo en sus funciones al cura, que hace más de 10 años que trabaja en la Provincia.

El director general del colegio, Luis Olivero, señaló a medios porteños que “siete personas del colegio lo vieron en diferentes situaciones cometiendo imprudencias con los chicos y por eso decidimos aplicar el protocolo que tenemos para estos casos”. Se refería al protocolo para lidiar con situaciones de abuso y que incluye la convocatoria de dos psicólogos e informar a la comisión directiva del colegio.

“Luego de haber tomado conocimiento de situaciones irregulares que tuvieron lugar en espacios abiertos y que fueron advertidas por personal del colegio, se ha decidido su apartamiento”, dice el comunicado.

La repercusión en San Juan fue inmediata y la comunidad dominica emitió un comunicado en que precisa que “en cumplimiento de nuestras propias normas fray Luis Lenzi ha sido apartado preventivamente de toda tarea pastoral en relación con menores”.

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Próvolo: piden más tiempo para seguir investigando los hechos

ARGENTINA
El Sol

November 9, 2017

By Melisa Stopansky

[Google Translate: The prosecution of sexual offenses requested an extension in the main case due to pending a series of studies, including a DNA to the accused.]

La fiscalía de delitos sexuales solicitó una prórroga en la causa principal por estar pendientes una serie de estudios, entre ellos, un ADN a los imputados.

La fiscalía de Delitos Sexuales abocada a pleno a la investigación de los abusos sexuales a una veintena de niños y adolescentes sordo mudos que ocurrían en el Instituto Próvolo de Luján de Cuyo, solicitó una prórroga a la Justicia de Garantías por estar pendientes una serie de estudios y pericias relevantes para el caso, además de varios testimonios en Cámara Gesell que se producirán esta semana de víctimas que siguen recordando y dando cuenta de las atrocidades que estuvieron ocultas por al menos una década.

Uno de los elementos claves, es el análisis del ADN de los seis imputados, entre los cuales se encuentran dos sacerdotes que administraban y dirigían el Instituto Próvolo. Se trata de Horacio Corbacho (56) y Nicola Corradi (82), ambos están detenidos y con prisión preventiva confirmada por un tribunal de alzada. También está detenida como partícipe la monja Kumico Kosaka, quien goza del beneficio de la prisión domiciliaria al igual que Corradi.

El pedido se hizo por el hallazgo de una bombacha de nena con restos de material genético de un hombre y que fue encontrada en una de las habitaciones del instituto.

Entre otras pericias, se aguarda el análisis de un negativo de fotos que podría tratarse de pornografía infantil ya que fue hallado en otra de las dependencias donde ocurrían los vejámenes.

Y el análisis a un CPU que también fue secuestrado en los allanamientos en los que podrían encontrarse elementos importantes para la investigación.

La prórroga quedará sujeta al análisis del cuatro juzgado de Garantías donde se otorgaron las prisiones preventivas a los imputados Corradi, Corbacho, Kosaka y a los empleados José Bordón, al administrativo José Luis Ojeda y al administrativo Armando Gómez.

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Schwester Rosemarys Kampf

NIGERIA
Deutschlandfunk

November 8, 2017

By Katrin Gänsler

[Google Translate: Child abuse and incest are punishable in Nigeria, but hardly anyone indicates the deeds. The victims are stigmatized. The religious Rosemary Ukata tries to bring perpetrators to justice.]

Kindesmissbrauch und Inzest sind in Nigeria zwar strafbar, doch kaum jemand zeigt die Taten an. Die Opfer werden stigmatisiert. Die Ordensfrau Rosemary Ukata versucht, Täter vor Gericht zu bringen.

Ordensschwester Rosemary Ukata sitzt in einem winzigen Büro in Ogoja, einer Kleinstadt im Süden Nigerias. Von außen dringt der Straßenlärm herein. Immer wieder kommt jemand, der ihren Rat braucht. Die 59-Jährige, die aus dem Bundesstaat Abia im Südosten des Landes stammt, bleibt gelassen und freundlich, aber auch bestimmt. Besonders viel Zeit nimmt sie sich für Helen. Die junge Frau kann häufig nur stumm nicken, da ihr immer wieder die Tränen kommen. Schwester Rosemary fast Helens Geschichte zusammen:

“Helen ist eines der Vergewaltigungsopfer. Um genau zu sein, war es Inzest. Wir haben sie kennengelernt, weil ein Nachbar besorgt war. Er ist zu uns ins Büro gekommen und hat erzählt, dass das Mädchen vom Vater missbraucht worden ist. Dadurch ist es schwanger geworden.”

Sexueller Missbrauch und Inzest sind in Nigeria strafbar. Doch meistens kommt es nicht einmal zu einer Anzeige. Genau das will die Ordensschwester, die 1999 das “Zentrum für Frauenstudien und Einmischung” – kurz CWSI – gegründet hat, ändern. In einem aktuellen Fall steht beispielsweise gerade ein Mann vor Gericht, der eine Dreijährige vergewaltigt hat. CWSI übernimmt die Prozesskosten.

Auch im Fall von Helen gingen die Mitarbeiter zur Polizei. Doch die Antwort war ernüchternd:

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El cura expulsado del colegio Cardenal Newman se defiende: “Todo es un enorme error”

ARGENTINA
Clarín

November 8, 2017

[Google Translate: The Dominican priest Luis Federico Lenzi, separated from his position at the Cardinal Newman School of San Isidro after having been found in “irregular situations” with students, said today through an audio on WhatsApp that what happened “is a huge mistake” .]

A través de un audio de WhatsApp, el fraile Luis Lenzi minimizó su separación del cargo. Lo acusan de haber sido encontrado en “situaciones irregulares” con alumnos.

El sacerdote dominico Luis Federico Lenzi, separado de su cargo en el colegio Cardenal Newman de San Isidro tras haber sido encontrado en “situaciones irregulares” con alumnos, dijo hoy a través de un audio de Whatsapp que lo ocurrido “es todo un enorme error”.

La respuesta del cura, que es uno de los tres sacerdotes dominicos de ésa orden en San Juan, se conoció a través de un audio de Whatsapp enviado a la comunidad de la provincia cuyana y que esta mañana se viralizó.

