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.

March 22, 2017

Sex-molesting priest forced boy to recite Bible during attacks? Lawsuit settled

CALIFORNIA
MyNewsLA

POSTED BY TONI MCALLISTER ON MARCH 21, 2017

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has settled a lawsuit brought by a 29-year-old man who alleged he was forced to read verses from the Bible while being sexually molested in the 1990s by his head parish priest who has since died.

The alleged abuses affected the plaintiff’s education and he did not graduate from high school, his court papers stated. He also began drinking and taking drugs at age 14 and attempted suicide in 2010, his court papers stated. He has remained sober since March 2014, according to his court papers.

Despite the settlement, the Archdiocese did not confirm the plaintiff’s allegations.

The plaintiff did not tell anyone about the alleged molestation until he was 25 years old and spoke with a therapist in February 2013, when he realized there was a connection between the abuses and the damages he suffered as an adult, his court papers stated. The suit was filed in October 2014 and the settlement papers were filed last week.

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Another catholic school student accused defrocked priest of sexual abuse

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

Jive Kaai is now the 32nd alleged victim to file suit against the Archdiocese of Agana.

Guam – Another sexual abuse lawsuit has been filed against the Archdiocese of Agana, naming, once again, defrocked priest Raymond Cepeda as the alleged perpetrator.

The lawsuit was filed by Jive Lee Kaai, 47, who was a student at the Santa Barbara Catholic School back in the early 1980s./ Kaai alleges that when he was 12 or 13 years old, he and two other school boys were ordered to clean around the campus as punishment but Cepeda had the boys join him in dropping off boxes to the Tumon parish.

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Nativism, Violence, and the Origins of the Paranoid Style

UNITED STATES
Slate

By Mike Mariani

In 1826, the bishop of the Boston diocese, Jean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus, approved the construction of the Ursuline Convent school on a 24-acre property on a hilltop overlooking Boston Harbor. With financing from wealthy Boston families enthusiastic about the prospect of giving their daughters a private education to rival those of affluent boys, a lavish three-story brick house was built on a sprawling estate. But late into the night on Aug. 11, 1834, spurred by rumors that a nun named Elizabeth Harrison was being held at Ursuline against her will, an angry mob of Protestant men laid siege to the school, setting it ablaze with tar barrels. As the school burned to the ground, the nuns and students absconded out a back entrance.

The United States in the 1830s was a time of nativism and deepening anti-Catholic resentment. The country was experiencing a massive influx of Irish immigrants, almost all of whom were Catholic. Protestants in New England and New York became wary, even paranoid, of the threat of the country tipping toward the Roman Catholic Church. Puritanism was one of the driving forces behind the American Revolution just a few decades prior, and Protestants cherished and would aggressively defend its independence from Rome. The idea that “popery” might be seeping into the states, taking a multitude of insidious forms, was a cause for alarm.

Incipient nationalist movements took advantage of this widespread fear, disseminating conspiracy theories suggesting that the Irish were smuggling in a “foreign Catholic menace” that would not only usurp Protestantism but eventually topple American democracy. It was this wave of anti-Catholic bigotry that made something as heinous as the Ursuline school burning possible, as Protestant newspapers and demagogues preyed on people’s suspicions that parochial schools were run by the Vatican. Everyone involved in the convent burning was eventually acquitted of wrongdoing, further underscoring the grip of anti-Catholic sentiment.

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March 21, 2017

Condenan a 15 años de cárcel a sacerdote argentino acusado de abuso de menores

ARGENTINA
24 Horas

[Argentine priest accused of child abuse condemned to 15 years in prison. The Argentine Supreme Court confirmed the sentence to 15 years of jail against the priest Julio César Grassi, 60, for the crime of sexual abuse of minors. In a unanimous decision, the ministers rejected today the appeals presented in the case.]

21 MARZO 2017

La Corte Suprema argentina confirmó la sentencia a 15 años de cárcel contra el sacerdote Julio César Grassi, de 60 años, por el delito de abuso sexual de menores.

En un fallo unánime, los ministros rechazaron hoy los recursos presentados en la causa que tiene como imputado al sacerdote y ex presidente de la Fundación Felices Los Niños del país trasandino

Grassi está acusado como autor reiterado de los delitos de abuso sexual, agravado por resultar sacerdote, encargado de la educación y cuidado del menor-víctima.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Michael D. O’Herlihy

NEW YORK
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Michael D. O’Herlihy was a priest of the Archdiocese of New York, ordained in 1961. Early in his career he assisted at parishes in Livingston Manor, New Brighton, and the Bronx. For most of his career he was a teacher, 1970-1980 at Cardinal Hayes High School and then at Cardinal Spellman High School 1980-1992.

O’Herlihy was placed on an unexplained leave of absence in 1992. In 1993 he was laicized. His name was included in 2002 on a list of New York archdiocesan priests with complaints of child sexual against them. The archdiocese gave the list to the District Attorney; no charges were filed.

In a 2004 lawsuit O’Herlihy was accused of having sexually abused a Cardinal Hayes’ student in 1980. According to the lawsuit, O’Herlihy told the student he had heard that he was being sexually abused by a Catholic youth group leader. When the boy acknowledged the rumor to be true, O’Herlihy allegedly went on to also sexually abuse him, plying the boy with alcohol and pornography. The suit claimed that other Cardinal Hayes students were abused as well.

O’Herlihy was found in 2009 to be teaching at Manhattan Comprehensive Night and Day High School.

Ordained: 1961
Laicized: 1993

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L’évêque de Haute-Loire dans le collimateur de “Cash Investigation”

FRANCE
Zoomdici

[The Bishop of Haute-Loire in the sights of “Cash Investigation”.]

Ce mardi à 21h, l’enquête de Cash Investigation “Pédophilie dans l’Eglise : le poids du silence” sera diffusée sur France 2. Lors de la promotion de l’émission, la journaliste Elise Lucet a sous-entendu que l’évêque du Puy couvrait un homme soupçonné d’actes pédophiles dans son diocèse. L’Eglise dénonce les méthodes de l’émission.

La Haute-Loire a fait une brève irruption dans l’émission “C à Vous” du lundi 20 mars sur France 5. Sur le plateau, alors que les journalistes Elise Lucet et Edwy Plenel font la promotion d’une enquête conjointe sur la pédophilie dans l’Eglise, apparaît le nom de l’évêque du Puy, Mgr Crepy.

Un religieux résidant en Haute-Loire soupçonné d’agression sexuelle

Le chef des catholiques de Haute-Loire dirige également la cellule de lutte contre la pédophilie dans l’Eglise. Il a donc logiquement été interviewé par Elise Lucet. Et, d’après elle, il pourrait couvrir un homme soupçonné d’actes pédophiles dans le diocèse du Puy. La journaliste dévoile une partie de l’interview. “Quand je lui ai dit, à un moment, est-ce que vous pourriez, vous, l’Eglise de France, vous porter partie civile dans le procès de ce prêtre, qui est dans votre diocèse, il ne sait pas quoi répondre. Il dit “non, franchement je ne sais pas, a priori c’est non.””

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Un prêtre soupçonné de pédophilie en Afrique aurait été “exfiltré” au Puy-en-Velay

FRANCE
L’Eveil

[France 2, Cash Investigation presented by Elise Lucet reveals Tuesday evening the presence in Haute-Loire of a priest suspected of pedophilia 20 years ago in Africa.]

L’émission de France 2, Cash Investigation présentée par Elise Lucet, révèle mardi soir la présence en Haute-Loire d’un prêtre soupçonné de pédophilie, il y a 20 ans, en Afrique, et réfugié dans une communauté religieuse du bassin du Puy-en-Velay. Le prêtre aurait depuis quitté les lieux et la Haute-Loire. Une enquête est ouverte par la justice.

Cash Investigation a enquêté en Afrique, en Guinée Conakry, où le frère Albert aurait commis des viols et des agressions sexuelles sur plusieurs enfants, notamment dans un club de football. Les faits remonteraient à une vingtaine d’années. L’émission de télévision a retrouvé un jeune homme qui témoigne de viols et d’agressions pendant six ans.

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Senior Anglicans face child abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Australia’s most senior Anglican will face a royal commission to answer for what the church is doing to prevent a repeat of its “shocking” failure to tackle child sexual abuse.

Primate and Melbourne Archbishop Philip Freier says the church is determined to adopt a uniform national approach to protecting children.

Archbishop Freier says since apologising in 2004 for its child abuse failures, the church has invested a great deal of energy in seeking to understand the nature and cause of its failings and has made improvements in many areas.

“We are not trying to make excuses for failures past or present,” he said on Friday as the child abuse royal commission’s final hearing into the Anglican Church began.

Newcastle Bishop Greg Thompson, who is resigning after being harassed and feeling threatened for being a public face for child abuse victims, has told the inquiry vested interests in the 23 Anglican dioceses are still undermining efforts to get a uniform national response.

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Ontario law firms allegedly sat on documents supporting residential school clients’ abuse claims

CANADA
APTN National News

March 21, 2017

Jorge Barrera
APTN National News

Two Ontario law firms allegedly failed to produce documents in their possession that could have helped their Indian residential school survivor clients during compensation hearings for abuse suffered at a notorious institution known for using an electric chair on students, according to a document filed with an Ontario court.

The two firms—Nelligan O’Brien Payne and Wallbridge, Wallbridge—are named in a request for directions filed with the Superior Court of Ontario as part of ongoing litigation related to the handling of St. Anne’s Indian residential school abuse claims by the Independent Assessment Process (IAP).

The IAP was created by the multi-billion dollar Indian residential school settlement agreement to set compensation payouts for abuse claims.

A hearing on the case is scheduled for Friday in Toronto.

The request for directions, filed by St. Anne’s residential school survivor Edmund Metatawabin and another survivor known as K-10106, seeks to have the court investigate whether the non-disclosure of documents constituted a breach of the settlement agreement. The court action also seeks to compel Ottawa to disclose remaining documents related to previous St. Anne’s related litigation and settle several other matters related to the IAP and the handing of hundreds of abuse claims by survivors of the institution.

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How the church is combatting sexual abuse: an interview with Jesuit Hans Zollner

ROME
America

Gerard O’Connell
March 21, 2017

“The impression that Pope Francis is not hard enough on perpetrators is wrong. The general line of judgment and sentence has not changed,” Hans Zollner, S.J., president of the Centre for Child Protection at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, told America in this interview in which he explains what the pope and the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors (PCPM) are doing to combat child abuse and ensure the protection of children in church institutions worldwide.

There has been much discussion about the need to hold bishops accountable. The PCPM recommended the establishment of a special tribunal to deal with negligence, and gained the pope’s approval. The Vatican announced in June 2015 that this tribunal would be established, but this never happened. Father Zollner explains why.

Pope Francis established the PCPM on March 22, 2014, and appointed Father Zollner as one of its founding members together with Marie Collins—the Irish survivor whose recent resignation from it sent shock waves through the church. In this interview, the German Jesuit not only explains the work the commission is doing to train Vatican officials and bishops’ conferences worldwide about safeguarding children; he also comments on Marie Collins’s resignation.

The following is a slightly edited version of the interview:

Some have alleged that Pope Francis talks a lot about combatting child abuse in the church but is soft on perpetrators. What do you say to such charges?

First of all, the impression that he is not hard enough on perpetrators is wrong. The general line of judgment and sentence has not changed. He has introduced some measures so that even in cases of appeal the decision is reached faster; survivor-victims and the accused know earlier what is the final decision. Contrary to public opinion, the motu proprio “Like a Loving Mother” (June 4, 2016) has an effect, because it clarifies and strengthens procedures that were already there to be fulfilled if needed.

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Kerala Catholic priest arrested for allegedly molesting boy

INDIA
The News Minute

A Kerala Catholic priest was arrested on Tuesday from Madurai, after he managed to escape following charges of molesting a 14-year-old boy.

Catholic priest Thomas Parakulathil, 32, was arrested by the Kerala Police on Tuesday morning from Madurai, after he ran away when the police reached the church in Puthoor during Mass on Sunday, a top official involved in the case told IANS.

“He has now been brought to Kottarakara and the police are doing their job,” said the official on condition of anonymity.

The arrest occurred after the boy along with his parents hailing from the capital city approached the Poovar police last week saying that he was molested by Parakulathil last year.

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Bid to extradite priest from Canada over Fort Augustus abuse claims

SCOTLAND/CANADA
BBC News

By Reevel Alderson
Home affairs correspondent, BBC Scotland

Moves are under way to extradite a retired priest from Canada to Scotland in connection with child abuse claims.

The Crown Office has been granted a petition warrant for the arrest of Father Robert MacKenzie, who lives in Cupar, Saskatchewan.

Fr MacKenzie, 84, taught at the former Fort Augustus Abbey School before moving to Canada in 1988.

Papers are now being prepared in the Crown Office to submit an extradition request to the Canadian authorities.

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Former Wallabies star Tony Daly’s childhood sexual abuse led to drugs, booze, failed marriages and crime

AUSTRALIA
The Daily Telegraph

DANIELLE GUSMAROLI, The Daily Telegraph
March 20, 2017

FORMER Wallabies prop Tony Daly has revealed his ­relentless mission to become a World Cup-winning Aussie rugby star was fuelled by pent-up rage after he was sexually abused as a young boy by a Marist brother at one of Sydney’s most prestigious schools.

The 41-cap Australian front-rower lifted the lid on his abuse as an 11-year-old by a Catholic brother at the elite rugby nursery, St Joseph’s College, after detailing what happened at two assessment interviews with the Royal Commission.

The abuse revelations come as Daly avoided jail yesterday for petty thefts and driving offences — part of a rampage of drug and booze-­fuelled robberies sparked by the demons of shame ­unleashed after his sporting career.

His spiral of self-loathing also included two failed marriages and the FBI frogmarching him off a plane in Los Angeles, after he allegedly stole a wallet and sunglasses from a passenger in 2009.

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‘He robbed me of my innocence and normal life’: Former Wallaby reveals he was ‘sexually abused by a Catholic priest’ at an elite Sydney boys’ school when he was 11 years old

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

By Daniel Peters For Daily Mail Australia

A former Wallaby star has revealed he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest at an elite Sydney boys’ school when he was just 11 years old.

Tony Daly, now 51, represented Australia in 41 test matches as a stocky and gutsy prop – but the horrors of his past tormented him through life after rugby union.

