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.

May 18, 2016

Key PA Senator: Won’t Be Rushed On Child Sex Abuse Bill

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

May 17, 2016

by Tony Romeo

HARRISBURG (CBS) — The chairman of a key state Senate committee says he’s aiming for a vote next month on a House bill that would give child sex abuse victims more time to seek justice, but also insists he won’t be rushed.

The state House last month sent the Senate a bill that would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations in future cases, and would give victims of child sex abuse more time to bring civil cases.

Republican Jake Corman, the Senate majority leader, says he favors Senate action on the House-passed bill, but defers to the chairman of the committee where the bill now sits.

“We’d like to get it done. You know, look — I don’t get in front of my chairmen, that’s the worst thing I can do,” said Corman.

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

Advocates blast Gov. Cuomo for not backing legislation to extend statute of limitations for child sex abuse victims

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY DAN RIVOLI STEPHEN REX BROWN

It’s time to take a stand, governor.

Advocates lashed out at Gov. Cuomo on Tuesday for failing to back proposed legislation that would extend the state’s statute of limitations regarding child sex abuse.

“Any passivity on this issue effectively defends child sexual predators,” said Kathryn Robb, an advocate who says she endured sexual abuse as a child. “It is very simple, the governor has a choice — stand with child sexual predators, defending them by supporting (the present statute of limitations), or stand with the children of New York, and defend them. It is that simple.”

Her withering words came in response to Cuomo’s mealy-mouthed answer to a simple question — why hasn’t he met with victims of sexual abuse advocating reform of state law governing charges against child-sex abusers?

“I don’t believe that I’m not meeting with them,” he said. “And it’s a very important issue. I’m talking to the Legislature about it from a variety of opinions and perspectives.”

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

Abuse victim calls for end to time-barred sex crimes

MALTA
Times of Malta

May 18, 2016, 07:15 by Kim Dalli

A child abuse victim is calling for sex crimes against minors not to be time-barred and for the prescription period to come into effect, at minimum, when the abused party turns 18.

Christina, 21, opened up to this newspaper in an effort to get policymakers to rethink the statute of limitations for the sexual abuse of minors.

As the law stands, the defilement of minors is time-barred after five years, meaning no criminal action can be taken if the case is reported more than five years after it took place. The rape of minors is time-barred after 15 years.

For cases of participation in sexual activity with a minor, as opposed to forced sexual activity – for example, intercourse for which the minor gave his or her ‘consent’ – the 10-year prescription period is suspended until the victim turns 18.

Ready to go by her first name but still hesitant to show her face and full identity due to the psychological trauma she has suffered, Christina explains that, as a child, she could not quite understand what was being done to her, although she instinctively felt it was “wrong”.

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

Child sex abuse bill focus of legislator’s panel

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

By Patti Mengers, Delaware County Daily Times
POSTED: 05/17/16

Nearly 24 hours after priests in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia convened for meetings with Archbishop Charles Chaput, a state representative who claims he was abused as a child by a priest is hosting a panel for legislators on a bill that would expand the statute of limitations for filing lawsuits against suspected abusers and institutions that allegedly protected them.

Phil Saviano, whose efforts to help Boston Globe reporters expose suspected child sex abuse by nearly 90 priests in 2002 were included in the Academy Award-winning film, “Spotlight,” will be among five panelists featured in East Wing Senate Hearing Room 8 A at 12:30 this afternoon. Host is state Rep. Mark Rozzi of Berks County, D-126, who has identified himself as a survivor of Catholic clergy abuse.

“I think the panel is important because it puts a human face on an issue which can be discussed in legalese endlessly,” John Salveson, president and founder of the Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse, said on Tuesday.

The 60-year-old Radnor resident, who claims he was abused as an adolescent by a Long Island priest but was ignored when he brought it to the attention of the Diocese of Rockville Centre bishop in 1980, has called the passage of House Bill 1947 “a major step forward in our battle to find justice for the victims of child sex abuse in Pennsylvania.”

Tuesday, Chaput called all priests who serve the approximately 2.5 million Roman Catholics in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia to attend meetings at St. Helena’s Church in Montgomery County. It was rumored he would be talking with them about House Bill 1947 proposed last month by state Rep. Ron Marsico, R-105, of Dauphin County that would expand from age 30 to 50 the statute of limitations for the filing of lawsuits against alleged abusers and institutions entrusted with the victims’ protection.

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

As grand jury investigation continues, Solebury School abuse accusers tell story in Harrisburg

PENNSYLVANIA
The Intelligencer

By Jo Ciavaglia, staff writer

On a November day in 2014, Carole Trickett had just spent an hour testifying before a grand jury about a part of her childhood she spent most of her 79 years trying to put out of her mind, when a Bucks County prosecutor posed one last question to the 1954 Solebury School graduate.

How did she think the alleged sex abuse she experienced as a child at the hands of one of the school’s founders affected her life?

The Maine resident answered, but only after she took two minutes to compose herself, she said during a recent phone interview. She doesn’t recall her exact answer, but does remember the question left her astonished.

“They need to understand this is not just having your appendix out. It’s affected me in many ways,” said Trickett. “It doesn’t go away.”

While the painful memories of child sex abuse don’t expire, time limits for victims to take court action against their abusers does.

For example, only one of the reportedly dozens of alleged sex abuse victims over decades at Solebury School, a private boarding school, falls within the legal time frames for pursuing criminal and civil action, according to sources close to the now 18-month-old grand jury investigation.

Trickett and others want to see that changed. It’s why she will appear, along with other alleged Solebury School sex abuse victims and statute of limitations reform supporters, at the Pennsylvania Capitol on Wednesday for an event to bring attention to proposed legislation that would extend — in some cases eliminate — those time limits.

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

On the Front Lines in the Battle to Eliminate Child Sexual Abuse in the Jewish Community

NEW YORK
The Jewish Voice

WEDNESDAY, 18 MAY 2016

ARIELLA HAVIV

An interview with Mark Meyer Appel, the founder of Voice of Justice

There is no doubt to anyone who has eyes to see and ears that hear that the myriad headlines that dominate the media reveal egregious corruption amongst trusted officials and the kind of moral turpitude that causes a collective cringe.

For decades, the seemingly at peace Orthodox Jewish world has had its share of shocking publicity when facts emerged about horrific child sexual abuse; perpetrated not by circumspect types in the outside world but by respected adult members of the community.

Raising one’s voice in outrage and indignation and thusly confronting the dense wall of silence that has been erected by the Orthodox Community in shielding perpetrators has been a most daunting venture. Given the community’s resistance to speaking openly about this terrifying phenomenon, those who would entertain the notion of crossing this invisible line are readily shunned; threatened and even ostracized.

Enter Mark Meyer Appel, founder of the Voice of Justice. Mr. Appel’s name has come to personify those victims of abuse whose voices have been drowned out in this continuing and painful conversation. Mr. Appel , however, cannot claim neophyte status in terms of acquiring knowledge on child sexual abuse.

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

Judge denies LDS leader’s request to drop sexual abuse charges

IOWA
Daily Nonpareil

By Derek Sullivan
dsullivan@nonpareilonline.com

An Oakland man will stand trial on sexual abuse charges after his motion to dismiss charges was denied Monday.