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Comienza el juicio por corrupción de menores contra el cura Ilarraz

ARGENTINA
Elentrerios

November 8, 2017

Diario Uno Entre Ríos

[Google Translate: On Monday the 13th, the trial of priest Justo José Ilarraz, accused of seven cases of corruption and abuse of minors when he was the prefect of discipline at the archdiocesan seminary of Our Lady of the Cenacle, between 1985 and 1993, began in the courts of Paraná. which were pupils children between 10 and 14 years. Although it is not defined, at the stage of the allegations, the prosecutor’s office and the plaintiffs will demand more than 25 years in prison.]

El sacerdote fue acusado de siete hechos de abusos ocurridos dentro de seminario de Paraná. Tras siete años de investigación, finalmente el religioso se sentará en el banquillo de los acusados. La querella y Fiscalía pedirán más de 25 años.

El lunes 13 iniciará en los tribunales de Paraná, el juicio al cura Justo José Ilarraz, acusado por siete casos de corrupción y abuso de menores cuando ejercía como prefecto de disciplina en el seminario arquidiocesano Nuestra Señora del Cenáculo, entre 1985 y 1993, establecimiento en el que eran pupilos niños de entre 10 y 14 años. Si bien no está definido, en la etapa de los alegatos la fiscalía y las querellan van a reclamar penas superiores a los 25 años de cárcel.

Es un juicio lleno de polémicas y medidas dilatorias que derivaron en la intervención de toda la estructura judicial de la provincia de Entre Ríos, de Casación a nivel nacional y ahora se espera la definición de la Corte Suprema de Justicia para establecer si la causa está o no prescripta, tal cual sostiene la defensa del cura.

El debate será a puertas cerradas, y es el segundo que se sustancia a un religioso en Entre Ríos por abuso y corrupción de menores, ya que por la misma situación fue condenado a 25 años de prisión efectiva el cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria, de Nogoyá.

Al sacerdote, a quien se juzgará en la causa caratulada “Ilarraz, Justo José s/promoción a la corrupción agravada”, se lo acusa de haber abusado de siete adolescentes, de entre 10 y 14 años, que cursaban el ciclo básico como pupilos en el seminario menor, un colegio orientado al sacerdocio.

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El lunes comienza el juicio contra el cura Justo José Ilarraz por abuso y corrupción de menores

ARGENTINA
Analisis Digital

November 9, 2017

[Google Translate: Next Monday, November 13, the trial of priest Justo José Ilarraz, accused of seven cases of corruption and child abuse when he was prefect of discipline in the Archdiocesan Seminary “Our Lady of the Cenacle,” will begin in the Courts of Paraná. 1985 and 1993, establishment in which children between 10 and 14 years old were pupils. Although it is not defined, it is estimated that at the stage of the allegations the prosecution and the complaints will demand penalties exceeding 25 years in prison.]

El próximo lunes 13 de noviembre se iniciará en los Tribunales de Paraná, el juicio al cura Justo José Ilarraz, acusado por siete casos de corrupción y abuso de menores cuando ejercía como prefecto de disciplina en el Seminario Arquidiocesano “Nuestra Señora del Cenáculo”, entre 1985 y 1993, establecimiento en el que eran pupilos niños de entre 10 y 14 años. Si bien no está definido, se estima que en la etapa de los alegatos la fiscalía y las querellas van a reclamar penas superiores a los 25 años de cárcel. El 13 de septiembre de 2012, la revista ANÁLISIS publicó en su portada la denuncia de los abusos de Ilarraz, lo que permitió actuar de oficio a la Procuración general y sumar a los pocos días los primeros dos testimonios de sus víctimas. Finalmente, tras cinco años de investigación, el sacerdote se sentará en el banquillo de los acusados. El debate será a puertas cerradas.
Es un juicio lleno de polémicas y medidas dilatorias que derivaron en la intervención de toda la estructura judicial de la provincia de Entre Ríos, de Casación a nivel nacional y ahora se espera la definición de la Corte Suprema de Justicia para establecer si la causa está o no prescripta, tal como sostiene la defensa del cura.

El debate será a puertas cerradas, y es el segundo que se sustancia a un religioso en Entre Ríos por abuso y corrupción de menores, ya que por la misma situación fue condenado a 25 años de prisión efectiva el cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria, de Lucas González.

Al sacerdote, a quien se juzgará en la causa caratulada “Ilarraz, Justo José s/Promoción a la corrupción agravada”, se lo acusa de haber abusado de siete adolescentes, de entre 10 y 14 años, que cursaban el ciclo básico como pupilos en el seminario menor, un colegio orientado al sacerdocio.

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Comienza el lunes el juicio al cura Ilarraz, acusado de abuso y corrupción de menores

ARGENTINA
El Litoral

November 8, 2017

[Google Translate: The Oral Court of Paraná will begin on Monday the trial of priest Justo José Ilarraz, accused of seven cases of corruption and abuse of minors when he was the prefect of discipline at the Archdiocesan Seminary Nuestra Señora del Cenáculo, between 1985 and 1993, establishment in which children between 10 and 14 years old were pupils.]

Telam

El Tribunal Oral de Paraná comenzará el lunes el juicio al cura Justo José Ilarraz, acusado por siete casos de corrupción y abuso de menores cuando ejercía como prefecto de disciplina en el Seminario Arquidiocesano Nuestra Señora del Cenáculo, entre 1985 y 1993, establecimiento en el que eran pupilos niños de entre 10 y 14 años.

El juicio, que comenzará a las 9 y será a puertas cerradas, será el segundo que se sustancia a un religioso en Entre Ríos por abuso y corrupción de menores, ya que por la misma causa fue condenado a 25 años de prisión efectiva el cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria, de Nogoyá.

Al sacerdote, a quien se juzgará en la causa caratulada ‘Ilarraz, Justo José s/promoción a la corrupción agravada‘, se lo acusa de haber abusado de siete adolescentes, de entre 10 y 14 años, que cursaban el ciclo básico como pupilos en el seminario Menor, un colegio orientado al sacerdocio.Ilarraz fue suspendido por la Igesia en 2012 para oficiar misas en público, pero antes, en 1993, el entonces arzobispo de Paraná, Monseñor Estanislao Esteban Karlic, lo autorizó para que viajara a Roma.

