ABUSE TRACKER

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

April 3, 2017

Update | Johnstowners rally in Harrisburg for changes to sexual abuse law (with photo gallery)

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

HARRISBURG – Hundreds of small blue flags signifying Child Abuse Prevention Month fluttered near Shaun Dougherty as he spoke from the state Capitol steps on Monday.

The Westmont resident offered his support for a bill that would eliminate the criminal and civil statutes of limitations in cases of future child sexual abuse, while also providing a one-time, two-year window of retroactivity for past victims, such as Dougherty, to bring civil claims against perpetrators.

Dougherty, during his brief comments, pointed to the area where the flags were located behind a wall.

“I don’t want any other children in this state to live the way I live,” said Dougherty, who was allegedly abused by a local priest.

“I want them to be happy. I don’t want any more of those blue flags anywhere, anywhere around here. No more. I want to burn all those damn flags.”

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.

Paris conference on deposing a heretical pope looks to the past, not the present

FRANCE
Religion News Service

By Tom Heneghan

PARIS (RNS) Holding a colloquium to discuss dethroning an erring Roman Catholic pontiff sounds like a call to battle at a time when prominent cardinals say Pope Francis is leading the faithful astray.

Its title, “The Deposition of a Heretical Pope,” added a provocative touch after a rare challenge by four cardinals who last September urged Francis to clarify parts of “Amoris Laetitia” (The Joy of Love), a papal document they said wrongly opened the door to allowing divorced and remarried Catholics to receive the Eucharist.

So when plans for a conference were reported a few weeks ago, it created quite a buzz on the far right of the Catholic blogosphere.

As the original U.S. report was picked up and translated around Europe, it looked as if the two-day meeting in Paris could be the place where the next steps in the campaign against the pope were being worked out.

It turned out to be nothing of the sort.

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.

12-year-old’s suicide: priest, mother held

INDIA
The Hindu

The man sexually assaulted the girl

A 29-year-old man who works as a priest at various temples was arrested by the Karunagapally police on Tuesday on charges of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl and abetting her suicide. The victim’s 49-year-old mother has also been arrested.

The police said the priest, an active member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, was the woman’s paramour and he exploited that relationship to sexually assault the woman’s daughter, a Class-7 student. The police identified the accused as Renju, residing at Alumkadavu, near Karunagapally.

Unable to bear the sexual assault by the priest, the girl committed suicide. The police said the girl was subjected to unnatural sex. Though the woman had objected to it, she did not make a complaint to the police or other authorities concerned.

The probe was directly supervised by City Police Commissioner S. Satheesh Bino.

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.

Parent asks school to drop bishop’s name

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | The Guam Daily Post

Coadjutor Archbishop Michael Byrnes said yesterday a parent of a child who attends Bishop Baumgartner Memorial Catholic School has asked that the school drop the bishop’s name.

The former Guam bishop is named in numerous child sexual abuse cases as being aware of certain abuses of altar boys, and allegedly did little to stop or investigate the abuse.

During a press conference held yesterday afternoon concerning developments in the Task Force for the Protection of Minors’ efforts to educate archdiocesan schools and parishes, Byrnes fielded questions from the media which included mention of a complaint made to Bishop Baumgartner Memorial Catholic School.

“I’m aware of that particular (request), and as far as I know right now it’s simply from one person,” he said. “(It’s) taken seriously, but it’s one of those situations that’s going to take a while for us to discern the way forward because there’s going to be at least two sides to the story.”

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.

Diocese of Great Falls-Billings moves toward settlement in abuse claims

MONTANA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Great Falls-Billings

PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Darren Eultgen, Chancellor
Diocese of Great Falls-Billings
PO Box 1399
Great Falls, MT 59403-1399
(406 727-6683
chancellor@diocesegfb.org

Diocese of Great Falls-Billings moves toward settlement in abuse claims

The Diocese of Great Falls-Billings has taken a major step toward bringing resolution to 72 current claims of abuse of minors by diocesan priests, religious community priests, women religious and lay workers who have served in the diocese.

On March 31, 2017, the Diocese is filing a chapter 11 reorganization case before the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Montana to fulfill a pre-bankruptcy mediated negotiated agreement with known abuse survivors and the Diocese’s liability insurance carrier.

Bishop Michael W. Warfel and the Diocese have chosen a pastoral approach which provided the basis for its having entered this confidential mediation process. The recent mediation resulted in the beginning stages of general parameters of proposed settlements with the victims and the insurance carrier. The details of that comprehensive agreement are still being worked on by the parties. Under the supervision and ultimate approval of the Bankruptcy Court, the diocese and its insurance carrier would both contribute to that comprehensive settlement, which would compensate the currently identified victims. There will be additional settlement funds for additional and unknown victims. The process of obtaining Bankruptcy Court approval included the opportunity for victims and creditors to vote on the proposed settlement. The Diocese expects that its reorganization will be expedited by the pre-bankruptcy negotiations with all the affected parties.

“On behalf of the entire Diocese of Great Falls-Billings, I express my profound sorrow and sincere apologies to anyone who was abused by a priest, a sister, or a lay Church worker,” said Bishop, Warfel. “No child should experience harm from anyone who serves in the Church.”

Bishop Warfel also indicated: “I want to assure you that none of those who have been credibly accused remain active in parish ministry at this time. In fact, nearly all of those accused are deceased.”

For over two decades, the diocese has had abuse prevention programs in place, including screening and training for employees, volunteers, priests and seminarians. The diocese has an independent board to review claims of abuse, whose members include several parents, a judge, two former law enforcement officers, a social worker, and a counselor. Anyone wishing to report sexual abuse of a minor may contact the Victim’s Advocate for the diocese at (406) 750-2373 or victimassistancecoord@gmail.com.
.
Bishop Warfel indicated: “We remain unwaveringly committed to promoting the Good News of Jesus Christ. Once the reorganization proceedings conclude, we will be able to plan confidently for future ministry for the people of the Church of the Diocese of Great Falls-Billings.”

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.

DIOCESE OF GREAT FALLS BILLINGS FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY PROTECTION FROM 72 CLERGY SEX ABUSE LAWSUITS

MONTANA
Tamaki Law

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

MEDIA CONTACT:
TAMAKI LAW OFFICES 509-248-8338
Vito de la Cruz vito@tamakilaw.com cell (509) 952-7271
Blaine L. Tamaki btamaki@tamakilaw.com cell (509) 307-5804
Bryan G. Smith bsmith@tamakilaw.com (509) 307-7197

On March 31, 2017, just a few months before the first of many clergy sex abuse trials were scheduled to begin, the Diocese of Great Falls/Billings (covering most of Eastern Montana) filed for bankruptcy protection. Since 2012, the Great Falls Diocese has been defending 72 lawsuits, alleging childhood sexual abuse at the hands of clergy and nuns. The abuse took place over several decades from the 1950s through the 1990s.

This is the 15th bankruptcy filed by a Catholic Diocese in the U.S., and follows a bankruptcy filed by the Diocese of Helena (covering Western Montana) in 2012.

This bankruptcy will result in an automatic “stay” of all pending lawsuits, as the parties shift their focus to calculating the assets available to fund a potential settlement of these claims and any additional verified claims presented after the bankruptcy is filed.

According to Tamaki Law attorney Vito de la Cruz, who represents 34 of the 72 abuse survivors with pending lawsuits, “the abuse my clients suffered at the hands of Diocesan and religious order priests and nuns has caused profound suffering, hardship, and despair over their entire lives. However, with the Diocese filing bankruptcy instead of fighting each case individually, which would have taken years if not decades, abuse survivors hope that they will receive a measure of justice and accountability within a reasonable period of time.”

It is anticipated that the Diocese, its liability insurer, and the abuse survivors will participate in settlement discussions later in 2017.

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.

Former Boy Scout alleges abuse during 1973 camping trip

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Mindy Aguon | For The Guam Daily Post

A camping trip at Manenggon in Yona in 1973 turned into a nightmare for a former Boy Scout who recounted the horrific night in a lawsuit filed Monday in the District Court of Guam.

An individual with the initials “J.C.T.,” through attorney David Lujan, filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Agana, the Boy Scouts of America and former priest and Boy Scout master, Louis Brouillard.

When he was 15, “J.C.T.” and his tent mate were getting ready to sleep during a camping outing when he smelled tobacco and saw Brouillard enter his tent. The former Boy Scout accused the priest of fondling him and sexually abusing him while repeatedly telling him, “It’s okay. It’s okay. It’s okay.”

The victim recalls when Brouillard was finished molesting and abusing him, he did the same to his tent mate. “J.C.T.” was very disturbed, exited the tent and hid in the bamboo area, court documents state.

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.

40th person accuses church of sex abuse

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Apr 03, 2017
By Krystal Paco
. –
A 40th victim has filed suit against the Archdiocese of Agana and the Boy Scouts of America Aloha Council. Plaintiff J.T.C. alleges he was 15-years-old in the early 1970s when he was sexually molested by his Boy Scout troop leader, Father Louis Brouillard.

On a camping trip in Manenngon, Yona, the priest came into his tent and performed oral sex on him, all while assuring the teen boy “it’s okay.” Using his free hand, J.T.C. alleges Brouillard fondled his tentmate too. When he was done with J.T.C, Brouillard also performed oral sex on the second boy.

Although he would continue to go on camping trips, the plaintiff states he would fight his way out of letting the priest into his tent. J.T.C. is represented by Attorney David Lujan. He is suing for $10 million.

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.

Islamic groups have dodged scrutiny by the Royal Commission into institutional child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Paul Toohey, News Corp Australia Network
April 3, 2017

Islamic organisations have dodged scrutiny by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which has spent four years probing numerous religious organisations but made no inquiries into Islam.

The commission, now in its fourth year, has diligently investigated Catholics, Anglicans, Pentecostals, Jewish, Jehovah’s Witnesses and obscure cults — along with sporting groups and the entertainment industry.

But it has published no information on sexual abuses against children within Islam, the third largest religion in Australia, raising questions as to whether the commission, which has proactively investigated even small religious sects, has failed Islamic children.

Lawyer Peter Kelso, who has represented 15 survivors of Christian institutions, recently wrote to the commission asking if it had looked at abuse from within Islam, particularly relating to forced child marriage, female genital mutilation and child sex.

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.

Windsor law professor calls on Senator Beyak to educate herself about residential schools

CANADA
CBC News

Valerie Waboose, an assistant law professor from the University of Windsor, is adding her voice to the growing chorus of Indigenous people calling on Senator Lynn Beyak to educate herself on the legacy of residential schools in Canada.

Earlier this month, Beyak criticized the Truth and Reconciliation Commission for “not focusing on the good” of the “well-intentioned” institutions.

The senator continues to face criticism for her comments, but said she does not need any more education about the schools and that she has “suffered” with Canada’s Indigenous people.

“The best way to heal is to move forward together, not to blame, not to point fingers, not to live in the past,” she said. “Recognize the atrocities, but move forward.”

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.

En Afrique, des prêtres pédophiles couverts par l’Église

FRANCE
France 24

[A journalistic inquiry denounces the exfiltration by the Catholic Church of French priests suspected of sexual abuse of young Africans. They are thus excluded from local justice.The investigation focuses in particular on Africa, which has nearly 200 million Catholics, especially Guinea and Cameroon where religious who have been convicted of sexual abuse by local authorities have been repatriated to Europe by their congregations. The findings were revealed between Monday 20 and Wednesday 22 March by a group of independent journalists.]

Une enquête journalistique dénonce l’exfiltration par l’Église catholique de prêtres français soupçonnés d’abus sexuels sur de jeunes africains. Ils sont ainsi soustraits à la justice locale.