James Raborn, 26, has been charged with two felony counts of sexual exploitation by a counselor or therapist, two misdemeanor counts of sexual exploitation by a counselor or therapist as well as single misdemeanor counts of dissemination or exhibition of obscene materials to minors and purchase or possession of a depiction of a minor in a sex act.

If convicted of sexual exploitation by a counselor or therapist, a Class D felony, Raborn could receive up to five years in prison on each count.

On March 23, Raborn’s attorney, Jordan Glaser, filed a motion to dismiss the charges. In April, Fourth Judicial District Chief Judge Jeffrey Larson heard arguments from Glaser and prosecutor Shelly Sudmann on the motion.

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

Former pastor convicted in sexual abuse trial

OHIO
Portsmouth Daily Times

By Frank Lewis – flewis@civitasmedia.com

A former Jackson County, Ohio pastor has been found guilty of 14 of the 15 counts against him in a sexual abuse trial. Dennis V. Wright, 67, who was convicted on the charges involving three victims, reportedly abused a teenage girl numerous times and a mentally challenged adult while he was pastor of the Old Emory Church in Madison Township. He was also convicted of sexually assaulting his own son back in 1989 and 1990 when his son was only 10.

“They convicted him on all counts except count 5, which was illegal use of a minor in a nudity-oriented material,” Defense Attorney Gene Meadows said. “We tried the bulk of the case to the jury. There were several charges in the indictment that had sexual violent predator specifications attached to them. We tried those to the bench today (Tuesday) and we come back for sentencing Thursday.”

The investigation was conducted by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office and the Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI)

According to a story in the Jackson County Times-Journal, the unnamed female was 13 when the first incident occurred. The story said the girl’s father found out about the situation and reported it to the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office in February 2015.

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

Guam Archbishop denies abuse allegation

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

An Archbishop in Guam is denying an allegation he molested an altar boy 40 years ago.

52-year-old Roy Quintanilla said the abuse occurred when Archbishop Anthony Apuron, who was then a pastor, asked him to stay the night at his house when he was just 12-years-old.

Mr Quintanilla said he wanted closure and was worried there may be others like him who had pushed the experience of abuse into the back of their minds.

But in a video statement on the website of the Catholic Archdiocese of Agana in Guam, the Archbishop rejected the accusation.

“To be absolutely clear and to avoid any misinterpretations of my statement, I deny all allegations of sexual abuse by Roy Quintanilla.”

Mr Quintanilla, who was then an altar boy, said it felt like the abuse just happened yesterday.

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

Award-winning journalist Stephen Jimenez, child sex-abuse survivor, blasts lawmakers protecting predators by dismissing Child Victims Act

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE

Stephen Jimenez returned to Windsor Terrace for the first time in 25 years Tuesday and was bombarded by warm memories — and raw, gut-wrenching emotional wounds.

Jimenez grew up in a three-story home in this leafy Brooklyn neighborhood surrounded by a loving extended family.

This was also where a Holy Name of Jesus Elementary School teacher named Brother Romanus repeatedly sexually abused Jimenez for nearly four years in the 1960s. Jimenez said Brother Romanus, a member of the Xaverian order who died in 1992, assaulted him dozens of times between the ages of 10 and 13 in a classroom closet, bathhouse locker rooms and swimming pool changing rooms, even under the boardwalk at Coney Island.

“I love this place,” Jimenez, 62, said as he sat on a park bench and wiped tears from his face. “But it is really difficult to come back. I feel like a piece of my life has been stolen from me.”

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

Pope’s latest Q&A tackles sex abuse, secularism and deacons

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By Ines San Martin
Vatican correspondent May 16, 2016

ROME— In a new interview with a French newspaper Pope Francis stirred the waters once again, saying there must be no limit on the Church’s prosecution of sex abuse by priests, defending both secular states and religious freedom, and saying that it’s often a mistake to “clericalize” talented laity by turning them into deacons.

“It’s true that it’s not easy to judge the facts after decades, in another context,” Francis told La Croix when asked about a series of sex abuse scandals currently shaking the French church.

“Reality is not always clear,” he said.

“But for the Church, in this area, there can be no prescription,” he continued, referring to a term in the Code of Canon Law for a statute of limitations against prosecuting crimes after a certain period of time.

“With these abuses, a priest who has the vocation to lead [people] to God destroys a child,” Francis said. “[He] spreads evil, resentment, pain.”

“As Benedict XVI said, there must be zero tolerance,” Francis said.

Questioned about the specific case of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, who has admitted to making mistakes in the handling of clerical sexual abuse in his diocese of Lyon, Francis said that based on the information he has, he believes Barbarin took the necessary measures.

“He’s courageous, creative, [and a] missionary,” Francis said. “We must now wait for the result of the proceedings before the civil courts.”

The pope rejected calls for Barbarin to resign.

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

Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown holds second of three prayer services for healing

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY SARA SMALL TUESDAY, MAY 17TH 2016

ALTOONA — The faithful of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown gathered Tuesday night to continue the process of healing.

This is the second of three prayer services the Diocese is holding to pray for victims of child sexual abuse at the hands of religious leaders.

Victims, as well as their families, attended the service at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in Altoona.

“There are no words to express the sorrow and the hurt for those who have been harmed in our church,” says Tony DeGol, Diocese spokesman.

While there are few words that may help in the healing process, Bishop Mark Bartchak is trying to assure the faithful.

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

A victim speaks – Part 1

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Part 2

[with video]

Altoona, Blair County

This victim says he’s been scarred for life over years of sexual abuse and being forced to dress as a woman during sexual encounters with a priest.

He’s still worried about the toll it takes on his family and wanted to remain anonymous.

We’ll call him “John”.

John’s story is shocking. Raised as a Catholic, he attended Catholic elementary schools in Altoona before heading to Bishop Guilfoyle as a teen.

As “John” recalls, “That’s where I got to meet Fr. Raymond – Fr. Raymond Waldruff. He was my teacher at Bishop Guilfoyle.”

When he was 15 – “John” said the grooming began.

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

Statute of limitations would prevent L.I. Catholic school priest from criminal prosecution

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY STEPHEN REX BROWN

New York’s statute of limitations on misdemeanor sexual abuse would prevent a now-suspended Catholic priest from being criminally prosecuted — the latest example of how current laws work against victims.

A church-run inquiry determined that accusations lodged against the Rev. James Williams, former president of Chaminade High School in Mineola, L.I., of sexually abusing a former student had been deemed “credible.”

Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas revealed her office was also aware of the accusations, but that her hands were tied.

“The victim alleged conduct constituting misdemeanor sexual abuse by Father Williams in 2011. The victim, who was legally an adult at the time of the alleged abuse, did not wish to pursue criminal charges. The two-year statute of limitations for misdemeanor sexual abuse expired in 2013, two years before the alleged abuse was reported by the diocese,” said Brendan Brosh, a spokesman for Singas.

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

Giving predators a pass: The case of Father James Williams, ex-president of Chaminade High School, underscores the urgency of statute-of-limitations reform

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Editorial

The Nassau County district attorney was legally barred from filing a sex abuse charge against a priest who served as president of a prominent Long Island boys high school — demonstrating once more that New York’s statute of limitations can be a predator’s best friend.

A former student told the DA in 2015 that Father James Williams, ex-president of Chaminade High School, had abused him in 2011. Since the alleged conduct — denied by Williams — occurred more than two years earlier, the statute ruled out a criminal case.