In two interviews with the Royal Commission, Daly detailed the two years of sexual abuse inflicted by a Marist brother while he was a young boy at St Joseph’s College.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Daly said he felt ‘shame for years’ after enduring ‘fondling’ by the priest.

‘This bastard robbed me of my innocence and normal life,’ he told the publication.

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Pédophilie dans l’Eglise : Les quatre révélations de l’émission « Cash investigation » diffusée ce soir

FRANCE
20 Minutes

[Pedophilia in the Church: The four revelations of the program “Cash investigation” broadcast tonight. What is astonishing in this documentary is the silence around the priests faced with accusations of sexual abuse of children.

Mediapart reveals that 25 bishops, including five still in office, methodically covered for 32 years the perpetrators of pedophile acts.

Explanation: the denunciation passes after the law of God. “We have a duty of charity in relation to a brother priest. He must be given a chance to repent and make amends,” said a witness who wished to remain anonymous. In short, the church prefers forgiveness rather than legal action.

Geographical solution: moving the priest away from business. The church has found a way to stifle the scandals: to prevent priests who are guilty of sexual abuse from becoming entangled in legal proceedings. They move them to another diocese where the case is unknown.

The church assures that priests who have committed pedophilic acts no longer work in relation to minors. Cash investigation shows that it is a wishful thinking: Example with Father Didier, sentenced to six years in prison for sexual assaults on ten victims in the 1990s. When the journalists met him, he was still practicing in a parish in Lyon, in the daily contact of faithful of all ages. Same concern for Father Emmanuel, suspected of rape in Bertoua in Cameroon. MOved to Bologna, Italy, he lives in the community of St. John, in the same premises as a children’s theater education course. Priests and apprentice actors under the age of 18 meet in the corridors every day.]

Lucie Bras

Mediapart et la société de production Premières Lignes ont enquêté pendant un an pour comprendre comment l’Eglise française fait face aux affaires de pédophilie de ses prêtres. Silence, secret et mutations à l’autre bout du monde, les journalistes ont décortiqué ces processus grâce à une enquête d’un an. 20 Minutes a eu accès à ce documentaire en avant-première. Voici ce que nous avons retenu de l’émission diffusée ce mardi soir à 21h sur France 2.

La loi de Dieu plutôt que celle des hommes

Ce qui étonne dans ce documentaire, c’est le silence autour des prêtres concernés par des accusations d’abus sexuels sur enfants. Mediapart révèle que 25 évêques, dont cinq toujours en poste, ont méthodiquement couvert pendant des années 32 auteurs d’actes pédophiles.

Explication : la dénonciation passe après la loi de Dieu. « Nous avons un devoir de charité par rapport à un frère prêtre. Il faut lui donner une chance de se repentir et de faire amende honorable », explique un témoin qui a souhaité rester anonyme. En bref, l’Eglise préfère le pardon plutôt que l’action en justice.

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Cash investigation fait son Spotlight et enquête sur la pédophilie dans l’Eglise

FRANCE
Linternaute

[Tonight in Cash Investigation, a study that is reminiscent of Boston Globe journalists’ 2003 report. Elise Lucet’s team joined Mediapart’s journalists to uncover one of secrets of the church in France: pedophilia which undermines religious institutions. You will understand it is a magazine that should make a big noise that you can discover on France 2 from 9pm. In the United States, this Boston case earned a Pulitzer for journalists at the Boston Globe and a film was dedicated to them: Spotlight, Oscar for best movie 2016.]

Ce soir dans Cash Investigation, une enquête qui n’est pas sans rappeler celle qu’avait réalisée les journalistes du Boston Globe en 2003. L’équipe d’Elise Lucet s’est jointe aux journalistes de Mediapart afin de percer à jour un des secrets de l’Eglise en France : la pédophilie qui met à mal les institutions religieuses. Vous l’aurez compris, il s’agit d’un magazine qui devrait faire grand bruit que vous pourrez découvrir sur France 2 dès 21h. Aux Etats-Unis, cette affaire a valu un Pulitzer aux journalistes du Boston Globe et un film leur a été dédié : Spotlight, Oscar du meilleur film 2016.

Résumé de l’émission : Pendant près d’un an, l’équipe d’Elise Lucet, en partenariat avec Mediapart, a travaillé sur l’un des secrets les mieux gardés de l’Eglise de France, le fléau de la pédophilie, qui fait vaciller l’institution. Des religieux, condamnés, seraient toujours en activité, parfois même au contact d’enfants. L’enquête révèle que des hauts responsables de l’Eglise ont couvert certains agissements et protègent des prêtres accusés d’agressions sexuelles sur mineurs en les déplaçant de pays en pays, notamment en Afrique. Cash Investigation a cartographié ces exfiltrations internationales. L’équipe s’est rendue au Vatican, à la rencontre du pape François.

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Le pape François a-t-il tenté de couvrir un prêtre pédophile ?

FRANCE
Le Point

[Pope Francis and Clergy Sexual Abuse in Argentina Including a Database of Publicly Accused Argentine Clerics – BishopAccountability.org]

[Has Pope Francis tried to cover a pedophile priest? An Argentinean judge admits having been pressured by the church to find innocent a priest accused of sexual abuse in 2010 while the pope was archbishop of Buenos Aires. According to Mediapart, while he was still archbishop of Buenos Aires Jorge Bergoglio actively participated in the defense of a famous South American priest who was accused of pedophile acts – Father Grassi. The case was revealed in 2002 by the program Telenoche Investiga and Julio Grassi is accused of assaulting minors of the foundation he created Felices Los Ninos. One of the victims, Gabriel, raped at the age of 15, reports that he has been threatened as a result of his testimony as Father Grassi is considered a real star in Buenos Aires. Father Grassi was finally sentenced to 9 years in prison in 2009. But for the lawyer of the victims, “the pope’s attitude … facilitated Grassi’s impunity”.]

Une enquête menée par Mediapart et Cash Investigation révèle que plusieurs grands noms de l’Église catholique ont couvert ou défendu des prêtres accusés de pédophilie. Alors que l’Église catholique est régulièrement sur la sellette à la suite de différentes affaires de pédophilies découvertes ces dernières années, le Pape François semble faire preuve de la plus grande fermeté sur le sujet. Et pourtant c’est bien lui qui est visé par cette enquête.

Selon Mediapart, alors qu’il était encore archevêque de Buenos Aires, Jorge Bergoglio a activement participé à la défense d’un célèbre prêtre sud-américain, accusé d’actes pédophiles, le père Grassi. L’affaire est révélée en 2002, par l’émission Telenoche Investiga, et Julio Grassi est mis en cause pour agression sur des mineurs de la fondation qu’il a créée Felices Los Ninos. L’une des victimes, Gabriel, violé à l’âge de 15 ans, raconte avoir subi des menaces à la suite de son témoignage, le père Grassi étant considéré comme une véritable star à Buenos Aires. Le père Grassi sera finalement condamné à 9 ans de prison en 2009. Mais, pour l’avocat des victimes, « l’attitude du pape […] a facilité l’impunité de Grassi ».

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French Catholic bishops accused of ‘covering-up sex abuses’

FRANCE
France 24

Twenty-five French bishops have been covering up scores of cases of sexual abuses by Catholic priests, French media revealed on Tuesday in a report reminiscent of the Spotlight investigation into clergy sex abuse.

Investigative reporters from the Mediapart website have identified 32 individuals, including 28 priests, who have been accused of committing sexual abuses from the 1960s up to today.

“Out of these 32 cases, 25 bishops, including five still in place, decided not to report them to judicial authorities after being alerted about these sexual abuses. In total, there are 339 suspected victims, forgotten by the French Church,” writes Mediapart.

‘The mechanics of silence’

Reporters say they have compiled hundreds of documents, press clips, letters, testimonies and judicial reports to back up their claim.

A book about the alleged cover-up, Eglise, la mécanique du silence (“Church, the mechanics of silence”) is going to be released on March 22.

Most of the abusers have subsequently been charged and some of them sentenced over these sex crimes, Mediapart say.

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Pédophilie, l’Église de France dénonce les méthodes de « Cash investigation »

FRANCE
La Croix

[Pedophilia, the Church of France denounces the methods of “Cash investigation”.]

Recueilli par Marie Malzac, le 20/03/2017

ENTRETIEN – À la veille de la diffusion de l’émission « Cash investigation » sur la pédophilie dans l’Église, mardi 21 mars, Vincent Neymon, porte-parole adjoint de la Conférence des évêques de France, explique à La Croix son refus de participer au débat qui suivra le documentaire, comme annoncé dans un communiqué.

La Croix : Comment la Conférence des évêques de France (CEF) a-t-elle été sollicitée par l’équipe de « Cash investigation » pour cette enquête ?

Vincent Neymon : Nous avons eu des échanges avec Élise Lucet et son équipe dès le mois d’octobre 2016, quelques semaines avant l’Assemblée plénière des évêques de novembre à Lourdes. Ils ont menacé de venir sous le nom d’un autre média si nous refusions de les accréditer, ce que nous avons perçu comme une sorte de chantage. Nous avons toutefois décidé de jouer le jeu médiatique. Nous avons correspondu avec Martin Boudot, le réalisateur du documentaire, qui a demandé de nombreuses précisions, que nous avons essayé de fournir.

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La réponse de « Cash investigation » à l’Église de France

FRANCE
La Croix

[Following an interview with La Croix by Vincent Neymon, deputy spokesman of the French Bishops’ Conference, explaining his refusal to participate in the debate that will follow the documentary on the pedophilia of “Cash investigation” broadcast Tuesday, March 21, The editor of the show, Emmanuel Gagnier reacts. Here is their release.]

À la suite de l’interview à La Croix de Vincent Neymon, porte-parole adjoint de la Conférence des évêques de France, expliquant son refus de participer au débat qui suivra le documentaire sur la pédophilie de « Cash investigation » diffusé mardi 21 mars, le rédacteur en chef de l’émission, Emmanuel Gagnier réagit. Voici leur communiqué.

« Nous découvrons avec surprise les déclarations de Vincent Neymon, porte-parole adjoint et directeur de la communication de la Conférence des évêques de France dans les colonnes de La Croix.

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France: 25 évêques accusés d’avoir ‘couvert’ des abus sexuels

FRANCE
Kath.ch (Suisse)

[The French Catholic Church finds itself once again at the heart of revelations concerning cases of pedophilia. Since the 1960s no fewer than 25 bishops have ignored sexual assaults committed by their priests,reports a survey of the Mediapart website and TV Cash Investigation magazine . The Conference of French Bishops (CEF) denounces breaches of journalistic ethics of the program.]

21.03.2017 par Maurice Page

L’Eglise catholique française se retrouve une nouvelle fois au coeur de révélations concernant des affaires de pédophilie. Depuis les années 1960, pas moins de 25 évêques auraient passé sous silence les agressions sexuelles commises par leurs prêtres, préférant les ‘exfiltrer’ de leur diocèse, rapporte une enquête du site Mediapart et du magazine TV Cash Investigation. La Conférence des évêques de France(CEF) dénonce des manquements à la déontologie journalistique de l’émission.

Les chiffres publiés attestent de la gravité du scandale: depuis les années 1960, 25 évêques, dont cinq sont toujours en exercice, auraient ‘couvert’ les abus commis par 32 prêtres sur 339 victimes dans 17 diocèses en France, mais aussi au Canada, en Suisse et en Guinée-Conakry. Parmi les victimes recensées, 288 étaient mineures au moment des faits. 165 seulement ont été entendues par la justice. La moitié des prêtres auraient commis leurs agressions après l’an 2000.

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Abus sexuels dans l’Église catholique : “On va maintenant arrêter de nier cet

FRANCE
Franceinfo

[After the investigations of Mediapart and Cash Investigation on the extent of pedophile affairs in the Church of France, the president of the association La Parole Liberee, François Devaux, reacted Tuesday March 21 on franceinfo. He was surprised at the extent of these revelations about abuse and cover-up in the Catholic church. His association had previously denounced the sexual assaults committed by Father Preynat in Lyon.]

Après les enquêtes de Mediapart et Cash Investigation sur l’ampleur des affaires de pédophilie dans l’Eglise de France, le président de l’association La Parole libérée, François Devaux, réagit mardi 21 mars sur franceinfo. Il se dit surpris de l’ampleur de ces révélations. Son association avait dénoncé les agressions sexuelles commises par le père Preynat à Lyon.

franceinfo : Comment avez-vous réagi face à ces nouvelles révélations de Mediapart et de Cash Investigation ?

François Devaux : On pensait pas du tout que cela prendrait cette ampleur, mais on s’est vite rendu compte qu’il y avait de profonds dysfonctionnements. Cela fait un an et demi qu’on a mis en péril beaucoup de nos équilibres personnels pour faire ces révélations. On est très content que des équipes professionnelles aient pu consacrer autant de temps et d’énergie pour plébisciter notre action qui vise à remettre un peu de conscience morale au sein de notre société. Car cela restera quand même un des grands fléau de notre civilisation et de l’histoire de France.

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Mgr Jean-Luc Bouilleret sera demain soir l’invité du 19/20

FRANCE
Franceinfo

[The archbishop of Besançon who is challenged by Mediapart will speak Wednesday, March 22 after the broadcast of the program “Cash Investigation” which denounces the silence of the church during cases of sexual assaults committed by priests.]

Par Sophie Courageot
Publié le 21/03/2017

Selon une enquête de Médiapart, 25 évêques français, dont cinq sont toujours en poste, ont couvert pendant des années 32 prêtres auteurs d’abus sexuels sans que la justice en soit informée. Parmi eux est cité Mgr Jean-Luc Bouilleret aujourd’hui en poste à Besançon.

L’émission Cash Investigation diffusée ce mardi 21 mars à 21h50 sur France 2 se penchera sur le silence de l’église.

La conférence des évêques de France (CEF) n’a pas souhaité faire de commentaires avant la diffusion de l’émission. Elle n’y participera pas.

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Pédophilie : “Cash Investigation” pointe les silences accablants de l’Eglise

FRANCE
Franceinfo

[France 2, “Cash Investigation” returns Tuesday night on the pedophilia cases that shook the Church of France, notably the Diocese of Lyon.]

