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 8, 2017

AMPLEFORTH MONKS IN TRAINING BEFORE ABUSE INQUIRY PUBLIC HEARINGS

ENGLAND
The Tablet

November 8, 2017

By Bernadette Kehoe

Ampleforth has been rocked by a series of allegations linking priests to the abuse of boys

One of Britain’s leading Catholic schools, Ampleforth College, has revealed that some Benedictine monks there have received specialist training on how best to help victims and survivors of sexual abuse. In a statement ahead of its participation in the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) later this month, Ampleforth said the aim was “to be much more focussed on survivors of abuse.”

So far, four monks have undergone two days of intensive training with an external agency which was recruited for the task, with the aim of rolling it out further in the coming months. A spokeswoman told The Tablet: “We wanted to make sure the monks were able to listen and respond to abuse survivors in the most appropriate way possible and to better understand the journey of abuse survivors. “

One monk added : “The training was very helpful. It gave me a deeper insight into the likely feelings of those who have been abused and I feel it prepared me to be more sympathetic and helpful to survivors who contact us.” The spokeswoman conceded the Inquiry could be a trigger for people to come forward and a confidential independent telephone helpline has also been set up for victims.

Ampleforth has been rocked by a series of allegations linking priests to the abuse of boys. Since 1996 three monks and a lay teacher have been convicted of sex offences against more than 30 pupils dating back to the mid-1960s and up to the mid-1990s. Ampleforth’s statement expressed ‘sincere and heartfelt apologies to anyone who suffered abuse in our schools, monastery, parishes or other ministries.’

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.

Accusers describe abuse in court hearing for Italian ‘Archangel’

ROME
Crux

November 8, 2017

By Claire Giangravè

The preliminary hearing in a trial of the leader of a Catholic lay association, who is charged with the sexual abuse of at least six underage girls, took place Nov. 4 in southern Italy. Three of the alleged victims took to the stand to testify to their accounts of the abuses which the accused was able to perpetrate for the better part of forty years with no ecclesiastic or governmental oversight.

ROME – In a case that raises questions about how an association proclaiming itself Catholic and meeting in a parish could escape Church oversight for decades, a Nov. 4 preliminary hearing in a trial of the group’s leader on sexual abuse charges featured testimony from three of his alleged female victims.

Pietro Alfio , 73, has been under arrest since Aug. 2, when an investigation called ‘Operation 12 Apostles,’ conducted by police in Sicily, uncovered a deep web of political, ecclesiastic and judicial ties that allegedly allowed Capuana to carry on abuses within the lay-led ‘Culture and Environment Catholic Association,’ or ACCA.

The group is listed as a ‘civil association’ and has up to 5,000 followers, who still meet in the little-known municipality of Aci Bonacorsi, located inside the Diocese of Acireale on the Italian island of Sicily.

By all accounts, Capuana was a charismatic and charming personality, referred to as ‘Archangel’ by his disciples.

During the preliminary hearing, local reports say that Capuana, wearing blue trousers and a light-colored shirt, “dragged himself” into the courtroom, looking thin and weary and accompanied by four armed penitentiary guards.

The hearing was presided over by the magistrate in charge of preliminary investigations, Anna Maria Cristaldi, and took place behind closed doors.

Three girls, one of them still a minor, took to the stand to testify before the judge, accompanied by their lawyer Tommaso Tamburino. Capuana was not allowed to see the witnesses as he stood behind bars, with a wooden screen hiding the witnesses in order to protect their identity. After the hearing, the girls exited through a back door.

Capuana was silent though most of the hearing, except for the few times he muttered indignantly at the accusations before being reprimanded by the judge.

Though the hearing was secret, the pre-trial detention order for Capuana, obtained by Crux in collaboration with local media outlet Laspiapress, revealed the grisly details discovered during the police investigation, including wiretaps of conversations among the alleged perpetrators.

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 7, 2017

Correction: Prep School-Sexual Abuse story

CONCORD (NH)
The Associated Press

November 7, 2017

In a story Nov. 2 about a report on sexual misconduct at St. Paul’s School in New Hampshire, The Associated Press erroneously reported when a former Episcopal priest pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a student. The priest pleaded guilty on May 15, not last week.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Report highlights pattern of sexual abuse at prep school

The rector of a prep school in New Hampshire says he is upset by accounts of sexual misconduct involving faculty that go back decades and the school’s failure to protect students under its care

By Michael Casey

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Over several decades, former faculty and staff at a prep school are accused of singling out students, plying them with alcohol and then attempting to kiss, fondle and commit other acts of sexual misconduct with them, according to a report released by the school late Wednesday.

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.

Sacerdote de 96 años difundió “por error” pornografía infantil

GUATEMALA
La Prensa Libre

November 3, 2017

[Google Translate: A retired priest of 96 years will face 70 charges for possession and dissemination of child pornography, after being accused of distributing “by mistake” the material to other elders in the retirement home where he lived.]

Un sacerdote retirado y de 96 años enfrentará 70 cargos por posesión y difusión de pornografía infantil, luego de ser acusado de distribuir “por error” el material a otros ancianos en la casa de retiro donde vivía.

El caso lo revelaron esta semana las agencias de noticias RT y New York Post, que cuentan la historia del hombre, que en apariencia almacenaba los archivos pornográficos en su computadora “incluidas fotos de niñas de hasta ocho años de edad”.

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

I was raped by a CofE priest and I know the system’s broken

ENGLAND
Christian Today

November 6, 2017

By Jayne Ozanne

It’s one of the first lessons in life – bad things happen. Bad things happen to bad people, and bad things happen to good people. They can happen in ‘dark and dangerous places’, but they can also happen in places that are supposed to be ‘safe’ and full of light. Sadly, this often makes the impact of what has happened even more wounding, with devastating consequences on an individual’s ability to trust.

The critical thing of course is – what happens afterwards? How do we respond? What should we do – Keep Calm and Carry On as ‘normal’ (or as near to it as we can pretend to be), or allow ourselves to be changed and altered by the experience, learning from it so that we ensure it doesn’t happen again?

The Church of England appears to be extremely good at adopting the former – wartime – strategy. It just carries on carrying on. However, in doing so it becomes more and more like a Carry On film – a farcical comedy that stretches reality to breaking point and risks becoming the butt of too many jokes.

So, here’s my bad thing: I was raped – by a priest. No matter that it happened over 25 years ago. It happened. I finally told someone – a bishop – last year, and was advised discreetly to drop the allegations. I’m sure it was with the best of intentions, but it was like a kick in the stomach, adding quite literally insult to injury.

It has caused me to reflect – not only on my reasons for staying quiet for so many years, but also on my experience in finally coming forward. Most importantly, however, it has made me consider what I would have ideally liked to have happened – how I would have liked to have been treated, and what might have helped me to speak out sooner. For that is the point of my disclosure – to help us reflect and change.

Obviously, the first thing I would have dearly loved would have been to have been taught – from an early age – that this sort of behaviour is completely unacceptable, out of order, and absolutely not my fault. The years of self-blame and shame were arguably the most damaging. These were the years where I carried this awful truth on my own, too ashamed to speak out, and too guilty about what I saw as my own complicity to call it for what it was – rape.

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.

Irish association to offer sessions for priests falsely accused of abuse

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Catholic News Service

November 6, 2017

By Nick Bramhill

DUBLIN (CNS) — 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.

Father Roy Donovan, a spokesman for the 1,000-strong priests’ group, said the purpose of the workshops was to not only “help heal the scars” of clergymen cleared of abuse allegations, but also to provide support to clerics who still felt traumatized or a sense of collective guilt over crimes carried out by the minority of pedophile priests in their fold.

“A lot of good, decent priests have been affected by the abuse carried out by other priests in the past,” he said. “They’ve suffered shock and a sense of shame over what’s happened, and that’s partly why we’re holding a circle of healing.”

He said the sessions were in response to demand from the group’s members.
“Hopefully, those who attend will find some benefit and, if it goes well, then it’s quite likely that we’ll hold regular circles of healing around the country,” he said.

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

The Conspiracy of Inaction on Sexual Abuse and Harassment

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

November 5, 2017

By David Leonhardt

I caught the journalism bug in high school. I was fortunate to be a scholarship student at a rigorous New York private school with a weekly newspaper, and some of the older students I admired taught me the power that the written word could have.

When we complained verbally to teachers or administrators about a problem, they could ignore us. When we put our arguments in writing, they tended to pay attention. So we became teenage crusaders, inveighing against perceived injustices. Sometimes, the subjects were sophomoric (“censorship” of the talent show), but often they were serious (inequality, racism, South African divestment).

Three decades later, I look back on the experience with deep gratitude. I also look back with haunting regret.

For all of our crusading, we ignored the biggest story at the school. We were aware of the rumors — the teachers who made comments about girls’ bodies, the teacher suspiciously friendly with female students, the music teacher solicitous of male students.

But we never wrote about it. As best as I can remember, we didn’t even talk about writing about it. We didn’t know how. It seemed too dark, too uncertain.

In 2012, the truth came out. My school — Horace Mann — had tolerated sexual molestation for decades. Administrators whose most solemn responsibility was protecting children instead chose to look the other way and protect child abusers. The music teacher, a cultish figure named Johannes Somary, was the worst abuser during my time. One of his victims later committed suicide.

The current torrent of harassment revelations — following Jodi Kantor’s and Megan Twohey’s Times exposé of Harvey Weinstein — has caused me to think back on high school again, because every big case has had something in common with Horace Mann.

People knew.

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.

El padre Grassi fue beneficiado por el 2X1

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
El Intransigente

November 6, 2017

[Google Translate: The controversial benefit of the 2X1 , which was applied a few months ago to different genocides, was now applied in the case of priest Julio César Grassi , who is sentenced to 15 years in prison for aggravated sexual abuse of minors . Is that the Criminal Chamber ratified the decision of the Criminal Oral Court 1 of Morón , which, last April, granted this reduction of the sentence to the priest.]

La Cámara Penal ratificó el fallo del Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón, que, en abril pasado, le concedió esta reducción de la pena al sacerdote. De todas maneras, estará preso hasta el 10 de agosto de 2026

BUENOS AIRES (Redacción) – El polémico beneficio del 2X1, que hace algunos meses fue aplicado a diferentes genocidas, ahora se aplicó en el caso del cura Julio César Grassi, quien está condenado a 15 años de prisión por abuso sexual agravado a menores. Es que la Cámara Penal ratificó el fallo del Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón, que, en abril pasado, le concedió esta reducción de la pena al sacerdote.

A pesar de que aún estará preso hasta el 10 de agosto de 2026, dicho tribunal que lo había sentenciado en primera instancia, lo había beneficiado con el “dos por uno”. Incluso, el TOC1 destacó que a Grassi todavía le restan cumplir nueve años, cuatro meses y 20 días de condena. De todas maneras, en el momento de la resolución, el cura ya había cumplido tres años, nueve meses y veinte días de su condena, lapso que se computa como “dos por uno” por ser cumplido antes de que la sentencia quede firme.

En tanto, el 21 de marzo pasado, la Corte Suprema de Justicia confirmó la condena a Grassi por “abuso sexual agravado por resultar sacerdote, encargado de la educación y de la guarda del menor víctima, reiterado, dos hechos, en concurso real entre sí, que a su vez concurren formalmente con corrupción de menores agravada”. Con esta medida, la condena emitida en el 2009, que ya había sido confirmada por la Cámara de Casación y la Suprema Corte de la provincia de Buenos Aires, quedó firme.

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.

Cura abusador: El beneficio del 2×1 a la condena del padre Grassi generó amplio rechazo

BUENOS ARIES (ARGENTINA)
Info Cielo

November 7, 2017

[Google Translate: The priest Julio César Grassi, condemned for aggravated sexual abuse to minors to 15 years of prison in 2009, received the benefit of 2×1. In this way, it will be released in 2026 and the indignation was immediate. The rejection of this resolution calls into question the actions of justice and the questioning of the Catholic Church reappear.]

En fallo dividido, la justicia ordenó reducir la pena al condenado por abuso sexual abusado. Había sido condenado a 15 años de prisión en 2009.

El cura Julio César Grassi, condenado por abuso sexual agravado a menores de edad a 15 años de prisión en el 2009, recibió el beneficio del 2×1. De este modo, saldrá en libertad en el 2026 y la indignación no se hizo esperar. El rechazo a esta resolución pone en tela de juicio al accionar de la justicia y los cuestionamientos a la iglesia católica afloran nuevamente.

El fallo fue dividido la Cámara Penal le concedió el beneficio al abusador luego de que su condena fuera confirmada por la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación el 21 de marzo pasado.

Por este motivo, el cura violador permanecerá preso sólo hasta el año 2026 ya que cada año que pasó prisión sin condena firme se le computarán ahora como dos.

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.

Silence on sexual violence makes church leaders complicit, say victim advocates

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

November 6, 2017

By Heidi Schlumpf

Sexual violence victims speak out, while church leaders remain quiet

Jessica Mesman Griffith was sitting outside her high school cafeteria, waiting for a ride home after dance team practice, when a janitor approached her with his penis exposed and started masturbating in front of her. She was 14 — and terrified.

About a year later, while hanging out with her girlfriends, each one started sharing stories of sexual assault or violence, by a babysitter, an uncle or their mom’s boyfriend. That’s when Griffith realized, “I’m a girl, and because I’m a girl, I’m not safe.”

Griffith didn’t share her own story about the janitor with those friends, in part because it seemed less severe than their revelations. But she never told anyone else about it either, because she was embarrassed and felt somehow responsible.

Only much later did Griffith realize that church teaching about sexuality may have contributed to her silence. Teachers and clergy at her Catholic grade school had only talked about sex in terms of sin, so she came to associate the two. When she was sexually harassed by the janitor, she felt sinful.

“It just felt so dirty and tainted,” said Griffin, co-founder of the Catholic blog Sick Pilgrim and co-author of the spiritual memoir Strange Journey. “Just by witnessing it, I felt I was culpable. I was sure I did something wrong to provoke this.”

Griffin is speaking out now, as reports of sexual harassment by Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein have prompted more victims to go public. Those revelations also spurred a social media campaign in which victims have used the hashtag #metoo to indicate their own experiences of sexual assault, harassment, rape or other sexual violence.

One in three women (and one in six men) have been victims of contact sexual violence at some point in their lifetimes, according to the government’s National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey.

Yet Catholic Church leaders have been conspicuously quiet on the issue. This silence — combined with teachings and systems that contribute to a culture in which sexual violence against women is rampant — makes the church complicit, say theologians and those who work with victims. And given the church’s own lack of accountability in response to clergy sexual abuse, its credibility on the issue is already damaged.

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.

US bishops’ new child protection program aims to create culture of mindfulness

WASHINGTON, D.C.
CNA/EWTN News

Nov 7, 2017

By Mary Rezac

Washington D.C., Nov 7, 2017 / 03:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After years of research, the U.S. bishops are rolling out a new training program that takes some of the best risk-management practices from other industries and applies them to child protection in the Church.

The new program, entitled “Creating a Culture of Protection and Healing,” is being piloted in several dioceses and will eventually be available to any diocese by request.

The principles of the program, which will add to the existing trainings and protections already in place, borrows tools and techniques of HROs (highly reliable organizations) from industries in the secular world that also frequently deal with high-risk situations, such as hospitals or airlines.

These HROs are in industries in which, when accidents do occur “it’s rather volatile, it costs lives,” Deacon Bernie Nojadera, executive director of the Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, told CNA.

“For example in the airline industry when a plane crashes or something like that,” it can be very costly in terms of loss of life, he said.

“So the industry is looking at ways to make sure that even the lowest person on the chain of command – if they see something that’s untoward, they speak up, they say something, they report it. They know how and what to do when they come across a situation that could cause a problem in the future.”

That’s the same attitude and level of awareness that the bishops are hoping to create in dioceses who implement this new program, he said.

“We’re trying to create this mindfulness, a change in culture, so safe environments can be not only established but indeed maintained, because that’s the key. We have to constantly be on our toes, on our guard, with no room for complacency.”

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.

OPINION: Church caught in a hail of unfriendly fire

NOVA SCOTIA (CANADA)
The Catholic Register

November 6, 2017

The Catholic Church in Nova Scotia has recently been exposed to unfriendly fire.

It started when a Liberal cabinet minister introduced a bill to a committee of the legislature to allow the Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth, one of only two dioceses in the province, to divest itself of assets and place them into sub-corporations controlled by individual parishes. The committee then deferred the bill.

The deferral came at the urgings of Halifax lawyer John McKiggan, who represents hundreds of sexual assault victims allegedly abused by priests.

The lawyer said reorganizing the archdiocese would make it more difficult for abuse victims to receive fair compensation for their injuries. He hinted that the reorganization was simply a way to hide assets in the event of future legal actions.