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Lawsuit: Priest, Boy Scout leader abused victim

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

November 9, 2017

By Mindy Aguon

A Mangilao man alleges he was sexually abused by a priest and a Boy Scout leader 53 years ago.

In a lawsuit filed yesterday in the District Court of Guam, B.F., who used his initials to protect his identity, accused retired priest Louis Brouillard and Edward Pereira of sexually abusing him over a two-year period beginning in 1964.

The civil complaint filed against the Archdiocese of Agana, the Boy Scouts of America and Brouillard alleges that B.F. met Brouillard when he was serving as priest of the Mangilao parish and Pereira served as a Scout leader.

The boy was never officially an altar boy, although Brouillard allowed him to serve as a back-up altar server and participate in Boy Scout outings, the lawsuit states.

B.F. alleges the abuse occurred at the Mangilao rectory where Brouillard walked around naked, exposing himself to boys. The priest allegedly had the boys take turns sitting naked on his lap while he fondled them and forced them to perform sexual acts.

The alleged abuse continued during Boy Scout swimming outings. B.F. recalled that on two occasions while at Agana Springs, he and several of his friends refused to remove their clothes and Brouillard made them walk home to Mangilao.

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Gympie man’s child abuse horror story nears final chapter

AUSTRALIA
The Gympie Times

November 9, 2017

By Arthur Gorrie

Joe Kiernan was born into a real-life Stephen King horror story in 1960.

Stolen from his unmarried mother at birth, “because that’s what they did then,” he was sent to the infamous St Joseph’s orphanage at Neerkol, near Rockhampton – an institution so evil its grounds include a memorial to the abused children who died there.

A Gympie survivor of unimaginable abuse, Mr Kiernan was able to smile at times yesterday as he told of his feelings, now the prosecutions have begun and the truth has come out at a Royal Commission.

“Some former residents don’t want the buildings destroyed, but it’s owned by other people now and they have a right to do what they want,” Mr Kiernan said yesterday.

And he said the demolition crews might just find some gruesome reminders of the Neerkol horror story.

“So be it,” Mr Kiernan said yesterday.

“They might find some bodies or bones.

“If they do and there are some without death certificates, it’s back in the hands of the police.”

Mr Kiernan is one of thousands of people who survived the care of church and state and who have now given evidence to the Child Abuse Royal Commission.

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Married priests

PHILIPPINES
The Manila Standard

November 09, 2017

By Florencio Fianza

It is possible that in the not too distant future, we will be seeing married priests administering to the Roman Catholic faithful in this country.

Brazilian Claudio Cardinal Hummes, who is a friend of Pope Francis, requested the Pope to lift the ban on the ordination of married men specifically for Brazil which is the largest Roman Catholic country in the world.

The request is for the church to consider “vin probati,” the ordination of married men with proven great faith. Brazil, just like many other countries around the world, is suffering from a shortage of priests having only one priest per 10,000 faithful. It is thought that the ordination of married men might alleviate this acute problem.

This however, is not the only problem facing the Catholic Church today. There is the matter of sexual misconduct by priests which has caused tremendous damage to the prestige and reputation of the church as the guardian of faith and morals in the last couple of decades. At the moment, Australian Cardinal George Pell, formerly the third most powerful official in the Vatican, is undergoing criminal trial for child sexual abuse in his native country.

In the so-called Eastern Catholic Church, where priests are allowed to marry, the problem of sexual misconduct is not often heard of. Allowing priests to marry or ordaining married men with proven great faith might therefore go a long way in lessening this problem of the Catholic Church. It is like solving two huge problems with a single shot.

The issue of married priests has always been a contentious problem of the Church right from the very beginning. Right from the start, priests were allowed to marry. Seven popes in antiquity were in fact married starting with St Peter. The apostles were also married. But there were Church leaders who questioned not only the practicality of married priests but also whether marriage was damaging the purity of the church. Matters like married priests not sleeping with their wives the night before celebrating the holy mass started being required. Other subjects such as material things being evil and that a person cannot be married and be perfect at the same time started to take root in early Church teachings.

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Sad truth on how companies respond to workplace sexual harassment

TORONTO (CANADA)
The Toronto Star

November 7, 2017

By Kelly Nolan

Instead of supporting lawyers who work to silence victims, workplaces should try evolving the culture from a patriarchal system of entitlement to one where women never have to be afraid.

As leader after leader falls from grace in the current sweep of sexual harassment and assault accusations, CEOs, chairs of the boards, human resources executives and corporate legal counsel are rushing into emergency meetings to assess their risk and build crisis communications strategies to “manage” the potential fallout.

What’s on the meeting agenda? Reviews of past nondisclosure agreements (NDAs), risk assessments on unresolved complaints from employees and disgruntled employees who have fled the company.

“What is our exposure on this?”

“How do we manage what we have hidden in our corporate closet?”

What should be on the agenda? How to create equity frameworks to ensure our employees are safe and free from harassment and the abuse of power. How to ensure transparency so the women on their team and their future recruits know their well-being trumps the “Trumps” in the office.

NDAs are the devil’s work. They silence victims, protect the employer from taking responsibility and secure a perfect environment for predators — and have done so for years. (Fox News … say no more.)

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WHAT DO YOU ACTUALLY BELIEVE?: Committed Catholics no longer trust the hierarchy.

UNITED STATES
The Church Militant

November 9, 2017

TRANSCRIPT

Next week, the American bishops will gather for one of their twice-a-year meetings and discuss a bevy of topics. But as the bishops meet, out-in-the-pews, committed Catholics are becoming increasingly concerned about the direction the conference is taking as a whole. By committed Catholics, we mean Catholics who not only go to Mass on Sundays and Holy Days and have a devotional life but also have a very good understanding of the ruinous state the Church is in.

They are not looking at little things here and there and investing all their hope and common sense in these small things — laudable and joyful as they are. It is precisely the attitude and tone and direction of the bishops’ conference that sucks the joy and hope out of these efforts, giving committed Catholics pause to think that they will suddenly be shut down or sidelined without any notice.

This has been the case with multiple little religious communities that have tried to form or homeschooling efforts on the part of concerned parents or distribution of faithful catechetical materials or various speakers not being allowed to present on church property and so forth. Add to this the wall of opposition to anything even closely resembling Tradition, and we aren’t talking necessarily about the Latin Mass but attempts to get rid of abuses and liturgical overreaches that currently exist and are ignored or the near-refusal, however politely it may be framed, to allow any resurgence or restoration of Catholic identity as it relates to the political and cultural order, for example.