L’investigation se concentre notamment sur l’Afrique, qui compte près de 200 millions de baptisés catholiques, et en particulier sur la Guinée et le Cameroun, d’où des religieux reconnus coupables d’abus sexuels par les autorités locales ont été rapatriés en Europe par leurs congrégations. Les constats ont été révélés entre le lundi 20 et le mercredi 22 mars par un collectif de journalistes indépendants, We report, associés à Mediapart, et l’émission de France 2 Cash Investigation.

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.

Investigan denuncia de presunto abuso de un sacerdote a un joven de 14 años

URUGUAY
Subrayado

[Investigation continues into an allegation of alleged abuse by a priest of a 14-year-old boy. The priest was school director. The incident was first made known in November 16 by the alleged victim who is now 22.]

La jueza penal de 13° Turno, Ana Claudia Ruibal, tiene a su cargo un caso sobre presunto abuso sexual de un sacerdote hacia un menor de edad.

Según informó Telenoche, la denuncia fue presentada en noviembre de 2016 por un joven de 22 años, quien aseguró que el abuso ocurrió cuando él tenía 14 años.

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.

Pédophilie: l’Église catholique reste malade

FRANCE
Slate

[The struggle against pedophilia of the clergy must be made a real priority.]

Henri Tincq — 02.04.2017

Quand en finira-t-on avec ce cancer de la pédophilie du clergé? Avec cette honte inscrite au front d’une institution de deux mille ans, une Église tenue pour sacrée par plus d’un milliard de fidèles dans le monde entier? On croyait à une sorte de «rémission» après les efforts de contrition, de transparence, de «tolérance zéro», le dialogue ouvert avec les victimes, les gestes et paroles de «repentance», le déblocage de sommes considérables pour dédommager les victimes d’abus sexuels par des prêtres. Rompant avec des années de silence, d’immobilisme et de contournement de la loi, tant canonique que civile, la politique mise en œuvre par les papes Benoit XVI (2005-2013) et François a conduit à nombre de signalements à la justice et à des condamnations fermes de prêtres abuseurs.

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

Catholic Church must reform confession, abuse survivor says

AUSTRALIA
BBC News

By Hywel Griffith
BBC News, Sydney

An Australian child abuse survivor has called on the Catholic Church to reform its laws on confession to ensure crimes are reported to police.

Peter Gogarty said perpetrators knew anything disclosed in confession would not be revealed to authorities.

He told the BBC it was effectively a “get-out-of-jail-free card”.

It follows the final public hearings in an Australian inquiry, which has heard evidence of abusers confessing knowing their actions would not be divulged.

The issue of mandatory reporting has split Australia’s Catholic Church, with archbishops differing on whether information given by a child victim during confession should be relayed to police.

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

40th clergy sex abuse lawsuit demands $10M

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com April 3, 2017

Guam’s clergy sex abuse lawsuits reached 40 on Monday, April 3, when a man alleged former priest Louis Brouillard sexually abused him.

An accuser with the initials J.C.T., represented by attorney David Lujan, filed suit to demand a jury trial and $10 million in minimum damage, according to court documents. Since last week, some plaintiffs have chosen to use their initials to protect their identity, their lawyers said.

The latest lawsuit, filed in the District Court of Guam, named the Archdiocese of Agana, the Boy Scouts of America and Brouillard as defendants, along with up to 50 others who may have aided, abetted, concealed or covered up the alleged abuse.

Brouillard was also a scout master in the Boy Scouts of America while he was a priest on Guam. Most of the 40 lawsuits filed so far in local and federal courts accuse Brouillard, who has admitted to abusing at least 20 boys on Guam when he was a priest here.

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.

Religious order rejects calls to share redress costs with State

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Pressure by politicians on religious congregations to pay half the €1.5 billion cost of compensating those abused in Catholic institutions “is immoral and should stop”, one of the congregations has said.

The Oblates (Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate), who were severely criticised by the Ryan Commission report which investigated institutional abuse, dismissed the notion they were under “moral pressure” to pay more towards the compensation bill.

Nor do any of the 18 congregations involved “have a moral obligation to pay a share of the administration and ancillary costs of the Commission of Investigation and the redress board. Such a demand has never been made in all the history of the State,” it said.

Further, in a challenge to findings in the Ryan Commission report, it refers to “the huge gap between the way the congregations have understood their own history and the way it is presented in the report”.

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

Sexual abuse survivor Andrew Collins has called on Ballarat Diocese Bishop Paul Bird to resign

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

Rachael Houlihan
@rachaelhoulihan

3 Apr 2017

CLERGY sexual abuse survivor Andrew Collins has called on Ballarat Diocese Bishop Paul Bird to resign after he refuted calls to remove plaques which include the name of disgraced bishop Ronald Mulkearns.

Mr Collins, who went to Rome last year to hear Cardinal George Pell’s evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, called on the Vatican to remove Bishop Bird if he would not resign. Bishop Bird told The Standard it was important to accurately record historical events where the community had gathered to celebrate with Bishop Mulkearns.

He said each school or church council had to make its own decision in regards to the removal of plaques and called on those making such decisions to also recognise the good work done by Bishop Mulkearns.

Bishop Mulkearns, who died last year, was known as the “keeper of secrets” and headed the Ballarat Diocese while paedophile members of the clergy abused children.

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.

Embroiled in controversy, archdiocese launches new initiative

GUAM
KUAM

[with video]

Updated: Apr 03, 2017

By Krystal Paco

We can expect more transparency from the Archdiocese of Agana, who today launched the first of a monthly series called Updating the Faithful. Today’s update was on efforts to educate and prevent child sex abuse in the Catholic school system.

Faculty and staff at all 14 of Guam’s Catholic schools know what to do should they suspect a child is a victim of abuse. The efforts were spearheaded by the Task Force for the Protection of Minors led by longtime social work professional Sarah Thomas-Nededog, who said, “The schools know much better what the mandatory reporting law was all about to understanding the issues of boundaries and the importance of setting those boundaries and respecting them and teaching and supporting children to be more empowered to protect themselves, as well.”

The task force was created in September shortly after allegations of clergy sex abuse went public. To date, 39 plaintiffs have filed suit alleging members of the church knew of the ongoing abuse decades ago, but failed to do anything about it. The group’s mission is now expanded to educate the parishes.

Today’s press conference is the first of a monthly series. Coadjutor Archbishop Michael Byrnes chose this month’s topic to highlight ongoing Child Abuse Prevention Month, as he announced, “My main role here is to say thanks to you all for really taking the lead and providing some really effective measures through the training.”

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 launches ‘Updating the faithful’ series

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com April 3, 2017

Archbishop Michael Byrnes on Monday held the first of his “Updating the Faithful” monthly briefings, starting with updates on sexual abuse prevention and response training at Catholic schools and parishes.

Byrnes launched his series, which will be held every first week of the month, to update the faithful about the archdiocese’s issues, initiatives and efforts, he said.

To date, 14 archdiocesan schools and four parishes have received training from the Task Force for the Protection of Minors, said chairwoman Sarah Thomas-Nededog, a longtime social work professional. The task force was formed last year by temporary Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai.

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.

Open Letter to the Bishops of Australia

AUSTRALIA
Catholics for Renewal

Catholics for Renewal has drafted this letter in consultation with many Catholics strongly committed to the teachings of Jesus and their Church. People of the Church have been distressed by the increasing failings of our Church, particularly in the context of the evidence before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Australian Catholics are invited to consider and sign below the following Open Letter to the Bishops of Australia. The Open Letter provides an opportunity, consistent with the Church’s Code of Canon Law, for the faithful – lay people, religious, priests, all members of the Church – to seek renewal of the Church.

Open Letter to the Bishops of Australia
‘Please Listen and Act Now’

Dear Bishops

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has exposed grave governance failures in our Church, failures that undermine its very mission. We, the undersigned Catholics of Australia, write to you as Pilgrim People of God, accepting shared responsibility for our Church, expressing our sense of faith which Vatican II recognised as critical to the life of the Church, and asking you our bishops to listen and to act decisively, executing necessary reforms now.

Over several decades we have seen our Church declining steadily to its now shameful state. Countless Catholics have been alienated, particularly younger generations who are our Church’s future. The Royal Commission has now exposed dysfunctional governance, an entrenched culture of clericalism, and a leadership not listening to the people. Too many bishops have denied the extent of clerical child sexual abuse and its systemic cover-up, and even protected paedophiles ahead of children.

The Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry also found that the Church’s governance contributed to coverups and further abuse. Yet the failings go beyond the scandal of child sexual abuse. Archbishops have admitted to “a catastrophic failure of leadership”, and some have spoken of ‘criminal negligence’. Church credibility has been squandered. To rebuild trust, there must be reform of governance based on Gospel values, reflecting servant leadership and engagement with the faithful. There has to be accountability, transparency, and inclusion particularly of women.

Changing processes is not enough. We ask each and every bishop to act now on these reforms:

1. Eradicate the corrosive culture of clericalism – “an evil . . . in the Church” (Pope Francis).

2. Become truly accountable with full involvement of the faithful, including diocesan pastoral councils, and diocesan assemblies or synods; with pastoral plans and annual diocesan reports.

3. Appoint women to more senior diocesan positions, such as chancellor and delegate of bishops.

4. Hold diocesan synods/assemblies in 2018, with deanery and parish listening sessions, to develop the agenda for the national 2020 Plenary Council; and as part of normal diocesan governance.

5. Further remodel priestly formation, including ongoing development, assessment and registration.

6. Reconcile publicly and fully with all the persons abused, their families and communities, and commit to just redress.

7. Send an urgent delegation, including laity, to Pope Francis:

i. urging him to purge child sexual abuse from the Church: legislating civil reporting of abuse, and ensuring effective discipline, major canon law reform, and review of priestly celibacy;

ii. advising him of the Royal Commission’s exposure of the Church’s global dysfunctional governance; particularly its clericalist culture and lack of accountability, transparency, and inclusiveness, especially the exclusion of women from top decision-making positions; and

iii. requesting immediate reform of bishop selection processes, fully including the faithful in identifying the needs of dioceses and local selection criteria.

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.

Call to arms for Catholic Church

AUSTRALIA
Barossa Herald

Joanne McCarthy
3 Apr 2017

Australia’s bishops must lead an urgent delegation to Pope Francis seeking changes to some of the church’s most fundamental views on women, celibacy, governance and the handling of child sex cases, according to Australia’s peak Catholic reform group in a call to arms to Catholics across the country.

In an open letter sent to all parishes, Catholics for Renewal has urged bishops and archbishops not to “defer to the Holy See”, or wait for the recommendations from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, before acting on serious issues identified by the commission that contributed to the child sexual abuse crisis.

Catholics for Renewal president and former senior Australian government bureaucrat, Peter Johnstone, said bishops needed to be prepared to urge Pope Francis to require mandatory reporting of all child sex abuse allegations to police and immediately appoint women to the church’s highest ranks.

“The appointment of women would be revolutionary, but I would argue the Pope could do that tomorrow and that would be a catalyst for forcing ultra-conservative bishops to realise they’ve got no choice but to get on board,” Mr Johnstone 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.

Sex abuse in Catholic institutions: key questions for the royal commission

AUSTRALIA
On Line Opinion

By Brendan O’Reilly – posted Monday, 3 April 2017

This . . . can only be interpreted for what it is: a massive failure on the part the Catholic Church in Australia to protect children from abusers and predators, a misguided determination by leaders at the time to put the interests of the Church ahead of the most vulnerable and, a corruption of the Gospel the Church seeks to profess. As Catholics we hang our heads in shame . Frances Sullivan, CEO, (Catholic) Truth, Justice and Healing Council.