L’émission de France 2, “Cash investigation” revient mardi soir sur les affaires de pédophilie qui ont ébranlé l’Eglise de France, notamment le diocèse de Lyon. Le reportage d’Elise Lucet a été réalisé avec 3 journalistes indépendants qui ont enquêté sur “les agresseurs couverts par l’Eglise”
Par Ph.Bette avec l’AFP et Mediapart

Publié le 21/03/2017

L’émission de France 2 diffuse à 20h55 un film documentaire de Mathieu Boudot intitulé “Pédophilie dans l’Eglise : le poids du silence”. On y voit notamment Elise Lucet interpeller en chemin le cardinal Barbarin sur les affaires de pédophilie qui ont secoué le diocèse de Lyon et qui lui ont valu d’être entendu par la police. Le dossier a été classé sans suite par la justice.

“Cash investigation” révéle pourtant que dans le diocèse de Lyon, “des prêtres condamnés pour des actes pédophiles sont toujours en poste. Comme père Didier, reconnu coupbale d’agressions sexuelles sur dix victimes”

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VIDEO. “Cash Investigation”. Pédophilie : Elise Lucet à la rencontre du pape

FRANCE
Franceinfo

[Pope Francis and Clergy Sexual Abuse in Argentina Including a Database of Publicly Accused Argentine Clerics – BishopAccountability.org]

In 2010, Pope Francis, then archbishop of Buenos Aires, tried to help a priest condemned for pedophilia. The case of Fr Julio Grassi caused an enormous scandal in Argentina, the birthplace of the sovereign pontiff.]

En 2010, le pape François, alors archevêque de Buenos Aires, aurait tenté de faire innocenter un prêtre condamné pour pédophilie. L’affaire du père Julio Grassi a provoqué un énorme scandale en Argentine, pays natal du souverain pontife… Elise Lucet attend ce dernier place Saint-Pierre, à Rome, pour lui poser des questions. Un extrait du magazine “Cash Investigation” diffusé le 21 mars.

“Cela n’est jamais arrivé dans mon diocèse”, dit le pape François à la page 64 de son livre d’entretien Sur la terre comme au ciel (Robert Laffont) à propos des prêtres pédophiles. Est-ce la stricte vérité ?

Dans son pays natal, l’Argentine, le pape est très critiqué pour sa gestion du cas d’un prêtre condamné pour pédophilie. En 2010, archevêque de Buenos Aires, il aurait tenté de faire innocenter un homme d’Eglise. C’est l’affaire du père Julio Grassi, le plus grand scandale de pédophilie dans l’Eglise en Argentine.

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Kinderschützer: Mehr Missbrauch an Säuglingen

ITALIEN
Katholisch

[The sexual abuse of infants and small children is growing according to the Italian child protection association “Meter”. The association, founded by the Sicilian priest Don Fortunato Di Noto, published its annual report on pedophilia and pedophilia on the internet.]

Der sexuelle Missbrauch an Säuglingen und Kleinkindern wächst nach Angaben der italienischen Kinderschutz-Vereinigung “Meter”. Die vom sizilianischen Priester Don Fortunato Di Noto gegründete Vereinigung veröffentlichte am Montag ihren Jahresbericht mit Dokumentationen über Pädophilie und Pädopornografie im Internet, wie der katholische Nachrichtendienst SIR berichtete. 2016 habe “Meter” den Behörden knapp 9.400 URLs gemeldet, mehr als 200.000 Videos (76.000 im Vorjahr) und knapp 2 Millionen Fotos (2015: 1,1 Millionen Fotos) identifiziert. Davon hätten sich 9.900 Fotos und 2.900 Videos auf Kleinkinder im Alter von 0 bis 3 bezogen, heißt es in dem Bericht.

“Es gibt wirklich einen immens hohen Prozentsatz an Neugeborenen. Das geht so weit, dass sogar ein Portal eingerichtet worden ist, das Neugeborenen gewidmet ist und in dem Material hochgeladen wird, das abscheulichste Missbrauchsvergehen zeigt,” sagte Di Noto Radio Vatikan. Dieses Material stamme aus der ganzen Welt und somit lasse sich das Problem nicht auf eine Nation oder einen Ort einschränken, so der Geistliche aus Avola bei Syrakus. Das Material werde durch Einzeltäter, aber vermehrt auch durch kriminelle Vereinigungen und Gruppen produziert.

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De nouvelles accusations d’abus sexuels dans l’Eglise

FRANCE
Le Monde

[New accusations of sexual abuse in the church. Mediapart and the “Cash Investigation” program, which will air Tuesday night say that 25 bishops have covered 32 sexual assailants.]

Après la mise en cause du cardinal Barbarin à Lyon, la gestion par l’Eglise catholique de prêtres mis en cause pour des actes de pédophilie est l’objet de nouvelles accusations, en France et jusqu’au Vatican.

Avec moins de 0,5 % de prêtres accusés d’abus sexuels sur mineurs, la France semble moins touchée que les Etats-Unis, où les accusations de pédophilie ont visé 4 % des prêtres entre 1950 et 2002, et que l’Australie, où ces soupçons en ont concerné 7 % entre 1950 et 2010.

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Bischöfe verweigern Fernsehdebatte zu Missbrauch

FRANKREICH
Katholisch

[Members of the French Bishops’ Conference have refused to participate in a TV debate on clergy abuse. A Cash Investigation TV program revealed that 25 French bishops are known to have covered-up abuse.]

Die Französische Bischofskonferenz nimmt nicht an einer Fernsehdebatte zum Thema Missbrauch am Dienstagabend teil. Grund für die Verweigerung seien die Interviewmethoden, die die Journalisten für eine Fernsehsendung zum Missbrauch in der Kirche an den Tag gelegt hätten, teilte die Bischofskonferenz am Montag in Paris mit. Die Journalisten respektierten ethische Standards nicht und die Sendung beschäftige sich mehr mit Anschuldigungen als dem Willen zur Erklärung, heißt es in der Pressemitteilung der Bischofskonferenz.

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WA boys accused of sex abuse not at school

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Two West Australian boys who allegedly sexually abused a nine-year-old boy are no longer attending school while the education minister looks into options for continuing their learning.

The mother of the boy has expressed outrage his alleged abusers, aged 12 and 17, have been allowed to continue going to school, although it is not the same school her son attends.

New Education Minister Sue Ellery agreed it was unacceptable.

“There are ways to provide those children with an education outside the school environment,” she told 6PR radio on Tuesday.

Ms Ellery said the two boys did not attend a public school so she would discuss the case with non-government school providers and would also look at protocols for addressing such situations in future.

Catholic Education WA said it did not comment publicly on matters regarding individual students, in the interests of child safety and child protection.

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Nottingham hosts child sexual exploitation event

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

Nottingham is set to host the country’s biggest ever event to tackle child sexual exploitation today.

The current head of the national Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, Professor Alexis Jay will address social services, the police and community groups at the two-day conference hosted by East Midlands based charity NWG.

It comes after the group were backed with over £1.24million of Government money enabling them to double their staff and launch the national child sexual exploitation response unit to support those who come across child sexual exploitation.

The charity’s chief executive, Sheila Taylor MBE, who was a key participant in a Downing Street child sexual exploitation summit and has previously helped Derbyshire police track down and convict two gangs of paedophiles, said:

“It’s great to see so many people coming together to help tackle this horrendous crime but of course we’d like so many more to join with us and access support. In order to end the suffering of children we all have a part to play – we need to encourage people to speak out and we want to bring these issues out into the open. We want the world to unite against child sexual exploitation and we aim to highlight the issues surrounding CSE; encouraging everyone to think, spot and speak out against abuse and adopt a zero tolerance to adults developing inappropriate relationships with children.”

– SHEILA TAYLOR MBE.

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Latest sex abuse lawsuit details abuse during retreat at Cocos Island

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

The alleged victim said he was punished for bringing food to the retreat that was held at Cocos Island back in 1986.

Guam – In the latest sex abuse lawsuit filed against the church, a former confirmation class student says defrocked priest Raymond Cepeda sexually assaulted him during a weekend retreat at Cocos Island as a form of punishment.

The complaint, filed by 45-year-old James Mafnas, states that when Mafnas was 15 years old and a student of confirmation classes at the Barrigada parish, students were required to go on a retreat to Cocos Island as a requirement for confirmation class.

Mafnas says students were told not to bring food with them and that they were required to purchase food from a resort at Cocos Island. But Mafnas said his family couldn’t afford to purchase food at Cocos Island so Mafnas secretly packed some food with him to the retreat. When he got caught, Mafnas says he was sent to Cepeda’s bungalow. At the time, Cepeda was the parish priest of the Barrigada church.

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Northeast Michigan Priest Pleads Not Guilty in Sexual Assault Case

MICHIGAN
WBKB

The Presque Isle County Courthouse was a full courtroom today, as the Obwaka case continued.

Residents from all over the county were present in the courtroom for Reverend Sylvester Obwaka’s arraignment hearing. The former Saint Ignatius priest is being accused of assaulting a 28–year–old male, in February of this year.

We later learned that the victim is also a priest. Last week, the victim testified in court claiming that he was assaulted while sleeping at the reverend’s home. Today in court, Obwaka pleaded not guilty to all charges.

“We have reviewed the charges in reading…He entered a plea of ‘not guilty on all accounts,” Honorable Scott L. Pavlich stated during Monday’s hearing.

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City stalls on probe into secular education at Hasidic schools

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Yoav Gonen March 20, 2017

City officials are dragging their heels on a politically-sensitive probe of whether Hasidic schools provide their students with a secular education, advocates charge.

The Department of Education launched a probe more than 18 months ago after advocates submitted a list of dozens of Orthodox Jewish schools that provide little or no English, math, social studies or science — most notably for boys in yeshivas.

But advocates say the probe is moving at a snail’s pace because Mayor de Blasio fears riling the powerful Hasidic community.

“There’s really no explanation to why the mayor would turn a blind eye other than the fear of upsetting this powerful bloc vote led by these powerful [Jewish] lobbyist groups,” Naftuli Moster, founder of the group Yaffed, told The Post.

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Man sues Tusla to get information on sister in Tuam home

IRELAND
Irish Times

Aodhan O’Faolain

A Co Galway man seeking information about his infant sister who may have died in the Tuam mother and baby home has secured leave from the High Court to bring an action against Tusla.

Peter Mulryan’s sister Marian Bridget Mulryan is believed to be among the 796 children recorded as having died in the home.

He brought proceedings against Tusla, the child and family agency, in order to get any information that may exist about her.

Tusla says it has provided all information it is aware of and has also offered to allow Mr Mulryan, of Derrymullen, Ballinasloe, to inspect materials in its possession concerning the Tuam home.

Previously, the court heard Mr Mulryan went with his mother to the Tuam home just days after his birth in July 1944. His mother later appeared to have gone to a Magdalene institution and he was “boarded out” at the age of four.

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Mother and baby home truth probe set to be rejected

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

By Juno McEnroe
Political Correspondent

The Government is set to oppose an opposition motion this week advocating a truth commission to investigate mother and baby homes.

TDs will this evening debate Sinn Féin proposals for a truth commission, modelled on those of other countries, that would hear from survivors groups.

The motion proposes allowing such an inquiry “unfettered” access to documentation. It would also examine how people were treated in Magdalene laundries and industrial schools and allow for public or private hearings.

All mother and baby home sites would come under its remit and the inquiry would consider the State’s role in placing people there and in other institutions.

The motion, led by Cork TD Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire, is expected to be opposed by Government.

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There was nothing good: An open Letter to Canadian Senator Lynn Beyak

CANADA
Anglican Church of Canada

Dear Senator Beyak:

Not only in the Red Chamber on Parliament Hill, but across the country, many people – both Indigenous and non-Indigenous – were dismayed by your remarks. You said “I was disappointed in the TRC’s Report and that it didn’t focus on the good,” associated with Residential Schools. Had you, Senator, made these remarks within a discussion of the TRC’s Report, your comments might have been less shocking.

Senator Beyak, you are quite right in saying that for a small minority of survivors, their personal experiences of Residential School were “good”. But in much greater numbers, the personal experiences of children who were housed in those schools were “bad” – very bad in fact. One only needs to have attended a local, regional or national event hosted by Canada’s Truth & Reconciliation Commission to know this. The Commissioners listened to the personal stories of thousands of students – of survivors – all of which bore witness to the horrific experience they had.

There are hundreds of students who went to Residential Schools administered by the Anglican Church of Canada (ACC). They have told their stories at our church’s National Native Convocation and at Sacred Circle Gatherings. We have been rendered speechless by what we heard. We have hung our heads in shame and raised them with remorse over the pain our church inflicted upon those children.

There was nothing good about a federal government policy of forcibly removing children “from their evil surroundings”, housing them in schools with the intent of “killing the Indian in the child…and turning them into a civilized adult”. It was an attempt at cultural genocide, an attempt whose failure bears witness to the courage and resilience of those children and their communities. As elder Barney Williams of the Survivors’ Society has so often said, “We were all brave children.”

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‘Nothing good’ about residential schools, Anglican leaders tell Senator Beyak

CANADA
Anglican Journal

BY ANDRÉ FORGET ON MARCH, 20 2017

Canadian Anglican leaders have upbraided Conservative Senator Lynn Beyak for her assertion that the report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was overly negative in its representation of the Indian Residential Schools system.

In an open letter published March 20, Archbishop Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, National Indigenous Anglican Bishop Mark MacDonald and General Secretary Archdeacon Michael Thompson said they were “dismayed” by Beyak’s comments, and stated there was “nothing good” about the residential schools system.

In a March 7 speech to the senate, Beyak had criticized the TRC for letting the negative aspects of the Indian Residential Schools system—which its report concluded constituted “cultural genocide”—overshadow the “good deeds” of “well-intentioned” teachers.

Beyak made similar remarks during a recent meeting of the Senate’s Aboriginal People’s committee (of which she is a member), saying she was disappointed the TRC’s report “didn’t focus on the good” done by Christian teachers.

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Senator Beyak agrees to meet residential school survivors … in the summer

CANADA
APTN National News

March 20, 2017

Willow Fiddler
APTN National News

Senator Lynn Beyak says she will meet with leaders and residential school survivors this summer to discuss their “very real” concerns.

Beyak was invited to meet with a Truth and Reconciliation committee from Sioux Lookout after she made comments about residential schools in the Senate almost two weeks ago. The committee, created last year by the municipality in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s calls to action, said the senator’s remarks hinders healing and relationship building.

Garnet Angeconeb, a residential school survivor who sits on the committee, said he was disappointed and surprised to hear Beyak’s comments which included stating that the remarkable works and good deeds of residential schools are often overshadowed by the negative reports and mistakes.