The unidentified student, who is said to have been 18 at the time of the incident or incidents, reportedly preferred not to file a criminal complaint even if the law had given him the power. The point is that he and other alleged victims should have the opportunity to do so if they wish.

According to the district attorney, Williams’ reputed actions amounted to misdemeanor sex abuse. New York’s Penal Law includes only three relevant sexually related misdemeanors.

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

Quintanilla: Archbishop Apuron is Lying

GUAM
Pacific News Center

[with video]

Written by Janela Carrera

Roy Quintanilla says he’s offended that the archbishop would deny the allegations of sexual abuse.

Guam – Roy Taitague Quintanilla says he’s offended that Archbishop Anthony Apuron would deny that he sexually abused Quintanilla when Quintanilla was an altar boy. He also explains what motivated him to end his 40-year silence.

It was the first time anyone has publicly come out with allegations that they were victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Archbishop Anthony Apuron. Hours after Roy Quintanilla made the announcement yesterday, Archbishop Apuron released his own video statement, denying all the allegations.

“When I first became aware of his response, obviously my first response was absolutely offended because I know what he did, he knows what he did and he knows that he’s lying,” says Quintanilla. “I am not lying.”

Quintanilla says he has no intention of taking the archbishop to court. All he wants is for the archbishop to admit what he did wrong. He also says his public statements are aimed at Archbishop Apuron and not at the Church.

“I want it to be clear that I’m not confronting the catholic church, I’m not confronting the faith, I’m confronting the person: Anthony Sablan Apuron. And I’m offended that in his response he hides behind the church and he hides behind the cloth and implies that I am slandering the church when that could not be further from the truth. I am not slandering the church, I love my faith and I love the catholic church,” he says.

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

Head of Catholic Church in Guam accused of molesting altar boy

GUAM
Times Live (South Africa)

[with video]

AFP

The head of the Catholic Church in Guam was forced to publicly defend himself from accusations of sexual abuse, describing the allegation as part of an ongoing “malicious” attack.

“To be absolutely clear and to avoid any misinterpretations of my statement I deny all allegations of sexual abuse,” Archbishop Anthony Apuron said in a televised statement.

The accusation was made by 52-year-old Roy Taitague Quintanilla who said he was molested 40 years ago when he was an altar boy at a church where Apuron was the parish priest in the western Pacific US territory.

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

May 17, 2016

6 new sex abuse lawsuits filed against Seattle Archdiocese

WASHINGTON
Chinook Observer

Published on May 17, 2016

SEATTLE (AP) — Six new child sex abuse lawsuits have been filed against the Seattle Archdiocese.

The Seattle attorneys who filed the lawsuits say more abuse survivors came forward after the Catholic church released the names of 77 people against which credible allegations have been made.

They allege they were abused at various parishes and schools across the Seattle Archdiocese from the late 1950s to the late 1980s. In each lawsuit, they claim the Archdiocese knew or should have known that the abuse posed a danger to children, but did not protect them.

In January of this year, the Seattle Archdiocese identified each of the six priests identified in the complaints as being the subject of “credible” sexual abuse allegations involving children.

Each of the plaintiffs filed their claims under pseudonym to protect their identity because they allege they were sexually abused as children.

At least three Roman Catholic priests stationed in Pacific County from 1958 to 1971 were identified as being among 77 Catholic clergy believed to have sexually abused Washington state children.

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

Editorial: Diocese silence on sexual abuse must end

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

OTTAWA CITIZEN EDITORIAL BOARD

The act of penance, according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, requires “the sinner to endure all things willingly, be contrite of heart, confess with the lips, and practise complete humility and fruitful satisfaction.” It is abhorrent to read these words while learning new details of the abuse of young people in Ottawa by Catholic priests.

Contrition and confession. Both appear in short supply, based on Citizen reporter Andrew Duffy’s findings about the Archdiocese of Ottawa suing its insurance companies over the costs of lawsuits from victims of sexual abuse. Based on Duffy’s scouring of court records and the online database Sylvia’s Site, there have been at least 41 victims in the Ottawa diocese. The archdiocese won’t provide an exact number.

Sadly, the abuse of children by priests is not news in Ottawa: The scandal began to surface in the mid-1980s.

But the archdiocese has declined to answer a number of detailed questions put to it in writing last week by the Citizen. There may be more victims; we know only of those for whom there is a legal paper trail. And how many priests were involved? Silence from the church, though the Citizen’s analysis counts at least 11. So much for confession.

One priest has spoken, at least. Rev. Barry McGrory admitted to assaulting two girls and one boy at Ottawa’s Holy Cross Parish. He says then-archbishop Joseph-Aurèle Plourde (now deceased) knew about it, but that instead of being treated – or imprisoned – he, McGrory, was moved to Toronto, where four years later he was charged with sexually assaulting a 17-year-old boy.

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

Special report: Insurance lawsuit reveals secrets of Ottawa’s clergy abuse scandal

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

ANDREW DUFFY, OTTAWA CITIZEN

The Archdiocese of Ottawa will not say how many victims of clergy sex abuse it has recognized or how much it has paid them. But, as Andrew Duffy reports in this series, documents filed in a recent lawsuit begin to answer those questions, while also revealing details of never-before-known cases — such as that of Rev. Barry McGrory. Read Part 1 of this series below. Read Part 2: “Priest admits to sexual abuse for first time in Citizen interview” here. Read Part 3: “Ottawa diocese repeatedly warned about local clergy’s most notorious abuser” tomorrow.

Documents filed by the Archdiocese of Ottawa as part of an insurance lawsuit disclose substantial new information about the history and scope of Ottawa’s clergy sex abuse scandal.

The scandal began to unfold in the mid-1980s, but the number of victims in this city has remained a closely guarded secret.

The diocese will reveal neither how many sexual abuse victims it has compensated, nor how much it has paid them.

Documents filed in the recent insurance suit, however, make credible estimates possible.

A Citizen analysis of court records, newspaper files and Sylvia’s Site — a website devoted to tracking the church sex abuse scandal in Canada — reveals there have been at least 41 acknowledged victims of clergy sexual abuse in the Ottawa diocese.

Eleven priests who worked in the diocese have been connected to sexual abuse through criminal and civil actions, the Citizen’s analysis shows. That total includes three previously unreported cases.

The diocese’s historic silence has meant that understanding the full scope of the sex abuse scandal in the Ottawa diocese is difficult since some cases have been prosecuted in criminal courts, while others have been settled privately in civil actions.

The Archdiocese of Ottawa was asked to produce its own victim numbers, but it declined.

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

Special report: Priest admits to sexual abuse for first time in Citizen interview

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

ANDREW DUFFY, OTTAWA CITIZEN

The Archdiocese of Ottawa will not say how many victims of clergy sex abuse it has recognized or how much it has paid them. But, as Andrew Duffy reports in this series, documents filed in a recent lawsuit begin to answer those questions, while also revealing details of never-before-known cases — such as that of Rev. Barry McGrory. Read Part 1 of this series: “Insurance lawsuit reveals secrets of Ottawa’s clergy abuse scandal” here. Read Part 2 below. Read Part 3: “Ottawa diocese repeatedly warned about local clergy’s most notorious abuser” Wednesday.

A retired Catholic priest admitted, in an interview with the Citizen, that he sexually abused three young parishioners at Ottawa’s Holy Cross Parish in the 1970s and 80s.

Rev. Barry McGrory said he was a sex addict who suffered from a powerful attraction to adolescents, both male and female.