A key official report for one Catholic diocese found that:

the diocese’s preoccupations in dealing with cases of child sexual abuse, at least until the mid-1990s, were the maintenance of secrecy, the avoidance of scandal, the protection of the reputation of the Church, and the preservation of its assets. All other considerations, including the welfare of children and justice for victims, were subordinated to these priorities ……and (the diocese) did its best to avoid any application of the law of the State”. The report concluded that there is “no doubt that clerical child sexual abuse was covered up.

So which Catholic diocese do you think the report related to? Ballarat? Newcastle? Sydney?

No. The extracts come from the Murphy Commission’s report into child sex abuse within the Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin released in 2009. Investigations into clerical sexual abuse of Catholic children in the US came up with broadly similar conclusions, and you don’t need to be Nostradamus to foresee that Australia’s Royal Commission is going to come up with much the same findings. The similarity in the Catholic Church’s behaviour across countries stands out, and suggests a systemic problem along with an organised cover-up world-wide.

At the request of the Royal Commission, the Australian Catholic Church has released survey data revealing that 7% of priests, working between 1950 and 2009, have been accused of child sex crimes. The figures were even higher for some orders of religious brothers: 40% for the Brothers of St John of God, 22% for the Christian Brothers, and 20% for the Marist Brothers.

Between 1980 and 2015, 4,444 alleged incidents of child sexual abuse relating to 93 Catholic Church authorities in Australia were reported. The average age of victims was 10.5 for girls and 11.6 for boys, and (notably) the overwhelming majority were male.

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.

A Newcastle woman turns her back on religion because her father was abused by a priest

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

Joanne McCarthy
2 Apr 2017

STEVE Smith’s daughter remembers the day in 2001 when her father drove to a court case that nearly broke him.

The dreadful details of that child sex trial against Newcastle Anglican priest George Parker – including “considerable doubt” about the veracity of diary entries used to stop the case – were only revealed to Mr Smith’s family during a Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse public hearing in August.

In an open letter to “abusers of children and those who help conceal those crimes”, that was one of the final documents tendered as evidence on the royal commission’s final public hearing day on Friday, Mr Smith’s daughter Danika spoke about the ripple effect of child sexual abuse on the families of the abused.

“You ensured a traumatic childhood for us where our Dad was emotionally unavailable because he was just trying to survive every day. He closed off from the world, including even his kids at times,” said Danika, who did not want her surname revealed.

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

Church sex abuse training encourages victim to come forward

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

The Archdiocese of Agana will be holding monthly briefings to update the community on various initiatives the church is taking.

Guam – Since the Archdiocese of Agana’s implementation of the Task Force for the Protection of Minors, some individuals have come forward to report abuse within the catholic community.

Today, Coadjutor Archbishop Michael Byrnes and the task force gave an update on the curriculum so far. They’ve made significant progress in implementing a sexual abuse curriculum within the catholic schools and parishes. Several members provided updates to the public on that progress.

So far, all 14 catholic schools have received the training. Now, the focus will be within the different parishes. But since the this task force was created, we asked Byrnes if the archdiocese has received any reports of sexual abuse from any of the students or minors they’re entrusted to protect.

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Sexual abuse, death of 12-year-old girl; temple priest held in Kollam

INDIA
Evartha

Kollam: Sexual atrocities towards children doesn’t seem to end in state, as a temple priest has been arrested for sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl, who was later found dead at her house in Karunagappally.

The accused priest, identified as Renju, is said to be the paramour of the child’s mother. She is also in police custody.

The postmortem report had revealed that the child was subjected to unnatural sex. The woman had confessed to the police that the child was sexually abused.

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April 2, 2017

Child molestation trial starts this week in Brunswick for outspoken pastor with checkered history

GEORGIA
Florida Times-Union

Posted April 2, 2017
By Eileen Kelley

BRUNSWICK, Ga. — Kenneth Adkins sits in jail and ticks off the hours … days … dreaming about reinventing himself.

Perhaps he’ll go to work and advocate for coeds who attend historically black colleges in the Atlanta area, or so he said on Day 216 behind bars. Or perhaps there’ll be a national appetite for an “Apprentice”-type reality TV show where former convicts like himself vie for jobs on the outside, something he floated to the Times-Union sometime around Day 158.

Adkins knows a thing of two about reinventing himself. He went from a drug-addicted con man in the 1980s and ’90s to a fairly prominent public relations man in Jacksonville. Although clean, he’s made many financial mistakes.

Adkins also became a pastor and more recently a bishop.

Along the way he’s earned accolades from Trumpian-types who love his tell-it-like-it-is approach. And he’s earned his fair share of fist shaking from those he has crossed. Then there are those who simply say Adkins crossed the line too far this time, something he now freely admits he did when he championed the anti-gay, anti-transsexual stance during the public debates leading up to Jacksonville’s expansion of the Human Right Ordinance.

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Bishop of Ballarat says history should accurately recall historical events

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

Andrew Thomson
2 Apr 2017

THE Catholic Bishop of Ballarat has refuted calls to remove plaques which include the name of disgraced bishop Ronald Mulkearns.

Bishop Paul Bird made the comment prior to a visit to Warrnambool on Sunday.

He said it was important to accurately record historical events where the community had gathered to celebrate with Bishop Mulkearns.

The bishop said other events, including Bishop Mulkearns’ failings, had been recorded elsewhere. Bishop Bird said he thought it was going too far. Bishop Mulkearns, who died last year, was the bishop of the Ballarat Diocese while pedophile members of the clergy abused children.

He was aware of pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale’s offending in 1975 but chose to move him to parishes within the diocese, allowing the notorious offender to keep committing crimes.

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Greeley authorities and advocates discuss Colorado’s statute of limitations on rape

COLORADO
Greeley Tribunei

Even though the 19-year-old Greeley woman did everything she could to report the rape correctly, two men police believe sexually assaulted her will never be convicted of that crime under Colorado’s current laws.

Hours after the men left her in a dark alleyway in the 1500 block of 8th Avenue in the early morning hours of July 31, 1984, she was speaking with a Greeley police detective. Not long after that, she underwent a medical exam, and a nurse collected the DNA evidence. In the days that followed, she walked police through the alleys and side streets, where the two men had threatened to kill her if she didn’t submit to them.

She shared details with the detectives many victims say are agonizing and humiliating.

But the investigation stalled.

For over three decades, not much else happened. She had no idea who the men were who raped her that night, and, it seemed, neither did police or prosecutors.

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Priest defends Tuam nuns, says unmarried mothers sterilized in other countries

IRELAND
IrishCentral

IrishCentral Staff @IrishCentral April 02, 2017

A prominent Catholic priest in Ireland has defended how the church handled the issue of unmarried mothers in institutions like Tuam in Galway, where 800 children have no burial records.

Father Padraig McCarthy was writing in the influential Catholic publication “The Furrow.”

He stated other countries used sterilization which was mandatory in some. He stated women were sent to asylums in many countries for being “feeble minded” and “promiscuous.”

He wrote that several countries such as Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Estonia, Switzerland, Iceland, Austria, France, Belgium and the Czech Republic, operated mandatory sterilization programs for those judged unfit to have more babies.

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Law firms swamped by historical child sexual abuse cases due to royal commisison

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Rachel Browne

Australian legal firms are experiencing unprecedented demand from people who have suffered alleged child sexual abuse in institutions such as churches, schools and youth groups.

The demand has been spurred on by revelations from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and legal reforms which allow survivors to make a claim for damages regardless of when the abuse allegedly occurred.

Shine Lawyers received 61 inquiries about historical child sexual abuse in 2012, prior to the commencement of the royal commission in 2013. Last year the firm received 730 inquiries, an increase of more than 1000 per cent.

Law firm Maurice Blackburn has also experienced a surge in people exploring their legal options, with hundreds of new inquiries.

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‘The power and determination needed to look towards the future’: Reconciliation Pole installed at UBC

CANADA
The Province

A carved pole installed Saturday at the University of B.C. contains thousands of copper nails that serve as a reminder of Canada’s traumatic colonial past.

Each nail — hammered into the 16.8-metre-tall, 800-year-old red cedar pole by residential-school survivors, affected families and school children — represents an indigenous child who died at a residential school.

Officially know as the Reconciliation Pole, the monument tells the story of the school system, which was founded in the 1800s and not shuttered until 1996.

“My hope for the pole is that it moves people to learn more about the history of residential schools and to understand their responsibility to reconciliation,” said James Hart, Haida master carver and hereditary chief, in a media release.

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Totem pole at UBC honours First Nations victimized by residential schools

CANADA
Question

Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — A 17-metre totem pole installed at the University of British Columbia is a permanent reminder of the strength and resilience of the countless children victimized by the residential school system, one survivor said.

Elder Barney Williams used his remarks to a crowd gathered Saturday for the raising of the totem pole to talk about his experience of being raped and abused at a residential school on Meares Island, B.C.

“This is real folks, this is not something we make up because we want sympathy,” he said.

The mistreatment of generations of indigenous people, he said, is a “Canadian problem, not just a First Nations problem.”

The Reconciliation Pole, carved by Haida Nation hereditary chief James Hart, honours the victims and survivors of Canada’s residential school system.

– See more at: http://www.whistlerquestion.com/totem-pole-at-ubc-honours-first-nations-victimized-by-residential-schools-1.13732658#sthash.4Iko3C2a.dpuf

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‘Bishop’ sexually assaulted woman and teenager during private prayer sessions

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Rachel Roberts

A church minister who sexually assaulted a teenage girl and a woman has been jailed, along with his female secretary who acted as his accomplice.

Benjamin Egbujor and Rose Nwenwu “preyed on their victim’s vulnerabilities, whilst satisfying their own sexual urges under the guise of private prayer,” said Police Constable James Bell, of Scotland Yard’s Offences and Child Abuse Command (SOECA).

The Inner London Crown Court heard the younger victim, who was under the age of 16, was told by Egbujor, a bishop at the Jubilee Christian Centre in Peckham, South London, that she had been “chosen” to attend a special private prayer session.

But after being taken to the 55-year-old’s office, the girl was forced to undress and oil was poured over her.

After she told her family what happened, they reported the incident to London’s Metropolitan Police who discovered during the course of their inquiries that another woman in her 30s had also been sexually assaulted by Egbujor.

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Chip Minemyer | Victims have been courageous; time for others to do the same

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Chip Minemyer
cminemyer@tribdem.com

Penn State’s former leaders have been found guilty of endangering children, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown has been forced to adopt new policies and the Pennsylvania Legislature is wrestling over the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse.

As we enter April’s Child Abuse Prevention Month, major institutions are in turmoil because of past sins – while the quest for justice for those who suffered at the hands of priests, coaches and other trusted adults remains a struggle.

If only someone in power had showed the courage and compassion years ago to say: “This stops now.”

Former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, founder of The Second Mile for troubled kids, was convicted in 2012 on 45 counts of child sexual abuse.

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‘Nigerian’ pastor jailed in London for sexual assault

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Trust (Nigeria)

By Abdullahi Tasiu Abubakar, London | Publish Date: Apr 2 2017

A UK-based pastor, believed to be originally from Nigeria, has been jailed in London for sexually assaulting a girl and a woman during “private prayer sessions”.

Fifty-five-year-old Benjamin Egbujor, of Harold Avenue in Kent, was found guilty of sexual assault and causing a child to engage in sexual activity.

His 43-year-old secretary, Rose Nwenwu, of Thurlestone Road in London, was also found guilty of aiding him and of participating in sexual assault.