“We’ve been talking about the issue for so long now, over the last 20 years and there’s been some really high level processes in this country that have done good work to address this issue,” said Angeconeb last week in response to the comments. “So those kinds of views and comments coming from somebody at that level is why I was disappointed and quite frankly surprised.”

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Our view: Erie bishop’s openness a good start

PENNSYLVANIA
GoErie

By the Editorial Board

Transparency, accountability and checks and balances of power are woven into American identity. Not so the Catholic Church, which only began its slow, welcome and necessary pivot to the modern world with the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.

So it is encouraging news that Bishop Lawrence Persico of the Catholic Diocese of Erie has not only been following abuse-reporting protocols instituted following the emergence of the global clergy child sex abuse scandal in 2002, but is pushing beyond them to improve transparency, as detailed by Erie Times-News reporter Ed Palattella.

Bishops and other church officials are now required by the church and the law to immediately report child sex abuse allegations to police and other authorities.

Persico is going beyond that to make public the names of disciplined or defrocked clergy. From now on, he will publicize the names of priests who have been dismissed permanently from the priesthood by the pope for disciplinary reasons or removed from active clerical duty for reasons related to serious wrongdoing.

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‘There was nothing good’: Anglican church disputes Senator’s claim that residential schools contained ‘good’

CANADA
National Post

Tristin Hopper | March 20, 2017

In response to Senator Lynn Beyak’s assertion that Canadians ignore the “abundance of good” that happened in residential schools, one of the system’s primary operators issued a statement Monday saying “there was nothing good.”

“There was nothing good about children going missing and no report being filed. There was nothing good about burying children in unmarked graves far from their ancestral homes,” reads a statement co-signed by the Most Rev. Fred Hiltz, archbishop of the Anglican Church of Canada.

Although the majority of Canada’s residential schools were operated by Roman Catholic dioceses, about a third fell under the purview of Anglican organizations.

“There are hundreds of students who went to Residential Schools administered by the Anglican Church of Canada … we have hung our heads in shame and raised them with remorse over the pain our church inflicted upon those children,” said Monday’s statement, which detailed the various abuses of the system that were “nothing less than crimes against humanity.”

“We cannot speak about the Residential Schools without acknowledging these truths.”

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Man sexually assaulted teen at church function: DA

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Eric Veronikis | everonikis@pennlive.com

The Berks County District Attorney’s office has filed statutory sexual assault charges against a man who is accused of sexually assaulting a 15-year-old girl during a church function in Sinking Spring more than 10 years ago.

Police filed charges against Jonathan Scott Buchanan, 34, Thursday.

In October, detectives within the DA’s office launched an investigation after receiving a sexual assault complaint left on an abuse hotline and a report filed with the Berks County Department of Children and Youth Services.

Detectives learned that a 15-year-old girl was sexually assaulted in October of 2006, as she participated in a show production put on by her church, the DA’s office said.

Buchanan, who was about 25-years-old at the time, assisted with a dress rehearsal the day the incidents occurred, according to the DA.

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Texas Supreme Court Addresses The Causation Requirement For A Breach Of Fiduciary Duty Claim And Conspiracy, Aiding And Abetting Breach Of Fiduciary Duty, And Joint Venture Theories

TEXAS
JD Supra Business Advisor

3/20/2017
by David Fowler Johnson | Winstead PC

In First United Pentecostal Church of Beaumont v. Parker, a church hired an attorney to defend it against sexual abuse allegations. 2017 Tex. LEXIS 295 (Tex. March 17, 2017). During the same time, the church also engaged the attorney to assist in a hurricane/insurance claim. When the insurance company offered to pay over $1 million to settle the claim, the attorney generously suggested that the church leave those funds in the attorney’s trust account to assist with creditor protection. The attorney then withdrew those funds in 2008 and used them for his personal expenses and the expenses of his firm. The attorney had a contract attorney working with his firm. The contract attorney did not know about the improper use of the money at the time that it was done. Rather, he learned about it in 2010, but failed to disclose that information to the client. Eventually, the contract attorney did disclose the information and sent a letter wherein he repented and admitted to breaching his fiduciary duty. The original attorney fled to Arkansas, but was later caught. He pled guilty to misappropriation of fiduciary property and received a fifteen-year sentence.

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‘Nothing good’ about residential school system, Anglican Church tells Senator Beyak

CANADA
CBC News

By John Paul Tasker, CBC News Posted: Mar 20, 2017

Leaders of the Anglican Church of Canada have penned a strongly worded letter to Lynn Beyak, the Conservative senator who recently mounted a defence of the Indian residential school system, to denounce her remarks and take ownership of the atrocities committed in the church-run schools.

In a letter sent Monday, church leaders said they were “dismayed” that Beyak would try and shed a positive light on the system, telling her, rather, “the overall view is grim. It is shadowed and dark; it is sad and shameful.”

“Senator Beyak, you are quite right in saying that for a small minority of survivors, their personal experiences of residential school were ‘good.’ But in much greater numbers, the personal experiences of children who were housed in those schools were ‘bad — very bad in fact,” the letter, written by the Most Rev. Fred Hiltz, the archbishop and primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, the Right Rev. Mark MacDonald, the national Indigenous Anglican bishop, and the church’s general secretary, Michael Thompson, said.

The church leaders note children were forcibly removed from their homes, subjected to exacting punishment for speaking their native tongues and were subjected to “rampant” physical, sexual and mental abuse.

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Salvation Army facing lawsuit after girls claim sexual abuse in West Ashley

SOUTH CAROLINA
Live 5

[with video]

WEST ASHLEY, SC (WCSC) –
The Salvation Army is facing a lawsuit after two girls claim they were sexually abused for years while attending Sunday School at the Salvation Army’s West Ashley location on Highway 61.

According to the McLeod Law Group, the Salvation Army hired a known sexual predator.

The lawsuit names Armando Gonzalez, who according to jail records, was arrested in December 2015 for criminal sexual conduct with a minor under 11 in connection to the assaults.

Lawyers say the Salvation Army did not take any steps to protect the victims entrusted in its care and supervision.

The lawsuit claims the girls were sexually assaulted over five years starting at the age of 4.

According to lawyers, when one of the victims reported the abuse in October of 2015, Gonzalez confessed to years of sexual abuse at The Salvation Army and was subsequently charged and arrested.

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With an unexpected phone call, a former student reveals alleged abuse

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

Alexandra Back

It was the morning of June 20, 2012, and the phone call, from a former Daramalan College student to the headmaster at Marist College Canberra, came out of the blue.

The headmaster, Richard Sidorko, had been the former student’s boarding master at an interstate school in the 1980s, and they had come to know each other quite well during that time.

The conversation that day had moved from general chat chat, to talk about another former student, who had recently died. The student then asked the headmaster about a sexual abuse case at Marist College, which had been generating attention.

“He then said, ‘you know, I’ve been abused too’,” Mr Sidorko told the ACT Supreme Court on Tuesday, at the trial of the student’s alleged abuser. “My response was surprised, but not surprised.

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Cairns MP Rob Pyne lashes out at the Church in Parliament while introducing bill on reporting abuse

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Leader

March 21, 2017

By Mark Bowling

INDEPENDENT Member for Cairns Rob Pyne has attacked the Catholic Church as “a law unto itself” as he introduced a private member’s bill dealing with child abuse into Queensland Parliament.

The bill would legally require priests and other ministers of religion to report cases of abuse.
Mr Pyne said if a member of the clergy had knowledge of a crime, they should be obliged to report it.

“Child abuse is even more damaging when the offender holds a position of trust. Abuse by ministers of religion is a life-scarring betrayal,” Mr Pyne tweeted on Tuesday March 20, the day before he tabled his bill.

Mr Pyne’s bill would make it mandatory for religious ministers to report abuse, including child sexual abuse, to the Department of Child Safety.

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‘Witch’ Fletcher has no authority: bishop

AUSTRALIA
Deniliquin Pastoral Times

A legally-blind, self-described “witch” who abused two teenage girls will never have authority in the alternative Catholic church he attends, the church leader says.

Robin Fletcher was jailed in 1998 for using hypnotism and mind-altering techniques to prostitute two 15-year-old girls, while working as a drug abuse and sexual guidance youth counsellor.

He was released in 2006, but lived under supervision orders for the next decade before a court this month allowed him to roam freely.

Australian Church of Antioch Archbishop Frank Bugge says he has known Fletcher for more than 30 years and allows “the very well qualified” man to teach theology once a month.

Fletcher also attends mass each Sunday at the Alphington church – a three-minute walk from a children’s playground – but the archbishop strongly disputed any notion the convicted sex offender preaches or holds authority.

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Sister Maureen | It’s time for diocese to put victims first

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Sister Maureen
www.catholicwhistleblowers.org

For decades, the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown has covered up the sexual abuse of children while transferring errant priests from parish to parish, place to place, year after year. In this, it is not unlike other dioceses in Pennsylvania, including the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Three grand juries investigated the Philadelphia archdiocese, resulting in the release of scathing grand jury reports in 2005 and 2011.

Now, a year after the 2016 release of an equally scathing grand jury report on the Altoona-Johnstown diocese, an “independent oversight board” is being created to “protect diocese children from sexual abuse in the church.”

Had it not been for that grand jury report, the cover-up would likely have continued as business as usual in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese as it has in many states across the country.

Keep in mind that the Altoona-Johnstown Memorandum of Understanding is just that, a memorandum, an agreement between Bishop Mark Bartchak and acting U.S. Attorney Soo Song. It has no power in law.

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Diocesan autonomy slows Anglican standards

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

MARCH 21, 2017

By Rebekah Ison
Australian Associated Press

A persistent culture of independence within Anglican dioceses is delaying a long-awaited misconduct regime that would deal with allegations of child sexual abuse, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Response to Child Sexual Abuse on Tuesday heard there still isn’t a consistent national approach to professional standards 13 years after the church’s General Synod enacted a model ordinance on the issue in 2004.

Data released at the start of the hearing revealed 82 people who made complaints to the church were first abused as children between 2000 and 2015.

Commissioner Robert Fitzgerald on Tuesday said it was “almost inexplicable” to outsiders that the church had not put aside “relatively minor differences” to arrive at a common approach to professional standards.

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‘Profound disappointment’: Anglican dioceses fail to agree on sex abuse policy

AUSTRALIA
Camden Courier

Rachel Browne
21 Mar 2017

The Anglican church has failed to achieve a nationally consistent approach to child sexual abuse due to lack of consensus between its 23 dioceses, a royal commission has heard.

The inquiry into how the church has responded to child sexual abuse was told a national body was established to develop child protection standards that were enacted by the general synod in 2004.

Not all dioceses have adopted the Professional Standards Commission’s models or have only partially implemented them over the past 13 years, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard.

Garth Blake SC, a Sydney barrister and chairman of the church’s Professional Standards Commission, told the hearing the inaction left him “deeply” troubled.

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The bane of Mansion Murphy

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Kevin Cullen GLOBE STAFF MARCH 20, 2017

The only way you got Breslin out of New York was at gunpoint or with a good story.

Jimmy Breslin, who died Sunday, was the best newspaper columnist in the world and he was the first one to tell you that. But he would also tell you he had good material, and it was almost always in New York. …

Breslin spent some time in Boston researching his 2004 book about the coverup of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, “The Church That Forgot Jesus.”

He wanted to figure out Cardinal Law, why Law would enable so many priests to abuse kids.

“What’s this Law like?” he asked.

I told him that when Law was a young priest in Mississippi, he told others that he was going to be the first American pope.

“That’s not so bad,” Breslin replied.

I told him Law insisted that his staff refer to him as Your Eminence.

“That’s it,” Breslin chirped. “That’s what I needed to know.”

In Breslin’s world, being ambitious was admirable; being pompous was a venal sin.

Breslin zeroed in on one of Law’s assistants, Bishop William Murphy, who had protected abusive priests in Boston. Murphy was rewarded for his loyalty, made bishop of Rockville Centre, on Long Island.

Breslin found out Murphy had kicked some nuns out of their convent so he could turn it into a palace for himself. Breslin nicknamed him Mansion Murphy and made his life miserable, though not as miserable as the lives that Murphy helped ruin by protecting criminals in Roman collars.

Breslin loved good priests and nuns. He just thought there weren’t enough of them, and that it was the big shots running the church who were to blame.

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New lawsuit alleges sexual abuse was ‘penance’ for confirmation

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Mindy Aguon |For The Guam Daily Post Mar 21, 2017

A 45-year-old man filed a lawsuit in the District Court alleging he was sexually abused as “penance” to get confirmed in the Catholic Church.

James A. Mafnas, of Barrigada, filed a lawsuit against the Archbishop of Agana, alleging he was abused by former priest Raymond Cepeda when he was attending confirmation classes at San Vicente Ferrer-San Roke Catholic Church in Barrigada. According to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, confirmation is a sacrament of initiation in the Catholic Church where a baptized person is “sealed with the gift of the Holy Spirit”.

In 1986, Mafnas and other confirmation students attended a weekend retreat at Cocos Island Resort. Students were instructed that all food had to be purchased at Cocos Island from the resort store, but Mafnas’ parents couldn’t afford to give him extra money for food so he packed bread, spam and corned beef to take with him to the retreat, court documents state.

Mafnas recalled that he was caught with the food and was told to report to Cepeda’s bungalow. Cepeda yelled at him telling him he would not get confirmed and made him recite 20 rosaries, the lawsuit states. Instead of returning to the other students, Mafnas was made to sleep on the floor in Cepeda’s room.

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Man says former priest abused him in 1986, called it penance

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com March 21, 2017

A man alleged a former priest sexually abused him on Cocos Island in or around 1986 as penance so he could get confirmed.

James A. Mafnas, now 45, is the 31st man to file a Guam clergy sex abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Agana, priests and others who may have helped or covered up the abuse.

Mafnas, in his complaint, said former priest Raymond Cepeda sexually abused him when he was about 15, during a weekend retreat on Cocos Island, as a requirement for confirmation class.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court of Guam, says Mafnas packed some bread, Spam and corned beef to take to the retreat, even though students were instructed to not bring food or snacks.

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March 20, 2017

Croatia Threatened with Lawsuit by WWII Victims

CROATIA
Balkan Transitional Justice

Croatia has been threatened with a lawsuit if it doesn’t support victims of the WWII fascist Ustasa movement in their claims for reparations – although one expert doubted Zagreb would back the case.

Sven Milekic BIRN Zagreb

US lawyer Jonathan Levy said on Monday that he will lay charges against Croatia if it fails to back claims against the Vatican Bank made by victims of the Croatian WWII fascist Ustasa movement.