Then Archbishop Joseph-Aurèle Plourde, he said, knew of his sexual problems before moving him to a Toronto-based organization dedicated to assisting remote Catholic missions.

Many of the missions were in native communities in Canada’s north.

Four years after leaving Ottawa, in 1991, McGrory was charged with sexually assaulting a 17-year-old native youth.

McGrory told the Citizen he was a victim of his illness, a sexual disorder from which he’s now cured.

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

Another priest with Haverhill ties accused of child sex abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
Eagle-Tribune

HAVERHILL — Another Catholic priest with Haverhill ties has been accused of sexually abusing a child.

Mitchell Garabedian, lawyer who has brought civil suits against several priests and the Archdiocese of Boston, has filed a civil suit against the Rev. Arnold Kelley, an elderly priest who lived and served at All Saints Parish in Haverhill for several years.

The suit says Kelley abused a boy who was 10 to 13 years old from approximately 1973 to 1976 at St. Thomas Aquinas Parish in Jamaica Plain.

The suit asks that the Archdiocese recognize Kelley as a sexual predator and make a settlement with the victim.

Kelley is the second All Saints priest accused of abusing a child. Former priest Kelvin Iguabita served 12 years in jail after being convicted in 2000 with raping a 15-year-old girl at the church. He is also accused in a recent civil suit of abusing a 5-year-old girl from the parish 15 years ago. That suit also names officials from the Archdiocese of Boston as defendants.

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

Apuron: ‘I deny all allegations of sexual abuse’

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

[with video]

Kyle Daly, kjdaly@guampdn.com May 17, 2016

Archbishop Anthony Apuron released a recorded video Tuesday evening in which he denied allegations that he sexually abused an altar boy about 40 years ago.

On Tuesday morning, Roy Taitague Quintanilla, 52, of Hawaii, gave a detailed account to the media, alleging that he was sexually abused by the archbishop when he was an altar boy and the archbishop was a priest.

Apuron hasn’t been charged with a crime and no lawsuit has been filed against the archbishop.

“To be absolutely clear and to avoid any misinterpretations of my statement, I deny all allegations of sexual abuse by Roy Quintanilla,” Apuron said in the video.

In his video statement, the archbishop referred to what he called “malicious ads” that were placed in local newspapers, including the Pacific Daily News, in recent days. The Concerned Catholics of Guam, a group that has been critical of the archbishop, paid for the ads, which called for victims of sexual abuse to come forward.

In a previous news release, the archdiocese stated the advertisements insinuated criminal sexual abuse by Apuron.

“As predicted just four days ago, these malicious ads have resulted in a false accusation of sexual abuse,” Apuron said in the video.

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

Priest gets 10 years, deportation, on fondling charge

MISSISSIPPI
Washington Times

By JEFF AMY – Associated Press – Tuesday, May 17, 2016

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) – A Roman Catholic priest who pleaded guilty to fondling a boy has been sentenced to 10 years in a Mississippi prison, followed by deportation to Mexico.

The Rev. Jose Vazquez was ordered to serve the sentence without possibility of parole. Jones County Circuit Judge Dal Williamson also ordered that Vazquez serve an additional five years in prison if he is caught re-entering the United States after he’s deported.

Vazquez, 37, was arrested in September after a man reported inappropriate behavior between his 12-year-old son and the priest.

“This behavior is reprehensible and will not be tolerated. We continue to be saddened by his actions and for his victim,” the Biloxi diocese said in a statement. “When first notified about the accusation, diocesan officials cooperated fully with civil authorities, and the priest was immediately suspended from all ministry and removed as a pastor.”

Diocesan spokesman Terry Dixon declined comment when asked if Vazquez has been removed from the priesthood, or if the diocese faces any civil lawsuits because of Vazquez.

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

MEDIA RELEASE – MAY 17, 2016

MASSACHUSETTS
Road to Recovery

Boston Archdiocesan senior priest, Fr. Arnold E. Kelley, currently in residence at All Saints Parish, Haverhill, MA, is accused of sexually abusing a minor child from approximately 1973-1976 according to a lawsuit filed recently in Essex County, Superior Court, Salem, MA

“John Doe” of Massachusetts has accused Fr. Arnold E. Kelley of sexually abusing him from approximately 1973-1976 when he was approximately 10-13 years of age at St. Thomas Aquinas Parish in Jamaica Plain, MA

What
A press conference alerting parishioners, the general public, and the media of the recent filing of a lawsuit in Essex County, Superior Court, Salem, MA, against Fr. Arnold E. Kelley by a man who claims to have been sexually abused as a minor child for approximately three years by Fr. Arnold E. Kelley at St. Thomas Aquinas Parish, Jamaica Plain, MA

When
Wednesday, May 18, 2016 at 11:00 am

Where
On the public sidewalk outside All Saints Roman Catholic Church, 120 Bellevue Avenue, Haverhill, MA 01832

Who
Members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey, that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, including its co-founder and President, former Catholic priest Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D.

Why
As early as 1997, the Archdiocese of Boston was made aware of an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor child by Fr. Arnold E. Kelley at St. Rita’ s Parish in Lowell, MA. It is believed that Fr. Arnold E. Kelley arrived at St. Rita’s Parish in approximately 1980. Recently, a man came forward to report that he was sexually abused as a minor child from approximately 1973-1976 when he was approximately 10-13 years of age by Fr. Arnold E. Kelley at St. Thomas Aquinas Parish in Jamaica Plain, MA. Attorney Mitchell Garabedian recently filed a lawsuit on behalf of this man in Essex County Superior Court in Salem, MA, against Fr. Arnold E. Kelley for sexual abuse. “John Doe” was active in St. Thomas Aquinas Parish as a parishioner, band member, and religious education student. “John Doe” alleges that he was sexually abused as a minor child by Fr. Arnold E. Kelley at St. Thomas Aquinas Parish School and St. Thomas Aquinas High School. Demonstrators will demand that Fr. Arnold E. Kelley be recognized by Cardinal O’Malley as a sexual predator, and that John Doe’s claim be validated and settled fairly by the Archdiocese of Boston.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc., 862-368-2800

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The Catholic church needs to move on from archaic celibacy rule

NEW ZEALAND
Manawatu Standard

KARL DU FRESNE
May 18 2016

OPINION: On a recent Monday morning I sat at the press desk in the Wellington District Court and watched as a former Catholic priest was sentenced to six years and seven months in prison for historical sex offences.

Peter Joseph Hercock left the priesthood in the 1980s. He is 72 now, and married with a son. But in the 1970s he was a chaplain and counsellor at Sacred Heart Girls’ College in Lower Hutt.

The four women who pursued complaints against him were then pupils in their early teens. They were grappling with personal problems or came from troubled home environments – sometimes both.

hey went to Hercock thinking he would help them. Instead he groomed them for his sexual gratification. He raped and indecently assaulted them in his bedroom in the Catholic presbytery and at a Kapiti Coast bach used by nuns.

One victim, then aged 14, vividly recalled a “wretched” Leonard Cohen record playing in the background as she was raped. Another was given two glasses of whisky and carried to bed.

Much as we have become accustomed to sordid stories of sexual abuse by priests, the women’s victim impact statements were painful to sit through.

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Apuron accused of molestation

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Jacqueline Perry Guzman | Post News Staff

A man has come forward and publicly accused Archbishop Anthony Apuron of molesting him 40 years ago, when he was a 12-year-old altar boy.