The Metropolitan Police said Benjamin and Rose committed the offences at their Jubilee Christian Centre (JCC) in Penarth Street in London.

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Clash ahead over sex abuse reforms

PENNSYLVANIA
The Daily Item

By John Finnerty CNHI Harrisburg Bureau

HARRISBURG — With the state House poised to take up legislation to reform the state statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases, supporters are preparing a final push to make the bill cover old sex crimes and not just future abuse.

The state Senate unanimously passed a statute of limitations bill last month that would give victims until the age of 50 to file lawsuits against abusers or their employers if there were allegations of cover-ups.

Under current law, victims have until the age of 30 to sue for old sex crimes. The Senate bill also eliminates the statute of limitations entirely for criminal investigations of child sex abuse.

But controversially, the measure provides no retroactive relief. If the statute of limitations has expired on old child sex cases, the law change doesn’t help those victims seek justice.

The House judiciary committee is scheduled to take up the Senate bill on Tuesday. Ahead of that vote, supporters of an effort to get a retroactive window opened for victims of old child sex crimes will rally Monday at the Capitol. The push for rewriting the rules regarding how long victims have to sue for child abuse reignited last spring after revelations that the Catholic Diocese of Johnstown-Altoona had covered up decades of abuse of children by priests. On Monday, a busload of victims and their supporters is expected to travel from Johnstown to join the Capitol rally.

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Guam Catholic Church sees a “perfect storm” of controversy

GUAM
The Courier

Posted On Sun. Apr 2nd, 2017

HAGATNA, Guam (AP) — The Catholic Church on the Pacific island of Guam has been devastated by allegations that its longtime archbishop sexually abused altar boys. But even before the scandal broke, Guam’s church was divided over another issue – the presence of a controversial European lay movement that became so toxic that a community of nuns fled to the mainland U.S. in despair.

The battle on the tiny tropical U.S. territory pits the Neocatechumenal Way lay group against critics on a majority Catholic island that was colonized by Spanish missionaries in the 17th century. The Way was founded in the 1960s in Madrid and is best known for sending families out on missions to evangelize in places where Catholics are a either a minority or have fallen away from the church.

For years, locals on Guam have complained that the Way represented a new missionary movement trying to introduce an unusual version of Catholicism to their church, which is the most influential institution on the island. The Way’s practices include celebrating Mass on Saturday night in special communities of 30-40 people seated around a table, rather than facing an altar in a church open to all.

Guam’s critics aren’t alone. Bishops in Japan, the Philippines and elsewhere have sought to limit the Way’s activity in their territories, complaining of sectarian and culturally insensitive practices.

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April 1, 2017

British campaigner who was ousted from Vatican child abuse commission accuses Catholic church of treating victims with ‘contempt’

UNITED KINGDOM
The Mail on Sunday

By Adam Luck For The Mail On Sunday

A British campaigner who has been ousted from a Vatican child abuse commission has accused the Catholic Church of treating child sex abuse victims with contempt.

Peter Saunders, who was abused by two priests as a child, said he had lost faith in Pope Francis after learning that the only other abuse victim on the commission had resigned because of a lack of progress.

The father of two, who was last year forced to take ‘leave of absence’ from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, believes that he will shortly be officially dismissed from his role after clashing with other members of the inquiry.

Pope Francis formally set up the commission in 2014 amid a rising tide of abuse allegations surrounding the Catholic clergy and mounting evidence of high-level cover-ups by bishops and cardinals.

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PECKHAM BISHOP AND STAFF LOCKED UP FOR SEXUAL ASSAULTS ON YOUNG GIRL AND WOMAN FROM CONGREGATION

UNITED KINGDOM
Southwark News

OWEN SHEPPARD (01 April, 2017)

“I fear there may be other victims who have not yet come forward and I urge them or any victim of sexual abuse to tell the police what happened,” Met officer said

A bishop who sexually assaulted a young girl and a woman during “private prayer sessions” at a Christian centre in Peckham, has been jailed.

Benjamin Egbujor, 55, from Kent attacked both victims – who cannot be named for legal reasons – between 2011 and 2013.

Egbujor selected a girl who was aged under sixteen from his congregation, and invited her to a private prayer session, at the church in SE15.

After being taken into his private office, the girl was exploited by being forced to undress, and oil was poured over her.

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The Rev. Jiang denies inappropriate contact with Lincoln County teenage

MISSOURI
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By Joel Currier St. Louis Post-Dispatch

TROY, MO. • The Rev. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang testified Friday that he never kissed on the mouth, sexually abused nor groomed a teenage girl over an 18-month relationship with her and her family.

But the priest did acknowledge that he sent hundreds of texts and emails expressing his love for them, and, in one instance, left the family a $20,000 check as well as an apology.

The 31-year-old Catholic priest’s testimony Friday in a Lincoln County courtroom was his first public response to abuse allegations that first surfaced five years ago. He is on trial this and next week in a civil suit accusing him of molesting the teen during a June 2012 a visit to her home in Old Monroe and in the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica rectory parking lot after Sunday Mass. At the time, Jiang was an associate pastor there.

Jiang emphatically denied on Friday ever having inappropriate contact with the teenager.

“They were my family,” Jiang said on the stand Friday. “I was very close to the [girl’s] family. I would do anything to help them.”

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EDITORIAL: Final public hearing of child abuse Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

GIVEN the circumstances that led up to the creation of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, it was appropriate that Newcastle’s Steve Smith was the final person to give evidence to this groundbreaking and historic investigation.

Mr Smith first spoke publicly in 2013 about the abuse he suffered as an Anglican altar boy and has been a forceful advocate for institutional reform. Speaking to the commission on Friday afternoon, he lamented the lives that had been devastated or lost through what he described as the self-serving attitudes of Australian religious institutions.

Children needed to have the confidence that adults will look after them, Mr Smith said. But as this royal commission has repeatedly shown, that confidence has been all too often misplaced and abused.

In his closing remarks, the chair of the commission, Justice Peter McClellan, said the courage and determination of survivors had helped the public to gain a greater understanding of the impact of sexual abuse of children. He thanked those survivors who were “determined to give evidence”, saying they had “given a voice” to the tens of thousands of children who had been abused over the years in Australian institutions.

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Church of England implementing new rules to prevent clergy sexual abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

Andy Walton CHRISTIAN TODAY CONTRIBUTING WRITER 31 March 2017

he Church of England has issued a progress report, one year on from the publication of a major report into safeguarding in the Church.

The Elliot Report, issued in 2016, came as a result of investigations into ‘the treatment of ‘Joe’, a victim of clergy sexual abuse. ‘Joe’ reported that he had disclosed information about the abuse he suffered on several occasions but hadn’t received an adequate response.

As a result, a number of measures were put in place, which the Church now says it is implementing fully. These include, ‘Strengthening of the training for handling disclosures with a bespoke module for bishops and senior church staff; an independent audit of safeguarding in all dioceses, due to be completed at the end of the year; further plans to work more closely with survivors to learn from their experience.’

At the time the report was received the Church said the Archbishop of Canterbury would ensure that all recommendations were implemented as soon as possible.

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Elliott Review progress report

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

31 March 2017

The Church of England’s National Safeguarding Team has today published a progress report, one year on from the Elliott Review, which recommended a range of safeguarding proposals for the Church, particularly in the areas of handling disclosures and accountability.

The independent review, by safeguarding consultant Ian Elliott, was commissioned in 2015, to look at lessons learnt in the case of ‘Joe’, a survivor of clerical sexual abuse. He reported that he had disclosed his abuse over a number of years to different people on separate occasions, both within and outside the Church and that he had not received a response which he felt adequately addressed his needs. The report, which was received by the Bishop of Crediton, Sarah Mullally, as a senior woman in the Church, at the request of the survivor, made a range of recommendations.

The Church has issued an unreserved apology to Joe and on publication of the report last year, said it was fully committed to implementing the recommendations. The responses to these include: Strengthening of the training for handling disclosures with a bespoke module for bishops and senior church staff; an independent audit of safeguarding in all dioceses, due to be completed at the end of the year; further plans to work more closely with survivors to learn from their experience.

The full recommendations and responses can be read in the Progress Report.

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Church of England says progress being made in handling abuse cases

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Fri 31 Mar 2017
By Premier Journalist

The Church of England has released a progress report one year on from the release of the Elliot Review outlining how the Church is improving its response to allegations of abuse.

The Elliott Review was commissioned in September 2015 to look into alleged sexual abuse committed against a man known as ‘Joe’ during the 1970s.

Joe’s claims were made to a number of different people on separate occasions through the intervening years, both within and outside the Church, but no action was taken.

The review left leaders of the Church of England “embarrassed” and “appalled” by their failings.

The Church issued an unreserved apology to Joe after the Elliot Review report was published last year.

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Judge grants retired bishop’s 2nd request in abuse case

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com April 1, 2017

U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Joaquin V.E. Manibusan granted a second request from retired Saipan Bishop Tomas A. Camacho to have more time to respond to a former altar boy’s lawsuit, alleging the former Guam priest raped and sexually abused him from about 1971 to 1974.

The judge gave Camacho, represented by Attorney William M. Fitzgerald, until April 10 to respond to Melvin Duenas’ lawsuit. The deadline was supposed to be March 31.

Fitzgerald and Duenas’ attorney, Gloria Rudolph of the law firm of Lujan & Wolff, submitted on March 27 a stipulation on the second proposed extension. The judge granted the time extension on March 29.

Duenas, now 55 and living in Yona, filed on Feb. 13 in the U.S. District Court of Guam a lawsuit alleging that Camacho sexually abused and raped him when Camacho was priest at Saint Joseph Catholic Church in Inarajan. Duenas also alleged that former island priest Louis Brouillard sexually abused him on church grounds and during Boy Scouts of America activities.

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Tulsa Principal Accused Of Viewing Child Porn Out On Bond

OKLAHOMA
News on 6

BY: EMORY BRYAN, NEWS ON 6

TULSA, Oklahoma – A school principal accused of viewing child pornography is out of the Tulsa County jail on bond.

Jeffrey Goss may be out of jail, be he has to wear an ankle monitor and remain home, except to go to court.

The church that employed Goss said his arrest was a complete shock. Pastor Jim Thornton said since Tuesday he’s been busy meeting with families from the school, which is housed inside the Tulsa Hills Church of the Nazarene.

“This came as a complete shock to us – not because we were in denial, but because we took all the precautions we thought were necessary to prevent something like this. There was nothing on our radar to cause any concern,” Thornton said.

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Pastor at Tulsa church embroiled in child porn investigation speaks out

OKLAHOMA
KTUL

by Ethan Hutchins

TULSA, Okla., (KTUL) — A pastor at a Tulsa church where a principal has been arrested for child porn is speaking out about the investigation.

An investigation that rocked two Tulsa communities after a pastor and the principal of a separate church were arrested.

Both churches dealing with the unthinkable this week.

“We have tried the best we can to eliminate all variables beyond human will,” said Pastor Jim Thornton.

Thornton is the pastor at Tulsa Hills Church of the Nazarene.

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Lawsuit: Child, then 6, molested by older student at St. Alphonsus

MISSISSIPPI
Sun Herald

BY ANITA LEE
calee@sunherald.com

The guardian of a former St. Alphonsus Catholic School student is suing the school and the Catholic Diocese, alleging the child was sexually assaulted at age 6 by a 12-year-old student while both were in an after-school program.

The lawsuit says the older boy put his mouth on the younger child’s genitals in a bathroom off the school cafeteria in May 2011. The lawsuit says the 12-year-old also was “French kissing” the 6-year-old during the 30 minutes to two hours they were in the bathroom.