Certain people in the Vatican allegedly sponsored the exiled Ustasa government after WWII and helped to transfer parts of its treasury – partly created from wealth taken from Serbs, Jews and Roma – to the Vatican Bank.

Levy took the ‘Ustasa treasury’ case to the US courts, but lost in 2010, with judges concluding that they had no jurisdiction over the matter.

He has now appealed to the Croatian government’s newly-formed Council for Dealing with Consequences of the Rule of Non-Democratic Regimes, asking it to support the Ustasa victims.

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Court hears man seeking records of sister who died at Tuam home

IRELAND
RTE News

The High Court has granted leave to a Co Galway man seeking information about his sister who may have died in the Tuam Mother and Baby Home to bring an action against Tusla, the child and family agency.

The case has been brought by Peter Mulryan, whose infant sister Marian Bridget Mulryan is believed to be among 796 children recorded as having died there, has brought proceedings against Tusla aimed at getting any information that may exist about her.

Permission to bring the action was granted by Mr Justice Richard Humphreys, following an application by Deidre O’Donohoe BL instructed by solicitor Kevin Higgins for Mr Mulryan.

Previously the court heard that Mr Mulryan went with his mother to the Tuam home in July 1944, his mother later appeared to have gone to a Magdalene institution and he was sent away at age four.

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Online child grooming law after two‑year wait

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

John Simpson, Crime Correspondent
March 20 2017
The Times

A new law against “sexual communication with a child” will finally be brought into force after two years of delays and public pressure.

Liz Truss, the justice secretary, will announce the law, which is designed to help to stop child sexual abuse at the earliest stages, today.

The legislation has been the focus of public anger since it was passed in March 2015 but the government failed to usher through a commencement order that is needed before law enforcement agencies could use the power. Missed opportunities to prosecute offenders are thought to run into thousands. Ms Truss will also announce measures to give alleged rape victims the option to record their evidence on tape before trials.

“In a world of mobile phones and social media our children are ever more vulnerable to those who prey on their innocence,” she said yesterday. “This new offence will help us to tackle the early stages of grooming and nip in the bud those targeting children online or through texts.”

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25 French bishops accused of covering up hundreds of sex abuse cases

FRANCE
RFI

[Les chiffres de la honte: 32 agresseurs, 339 victimes – Mediapart]

Twenty-five French bishops covered up sexual abuse of by 32 Catholic priests for years, an investigative website claims. The abuse, which continued after 2000 when the church claimed to have tackled the problem, affected 339 victims, it says.

The Mediapartwebsite names all 25 bishops, five of whom were still in office in January, and accuses Lyon’s Cardinal Philippe Barbarin of having known about abuse by five priests without notifying police.

Several cases of covering up sexual abuse against Barbarin were dismissed last June.

Among the other bishops named by Mediapart are Besançon Archbishop Jean-Luc-Bouilleret, Bayonne Bishop Marc Aillet, Yves Le Saux of Le Mans and Mgr Bernard Fellay of the Society of Saint Pius X, a traditionalist fraternity that is going through a reconciliation process with the Vatican.

Of the 339 victims, 288 were minors, the site says.

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Press Communiqué: Audience with the President of the Republic of Rwanda, 20.03.2017

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bulletin

Today, Monday 20 March, at the Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father, Pope Francis, received in Audience His Excellency Mr Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda. Subsequently, the President met His Eminence Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Secretary of State, who was accompanied by His Excellency, Archbishop Paul R. Gallagher, Secretary for Relations with States.

During the cordial exchanges, the good relations that exist between the Holy See and Rwanda were recalled. Appreciation was expressed for the notable path of recovery towards the social, political and economic stabilisation of the country. Likewise noted was the collaboration between the State and the local Church in the work of national reconciliation and in the consolidation of peace, for the benefit of the whole Nation. In this context, the Pope conveyed his profound sadness, and that of the Holy See and of the Church, for the genocide against the Tutsi. He expressed his solidarity with the victims and with those who continue to suffer the consequences of those tragic events and, evoking the gesture of Pope Saint John Paul II during the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, he implored anew God’s forgiveness for the sins and failings of the Church and its members, among whom priests, and religious men and women who succumbed to hatred and violence, betraying their own evangelical mission. In light of the recent Holy Year of Mercy and of the Statement published by the Rwandan Bishops at its conclusion, the Pope also expressed the desire that this humble recognition of the failings of that period, which, unfortunately, disfigured the face of the Church, may contribute to a “purification of memory” and may promote, in hope and renewed trust, a future of peace, witnessing to the concrete possibility of living and working together, once the dignity of the human person and the common good are put at the centre.

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Pope Francis admits Catholic priests took part in Rwandan genocide and begs forgiveness over church’s role

VATICAN CITY
Daily Record (Scotland)

Pope Francis has asked for forgiveness for the “sins and failings of the Church” during Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, saying he hoped his apology would help heal the African state’s wounds.

But Rwanda’s government indicated it felt the apology did not go far enough, saying the local Church was still complicit in protecting the perpetrators of the genocide.

At a meeting with Rwandan President Paul Kagame, Pope Francis said that priests and Roman Catholic faithful had taken part in the slaughter of some 800,000 people from the ethnic Tutsi minority as well as moderates from the Hutu majority.

“( The pope ) implored anew God’s forgiveness for the sins and failings of the Church and its members, among whom priests, and religious men and women who succumbed to hatred and violence,” the Vatican said in a statement.

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Trial for local priest in Minnesota postponed

CALIFORNIA/MINNESOTA
CBS 8

[with video]

(CBS 8) – Trial that was to be underway in Minnesota Monday for a San Diego priest accused of sexual misconduct has been postponed.

He is currently on leave, from the San Diego diocese.

These allegations stem from two incidents that allegedly occurred back in 2010 in Minnesota.

But the investigation didn’t come to light until 2016 and that’s when Father Jacob Bertrand took a leave of absence from the San Diego diocese.

Father Bertrand worked at several churches in and around San Diego including Saint Rosa Lima in Chula Vista and Santa Sophia in spring valley.

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Diocese apologizes; healing services still delayed

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., March 18, 2017

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP — The spokeswoman for the Diocese of Gallup offered an apology – tempered with an explanation – after Bishop James S. Wall postponed eight healing services for survivors of clergy sex abuse and rescheduled them in March 2018.

Wall initially canceled five healing services in January because of illness, but then postponed another service in February because it conflicted with his annual Mardi Gras fundraiser celebration and postponed two upcoming services in July because they conflict with a speaking engagement he accepted at the annual Tekakwitha Conference for Native American Catholics.

A number of individuals, including several abuse survivors, expressed frustration to the Independent over the Mardi Gras and Tekakwitha cancellations as well as disappointment that all eight services were postponed to next year.

“The Tekakwitha Conference and Mardi Gras conflicts were a scheduling oversight on our part, and we extend sincere apologies to anyone – especially survivors – affected by the rescheduling,” diocesan spokeswoman Suzanne Hammons wrote in an email.

“I understand the frustration survivors may be feeling,” Hammons added. “It can be hard to strike that balance between fulfilling the duties of our regular ministries and also meeting the needs of survivors, and we regret that in these two cases, that balance was not handled effectively. We will make every effort to prevent conflicts in the future.”

“The Mardi Gras fundraiser is the largest single fundraiser for Catholic schools,” Hammons wrote, “and provides crucial funding for the education and needs of children in the Diocese, many of who also rely on the schools as a source for meals, counseling, and other resources.”

Hammons said the Tekakwitha Conference is also important because of Wall’s position as chair of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Subcommittee on Native American Affairs. Wall “has the responsibility of listening to the voices of Indigenous Catholics,” she wrote, and the conference “provides Native People with a major platform to voice their needs and concerns on a national scale.”

Hammons also asserted diocesan officials consulted with members of the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors about rescheduling the healing services. The committee represented the interests of clergy sex abuse claimants in the Gallup Diocese’s now concluded bankruptcy case.

“The revised schedule was made after extensive and careful planning with the Creditors’ Committee, which includes survivors of abuse,” Hammons wrote.

Blindsided by decision

Prudence Jones, a Gallup resident and a member of the committee, took issue with Hammons’ statements. Jones attended the first healing service in November and had offered public remarks complimenting both the bishop and the service at the time.

However, in a phone interview Tuesday, Jones described herself as “blindsided” by the bishop’s decision to postpone the eight services until March 2018. By pushing the services so far back, Jones said, it gives the appearance “that the pain and suffering these victims suffered because of abuse is not very important to the diocese.”

“I believe a timely schedule for the healing services is so important because now that the bankruptcy is finalized, the victims of clergy abuse are beginning the process of rebuilding their lives and these healing services are an integral part of that process,” she said.

There are no healing services scheduled this month and only one service in April. For the remainder of the year, the bishop has between one to three services scheduled per month.

Jones also questioned Hammons’ claim that diocesan officials consulted with committee members about rescheduling the postponed services. Now that the bankruptcy case is concluded, she said, the seven members of the committee still occasionally keep in touch by email regarding bankruptcy-related matters. Jones said none of the other committee members sent out an email saying the diocese was asking for the committee’s input.

“I was not contacted by the diocese, and that was surprising to me as I’m the only committee member that lives in Gallup and therefore in a position to be working closely with the diocese as a committee member,” Jones said.

Profound healing effect

Committee members Criss Candelaria and Jo Ulibarri also confirmed they were not consulted about rescheduling the postponed services. In addition, Arizona attorney Robert E. Pastor, who represented Jones and a fourth committee member, said he had not heard of diocesan officials soliciting input from the committee. The remaining three committee members maintain their anonymity and do not speak with the media.

Ulibarri said a diocesan official did notify her in January that healing services in Farmington and Lumberton were being postponed because of the bishop’s illness, but she said she wasn’t told when any of the postponed services would be rescheduled.

“I understand the Bishop has been ill and he is busy, but I’d like to see these services done,” Ulibarri wrote in an email Tuesday. “I feel like the victims need these services as an acknowledgement of what happened to us and it’s just getting pushed aside.”

Candelaria, the chairman of the committee, was the only contacted committee member not concerned with the postponements.

“I was not consulted but I have no strong objection provided they occur,” Candelaria wrote in an email. “I don’t think time is of the essence. It may be beneficial in that the reconciliation masses spread over a reasonably longer period of time might keep it in public awareness.”

In contrast, Joelle Casteix, the western regional director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, criticized the lengthy postponements because many abuse survivors are older individuals in poor health.

“Healing masses and visiting the parishes where clerics abused children are a ‘no-brainer’ that has a profound healing effect on many survivors,” Casteix said in a statement released March 9. “In fact, this is something that Wall should have done early in his tenure. By postponing these services for fundraisers and conferences, Wall is telling victims he doesn’t really care. And because many of the victims are older and ill, these year-long postponements may outlast the lifespans of many of the most hurt victims.”

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Doble vida. Confesor de día, pederasta de noche

LEóN (MEXICO)
Debate [Culiacán, Sinaloa, Mexico]

March 20, 2017

By Redacción

Read original article

Inhabilitado desde 2012 por procrear una niña, ahora el ex vocero de la Arquidiócesis de León, Jorge Villegas, enfrenta cinco denuncias por abuso de menores

Una mujer coloca en el altar un papel con las peticiones para la oración

universal. Es la misa del segundo domingo de Cuaresma en la parroquia de San

Juan Bautista de la Salle, al poniente de la ciudad de León. El cura dirige la

mirada a los asistentes y eleva súplicas a Dios:

Por los sacerdotes y seminaristas de nuestra Diócesis, para que vivan llenos del

amor de Dios y de un profundo espíritu de servicio hacia los hermanos… por

las necesidades del sacerdote Jorge Raúl Villegas Chávez. Oremos. “¡Te

rogamos Señor!”, claman los feligreses, sentados en bancas semicirculares y

escalonadas, por quien fue su cura durante ocho años, de 2004-2012.

A muchos no les importa que el prelado esté acusado de pederastia y abusos

sexuales en contra de cinco menores, ni que haya abusado de la confianza que

como confesor le tenían.

“Aquí nunca se le supo nada”, dice tajante la encargada de distribuir los

misales en el acceso al templo. Recuerda al padre Raúl como una buena

persona, serio, atento, que daba sus misas con mensajes “muy bonitos” a la

comunidad. En el grupo encargado de las labores en el templo afirman que “las

tentaciones del diablo” lo perjudicaron. En sus oraciones piden por él.

A un lado de esa parroquia está la casa que por ese tiempo habitó el padre, en

la colonia Piletas, cuarta sección. Su voz aún se escucha en la grabación de la

línea de la parroquia, en la que da cuenta de los horarios de oficina.

Ignoran o no quisieron ver su doble vida, porque el padre Jorge Raúl Villegas

Chávez, sin desprenderse de la sotana, alternaba su ministerio con una

relación amorosa con una mujer con la que procreó una hija que hoy tiene 12

años, motivo por el que fue separado de su ministerio y enviado a una casa de

retiro en Tlaquepaque, Jalisco, en septiembre de 2012, en la que se le brindó

acompañamiento y apoyo sicológico.

De ahí salió para convertirse en un agresor sexual, ya no sólo traicionó sus

votos de celibato como hizo en León, sino que actuó como un depredador

sexual que iba acumulando víctimas, en Irapuato, amparado en el poder que le

daba estar rodeado de una sociedad en extremo católica y obediente, y el

secreto de confesión con el que manipulaba a sus víctimas.

Irapuato es la segunda ciudad con más católicos en el estado: 92.1% de su

población profesa esta religión, según datos de 2010 del Inegi. Sólo es

superada por León, que registra 93.9%

Un cura de alto rango

El padre Jorge Raúl Villegas se desenvolvía en la más alta jerarquía de

Guanajuato. Como vocero de la Arquidiócesis de León, tenía trato con los

periodistas y daba entrevistas en radio y televisión. Fue vocero del arzobispo

José Guadalupe Martín Rábago durante ocho años; incluso, éste lo comisionó

para preparar la visita del Papa Benedicto XVI en marzo de 2012. En las giras

del nuncio Christopher Pierre se encargaba de su agenda con la prensa.

Tuvo como compañero al gobernador Miguel Márquez Márquez en el

Seminario Conciliar de León; en materias comunes coincidió con el presbítero

Roberto Muñoz, actual vocero de la Arquidiócesis de León.