Roy Taitague Quintanilla gathered with family members and friends and read a letter addressed to the archbishop to members of the media just below the Archdiocese of Hagåtña Chancery Office in Agana Heights on Tuesday, May 17.

Quintanilla, 52, alleged the archbishop molested him while he was an altar server at Mount Carmel Church in Agat when the archbishop served as the parish priest.

The letter details the incident beginning with a trip to the movies with all the altar boys of the parish and then each of them being dropped off at their home. “I was the last of the altar boys in the van. I thought you were going to take me home like the others, but instead, you asked if I could sleep at your house,” he said, reading the letter.

He alleged that at the archbishop’s house, he was told to sleep in the same room as Apuron and that Apuron grabbed his private parts.

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Papst Franziskus: Rücktritt von Primas Barbarin wäre “unklug”

FRANKREICH
kathpress

Paris-Vatikanstadt, 17.05.2016 (KAP) Papst Franziska hat sich gegen einen Rücktritt des französischen Primas, Erzbischof Philippe Barbarin von Lyon, ausgesprochen. Dies wäre “unklug” und müsste wie ein Schuldeingeständnis ausgelegt werden, sagte er im Interview der französischen Zeitung “La Croix” (Montag). Stattdessen müsse man die Ergebnisse der staatlichen Ermittlungen abwarten. Nach seinen Erkenntnissen habe Barbarin die notwendigen Maßnahmen zur Aufklärung der Fälle ergriffen, so Franziskus.

Barbarin wird beschuldigt, von Missbrauchsfällen gewusst und nicht angemessen reagiert zu haben. Mitglieder der französischen Regierung forderten seinen Rücktritt.

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New abuse claims against St Edmund’s headmaster emerge

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

May 18 2016

Christopher Knaus

Fresh claims have emerged against a former headmaster of St Edmund’s College, who was accused last year of molesting a student repeatedly over two years.

The late Brother Noel Landener served his first stint as a headmaster at St Edmund’s between 1960 and 1965, following a long career in the Catholic Christian Brothers order.

He was celebrated in the decades after he left the school, and rose through the ranks of Christian Brothers to become a member of Queensland’s provincial council and then a school inspector in the same state, according to his obituary.

He was praised for driving up student numbers, cultivating “self-discipline”, and having a “talent for organisation, abundant energy, and a clear view of the school he wanted St Edmund’s to become”.

One of the school’s six houses was named in his honour.

But, following his death in 1982, disturbing allegations began to emerge about his five years in Canberra.

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6 new lawsuits against Seattle Archdiocese detail decades of alleged abuse

WASHINGTON
KIRO

by: David Wagner Updated: May 17, 2016

Six new lawsuits against the Seattle Archdiocese detail three decades of alleged abuse by six priests and a youth minister. The lawsuits are being filed this morning in King County Superior Court.

Among those accused:

* Father James Gandrau, St. Mark Parish in Shoreline
* Father Dennis Muehe, St. Anne Parish in Seattle
* Father Theodore Marmo, St. Vincent de Paul and St. Edward Hall
* Father Harold Quigg, St. Vincent de Paul and St. Edward Hall
* Father Jerome Dooley, Sacred Heart Catholic Church and School in Tacoma
* Father David Jaeger, Immaculate Conception Catholic Church and School in Everett

All six priests were on the list of 77 church pedophiles released by the Seattle Archdiocese in January.

“After the Archdiocese released the list of names our office received dozens of calls from abuse survivors, including many people who thought they were the only one. These cases represent the first group of abuse victims who decided they wanted to take action, but I would be surprised if more claims are not filed,” said attorney Michael Pfau.

There is also a church worker, named in one of the lawsuits, not included on the list of pedophiles released by the Seattle Archdiocese. Jim Funnell was a youth minister at St. John Vianney in Kirkland.

According to the lawsuit, “Funnell groomed and sexually abused” a boy. It goes on to say that the parents of “another boy who was molested by Funnell” talked with parish priest, Ted Marmo, but Marmo never confronted Funnell and didn’t restrict his access to children. Father Marmo is among those previously named by the archdiocese as a pedophile priest.

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In French interview, pope talks about religious freedom, abuse crisis

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service
5.17.2016

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Governments work best when they are secular, not confessional, but they must give ample space for people to express their religious beliefs, including by respecting the right of conscientious objection, Pope Francis told the French Catholic newspaper La Croix.

While legislatures must “discuss, argue, explain (and) reason” about legal solutions to complex issues, including euthanasia and same-sex marriage, “once a law has been adopted, the state must also respect consciences,” the pope said in the interview published May 16. “The right to conscientious objection must be recognized within each legal structure because it is a human right — including for a government official, who is a human person.”

National governments, he said, “must be secular. Confessional states end badly.” …

The journalists also asked Pope Francis about a case of clerical sexual abuse that has “shattered” Catholics in the Archdiocese of Lyon where a priest, who ran a large Catholic school, has been charged with “sexual aggression and rape of minors” between 1986 and 1991.

“It is not easy to judge the facts decades later in a different context,” Pope Francis said, but “there can be no statute of limitations for the church in this field. … As Benedict XVI said, there must be zero tolerance.”

An association of the priest’s victims have filed a lawsuit against Lyon Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, accusing him of failing to act to stop the abusive priest. “Based on the information that I have, I believe that Cardinal Barbarin in Lyon took the necessary measures and that he has matters under control,” Pope Francis said.

The pope said he believed that Cardinal Barbarin resigning would be “a contradiction, imprudent” while the case is still under study because “would amount to an admission of guilt.”

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Archbishop Chaput To Conduct 2 Private Meetings With Priests

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

May 17, 2016 By Mark Abrams

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput will conduct two private, closed door meetings today with priests from the archdiocese.

There is a pressing issue on his agenda.

Sources tell KYW Newsradio the archbishop will review the status of legislation which would allow victims of clerical sex abuse to sue their perpetrators, as well as the church that employs them.

That legislation passed the state House several weeks ago and is now in the Senate.

Sen. Stewart Greenleaf, a Montgomery County Republican and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee where the bill has been referred, has told advocates some kind of action could come on the bill before lawmakers recess in June.

The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference claims the legislation would prompt lawsuits that could eventually bankrupt parishes.

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POPE BACKS FRENCH CARDINAL

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on remarks made by Pope Francis in an interview with the French media:

“Pope Rules Out Early Resignation for Cardinal in Paedophilia Storm”

“Pope Rules out Early Resignation for French Cardinal”

“Pope Shows Support for Cardinal Accused of Covering Up Abuse”

“Pope Backing Cardinal Accused of Covering Up ‘Abuse’”

These are some of today’s headlines regarding Pope Francis’ comments on the status of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, Archbishop of Lyon. The headlines smack of Catholic baiting: the cardinal has not been found guilty of anything, and there never was a cover-up. Therefore, it was entirely defensible of the pope to say, “Based on the information that I have, I believe that Cardinal Barbarin in Lyon took the necessary measures and that he has matters under control.” Here’s what happened.

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Vatican PR aide warns Catholic blogs create ‘cesspool of hatred’

NEW YORK
Crux

By Ed Wilkinson
Catholic News Service May 17, 2016

BROOKLYN, N.Y. — Although Pope Francis has succeeded in rebranding the public profile of the Church, according to a Vatican PR aide, his positive tone isn’t always reflected when Catholics themselves take to the use of social media.