Premier Stephen McNeil lauded the committee for deferring the bill as the government reviews it to ensure no unintended consequences might ensue. But the suggestion that the archdiocese was trying to stow away assets drew the ire of the archdiocesan chancellor.

“First of all, under Church rules the bishop can’t do that,” Deacon Bob Britton told local media. “And if he did that, then the question would be: How much longer would he be the bishop?”

Britton said lawyers have told the Church that the courts have already determined that the archdiocese and individual parishes would be responsible for any future claims of sexual abuse.

“The unintended consequences that are alluded to are simply not there,” he said.

Nova Scotia’s other diocese — Antigonish — agreed to a $16-million settlement in 2012 to be paid to 125 confirmed and alleged victims of sexual abuse. The settlement forced the diocese to put about 150 properties up for sale and require more than 100 parishes to yield savings.

Britton said the intent of the new bill is to recognize in civil law what is already a Church reality — that each parish is a separate entity while still joined with the archdiocese.

“The claims of a kind of nefarious motives, I assure you, they are not there,” said Britton.

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.

Anti-Abuse Video and Song, ‘It’s Not Okay’ by Linda Newlin, Gains Traction

SANTA BARBARA (CA)
PR Newswire

Nov. 7, 2017

“It’s Not Okay to abuse and use anyone,” says singer/songwriter/author Linda Newlin in her new, provocative song and music video. The images and scenes depict all forms of abuse going on in our world and challenge the abusers who have hurt others and those who have been complicit by keeping quiet.

Newlin originally wrote the song and produced the video on the heels of the sexual abuse scandals perpetrated by the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts but its message is just as relevant today. Just this weekend, Facebook was flooded with “Me Too” messages from tens of thousands of women speaking up about sexual harassment and abuse.

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

When politicians or clergy abuse, the institution doesn’t need protection: it needs honesty

ENGLAND
Christian Today

November 7, 2017

By Florence Gildea

‘I […] was worried I would be blacklisted as untrustworthy. In Westminster, where power and loyalties are hard currency, I feared making enemies’, wrote Jane Merrick as she explained why she did not report former defence secretary Michael Fallon’s attempt to kiss her to the party whips.

Labour activist Bex Bailey was told by a senior party member not to report the fact that she was raped because it might damage her career. Other women who have come forward as victims of sexual assault or harassment in Westminster have found that officials have ‘at best turned a blind eye and at worst actively covered it up’. Why is it that institutions are so reluctant to hold their members accountable for sexual assault?

It’s a pattern we are becoming used to, that is even becoming normalised: someone (typically male) empowered with a sense of entitlement, acts towards another (typically female) as if he had the right to her body and then somehow passes the burden of shame and professional consequences on to the one they have assaulted. Unless, the abuser or those around them reassures the victim, they keep it to themselves. Otherwise, the one who has been betrayed is warned: you won’t be trusted; you’ll be letting the side down. It is not surprising that efforts to hush up sexual assault scar all political parties. Such is the cost of tribalism.

Both the UK’s major political parties, I’m sure, wish perpetrators of sexual assault were only to be found on the opposite side of the Commons. All institutions, likewise, hope it is only Hollywood and Westminster where these incidents take place. Yet nothing could be further from the truth: a survey for the Young Women’s Trust found one in eight large employers admit they are aware of sexual harassment that has gone unreported. More than half of women say they have experienced sexual harassment at work, according to research by the TUC.

We all want to be immune from wrongdoing ­­– just as much perhaps as we want to be immune from harm. It is surely the belief that we – whoever that ‘we’ is – are above such things that leads people to suggest that victims of sexual assault should not come forward. After all, we don’t have a systemic problem: it’s just a couple of bad apples. No need to make a fuss.

No wonder, then, that the Church has so often suppressed the truth of sexual assault in order to present itself as the representative of the Truth. If victims of sexual assault in Westminster can be asked to put party loyalty over their own needs, how much more can church leaders ask those in their care to prioritise God’s public image.

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.

Limerick priest helping heal scars of falsely accused colleagues

LIMERICK (IRELAND)
The Limerick Post

November 6, 2017

A COUNTY Limerick priest is extending a helping hand to his traumatised colleagues who have been falsely accused of sexually abusing children.

Caherconlish parish priest Fr Roy Donovan, who is spokesman for the 1,000 member Association of Catholic Priests (ACP), said that they are offering group therapy sessions to help innocent churchmen who have been affected by abuse scandals.

Fr Donovan said the purpose of the ‘circle of healing’ workshops is to not only ‘help heal the scars’ of clergymen cleared of allegations, but also to provide support to clerics who feel traumatised over crimes committed by ‘the small minority of paedophiles’ in their fold.

“A lot of good, decent priests have been affected by the abuse carried out by other priests in the past. They’ve been traumatised and left with a sense of shame over what’s happened, and that’s partly why we’re holding a circle of healing.

“We’re holding the first one in Cork later this month, and it follows a demand from our members. There’ll be 20 priests attending the first session and it will run for two hours. It will be very much like a group therapy session.

The APC has been advocating radical reform in the Church including the relaxation of celibacy rules and the ordination of women priests.

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

Polygamist with Utah connection and his 4 wives detained in Mexico murder investigation

MEXICO CITY
The Associated Press

November 6, 2017

By Mark Stevenson

Mexico City • Prosecutors in northern Mexico say they have detained wanted U.S. polygamist Orson William Black Jr. and his followers and are investigating whether Black was involved in the death of three American youths whose bodies were found at a ranch in September.

The arrest of Black on Sunday — along with four of his wives, a woman described as “a concubine” and about 20 Americans without proper documents — marks the end of the fundamentalist sect leader’s long, strange period on the lam.

Few thought the trail to finding him would end in bloodshed.

The prosecutors’ office in the border state of Chihuahua says Black, 56, was captured in an area largely populated by Mennonites and is under investigation for the deaths of three Americans aged 15, 19 and 23 on Sept. 10.

In keeping with Mexican legal practice, the office identified the victims by their first names — Robert W.B., Jesse L.B. and Michael B. — and suggested they may have all carried the last name Black.

Prosecutors did not say why Black was a suspect in the deaths, but suggested the victims may have been members of his religious group. Black was a member of polygamous The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints but split from that group in the 1980s. The FLDS began after the mainstream Mormon church disavowed polygamy in 1890.
Black was charged in 2003 in Mohave County, Ariz., with two felony counts of conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor and three felony counts of sexual conduct with a minor. Black fled before he could be prosecuted.

The Arizona Attorney General’s Office filed the charges and alleged Black married two girls underage. One of the counts, according to a 2003 article by the Phoenix New Times, refers to one of the children conceived by an underage brides was a boy born in December 1998 and named Robert William Black. It was unclear Monday whether he is one of the murder victims.

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.

In this moment of crisis, the Church desperately needs good priests

ENGLAND
Catholic Herald

November 6, 2017

By Fr. Alexander Lucie-Smith

The Church needs renewal. Does it have the people who can bring it about?

Did you hear the first reading at Mass yesterday, the Thirty-First Sunday of the Year, cycle A? Here it is again, in case you missed it. It comes from the prophet Malachi.

I am a great king, says the Lord of Hosts, and my name is feared throughout the nations. And now, priests, this warning is for you. If you do not listen, if you do not find it in your heart to glorify my name, says the Lord of Hosts, I will send the curse on you and curse your very blessing. But you, you have strayed from the way; you have caused many to stumble by your teaching. You have destroyed the covenant of Levi, says the Lord of Hosts. And so I in my turn have made you contemptible and vile in the eyes of the whole people in repayment for the way you have not kept to my paths but have shown partiality in your administration.

Have we not all one Father? Did not one God create us? Why, then, do we break faith with one another, profaning the covenant of our ancestors?

These words are a nice reminder to us all that the words of the Bible are not just of their own time, but for all time; goodness knows what in particular the priests of Israel had done to arouse the prophet’s wrath, but the words resonate today for reasons we all know.

First of all, the child abuse scandal in the Catholic Church. This was caused by priests who “strayed from the way”, that did not keep to the Church’s teaching, a teaching they themselves were supposed not just to uphold but to teach and preach. If that wasn’t bad enough, the subsequent cover-up turned a bad situation into a full-blown crisis, because it revealed to the world, and to those of us in the Church, that the Church’s institutions were not working as they should have been. In other words, those charged with oversight were not overseeing things properly.

Most of the vilification for the child abuse crisis has fallen on the priests of the Church, largely because these are the only “officials” of the Church the general public meets, though there have been several high ranking clergy who have also been made “contemptible and vile in the eyes of the whole people”: one thinks, for example, of Cardinal Law of Boston, as well as the most unfair persecution, from some quarters, of Pope Benedict XVI. But on the whole, it is the priests, the men who are the daily point of contact with the public, who have had their collective reputation besmirched. That is something we priests have had to live with. But that is not really the most bitter fruit of the Church’s mismanagement: the real harm done is seen in the ruined lives of the abused and in the loss of faith by the laity.

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November 6, 2017

As #MeToo harassment claims hit the Church of England, it’s an institution still steeped in sexism

BOSTON (MA)
The Conversation

November 6, 2017

The Church of England is the latest institution to be swept up in the #MeToo wave of disclosures about sexual abuse and harassment. As Rachel Trewick, the bishop of Gloucester told the Guardian, it’s dangerous to imagine that the “church is somehow an elite group of people” immune from the issue of harassment. In an interview with Channel 4 News, Jayne Ozanne, a senior lay member of the church, said she thought sexual harassment and abuse was widespread within the church.

My ongoing research into how women clergy negotiate their belonging in the Church of England suggests that the institution has a uniquely problematic relationship with sex and gender. The stories I’m hearing from women priests about everyday unhealthy and humiliating practices based on perceptions of gender are in many ways no different to the stories lots of other women might tell.

Yet, women clergy must also negotiate a system whose symbolism is dominated by men in their bid to belong within the institution – and access power. Life has not been easy for women in the church: a male saviour, sent by God with masculine names, a traditionally male priesthood, a male-oriented history, a creation myth that casts the woman as temptress, and the battles required to read Biblical text in a non-sexist way. The legacy of Christian culture is that men and women are constructed as different, in ways that hand power to men.

Women clergy are awake to the ways in which this plays out. As priests, they must slay the demons attached to the myth of being different-but-equal. Roles and attitudes expected of women that are hidden in “feminine” traits undermine their leadership and authority in subtle ways. For example, the way they look is constantly judged and evaluated. One woman recounted that she was told the feminine timbre of her voice made her inaudible.

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Attorney: Priest gave sharp, unemotional answers on Guam child abuses

GUAM
USA Today Network

November 5, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

HAGÅTÑA, Guam — Former Guam priest Louis Brouillard did not show much emotion and remained fairly sharp mentally when he provided, over a four-day period, information about the “tragic circumstances that allowed him to have access to Guam’s children for many years,” according to one of the attorneys involved in more than 140 lawsuits accusing Brouillard of child sex abuse.

Brouillard’s Oct. 31 to Nov. 3 deposition in Pine City, Minnesota, where he lives, brought together attorneys for most plaintiffs and defendants from different parts of the nation.

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Twin Cities Archdiocese releases names of 19 men suspected of sexually abusing minors

ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
Star Tribune

November 4, 2017

By Karen Zamora

14 of the men have died; none who survives serves in any pastoral role.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on Friday afternoon released the names of 19 deceased or former priests or members of religious orders against whom it now acknowledges “substantiated claims of sexual abuse of minors.”

Many of the names have long been in the public domain, released by their religious orders on their own lists of members credibly accused of abuse, named in victims’ lawsuits or on websites compiled by abuse survivors. But it appears to be the first time the archdiocese has released their names in relation to its own jurisdiction.

In a statement on the archdiocese’s website, Tim O’Malley, director of the archdiocese’s Office of Ministerial Standards and Safe Environment, wrote, “Eighteen of the men have been disclosed by their diocese or religious order based on alleged abuse outside of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, but had, at some point, served or spent time in this archdiocese. The other man served in the archdiocese until his death in the early 1960s and is being disclosed now based on recent interviews with victims/survivors who courageously came forward.”

Tom Halden, director of communications for the archdiocese, said late Friday that he had no comment beyond what the news release said.

Fourteen of the men on the new list have died. None who survives now serves in any pastoral capacity.

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Archdiocese releases names of 19 clergy accused of sexual abuse of a minor

ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
Pioneer Press

November 3, 2017

By Deanna Weniger

The names of 19 men have been added to the growing list of abusers who at some point served or spent time in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The statement, posted Friday on the archdiocese’s website, defined the men as those “who have substantiated claims of sexual abuse of a minor against them.”

All but one of the men committed the alleged abuse outside of the Twin Cities, but were included because they spent some time during their careers at the local diocese, the statement said.

One man, Vincent Worzalla, who died in 1962, was accused of abuse within the local diocese. He worked at Holy Cross in Minneapolis from 1915 to 1951 and at Holy Trinity in South St. Paul from 1951 until his death.

He is being disclosed now “based on recent interviews with victims/survivors who courageously came forward,” the statement said.

Some of the names on the list already had been released, due to prior litigation. Fourteen are deceased.

Those still living are James Moeglein, Dunstan Moorse, Michael Paquet, James Phillips and Thomas O’Brien.

The others listed are Cornelius Devenster, John Gleason, Othmar Hohmann, Paul Kabat, Thomas Meyer, Orville Munie, John Murphy, David Roney, Urban Schmitt, Michael Skoblik, Charles Stark, Emil Twardochleb and Pirmin Wendt.

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Padre do Monte com uma filha agita comunidade católica

LISBON (PORTUGAL)
Diário de Notícias

November 5, 2017

By Élvio Passos

[Google Translate: Father Giselo Andrade assumed the paternity of a girl, born on August 18 of this year, in the parish of São Pedro, probably in the Dr. Nélio Mendonça Hospital. The fact that the parish priest of Monte had a daughter gave rise to a series of public statements and initiatives, some humorous in order to ask the bishop of Funchal to at least remove the priest from the duties for which he is appointed.]

Giselo Andrade quer continuar padre, mas pondera pôr o lugar à disposição da Diocese

O padre Giselo Andrade assumiu a paternidade de uma menina, nascida no dia 18 de Agosto deste ano, na freguesia de São Pedro, provavelmente, no Hospital Dr. Nélio Mendonça. O facto de o pároco do Monte ter uma filha deu azo a um conjunto de alegações e iniciativas públicas, algumas jocosas outras no sentido de pedir ao bispo do Funchal que, no mínimo, afastasse o sacerdote das funções para que está nomeado.

Perante as acusações e ainda sem a confirmação de que o padre tinha uma filha, no dia 27 de Outubro, o DIÁRIO pediu a Giselo Andrade que esclarecesse/comentasse as acusações, que lhe eram dirigidas, com incidência no facto de ter um filho e ter sido ‘obrigado’ a assumi-lo. Pedimos, igualmente, esclarecimentos sobre a administração da paróquia, sendo o padre acusado de ‘empregar’ a família e não prestar contas.

A resposta de Giselo Andrade, no mesmo dia, foi forte: “Relativamente aos factos alegados nego-os peremptoriamente sendo certo que me reserva ao direito de intentar queixa-crime contra os responsáveis por uma eventual publicação através da impressa ou de qualquer outro meio de divulgação.”

De facto, a pergunta do DIÁRIO falava em filho e o padre Giselo é pai de uma menina, podendo ser essa a interpretação do sacerdote, para negar o que é verdade. Na última sexta-feira, voltámos a tentar o contacto com o pároco do Monte para saber se mantinha o que dissera, uma semana antes, ou se gostaria de fazer outros esclarecimentos. Desta vez, não obtivemos resposta.

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Examen psicológico practicado a víctima de violación es contundente

PERU
Jornada

November 6, 2017

[Google Translate: After several months of not having obtained any result, before the complaint filed with the Public Prosecutor for acts of rape against the priest Félix Pariona Huacre, the defense of the victim ALL released the result of the psychological report which states “(). .. The patient presents trauma of psychosexual origin due to sexual abuse and other alterations of a sexual nature produced during her childhood and adolescence … () “]

Tras varios meses de no haber obtenido resultado alguno, ante la denuncia presentada al Ministerio Público por actos de violación sexual contra el sacerdote Félix Pariona Huacre, la defensa de la víctima A.L.L. dio a conocer el resultado del informe psicológico el cual señala “( )…La paciente presenta trauma de origen psicosexual producto de eventos de abuso sexual y otras alteraciones de índole sexual producidos durante su niñez y adolescencia… ( )”

Sin embargo, desde que se denunció el hecho en febrero de este año, la Segunda Fiscalía Corporativa de Huamanga a cargo del fiscal Nilo Paredes Chávez archivó el caso resolviendo que no existen indicios relevantes de la existencia del delito. Esta extraña decisión ha levantado oscuros vínculos entre dos instituciones (Ministerio Público y la Iglesia Católica).