Sus conflictos legales comenzaron en 2012, cuando le llegó una demanda por

incumplimiento de pago por un crédito hipotecario, en el expediente

919/2012. Tras perder, le fue embargado y rematado un inmueble. En febrero

de 2013 le llegó otra, ahora por el reconocimiento de paternidad y pensión

alimenticia que promovió en su contra la mujer con la que tuvo una vida

conyugal y procreó una niña.

Villegas Chávez se incorporó al gobierno eclesiástico con la llegada del obispo

José Guadalupe Martín Rábago a la Diócesis de León (1995) y colaboró en

tareas para el semanario Gaudium, así como en la vocería clerical.

En ese tiempo el sacerdote compaginaba su responsabilidad de portavoz del

clero con su misión de párroco en el templo de San Juan Bautista de la Salle,

mientras sostenía su relación amorosa con la joven.

“En las tardes llegaba en una camioneta por una mujer y una niña a un

establecimiento ubicado en la avenida Miguel Alemán, en la zona centro de

León”, comenta un comerciante del mercado Aldama.

Su posición le abrió espacios en medios televisivos y de radio con programas

patrocinados y colaboraciones, con una constante proyección pública;

estableció cercanía con los presidentes municipales de León, Silao y

Guanajuato, y con los periodistas llevaba una relación amigable. “Era atento,

respondía a cualquier hora, cortés, no rehuía a los temas”, recuerda el

coordinador de un noticiario radiofónico.

Durante una década estuvo cada semana al lado del arzobispo José Guadalupe

Martín Rábago en la rueda de prensa dominical, incluso cuando éste ocupó la

presidencia de la Conferencia del Episcopado Mexicano. Así transcurrió hasta

el año 2012, cuando Martín Rábago fue enterado por una joven que el

sacerdote Raúl era padre de una niña de siete años.

Vino entonces su extraña y repentina desaparición de la escena pública. Fue

separado como vocero, a escasos meses de que había sido un personaje

protagónico en los preparativos de la visita del Papa Benedicto XVI a León e

incluso después de que había viajado a Roma como consecuencia de la gira del

Pontífice. En septiembre de 2012, el arzobispo Martín Rábago anunció que

Villegas Chávez dejaba de ser vocero de la Arquidiócesis, bajo el argumento de

participaba en un “curso especial” fuera de la ciudad.

Un sacerdote comentó que el arzobispo estaba molesto y lo había cesado al

enterarse de que había fallado en su ministerio. Fue entonces que se internó

en la Casa Alberione, de Tlaquepaque, a donde se canalizaba a sacerdotes por

“conductas impropias” para brindarles apoyo emocional. La suspensión tenía

el propósito de que reflexionara sobre su vocación. “Tenía que tomar una

decisión y no llevar una doble vida”, comentó un cura cercano a la

Arquidiócesis.

A los feligreses del templo de San Juan Bautista de la Salle tampoco se les

contó la verdad. Ellos recibieron con tristeza la partida de su párroco que, se

les dijo, estaría comisionado en Guadalajara. Se cooperaron para organizarle

una fiesta de despedida y hasta mariachis le llevaron. Karina Veloz, una vecina

de la zona , recuerda que el padre se despidió y dijo que si Dios quería, “estaría

de vuelta”.

En 2014 se hizo público su juicio de paternidad. La Arquidiócesis de León tuvo

que salir a decir que el presbítero Jorge Raúl Villegas Chávez se encontraba

“separado” de su ministerio por esa causa. “Fue apartado del ejercicio

sacerdotal debido al proceso que enfrenta en los tribunales correspondientes a

nivel eclesiástico”, anunció en un comunicado la Arquidiócesis, dirigida por el

arzobispo Alfonso Cortés.

Tres personalidades

Ya no se volvió a saber de él hasta el 13 de febrero de este año, cuando policías

ministeriales del estado lo detuvieron en la casa pastoral del templo del

Espíritu Santo. Inmueble ubicado en la colonia Moderna, en la ciudad de

Irapuato, a espaldas del plantel educativo en donde, se dice, abusó de al menos

cinco menores.

Entonces quedó al descubierto: pese a que estaba inhabilitado, Jorge Raúl

Villegas Chávez, en la ciudad de León, en 2016 volvió a oficiar misa en el

templo de San Cayetano Confesor, de la Diócesis de Irapuato, en donde se dio a

conocer como “el padre Jorge”.

“Sólo daba la misa de siete de la mañana”, cuenta una mujer de piel clara que

tiene su domicilio frente a la parroquia ubicada en la calle Primo Verdad, del

Barrio de San Cayetano, a unas cuantas cuadras de la colonia Moderna.

Retomar su actividad sacerdotal lo acercó a la congregación Hermanas de las

Pobres Siervas del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús, quienes le abrieron las puertas

del Colegio Atenas, clasificado como uno de los más exclusivos de Irapuato.

La directora de la escuela, Carmen Carbajal Méndez, reveló a la activista

Norma Nolasco, representante legal del Grupo Unido de Madres Solteras AC

(Gumsac), haber conocido al “padre Jorge” en el templo de San Cayetano

cuando oficiaba misa; lo encontró agradable y carismático, por lo que le

ofreció trabajo en la institución.

El “padre Jorge” ingresó al colegio de religiosas en agosto pasado sin cartas de

recomendación. Las oficinas de la dirección del plantel lo designó como

confesionario personal.

Confesaba y brindaba asistencia sicológica a alumnas y alumnos. Les decía que

necesitaban un apoyo, alguien en quien confiar y que él era esa persona. Les

hablaba de los deberes religiosos y los conminaba a orar.

“A las 12:00 del día, cuando se canta el Ave María, el padre Jorge llegaba al

salón, sacaba a una alumna para llevarla a la dirección del colegio, ahí pedía

que le recitara el Angelus que había dejado como tarea”, describe la madre de

una estudiante de secundaria.

El rezo terminaba en toqueteos y otras cuestiones sexuales, incluso como

penitencia para las niñas. A la primera víctima, una alumna de 14 años, la

confesaba los días viernes y bajo secreto de confesión la violaba; los lunes le

daba terapias como su sicólogo. Así fue por tres meses, según consta en la

denuncia del 10 de febrero formulada en su contra en la Agencia del Ministerio

Público del Centro de Justicia para Mujeres en Irapuato.

De la segunda víctima abusó mediante tocamientos en su cuerpo a través de

una tarea que le dejó. Todo fue en secreto de confesión.

El sacerdote usaba frases religiosas para aprovecharse de los estudiantes.

Todos los abusos que cometió los hizo en el nombre de Dios, acusan activistas.

“Se subía la sotana y se bajaba el pantalón”, señala Norma Nolasco.

Experto en fraudes

El abogado Roberto Saucedo, quien representó a la madre de la hija del

sacerdote en el juicio de reconocimiento de paternidad y pensión alimenticia,

dice haber sido sorprendido por el religioso, quien durante el juicio civil se

presentó como el “padre Joaquín Hernández” , en calidad de intermediario del

“padre Raúl”.

Este encuentro se llevó a cabo el 23 de mayo de 2014 en la sede del Seminario

de la Natividad de María, ubicado en la calle Madero, en León, cuando se creía

que el padre Raúl seguía en la casa de retiro de Jalisco.

Fue hasta que en una audiencia en un juzgado de León se dio cuenta de que el

“padre Raúl” y el “padre Joaquín” eran la misma persona. “Es un sujeto muy

inteligente, muy sagaz”, dice el litigante.

Un día después de la detención del religioso, en un comunicado del 14 de

febrero de 2017, la Arquidiócesis de León reveló que el presbítero Jorge Raúl

Villegas Chávez había quedado inhabilitado desde septiembre de 2012 para

ejercer cualquier función ministerial en la Iglesia. y negó que hubiera sido

removido a Irapuato. “El sacerdote se fue a vivir con su familia a Irapuato, de

donde es originario”, dijo.

“Si él ejerció ministerio alguno, como el de la dirección espiritual y de la

administración del sacramento de la confesión, infringió la ley eclesiástica”, se

deslindó la Arquidiócesis. Lo mismo hizo el obispo irapuatense Jesús Martínez

Zepeda, porque Villegas, dijo, “no tenía autorización” para ejercer ministerio

en su Diócesis.

Cadena de delitos

En la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado existen en su contra cinco

denuncias por los delitos de violación calificada, corrupción de menores y

abusos sexuales, en los que las víctimas son menores, hombres y mujeres, y

otra más en la Procuraduría General de la República (PGR) por el delito de

pederastia.

A las víctimas, un niño de 10 años, tres niñas de 14 y 15 años, y un adolescente

de 16, les brindaba la confesión, asistencia psicológica y fungía como su guía

espiritual.

En los testimonios, los agraviados coinciden en que para lograr sus propósitos

el “padre Jorge” recurrió a la presión sicológica. Como penitencia, los menores

tenían que acceder a sus caprichos sexuales. De guía espiritual se convertía en

agresor sexual.

Villegas Chávez se encuentra vinculado a proceso penal en el Cereso de

Irapuato, municipio en el que vivió su infancia, al lado de su familia. “Nadie

imaginaría que tras el rostro de un sacerdote amable, cordial, ameno, que

inspiraba confianza como vocero del Arzobispado de León, podría estar oculto

un pederasta”, dice Norma Nolasco, activista a quien se acercaron las madres

de cinco estudiantes que fueron abusadas por el cura. “Todos los abusos que

cometió los hizo en el nombre de Dios”, dice.

Su inclinación era hacia niños y niñas, en quienes operaba con el mismo

método y haciendo valer su autoridad sacerdotal, coincide la abogada Dalia

Ramírez, asesora jurídica de las víctimas.

El Universal acudió al Colegio Atenas en dos ocasiones y buscó a la directora

para conocer su versión, pero ésta se negó a dar entrevista.

No es el único

Jorge Raúl Villegas Chávez es el segundo sacerdote guanajuatense acusado de

cometer ilícitos sexuales en contra de menores en los últimos 13 años. El padre

José Luis de Maria y Campos López estuvo preso cuatro años por abusos

sexuales en contra de tres monaguillos de la cuasiparroquia María Auxiliadora,

de la que era titular, en la colonia Santa María de Cementos, al sur de la ciudad

de León. En 2009 salió libre.

El Universal

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Former student in Daramalan College sex abuse trial defends account during cross-examination

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

Alexandra Back

Trial begins for Peter Cuzner, former teacher accused of sex abuse at Daramalan College

A defence barrister has sought to question the memory of the man who accused his former Catholic school teacher of sexually abusing him while at Daramalan College in the 1980s.

Peter Cuzner, 61, is on trial in the ACT Supreme Court this week charged with two counts of indecent assault. Prosecutors allege Mr Cuzner had touched the year 9 boy’s groin on two occasions while purporting to look for a pulse.

The former student took the stand for a second day on Monday, where he defended his account of the alleged assaults under cross-examination by defence barrister John Masters.

Conceding his memory may have faded over time, the witness said, “but some things that happen in your life stick vividly in your mind, and are never going to be erased”.

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State redress scheme won’t be reopened despite Tuam revelations

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Niall O’Connor
March 20 2017

Education Minister Richard Bruton has said there are “no plans” to reopen the State’s redress scheme for institutional abuse despite the latest revelations surrounding the Tuam baby scandal.

The scheme, which has to date cost almost €1.5bn, closed to new applicants in September 2011.

It emerged last week that religious orders who ran residential institutions where children were subject to abuse have paid just 13pc of the costs.

A report by the Comptroller and Auditor General (C&AG), published by Mr Bruton, confirmed that the State had received just €85m of the €226m that was due from the Church.

A spokesperson for Mr Bruton confirmed that the scheme would not be reopened for new entrants.

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Call for Commission in light of Tuam Mother and Baby Homes revelations

IRELAND
Connacht Tribune

Galway Bay fm newsroom – A Sinn Féin Deputy has published a Dáil motion which will be debated this week, calling for a Truth Commission to establish the facts about Ireland’s Mother and Baby Homes.

Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire says the revelations of recent weeks at Tuam, and subsequent reports, have shocked and angered Irish people.

He says survivor groups have also criticised ‘behind closed doors hearings’ and he believes we need to shine a light on the historic mistreatment of women and children in Ireland.

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‘They’d put me in a room with nothing to eat and no windows. Then they would cut my hair to the bone’

IRELAND
The Journal

MARY MERRITT FIRST entered the High Park Magdalene Laundry in 1947, at the age of 16.

Born in a Dublin workhouse, she was put into the care of the Sisters of Mercy in Ballinasloe, Co Galway when she was two.

Mary (85) never met her mother, and has never found out who she was.

“To this day I don’t know who my mother is,” she told TheJournal.ie last week.

I’m 85 now, I’ll be 86 next month.

After 14 years in the orphanage in Ballinasloe, Mary (who was known as Mary O’Conor at that time) said she went out one night with four other girls and stole some apples from a nearby orchard.

“They came into me the next morning – on the 7th of January 1947 – and they said O’Conor get your clothes together, you’re going to a situation in Dublin,” said Mary.

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CCRM: Allow nuns to perform confession for women, minors

INDIA
The New Indian Express

KOCHI: Why can’t nuns be allowed to perform the Catholic Church’s sacrament of penance for women and young boys?

This is a question asked by the Kerala Catholic Church Reformation Movement (CCRM) – a layman’s organisation for reforms in the Church – in the wake of the growing incidents of minors being sexually abused by Christian priests in the state.

“We are raising this demand in the wake of the recent spurt in incidents of sexual abuse by Christian priests. The Bible doesn’t say confession should be done only by priests,” said Indulekha Joseph, who staged a dharna outside the Bishop’s House here on Sunday, demanding that nuns be allowed to perform the sacrament of confession for women and young boys.

The Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation is one of the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church, in which the faithful obtain absolution for sins committed against God and neighbours, and are reconciled with the community of the Church.

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Abuse survivor says scheme to enable victims is ‘disabling people’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Kitty Holland

As a child, David Dineen (46) experienced “savage sexual abuse,” and beatings in a Brothers of Charity institution in Cork. He left, aged 15, and spent spells homeless and involved in drugs and crime. He found it difficult to form lasting relationships.

He has spent his adult life recovering from and coming to terms with his childhood.

“And then along came Caranua,” he says. “They caused me so much distress, in the end, last September, I had to pull away from them for my mental health.”

Caranua is the independent body established under the the 2012 Residential Institutions Statutory Fund Act to manage €110 million pledged by religious congregations to enhance survivors’ lives.