Tens of thousands, maybe even hundreds of thousands, of committed Catholics have simply grown to not trust the bishops when it comes to promotion of the authentic Catholic faith. In fact, those Catholics see many of the bishops more along the lines of being the actual problem, not just a hindrance. There is, simply stated, a mountain range of evidence pointing at the bishops collectively not caring about committed Catholics. It has not been for nothing that tens of thousands of committed Catholic parents will not let their children attend Catholic schools anymore for fear of losing the Faith. The same motive is behind thousands of Catholic families who Sunday after Sunday pile into vans and drive long distances to go to a reverent Mass, driving right past a number of other, more convenient parishes along the way. They simply don’t trust the priests who are allowed by the bishop to continue in their ministry.

When you add to that climate the silence in the face of heresies, dissent, horrible catechesis, bowing to false ecumenism, which was on full display front and center during Revolt Day last week, and a host of other sins — the approval of all things gay and gay clergy, the anti-Catholic preaching that happens regularly at Catholic parishes, the promotion of a massively worldly agenda dressed up in spiritual rags — climate change, immigration, death penalty, community organizing, social justice warrior “collections,” to name just a few. These are politically liberal, practically socialist positions that too many of the bishops like to baptize and pass off as somehow Catholic, and of course, the realization that many of these bishops were involved directly or indirectly with the gay clergy sex abuse scandal which has cost the Church in the U.S. nearly $4 billion.

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United States: NYC Expands Sick Time Act To Offer Safe Time To Victims Of Sexual Abuse, Stalking, And Human Trafficking

NEW YORK
Mondaq

November 9, 2017

By Stephanie L. Aranyos
Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart

On November 6, 2017, Mayor de Blasio signed New York City Council legislation Int. 1313-2016 (also referred to as Int. 1313-A or the Earned Safe and Sick Time Act) into law, expanding the New York City Earned Sick Time Act. The new law will allow employees to take “safe” time related to family offense matters, sexual abuse, stalking, and human trafficking. The new law is set to take effect on or about Monday, May 7, 2018.

The New York City Earned Sick Time Act, which took effect on April 1, 2014, requires that New York City employers with 5 or more employees provide up to 40 hours of paid sick time to eligible employees in a calendar year. Employers with fewer than five employees must provide the equivalent of unpaid leave. While the safe time expansion does not expand the number of hours an employer is required to provide to employees, it significantly expands the permissible uses for safe/sick time.

Under the new law, employees will be permitted to take safe time if they are victims of a family offense matter, sexual offense, stalking, or human trafficking, or if a family member has been a victim of such crimes, in the following circumstances:

a. to obtain services from a domestic violence shelter, rape crisis center, or other shelter or services program for relief from a family offense matter, sexual offense, stalking, or human trafficking;

b. to participate in safety planning, temporarily or permanently relocate, or take other actions to increase the safety of the employee or employee’s family members from future family offense matters, sexual offenses, stalking, or human trafficking;

c. to meet with a civil attorney or other social service provider to obtain information and advice on, and prepare for or participate in any criminal or civil proceeding, including but not limited to, matters related to a family offense matter, sexual offense, stalking, human trafficking, custody, visitation, matrimonial issues, orders of protection, immigration, housing, discrimination in employment, housing or consumer credit;

d. to file a complaint or domestic incident report with law enforcement;

e. to meet with a district attorney’s office;

f. to enroll children in a new school; or

g. to take other actions necessary to maintain, improve, or restore the physical, psychological, or economic health or safety of the employee or the employee’s family member or to protect those who associate or work with the employee.”

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Unruh’s complaint could anchor class-action

BOSTON
Boston Herald

November 09, 2017

By Chris Villani and Joe Dwinell

Heather Unruh’s complaint against Kevin Spacey could be the cornerstone of a class-action suit against the Hollywood star, similar to the cases filed against the Archdiocese of Boston during the clergy sex abuse scandal.

And such a sweeping civil action could cost the now-banished “House of Cards” actor millions, said Boston civil litigation lawyer Mark Itzkowitz.

“An award could be astronomical,” said Itzkowitz. “The fact that so many people are coming forward against Spacey lends credibility” to Unruh’s accusation.

The former Channel 5 anchor told reporters yesterday Spacey plied her underage son with alcohol in June 2016 at the Club Car restaurant on Nantucket. He then allegedly grabbed the then-18-year-old’s genitals, she said. Prosecutors said they have launched an investigation.

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who is representing Unruh’s son, said he is exploring taking civil action against the A-list actor.

Spacey’s career has been in a free fall, and he announced last week he is seeking treatment after actor Anthony Rapp said Spacey made an unwanted sexual advance at him during a party at Spacey’s home in the 1980s, when Spacey was 26 and Rapp was just 14.

Filmmaker Tony Montana and others have since come forth with similar allegations against the 58-year-old Spacey.

Hub attorney Carmen L. Durso said accusers lining up against Spacey makes a case against him that much stronger.

“If he has 10 victims, you could theoretically have all 10 victims testify at a civil trial,” Durso said. “It gives the jury a basis for believing the victim, buttressing the victim’s credibility in talking about something that other people agreed that person did before and was in a habit of doing.”

Durso said the key is showing a pattern of alleged criminal behavior.

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Former Boston news anchor accuses Kevin Spacey of assaulting her son, then 18, last year

BOSTON
The Los Angeles Times

November 8, 2017

By Libby Hill

Authorities in the Cape and Islands District of Mass. have confirmed to the Los Angeles Times that a police investigation involving Kevin Spacey is underway following an allegation that he groped the teenage son of a former Boston TV news anchor.

At a Wednesday news conference in Boston, Heather Unruh alleged that the Oscar-winning actor assaulted her son last year when he was 18.

Unruh sat alongside lawyer Mitchell Garabedian and her teenage daughter as she shared the story that began unfolding with a tweet several weeks ago.

“The #weinsteinscandal has emboldened me,” Unruh tweeted on Oct. 13. “I was a Kevin Spacey fan until he assaulted a loved one. Time the dominoes fell.”

And the dominoes did begin to fall for Spacey. On Oct. 29, actor Anthony Rapp publicly alleged that Spacey made a sexual advance toward him in 1986, when Spacey was 26 and Rapp just 14.