Frente a esta resolución la defensa ha presentado la queja de derecho el cual ha sido declarado fundado en segunda instancia, por ese motivo se ha ampliado la investigación, lo cual amerita un nuevo pronunciamiento.

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Escobar Gaviria: otro pedido de prisión

ARGENTINA
Diario del Sur Digital

November 6, 2017

[Google Translate: While awaiting the resolution of the cassation appeal filed for the annulment of the ruling that last September sentenced him to 25 years in prison, the priest Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria faces a new request for preventive detention in the context of another case of abuse and corruption of minors processed by the Fiscal Unit of Nogoyá.]

dos pedidos de prisión preventiva, una condena y un nuevo juicio próximo a iniciarse

Mientras aguarda que se resuelva el recurso de casación presentado para que se dicte la nulidad del fallo que en septiembre último lo condenó a 25 años de cárcel, el cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria se enfrenta a un nuevo pedido de prisión preventiva en el marco de otro caso de abuso y corrupción de menores que tramita la Unidad Fiscal de Nogoyá.

Así lo indicó a Entre Ríos Ahora el fiscal Federico Uriburu, de la Unidad Fiscal de Nogoyá, que ya tiene concluida la investigación penal preparatoria de la nueva denuncia por abuso que pesa sobre el cura, ya condenado por otros cuatro casos. El caso ya fue ventilado durante el juicio oral al que fue sometido el cura, en agosto pasado en Gualeguay.

Escobar Gaviria, que fue párroco de San Lucas Evangelista, de Lucas González, entre 2005 y 2016, enfrentó, en agosto último, un juicio oral y público por cuatro casos de abusos y corrupción de menores. El Tribunal de Juicios y Apelaciones de Gualeguay, que lo juzgó, lo halló culpable de los delitos de abusos y corrupción de menores, y lo condenó a 25 años de prisión. Aunque hasta tanto quede firme esa sentencia, decidió sostener la prisión preventiva que le dictó la Justicia el 21 de abril, y lo mantuvo preso en la Unidad Penal de Victoria, donde está ahora.

Durante el desarrollo de las audiencias, uno de los testigos que llevaron los fiscales Dardo Tórtul y Federico Uriburu contó de los abusos a los que lo sometía Escobar Gaviria, y su testimonio derivó en la apertura de una nueva investigación penal preparatoria. En el marco de esa instrucción, el abogado Mariano Navarro ya se constituyó como querellante y esta semana el fiscal Uriburu pedirá la prisión preventiva del sacerdote, medida que piensa solicitar al juez de Garantías de Nogoyá, Gustavo Acosta. La petición es que la preventiva se extienda hasta el inicio del nuevo juicio.

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La Justicia le redujo la pena a Grassi

ARGENTINA
Filo News

November 6, 2017

[Google Translate: In a divided decision, the Criminal Chamber granted the benefit of 2×1 to Father Julio César Grassi , whose sentence of 15 years in prison for sexual abuse had been confirmed by the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation on March 21.]

En un fallo dividido, el Tribunal N° 1 de Morón aplicó el beneficio del 2×1. De esta manera, deberá cumplir dos años menos de cárcel y saldrá en 2026

En un fallo dividido, la Cámara Penal concedió el beneficio del 2×1 al padre Julio César Grassi, cuya condena a 15 años de prisión por abuso sexual había sido confirmada por la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación el 21 de marzo pasado.

De esta manera, la condena de Grassi ahora será hasta 2026, ya que se vio beneficiado con el mecanismo del 2×1 el tiempo que estuvo en prisión preventiva.

El cura fue detenido en 2013, acusado de la violación de un chico que acudía a la institución presidida por Grassi, Felices los Niños.

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Sacerdote Cristián Precht terminará condena por abusos sexuales a un mes de visita papal

CHILE
BioBioChile

November 4, 2017

Por Guido Focacci; La Información es de Cristóbal Cruz

[Google Translate excerpt: Precht, a Chilean priest guilty of sexual abuse against minors and adults , was condemned in 2012 by the ecclesiastical justice and separated for five years from the priestly ministry, sentence that will be completed in December, one month after Pope Francis visited Chile.]

El arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati, presidió la misa en conmemoración al recientemente canonizado sacerdote español, Faustino Míguez, eucaristía celebrada en la Catedral Metropolitana y tras la cual se refirió nuevamente a Cristián Precht.

Precht, sacerdote chileno culpable de abusos sexuales contra menores y mayores de edad, fue condenado en 2012 por la justicia eclesiástica y apartado por cinco años del ministerio sacerdotal, sentencia que completará en diciembre, a un mes de la visita del papa Francisco a Chile.

Respecto al término de esta condena, Ezzati aseguró que, una vez cumplida su pena, Cristián Precht deberá sacar las lecciones correspondientes para continuar con una vida más sana.

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Staff members speaks of abuse at Gravesend children’s home

ENGLAND
Kent Online

November 6, 2017

By Tom Acres

New details have emerged of the horrific abuse inflicted upon young girls at a Church of England children’s home during a callous regime lasting more than three decades.

Dozens of harrowing accounts from Kendall House in Gravesend were told in an independent review published last year and in a follow-up report, which both featured stories of how girls as young as nine were injected with drugs, kept in straitjackets and raped.

Most reports were based on interviews with women kept at the home in Pelham Road as children and teenagers, but now a former member of staff has spoken openly.

In an exclusive interview with the Messenger, the 62-year-old man, who asked to be referred to as L Simpson, said recalling his time at Kendall House brought back “terrible memories” which made him “feel sick”.

He worked there during the summer of 1975, between years of study at Kingston University, where he was working on a sociology dissertation. He was offered work there through his flatmate, whose father was a vicar with connections to Kendall House.

Mr Simpson, who was 20, soon realised it was not the placement he was expecting.

“I started on the same day as another chap called Ron. He had very little experience, and I had only done some volunteering at a short stay unit in Putney over Christmas,” he said. “We were asked to wait in the garden and this young guy came up to me and said, ‘I would ask to leave here. What goes on here isn’t right’.”

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Archbishops urged to host debate on sexual harassment after rape claims against priest

ENGLAND
Christian Today

November 6, 2017

By Harry Farley

The Church of England’s ruling general synod is being urged to publicly debate bishops’ response to sexual harassment at its next meeting after allegations of abuse and assault were levelled at clergy members.

The Archbishops of Canterbury and York were told the ‘urgent’ discussion would allow the CofE’s safeguarding system, which has come under fire for its lack of accountability, to be scrutinised.

It comes after a prominent member of the national synod, which meets twice a year, claimed she was raped by a priest and told by a bishop to drop the claims.

Jayne Ozanne, a founding member of the Archbishops’ Council advisory body, is calling for a separate, independent body to handle claims of assault and abuse within the church.

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Opinion Letters: In Ireland, Recalling ‘a Very Dark Time’

IRELAND
The New York Times

November 5, 2017

[Note: Multiple letters to the editor follow the single letter excerpted below]

To the Editor:

Re “The Lost Children of Tuam,” by Dan Barry (Special Report, Oct. 29):

I grew up in the long shadow of one of Ireland’s most notorious institutions for boys, St. Conleth’s industrial school in County Offaly. The school’s reputation for harsh treatment was such that we were often threatened with being sent to St. Conleth’s if we didn’t behave.

The Irish writer John McGahern, himself a victim of the tyrannical Irish version of the Catholic Church, once said:

“The true history of the thirties, forties and fifties in this country has yet to be written. When it does, I believe it will be shown to have been a very dark time indeed, in which an insular church colluded with an insecure state to bring about a society that was often bigoted, intolerant, cowardly, philistine and spiritually crippled.”

Your report on St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway, has borne out Mr. McGahern’s prescience. Dan Barry follows a long line of reporters and activists who in the late 1970s succeeded in forcing the Irish government to investigate the conditions of its more than 70 industrial schools, its orphanages and its Magdalene Laundries for “fallen women,” who took care of church linens, among other things.

The courage of reporters like Mr. Barry shines a bright light on how dark the dark times mentioned by Mr. McGahern really were.

TOM PHELAN, FREEPORT, N.Y.

The writer’s novel “Nailer” is set against the backdrop of Ireland’s abusive industrial schools and the church-state collusion that allowed them to flourish.

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Hollywood child abuse film rises from ashes

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Guardian News & Media Ltd via Gulf News

November 4, 2017

By Rory Carroll

Despite barely getting a release in 2015, ‘An Open Secret’ is seeing renewed interest online amid sex abuse allegations

When the documentary An Open Secret tried to lift the lid on child abuse in Hollywood, it billed itself as “the film Hollywood doesn’t want you to see”. The marketing tagline did not exaggerate.
The film died upon release in 2015. There was no theatrical release to speak of, no television deal, no video on demand distribution.

“We got zero Hollywood offers to distribute the film. Not even one. Literally no offers for any price whatsoever,” said Gabe Hoffman, a Florida-based hedge fund manager who financed the film.
It did not seem to matter that it was directed by an Oscar-nominated director, Amy Berg, or that it uncovered damning evidence of the sexual abuse of teenage boys by figures in the film industry.
“There was nowhere to see it,” said Lorien Haynes, the film’s writer. “I don’t think it impacted at all. Nobody saw it. We released a film that didn’t [seem to] exist.”

Now, two years later, multiple “open secrets” of predatory behaviour are detonating across Hollywood and the documentary that blew the whistle is getting millions of viewers — but still no distribution deal.

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COMMENTARY: Archbishop: ‘I offer my sincere apology’

SANTA FE
Santa Fe New Mexican

November 4, 2017

By Most Reverend John C. Wester, Archbishop of Santa Fe

On Sept. 12, 2017, the Archdiocese of Santa Fe released a list of 74 priests, deacons and religious who have been accused of sexual abuse of children. The vast majority of these abuses occurred over 25 years ago.

Since then, the Archdiocese of Santa Fe has implemented a number of strict measures, including removing perpetrators from ministry, terminating employment of perpetrators, instituting a zero tolerance policy and implementing Safe Environment and Victim’s Assistance Programs throughout the archdiocese. As a result, since 1993, the archdiocese has received only two reports of clergy sexual misconduct with a minor where the incident was reported to have occurred later than 1993.

On Oct. 18, 2017, Judge Alan Malott, a District Court judge in Albuquerque, ordered the public release of approximately 1,000 pages of documents related to three of the most prolific child abusers to have ever served in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe: Arthur Perrault, Sabine Griego and Jason Sigler. Although their crimes were committed decades ago, it is my hope that the release of these documents to the public will further aid in the healing process for past victims and their families.

It is difficult to put into words my sadness and shame over the betrayal of trust by members of the clergy who were supposed to love and protect our children and young people, and for the pain and suffering endured by victims of this abuse. I offer my sincere apology on behalf of the archdiocese to survivors and their families and my continued commitment to support and assist you on your road to healing and recovery.

Jesus said, “Let the children come to me and do not prevent them; for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these” (Luke 18:16). It is at the heart of the church’s mission, therefore, to protect, nurture and care for our children. Indeed, the church and any society can be judged on how well it cares for the vulnerable in its midst. When the church fails in this sacred responsibility, we betray the trust Christ has given us and the trust of those we have a responsibility to look out for and safeguard.

I firmly believe that actions speak louder than words. What is often lost or relegated to a footnote in the media’s coverage of the clergy sexual abuse crisis in New Mexico are the many steps this archdiocese has taken over the past 25 years to prevent sexual abuse of children. First of all, since 1993, the archdiocese has adopted a “zero tolerance” policy with respect to clergy credibly accused of sexual misconduct with minors. Of the 74 names on the archdiocese’s list of accused clergy, those who are still living have been permanently restricted from public ministry or removed from the priesthood.

Moreover, the archdiocese continues to expand and develop its Victim’s Assistance and Safe Environment Programs. The archdiocese requires that all clergy, employees and volunteers undergo criminal background checks and attend workshops on recognizing and reporting signs that a child may be the victim of physical or sexual abuse or harassment.

Seminary candidates for the archdiocese also undergo extensive psychological testing and screening as a prerequisite to admission, followed by continuing evaluation and support. All clergy must participate in ongoing sexual abuse awareness and prevention training every five years.

The archdiocese’s programs include, but are not limited to, providing counseling to victims of clergy sexual abuse at the expense of the archdiocese, conducting annual children and youth protection classes at every grade level in the Catholic school system as well as in parish-based religious education programs for those who are not enrolled in Catholic schools. These programs also reinforce appropriate boundaries that must be adhered to when adults interact with children and young people.

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Guam priest makes further admissions

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

November 6, 2017

A Catholic priest who admitted decades of sexual abuse on Guam has made further admissions in a depositions hearing.

Louis Brouillard, who is now 96, was on Guam between 1948 and 1981, and is accused of abusing dozens of children during that time.

The Guam Catholic Church is facing more than 140 lawsuits alleging decades of child sex abuse, but Father Brouillard is the only person to have admitted any crimes.

The Pacific Daily News reported that lawyers representing many of the plaintiffs met with Father Brouillard and his attorney last week for four days of depositions hearings.

One of the lawyers, Steven Reich, said the priest was mentally sharp and cooperative, and provided additional sworn evidence about abuse.

Father Brouillard was transferred from Guam to Minnesota in 1981 as accusations surfaced, but three recent lawsuits accuse him of bringing boys from Guam to the US mainland to continue the abuse.

Meanwhile, Mr Reich said an agreement was yet to be reached on the possibility of out-of-court mediation with the church.

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Archbishop of Canterbury urged to abandon Church insurers over ‘derisory’ settlements to abuse victims

ENGLAND
Christian Today

November 3, 2017

By Harry Farley

The Archbishop of Canterbury is being urged by a clerical abuse survivor to abandon the Church’s insurer in the wake of a scandal over its ‘derisory and heartless’ treatment of victims.

It comes after three bishops urged the Ecclesiastical Insurance Group (EIG) to review a settlement of £35,000 that was offered to Gilo, whose surname is withheld to protect his identity, saying they were ‘very concerned about the way in which the claim was handled at the time’.

The Bishop of Durham, Paul Butler, the Bishop at Lambeth, Tim Thornton, and the Bishop of Buckingham, Alan Wilson, expressed their concern that ‘horse-trading’ between lawyers about settlement figures had ‘little concern for the impact’ on the survivor.

Now Gilo is urging the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, to review the settlement offers made by EIG to abuse survivors and relieve the company of its responsibility to reach settlements.

‘The way the Church and its insurers has treated survivors institutionally compounds the abuse we have already suffered,’ he wrote in the letter to Welby.

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‘Their cross to bear’: The Catholic women told to forgive domestic violence

AUSTRALIA
ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

November 4, 2017

By Hayley Gleeson with Julia Baird
Illustrations by Rocco Fazzari

Pope Francis has denounced domestic abuse as “craven acts of cowardice”. But will the Australian Catholic Church have the courage to answer his call and root out the “shameful ill-treatment” of women in its midst? And is its all-male hierarchy, still reeling from revelations of child sexual abuse, capable of leading the charge?

Over the past three decades spent working for the Catholic Church, Maria George has been exposed to dozens of women who have survived intimate partner violence. The work of a pastoral associate often involves caring for vulnerable or distressed parishioners.

But the story of one particular woman’s abuse by her husband, a controlling man who raped his wife repeatedly over the decades of their marriage, has stayed with her.

“She endured something like 16 pregnancies, quite a few miscarriages, and the stillbirth of a baby,” Ms George, a senior pastoral associate at Melbourne’s St Kilda-Elwood parish, told ABC News.

She knew that being forced to have sex was wrong, and she often thought about leaving, Ms George said.

But, “her response to that [abuse] was, ‘this is my duty as a wife, for better or worse’, and ‘I said in marriage vows that I will stick with this’.” And she did.

Another woman, a mother of seven living in Melbourne who spoke to Ms George about her alcoholic husband’s physical, verbal and emotional abuse, sought the help of a priest.

He told her the violence was “God’s will” and that she must endure it because she’d promised in her marriage vows that she would, for better or worse.

“The [priest’s] attitude was that it was perhaps a moral failing by that man, but you have a duty to forgive,” Ms George said.

“That is what the Christian faith teaches us, that you must be forgiving, and basically forgive and go back and get more of the same treatment. That is what happened in the end.”

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November 5, 2017

Sacerdote es acusado de atacar sexualmente a una persona discapacitada

CHICAGO (IL)
Univision

November 3, 2017

[Google Translate: Priest is accused of sexually assaulting a disabled person. The alleged victim is a 39-year-old man who is paralyzed and suffering from an intellectual disability. Bail for the pastor was set at one million dollars.]

La presunta víctima es un hombre de 39 años que está paralítico y sufre de una discapacidad intelectual. Al pastor le fue fijada una fianza de un millón de dólares.