St. Alphonsus and the Catholic Diocese were aware the older boy had a history of aggression toward younger students, the lawsuit says, even requiring him at one point to be psychologically evaluated before continuing his education there. The lawsuit also names principal Pamela Rogers, who the parents claim tried to dissuade them from contacting law enforcement authorities when they reported the alleged abuse to her.

The lawsuit, filed in Jackson County Circuit Court by Ocean Springs attorney Jonathan Franco, represents only the alleged victim’s side of the story. Gulfport attorney Joe Sam Owen, who represents the diocese, said he just received a copy of the lawsuit and needs time to review it before commenting.

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Berks lawmaker hopes to restart overhaul of child sexual abuse bill

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith
MUHLENBERG TOWNSHIP, PA

State Rep. Mark Rozzi is planning to re-ignite his push to give child sexual abuse victims more time to confront their abusers in court with a Harrisburg rally Monday.

The Muhlenberg Township Democrat plans to speak on the Capitol steps with abuse victims and their advocates to urge lawmakers to enact his proposal to overhaul the statute of limitations in child sexual abuse cases.

Rozzi, who has made the proposal his signature effort since taking office in 2013, was himself raped as a teen by a Catholic priest.

The rally comes a day before the House Judiciary Committee plans to consider an overhaul of sex abuse laws that cleared the Senate earlier this year.

The Senate’s proposal would extend time limits for victims to sue or press criminal charges but is missing the element Rozzi and many other victims have demanded: A chance for victims for whom those limits have already expired to file lawsuits.

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Judge recusals of clergy sex abuse cases mount

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com April 1, 2017

Superior Court of Guam judges continue to recuse themselves from hearing Catholic clergy sex abuse cases, now that the local court is seeing a second wave of filings.

As of March 30, local judges have filed 89 disqualification memos to avoid doubts about their partiality.

The first wave of former altar boys filed their lawsuits in the Superior Court of Guam as early as Nov. 1, 2016, but started moving their cases to the U.S. District Court of Guam in January.

Local court judges said they have familial or business ties to either the plaintiffs or the defendants, court documents show.

But since March 9, the local court started seeing new cases.

Clynt Ridgell, director of Policy Planning and Community Relations at the Judiciary of Guam, said in a case in which all Superior Court judges have been disqualified, the presiding judge will send a request to the chief justice to assign a judge pro-tempore.

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March 31, 2017

Montana diocese files for bankruptcy ahead of trial

MONTANA
Great Falls Tribune

Seaborn Larson, Great Falls Tribune March 31, 2017

An attorney representing nearly half of the 72 survivors who suffered sexual abuse and rape at the hands of priests and nuns in rural Montana say the church’s decision to file for bankruptcy is a step in the right direction.

The Diocese of Great Falls-Billings on Friday filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in federal court, effectively setting in motion the process to reorganize its assets toward a settlement in a lawsuit in which more than 20 religious community leaders sexually abused at least 72 victims in eastern Montana over the course of several decades.

Vito de la Cruz, an attorney with Tamaki Law representing 34 of the 72 victims, said the bankruptcy filing marks an incremental win for his clients. He said he expects the diocese to begin negotiating an appropriate financial settlement with the court in August or September of this year.

“It’s a step in the right direction,” he said.

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First child abuse inquiry sessions to hear from faith-based organisations

SCOTLAND
Evening Times

The first sessions of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry will hear evidence from faith-based organisations and residential and foster care providers.

Expert witnesses, the Scottish Government and survivor groups will also give evidence at the hearings, which will begin on May 31.

The inquiry is examining historical allegations of the abuse of children in care and has been taking statements from witnesses since last spring.

It covers the period within living memory of anyone who suffered such abuse, no later than December 17, 2014.

The first phase of hearings will take place at Rosebery House in Edinburgh and is expected to last about seven weeks.

They will hear evidence of the history and governance of large care providers of residential and foster care to children in Scotland and whether there is any retrospective acknowledgement of abuse.

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Religious orders to give evidence at child abuse inquiry

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL

A number of religious organisations including the Catholic Church and Church of Scotland will be called to give evidence by the national child abuse inquiry, it has been confirmed.

Led by judge Lady Smith, the inquiry will hear from expert witnesses, the Scottish Government and survivors’ groups when the first phase of hearings gets under way in May.

Evidence will also be taken from large care providers including Quarriers, Barnardo’s and the Aberlour Child Care Trust, as well as faith-based organisations.

The inquiry published a list of ten such organisations, including CrossReach, previously known as the Church of Scotland Board of Social Responsibility and the Bishops’ Conference of the Catholic Church.

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Inquiry first phase hearings starting on 31 May 2017

SCOTLAND
Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry

The Inquiry has issued a notice providing information about the scope and purpose of the Inquiry’s first phase hearings which will start on 31 May. There is also information about how to apply for what is called “leave to appear”.

Members of the public do not need “leave to appear” to watch the hearings from the public seats.

The evidence to be heard will include:

^ Evidence from expert witnesses about:
* The legislative and regulatory framework governing children in care in Scotland up to 1968;
* The early development of care services in Scotland;
* Societal attitudes towards children; and
* The nature and prevalence of child abuse in Scotland.

* Evidence from the Scottish Government on the nature, extent and development of the State’s areas of responsibility for children in residential and foster care in Scotland.
* Evidence of the history and governance of a number of care providers, including faith based organisations, and whether there is any retrospective acknowledgement of abuse.
* Evidence of the background, development, purpose and work of survivor groups.

The first part of the first phase hearings will end no later than 20 July 2017. The second part of the first phase will resume in autumn 2017.

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Child abuse inquiry will quiz charities and church groups will be asked to admit abuses

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Stephen Naysmith

CHARITIES and faith-based groups will be asked whether they admit overseeing the abuse of children, during the first public hearings of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry.

The Inquiry has announced 10 Christian organisations and three charities will appear during seven weeks of hearings, beginning on May 31 as it takes evidence in public for the first time.

They will be asked what residential care they provided for children, when, and how it was governed. The inquiry will also ask each charity whether they acknowledge abuse took place on their watch.

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‘They had nowhere to hide’: abuse survivors praise commission for shaking institutions

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey

Anthony Foster, an outspoken advocate for child sexual abuse victims and survivors, noticed a glaring absence from the hearing rooms during the final week of the child sexual abuse royal commission.

“There has not been one representative from one religious institution present,” says Foster, whose daughters Emma and Katie were sexually abused by a Catholic priest.

“Not one. And all of the survivors have noticed it.”

The absence of senior religious leaders and other high-profile institutional representatives was particularly jarring to Foster, given the closing week of public hearings focused on the nature, cause and impact of child sexual abuse, and prevention and responses.

On Monday, the chair of the commission, Justice Peter McClellan, revealed that children were allegedly sexually abused in more than 4,000 Australian institutions.

“The non-attendance of the representatives of those institutions this week is palpable,” says Foster, whose own evidence in 2013 highlighted the gross flaws in the handling of sexual abuse cases by the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne. “It has been such an important, enlightening week.”

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Victim advocate: The abuse scandal has broken heart of the Catholic Church in Australia.

AUSTRALIA
America

Gerard O’Connell
March 31, 2017

In this exclusive interview with America, Francis Sullivan, the chief executive officer of the Australian Catholic Church’s “Truth, Justice, and Healing Council,” reflects on what contributed to the abuse of minors by priests and religious in Australia, and what he thinks the Royal Commission that has been investigating this abuse might say in its report at the year’s end.

T.J.H.C. was set up by the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and Catholic Religious Australia soon after the federal government announced on Jan. 11, 2013, the establishment of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. It represents dioceses, archdioceses and religious congregations across the country. It was set up for the church to address the past openly and honestly, and to speak with one voice before the Royal Commission.

Mr. Sullivan was one of the speakers at the seminar on “Safeguarding children in homes and schools” held at the Gregorian University in Rome last week. He spoke with America on March 27.

At the seminar, you said that while recognizing that the abuse of minors is widespread, the question is: Why did it happen in the Catholic Church, too? From your experience in Australia, what answers have you come up with?

Clearly, those in positions of authority, whether they were bishops or leaders of religious orders, instinctively chose to look after the institution no matter how, at times, scandalous were the cases. Instinctively their heart was with an institutional agenda, not with a compassionate agenda that speaks of the Gospel. So it’s a matter of instinct, and instinct is always shaped and nurtured by culture, a culture that’s self-protective, that’s about continual preservation and promotion. It’s a culture where people can identify with certainty and security, and when something like child sex abuse, clerical sex abuse, confronts them it’s a disruptor, and the way institutions deal with disruptors is to get rid of them. They don’t integrate the experience.

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Transfer Of Sex Case Involving Moravian Pastor Delayed

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

There has been a delay in the transfer of the sex offence case of Moravian minister Rupert Clarke from the St Elizabeth Parish Court to the Home Circuit Court in Kingston.

Clarke, who is 64, is charged with having sex with a minor in relation to a 14-year-old girl in the parish.

Yesterday, when he appeared in the St Elizabeth Parish Court, it was expected that the judge would have granted permission for the matter to be transferred on a voluntary bill of indictment.

But Clarke’s new attorney Deborah Martin asked for time to peruse the affidavit which she said was only served on her yesterday by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution.

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NEWS RELEASE – Bankruptcy Path to Settlement of Sex Abuse Claims Against Diocese of Great Falls – Billings

MONTANA
James, Vernon and Weeks, P.A.

NEWS RELEASE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Leander James (Cell 208 818-6775)
Craig Vernon Cell (208-691-2768)
James Vernon & Weeks P.A.
1626 Lincoln Way
Coeur D’Alene, ID 83814
ljames@jvwlaw.net
cvernon@jvwlaw.net
Tel: (208) 667-0683
Fax: (208) 664-1684

(Great Falls, Montana – March 31, 2017.) The Roman Catholic Diocese of Great Falls-Billings filed bankruptcy today as a step toward settling 72 lawsuits seeking monetary and non-monetary redress for claims of child sexual abuse perpetrated by Catholic priests, nuns and lay workers from the 1950s through 1990s.

The filing automatically stays any further action in the lawsuits and paves the way for a global settlement and payment of claims through the bankruptcy court. The first cases were scheduled for trial in July.

The Catholic Church uses bankruptcy laws that allow corporations to continue doing business after paying off their creditors to shed itself of child sexual abuse claims and continue to operate. This is the 15th Diocesan bankruptcy in the United States, falling in the wake of the Diocese of Helena bankruptcy in 2015 and the Northwest Jesuit bankruptcy in 2012.

“While we had hoped to obtain justice for our clients at trial,” said Attorney Leander James, “we are hopeful that the Diocese bankruptcy will result in non-monetary terms for the protection of children and monetary recognition of the tragedies endured by victims.”

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Great Falls-Billings Diocese Files Bankruptcy As Part Of Sex Abuse Settlement

MONTANA
Montana Public Radio

A Montana Roman Catholic diocese is filing for bankruptcy protection as part of an unfolding settlement with 72 people who filed sex abuse claims.

Darren Eultgen is Chancellor of the Diocese of Great Falls-Billings. Eultgen says the diocese and its insurance carriers would contribute to a fund to compensate victims and set aside additional money for those who have not yet come forward:

“We’ve started to take beginning steps to settle these large abuse lawsuits facing the diocese, entered into mediation and today as part of that agreement, filed for bankruptcy.”

Two sexual abuse lawsuits were filed against the Diocese of Great Falls-Billings – one in February 2012 and another the following June.