Spacey said last week that he did not recall the incident with Rapp but apologized for the encounter. He also said he is seeking “evaluation and treatment.”

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Former TV Anchorwoman Accuses Kevin Spacey of Assaulting Her Son

BOSTON
The New York Times

November 8, 2017

By Katharine Q. Seelye

BOSTON — A longtime Boston television journalist on Wednesday accused Kevin Spacey of sexually assaulting her 18-year-old son in the summer of 2016 at a Nantucket bar.

At an emotional news conference, Heather Unruh, a former news anchor for WCVB, an ABC affiliate, said that the actor plied her son with “drink after drink” and then reached down his pants and grabbed his genitals. Her son had told Mr. Spacey that he was 21, she said, though he was only 18.

“But,” said Ms. Unruh, regardless of her son’s age, “Kevin Spacey had no right to sexually assault him. There was no consent.” She said she hoped the actor would go to jail.

Mr. Spacey and his spokesman did not immediately reply to email messages seeking comment on Wednesday.

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November 8, 2017

The Register at 90: Forming and Informing Catholics With ‘Snap, Vigor and Courage’: A look back at our history in Catholic journalism

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

November 8, 2017

By Peter Jesserer Smith

When Soviet tanks rumbled into Lithuania in 1991, a pair of young journalists crossed the border — for the second time — to chronicle the death throes of the Soviet Union for the National Catholic Register.

Soviet dictator Josef Stalin once reputedly scoffed, “The Pope! How many divisions has he got?” when told Pope Pius XI wanted to see signs of encouragement for religion and Catholics in Russia. More than 50 years later, Joop Koopman and Jonathan Luxmoore were on assignment for the Register, crisscrossing in a secondhand Polonez, a Polish car with a cast-iron bumper that Luxmoore bought from a Belgian ambassador, sending back their firsthand accounts of watching the empire Stalin built crumble before St. John Paul II’s religious revolution.

“We were at the cutting-edge of political reform and change,” recalled Koopman, who went on to serve as the newspaper’s editor during the 1990s.

These and other stories of the past 90 years rest in the Register’s archives. But the fading pages of print also tell the story of a long line of men and women who served as custodians of a great mission to form, inform and challenge generations of Catholic readers to engage the world through the global lens of the Catholic faith.

From its very beginnings Nov. 8, 1927, up to its present day as a news service of the EWTN Global Catholic Network, the Register has left its mark on both its readers and the journalists who aspired to bring the best professional writing to its pages.

Denver Origins

The National Catholic Register was born out of the Denver Catholic Register, which began as an effort in 1905 to set the record straight for Colorado’s Catholics and had been overseen by Msgr. Matthew Smith since 1913. Msgr. Smith took over leadership of the Denver newspaper as a lay journalist, bringing to the paper professional journalistic standards. He had been a priest only four years when he launched the national edition of the Register in 1927.

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Brothers abused by reverend

ENGLAND
The Argus

November 7, 2017

TWO brothers have described the moment they realised they were abused by the same man.

Phil and Gary Johnson were both abused by the Reverend Roy Cotton while they were members of the choir at St Andrew’s church in Eastbourne.

Cotton, who died in 2006, was never prosecuted, but the brothers’ case led to the prosecutions of several other clergy.

Theresa May, when she was Home Secretary, ordered a national inquiry into abuse cases by the clergy.

Phil Johnson said: “There was a story on the lunchtime news on the radio about an abusive vicar. I could see out of the corner of my eye that Gary froze. And the penny dropped in that moment.”

The brothers’ fight for justice ended 20 years ago, as they were told there were not enough independent witnesses to prosecute Cotton.

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Harvey Weinstein’s not alone

UNITED STATES
Catholic News Service

November 7, 2017

By Greg Erlandson

Harvey Weinstein is a pig.

It’s not language I would normally use in a column, but the cascade of revelations about his treatment of women and men, most particularly his twisted and apparently constant sexual advances, demands a blunt assessment. The accusations that have toppled this modern-day film mogul make for disturbing reading every morning at the breakfast table.

The exposure of his predatory bullying in this age of predatory bullies has had at least a few benefits, however.

First, it has ignited an explosion of confessions on the part of women in the entertainment industry as well as other professions. I might say all professions. The #MeToo hashtag makes for harrowing reading, a rolling tide of upsetting, at times horrifying, anecdotes that can easily fill the reader with a deep despair for man’s inhumanity to woman.

While many of us make our way through our days without harassing or being harassed, it is clear that many of our sisters (and some of our brothers) are not so fortunate. That so many have felt it necessary to remain silent for so long speaks not just to fear of the abuser’s retaliation, but also to the fear that the rest of us will turn away.

As we Catholics have seen in the clergy sexual abuse crisis, this fear is not unfounded. Of course, we must be sensitive to the risk of false allegations, which is why we need due process, but not no process or a sham process.

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15 Years Later, Josh Guimond’s Disappearance Still Unsolved

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
CBS (WCCO)

November 7, 2017

By Liz Collin

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — A student at a Minnesota Catholic college vanished in the middle of the night. This week marks 15 years since Josh Guimond went missing from St. John’s University.

A standout student, the 20-year-old had a bright future ahead. That all changed Nov. 9, 2002. Guimond’s disappearance would later face extra scrutiny, both for the clergy sex-abuse scandal and for the investigators assigned to the case.

A decade and a half later, WCCO’s Liz Collin went back to talk to a family still waiting for answers, the investigators trying to find them and to the friends who last saw Guimond before his trail went cold.

There is a certain Minnesota modesty when Brian Guimond describes his son — class president of his Maple Lake High School, voted most likely to succeed by his peers, planning for a future in politics and law.

“Oh yeah honor rolls and all that,” he said.

Raised Catholic, Brian made sure his son was in a pew each Sunday. Another reason Josh’s choice to attend St. John’s University made perfect sense. He was a junior in college and that November weekend of 2002 marked deer opener. Instead of taking part in the annual hunting tradition with dad, homework kept Josh in Collegeville.

We now know that Saturday night, Nov. 9, Josh met up with friends to play cards. The next day, his dad discovered Josh hadn’t been seen since.