On the contrary, to hear Father Thomas Rosica tell it, sometimes Catholic conversation on-line is more “culture of death” than “culture of life.”

“Many of my non-Christian and non-believing friends have remarked to me that we ‘Catholics’ have turned the Internet into a cesspool of hatred, venom and vitriol, all in the name of defending the faith!” he said.

“The character assassination on the Internet by those claiming to be Catholic and Christian has turned it into a graveyard of corpses strewn all around,” said Rosica, who assists the Vatican Press Office with English-speaking media, on May 11 as he delivered the keynote address at the Brooklyn Diocese’s observance of World Communications Day.

“Often times the obsessed, scrupulous, self-appointed, nostalgia-hankering virtual guardians of faith or of liturgical practices are very disturbed, broken and angry individuals, who never found a platform or pulpit in real life and so resort to the Internet and become trolling pontiffs and holy executioners!” Rosica said.

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Furthur details on Vatileaks II”

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

Further details have emerged concerning the so called “Vatileaks II” trial, investigating how various confidential documents were leaked to Italian journalists in the year 2015.

The Holy See Press office issued a six page summary of the court proceedings, where particular focus was given to contents of mobile phone messages and emails from Mons. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, one of the accused parties. At the time of the leaks, Mons. Vallejo was an official working in the Organisation for Ecomonic-Administrative structure of the Holy See (COSEA).

Much of the Monday 16th May’s testimony came from Gianluca Guazzi, Commissioner of the Vatican Gendarmes corps. The Commissioner told the court about 110 thousand Euro being spent on a computer server to hold all of COSEA’s documents. He also pointed out that the computer systems consultant was Corrado Lanino, husband of the accused Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, and that until recently, no superior in the Vatican had known the location of the server.

Accounts were also heard of how the accused believed they were being spied on, and had began to use the “Whatsapp” messaging service on their mobile phones because they believed that the service was immune to phone taping and interception.

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Vatileaks II trial continues

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

The so called “Vatileaks II” trial continues in the Vatican courtroom. The trial is investigating how various confidential papers from the Vatican were leaked to Italian journalists in the year 2015.

The session on Monday 16th May began at about 15:30 pm. A panel of Vatican lawyers continued to investigate the accused parties, Mons. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui and Nicola Maio.

The accused journalists Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi were not present at the court session. They were instead represented by their lawyers.

Two other men, Mario Benotti and Paulo Mondani, were also requested to give testimony, but they did not appear at the court session.

(due to their respective absences, both the Prosecution and Defence lawyers requested that their testimony not be used during the trial.)

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Information on the trial for dissemination of reserved information and documents , 17.05.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bollettino

Vatican City, 17 May 2016 – This morning, at around 11 a.m., a further hearing was held in the Vatican City State Tribunal in the ongoing trial for the dissemination of reserved information and documents, according to information provided by the director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J. It was attended by the members of the Tribunal (Professors Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Piero Antonio Bonnet, Paolo Papanti-Pelletier and Venerando Marano), the Promoter of Justice (Professor Roberto Zannotti), and the defendants, Ángel Lucio Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui and Nicola Maio. The defendants Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi were absent but were represented by their lawyers. Therefore, all five respective legal representatives were present: Emanuela Bellardini, Laura Sgrò, Rita Claudia Baffioni, Lucia Teresa Musso and Roberto Palombi.

At the beginning of the session, the president read the following Order of the Court: “Considering the deposition of the deputy commissioner Gianluca Gauzzi Broccoletti during the hearing of 16 May 2016; given that outcomes emerged that, although present in the seized information and computer appliances, were not known by the Promoter of Justice and the defendants; that Article 400 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides for the acquisition for the proceedings of the documentation shown by the witness during his testimony; the Promoter of Justice and the counsels for the defence may present requests exclusively in relation to the aforementioned documentation during the hearing of 24 May 2016 at 3.30 p.m.; the session shall be dedicated to the examination of the witnesses Gianluca Gauzzi Broccoletti and Stefano De Santis, and expert witnesses (17.5.2016)”.

The report of the declaration made yesterday afternoon by the witness Gianluca Gauzzi Broccoletti was read and approved. The session was concluded shortly after 11.30 a.m. and, as indicated in the order, the next hearing will take place on 24 May at 3.30 p.m.

Note: Article 400 paragraph 2 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to situations in which manifestly influential evidence emerges during the discussion.

The session held yesterday afternoon, starting at 3.30 p.m. and attended by those named above and by the Promoter of Justice Professor Giampiero Milano, was dedicated to the further interrogation of witnesses. Although summoned, Mario Benotti and Paolo Mondani were not present, and the President asked the counsels for the defence of Msgr. Vallejo Balda and the Promoter of Justice whether to continue with further summons. They answered that they were willing to renounce their testimony for reasons of procedural economy.

The four witnesses present were therefore examined: Fabio Schiaffi, official of the Protocol of the Prefecture of Economic Affairs, requested by the Promoter of Justice; Professor Lucia Ercoli, health official of Vatican City State and Msgr. Vittorio Trani, chaplain of the Regina Coeli prison, requested by the defence for Chaouqui; and Gianluca Gauzzi Broccoletti, commissioner of the Gendarme Corps Vatican City State Gendarme Corps, who performed the forensic analysis of information and computer appliances seized during investigations, requested by the Promoter of Justice. The witnesses responded to questioning by the Promoter of Justice, the counsels for the defence and the panel of judges.

Following the interrogation of each witness, the respective report was read and approved. Since the deposition of the witness Gauzzi was prolonged and needed more time, at 7.15 p.m. the President of the Tribunal adjourned the hearing until 11 a.m. the following day, for the continuation of the examination of witnesses.

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Catholic suspected paedophiles allowed to continue teaching, despite complaints

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

Christopher Knaus

Catholic officials knowingly allowed two suspected paedophiles, including one of NSW’s worst, to continue teaching unpunished, eventually putting St Edmund’s College students at risk for a decade.

One cover-up involved a Marist Brothers principal in Sydney, who was aware that now-notorious child predator Brother Francis “Romuald” Cable was abusing boys, but failed to report him to police.

Cable instead went to Newcastle, where he molested another 11 children before leaving the order to teach at St Edmund’s between 1979 and 1989.

Fairfax Media has also established that the Christian Brothers, who then ran St Edmund’s, became aware of a complaint against one of their NSW brothers, but sent him to Canberra regardless, allowing him to allegedly abuse another boy.

The Christian Brothers concede their past handling of such cases was flawed and that “what happened 25 years ago is not what the community or we would accept today”.

The Marist Brothers say the Sydney principal never reported Cable’s abuse to his superiors, and that the order’s leadership did not become aware of any complaint until 1993, when his teaching career was over.

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EXCLUSIVE: Jewish security patrol trio accused of beating gay black man likely to avoid prison

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY GRAHAM RAYMAN
HELLA WINSTON
REUVEN BLAU
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, May 17, 2016

The three Orthodox Jewish men accused of brutally beating a gay black man and leaving him partially blind will likely not serve prison time under an expected plea deal, the Daily News has learned.

The case largely crumbled once at least two witnesses to the December 2013 beatdown changed their version of events after initially implicating the members of the Shomrim volunteer Jewish security patrol, sources said.

Also, surveillance video from the Williamsburg, Brooklyn, scene is limited, people familiar with the case told The News.