Bishop Michael Warfel said in a statement that he apologizes to anyone who was abused by a priest, a sister or a lay church worker.

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Diocese of Great Falls-Billings filing for bankruptcy as part of sex abuse settlement

MONTANA
KPAX

Updated: Mar 31, 2017

By David Sherman – MTN News

GREAT FALLS –
The Diocese of Great Falls-Billings plans to file for bankruptcy protection as part of a settlement with 72 people who filed sex abuse claims, church officials said on Friday.

The Diocese comprises the eastern two-thirds of Montana. It includes 79 priests (49 active), 51 parishes, and more than 38,000 registered Catholics, according to its website.

In a press release, the diocese says that it is taking a “major step forward” bringing resolution to 72 current claims of abuse by minors by diocesan priests, religious community priests, women religious and lay workers who have served in the diocese.”

They expect make the Chapter 11 reorganization filing on Friday, and the Diocese and its insurance carriers would contribute to a fund to compensate victims and set aside additional money for those who have not yet come forward.

The amount of the settlement has not yet been released.

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Diocese filing for bankruptcy to settle sex abuse claims

MONTANA
Associated Press

BY AMY BETH HANSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A second Montana Roman Catholic diocese will file for bankruptcy protection as part of settlements involving more than 400 people in sex abuse lawsuits, church officials said Friday.

The Diocese of Great Falls-Billings said it expected to make the Chapter 11 reorganization filing later in the day, and the diocese and its insurance carriers would contribute to a fund to compensate victims and set aside additional money for those who have not yet come forward.

The amount of the settlement involving 72 people was not released.

“On behalf of the entire Diocese of Great Falls-Billings, I express my profound sorrow and sincere apologies to anyone who was abused by a priest, a sister or a lay church worker,” Bishop Michael Warfel said in a statement. “No child should experience harm from anyone who serves the church.”

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Roselle Catholic teacher accused of having sex with student, deleting evidence

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey 101.5

By Dan Alexander March 31, 2017

ROSELLE — A Catholic high school teacher was arrested at her Linden home on charges of having a sexual relationship with a student.

Roselle Catholic began an investigation into the allegations made against technology teacher Theresa Hrindo, 25, and contacted the Union County Prosecutor’s Office.

Hrindo had sexual relations with the student several times between December and February at several different locations in the county, according to Union County Acting Prosecutor Grace Park.

The 2010 graduate of the school also faces charges for hindering apprehension because she deleted incriminated photos and other files from the student’s phone.

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Roselle Catholic teacher accused of sex with student freed from jail

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Marisa Iati | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

ELIZABETH — A teacher at Roselle Catholic High School accused of having a sexual relationship with a student was ordered on Friday to be released from jail on two conditions.

Judge Brenda Coppola Cuba agreed to release Theresa Hrindo, 25, of Linden, under the conditions that she have no contact with the student and that she cannot teach or supervise children.

“This whole process for my client, her family and everyone involved is, quite frankly, traumatic,” Michael G. Brucki, Hrindo’s lawyer, told the judge at Hrindo’s first appearance in state Superior Court in Union County.

Hrindo was arrested Thursday afternoon and charged with two counts of sexual assault, two counts of endangering the welfare of a child, and one count of hindering apprehension.

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25-Year-Old Catholic High School Teacher Arrested for Sexual Relationship with Student

NEW JERSEY
NBC New York

A 25-year-old teacher at a New Jersey Catholic school faces charges that she carried on an illicit sexual relationship with a student, the Union County Prosecutor’s Office said on Friday.

Theresa Hrindo allegedly engaged in sexual acts with the student from last December through this February while working at Roselle Catholic High School, prosecutors said. Hrindo, a technology teacher, graduated from that same school in 2010 and from Kean University in 2014.

An investigation began earlier this month after a referral from the Archdiocese of Newark. A spokesman for the archdiocese said Hrindo was suspended when the allegations first came to light; she is no longer listed as faculty on the school’s website.

“When we became aware of the allegation we reported it immediately to the prosecutor’s office, and the school and the archdiocese have been cooperating with the prosecutors throughout the last couple of weeks,” the spokesman said.

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NEW YORK TIMES OP-ED FANS “MASS GRAVE” HOAX

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue

In its reporting on Ireland’s “mass grave” story, the New York Times has been one of the only media outlets in the nation not to buy into this hoax. Indeed, the 2014 story by Douglas Dalby blew holes in the account rendered by Catherine Corless, the person responsible for making this unsubstantiated accusation. He accurately stated that she “surmised that the children’s bodies were interred in a septic tank behind the home,” and quoted sources who undermined her story. (My italic.)

In today’s New York Times there is an op-ed by Sadhbh Walshe that is strewn with inaccuracies and vicious smears against nuns. Her only credentials are that of a film maker and staff writer for fictional TV shows. She is good at fiction: she cites a report by an Irish commission as proof that “mass graves” were found outside a Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Ireland. In point of fact, it never made such an accusation. Walshe made it up. This explains why she never quoted from the report.

“Now the existence of a mass grave of babies can no longer be denied,” Walshe says. Yes it can. Where is the evidence? Where are the pictures? Why didn’t the Irish government say it found a “mass grave”?

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Assignment Record– Rev. Raymond A. Hyland

NEW YORK
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Raymond Hyland was ordained for the Archdiocese of New York in 1947. He was a parish priest throughout his career, assisting in Saugerties, the Bronx, Crestwood and Middletown before becoming pastor in 1974 in Bengall, and then in Kingston in 1983. He died in 1995.

In the mid-1980s a woman told the archdiocese that Hyland sexually abused her when she was a child in the Bronx in the 1950s. The woman – an Ursuline nun – said that Hyland stepped in to “take her under his wing” after her sister was struck and killed by a car. The abuse allegedly started when the woman was 11 years-old and continued until she was 16. Hyland’s accuser said two priests from the archdiocese questioned her about the allegations and asked her what she had done to “activate his interest.” She asked for compensation to help with her therapy expenses, a that request wasn’t granted until 2000, when the archdiocese sent a check to her order. Further, the woman said that she was made to sign a confidentiality agreement. She began to speak out in 2005 and, in 2016, she named Hyland publicly.

Born: December 31, 1919
Ordained: March 1, 1947
Died: May 20, 1995

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Caso Provolo: una vittima ha raccontato di una macabra stanza con catene dove legavano i bambin

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Provolo case: One victim told of a macabre room at the deaf institute that had chains on the wall in which children were bound for rape.]

bound the children to rape them

Per queste affermazioni hanno fatto un’ispezione oculare nella soffitta dell’Istituto, dove hanno trovato una parete con un buco dove potrebbero essere state attaccate le catene. Hanno trovato altre prove che vanno ad aggravare la condizione dei cinque detenuti.

Strazianti e macabri dettagli sono stati apportati da una testimone e vittima sui reiterati abusi sessuali i quali, secondo quanto ha denunciato, è stata sottomessa nell’Istituto Provolo di Luján. Grazie a questa testimonianza è stata fatta un’ispezione oculare e sono stati trovati altri elementi per incriminare gli accusati e continuare l’indagine.

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‘Mother and Baby’ mums should be compensated for ‘slave labour’ says support group

IRELAND
Westmeath Examiner

The thousands of women who were forced into “slave labour” in Castlepollard and other mother and babies home should be compensated by the religious orders who were paid by the state to take care of them, according to the chairman of the Coalition of Mother And Baby Home Survivors (CMABS).

The Irish Times reported last Wednesday that the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes has proposed a redress scheme for survivors who suffered abuse during their time in the facilities. The commission’s final report will be released early next year.

Speaking to the Westmeath Examiner, CMABS chairman Paul Redmond, who was born in the mother and baby home in Castlepollard, says that a redress scheme is long overdue.

“Natural mothers in places like Castlepollard were essentially unpaid slave labour and they were worked to the bone six days a week from early morning until the evening without a penny. The government was paying handsomely for their care and they should not have been doing any work at all. It really was putting their health and emotional wellbeing at risk.

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MENSAJE A NUESTROS FIELES

PIEDRAS NEGRAS (MEXICO)
Diócesis de Piedras Negras [Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Mexico]

March 31, 2017

By Unknown

Read original article

 “Sepan que yo estaré con ustedes todos los días hasta el fin del mundo”

(Mt 16,16)

Muy amados hermanos:

Es de todos conocida la situación que estamos viviendo en nuestra Iglesia Diocesana. Nos encontramos en un momento difícil todos los que formamos parte de ella.

En algunos medios de comunicación y redes sociales se han publicado informaciones falsas, tergiversadas y muchas veces con mala intención contra personas e instituciones de nuestra Iglesia.

El hecho real es éste: Recibí una denuncia contra un sacerdote, por conducta inadecuada. Cumpliendo con mi obligación, he enviado a la Santa Sede la información debida para que se realice el debido proceso,  y también he notificado a la autoridad civil sobre esa misma denuncia, para que investigue y actúe conforme a la ley.

Ante todo esto, les digo a ustedes que estamos buscando la verdad y la justicia, y llegaremos a ellas; mientras tanto, les pido vivir en su significado más profundo lo que resta de la Cuaresma y la muy próxima Semana Santa, con la certeza de que este camino nos lleva a la nueva vida en la resurrección de Jesús.

Tengan esperanza, como yo la tengo, porque “la verdad nos hará libres”.

Además quiero dirigir una palabra:

A las personas que han sido afectadas directa o indirectamente por tan dolorosa situación: les pido perdón de corazón, y ofrezco la ayuda que un servidor y la Diócesis puedan brindarles, rogando a Dios sea Él su refugio y fortaleza.

A mis sacerdotes: los exhorto encarecidamente a un mayor compromiso con su testimonio sacerdotal y a una entrega más generosa, más disciplinada, más transparente, recordando que en los momentos críticos de la Iglesia, Dios ha suscitado grandes santos.

A los seminaristas y sus familias: les pido unidad en torno a la vocación de cada uno, y confianza en que a pesar de los vientos en contra, seguiremos cuidando con más diligencia de su camino vocacional.

A los medios de comunicación: les pido realizar sus labores periodísticas y de investigación con un pleno sentido de ética profesional y tratando de informar objetivamente, teniendo en cuenta que toda persona tiene derecho a su buena fama y es inocente mientras no se demuestre lo contrario. Les ofrezco mi acostumbrada disponibilidad para la realización de su trabajo.

A quienes han manifestado su aversión a la Iglesia: los invito a construir puentes entre nosotros  – siguiendo el ejemplo del Papa Francisco –  y a buscar cómo podemos , juntos, trabajar por el bien de la sociedad.

Confiados en el Señor que nos dice “todo acontece para el bien de los que aman a Dios”, invito a todos a mirar con inmensa esperanza los tiempos que han de venir.

Oremos a Dios con la intercesión de la Virgen María para que nos lleve a encontrar los mejores caminos a todos los que formamos esta porción de su pueblo.

Me despido haciendo mías las palabras del Señor a los suyos: “No temas rebañito mío”(Lc. 12,32)

Su obispo que les acompaña y les bendice.

                                                                                      OMNIA IN CARITATE

                                                                                  

†  Alonso G. Garza Treviño

Primer Obispo de Piedras Negras

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Abuse survivors give voice to thousands

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

MARCH 31, 20174:

Megan Neil
Australian Associated Press

The voices of child sexual abuse victims have been heard and the secrecy shattered.

Now the survivors who have given voice to the suffering of tens of thousands of others during four years of child abuse royal commission public hearings want action.

They want a zero-tolerance approach after child sexual abuse allegations involving more than 4000 Australian institutions.