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El cura Grassi fue beneficiado con el “2×1”

ARGENTINA
El Patagónico

November 7, 2017

[Google Translate: The Criminal Chamber upheld the decision of the Criminal Oral Court 1 of Morón, which last April granted the benefit of “two for one” to the priest Julio César Grassi, sentenced to 15 years in prison for aggravated sexual abuse of minors and who will be imprisoned until 2026]

Lo confirmó la Cámara Penal. Con la reducción de la pena, estará preso hasta 2026.

La Cámara Penal ratificó el fallo del Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón, que en abril pasado concedió el beneficio del “dos por uno” al sacerdote Julio César Grassi, condenado a 15 años de prisión por abuso sexual agravado a menores y que estará preso hasta 2026.

El Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón, el mismo que lo sentenció en primera instancia, había realizado un cálculo de la pena a cumplir y determinado que a Grassi le restan cumplir aún nueve años, cuatro meses y 20 días de condena, por lo que estará detenido hasta el 10 de agosto de 2026.

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Archivan definitivamente denuncia de abuso sexual contra sacerdote

PERU
Diario Correo

November 7, 2017

By Jorge Alberto

[Google Translate: The complaint against the priest of Huamanga – Ayacucho, Felix Pariona Huacre, for sexual abuse against a minor has been filed today for the second and final time.]

La menor que denunció el hecho no acudió al examen psicológico

La denuncia contra el sacerdote de Huamanga – Ayacucho, Felix Pariona Huacre, por abuso sexual en contra de una menor ha sido archivado hoy por segunda y definitiva vez.

El caso fue archivado por primera vez por la Segunda Fiscalía Provincial Penal Corporativa de Huamanga, a cargo del fiscal Nilo Paredes. Pero tras una revisión la Cuarta Fiscalía Superior Penal de Ayacucho revisó el caso y ordenó que este se reabra.

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Habló el cura acusado de “situaciones irregulares” en el colegio Cardenal Newman: “No ha pasado nada grave”

ARGENTINA
Info Bae

November 8, 2017

[Google Translate: His name monopolized the public light of all the media in the country after the Cardenal Newman School, one of the most prestigious in Argentina, decided to dismiss him for “irregular situations” he had in the institution itself. However, the priest Luis Lenzi denied any type of accusation and affirmed that during his period in the entity “nothing serious happened”.]

Luis Lenzi negó haber cometido cualquier tipo de abuso con los alumnos de la entidad y calificó el hecho como algo “confuso, triste y tan feo”. En tanto, la Orden de Predicadores emitió un comunicado en el que condenó las acciones del cura en la institución educativa de San Isidro

Su nombre acaparó la luz pública de todos los medios del país después de que el colegio Cardenal Newman, uno de los más prestigiosos de la Argentina, decidiera despedirlo por “situaciones irregulares” que tuvo en la propia institución. Sin embargo, el cura Luis Lenzi negó cualquier tipo de acusación y afirmó que durante su período en la entidad “no pasó nada grave”.

“No ha pasado nada grave y absolutamente nada con ningún chico de todo lo que se pueda pensar. Pero hay detalles prácticos de los que prefiero no hablar. No ha pasado nada grave para mí, pero espero que un poco se decante el momento”, explicó el padre Lenzi en una conversación telefónica con el Diario de Cuyo.

Al margen de sus tareas en el Newman, Lenzi es uno de los tres frailes que integran la orden de los domínicos a cargo del colegio y de la iglesia de Santo Domingo en la provincia cuyana.

El escándalo explotó el lunes, cuando el propio Colegio Newman envió un comunicado a los padres de la institución en el que informaba sobre la decisión tomada.

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Concedieron el “2 x 1” al cura Grassi y saldrá en libertad 21 meses antes

ARGENTINA
La Capital

November 8, 2017

[Google Translate: The Chamber of Criminal and Criminal Appeals of Morón granted the priest Julio César Grassi the benefit of the so-called “2 x 1 law” and recalculated his release in August 2026, instead of 2028, as was expected when He was convicted for abusing a minor.]

El religioso estará en prisión hasta agosto de 2026. La Cámara de Morón aplicó el beneficio para el tiempo en que estuvo preso sin condena firme

La Cámara de Apelaciones en lo Penal y Criminal de Morón le concedió al sacerdote Julio César Grassi el beneficio de la llamada “ley del 2 x 1” y recalculó su salida en libertad para agosto de 2026, en lugar de 2028, como estaba previsto cuando fue condenado por abusar de un menor.

De esta forma, la Cámara de Apelaciones confirmó el fallo de primera instancia del Tribunal en lo Criminal 1 de Morón y resolvió aplicar los beneficios de una ley que fue derogada por la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación.

El sacerdote fue condenado a 15 años de prisión por abusar sexualmente del menor conocido como “Gabriel”, a quien cuidaba en la Fundación Felices los Niños que dirigía el cura, en un proceso que duró 11 años, desde octubre de 2002, cuando el caso salió a la luz por una investigación televisiva.

Grassi estuvo en la cárcel desde el 23 de octubre al 21 de noviembre de 2002; luego bajo prisión domiciliaria entre el 7 de marzo de 2012 y el 31 de mayo de ese año y finalmente fue apresado otra vez el 23 de septiembre de 2013 hasta la actualidad, alojado en el penal de Campana

El cálculo de la pena de 15 años se tomaba a partir de esa última fecha, por lo que el cura tenía como data de su libertad el 2028.

Ahora, la Cámara de Apelaciones computó esos dos períodos en los que Grassi estuvo en prisión sin sentencia, aplicó la ley del dos por uno y la nueva fecha de salida es 2026, un año y nueve meses antes de lo previsto en la condena

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Rebajan condena a sacerdote acusado de abuso a menor

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Diario La Verdad

November 7, 2017

[Google Translate: The Argentine Justice today confirmed the reduction of the sentence, from 15 to 13 years, to a priest condemned for having abused a minor while running a foundation for poor children and adolescents.]

Buenos Aires, Argentina.- Rebajan condena a sacerdote acusado de abuso a menor.

La Justicia argentina confirmó hoy la rebaja de la pena, de 15 a 13 años, a un sacerdote condenado por haber abusado de un menor mientras dirigía una fundación para niños y adolescentes pobres.