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George Pell slams ‘unjust’ Senate call for him to assist with sexual abuse police inquiry

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Cardinal George Pell has come out swinging against a Senate call for him to return to Australia to assist with police investigations.

A Greens Party motion, agreed to by the upper house in February, called on the senior ranking Catholic clergyman to return to Australia to face allegations of misconduct.

“The use of parliamentary privilege to attack me on this basis is both extraordinary and unjust,” Cardinal Pell wrote in a letter tabled in Parliament today.

“Given that the investigation is ongoing, any calls from the Senate for my return to Australia can only be perceived as an interference on the part of the Senate in the due process of the Victoria Police investigation.”

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Inadequate Anglican training led to abuse

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Rebekah Ison – AAP on March 20, 2017

The Anglican Church’s failure to properly select and train its aspiring priests led to child abusers in its ranks, the royal commission has heard.

Chair Peter McClellan asked four senior Anglicans if the process for picking and guiding student clergy had meant “people ended up in the church who were capable of committing these terrible crimes”.

The four panellists agreed, with the administrator of the Anglican Diocese, Bishop Tim Harris, saying the church had been in a position of great privilege and autonomy.

“I would hope, going into the 21st century, that there is a much greater awareness that the church is rightly more accountable,” he told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday.

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Washington Post Editor And Journalistic Icon Marty Baron To Speak At Penn State

PENNSYLVANIA
Onward State

BY JIM DAVIDSON ON MARCH 20, 2017

Marty Baron, executive editor of The Washington Post and iconic American journalist, will deliver Penn State’s annual Oweida Lecture in Journalism Ethics at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 21 in Freeman Auditorium at the HUB.

Known for his involvement in the story behind the 2015 film Spotlight, Baron began his nomadic career in 1976 as a reporter for the Miami Herald after graduating from Lehigh University. He left Florida in 1979 to work for the L.A. Times, where he secured his first editorial position in 1983.

After 17 years in Los Angeles, Baron moved back across the country to work for The New York Times, where he was named managing editor for nighttime news operations in 1997. He returned to the Herald in 2000 as executive editor, but left a year later to become editor of the Boston Globe.

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George Pell lashes ‘unjust’ Senate call

AUSTRALIA
Deniliquin Pastoral Times

AAP

Cardinal George Pell has accused the Senate of waging an “extraordinary and unjust” attack against him and interfering with due process.

A Greens motion, agreed to by the upper house in February, called on the senior ranking Catholic clergyman to return to Australia to face allegations of misconduct.

“The use of parliamentary privilege to attack me on this basis is both extraordinary and unjust,” Cardinal Pell wrote in a letter tabled in Parliament on Monday.

“Given that the investigation is ongoing, any calls from the Senate for my return to Australia can only be perceived as an interference on the part of the Senate in the due process of the Victoria Police investigation.”

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George Pell Refuses Senate Call To Return Home, Slams ‘Interference’

AUSTRALIA
Huffington Post

Josh Butler Associate Editor, HuffPost Australia

Cardinal George Pell has rubbished a Senate motion calling for him to return to Australia over a misconduct investigation, slamming the upper house’s “interference” in the police action.

In February, a Greens motion agreed to by the federal Senate called on Pell — currently based in the Vatican — to come back to Australia after Victoria Police reportedly began investigations of criminal misconduct against the former Archbishop of Melbourne. The Senate motion also noted “4444 people made allegations of child sexual abuse by members of the Catholic Church, including the clergy, between January 1980 and February 2015”.

At the time of the motion, Pell’s office said in a statement: “The suggestion that Cardinal Pell should be accountable for all the wrong doings of Church personnel throughout Australia over many decades is not only unjust and completely fanciful but also acts to shield those in the Church who should be called to account for their failures.”

In a formal letter to the Senate, tabled in the parliament on Monday, Pell went further in his response, criticising the upper house for even agreeing to the motion.

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March 19, 2017

Dáil to debate call for truth commission on mother and baby homes

IRELAND
Irish Times

Marie O’Halloran

A call has been made for a truth commission to be set up to properly establish the facts about mother and baby homes.

Sinn Féin spokesman on children Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire has introduced a Private Members’ motion to be debated in the Dáil on Tuesday, calling for the establishment of a truth commission.

“The entire system, and the mistreatment of woman and children in whatever setting, needs to have a light shone on it.”

Mr Ó Laoghaire said there were numerous examples of successful truth commissions internationally. “We should take the best examples of these and apply the principles here in Ireland,” and he cited truth processes in Chile, South Africa, Canada and Australia.

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Mother and baby homes ‘destroyed lives’ says CoI archbishop

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Revulsion towards church and state institutions have followed recent revelations about mother and baby homes, the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin has said.

Dr Michael Jackson said this year’s St Patrick’s Day had been “inevitably and rightly” different in Ireland. “As a society we stand in need of restoration. As members of churches we stand in need of redemption,” he said. “None of us can do this without respect for the voice of the victim; none of us can do this without the forgiveness of the victim,” he said.

“For all the churches, these events have hardened and sharpened the deep antagonism now felt towards churches around betrayal,” he said.

This was “because of our incapacity to get our head around something which to others is not as complicated as it sounds or looks: accepting that those who went before us have done wrong; saying that we are sorry for the wrong that was done; offering a heartfelt apology; asking for forgiveness from neighbour as well as from God. Institutions find this tremendously difficult,” he said.

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DON ANDREA CONTIN / L’ex amante, “dall’amore alle minacce di morte” (La vita in diretta, 16 marzo)

ITALIA
Ilsussidiario

[DON ANDREA CONTIN / Former lover, “from love to death threats” (Live Life, March 16)]

DON ANDREA CONTIN, INTERVISTA ALL’EX AMANTE: IL RACCONTO DELLA LORO STORIA FINO ALLA DENUNCIA (LA VITA IN DIRETTA) – Non cala l’attenzione attorno al caso di Don Andrea Contin, l’ex prete di San Lazzaro finito al centro dello scandalo sessuale che ha travolto la Chiesa di Padova nei mesi scorsi. L’uomo è indagato per violenza privata e sfruttamento della prostituzione. Oggi, nel corso della nuova puntata de La vita in diretta è stata intervistata la donna con la quale Don Andrea Contin aveva intrapreso una relazione amorosa, poi culminata in violenza. L’ex amante del prete allontanato dalla Curia, ha raccontato sin dall’inizio il suo rapporto con Don Contin, per lei semplicemente Andrea.

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Troppi scandali, flop dell’8 per mille alla Chiesa

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Quotidiano

[2017 will be an annus horribilis for the Italian church offerings which are expected to drop 150 million euros.]

di NINA FABRIZIO
Ultimo aggiornamento: 19 marzo 2017

Città del Vaticano, 19 marzo 2017 – Il 2017 rischia di essere l’anno nero per le finanze della Cei con una caduta a picco delle offerte dell’otto per mille. Le indagini interne che monitorano l’opinione pubblica e in particolare la propensione a firmare per l’offerta alla Chiesa cattolica in possesso della Conferenza episcopale italiana, parlano chiaro ed offrono ai vescovi un quadro affatto incoraggiante. La fiducia è crollata.

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Church protesters react to $30K in ‘hush money’

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Manny Cruz | The Guam Daily Post

Church protesters said yesterday they’re ready to “clean house” after news of about $30,000 in “hush money” had been paid by then-Archbishop Anthony Apuron to a former altar boy in 2002 to conceal sex-abuse allegations against a Guam priest.

“This is a disgrace,” said Mary Cruz, of the Concerned Catholics of Guam. “This is just another example of how he tried to cover his wrongdoings. I think now, more than ever, we need to clean out the church.”

The victim declined to reveal his name, because of a pending legal question, but said he was sexually molested by Father Louis Brouillard while the priest was at San Vicente Catholic Church between 1976 and 1980.

Brouillard has since signed a statement admitting that he may have sexually abused as many as 20 boys while he served in parishes across Guam.

Cruz said she herself feels guilty that the alleged abuses occurred “under (her) nose.”

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Retired Michigan priest arrested in Grand Forks on embezzlement charges

NORTH DAKOTA/MICHIGAN
Grand Forks Herald

By Andrew Hazzard

A Michigan priest who retired to Grand Forks is in the process of being extradited to his home state after being charged with embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars from his former church.

Rev. David Ernest Fisher, 70, was arrested at his Grand Forks home on March 11 on an extradition order from Shiawassee County, Mich.

The Argus-Press newspaper in Ossowo, Mich. reported that Fisher was a pastor at St. Joseph Catholic Church for 23 years. He retired in 2015. The newspaper reported that Fisher faces seven counts of embezzlement, including one count of embezzling $100,000 or more, a crime punishable by 20 years in prison.

“Following the retirement of Rev. David Fisher from the pastorate of St. Joseph Parish in Owosso, financial irregularities came to light,” the Catholic Diocese of Lansing, Mich. said in a press release. “These were promptly reported by the Diocese of Lansing to representatives of law enforcement, who began an investigation. At every point of the process, the diocese, the new pastor of St. Joseph Parish, and his parish staff have fully cooperated with law enforcement.”

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“Hay menores que desean el abuso y te provocan”; las atrocidades impunes de la jerarquía católica

ESPANA
Publico

[“There are minors who desire abuse and provoke you”; The unpunished atrocities of the Catholic hierarchy.]

Por Christian González 14.03.2017

Son los máximos representantes de la Iglesia Católica en un territorio. En sus homilías, artículos en prensa y programas en radio, exponen la doctrina cristiana a sus fieles y pontifican sobre cómo deben actuar en su vida. Sin embargo, nos hemos acostumbrado a verles pronunciar desde sus púlpitos frases homófobas y sexistas que indignan a la sociedad, como en las últimas semanas tras la victoria de una drag queen en el carnaval de Las Palmas.

Si nos fijamos en los últimos disparates pronunciados por miembros de la jerarquía eclesiástica, podremos extraer dos conclusiones. La primera, que están obsesionados con los menores, el sexo, los gays y la mujer. Y la segunda, que, a los obispos y cardenales, les sale gratis decir esas cosas desde sus tribunas, porque ninguno de ellos ha sido retirado de sus cargos.

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Le bugie del Vaticano sul sabotaggio del tribunale anti-pedofili

ITALIA
Lettera 43

[The Vatican lies on sabotaging the anti-pedophile court.]

FRANCESCO PELOSO

Il J’accuse di Marie Collins, la donna che è stata membro della Pontificia commissione per la tutela dei minori, contro la Curia vaticana, non si ferma e conosce anzi nuovi importanti capitoli. Il tribunale per giudicare i vescovi responsabili di aver insabbiato i casi di abusi sessuali sui minori – ha detto la Collins -, nonostante sia stato voluto e approvato da papa Francesco non è mai stato istituito dalla Congregazione per la dottrina della fede guidata dal cardinale Gerhard Müller. È il cuore del problema che assilla il percorso delle riforme avviata da Bergoglio. Per di più stavolta a parlare sono anche i documenti che sbugiardano la versione della Chiesa. Ma andiamo con ordine.

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Abusi, papa Francesco fa il gioco delle tre carte

ITALIA
Cronache Laiche

[Despite the proclaimed zero tolerance, nothing changes about the complaints to the civil authority of the clergy.]

Cristian Usai
martedì 14 marzo 2017

«È nostro dovere far prova di severità estrema con i sacerdoti che tradiscono la loro missione, e con la gerarchia, vescovi e cardinali, che li proteggesse, come è già successo in passato». Queste parole provengono dalla prefazione che papa Francesco ha scritto all’autobiografia di Daniel Pittet, vittima di abusi da parte di un sacerdote. Il Papa prosegue definendo la pedofilia, una «mostruosità assoluta, un orrendo peccato, radicalmente contrario a tutto ciò che Cristo ci insegna». Insomma, la Chiesa di Bergoglio avrebbe imboccato la via della fermezza. Certo, a questo punto ci si potrebbe lasciar prendere da facili entusiasmi; ma questi entusiasmi sarebbero giustificati?

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Bid to extradite Scots priest accused of abuse

SCOTLAND
The Sunday Post

Written by Gordon Blackstock, 19 March 2017

A RETIRED priest is set to be extradited from Canada to Scotland following a child sex abuse probe, The Sunday Post can reveal.

Father Robert MacKenzie, 84, was a teacher at Fort Augustus Abbey in the Highlands before moving to Canada in 1988.

In 2013, a police investigation was sparked after allegations emerged of physical and sexual abuse at the school where Father MacKenzie taught.

The offences were claimed to have taken place at the school over a period of 25 years between 1967 and 1992.

A number of former pupils at the school have made detailed allegations of abuse there.

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Guam bishop aims to resolve ‘distress’ regarding Neocatechumenal Way

GUAM
Headlines from the Catholic World

Hagatna, Guam, Mar 18, 2017 / 04:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The practices of the Neocatechumenal Way in Guam have drawn attention from the island’s coadjutor archbishop, who has said its members are to stop forming new communities for a year, in the interest of healing divisions in the archdiocese.

Coadjutor Archbishop Michael Byrnes of Agaña cited “a growing sense of distress about the multiplication of small communities in some parishes and about some of the differences in the way the Mass is celebrated among the small communities of the Neocatechumenal Way.”

The movement must celebrate Mass at a consecrated altar and members of the congregation who receive the Blessed Sacrament must consume it as soon as they receive it, the archbishop said in a March 15 pastoral letter to his flock on the northwestern Pacific island, a U.S. territory.

The Neocatechumenal Way is a new ecclesial movement that focuses on post-baptismal adult formation in small parish-based groups. It is estimated that the movement contains about 1 million members, in some 40,000 parish-based communities around the world.

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Juicio del caso Romanones por abusos inicia mañana su fase final con peritos

ESPANA
La Vanguardia

[Judgment of the Romanones case of alleged sexual abuses begins tomorrow its final phase with experts.]

Granada, 19 mar (EFE).- La Audiencia de Granada reanuda mañana el juicio por el conocido como caso Romanones en el que la Fiscalía pide nueve años de cárcel para el sacerdote acusado de un delito de abuso sexual continuado con acceso carnal con la testifical de forenses y tratará el martes las conclusiones finales de las partes.

La Sección Segunda de la Audiencia de Granada retomará a las 9.30 horas de mañana el juicio del caso Romanones, que comenzó el pasado seis de marzo con la declaración del único acusado, el padre Román, que negó cualquier abuso sexual y recalcó su inocencia.