It is the only approach the community can adopt, 56-year-old abuse survivor Steven Smith says.

“We should never again find ourselves in this situation where generations have been devastated and lives have been lost due to the indifference and self-serving attitudes of institutions in this country,” Mr Smith said on Friday.

“We as a community need to send a clear message to potential offenders and those institutions that would seek to protect them that we will act swiftly and decisively to protect our children and their future.”

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Survival and safety beyond the child abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Editorial

The good work of the royal commission must be translated into good work in every family, community and institution across the nation.

Crimes against children were committed at more than 4000 institutions across the nation, including 1500 with religious allegiances and 900 linked to governments. As the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse began its final week of public hearings, chairman Peter McLellan said it was “remarkable” that this scourge had been so widespread.

Members of the clergy accounted for one-third of the perpetrators revealed during the commission’s four years of investigations. Teachers accounted for one-fifth. The abuses occurred under the watch of trusted adults at public and private schools, detention centres, out of home care, churches, orphanages and government bodies; defence establishments, sporting clubs, after school care, dance and performing arts academies; institutions providing services for children with disability, scouts, health care providers, and a yoga ashram.

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Abuse hearings end: ‘I’m done’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

April 1, 2017

DAN BOX
Crime reporterSydney
@DanBox10

The final witness to give evidence to the child abuse royal commission said he felt “wrung out” after stepping down from the witness box yesterday, four years after the national inquiry began.

Steve Smith, who was sexually abused by an Anglican priest ­between the ages of 10 and 15, wiped away tears as both he and the six commissioners were ­applauded at the end of its 57th and final public hearing.

“I’m done,” Mr Smith said after the hearing. “I’ve been through the criminal justice system. He (the abuser) is dead. I’ve been to the highest legal auth­ority — the royal commission. I gave the last evidence. It’s over.”

Earlier in the day, Mr Smith, who is one of more than 1200 witnesses to give evidence during 400 days of public hearings, thanked the commission “for the opportunity to be able to finally have my voice heard”.

“We should never again find ourselves in this situation where generations have been devastated and lives have been lost due to the indifference and self-serving attitudes of institutions in this country,” he said.

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Royal commission into child sex abuse about restoring faith

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

APRIL 1 2017

Joanne McCarthy

I can only remember four words of a conversation with Justice Peter McClellan after the final day of evidence in Newcastle about the Hunter region’s tragic history of child sexual abuse involving churches.

It was September 8 last year, and we were standing outside Newcastle Courthouse. For more than a month the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard devastating evidence of abuse in the Catholic and Anglican churches, of cover-ups and the appalling treatment of survivors.

I know I thanked Justice McClellan for his public acknowledgement of the Newcastle Herald’s role in the royal commission’s establishment. But what I said is lost in a mist of age, exhaustion and the emotions stirred up by those weeks of public hearings.

I know he referred to the length of time I had written about child sexual abuse, but the exact words are gone. The only reason I know Justice McClellan said something like that is because I remember my three-word response: “You know why.”

We were shaking hands at the time. The late-afternoon traffic trundled or thundered along Hunter Street a few metres away, Justice McClellan’s car was waiting nearby, but for a few seconds it was a club of two members, joined by acknowledging the courage, grief and sadness of other people’s lives. Silence was the only response.

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Priest to give up on claim challenged in archdiocese bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Reuters

By Jim Christie

A Catholic priest who was asked to leave active ministry after a fathering a child said on Wednesday he would not contest the creditors’ committee challenge to his claim in the bankruptcy of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.

Stanley Kozlak’s claim had sought to preserve a 2002 deal with the archdiocese that removed him from the ministry and provided him with monthly disability payments. On Tuesday, the committee filed papers in Bankruptcy Court in Saint Paul calling for a court order that would disallow Kozlak’s claim.

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Suffer the Little Children: Church Cruelty in Ireland

IRELAND
The New York Times

By SADHBH WALSHE
MARCH 30, 2017

TUAM, Ireland — Last year, during the 100th anniversary of the Easter Rising that led to Irish independence, the writer Colm Toibin pointed to the fatal mistake the British made when putting down the rebellion. It was not just the swift execution of the movement’s leaders, which historians often point to as a defining moment, but the burial of their bodies in quicklime without coffins.

“Anyone Irish will understand that whatever you do, don’t do that,” he said, adding that it “mattered in Ireland in a way that it might not have mattered in some other country.”

We have a thing about respecting the dead here, you see, drummed into us in part by the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, Ireland’s self-appointed moral authority. It follows, then, that the discovery of the remains of a number of children up to age 3, in what may have been the sewage tanks of a former home for unwed mothers run by Catholic nuns, should be another “quicklime” moment. Watching this scandal unfold here, though, it’s sadly apparent that the Irish state is not ready to free society from the church’s yoke just yet.

The investigation into suspected abuses in the network of Ireland’s mother and baby homes is only beginning, but some pertinent facts are already known. While death certificates exist for at least 796 children who died in the home in Tuam, in the west of Ireland, in its years of operation from 1925 to 1961, burial records have been found for only two of them. The religious order that ran the home, the Sisters of Bon Secours, received government funding for the children in its care, and death rates were described in an official report as “undesirably high.” (On average, a child died in the home every two weeks.)

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Online abuse more prevalent: Hillsong

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Hillsong Church has reported at least three of its Australian youth leaders for sending inappropriate text messages to children as online abuse becomes more prevalent.

The global Pentecostal movement says it is trying to train its leaders, parents and children on the appropriate use of social media.

Many of the investigations undertaken by its Safe Church Office relate to online matters, Hillsong risk and compliance co-ordinator Kirk Morton says.

‘The reality is that online abuse, whether that is in the form of sexual or otherwise, is becoming more prevalent so it’s an issue that we’re looking to monitor and manage better,’ Mr Morton told the child sex abuse royal commission.

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Brisbane Catholic school removes name of former teacher from building after sex abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
The Courier-Mail

David Murray, The Courier-Mail
March 30, 2017

A LEADING Brisbane Catholic boys’ school has wiped the name of a longstanding former teacher from one of its rowing sheds over sexual abuse allegations.

St Joseph’s College Gregory Terrace advised the school community today that the name of late Brother Charles Lorenzo Dillon had been removed from the school building.

Dillon taught at the school for more than 20 years, from 1950 to 1972, and held numerous senior roles.

Principal Michael Carroll said the decision was made “following the recent receipt of information related to historical abuse allegations” against Dillon.

“I understand this information may be concerning for many past and present Terracians and staff,” Mr Carroll wrote in a letter sent to families and teachers.

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Vatican commission support ‘validates’ resignation – Collins

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Greg Daly
March 30, 2017

Expressions of support for Marie Collins from members of the Vatican’s child protection commission are a “validation” for her position, the former commission member has said.

Mrs Collins stepped down last month from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors after almost three months on the body of which she had been a founder member, saying she had grown frustrated with “resistance” from members of the Vatican bureaucracy, with the last straw being a refusal by members of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to respond to survivors’ letters.

Last weekend the commission expressed support for Mrs Collins, with French child psychiatrist Catherine Bonnet saying, “what Marie has said is the truth. It is more than the voice of a survivor. She has a general view of what is needed.”

Mrs Collins told The Irish Catholic: “It’s simply that there’s been a lot of misinformation put out there from various sources in the Vatican that I don’t really understand how the Vatican works,” adding: “It’s validation for me that the members have come out and said that I was right”.

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‘The damage is catastrophic’: When childhood trauma becomes a life sentence

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

Rachel Browne
30 Mar 2017
.
The damage inflicted by childhood abuse is lifelong and catastrophic but support services for victims are “grossly inadequate”, a royal commission has heard.

Shelly Braieoux told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse she still suffers decades after allegedly being abused in a religious organisation.

“Being a survivor of sexual abuse is like being in a lifelong invisible war,” she said.

“If the scars of sexual abuse were visual I’m sure I would be in a wheelchair with missing limbs and horribly deformed with burns and scars.”

The 45-year-old mother of four has ongoing physical and mental health problems including depression, anxiety and panic attacks.

“Even though we may have physically survived, we have been sentenced to a torturous life sentence full of unnumbered battles,” she said.

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Child sexual abuse royal commission told physical violence ‘the norm’ in many institutions

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Nicole Chettle

Many children’s homes ran on a regime of terror where physical violence was the norm, the royal commission into child sexual abuse has heard.

After three-and-a-half years, the commission’s final public hearing has been held in Sydney.

Vice president of the Care Leavers Australasia Network, Frank Golding, said offenders did not need to groom children who were living in institutions, because victims were readily available.

“Unlike church settings and the like where grooming took place necessarily to identify and isolate a victim, there was no need for grooming in the kinds of big institutions that I grew up in,” he said.

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Survivors demand action as sex abuse royal commission hearings conclude

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Rachel Browne

Three-and-a-half years after the child sex abuse royal commission held its first public inquiry, its final hearing returned to the survivors who started it all.

They had a strong message for governments, institutions and the community: no child should suffer as they did.

Savannah Szoredi told of her hope to break the cycle of abuse, having grown up in a volatile family as a result of her mother being sexually assaulted while in state care.

“She understood the injustices which had happened to her and tried to work her hardest to be the best parent she could be,” Ms Szoredi told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

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‘Spiritual abuse’ from residential schools had deep roots for First Nations

CANADA
The Catholic Register

BY EVAN BOUDREAU, THE CATHOLIC REGISTER
March 31, 2017

Blair Stonechild knows first-hand the devastating effects residential schools had on First Nations spirituality.

He spent nine years at Qu’Appelle Indian Residential School in Lebret, Sask., beginning in 1956.
“As a child I remember the shock of being removed from my family,” said Stonechild.

“One thing that really stands out in my mind was the endless torrent of prayers, Masses and confessions.”

Today, as a professor of indigenous studies at First Nations University of Canada, Stonechild looks back on that dark period of Canadian history as “spiritual abuse,” and its roots go deep.

“As I began to examine the cultural holocaust of residential schools I began to realize that this discounting of indigenous ideology was a phenomenon that started much further back in history and has extremely deep roots,” Stonechild said as he delivered the 2017 Royackers Lecture at Regis College in Toronto on March 22.

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Teacher, choir director accused of sex with student

GEORGIA
Times-Herald

By CLAY NEELY
Mar. 30, 2017

A former teacher and local church choir director was taken into custody after accusations surfaced of a relationship with a student.

Sydney Sewell, 25, faces sexual assault charges stemming from a sexual relationship with a student while serving as chorus teacher at Central High School in Carrollton, according to Carroll County sheriff’s spokesman Deputy Brad Robinson.

Sewell, who also served as choir director at Cornerstone Methodist Church in Newnan, was later released a $5,000 bond and resigned from her position at Central High School.

School officials received a tip March 22 that the 25-year-old Carroll County resident had sexual contact with the 16-year-old male student.

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Pensacola man back in jail, facing multiple child sex abuse charges

FLORIDA
Fox 10

By Asha Staples, Reporter

ESCAMBIA COUNTY, FL (WALA) –
A Pensacola man is in jail again after more alleged victims have come forward with sex abuse allegations.

Charlie Hamrick, 54, was arrest Tuesday and his first court appearance was yesterday.

As a routine courtroom appearance, Hamrick was in court again today as he faces more than three dozen child sex abuse charges in Escambia County. According to police, some of the charges date back as far as the ‘90s.

“Of course it is very difficult for any victim of this type of crime to come forward. It’s a very personal, intimate type of crime but it is very useful for us to ensure that justice is done,” Assistant State Attorney John Molchan said.