La Cámara de Apelaciones en lo Penal y Criminal de Morón ratificó el beneficio que ya le había concedido otro tribunal de la misma localidad, al contar doble el año y nueve meses que el cura Julio César Grassi pasó en prisión domiciliaria o preventiva más allá del tiempo máximo establecido por la ley (dos años).

La decisión en primera instancia de aplicar el llamado “dos por uno”, tomada hace medio año, generó una fuerte polémica en Argentina y duras críticas de los denunciantes, tanto por la gravedad de los delitos como por el hecho de que este beneficio ya había sido anulado por la Corte Suprema del país.

Tras la confirmación de este fallo, el religioso saldrá de la cárcel en 2026 y no en 2028, como estaba previsto tras una condena a 15 años de cárcel.

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Ayacucho: Arzobispado rechaza acusación de violación contra sacerdote

PERU
El Comercio

November 8, 2017

Redaccion EC

[Google Translate: Through a communiqué, the Metropolitan Archbishopric of Ayacucho rejected accusations of rape and undue touching against the priest of his jurisdiction Félix Pariona Huacre. The religious has been accused by a girl of initials ALL of sexually abusing her when she was between 15 and 17 years old.]

El religioso Félix Pariona, quien continúa oficiando misas, ha sido responsabilizado por una menor de abuso sexual

A través de un comunicado, el Arzobispado Metropolitano de Ayacucho rechazó las acusaciones de violación y tocamientos indebidos en contra del sacerdote de su jurisdicción Félix Pariona Huacre. El religioso ha sido acusado por una joven de iniciales A.L.L. de abusar sexualmente de ella cuando tenía entre 15 y 17 años.

De acuerdo al Arzobispado de Ayacucho, ellos han colaborado con las investigaciones del Ministerio Público, pero refieren que el caso se archivó por falta de pruebas el 20 de julio de 2017.

En la carta firmada por Monseñor Salvador Piñeiro, Arzobispo Metropolitano de Ayacucho, se detalla además que pese a que el caso se reabrió después por disposición del Fiscal Superior tras una queja de la defensa de la menor, ella no habría acudido al examen psicológico dispuesto dentro del plazo de 30 días de investigación.

“Tenemos la segunda disposición definitiva del archivamiento de fecha 7 de noviembre de 2017”, indica el comunicado.

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Ayacucho: caso de sacerdote acusado de violación fue archivado

PERU
America TV

November 7, 2017

[Google Translate: The Archbishop of Ayacucho issued a statement to inform the filing for the second time of the case of an alleged rape of a 15-year-old girl by a Catholic priest that occurred inside the Ayacucho seminary.]

Arzobispado informó que el Ministerio Público no encontró pruebas

El Arzobispado de Ayacucho emitió un comunicado para informar el archivamiento por segunda vez del caso de una presunta violación de una niña de 15 años por un sacerdote católico que habría ocurrido al interior del seminario de Ayacucho.

La organización informó que el Ministerio Público no halló más pruebas para determinar alguna culpabilidad de este sacerdote. Por este motivo, señalaron, este 7 de noviembre se determinó el archivamiento por segunda vez de este caso.

Sin embargo, el abogado de la menor ha indicado que esta no es la última instancia, ya que elevarán una queja de derecho de lo actuado ante el fiscal superior de Ayacucho en un plazo de 5 días.

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Lewin: “Con Grassi no hay que bajar los brazos nunca, porque no se da por vencido”

ARGENTINA
Analisis Digital

November 8, 2017

[Google Translate: The renowned journalist Miriam Lewin, who led the investigation that revealed the abuses of priest Julio César Grassi, was not surprised by the determination of the justice to grant the benefit of 2×1 to the priest sentenced to 15 years in prison and assured that “coming from Grassi we know that you should never lower your arms “because” he does not give up “. In this regard, he affirmed that “the investigation that required the most efforts of journalists to support and protect witnesses and to cover them from the siege of reprisals was clearly that of Grassi.” He also warned that “this is not going to end here” because “the next step will be to compute all that time that we consider absolute freedom but legally has the label of light prison as a prison completed, whereupon I would be released immediately. ” In this context, he regretted feeling “again the bitter feeling that justice does not serve as a remedy”. He asserted that “the wound of child sexual abuse is a permanently open wound, which does not stop bleeding” and claimed that “the Church clearly pronounces in these cases, so that eventually none of these pedophiles have ruined their lives. so many children that are concealed, protected and sustained by the Church. “]

Reclamó un pronunciamiento claro de la Iglesia contra los abusos

La reconocida periodista Miriam Lewin, quien encabezó la investigación que reveló los abusos del cura Julio César Grassi, no se manifestó sorprendida por la determinación de la justicia de otorgarle el beneficio del 2×1 al sacerdote condenado a 15 años de prisión y aseguró que “viniendo de Grassi sabemos que no hay que bajar los brazos nunca” porque “no se da por vencido”. En ese sentido, afirmó que “la investigación que más esfuerzos nos requirió a los periodistas para sostener y proteger a los testigos y para cubrirlos del asedio de las represalias fue claramente la de Grassi”. Además advirtió que “esto no va a terminar acá” ya que “el próximo paso será que le computen todo ese tiempo que consideramos de absoluta libertad pero que legalmente tiene la etiqueta de prisión morigerada como prisión cumplida, con lo cual saldría inmediatamente en libertad”. En este contexto, lamentó sentir “de nuevo la sensación amarga de que la justicia no sirve como reparación”. Aseveró que “la herida del abuso sexual infantil es una herida abierta permanentemente, que no deja de sangrar” y reclamó que “la Iglesia se pronuncie claramente en estos casos, para que finalmente no haya ninguno de estos pedófilos que le han arruinado la vida a tantos chicos que sean encubiertos, protegidos y sostenidos por la Iglesia”.

En declaraciones realizadas al programa A Quien Corresponda (Radio De la Plaza) Lewin sostuvo que “viniendo de Grassi sabemos que no hay que bajar los brazos nunca” y admitió: “Muchas veces me preguntan cuál fue la investigación en la que más represalias sufrieron los testigos, en las que me sentí más acosada o en peligro, y todos imaginan que sería la de los vuelos de la muerte o de corrupción policial o política, pero sin embargo la investigación que más esfuerzos nos requirió a los periodistas para sostener y proteger a los testigos y para cubrirlos del asedio de las represalias fue claramente la de Grassi”.