Un sacerdote católico de Kankakee, poblado localizado a 59 millas al suroeste de Chicago, fue acusado de agredir sexualmente a un hombre paralítico e intelectualmente discapacitado.

De acuerdo con las autoridades, una enfermera encontró al padre Richard Jacklin, de 65 años de edad, realizando un acto sexual con un hombre de 39 años en el Shapiro Development Center. Este es un centro residencial y de capacitación para personas con necesidades especiales.

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How the Church can help victims of sexual assault

UNITED STATES
Catholic News Agency

November 5, 2017

By Mary Rezac

It’s been a month since the New York Times first published an investigative report on Harvey Weinstein, a Hollywood film producer and studio executive who has been accused of sexually assaulting numerous women in the entertainment industry since the 1990s.

Already, the reports have been followed by a movement among women – both those who have made additional accusations against Weinstein and other celebrities, and women throughout the world who are sharing their own stories of sexual assault on social media, accompanied by the hashtag #MeToo.

The Catholic Church in the United States faced its own sex abuse crisis in the early 2000s, beginning with the Boston Globe’s report on extensive sexual abuse by clergy, particularly against minors. Since then, the Church has taken care to provide numerous resources to such victims, and develop robust child protection policies.

But what can the Church provide for adult victims of general sexual assault, whether committed by Church personnel or other people?

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Archdiocese releases names of priests, other members, accused of sexual abuse

ST. PAUL (MN)
KMSP-TV (Fox)

November 4, 2017

By Jack Highberger

[Includes video]

[See also the archdiocese’s statement and list: Statement Regarding Disclosure of Additional Names of Men with Substantiated Claims of Sexual Abuse Against Them.]

On Friday night, the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis released the names of 19 men accused of sexual abuse. Each of the men served within the diocese at one time.

Though the names of the men wouldn’t be recognized in the average household, St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson said the names are not foreign to officials.

“The bad, and sad, news is these are all names that have been known to top officials for many, many years,” he told Fox 9 on Saturday.

Anderson represents many of the church sex abuse survivors. He told Fox 9 that the release only came because of pressure. In fact, 14 of the 19 have died.

“It’s the first time we’ve seen this sort of self-publication from the archdiocese,” Anderson said. “But it comes after years of investigation, pressure and pain.”

The publication said all 19 men have “substantiated claims of sexual abuse against them.”

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Despite child molestation charges, Rushville pastor still appears to lead church

RUSHVILLE (IN)
WISH-TV

November 4, 2017

By Eric Feldman

An Indiana pastor appears to still be the leader of his church despite the child molestation and solicitation charges he faces and his attempt to take his own life after additional charges came down on Friday.

Garry Evans is listed as pastor on the sign in front of Rushville Baptist Temple Church, and now people living doors away want to know why no one from the church is speaking out.

“It’s wrong. Pure evil. There’s evil in that church,” said Tim Guck, who lives next door.

The man the church says leads their worship has led the Rushville Police Department down a frightening path of child molestation allegations.

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Time to change Canberra’s Catholic Church, faithful say

CANBERRA (AUSTRALIA)
Brisbane Times

November 5, 2017

By Tom McIlroy

A group of Canberra Catholic faithful have stepped up lobbying efforts for structural change they say will address deepening disillusion and disaffection in the church.

In a move welcomed by Canberra and Goulburn Archbishop Christopher Prowse, the Concerned Catholics group have presented a submission to senior clergy ahead of a proposed plenary council for the church in Australia in 2020.

It calls for church leaders to establish pastoral councils in the Canberra archdiocese, designed to give parishioners and lay partners an opportunity to participate fully in the response to next month’s final report from the landmark royal commission into responses to child sexual abuse.

The plan also calls for reforms of the church’s canon law and better promotion of the role of women in leadership positions.

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#MeToo movement brings women’s voices into open

NEW YORK
GoErie.com

November 5, 2017

By Brenda Martin

The social media moment has shown us how many women have experienced sexual harassment, assault or gender bias.

Emily Roll Moore was a young Fairview woman who struggled with life. She had a family, went to school, was a gifted writer and was the fashionista of her family. She was a mother, a daughter, a sister, a wife.

But she also had a past that haunted her, a series of events that she experienced in elementary school in upstate New York, that colored her days and nights.

She was sexually assaulted by a man connected to her grade school.

The assault changed her. It affected her relationships. It made her hurt herself.

Moore died several years ago at the age of 31 as a complication of anorexia nervosa, an eating disorder that Moore and her family believed was brought on by her childhood sexual abuse.

Her mother, Carolynn Roll, says #MeToo on behalf of her daughter, because her daughter can no longer say it herself.

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Lifting the veil of the Catholic Church and the Iglesia ni Cristo

PHILIPPINES
Rappler.com

November 5, 2017

The Catholic Church and the Iglesia ni Cristo are often left unchecked because of how they are revered as institutions. Rappler has pursued investigations of alleged abuses.

In Catholic Churches in the Philippines, the faithful often sit back and listen to what is presented as biblical truth. The Gospel readings often end with the declaration, “This is the word of the Lord.”

Because of this, faithful followers dare not question the priests who proclaim the gospel because they are seen as acting in the person of the head of the Catholic Church, Jesus Christ himself.

The Catholic Church in the Philippines counts at least 80,304,061 followers or 80% of the entire Philippine population, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority. Also in the millions is the home-grown Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) which has about 2.3 Filipinos followers.

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Attorney: Brouillard remained fairly sharp, did not show much emotion in 4-day deposition

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 5, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

Former Guam priest Louis Brouillard did not show much emotion and remained fairly sharp mentally when he provided, over a four-day period, more information about the “tragic circumstances that allowed him to have access to Guam’s children for so many years,” according to one of the attorneys involved in dozens of lawsuits accusing Brouillard of child sex abuse.

Brouillard’s Oct. 31 to Nov. 3 deposition in Pine City, Minnesota, where he lives, brought together attorneys for most plaintiffs and defendants from different parts of the nation.

Seattle-based attorney Steven T. Reich, a partner at the law firm Pfau Cochran Vertetis Amala, said Brouillard was deposed over four days, and he “remained fairly sharp mentally, and cooperative throughout.”

“I asked Mr. Brouillard many pointed questions, and he appeared to make a genuine effort to provide honest answers. With regard to Mr. Brouillard’s demeanor, he did not show much emotion, and was rather matter of fact during his testimony,” said Reich, whose law firm works with Guam attorney Kevin Fowler in representing clergy sex abuse accusers.

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November 4, 2017

Statement Regarding Disclosure of Additional Names of Men with Substantiated Claims of Sexual Abuse Against Them

ST. PAUL (MN)
Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

November 3, 2017

Source: Tom Halden, Director of Communications

From Tim O’Malley, Director, Office of Ministerial Standards and Safe Environment

In our continuing efforts to encourage healing, empower victims/survivors of sexual abuse to come forward, and promote transparency, we are adding to our website today the names of 19 men who have substantiated claims of sexual abuse of a minor against them. Eighteen of the men have been disclosed by their diocese or religious order based on alleged abuse outside of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, but had, at some point, served or spent time in this archdiocese. The other man served in the archdiocese until his death in the early 1960s and is being disclosed now based on recent interviews with victims/survivors who courageously came forward.

Disclosed by another diocese or religious order:

Cornelius DeVenster, OSC
John Gleason Michael Paquet, OSC
Othmar Hohmann, OSB
Paul Kabat, OMI
Thomas Meyer, OMI
James Moeglein, OSC
Dunstan Moorse, OSB
Orville Munie, OMI
John Murphy
Thomas O’Brien, OSC
Michael Paquet, OSC
James Phillips, OSB
David Roney
Urban Schmitt, OSC
Michael Skoblik
Charles Stark
Emil Twardochleb, OMI
Pirmin Wendt, OSB

Disclosed by the Archdiocese:
Vincent Worzalla

The assignment history for each man is located on our Safe Environment website.
If you or someone you know has been abused, the first call should be to law enforcement.

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Archdiocese discloses 19 additional names of men accused of abuse

ST. PAUL (MN)
Catholic Spirit

November 3, 2017

By Maria Wiering

[See also the archdiocese’s Statement Regarding Disclosure of Additional Names of Men with Substantiated Claims of Sexual Abuse Against Them.]

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis added 19 men Nov. 3 to a list of priests and religious brothers who have served or spent time in the archdiocese and have substantiated claims of sexual abuse of a minor against them.

“Eighteen of the men have been disclosed by their diocese or religious order based on alleged abuse outside of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, but had, at some point, served or spent time in this archdiocese,” according to a Nov. 3 statement from from Tim O’Malley, director of the archdiocese’s Office of Ministerial Standards and Safe Environment.

The other man, Father Vincent Worzalla, served in the archdiocese until his death in the early 1960s. According to the statement, Father Worzalla’s name is now being disclosed “based on recent interviews with victims/survivors who courageously came forward.”

The men who served or spent time in the archdiocese and were disclosed by other dioceses and orders are Cornelius DeVenster, OSC; John Gleason; Othmar Hohmann, OSB; Paul Kabat, OMI; Thomas Meyer, OMI; James Moeglein, OSC; Dunstan Moorse, OSB; Orville Munie, OMI; John Murphy; Thomas O’Brien, OSC; Michael Paquet, OSC; James Phillips, OSB; David Roney; Urban Schmitt, OSC; Michael Skoblik; Charles Stark;?Emil Twardochleb, OMI; and Pirmin Wendt, OSB.

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Sex Assault Scandals Opening Up Conversations In Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
WCCO (CBS Minnesota)

November 3, 2017

By Jennifer Mayerle

The difficult and often secret topic of sexual harassment and assault has been cast into the spotlight following claims against Hollywood heavy hitters.

It’s started a conversation in the Twin Cities.

“What is appropriate? Where are the lines when it comes to a power situation?” Teresa Thomas, director of Women in Networking, said.

Thomas says many members of WIN have experienced some type of sexual harassment or assault in the workplace.

“They’re realizing they’re not so alone in some of these situations they’ve had in their life. What they’re really hoping for is by having this issue come to light that we then address them and work on them and set higher standards and expectations for how we treat each other,” Thomas said.

Teri McLaughlin, executive director of MnCASA, which provides resources for sexual assault programs, believes what’s happening will impact the movement beneficially.

“We have an opportunity here to begin to change society to reduce the frequency of this going forward. I think this is a unique opportunity with the magnitude of reports right now,” McLaughlin said.

She says it’s predictable there are skeptics, but emphasizes we must believe victims that find the strength to come forward.

“When we start by believing, we absolutely create a space that safe for those victims,” McLaughlin said.

She believes we may be witnessing the beginning of what’s to come. McLaughlin compares what’s happening now to the Catholic sex abuse scandal.

“They didn’t come forward until they felt it was safe to do so when they saw somebody else wasn’t destroyed, wasn’t damaged that gives them some confidence to do so,” McLaughlin said.

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Archdiocese compiling list of clergy with credible allegations of child sex abuse

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 4, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

The Archdiocese of Agana will compile a list of clergy with credible allegations of child sexual abuse against them, according to Archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes.

The Catholic Church on Guam faces more than 140 lawsuits alleging sexual abuse decades ago by 16 different clergy members.

“It would be an important compliance to our own policy,” Byrnes said, as the Archdiocese of Agana rolls out revised policies on protecting young people, trains church workers and volunteers, and revives an independent review board on the investigation of alleged clergy abuses.

Because Guam clergy sex abuse accusers and defendants are pursuing mediation to try to settle the lawsuits, there is no telling yet how soon the archdiocesan list could be compiled and released to the public.

Seattle-based attorney Michael Pfau said releasing the names of the accused is a positive step, but the archdiocese should also provide complete files on abusive priests.

“Only then will the archdiocese show complete transparency,” Pfau said. “The people of Guam deserve to know the histories of abusive priests and the decisions of the church related to those priests.”

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November 3, 2017

$1M bond set for priest

KANKAKEE (IL)
Daily Journal

November 3, 2017

By Lee Provost

KANKAKEE — Bond for Father Richard E. Jacklin, the Catholic priest accused for sexually assaulting a Shapiro Developmental Center resident Tuesday, was set at $1 million Thursday in Kankakee County Circuit Court.

In addition, it was stated during the bond hearing that the 39-year-old victim, identified in court only by his initials, has an IQ of 47 and has been a resident at Shapiro since 2010.

The victim also suffers from partial paralysis.

Jacklin, an ordained priest since June 1984, has provided written and verbal confessions, Kankakee County State’s Attorney Jim Rowe said during the hearing.

It also was stated the victim told investigators this was not the first time Jacklin had sexual encounters with him. Authorities, however, do not have evidence to that statement as yet.

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Remembering Boise Bishop Michael Driscoll, Protector of Orange County’s Pedophile Priests

BOISE (ID)
LAist.com

November 2, 2017

By Gustavo Arellano

Catholics across Idaho are in mourning after the Oct. 24 death of longtime Diocese of Orange Bishop Michael Driscoll. Obituaries across the state noted the good deeds the 78-year-old Long Beach native (who will be buried Thursday) implemented in his 15-year term from 1999 to 2014: the introduction of the nonprofit Catholic Charities, an emphasis on tending to Idaho’s growing Latino population, and an increase in the number of priests and deacons.
But none of the Gem State’s newspapers bothered to mention Driscoll’s actual legacy: as an enabler, apologist and longtime keeper of secrets in the Diocese of Orange’s pedophile priest scandal.

I knew His Excellency well. From 2004 until about 2007, I was a one-man Spotlight against the Orange diocese for OC Weekly. In story after story, I showed how diocesan officials actively covered up priestly sex abuse, doing everything from shaming victims into silence to shuffling offending priests from parish to parish to not reporting them to law enforcement—and worse.
And during his 23-year career in Orange County, Driscoll was the conductor in the middle of it all.

He was named chancellor when the Diocese of Orange split from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles in 1976. In the Roman Catholic Church, a chancellor acts as the record-keeper for his diocese, fielding all complaints against priests and reporting any findings to his superiors. That meant Driscoll dealt directly with all sex-abuse allegations from 1976 until 1986, when he became vicar general—the right-hand man of new Bishop Norman McFarland, and the person charged with disciplining wayward priests. He kept that role until 1989, when McFarland made Driscoll an auxiliary bishop in 1989.

Not a bad trajectory for a man who actively protected child rapists, right?
Space—even online—prohibits me from listing all of Driscoll’s sins, so I’ll just mention the most egregious examples, because they happen to involve bona fide monsters.

In 1976, Driscoll received a letter from Archbishop William Cousins of the Diocese of Milwaukee regarding Father Siegfried Widera, who was set to visit Orange County. Cousins asked Driscoll to give Widera a temporary assignment as a sign of “fraternal charity” even though Widera had “a moral problem having to do with a boy in school,” and that there had “been a repetition” severe enough that state psychiatrists gave the “strong recommendation that no immediate assignment be made in the environs” of Milwaukee for Widera.

Widera, in fact, had been convicted in 1973 of molesting a boy. Yet the Orange diocese fully accepted Widera, whose rape of young boys was so horrible that then-Bishop Tod D. Brown agreed to pay $17.7 million in 2005 to nine of Widera’s victims. That was part of a $100 million settlement with other victims—at that time the largest such payout in the history of the Catholic Church in the United States. The Orange County Register noted at the time that Widera’s victims were among “the most grievously abused.”

“I don’t want to sound like I’m some kind of a monster, but … we perhaps never should have taken [Widera] in 1976,” Driscoll admitted in a 2002 deposition. “And I’m sorry about that today. But … you know, I can’t justify my actions. So I’m not going to.”

Driscoll didn’t just take in pedophiles, he also helped them resettle elsewhere. In 1985, he asked church officials in Liverpool, England, to take the Reverend Robert Foley, who had admitted to molesting an 8-year-old boy during a Boy Scouts camping trip organized by St. Justin Martyr in Anaheim. The boy’s mother, Driscoll wrote, “threatened to go to the police,” and Foley “is in jeopardy of arrest and possible imprisonment if he remains here.” Foley left the U.S. for England soon after; he never faced prosecution.

And in 1984, he wrote a letter praising Franklin Buckman, who had just left St. Polycarp in Anaheim for the remote Diocese of Baker in eastern Oregon. “He will be a blessing to you and your diocese,” Driscoll wrote to Baker officials, “and he is always welcome to ‘come home’ with us”—not revealing that Buckman was facing a sexual abuse allegation (the Orange diocese settled a case against the priest in 2005 for $1.9 million).

Widera, Foley and Buckman, however, didn’t compare to Eleuterio Ramos. Ramos was the worst pedophile priest in the history of the Orange diocese, admitting to molesting “at least” 25 boys during a career that started at St. Thomas the Apostle in Los Angeles 1966 and ended in Tijuana in 1991.

And Driscoll was there to cover up for Ramos every step of the way.