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Former students shocked by Escambia County coach’s charges

FLORIDA
WEAR

[with video]

by Jackalyn Kovac
Thursday, March 30th 2017

PENSACOLA, Fla. (WEAR) — At least six more people have come forward claiming former Sunday school teacher, assistant football coach and paramedic, Charlie Hamrick, sexually abused them, according to Escambia County Sheriff’s Office (ECSO).

ECSO said those claims must be investigated, but they continue to ask for any potential victims to come forward.

“Our prevailing hope and wish is that there are no more victims, but looking at the case and looking at the situation we find ourselves in we do not believe that is true. So we are encouraging and urging people that if you have information in these cases or any other cases, if you know there are victims out there, or you’re a victim out there, please give us a call. Because crimes like this can never go unanswered,” said Chief Deputy Chip Simmons.

Hamrick faces more than 40 charges of sexual abuse, including 36 counts of capital sexual battery.

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Judge rejects plea in pastor sex case

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Local News

By Michael Rellahan, Daily Local News
POSTED: 03/31/17

WEST CHESTER >> A proposed plea that would have sent a former youth pastor at a Chester County mega-church to prison for at least two years for allegedly having sex with a teenage parishioner was scuttled when the judge hearing the case refused to accept it, after hearing the victim say she thought the man deserved more time behind bars.

Common Pleas President Judge Jacqueline Carroll Cody Wednesday rejected the plea that had been brought to her by Assistant District Attorney Emily Provencher, the prosecutor handling the case, and defense attorney Evan Kelly of West Chester, representing former pastor Jacob Matthew Malone, who saw the young girl become pregnant with his child.

Cody called the circumstances surrounding the interactions between Malone and the complainant, now 20 and living with her child in Arizona, “way too serious,” according to accounts of the proceeding.

“Given the facts of this case, I’m not going to accept this plea,” Cody said.

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Supporters gear up for showdown over old abuse claims

PENNSYLVANIA
New Castle News

By John Finnerty | CNHI State Reporter

HARRISBURG — With the state House poised to take up legislation to reform the state statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases, supporters are preparing a final push to make the bill cover old sex crimes and not just future abuse.

The state Senate unanimously passed a statute of limitations bill last month that would give victims until the age of 50 to file lawsuits against abusers or their employers if there were allegations of cover-ups.

Under current law, victims have until the age of 30 to sue for old sex crimes. The Senate bill also eliminates the statute of limitations entirely for criminal investigations of child sex abuse.

But controversially, the measure provides no retroactive relief. If the statute of limitations has expired on old child sex cases, the law change doesn’t help those victims seek justice.

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Child’s father is Fr. Robin, shows DNA test result

INDIA
Kaumudi

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: In the Kottiyur sexual abuse case, the DNA test results have come out – it shows that Fr. Robin Wadakkumchery is the father of the 16-year-old victim’s child.

The tests were conducted at State forensic science laboratory in Thiruvananthapuram.

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Judge Sets ‘Occurrence’ Measure For Priest Abuse Cases

MINNESOTA
Law360

By Jeff Sistrunk

Law360, Los Angeles (March 30, 2017, 7:36 PM EDT) — A Minnesota bankruptcy judge held Thursday that each series of abusive acts that a priest inflicted on one victim in a given year is a separate “occurrence” for insurance coverage purposes, ruling in favor of the Diocese of Duluth in its dispute over coverage for sexual abuse claims against local clergy.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert J. Kressel granted partial summary judgment to the diocese, establishing a standard by which to determine the number of occurrences at issue in the coverage case.

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Guam’s Catholic Church faces two more lawsuits

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

4:34 pm today

Two more lawsuits have been filed in Guam by men who say they were sexually abused by a former priest in the 1960s.

The latest complaints bring the number of lawsuits for historical sexual abuse faced by the island’s Catholic Church to 39.

Most of the allegations are against the island’s recused archbishop, Anthony Apuron, and a former priest, Louis Brouillard.

According to the Pacific Daily News, the two latest cases accuse Mr Brouillard – who has admitted abusing children when he was on Guam – of abuse during boy scouts trips in the early 1960s.

One of the cases is seeking US$10 million in damages.

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Fractured parish critical of church process

AUSTRALIA
Tumut and Adelong Times

By Frances Vinall – March 31, 2017

About 100 members of the Tumut community attended a public meeting with the Archbishop of the Canberra-Goulburn Archdiocese, Christopher Prowse, and Archdiocesan Professional Standards Officer Matt Casey, on Sunday at St Mary’s Hall.

The main topic under discussion was former Tumut parish priest Father Brian Hassett, who was moved to Canberra in 2014 after an internal investigation by Mr Casey into allegations of inappropriate behaviour involving children.

The community was given the opportunity to speak, and to ask questions of the Archbishop and Mr Casey about how the whole affair had been handled.

Those who attended spoke primarily in support of Father Brian, with many sharing personal experiences of his “compassion and love,” and also communicating their feelings of hurt and betrayal – not only that he was moved away from Tumut, but also that the local community had been kept in the dark.

As one speaker said, there are many unknowns, and those who spoke let the Archbishop and Mr Casey know the effect the confusion and lack of transparency surrounding Father Brian’s removal had had both on individuals, and the parish.

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The investigation into Father Brian Hassett

AUSTRALIA
Tumut and Adelong Times

[with timeline]

By Frances Vinall – March 31, 2017

Advocates for Father Brian Hasset argue he has been denied procedural fairness and natural justice by an investigation conducted by the Catholic Church into allegations of inappropriate behaviour involving children.

Father Brian was moved to Canberra in 2014 after an investigation on behalf of the Canberra-Goulburn Archdiocese performed by Archdiocesan Professional Standards Officer Matt Casey.

Father Brian was represented by two people during and after the investigation, Reverend John Salvano, his Advocate within the Catholic Church, and independent solicitors employed by W.G. Muddle at the office of McAuley Hawach solicitors, based in Sydney.

A local source has passed the briefs from these parties on to the Tumut and Adelong Times.

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‘They were empty words’: Abuse survivors lose faith in George Pell’s Roman vow

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Melissa Cunningham

For years, Dominic Ridsdale held a secret locked inside him.

The fear his uncle, disgraced paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale, held over him was so entrenched it stopped him disclosing his sexual abuse until 30 years later.

“He told me if I told anyone, I would die,” Dominic said.

“I pushed the pain further and further down until I slid down into a hole and I couldn’t find my way out.”

Dominic battles depression, severe anxiety and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

He was one of thousands of survivors of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy who broke their silence during the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

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How Gloriavale’s leadership structure works

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

[with video]

HENRY COOKE
March 31 2017

There is probably no religious group New Zealanders have seen more of over the last decade than Gloriavale.

The West Coast Christian community has been featured in a series of documentaries and many news reports.

The allegations made against the community by former members have been well covered – the forced marriages, the sexual and physical abuse, the shunning of anyone who leaves, and the complete financial domination of all members.

But through it all only a few actual faces from the 550 to 600 member group have really emerged. In a TVNZ doco we see a lot of young newlyweds Paul Valor and Pearl Hope. In the exposes we hear a lot about the leader Hopeful Christian, who was convicted of sexual abuse in the 90s.

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March 30, 2017

Víctimas de Karadima apelan tras rechazo de demanda civil contra Arzobispado de Santiago

CHILE
Bio Bio

[Fernando Karadima victims appeal after rejection of civil lawsuit against Santiago’s Archbishopric.]

La defensa de las pruebas del presunto encubrimiento de la Iglesia al cura Fernando Karadima, es el principal argumento de la apelación que presentaron las víctimas de abusos sexuales del sacerdote.

El escrito, elaborado por el abogado Juan Pablo Hermosilla, pretende revertir lo resuelto por el ministro de fuero Juan Muñoz Pardo, quien rechazó la demanda por $450 millones interpuesta contra el Arzobispado de Santiago.

El médico James Hamilton, el periodista Juan Carlos Cruz y el presidente de la Fundación para la Confianza, José Andrés Murillo, pretendían ser indemnizados por la presunta “negligencia sistemática e ignorancia deliberada” de las autoridades de la Iglesia Católica.

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Provolo: la Curia italiana fraguó documentos para encubrir al cura pedófilo Corradi

ITALIA
La Izquierda Diario

[Provolo: The Italian curia forged documents to cover up the pedophile priest Nicola Corradi. This week in the Italian city of Verona documents were released that demonstrate the maneuvers of the Italian church leadership (of very close relationship with the Vatican) to try to cover up priests accused by dozens of victims of sexual abuse.]

institute for the deaf Antonio Provolo .

Daniel Satur
@saturnetroc
Jueves 30 de marzo | Edición del día

Esta semana en la ciudad italiana de Verona se hicieron públicos documentos que demuestran las maniobras de la dirigencia eclesiástica italiana (de estrechísima relación con el Vaticano) para intentar encubrir a sacerdotes acusados por decenas de víctimas de abusos sexuales en el instituto para personas sordas Antonio Provolo.

El hecho, además de su carácter de por sí escandaloso, tiene alcances internacionales. Particularmente en Argentina esos documentos presentados en Verona tienen una significación especial, ya que uno de los curas encubiertos es nada menos que Nicola Corradi, el octogenario detenido desde noviembre de 2016 en la cárcel de Luján de Cuyo (Mendoza) que había sido trasladado desde Italia a fines de los años 70 tras ser acusado de delitos sexuales.

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El sacerdote Raúl Villegas es acusado de otros tres casos de abuso sexual

MEXICO
Las Noticias de la Fronte

[Priest Raúl Villegas is accused of three other cases of sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Leon, Guanajuato, Mexico.]

León, Guanajuato.- Otras tres acusaciones por presunto delito de abuso sexual infantil, se sumaron al proceso contra el sacerdote católico Jorge Raúl Villegas Chávez, ex Vocero de la Arquidiócesis de León, Guanajuato,

lo que da un total de cinco denuncias penales. Además las víctimas presentarán una acusación de orden civil por daño contra los directivos del colegio Atenas.

La representante legal de los menores, Dalia Ramírez, y la activista Norma Nolasco dieron a conocer que las últimas tres víctimas evidenciadas son dos varones de 10 y 16 años de edad, respectivamente y una adolescente de 14 años de edad.

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No abusarás // el mandamiento negado en la Iglesia de Francisco

ARGENTINA
YouTube

La Izquierda Diario

Published on Mar 25, 2017

[Reporters expose a system of concealment of sexual abuse by priests in the Argentina Catholic church. The cover-up has involved the Vatican throughout the 20th century and victims have struggled over the years.]

No abusarás” // el mandamiento negado en la Iglesia de Francisco,
expone no sólo los abusos sexuales de sacerdotes de la Iglesia Católica de Argentina, sino también el sistema de encubrimiento diseñado desde el Vaticano a lo largo de todo el siglo XX y la lucha de las víctimas a lo largo de años-incluso décadas-.

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Caso Provolo: iniziano gli interrogatori e l’acquisizione dei documenti.

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

Da circa 20 giorni, iniziano le audizioni delle persone segnalate dall’Associazione Sordi “Antonio Provolo” – Onlus e dalla Rete L’ABUSO.

Come comunicato ai media nei mesi scorsi e ribadito nella conferenza stampa del 27 marzo 2017, tenutasi a Verona, le due associazioni sopra menzionate ed alcune vittime depositano una serie di denunce che fanno riaprire – questa volta presso l’autorità giudiziaria – quello che dopo 11 anni e due indagini da parte della Diocesi di Verona si rivela un vero vaso di Pandora: “il caso Provolo”. Ora, questo nuovo filone non è prescritto.

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