“Grassi nunca se da por vencido, jamás dejó de tener abogados de primera línea por más que no dieran la cara en algunas etapas del proceso y en este momento entendemos que lo está defendiendo Jorge Sandro, quien también asesoró en la defensa de Gregorio Ríos en el caso de Alfredo Yabrán. Y por eso creemos que esto no va a terminar acá”.

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Echaron a un cura del Colegio Newman por “situaciones irregulares” con los alumnos

ARGENTINA
Todo Noticias

November 7, 2017

[Google Translate: The Newman School reported that it separated one of the priests who works in that educational institution from his position. Luis Lenzi will no longer work there because he was found in “irregular situations” with the students who attend class.]

El sacerdote Luis Lenzi tuvo conductas incorrectas con los chicos “en lugares abiertos”.

El Colegio Newman informó que separó de su cargo a uno de los curas que trabaja en esa institución educativa. Luis Lenzi no trabajará más allí por haber sido encontrado en “situaciones irregulares” con los alumnos que asisten a clase.

El escueto comunicado del establecimiento educativo asegura que la escuela tomó la determinación luego de saber que esas situaciones “tuvieron lugar en espacios abiertos y que fueron advertidas por personal del colegio”.

De acuerdo a lo que informó el diario Clarín, las razones que aduce el texto oficial no tienen que ver con casos de abuso sexual, sino con conductas incorrectas por su cargo de docente.

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Woman sues Anglican Church after minister assaulted her with box cutter and knife

NEW BRUNSWICK (CANADA)
CBC News

November 08, 2017

By Bobbi-Jean MacKinnon

Cynthia Mae Moore seeks damages over 2 attacks by Rev. William Morton in St. Stephen in 2015

A New Brunswick woman who claims her former minister tried twice to kill her is suing him, the Anglican Church of Canada, the Anglican Diocese of Fredericton and the Anglican Parish of St. Stephen.

Cynthia Mae Moore, 60, claims she was in a nearly four-year extramarital affair with Rev. William Morton, her minister at Christ Church in St. Stephen, when he threatened to skin her alive and scraped her breasts with a box cutter.

The incident happened at Morton’s St. Stephen home on Nov. 24, 2015, according to the notice of action and statement of claim, filed with the Court of Queen’s Bench in Saint John.

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Cracking the Stonewall on a Nun’s Murder: A Reporter’s Story

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Crime Report

November 8, 2017

By Tom Nugent

It was the kind of moment that an investigative reporter never forgets.

Harsh accusations were told to WJZ by many of [Father] Maskell’s victims. We have spoken with two of these women, and now a third is coming forward with a real bombshell. She told WJZ she was abused not only by Father Maskell, but also by police officers. . . .

It happened last February 27, when Baltimore’s CBS outlet, WJZ-TV, reported that local police were investigating credible reports of cops raping teenagers at a Catholic high school for girls in the city, back in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

But the shocking TV news report also marked a huge turning point in this investigative reporter’s 22-year effort to uncover the truth about the murder of a teaching nun, Sister Catherine Ann Cesnik, who had reportedly tried to blow the whistle on widespread sexual abuse of students at her high school in southwest Baltimore.

The February 27 news story was an unexpected development, for sure.

For the first time ever, a major television station in Baltimore was talking openly—live and on the air—about the possibility that the nun’s murder had been covered up by police officials for more than four decades because an open investigation might reveal that “several” local policemen had been engaged in the sexual abuse, along with several law-breaking Roman Catholic priests.

Until then, the story of the 22-year struggle to uncover and report the abuse—along with an alleged Church and police cover-up—had been a depressing chronicle of stonewalling, frustration and official indifference.

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Church keeps sex abuse redress property

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

November 08, 2017

By Daniel McConnell

Six properties promised to the State by the Catholic Church in 2002 still remain outside full public ownership 15 years later, the Irish Examiner can reveal.

Documents obtained reveal a further 13 properties “handed over” in 2009, including the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Dublin, also continue to remain outside of the State’s control.

The Department of Education has been sharply criticised by the chairman and members of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) for the “unacceptable delays” in transferring the properties over to the State.

The PAC is to bring the secretary general of the Department of Education, Seán Ó Foghlú, next week to seek answers from him over the failure to transfer the lands.

PAC chairman Sean Fleming, speaking to the Irish Examiner, said there has been a total “malaise” within the department.

“Clearly there has been an insufficient determination to wrap this matter up,” he said. “It is completely unacceptable to have these matters outstanding 15 years after agreements were reached.

“We will now hear evidence from Mr Ó Foghlú on this matter next week and the lack of progress will be top of the agenda.”

PAC member Catherine Murphy echoed Mr Fleming’s concerns, saying the delays are “astonishing”.

“The public deserves better than vague updates and an inability from the department to fully disclose their engagements with the congregations,” she said.

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San Jose Catholic school under fire for allegedly mishandling sexual abuse allegations decades ago

SAN JOSE (CA)
The Mercury News

November 7, 2017

By Tracey Kaplan

SAN JOSE — A private Catholic girls school in San Jose is grappling with accusations from a graduate who said a longtime teacher who has since died sexually molested her and another student decades ago but never was held accountable.

In an essay published in the Washington Post, Kathryn Leehane described her frustration after she reported to school officials and police that a teacher had sexually molested her and another student.

“The teacher remained at the school,” wrote Leehane, who did not name the teacher or the school. “Eventually, I lost hope for justice.”

The essay, titled “When the Legal System Fails Sexual Assault Victims, We Have To Find Our Own closure,” prompted graduates of the school Monday to circulate an online petition on change.org to Presentation High School. As of Tuesday afternoon, about 1,900 people had signed it.

The unnamed authors of the petition are demanding an independent investigation and a public apology. They also want officials who were told about the allegations but did not take appropriate action to face “consequences.”

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Irish group offers therapy for priests falsely accused of abuse

IRELAND
Catholic Herald

November 7, 2017

The Association of Catholic Priests say the sessions are in response to demand from members

Irish priests who have been falsely accused of sexually abusing children are being offered group therapy sessions in a bid to improve their mental health.

Ireland’s Association of Catholic Priests will run its first so-called “Circle of Healing” later in November in Cork, as part of an innovative new move to help innocent churchmen who have been affected by past abuse scandals.

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