Upon becoming the Orange diocese chancellor, Driscoll would’ve learned about a letter in Ramos’ personnel file written by the Orange County District Attorney. Back in 1975, when OC parishes were still under the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, the http://www.bishop-accountability.org/docs/orange/ramos/orange_50600006_PF_ramos.pdf District Attorney had suggested that Ramos see a psychologist “as a result of a recent incident.” As chancellor, Driscoll fielded multiple complaints from parents, teachers and even other priests about Ramos’ predatory ways as he moved from parish to parish. And it was Driscoll who helped Ramos leave to Tijuana in 1985 after the priest admitted to molesting yet another boy.

“We deeply regret the problems he has,” Driscoll wrote to Diocese of Tijuana Bishop Emilio Berlie (who ended up placing Ramos in a children’s ministry), “and hope that he may now completely come to grips with facing these problems and overcoming them.”

Yet when he was deposed in 1991 as part of a civil lawsuit filed by a Ramos victim, Driscoll claimed under oath during a deposition that he “didn’t received any complaints [about Ramos] specifically to me”—despite letters that lawyers dug up detailing Ramos allegations in Driscoll’s writing.

In a 2005 letter printed in the Idaho Catholic Register, shortly before thousands of pages of documents were released with his name all over them, Driscoll stated he was “deeply sorry that the way we handled cases [in Orange County] allowed children to be victimized by permitting some priests to remain in ministry, for not disclosing their behavior to those who might be at risk, and for not monitoring their actions more closely.”

And that penance worked—so much so that both the Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register didn’t even bother to print an obituary about him (mostly because the editors and reporters who covered the sex-abuse scandal 12 years ago are long gone from the papers).
Such amnesia doesn’t sit well with John Manly. He was one of the lead lawyers in securing record-breaking settlements against the Orange diocese and Los Angeles archdiocese, and in recent years has represented victims in the Miramonte Elementary School sex-abuse scandal and gymnasts who say longtime USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar sexually abused them.

“Bishop Driscoll’s systemic protection of child molester priests not only allowed children of the Diocese to be savaged by predators,” says Manly, who served under Driscoll as an altar boy at St. Catherine’s Military School in Anaheim. “His conduct destroyed lives, families and took the innocence of thousands. It also decimated the moral authority of the Church to speak on social justice issues. No one listens to someone who protects child rapists. That’s his legacy. Good riddance.”

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‘Profoundly Disturbing.’ Prestigious Boarding School Staff Accused of Sexually Abusing Students Over Decades

CONCORD (NH)
TIME via the Associated Press

November 3, 2017

By Michael Casey

(CONCORD, N.H.) — Over several decades, former faculty and staff at a prep school are accused of singling out students, plying them with alcohol and then attempting to kiss, fondle and commit other acts of sexual misconduct with them, according to a report released by the school late Wednesday.

The allegations are part of an ongoing investigation by St. Paul’s School into its history of sexual abuse, and the focus of an investigation by the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office.

In May, St. Paul’s first reported detailed allegations against a dozen men and one woman who worked at the school between 1947 and 1999. An addendum released late Wednesday includes details from unnamed former students against five additional staff members, with allegations of abuse that happened as late as 2009.

The new report detailed 15 victims who had come forward to report abuse, while the May report did not provide information on victims.

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Archbishop Charles Chaput: Media coverage of church sex abuse scandal is unbalanced

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

November 3, 2017

By Charles J. Chaput

In recent years the Inquirer has done a variety of valuable reporting and editorializing on sex abuse in the Catholic Church and past failures by the Church to root out abusers and to protect the innocent. The entire public — including Catholics — can be grateful for that.

I arrived in Philadelphia just months after a harsh 2011 grand jury report, and since then (but starting well before then) the archdiocese has worked hard to reform its victim outreach efforts, safety standards, handling of abuse allegations, and cooperation with law enforcement.

None of this has been window dressing. The suffering of past abuse victims is a deep scar on the witness of the Church, and one that will take generations to redeem. The priests, deacons, religious, and bishops of this diocese love their people and are committed to protecting them. The archdiocese, its ministries, and its resources are no more and no less than the people who sustain its parishes. They make Catholic services possible, and they — not some disembodied religious corporation — bear the burden of unjust penalties and laws.

Truth is always a good thing. So it’s been odd to notice that the Inquirer has often seemed less committed to reporting the history, roots, scope, and intractability of chronic sexual-abuse problems in our public schools, institutions, and society at large — and even less interested in what the Church has done and is doing to deal with the problem.

Since 2002, the archdiocese has committed more than $13 million to victim assistance for individuals and families, including counseling and other mental-health related services, help with medications, necessary travel, and child care.

Professionals in the victim advocacy field administer our archdiocesan Victim Assistance Program. The focus is on healing. It doesn’t matter when the abuse occurred, and no limit exists on how long the assistance is offered. Counselors and therapists, independent of the archdiocese, establish each person’s plan based on the unique needs of each individual. We’ve invested an additional $6 million in abuse prevention efforts that include educational programming for tens of thousands of children and adults in our schools and parishes, as well as screenings and background checks through state and federal law enforcement agencies. All of these efforts are ongoing.

Yet these facts have routinely been ignored or underreported by media in the public sphere. Despite ample evidence of the scope of the sexual-abuse problem beyond the Catholic Church, some continue to perpetuate the lie that the sexual abuse of minors is lopsidedly a “Catholic” problem and that the Church has done little to address it. This is flatly, demonstrably false. In a Nov. 1 editorial, the Inquirer even claimed that “the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the insurance industry have long fought efforts to hold abusers accountable for past crimes.” Again, this is flatly, demonstrably false. Any person who criminally abuses a child should be punished by law.

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Archdiocese of NY: More than 200 claims of priest abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
lohud.com

November 2, 2017

By Jorge Fitz-Gibbon

The Archdiocese of New York said Thursday that more than 200 claims of abuse by Catholic priests have been filed under the church’s victim compensation program.

One day after the deadline for victims to file with the church, the Archdiocese said 172 claims were confirmed and financial compensation was accepted, while 21 victims have been offered compensation and 13 other claims are under review.

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, or IRCP, was launched by Archbishop Timothy Dolan to offer settlements to victims of abuse by priests who are prohibited from filing legal claims.

Started last year, the compensation program began a second phase on March 1 to allow victims to file for compensation. That phase ended yesterday.

“The program was intended to bring a sense of justice and peace to those who did suffer abuse by priests or deacons of the Archdiocese of New York,” said Joseph Zwilling, the spokesman for the archdiocese.

The program gave victims a means to be compensated for the abuse they suffered because the statute of limitations in New York prohibits them from filing civil claims. Nearly all of the claims involve childhood abuse that happened years or decades ago.

The church does not confirm how much has been paid out in total compensation.

But earlier reports note that the church has paid millions in compensation, including $1.5 million to victims of priests who have served in the Lower Hudson Valley.

“We have been told often by victim survivors that they are not predominantly interested in money,” Zwilling said. “What they are looking for is an acknowledgement of what they went through, and a tangible sign of the church’s sorrow for what happened to them, for the church to say, ‘I’m sorry.'”

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Hollywood, here’s some advice on your sex-abuse scandals — from the Catholic Church

RALEIGH (NC)
The News and Observer

By Martha Quillin

November 2, 2017

The Catholic Church, which was riddled by sexual abuse scandals starting in the early 2000s, now could teach Hollywood a thing or two about how to protect children, a church leader said Thursday.

Edward Mechmann, director of public policy for the New York Archdiocese, told the Catholic News Agency that the church learned from its experiences that the key to combating abuse is combating the culture that allows it.

“In the area of child protection, the corporate culture is the most important element,” Mechmann said. “In the Church, we have successfully made child protection a key part of our regular course of business and we have made it unequivocally clear that any kind of sexual sin against minors is utterly unacceptable.”

He offered the advice as Hollywood and other industries respond to sexual harassment and assault scandals, including allegations made this week against “House of Cards” actor Kevin Spacey. Spacey is accused of making a sexual advance on Broadway and TV actor Anthony Rapp, who was 14 years old when the incident allegedly occurred 30 years ago. Since the accusations, Spacey has apologized for the encounter.

“We have put into place strong policies that are aimed to prevent any abuse,” Mechmann said. “These policies are taken very seriously by the leadership of the Church (laity and clergy alike) who have all demonstrated repeatedly that they are committed to the program. We have demonstrated over and over again that we are open to receiving complaints, we take all allegations seriously, we vigorously investigate them, and we are firm in correcting any problem,” he said.

More than 4,400 U.S. priests have been accused of abusing children between 1950 and 2002. The most notorious was John Geoghan of Boston, who was accused of molesting about 130 people, mostly young boys, between 1962 and 1995. Despite receiving a letter outlining allegations against Geoghan, Cardinal Bernard Law reassigned the priest to another parish. Geoghan was found guilty of molesting a boy in 2002 and was sentenced to prison. Law resigned his position in the church the same year.

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Report highlights pattern of sexual abuse at prep school

CONCORD (NH)
Associated Press

November 2, 2017

Over several decades, former faculty and staff at a prep school are accused of singling out students, plying them with alcohol and then attempting to kiss, fondle and commit other acts of sexual misconduct with them, according to a report released by the school late Wednesday.

The allegations are part of an ongoing investigation by St. Paul’s School into its history of sexual abuse, and the focus of an investigation by the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office.

In May, St. Paul’s first reported detailed allegations against a dozen men and one woman who worked at the school between 1947 and 1999. An addendum released late Wednesday includes details from unnamed former students against five additional staff members, with allegations of abuse that happened as late as 2009.

The new report detailed 15 victims who had come forward to report abuse, while the May report did not provide information on victims.

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Corey Feldman, Harvey Weinstein, James Toback, Roman Polanski And More Show Why Statute Of Limitations For Sexual Abuse Needs To Be Abolished

UNITED STATES
Celebrity Insider

November 2, 2017

By Charisse Van Horn

Hollywood is in an uproar after allegations revealing the widespread and rampant nature of pedophiles and sexual predators within the entertainment industry have come to light. Corey Feldman has been a vocal advocate for children within Hollywood warning people about the prevalence of pedophiles for years. Ronan Farrow’s explosive exposé has launched a social media movement that may be revolutionary in nature. Men and women across the globe are coming forward to share their stories of abuse, harassment, and assault at the hands of sexual abusers. While many are finding the path to healing by speaking out, some publicly for the first time, there are many cases that will never see justice in a court of law due to the statute of limitations.

Each state in the U.S. has their own laws and rules regarding the statute of limitations. One thing that unites each of the stories of sexual harassment and abuse that are beginning to unfold is the time of the offense. Corey Feldman has spoken publicly about abuse that occurred in the 80s.

In the Harvey Weinstein and James Toback case, some of the allegations date back to the 90s. Roman Polanski has been accused of sexual crimes dating back to the 60s.

Many times cases are only picked up by state attorneys for prosecution if there is some legal loophole that will allow the case to move forward.

California tried to change their statute of limitation laws to help proceed with the Bill Cosby trial only to have those changes overturned.

During the height of the Catholic sexual abuse scandal, Massachusetts had to amend statute of limitation laws to allow adults who suddenly remembered the abuse the ability to prosecute.

There is no question about it. Statute of limitation laws in sexual abuse cases are absurd. They serve only to protect abusers from being prosecuted for crimes they committed.

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Diocese: Guam priest’s house guest troubled church, led to his removal

GUAM
USA Today/Pacific Daily News

November 2, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

[Note: A somewhat different version of an earlier story.]

A priest accused of sexual abuse on Guam was sent to Minnesota for “help with personal problems” in 1981, and later barred from serving as a priest after questions arose about a house guest from the island, according to a statement from the Diocese of Duluth.

Louis Brouillard, 96, is accused of sexually abusing minors in 87 lawsuits. More than 140 sex abuse lawsuits have been filed against the Archdiocese of Agana, 16 clergy members and three others affiliated with the church since late last year.

Brouillard was a pastor, teacher and Boy Scout leader on Guam for 33 years and has admitted to molesting 20 or more boys on the island.

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The truth about the ‘celibate’ priests who father children – and then abandon them

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Telegraph

November 3, 2017

By Hugh Costello

At the age of 12, Sarah Thomas found out that the father she had never known was a Roman Catholic priest.

“I’d been told he was a lecturer, but being quite inquisitive I’d always suspected there was information I hadn’t been given,” she says. “My mother had been too fearful to tell me the truth.”

Her situation may sound unusual, but there is a global community of people who have been confronted with the fact that their ‘missing’ fathers were in fact priests who had taken a vow to remain celibate, while secretly fathering children they would never acknowledge. I travelled from Buckingham, where 39-year-old Sarah lives, to Uganda while making my BBC World Service documentary My Father the Priest, trying to understand why these men would break the vows they took – and the devastation their behaviour wrought.

When Sarah’s mother found out she was pregnant two years into the relationship, her then-boyfriend “was very upset and broke it off that day. He never spoke to her again on his own. There was always a senior priest who acted as his adviser.”

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Pope raises prospect of married men becoming priests

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Telegraph

November 2, 2017

By John Phillips

Rome – Pope Francis has requested a debate over allowing married men in the Amazon region of Brazil to become priests, in a controversial move that is likely to outrage conservatives in the Church, Vatican sources say.

The pontiff took the decision to put a partial lifting of priestly celibacy up for discussion and a possible vote by Brazilian bishops following a request made by Cardinal Claudio Hummes, the president of the Episcopal Commission for the Amazon, Il Messaggero newspaper quoted the sources saying.

Cardinal Hummes reportedly asked Francis to consider ordaining so-called viri probati, married men of great faith, capable of ministering spiritually to the many remote communities in the Amazon where there is a shortage of priests, and evangelical Christians and pagan sects are displacing Catholicism.

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Area priest’s bond to be set today

KANKAKEE (IL)
Daily Journal

November 1, 2017

By Jeff Bonty

Father Richard E. Jacklin, who assists with Masses at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Goodrich, is scheduled to be in court today for his bond to be set after he was arrested by Illinois State Police on Tuesday and charged with sexually assaulting a resident at Shapiro Developmental Center in Kankakee.

The 65-year-old Jacklin has been preliminarily charged by state police with criminal sexual assault by force and sexual misconduct of a person with a disability.

“We are still gathering information,” Kankakee County State’s Attorney Jim Rowe told the Daily Journal on Wednesday.

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Priest charged with sexual assaulting resident at Kankakee developmental center

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press via Chicago Tribune

November 3, 2017

Bond has been set at $1 million for a Roman Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting a resident of a developmental center outside Chicago.

The Rev. Richard Jacklin was arrested by Illinois State Police on Tuesday for the alleged assault on the resident at Shapiro Developmental Center in Kankakee.

Kankakee County State’s Attorney Jim Rowe on Thursday told the judge a nurse walked in on Jacklin performing a sex act on a 39-year-old man. The alleged victim has been a patient at Shapiro since 2010 and is paralyzed and has an intellectual disability.

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November 2, 2017

Attorney: Brouillard ‘matter of fact’ about memories

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

November 2, 2017

By Mindy Aguon

It’s been 38 years since Louis Brouillard left Guam after serving as a priest with the Archdiocese of Agana, but he has shown a “remarkable” level of clarity in his memory about his time and actions while on island, according to an attorney representing childhood sex abuse victims.

Brouillard, 96, has been undergoing several hours of questioning over the last few days in his hometown of Pine City, Minnesota, where depositions are being held.

Attorney Steven Reich, who represents former altar boys and Boy Scouts who allege they were sexually abused by Brouillard while he served at parishes on Guam for nearly four decades, said the retired priest has a “really sharp memory.”

While he wouldn’t comment on details of the retired priest’s testimony or if the priest showed any signs of remorse for his actions, Reich stated, “He was matter of fact about his memories, about what he recalls occurring.”

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Ex-Priest Molested Children In South Bay: Lawsuit

PALOS VERDES (CA)
Palos Verdes Patch

November 1, 2017

By Emily Holland

The former reverend had already been named in a 2015 child sexual abuse lawsuit, according to reports.

PALOS VERDES, CA – An ex-priest who served in Southern California molested at least four children at parishes in Redondo Beach, Palmdale, and Covina, according to lawsuits recently filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Former Rev. Chris Cunningham had already been named in a 2015 child sexual abuse lawsuit, according to The Daily Breeze. Civil complaints filed this year allege Cunningham sexually molested boys between ages 10 and 15 from the mid-1990s to early 2000s at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Palmdale, St. Lawrence Martyr Catholic Church in Redondo Beach and St. Louise de Marillac Catholic Church in Covina, according to The Daily Breeze.

The lawsuits name the churches and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles as defendants and allege the archdiocese knew of the allegations against Cunningham, the San Gabriel Valley Times reported. The archdiocese didn’t investigate and opted to transfer the priest to various assignments and destroy the complaints, according to the court filings.