Taj Patterson, 25, was walking down Flushing Ave. in Williamsburg in December 2013 when he was set upon by a gang of men shouting anti-gay slurs, prosecutors said. Patterson suffered severe injuries including a broken eye socket and a torn retina that has left him permanently blind in one eye.

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Editorial: Financial reforms need transparency

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

EDITORIAL

It seems counterintuitive, but every time you hear about a financial scandal in the Vatican, that is good news, not bad. It is good news because it shows — to quote the Vatican’s financial watchdog — that the regulatory system is working.

For too long, the church has been racked by financial mismanagement. Now, some will say the basic problem is that clerics shouldn’t be put in charge of finances. Because their training is in theology, they lack either the training or the interest in finances to develop the expertise necessary to run multimillion-dollar, multinational organizations and are too easily compromised by incompetent but devout lay advisers or duped by those with nefarious intent.

A second cause of Vatican financial woes, according to many observers, is geography: The Holy See may be a sovereign nation, but it is culturally Italian, and in Italy nepotism and financial corruption are common. Getting a job or a contract in the Vatican could depend on whom you know more than what skills you bring.

Pope John Paul II clearly had concerns about Italian practices and at the beginning of his papacy gave all the top financial jobs to non-Italians. He appointed Cardinal Edmund Szoka of Detroit to head the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See in 1990. Szoka imposed the first unified chart of accounts for the Vatican, computerized the books and published detailed financial statements.

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Un prêtre influent du diocèse de Paris accusé d’abus sexuels

FRANCE
La Depeche

[Monsignor Tony Antarella, an influential priest of the Diocese of Paris, is accused of sexual abuse.]

L’Eglise catholique est de nouveau entachée par un scandale d’agression sexuelle. Monseigneur Tony Anatrella, prêtre du diocèse de Paris, conseiller au Vatican et psychanalyste, est accusé d’abus sexuels par au moins sept hommes adultes au moment des faits, selon des informations notamment rapportées par Mediapart, France 3 et TF1.

Le prêtre incriminé est un membre influent de l’Eglise catholique. Honoré du titre de « Monseigneur », équivalent à celui d’évêque, il a aussi été nommé conseiller pontifical pour la famille par le pape Jean-Paul II. En parallèle de ses activités de prêtre, il est également psychothérapeute à Paris. Celui qui se présente comme « psychanalyste et spécialiste en psychiatrie sociale » avait été associé à la rédaction de la brochure de la CEF « Lutter contre la pédophilie », publiée en 2003 et rééditée en 2010.

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19 años de cárcel para un pastor evangélico que abusó de dos menores

ESPANA
Mundo

[19 years in prison for an evangelical pastor in Spain who molested two children]

La Sección Octava de la Audiencia Provincial de Asturias ha condenado a 19 años y medio de prisión al edio al pastor evangélico acusado de abusar de dos menores, a una de las cuales dejó embarazada cuando tenía 15 años.

La sentencia le condena a ocho años y medio de cárcel por un delito continuado de abusos en el caso de la menor a la que dejó embarazada, al tener más de 13 años en el momento de los hechos, mientras que en el de la otra niña de le aplica una condena de once años de cárcel.

Además, deberá pagar una indemnización de 30.000 euros a la primera y de 15.000 a la segunda, y tampoco podrá aproximarse a las víctimas o a sus progenitores durante 10 años. Respecto al niño que nació fruto de los abusos, la Audiencia le condena al pago de una pensión alimenticia de 300 euros mensuales.

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Money over morals in Albany statute of limitations stonewalling

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Editorial

As victims put faces, voices and tears to the campaign to extend or eliminate the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse, the true force behind opposition in Albany came to the fore: money.

Those who traveled to the capital to tell their stories did so in the hope that conveying the horror, agony and scarring of their experiences would be an enlightening impetus for legislative reforms.

Only one important player met personally with the survivors: After snubbing them to attend a pizza party of May 4, Republican Deputy Senate Majority Leader John DeFrancisco gave the victims an audience in full view of the press.

Although he remained opposed to changing the law, DeFrancisco had the courtesy to tell the supplicants no to their faces. Gov. Cuomo, Republican Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan and Democratic Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie relegated the victims to speaking with aides.

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Group: Archbishop Apuron should resign

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

[with video]

Jasmine Stole, Pacific Daily News May 17, 2016

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) is calling for the resignation of Archbishop Anthony Apuron following a public accusation of sexual abuse made against him.

The Illinois-based group commended Roy Taitague Quintanilla for coming forward Tuesday and naming Apuron as the man who he said molested him as a 12-year-old altar boy serving at the local Catholic church in Agat.

Apuron hasn’t been charged with any crime, and no lawsuit has been filed.

Quintanilla said the abuse reportedly happened about 40 years ago when Apuron was a priest at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in Agat.

Joelle Casteix, SNAP’s Western regional director, issued a statement about 20 minutes after Quintanilla’s story went public.

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Extradition of Russian priest accused of pedophilia from Israel suspended – lawyer

RUSSIA/ISRAEL
RAPSI

MOSCOW, May 17 (RAPSI) – According to the lawyer defending Gleb Grozovsky, a St. Petersburg priest, the extradition of his client from Israel could be suspended via an appeal against the actions undertaken by the Israeli Justice Ministry submitted to the country’s Supreme Court and request to guarantee the defendant security in his homeland, RIA Novosti news agency reports on Tuesday.

A month ago Israeli Minister of Justice Ayelet Shaked has signed an order on extradition of Russian priest Gleb Grozovsky, who stands charged with sexual abuse of children. The priest insists that he is not guilty of this crime.

According to Grozovsky’s lawyer Haim Azencott, the extradition process has been suspended until the other party submits a reply to his complaint requesting the court to examine again the defendant’s allegations that he will be in danger after returning to Russia, and that the Israeli Justice Ministry failed to take properly his client’s case.

The lawyer hopes that the Israeli Supreme Court will hold respective hearings allowing him to present his arguments that the key element of any extradition procedures should be measures necessary to guarantee security and fair trial for the extradited person.

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Guam archbishop accused of abuse

GUAM
The Worthy Adversary

May 16, 2016 Joelle Casteix

A Hawaii man who says he was sexually abused by Guam Archbishop Anthony Apuron spoke out at a press conference today in Agana.

You can read more here, here, and here.

More soon …

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52-year-old Agat man alleges archbishop molested him

GUAM
KUAM via YouTube

Published on May 16, 2016

52-year-old Roy Taitague Quintanilla formerly of Agat tells his story before media on Tuesday morning. As an alter server at Mt Carmel Church in Agat, Quintanilla alleges Archbishop Anthony Apuron, who was a priest at the time, molested him. Quintanilla has retained Attorney David Lujan and following the press conference, hand delivered his letter to the Chancery in Agana Heights.

Quintanilla is asking Archbishop Apuron for a public apology and that he step down from his position.

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52-year-old Agat man alleges archbishop molested him

GUAM
KUAM

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

52-year-old Roy Taitague Quintanilla formerly of Agat tells his story before media on Tuesday morning. As an alter server at Mt Carmel Church in Agat, Quintanilla alleges Archbishop Anthony Apuron, who was a priest at the time, molested him. Quintanilla has retained Attorney David Lujan and following the press conference, hand delivered his letter to the Chancery in Agana Heights.