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Pope Francis Granting Anti-Semitic Group Same Status as Opus Dei

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on March 18, 2017 by Betty Clermont

In a March 3 homily, Bishop Bernard Fellay, superior general of the Society of St. Pius X, confirmed that negotiations to reunite the SSPX with the Catholic Church were ongoing. “Full communion” would be “within a few months,” Vatican reporter, Andrea Tornielli, wrote the same day. Fellay “needs time to explain and to gain broad acceptance for the agreement among the Society,” he noted.

French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre founded the traditionalist order of priests in 1970. He named them after Pope Pius X who, in 1907, described Modernism as “the synthesis of all heresies.”

The SSPX was declared “schismatic” in 1988 when Lefebvre ordained his own bishops without the approval of Pope John Paul II. All four of the new bishops incurred an “automatic” excommunication.

Anti-Semitism

The Simon Wiesenthal Center “condemned” Bishop Fellay for calling Jews “enemies of the Church” and asked the SSPX to renounce their anti-Semitic theology in January 2013.
Pope Francis was elected on March 13, 2013.

The Southern Poverty Law Center stated the SSPX “remains a font of anti-Semitic propaganda” in 2015. The SPLC had placed the SSPX on their “Hatewatch” list in 2009 because of the virulent anti-Semitism of its leaders.

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Battle over Ireland’s last Magdalene laundry

IRELAND
Deutsche Welle

Ireland’s last Magdalene laundry is up for sale, but campaigners want a memorial to women who endured abuse at the hands of religious orders. Ruairi Casey reports from Dublin.

A crowd of hundreds filled Dublin’s Sean MacDermott Street in 1979 when Pope John Paul II passed by. Local residents were hopeful he would visit Our Lady of Lourdes Church, which holds the shrine of Matt Talbot, a leading figure in the Irish Church’s temperance movement.

The pope could hardly have failed to notice the dense mass of worshippers, but he did not stop.

What he may not have seen was a long, brown-brick Victorian building on the opposite side of the street, one of Ireland’s now notorious Magdalene laundries, where women were incarcerated and forced to work in slave-like conditions.

Out of sight and mind for most of its history, it has now become a focal point in Ireland’s coming to terms with its cruel and brutal treatment of women in the 20th century.

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Editorial: The Archdiocese moves to St. Paul’s East Side

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

Editorial

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has completed a move to our East Side, one that brings both welcome influence and an infusion of vitality to its new neighborhood.

In a city where connections between church and community run deep, the transition — church offices and about 120 staff members now occupy leased space in the historic former 3M headquarters in St. Paul — is significant.

It’s so for many reasons. Among them: Vicar General Father Charles Lachowitzer, who grew up on the East Side, remembers the days when the area was a jobs engine, with manufacturing activity at Whirlpool, Hamm’s Brewery and 3M. Folks tell him “how good it is to see the lights on” again in what was a long-vacant building.

For the church — shedding properties on Cathedral Hill as part of the bankruptcy filing stemming from clergy-sexual-abuse cases — the move is “an opportunity to open a new chapter in our history,” Archbishop Bernard Hebda told us.

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Gordon Robinson | Put Down Your Tambourines

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

As usual, when Jamaicans have a conversation about sex, it all goes sideways.

The current debate on the definition of ‘rape’ and age of ‘consent’ has majored in the minor (pun intended). The word ‘rape’ has its roots (Latin ‘rapere’) in 15th-century England and is related to the Latin verb ‘stuprare’, which means ‘to defile, ravish, violate,’ and the noun ‘stuprum’ (literally ‘disgrace’), meaning ‘to abduct (a woman), ravish’; also ‘seduce (a man)’.

So, the origins of ‘rape’ are gender neutral, and the word carried more of a kidnapping or stealing connotation (‘to seize and take away by force’; ‘to snatch, to grab, to carry off’), rather than any sexually explicit intent. The essence of rape has always been the taking of innocence by force rather than the modern semantic obsession with ‘penetration’ and ‘vaginas’. Following British legal tradition like sheep for 500 years, we’re now debating whether statutory rape should be decided by a number (age) or an orifice.

While we argue endlessly, young women and men of all ages are regularly abused sexually by persons society hold in high esteem. Not only do we seem unable to stem the apparently ingrained cultural tide, we’re incapable of recognising the problem.

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Pat Howard: Erie bishop names defrocked priests

PENNSYLVANIA
GoErie

The Erie diocese is among several in Pennsylvania under investigation by a statewide grand jury related to what the diocese in a statement termed “past and present allegations of sexual abuse of children in the diocese.”

It was the Catholic Diocese of Erie’s equivalent of a legal ad, published to note the dispatching of an unpleasant piece of church business.

The notice, in the March 5 issue of the diocese’s Faith Life newspaper, opened with a declarative sentence that set a welcome and overdue precedent. It passed along word that a priest had gotten a pink slip from the pope.

“On Nov. 8, 2016,” it read, “Samuel Barton Slocum, formerly a priest of the Diocese of Erie, was dismissed from the clerical state by the Holy Father, Pope Francis.”

The notice doesn’t detail Slocum’s transgressions. But something is known about him because he faced what so many other priests eluded under the cover of the hierarchy — a criminal case and conventional justice.

He wasn’t accused of sexual abuse, but rather of continuing inappropriate contact with a 15-year-old boy even after the boy’s mother told him to stop. Slocum, who had been pastor of a parish south of Bradford, was convicted in 2012 and sentenced by a McKean County judge to two years of probation. He never returned to active ministry.

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$135M claims exceed church assets

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | The Guam Daily Post Mar 19, 2017

With 30 individuals alleging child sex abuse at the hands of Guam Catholic priests spanning four decades, the total amount of monetary damages being sought in U.S. District Court of Guam cases now surpasses the amount of money the church currently holds in assets.

Archdiocesan Finance Council President Richard Untalan recently said in a press conference with Guam’s media that the council had identified about $132 million in net book assets, which include churches, land and schools under the Archdiocese of Agana.

Of the 30 cases filed in local and federal courts, 27 were filed by plaintiffs represented by Attorney David Lujan. In those suits, the plaintiffs are pursuing “all general, special, exemplary and punitive damages, as allowed by law in a sum to be proven at trial and in an amount not less than ($5 million).”

With 27 cases seeking at least $5 million each, the total amount sought by Lujan’s clients has reached a minimum of $135 million.

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PRESS CLUB AWARDS FOR OUTSTANDING BIAS

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Andrew Bolt, Herald Sun
March 18, 2017

The Melbourne Press Club disgraces itself at its Quill Awards, as well as showing its bias.

Its Journalist of the Year is the ABC reporter behind a dangerously biased report on children in detention in the Northern Territory, and the Gold Quill goes to an ABC report smearing Cardinal George Pell on the flimsiest “evidence” as a likely child abuser.

This is astonishing, and yet more justification of my refusal to enter these circuses:

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March 18, 2017

SOCIAL WORKER ACCUSED OF HIDING RELIGIOUS SECT ABUSE RESIGNS

NORTH CAROLINA
Associated Press

BY MITCH WEISS AND TOM FOREMAN JR.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A veteran social worker accused of coaching congregants and their children on what to say during a 2015 child abuse investigation of her secretive religious sect has resigned, an attorney for a child welfare agency said Friday.

Andrea Leslie-Fite said Lori Cornelius left her position at the Cleveland County Department of Social Services. The development came less than two weeks after The Associated Press published a report that quoted former members of the Word of Faith Fellowship sect saying that Cornelius and two assistant district attorneys – all members of the church – had helped undermine abuse investigations. The prosecutors resigned their posts and are under investigation by the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation.

SBI spokesman Patty McQuillan said Friday the agency isn’t currently investigating Cornelius or the Rutherford County Division of Social Services. But she said that could change.

Leslie-Fite did not answer questions about the circumstances of the Cornelius departure. In her letter of resignation, Cornelius cited to various unspecified reasons. Leslie-Fite added only that the resignation had been submitted earlier in the week, effective Friday.

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Victim: Apuron paid $30K ‘hush money’

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Mindy Aguon | For The Guam Daily Post

A former altar boy, who alleges he was repeatedly sexually abused, told The Guam Daily Post recently that Archbishop Anthony Apuron paid “hush money” in 2002 when he confronted the Catholic Church leader about the years of abuse he and other altar boys endured.

The victim, who asked that his name not be published at this time because of an unresolved potential legal question, said he was sexually molested by Father Louis Brouillard when he was the priest at San Vicente Catholic Church in Barrigada between 1976 and 1980.

In 2000, after years of holding in his secret and rebelling against any type of authority, the victim said he wanted to “come clean” and met with Apuron about the alleged abuse.

“I told him what happened and he said, ‘You can have a lifetime psychiatrist,’ and told me to see Mr. San Nicolas, a professor out of the University of Guam,” the victim said.

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Frustration grows over Vatican investigation

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Mindy Aguon | For The Guam Daily Post

“I’ve never lost faith in God or the Catholic Church – just the people who caused this on me and my family.” – Ramon De Plata

Victims of cleric sex abuse are growing weary that the Vatican has yet to wrap up its investigation into allegations of sexual abuse by Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

Ramon De Plata of Chalan Pago said he will never forget what he saw when he was 10 years old in the parish rectory at Our Lady of Peace Parish in Chalan Pago.

During an overnight stay with other altar boys in 1964, De Plata alleges he saw Apuron – a seminarian at the time – and another clergy member, Rev. Antonio Cruz, engaging in sexual activity with another 10-year-old altar boy.

“I saw Apuron and I saw what they were doing to the other altar boy,” De Plata said. “I guess he got targeted.”

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Trinity at the Boston Underground Film Festival!

MASSACHUSETTS
skipshea

Posted on March 18, 2017 by Skip Shea

TRINITY, will screen next at noon on next Sunday, the 26th, at the Brattle Theater in Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts as part of the Boston Underground Film Festival.

In his first feature, Massachusetts’ own Skip Shea plumbs the depths of loss, trauma, and guilt through the story of Michael, a stoic artist (Sean Carmichael) who stops for coffee only to encounter the priest (David Graziano) who once sexually abused him. What would you do if you came face-to-face with the man who ruined your life?

Trinity explores that moment as a dreamlike journey through time past, a route that carries the troubled Michael in and out of churches, a dimly lit bathroom stall, and the tables of tarot card readers. We meet Father Tom’s other victims, most memorably the haunting Angel (Aurora Grabill), and a cadre of Michael’s chatty adulthood friends who seem to discuss the tenets of Catholicism as others casually discuss their theories about Westworld. Their removed, academic dissections rarely consider that the scars of abuse do not always fade with time. The experiences continue to strangle and suffocate the victims long after they’ve left the physical proximity of their tormentors.

An outspoken survivor of clergy abuse, Shea understands real terror is not necessarily found in cannibalistic reveries, but in the unexpected and most-unwelcome greeting from one’s tormenter in a benignly cozy coffee shop. These are the film’s most profoundly squeamish moments and they will stay with you long after you leave the theater. Filmed mostly in Western Massachusetts and Rhode Island, the non-linear narrative borrows from Mulholland Drive and the works of Alain Resnais, but this searingly painful story is all Shea. The journey is at times arduous and altogether frustrating, but you will never lose sight of the hope cautiously peering out from the rabbit hole. – Melinda Green

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German Newspaper Investigates Mysterious Trust Connected to Order of Malta

GERMANY
National Catholic Register

‘Bild’ sheds light on a multi-million dollar donation seen to be at the center of the Order’s recent dispute with the Holy See.

Edward Pentin

Germany’s mass-selling Bild newspaper has reported that the Grand Chancellor of the Order of Malta, Baron Albrecht Freiherr von Boeselager, accepted a 30 million Swiss franc donation ($31 million) on behalf of the Order from what Bild calls “a dubious trust” in Geneva. Boeselager denies any wrongdoing.

The Grand Chancellor told the newspaper that over a seven-year period, the Order would be drawing 30 million Swiss francs from the fund, which Bild calls by its acronym CPVG. So far, the Order has received 3 million francs from the trust, whose existence the Register first brought to public attention in January.

Bild correspondent Nikolaus Harbusch, a well known investigative reporter in Germany specializing in financial crimes, reports that the trustee, whom the newspaper names simply as Ariane S., signed a framework agreement with Boeselager to accept the money on March 1. The agreement came just weeks after Boeselager was reinstated as Grand Chancellor following his dismissal in December by the Order’s former Grand Master Fra’ Matthew Festing.

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‘In 1974 I drove myself to the Cork mother and baby home’

IRELAND
Irish Times

I confirmed my pregnancy with a GP in September 1973, in a town 30km from where I was working. He referred me to a local curate, and I went to see him. I had no idea at that time what I was going to do.

I had told nobody about my pregnancy, so the priest told me that I could go to a mother-and-baby home called Bessborough House, in Blackrock in Cork. I knew nothing about these homes, and I don’t think I had ever heard of them.

A month later I told a friend, who told me I’d be welcome in her parents’ home. Some weeks later I told my own mother. I knew that she’d be upset and that I wouldn’t be able to come home with my illegitimate baby.

I was 24 and from a middle-class home. I had been well educated and was the oldest in a big family. My mother would not want the neighbours to know.

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The church robbed us of our sons : mothers

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

Melissa Cunningham
@MeljCunningham

17 Mar 2017

Anne Levey is racked with guilt.

Once a devout Catholic, Ms Levey still has faith in God — but she can’t bring herself to step inside a Catholic Church.

She doesn’t accept dogma from any church, not since her son Paul was sexually abused at the hands of disgraced paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale.

“I blame myself, every day I blame myself,” she says. “I can’t help it.

“You go to bed and you’re thinking about it. You wake up and you’re thinking about it, but you just have to keep going. You live with it every day, the guilt, regret and the shame.”

Ms Levey is one of scores of secondary victims of the child sexual abuse scandal caught up in a cycle of entrenched pain.

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Former Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis official leaves priesthood

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

By: Rose Heaphy
POSTED:MAR 17 2017

(KMSP) – The Pope has granted a former high ranking official with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to leave the priesthood.

In 2014, Peter Laird, the former vicar general at the Archdiocese, petitioned to the Vatican for a “request for laicization,” according to a statement from Archbishop Bernard A. Hebda. The Pope recently granted Laird’s request, which means he will no longer be able to return to public ministry.

Laird worked alongside Archbishop John Nienstedt, who resigned in 2015 amidst criminal charges against the Archdiocese for failing to protect children against sexual abuse.

Laird resigned from his position with the Archdiocese and stepped away from priestly ministry in 2013.

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