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Un’altra accusa per don Lucio Gatti: violenze e maltrattamenti nelle sue case-accoglienza

ITALY
Periodico Daily

November 2, 2017

Di Mara Boselli

[Google Translate: A new and terrible accusation weighs on Don Lucio Gatti’s shoulders , which until recently had the Caritas center of St. Fatucchio in Perugia. Already in January 2014, the pastor has been in custody for two years with suspended sentence for sexual harassment for the damage of some young guests in the communities he followed; now, the choc story of the aforementioned alleged violence , crystallized in a lawsuit filed by lawyer of the involved person, lawyer Cristiano Baroni of Network Abuse.The young man recalls, through the detailed story he has exposed before the Forces of the Order, the calvary experienced within the communities at just 12 years; sexual harassment and labor exploitation would not only affect his life, but also the endless and painful days of all the other guests]

“A 12 anni, io sfruttato e abusato”. La querela di un ex-ospite infanga il nome delle comunità umbre.

Questo articolo è stato letto: 91
Una nuova e terribile accusa pesa sulle spalle di don Lucio Gatti che, fino a poco tempo fa, gestiva il centro Caritas di san Fatucchio, nel perugino. Già nel gennaio del 2014, il parroco ha patteggiato due anni con pena sospesa per molestie sessuali ai danni di alcuni giovani ospiti nelle comunità da lui seguite; ora, il racconto choc dell’ennesima presunta violenza, cristallizzata in una querela depositata in procura dal legale del soggetto coinvolto, l’avvocato Cristiano Baroni di Rete l’Abuso. Il giovane ripercorre, attraverso il dettagliato racconto che ha esposto davanti alle Forze dell’Ordine, il calvario vissuto all’interno delle comunità, ad appena 12 anni; molestie sessuali e sfruttamento lavorativo avrebbero scandito non solo la sua vita, ma anche le interminabili e dolorose giornate di tutti gli altri ospiti.

Secondo la testimonianza del giovane, le violenze e lo sfruttamento sarebbero state la norma nelle strutture di accoglienza del prete umbro; raccolte nero su bianco, chi narra è ancora un ragazzino all’epoca dei fatti. E’ il 2004, infatti, quando don Lucio pare gli metta per la prima volta occhi e mani addosso: i servizi sociali, su richiesta della madre del giovane, si sono appena accordati con la san Fatucchio per inserirlo in comunità. All’inizio, si parla solo di periodo scolastico, e tutto pare filare liscio; nel 2008, però, quando l’ospite ha già 16 anni, viene trasferito nella casa-accoglienza della parrocchia di santa Maria Maddalena, a Cenerente, il cui parroco era proprio don Lucio che lo accoglie nonostante quella sia una comunità di persone adulte, non riservata ai minori e composta prevalentemente da tossicodipendenti, elementi con disturbi psichiatrici e problemi giudiziari.

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Obispo de Goya dijo que habrá cero tolerancia con los casos de abuso

ARGENTINA
Corrientes Hoy

November 1, 2017

[Google Translate: The Bishop of Goya, with diocesan jurisdiction of the Catholic Church in Monte Caseros, Adolfo Ramón Canecín, was forceful yesterday, pointing out that “there will be zero tolerance for cases of abuse”, after the case of a minor was heard. 13 years, that was abused by a preceptor of the educational institution he attends.]

Luego de un caso de abuso en Monte Caseros

El obispo de Goya, con jurisdicción diocesana de la Iglesia católica en Monte Caseros, Adolfo Ramón Canecín, fue contundente ayer al señalar que “habrá cero tolerancia con los casos de abuso”, luego de que se conociera el caso de una menor de 13 años, que fuera abusada por un preceptor de la institución educativa a la que asiste.

La familia de la adolescente que concurre al Instituto Secundario “Presbítero Demetrio Atamañuk” de Monte Caseros, denunció al administrativo del establecimiento de haber mantenido relaciones con su hija. El hombre fue detenido el lunes por la tarde luego de ser citado por la Justicia a declarar.

En una entrevista realizada por el Canal 2 de esa localidad, el obispo Canecín afirmó en forma contundente: “La Iglesia tiene cero tolerancia en los casos de abuso según la consigna del papa Francisco, sea quién sea, obispo, sacerdote, laico o personal”, por lo que desde un primer momento aseguró que “se aceleraron todos los procesos para colaborar con la Justicia”. En tanto el rector del instituto secundario, Ramón Blanco, afirmó: “Lamentablemente es una situación muy dolorosa y afectó gravemente a la institución y repudiamos totalmente el accionar del victimario personal de la institución”. En la entrevista concedida a un medio local trató de llevar tranquilidad a la comunidad educativa y en especial a los padres, al recalcar: “Desde que tuvimos conocimiento del caso nos pusimos a disposición de la Justicia y queremos que se esclarezca el hecho que nos afecta a todos”.

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Obispo de Tacna y Moquegua: La muerte no es la solución al abuso sexual

PERU
La Republica

November 2, 2017

[Google Translate: Bishop Marco Antonio Cortez disagreed with the proposed death penalty for sexual violators . This initiative is promoted by some groups and political groups.]

PROPONE. Fortalecer la formación de valores cristianos en los niños y la participación de los padres en la educación de sus hijos.

El obispo Marco Antonio Cortez se manifestó en desacuerdo con la propuesta de pena de muerte para los violadores sexuales. Esta iniciativa es promovida por algunos colectivos y grupos políticos.

Cortez señaló que respecto a los actos de abuso sexual, existe de parte de la sociedad peruana una actitud de hipocresía. Sostuvo que son muchos los sectores que aprueban y promocionan una absoluta libertad para los menores y adolescentes sobre su educación y desarrollo sexual; sin embargo, cuando surgen problemas morales como los abusos se pide muerte para las personas que la sociedad ha formado.“Creo que es momento de reconocer que la sociedad es parte del problema también”, aseveró el obispo Cortez.

“¿Podemos decir que el desenfreno de las conductas ha generado eso (violencia sexual)? Sí. ¿Y quién ha generado eso? Un Estado que propicia el relativismo moral, que propicia conductas donde se dice ‘todo es posible’. Donde la educación en los colegios ya enseña ciertas cosas que solo los padres deben de enseñar”, declaró el obispo.

La propuesta de Cortez frente a un escenario de violencia sexual en el país es fortalecer la formación de valores cristianos en los niños y la participación de los padres en la educación de sus hijos. Esto último se está perdiendo, dijo.

“Lo que debería existir es la participación de los padres con respecto a la educación de sus hijos. El espacio es de ellos, no del Gobierno (…) El Estado propicia una situación así. Un Estado padre, que gobierna y rija todas las políticas”, sostuvo.

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Female clergy call for independent mediators into CofE abuse

ENGLAND
Premier

November 2, 2017

Woman church leaders are calling for sexual harassment and abuse claims in the Church of England to be reviewed by an independent mediator.

In a letter to the Guardian, Jayne Ozanne, a senior member of the general synod for the diocese of Oxford, said: “Abuse of power, particularly in relation to sexual misdemeanours, will never be dealt with by those within the same said power structures.

“The urge to protect one’s reputation is too strong.

“Make no mistake, the instances of sexual abuse and harassment within the church are manifold – at virtually every level of the hierarchy.”

Ozanne says that a bishop advised her not to report her claim that a priest had raped her in the 1990s.

“I trusted him because he was a priest,” she told Channel 4 News. “Shame and guilt is what kept me quiet and silent for so many years.”

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Lambeth Palace facing questions about accusations of abuse of woman in Church of England [with video]

ENGLAND
Channel 4 News

November 1, 2017

Presenter: Cathy Newman

Since accusations of sexual harassment and worse against the film producer Harvey Weinstein were revealed, many people from other industries have come forward with their own experiences – in part, fuelled by the Me Too campaign on social media, a hashtag created to invite others to share their experiences in the wake of the Weinstein scandal. One of those who used the hashtag is Jayne Ozanne, a founding member of the Archbishops’ Council and a senior lay member of the General Synod. Tonight she tells us exclusively why she, too, is a Me Too. She has told us that she was raped by a priest in the 1990s and claims a bishop advised her not to report the attack. A warning: this report contains details of a sexual nature.

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Pacific News Minute: Priest Who Admitted to Sex Abuse on Guam Gives Evidence [with audio]

GUAM
Hawaii Public Radio

November 1, 2017

By Neal Conan

So far, 141 suits have been filed in Guam alleging sex abuse by priests. The most recent just last week. This week, the man named in more than half those cases provides sworn evidence. We have more from Neal Conan in today’s Pacific News Minute.

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Pecados Imperdonables [with video]

AYACUCHO (PERU)
La Republica

November 2, 2017

Por: Melissa Goytizolo

[Google Translate: The young Ayacuchana ALL tells for the first time that Father Felix Pariona sexually abused her between 15 and 17 years of age in the San Cristóbal Seminary of Huamanga where her parents work. The priest denied the accusations.]

La joven ayacuchana A.L.L. relata por primera vez que el sacerdote Félix Pariona abusó sexualmente de ella entre los 15 y 17 años de edad al interior del Seminario San Cristóbal de Huamanga donde trabajan sus padres. El cura negó las acusaciones.

El sacerdote Félix Pariona Huacre llegó al Seminario San Cristóbal de Huamanga, en Ayacucho, el año 2005. En el claustro trabajaban como cocineros los padres de la joven A.L.L. Cuando Pariona se ordenó como sacerdote, en el 2014, empezó a acosar sexualmente a A.L.L., que entonces contaba con 15 años de edad.

De los tocamientos indebidos, Félix Pariona, quien vivía en el Seminario, al igual que su víctima, pasó a la violación sexual. La primera vez ocurrió en julio de 2016. Hasta diciembre de ese año, el clérigo asaltó sexualmente siete veces a la jovencita en su habitación asignada en el establecimiento religioso.

El sacerdote amenazó con lanzar a la calle a sus padres si A.L.L. denunciaba los abusos sexuales. “Yo soy el que manda aquí, gracias a mí tu mamá trabaja, gracias a mí a tu papá no lo hemos botado, gracias a mi ustedes comen”, le dijo Pariona, según la versión de A.L.L.

“Me decía que esto iba a quedar entro los dos siempre. ‘Yo no le voy a decir a nadie, tú no le avises a nadie’, me decía. Cada vez que me agarraba fuerte yo le decía por favor suéltame, y él lo sabe muy bien…. A mi cada vez que me agarraba se me ponía la piel rara”, declaró la muchacha.

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Healing liturgy at Kenmore acknowledges sexual abuse failures of the Church

BRISBANE (AUSTRALIA)
The Catholic Leader

November 2, 2017

By Emilie Ng

CATHOLICS from seven parishes in Brisbane’s west have acknowledged the Church’s failing of survivors of sexual abuse during a moving healing liturgy in Kenmore.

Parishioners from the Brisbane West deanery, which incorporates the parishes of Corinda Graceville, Darra Jindalee, Inala, Indooroopilly, Kenmore, St Lucia and Toowong, gathered at Our Lady of the Rosary Church, Kenmore, on October 23 to acknowledge “the hurt and injuries inflicted upon the innocent” by members of the Church.

Brisbane West dean Fr Mark Franklin led the liturgy, which was an adaptation of the Archdiocese of Dublin’s Liturgy of Lament and Repentance for the sexual abuse of children by priests and religious.

Fr Franklin said he had adapted the liturgy for his previous parish in Noosa and recently discerned the need for the Brisbane West community to “acknowledge before God and before our brothers and sisters that we had failed as a Church”.

“Protecting our most vulnerable is not a part-time or stop-gap measure; we as a Church have broken that trust and we must now continue to work on healing and restoring people’s faith in us until this evil has been eradicated,” he said.

“We are all responsible for what’s happened.”

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Chicago archdiocese wins claim against false sex abuse allegations

CHICAGO (IL)
America Magazine

November 01, 2017

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

A Chicago man who filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Chicago alleging sexual abuse by a notorious former priest has been ordered to repay the church for the money it spent defending itself, a Cook County circuit court judge ruled earlier this month. Church officials in Chicago say that revelations regarding other fraudulent cases could be forthcoming, a prospect that both the archdiocese and victim advocates say will be a disservice to genuine victims.

The man, identified in court documents only as John J. Doe, said in a 2015 lawsuit that he had been sexually assaulted by Daniel McCormack, a former priest who was convicted in 2007 of molesting five boys associated with a Chicago Catholic school that was connected to the parish where he was pastor.

While serving time in prison, Mr. Doe discussed plans for the lawsuit on the telephone with several people, including a cousin who had previously settled with the archdiocese over abuse claims against Mr. McCormack. During the initial phase of the lawsuit, lawyers for the archdiocese subpoenaed more than 300 hours of audio recordings from those phone calls. The church then found evidence they claimed proved Mr. Doe was lying about the abuse.

Mr. Doe eventually withdrew his case for reasons unrelated to the tapes, but he said he planned to refile. In July, the archdiocese filed its own suit against Mr. Doe, alleging that under an Illinois statute, the church was entitled to receive compensation for costs associated with defending itself against a bogus claim. Earlier this month, Judge Kathy M. Flanagan agreed with the church, ruling that based on “unrebutted and uncontradicted evidence,” the allegations were “not well-grounded in fact.”

John O’Malley, a lawyer for the archdiocese, told America that there is “a very difficult balance” in trying to be “good stewards” of the church’s financial resources, some of which is used to assist victims, while avoiding re-victimizing or re-injuring “the people coming forward” by questioning their allegations too rigorously.

Another lawyer representing the archdiocese, James C. Geoly, said that all cases brought against the church are subject to scrutiny but that in certain instances, there is “a healthy skepticism” because of the length of time that has passed since alleged abuse took place, as well as a plaintiff’s thin connections to the school, parish or neighborhood.

Church officials also said they had an ethical obligation to alert the court of potential fraud.

Paula Waters, chief communications officer for the archdiocese, said that Mr. Doe’s suit was “an affront to real victims.” She said some people have asked why the archdiocese appears to be “going after victims,” but she said that in Mr. Doe’s case, “We’re going after fraud.”

The managing director for SNAP, an advocacy group for victims of sexual abuse, told America that false allegations of clerical sexual abuse, which she noted are very rare, ultimately harm victims.

“When you want to report sexual abuse by a respected member of the community, it’s very difficult,” Barbara Dorris said. “Anything that makes it harder for a survivor or a child to report sexual abuse is a bad thing.”

“We want to make it easier for survivors to come forward, not harder. This is going to make it harder for victims to come forward,” she said.

Several people interviewed for this story said that they were unaware of similar cases in which a diocese was awarded money by courts from individuals who had made false accusations. But church officials and victims rights advocates agree that instances of fraud in abuse cases are rare.

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What society can learn from the Catholic Church regarding child protection

DENVER (CO)
CNA/EWTN News

November 2, 2017

By Mary Rezac

One month after an avalanche of sexual assault accusations were lobbed against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, another Hollywood scandal broke.

This week, actor Anthony Rapp accused actor Kevin Spacey of sexually assaulting him as a minor. Spacey apologized, but said he didn’t remember the encounter, and also took the opportunity to come out as gay.

In the early 2000s, the Catholic Church in the United States was also reeling from a sex abuse crisis when the Boston Globe broke the story of a former priest who was accused of molesting 130 minors, mostly young boys, over the course of more than 30 years. This led to a large-scale uncovering of thousands more allegations of abuse in dioceses throughout the country.

Since then, the Church has put into place numerous policies and practices to protect children from sexual abuse, including the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Charter for Child and Youth Protection.

The charter, implemented in 2002, obligates all compliant dioceses and eparchies to provide resources both for victims of abuse and resources for abuse prevention. Each year, the USCCB releases an extensive annual report on the dioceses and eparchies, including an audit of all abuse cases and allegations, and recommended policy guidelines for dioceses.

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Fin al castigo del sacerdote Cristián Precht tensiona visita del Papa Francisco

CHILE
ADN Radio

November 1, 2017

Por Valeria Vargas

[Google Translate excerpt: In December, the five-year sanction against priest Cristián Precht for sexual abuse of minors will be carried out.]

“Se deja libre a un depredador de la infancia”, acusó James Hamilton sobre este cura, declarado culpable por abuso sexual a menores.

En diciembre se cumplirá la sanción de cinco años contra el sacerdote Cristián Precht por abuso sexual a menores.

Pese a que autoridades de la Iglesia Católica reiteraron que continuarán con su política de tolerancia cero frente a los abusos, existe incertidumbre sobre si el clérigo volverá a dirigir misas.

La fecha es clave, porque coincide con la visita del Papa Francisco a Chile un mes después de que el sacerdote cumpla castigo por la sentencia del Vaticano que lo declaró culpable por conductas abusivas contra feligreses mayores y menores de edad.

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Imputan al sacerdote de Monte Vera por acosar a una chica vía Instagram

MONTE VERA (SANTA FE)
Casilada Plus

November 2, 2017

Escrita Por: Redaccion Rosario Plus

[Google Translate: It happened in Santa Fe, in the town of Monte Vera, near the provincial capital. For the first time, a Catholic priest receives a specific criminal accusation about the technological variant of sexual abuse, the crime of grooming, this is besieging a person through the internet for sexual purposes. And even worse, in this case the victim was a teenager, a minor.]

Ocurrió en Santa Fe, en la localidad de Monte Vera, cercana a la capital provincial. Por primera vez, un sacerdote católico recibe una imputación penal concreta sobre la variante tecnológica del abuso sexual, el delito de grooming, esto es asediar a una persona a través de internet con fines sexuales. Y peor aún, en este caso la víctima fue una adolescente, menor de edad.

El fiscal Estanislao Giavedoni imputó este miércoles al párroco Walter M. de grooming, quien hasta mayo pasado se había desempeñado como cura párroco de la iglesia Nuestra Señora de la Merced, en ese pueblo del departamento La Capital. El delito está descripto en el artículo 131 del Código Penal de la Nación. Giavedoni consideró comprobado que el religioso contactó el 22 de mayo a una chica de 16 años de ese pueblo a través de la red social Instagram. “Le escribió un mensaje en el que usó adjetivos calificativos para referirse a las imágenes que la adolescente tenía compartidas. Además, le preguntó por su lugar de residencia”, argumentó el fiscal.

M. tiene 42 años, y su agresión partió desde el usuario @w_mgg. “Por su parte -prosiguió el fiscal-, la víctima le preguntó al imputado su edad. Cuando el hombre le respondió, la adolescente fue contundente y rechazó cualquier tipo de vínculo”, agregó.

La adolescente se lo contó a los padres y de allí surgió la denuncia penal. Y la sorpresa devino cuando las averiguaciones dieron con que el acosador era el cura del pueblo. Antes de que la policía lo detuviera, el arzobispado de Santa Fe apartó al párroco de su función y cargo.

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RVC man claims St. Agnes priest sexually abused him

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
LI Herald

November 2, 2017

By Ben Strack

Recalls alleged incidents as a teenager from 1983 to 1993

“He asked me if I could help him, and I said sure, that sounds innocent enough,” said a Rockville Centre man who claimed that he was sexually abused for 10 years by a priest at St. Agnes Cathedral.

“That’s how it began,” said the 48-year-old man, who asked the Herald not to reveal his identity, “and then it went from there to if I could go into the shower with him and help him so that he wouldn’t fall down.”

The man, who was raised Catholic in Rockville Centre and still lives in the village, was an altar boy for several years. In 1983, he met the Rev. John J. McGeever, who he claims abused him until McGeever died in 1993.

The man is being represented by Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston lawyer who has handled hundreds of sexual abuse cases and was portrayed in the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight,” about the Boston Globe’s exposé detailing abuse allegations against priests in Boston. The man filed his claims on Oct. 25, in an application as part of the Diocese of Rockville Centre’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program.

The program, modeled after those created in the Archdiocese of New York and the Diocese of Brooklyn over the past year to help victims of abuse by priests and deacons gain some form of closure, launched last month. It is designed to grant financial settlements to victims who cannot file child sexual abuse lawsuits against the church due to New York’s statute of limitations.

“There isn’t any amount of money a sexual abuse victim wouldn’t exchange for not being sexually abused,” Garabedian told the Herald. “The monetary amount is only validation.”

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Bitterroot polygamous sect divided after sex abuse accusations against Utah leader

PINESDALE (MT)
Great Falls Tribune

November 1, 2017

By Kristen Inbody

PINESDALE – A split among members of the Apostolic United Brethren, a polygamist Mormon fundamentalist sect, is playing out in a Bitterroot Valley town of fewer than a thousand west of Corvallis and US Highway 93.

The church has been torn apart since daughter Rosemary Williams, who is on the television show “My Five Wives” and two nieces accused the church president Lynn Thompson of Bluffdale, Utah of molesting them.

Some Pinesdale AUB members have established a Second Ward, marriages have been strained even to separation and the congregation’s Pines Academy private school has seen declining enrollment, the Salt Lake Tribune reported.

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Priest criticizes Vatican over Indonesian bishop case

JAKARTA INDONESIA
UCA News

November 1, 2017

By Ryan Dagur

British cleric fires broadside at closed-door tribunals, calls for tranparency in disciplinary matters, appointing prelates

A British-born priest who has served in Indonesia for more than 40 years has called on the Vatican to end its tradition of keeping disciplinary cases involving the clergy confidential and demanded changes to the way bishops are appointed.

In an opinion piece published in Hidup, a weekly magazine published by the Jakarta Archdiocese, Divine Word Father John Mansford Prior, a missiology lecturer at the Catholic School of Philosophy in Maumere on the Catholic majority island of Flores said the handling of moral cases involving clergy must be “completely transparent, just like in the state system.”

“If the Holy See compels a bishop to withdraw, the results of the trial [of a bishop] must be officially announced,” he argued.

Father Prior, who also works at the Candraditya Center for the Study of Religion and Culture in Maumere is a former consultor of the Pontifical Council for Culture and the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conference (FABC).

His article, published in the Oct. 29 edition of Hidup, specifically addressed the resignation of Bishop Hubertus Leteng of Ruteng.

Pope Francis approved Bishop Leteng’s resignation on Oct. 11 after an investigation into allegations of misappropriating more than US$100,000 of church funds and an illicit relationship with a woman.

In its official announcement, the Vatican did not give a reason for Bishop Leteng’s resignation.

Father Prior told ucanews.com on Nov. 1, that in addition of transparency, the church should also encourage due process.

“If there were credible accusations, the clergy, whether it’s a priest or bishop being accused, should be immediately discharged, certainly with innocent prejudice,” he said.

The church is not credible in handling such cases, he argued because “priest investigates priest, bishop investigates bishop and it is done in private.”

“Who can really believe in the results of such a process?”

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Settlement reached in Vanceburg church lawsuit

VANCEBURG (KY)
The Lewis County Herald via The Ledger Independent

October 31, 2017

By Dennis K. Brown

Members of Vanceburg Christian Church learned Sunday that a civil lawsuit filed against the church nearly a year ago has been settled.

Clayton “Buddy” Lykins Jr., an elder at the church, told those attending services Sunday morning about the development and added the agreement prohibits the general disclosure of the terms of the settlement agreement.

“In December of last year, as many of you know, our church was the target of a lawsuit filed by a teenage boy, alleging that our former pastor, Duncan Aker, sexually abused him. The incident occurred a number of years ago,” Lykins told those who had gathered for Sunday morning services at the church. “Mr. Aker has not been associated with our church for the last seven years.”

Aker was the minister at Vanceburg Christian Church between 2006 and 2011.

“Also, last year, Mr. Aker pled guilty to sexual abuse of the young boy, which opened up the church to possibly be liable to the youth in a civil lawsuit,” Lykins said.

“No one at Vanceburg Christian Church had any reason to believe that Duncan Aker was engaging in any improper contact with this young person, or with any other person,” Lykins said. “However, because the sexual abuse apparently happened, and we could say this because Mr. Aker pled guilty, the church could possibly be liable for not supervising Mr. Aker’s actions.”

Aker was arrested in Greensburg, Ind., in May 2015 on a nine-count grand jury indictment. He was listed as a minister for Greensburg Christian Church at the time of his arrest.

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Father Niland accused of raping boy during confession

GUAM
Pacific News Center

November 1, 2017

By Janela Carrera

The victim is seeking $5 million in damages.

Guam – As church sex abuse cases continue to be filed, this latest allegation comes from a 48-year-old man who says he was raped while giving confession at the Agat Parish.

The complaint was filed by a man with the initials J.C. who says he was only 10 years old at the time of the abuse. J.C. became an altar boy in 1979 with the Mt. Carmel Church where now-deceased priest Father Jack Niland served as a Capuchin priest.

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Disgraced ex-Bronx priest cleared of charges of using $1M in church funds for S&M sex

Bronx (NY)
New York Daily News

October 30, 2017

By Laura Dimon

An investigation into a former priest who was accused of taking $1 million from a city church found no evidence to back up the allegation, the Bronx District Attorney said Monday.

Peter Miqueli, 54, was at the center of a scandalous civil lawsuit parishioners filed in 2015. They alleged the priest, who worked at St. Frances de Chantal Church in the Bronx and St. Francis Cabrini on Manhattan’s Roosevelt Island, used the cash to pay a hunky boytoy for S&M sex.

The Bronx DA did not investigate the salacious sex claims, but the Archdiocese did, a Church official said, and found “nothing has been brought forward to substantiate them.”

Bronx DA Darcel Clark launched an investigation into the parishioners’ allegations of financial misconduct and concluded they were unsubstantiated. As part of her probe, Clark looked at the civil case.

Miqueli was never criminally charged.

Clark did find, however, that St. Frances de Chantal Church improperly doled out more than $22,000 in reimbursements to Miqueli from parish accounts. The ex-priest was ordered to return the funds, Clark said.

“This investigation by the Economic Crimes Bureau found that Father Miqueli was improperly reimbursed for personal expenses,” Clark said. “The Archdiocese has reimbursed St. Frances de Chantal Church for the funds, $22,450 of hard-earned money donated by parishioners for the betterment of the parish. We have made recommendations to the Archdiocese and they have agreed to more oversight.”

In a letter that was disseminated to parishioners, the Most Rev. Gerald Walsh, vicar for clergy, said that, while $22,000 is a “significant sum,” it is a “far cry” from the $1 million Miqueli was accused of looting.

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Fact check: the churches joining child abuse redress scheme

AUSTRALIA
Eternity News

November 1, 2017

By Tess Holgate

Churches and institutions are being called upon to join the Federal Government’s national scheme to financially compensate victims of child sexual abuse.

In early 2015, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse recommended the establishment of the national redress scheme. This included a call for churches to come up with a national response to the proposed national redress scheme.

The scheme is opt-in, meaning that any state, institution or church which does not want to sign up to compensate victims with payments of up to $150,000, will not be obliged to do so. The scheme also includes the provision of access to counselling and psychological services and a direct personal response from each participating institution responsible for the abuse, if requested by the survivor.

The Royal Commission estimated that about 60,000 children were sexually abused in institutions, but only approximately 1000 of them in Commonwealth institutions. For the scheme to provide compensation to the majority of survivors, state governments, institutions and churches will need to sign on to it.

Legislation to establish the scheme was tabled last week. If it passes, survivors will be allowed to apply for compensation from July 1, 2018.

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New report identifies additional 15 victims of sexual misconduct at St. Paul’s School

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

November 2, 2017

By Danny McDonald

[See also the report.]

St. Paul’s School has identified 15 additional victims in an ongoing investigation into sexual misconduct at the elite Concord, N.H., school, and five faculty members who are newly suspected of improper conduct, according to a report issued to the school community Wednesday.

The report, the second in six months detailing misconduct at the school, lists allegations of what school officials termed “profoundly disturbing” sexual behavior at the school over a span of 53 years, from 1956 to 2009, according to the letter to the school community.

The new report presents investigators’ findings relating to the alleged sexual misconduct of 16 former faculty members and staff. Of that number, five were reported for the first time, 11 were previously known to investigators.

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St. Paul’s School Releases New Accounts of Sexual Misconduct

CONCORD (NH)
New Hampshire Public Radio

November 1, 2017

St. Paul’s School in Concord has notified parents and the wider community that there have been new accounts of sexual misconduct at the school.

The accounts are published in a supplemental report, released by the school Wednesday, by the law firm Casner and Edwards. St. Paul engaged the firm to investigate past sexual abuse and misconduct by faculty and staff. The results of the initial investigation were released in May.

Since then, the law firm says it has interviewed 43 people – including current and former faculty and former students — many of whom said they were inspired to come forward after reading the first report. They told stories of abuse by St. Paul teachers taking place over a span 53 years, with one incident as recent as 2009.

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Ex-Priest Molested Children In South Bay: Lawsuit

PALOS VERDES (CA)
Patch

November 1, 2017

By Emily Holland

The former reverend had already been named in a 2015 child sexual abuse lawsuit, according to reports.

An ex-priest who served in Southern California molested at least four children at parishes in Redondo Beach, Palmdale, and Covina, according to lawsuits recently filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Former Rev. Chris Cunningham had already been named in a 2015 child sexual abuse lawsuit, according to The Daily Breeze. Civil complaints filed this year allege Cunningham sexually molested boys between ages 10 and 15 from the mid-1990s to early 2000s at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Palmdale, St. Lawrence Martyr Catholic Church in Redondo Beach and St. Louise de Marillac Catholic Church in Covina, according to The Daily Breeze.

The lawsuits name the churches and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles as defendants and allege the archdiocese knew of the allegations against Cunningham, the San Gabriel Valley Times reported. The archdiocese didn’t investigate and opted to transfer the priest to various assignments and destroy the complaints, according to the court filings.

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Attorney: Brouillard cooperative, making an effort to answer difficult questions

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 1, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

Former island priest Louis Brouillard was cooperative and appeared to make an effort to answer difficult questions during the first day of his deposition in Minnesota, according to one of the attorneys involved in the dozens of lawsuits accusing Brouillard of child sex abuse.

Brouillard, who has admitted to abusing boys decades ago on Guam, this week is providing additional sworn evidence related to more than 80 lawsuits accusing him of sexually abusing or raping Guam children. As of this week, Brouillard is named in 87 lawsuits.

Seattle-based attorney Steven T. Reich, a partner at the law firm Pfau Cochran Vertetis Amala, said Brouillard has a “fairly decent memory, despite being 96 years old.”

Brouillard, “appeared to make an honest effort to answer the difficult questions put to him,” Reich said after the first day of Brouillard’s deposition, which lasted three hours. The deposition is in Pine City, Minnesota, where Brouillard now lives.

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Area priest arrested for sexual assault

KANKAKEE (IL)
Daily Journal

November 1, 2017

By Jeff Bonty

Father Richard E. Jacklin, pastor of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Goodrich, was arrested by Illinois State Police on Tuesday and charged with sexually assaulting a resident at Shapiro Developmental Center in Kankakee.

The 65-year-old Jacklin has been preliminarily charged by state police with criminal sexual assault by force and sexual misconduct of a person with a disability.

“We are still gathering information,” Kankakee County State’s Attorney Jim Rowe told the Daily Journal this morning.

That is all Rowe would say as the investigation is ongoing.

Jacklin will either be in court today or Thursday to have his bond set.

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Church: Brouillard removed as Minnesota priest in 1985 because of questions about Guam guest

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 2, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

A priest accused of sexual abuse was sent from Guam to Minnesota for “help with his personal problems” in 1981, and later barred from serving as a priest after questions arose about a house guest from the island, according to a statement from the Diocese of Duluth.

Louis Brouillard, 96, is accused of sexually abusing minors in 87 lawsuits filed since the beginning of the year. He served as a pastor, teacher and Boy Scout leader on Guam, and he has admitted to molesting 20 or more boys here.

In three recent lawsuits, he is accused of paying to bring boys from Guam to Minnesota, where he continued to abuse them. One of the lawsuits alleges he moved a boy into a two-bedroom retirement home apartment where he lived with his elderly parents.

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November 1, 2017

Former priest accused of sexually abusing minors at Covina, Redondo Beach and Palmdale churches

LOS ANGELES (CA)
San Gabriel Valley Tribune

October 31, 2017

By Stephanie K. Baer

A former priest who served in Southern California and was named in a 2015 child sexual abuse lawsuit allegedly molested at least four additional children at parishes in Palmdale, Redondo Beach and Covina, according to lawsuits recently filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Civil complaints filed in July and October allege former Rev. Chris Cunningham sexually molested boys ages 10 to 15 from the mid-1990s to the early 2000s at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Palmdale, St. Lawrence Martyr Catholic Church in Redondo Beach and St. Louise de Marillac Catholic Church in Covina.

The lawsuits, which name the churches and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles as defendants, also allege the archdiocese knew of the allegations against Cunningham.

The archdiocese did not investigate, opting instead to transfer the priest to various assignments and destroy the complaints, according to the court filings. None of the plaintiffs is named in the lawsuits.

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Child abuse documentary Hollywood ‘didn’t want you to see’ goes viral

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Guardian

November 1, 2017

By Rory Carroll

The film An Open Secret died upon release in 2015, but is seeing a renewed interest online amid a cascade of allegations against Hollywood’s elite

When the documentary An Open Secret tried to lift the lid on child abuse in Hollywood, it billed itself as “the film Hollywood doesn’t want you to see”. The marketing tagline did not exaggerate.

The film died upon release in 2015. There was no theatrical release to speak of, no television deal, no video-on-demand distribution.

“We got zero Hollywood offers to distribute the film. Not even one. Literally no offers for any price whatsoever,” said Gabe Hoffman, a Florida-based hedge fund manager who financed the film.

It did not seem to matter that it was directed by an Oscar-nominated director, Amy Berg, or that it uncovered damning evidence of the sexual abuse of teenage boys by figures in the film industry.

“There was nowhere to see it,” said Lorien Haynes, the film’s writer. “I don’t think it impacted at all. Nobody saw it. We released a film that didn’t [seem to] exist.”

Now, two years later, multiple “open secrets” of predatory behaviour are detonating across Hollywood and the documentary that blew the whistle is getting millions of viewers – but still no distribution deal.

Hoffman released the film for free on the video-sharing website Vimeo this month after reports about Harvey Weinstein’s alleged sexual assaults set off a chain-reaction, with James Toback, Tyler Grasham and Kevin Spacey among those accused of harassment and worse.

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Retired priest charged with child porn has Ossining ties

BRONX (NY)
lohud.com

October 31, 2017

By Jorge Fitz-Gibbon

A 96-year-old retired Catholic priest was charged Tuesday with more than 70 counts of possession of child pornography, the Bronx District Attorney’s Office said.

Monsignor Harry Byrne, who celebrated weekend masses at St. Ann’s Church in Ossining during the 2000’s, was charged after a five-month investigation that determined he surfed online for images of young girls, prosecutors said.

Byrne was arraigned on 37 counts each of possessing obscene sexual performance by a child and possessing a sexual performance by a child.

A resident of St. John Vianney Center for Retired Priests in the Bronx, Byrne was released after the arraignment and is due back in court in January.

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Church of England urged to tackle sexual abuse within its ranks

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

November 1, 2017

By Harriet Sherwood

Prominent women in church say it should acknowledge prevalence of sexual harassment and establish independent process for raising concerns

The Church of England should take a lead in tackling sexual harassment by acknowledging its prevalence within its ranks and by establishing an independent process for raising concerns, according to prominent women in the church.

As the ripple effect of the Harvey Weinstein revelations spreads across Westminster, the arts world and the media, one senior lay figure said sexual harassment and abuse within the C of E was “manifold” at almost every level of the hierarchy.

A number of female clergy and lay members of the church have used the #MeToo hashtag on Twitter, indicating that they have experienced sexual harassment or assault, including Jo Bailey Wells, bishop of Dorking.

Rachel Treweek, bishop of Gloucester and the only female bishop to sit in the House of Lords, said the past few weeks had shown how widespread sexual harassment was in society.

She told the Guardian: “I think it’s an issue in society and therefore it would be strange if it wasn’t also an issue in the church. The danger is when we imagine that the church is somehow an elite group of people. Yes, we are trying to be followers of Jesus Christ and therefore we should be aspiring to living our lives differently. But actually we are all human beings.

“The danger is if we begin to think it doesn’t exist in the C of E. Of course it does. We need to ensure we have conversations to ensure people can come forward and will be taken seriously.”

Some female clergy and lay members are now calling for an independent mediation service to deal with sexual harassment and abuse claims. They say the church’s instinct to protect its reputation should not outweigh the need for redress and a change in culture.

In a letter to the Guardian, Jayne Ozanne, a senior member of the C of E synod, or governing body, said: “Abuse of power, particularly in relation to sexual misdemeanours, will never be dealt with by those within the same said power structures. The urge to protect one’s reputation is too strong.”

She added: “Make no mistake, the instances of sexual abuse and harassment within the church are manifold – at virtually every level of the hierarchy.”

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Four years on, questions continue to be asked of report into Magdalene Laundries

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

November 01, 2017

By Conall Ó Fátharta

An academic who had access to one diocesan archive reports accounts of physical abuse and medical neglect and argues that the files are not accurately reflected in the McAleese Report into the Laundries, writes Conall Ó Fátharta.

MORE than four years after its publication in February 2013, the McAleese Report on the Magdalene Laundries continues to generate headlines, but for all the wrong reasons.

It has been criticised by survivors, advocacy groups, the human rights community, and the United Nations.

The reaction of the Government to it has been rather odd. It continues to cite the report as the essential narrative of the Magdalene Laundries, a narrative which states that the “ill-treatment, physical punishment, and abuse” prevalent in the industrial school system was not something the women experienced in the Magdalene Laundries. Yet, it is surprised that, based on a reading of the McAleese Report, religious orders have refused to contribute any money to the redress bill.

Despite the report confirming what was known for years — that the State was involved in all aspects of the Magdalene Laundries — and despite the then taoiseach, Enda Kenny, admitting the same and apologising to the women, the Government is now claiming, repeatedly, that the report made “no finding” in relation to State liability with regard to Magdalene Laundries.

In July, an examination of Ireland’s second periodic review, by the UN Committee Against Torture (UNCAT), raised more issues relating to the McAleese Report and its findings.

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Muscoy United Methodist Church pastor convicted on 32 counts of sexual child abuse

SAN BERNARDINO (CA)
The Sun via Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

October 31, 2017

By Stephen Ramirez

The pastor of the Muscoy United Methodist Church, charged with multiple counts of child molestation involving boys who attended the church, was found guilty by a San Bernardino County jury last week, the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s office said.

Stephen James Howard, 58, was convicted Friday, Oct. 27, of 32 counts of sexual abuse, including lewd acts upon a child, oral copulation of a person under 16 years old and sodomy of a person under 18, court records showed. He is being housed at the West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga with no bail, according to jail records.

Howard is scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 29 in San Bernardino.

Howard was arrested and charged in March 2014, according to court records. Detectives had investigated reports that month that Howard had molested boys at several locations, including San Bernardino, Rancho Cucamonga and Fontana, San Bernardino County sheriff’s officials have said.

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Lawsuit #141: ‘Best altar boy’ was non-Catholic youth priest abused

GUAM
USA Today Network

October 30, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

HAGÅTÑA, Guam —Father Louis Brouillard in 1979 allegedly allowed a non-Catholic youth to serve as an altar boy, sexually abused him, and later gave him a medallion for being the “best altar boy” at the Tumon parish, a lawsuit filed in federal court on Monday states.

The plaintiff, identified in court documents only as M.S.M. to protect his privacy, said in his lawsuit that Brouillard was aware the child was not Catholic, but still allowed him to serve Mass.

The $10 million lawsuit states M.S.M. lived across from the Tumon parish, so he served Mass as an altar boy almost every night and on weekends. He was around 12 years old at the time.

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Former Thornton pastor sentenced in sex assault case

THORNTON (CO)
9 News NBC via KUSA-TV

October 31, 2017

By Amanda Kesting

THORNTON – A former Thornton assistant pastor has been sentenced to 13 years in prison for sexually assaulting a girl at the church where we worked.

Robert Duane Wyatt, 51, pleaded guilty to charges of attempted first-degree assault and sexual assault on a child.

Prosecutors claim the abuse started when the girl, whose family attended Agape Bible Church, was 12, and lasted for nearly two years.

According to a release from the District Attorney’s Office, Wyatt first gained access to the girl by home schooling her at his house.

She reported that during this time, the sexual abuse began with inappropriate touching.

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Pedophile priest’s tale cries for day in court for long-ago victims| Editorial

PHILADELPHIA
The Inquirer

November 1, 2017

by The Inquirer Editorial Board

The sordid tale of how former priest James Brzyski raped and molested more than 100 boys from Philadelphia-area parishes again underscores the long overdue need for Pennsylvania lawmakers to abolish the statute of limitations for child-sex-abuse crimes and expand the legal window for victims to file lawsuits against their abusers.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the insurance industry have long fought efforts to hold abusers accountable for past crimes. But the decades-long sexual abuse scandal continues to torment victims and their families. Efforts to heal, let alone restore any trust, cannot occur until the crimes are confronted.

Brzyski’s gruesome story was told in vivid detail by staff writer Maria Panaritis, who conducted more than 40 interviews to document the behavior of Brzyski, who during the 1980s is believed to have sexually assaulted dozens of boys, many from St. Cecilia’s Parish School in Fox Chase and St. John the Evangelist School in Lower Makefield.

His trail of heinous destruction continues to haunt a generation of victims, including Jim Cunningham, who hanged himself in February, and Jimmy Spoerl, raped by Brzyski as an altar boy, who died in March 2016 after battling addiction.

The Rev. James Gigliotti told church officials that Brzyski was molesting boys, some as young as 11 years old. The church’s response was to send Brzyski for treatment in Maryland, where a clinician declared him a pedophile.

Brzyski admitted to “several acts of sexual misconduct,” including with a 7th grader, church records show. Cardinal John Joseph Krol, archbishop of Philadelphia, privately called Brzyski a “wolf in sheep’s clothing.” But what happened next is not just sad, it’s frightening.

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October 31, 2017

Retired priest, 96, who slammed Catholic Church for mishandling pedophilia cases facing child porn charges

BRONX (NY)
New York Daily News

October 31, 2017

By Molly Crane-Newman and Larry McShane

A 96-year-old retired priest who once ripped the Catholic Church over its pedophile scandal filled his computer with pornographic photos of under-aged girls, prosecutors charged Tuesday.

Monsignor Harry Byrne “had dozens of photographs on his computer of girls eight to 14-years-old performing sex acts with men or posing naked,” said Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark.

Visitors to Byrne’s room at the St. John Vianney Center for Retired Priests in the Bronx saw the vile collection of photos, the prosecutor said.

The probe began five months ago based on complaints from the home, officials said.

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Lawyer for Olympic Gymnasts: NDAs Allow Sexual Abuse to Fester

NEW YORK (NY)
TIME

October 31, 2017

By John Manly

John Manly is the founding partner of Manly, Stewart & Finaldi, California’s leading law firm representing child victims of sexual abuse. The firm has represented more than 150 victims of clergy sexual abuse in California and hundreds of others throughout the United States. The firm also represented plaintiffs in the $140,000,000 settlement against LAUSD in the Miramonte case, the largest sex abuse settlement against a School District in the US and currently represents more than 100 alleged victims of former US Olympic Gymnastics Team Dr. Larry Nassar.

The Harvey Weinstein scandal has done more than reveal the culture of sexual abuse that has infected the entertainment industry for generations. It has placed a spotlight on perpetrators and those who protect them using the despicable practice of non-disclosure agreements to intimidate and silence victims.

Throughout the past 25 years I have represented thousands of sexual assault victims in civil lawsuits against their molesters and the institutions that facilitated their abuse. Most of these victims were children at the time they were abused. One thing is common through all these cases, the perpetrators and their accomplices dwarf their victims in wealth and power. Indeed, sexual assault is not about sex, it’s about power.

The Catholic Church, media conglomerates, international sports organizations, major universities, public school districts, and corporations have all used non-disclosure agreements to silence victims of sexual assault and molestation — even when those victims are children.

Some attorneys contend that these agreements, which amount to buying the silence of victims, benefit victims by making it faster and easier to settle cases and get them financial compensations.

That is rarely true. Far more often these agreements protect serial perpetrators often shielding them from criminal prosecution and allowing them to seek new victims. How can anyone possibly justify allowing a priest, teacher, doctor or coach to hide their crimes from the public and continue having access to children?

For many years the Roman Catholic heirarchy paid victims an average of $250,000 to settle cases under confidentiality agreements then moved the priests accused of molesting them to other parishes where they continued their abuse.

That practice was ended by the Catholic bishops in 2002, largely as a result of demands made by survivors and their attorneys, as the number of cases against priests continued to escalate.

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.

Jury selection begins in a trial over the disputed sale of a convent involving singer Katy Perry

LOS ANGELES
Los Angeles Times via City News Service

October 30, 2017

A decade after the Archdiocese of Los Angeles paid about $600 million to settle allegations of clergy abuse, memories of the scandal loomed over a downtown courtroom today as prospective jurors were interviewed for a trial pitting the religious body and singer Katy Perry against a businesswoman concerning the purchase of a former convent.

Though the lawsuit filed against Dana Hollister deals with a real estate transaction and not with inappropriate behavior by priests with young parishioners, many jurors who spoke individually with Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Stephanie Bowick and the attorneys said their memories of the molestations have not faded.

Archdiocese attorney Kirk Dillman and the other attorneys took turns questioning the prospective jurors, who were given a questionnaire last week to fill out regarding their ability to serve. A lawyer who said he was of the Jewish faith said he has no particular bias toward nuns or the Catholic Church in general, but was swayed by past media coverage of pedophile priests and believes that bishops and popes were heavily to blame for what happened to the victims.

“For me, the higher-ups probably had some knowledge and turned a blind eye, I suppose,” he said.

The juror also said that given the large amount of the 2007 settlement, it probably meant that the church agreed to the resolution based on the merits of the case rather than just to have it go away.

The juror, who says he manages seven attorneys in a law firm and that one of the cases they are currently handling is related to the Harvey Weinstein sex scandal, said he bears no ill will toward the church.

“I don’t hate the Catholic Church, but I wouldn’t go into it with a completely blank slate,” he said. The juror was one of several individuals dismissed by Bowick based on their interviews.

Another prospective juror, who called himself an agnostic, wrote on his jury questionnaire that he was “not particularly fond of the Catholic Church” and that the clergy abuse was a major reason.

“It was a pretty big scandal,” he said. “I have children of my own. I know there were a lot of false accusations, but it left a bad taste in my mouth.”

A woman who said she belonged to an Armenian church said she, too, was affected by the media coverage at the time of the abuse revelations.

“I don’t mean to offend anyone in here,” she said.

She praised nuns in the church, saying they appeared to be “charitable and community-oriented.”

Yet another non-Catholic said she was disturbed by the way many abusive priests were simply moved to other parishes and said she believes high-ranking church individuals such as former Archbishop Roger Mahony were aware of the coverups.

“I don’t have the greatest opinion of organized religion,” she said, adding that many of her friends are “lapsed Catholics.”

The lawsuit alleges Hollister knew she did not have the written authority of the archbishop to buy the property on Waverly Drive, but recorded the deed anyway. The archdiocese and Perry maintain Hollister’s actions forced them to come to court and fight for two years to get the Hollister transaction undone.

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

Priest who admitted to Guam sex abuses to give evidence this week

GUAM
USA Today Network

October 29, 2017

By Haidee V Eugenio

Former Guam priest Louis Brouillard, the only accused clergy member who has admitted to sexually abusing children on Guam, is scheduled to provide additional sworn evidence during his deposition in Pine City, Minnesota, from Oct. 31 to Nov. 3.

Brouillard, 96, is accused in more than half of the 141 clergy sex abuse lawsuits filed in local and federal courts against the Archdiocese of Agana, 16 priests and three others on Guam.

The parties in the clergy abuse cases are pursuing mediation to try to settle the lawsuits, which have been filed in the wake of accusations in 2016 of child sexual abuse by three former altar boys and the mother of a fourth against Archbishop Anthony Apuron. The archbishop was removed from the island in June 2016 for a Vatican trial that the Agana archdiocese believes has concluded, though the outcome remains unknown.

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

Archbishop of Santa Fe pens op-ed on sex abuse within church

SANTA FE (NM)
The Associated Press

October 29, 2017

ALBUQUERQUE — The Roman Catholic archbishop of Santa Fe says the archdiocese has received only two allegations of clergy sexual misconduct involving children since 1993 because of the numerous strict measures aimed at preventing further abuse.

Archbishop John C. Wester published an op-ed in The Albuquerque Journal on Sunday expressing “sadness and shame over the betrayal of trust” by clergy “who were supposed to love and protect our children,” and for the suffering of abuse survivors.

The op-ed follows the recent release by the archdiocese of a list of 74 clergy credibly accused of abuse and documents that shed light on how the church allowed three pedophile priests to continue to prey on New Mexico children more than 20 years ago.

“I offer my sincere apology on behalf of the Archdiocese to survivors and their families and my continued commitment to support and assist you on your road to healing and recovery,” Wester wrote.

His op-ed piece said psychological screening and background checks for prospective clergy and other zero-tolerance policies, such as training programs and workshops, are among steps taken to prevent further abuse.

Wester also said he personally meets with and apologizes to victims of clergy abuse, as did his predecessor, Archbishop Michael Sheehan.

Brad Hall, an Albuquerque attorney who has filed more than 70 lawsuits against the archdiocese on behalf of clergy abuse victims, said he welcomes any steps the archdiocese takes to prevent abuse and help survivors.

Some steps taken by the archdiocese, such as the release last month of a list of 74 clergy, were measures demanded for years by victims and long resisted by the archdiocese, he said.

Hall also said that not enough time has passed to know whether clerical abuse in the archdiocese ended in the early 1990s.

“There is an average of 30 years between sexual abuse by a person in a position of trust and the first time the survivor discloses it,” Hall said. “Hopefully, these days kids would report much sooner. But we don’t know.”

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.