Quintanilla is asking Archbishop Apuron for a public apology and that he step down from his position.

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Christian Brother William Stuart Houston jailed over orphan abuse

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

May 16, 2016

Shannon Deery
Herald Sun

A VIOLENT sexual predator who preyed on small orphan boys then beat them when they complained will spend 12 years and nine months behind bars.

After evading justice for decades it is now likely former Christian Brother William Stuart Houston will die in jail.

During years of terrorising orphan children he taunted them about having no parents telling one: “don’t tell anyone. Oh, that’s right, you can’t tell anyone because you don’t have anyone.”

A string of his victims, joined by dozens of supporters, today turned out to the County Court to watch Chief Judge Peter Kidd sentence Houston.

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New York lawmakers have few excuses with myths debunked about child sex abuse legal reform

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY GLENN BLAIN

ALBANY — State lawmakers may be running out of reasons not to help the victims of child sex abuse obtain justice in New York.

As the state Senate and Assembly weigh legislation to eliminate the criminal and civil statute of limitations for child sex abuse cases and give victims a one-year window to revive old cases, advocates contend the arguments put forward by the Catholic Conference and other critics just don’t measure up to reality.

“We keep seeing the same arguments and they just don’t pan out,” said advocate Marci Hamilton, who has researched the issue.

The arguments and the reality:

MYTH: Extending the statute of limitations and granting a lookback window would spur a torrent of lawsuits and bankrupt religious organizations and groups like the Boy Scouts.

REALITY: Financial ruin is a commonly used argument against changing the law, but experiences in other states don’t appear to justify the dire predictions.

“There is a lot of Chicken Little, the sky is falling,” Hamilton said. “But if you just look at the facts in each of the states, it is a much more modest effect than they are claiming.”

Hamilton’s research found that in eight states with one-year window provisions, fewer than 3,000 people filed lawsuits. In California, which enacted a one-year window in 2003, 1,150 cases were filed.

Insurance experts, in a 2012 report, estimated that 100,000 children in the U.S. were victims of clerical sex abuse.

The Catholic Church in the United States has already paid about $3 billion to resolve child sex abuse claims, and at least 13 Catholic dioceses have filed for bankruptcy, according to data compiled by BishopAccountability.org, a private group that has tracked the scandal.

Hamilton, however, argued bankruptcy is employed more as a legal tactic to minimize payouts and draw out potential accusers rather than an expression of financial ruin.

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Child-sex victims get double-talk, ignorance from N.Y. lawmakers while lobbying for reform to crack down on predators

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY GLENN BLAIN STEPHEN REX BROWN

Top Democrats in Albany still won’t tell survivors where they can stand on the decade-old effort to reform the state’s statute of limitations law on child sex abuse claims.

A long day of lobbying legislators Monday did not yield any new hope for advocates as they left meeting after meeting with nothing more than rejections and earfuls of double-talk from politicians — some of whom remain noncommittal on the issue.

Senate Republicans remained opposed to reform — even after hearing survivors recall the horrors they endured as children.

After just two meetings before lunch, pessimism had set in among the six advocates that they’d made no progress persuading Albany powerbrokers to allow the reform to come to even come to a vote before the legislative session ends June 16.

“I don’t know how we are going to move these guys,” Kathryn Robb, 55, said after she and other child sex abuse survivors met with state Senate Deputy Majority Leader John DeFrancisco (R-Syracuse) and staff for Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan (R-Long Island).

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Editorial: When no one speaks up

RHODE ISLAND
Providence Journal

Posted May. 16, 2016

One sobering lesson of the child sex-abuse scandals of recent years is that perpetrators who are not stopped usually find new victims. Reporting by Providence Journal Staff Writers Karen Lee Ziner and Jacqueline Tempera on May 1 has added disturbing new details to the story of Howard White, one of six former employees recently accused of improper behavior at St. George’s School, in Middletown. News of the allegations against Mr. White has had a ripple effect, bringing at least three additional accusers out of the shadows.

In 1974, Mr. White was quietly dismissed by St. George’s from his job as assistant chaplain after he admitted to sexual misconduct, according to a report issued last year by the school. But his behavior was not reported to child protection authorities, as required by law.

Mr. White went on to work at a girls’ school in Virginia from 1978 to 1982 and then moved on to a coed private school in North Carolina for two years. While no accusations have arisen from either setting, additional allegations did recently emerge from Waynesville, N.C., where Mr. White served as rector of Grace Church in the Mountains for 22 years.

There, the police are currently pursuing two criminal investigations. One is based on a woman’s assertions, reported by the Journal, that Mr. White abused her at the church during the mid-1980s, when she was about 15. Another stems from a complaint by Forrest Parker Jr., 46, who contacted the Journal after reading the woman’s story.

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Allegations of sex abuse at United Talmudical Academy in Kiryas Joel spark outrage outside community

NEW YORK
News 12

Allegations of sex abuse at a yeshiva in Kiryas Joel are sparking outrage outside of the Hasidic community.

The principal of United Talmudical Academy is under investigation for alleged sexual abuse involving multiple students. Activists allege that two separate videos that were secretly taken show the principal kissing a boy while holding him between his legs.

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Man alleges Guam archbishop molested him as a child

GUAM
KSDK

Jasmine Stole and Kyle Daly, Pacific (Guam) Daily News , KSDK May 16, 2016

HAGATNA, Guam — A 52-year-old man from Hawaii said he was sexually abused by Archbishop Anthony Apuron when he was 12 years old.

Roy T. Quintanilla spoke at a press conference held in front of the Archdiocese of Agana Chancery Office in Hagåtña.

Quintanilla was flanked by his attorney David Lujan and others. Quintanilla said he’s been silent for 40 years. The alleged abuse deeply affected him, causing him to contemplate suicide.

“I’ve never stopped crying,” he said.

Immediately after the press conference, Quintanilla delivered a letter addressed to the archbishop to the chancery office.

When reached by phone later, the chancery office declined comment on the allegations and would not confirm if the letter was delivered to the archbishop.

Allegedly abused as an altar boy

The incident took place when Apuron was the pastor of the Mount Carmel Catholic Church in Agat, Quintanilla said. Quintanilla said he was an altar boy at the time.

Apuron, he said, had asked him to stay over at his house one night and requested he sleep in his bedroom. It was then, he said, that Apuron abused him.

This isn’t the first time the archbishop has been accused of molestation, but it is the first time anyone has come out publicly with a personal account.

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Man accuses archbishop of molestation

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Jacqueline Perry Guzman | Post News Staff

A man has come forward and publicly accused Archbishop Anthony Apuron of molesting him 40 years ago, when he was a 12-year-old altar boy. Roy Taitague Quintanilla gathered with family members and friends and read a letter addressed to the archbishop to members of the media just below the Archdiocese of Hagåtña Chancery Office in Agana Heights on Tuesday, May 17.

Quintanilla, 52, alleged the archbishop molested him while he was an altar server at Mount Carmel Church in Agat when the archbishop served as the parish priest.

The letter details the incident beginning with a trip to the movies with all the altar boys of the parish and then each of them being dropped off at their home. “I was the last of the altar boys in the van. I thought you were going to take me home like the others, but instead, you asked if I could sleep at your house,” he said, reading the letter.

He alleged that at the archbishop’s house, he was told to sleep in the same room as Apuron and that Apuron grabbed his private parts.

He said after the alleged incident, he didn’t sleep that night and was too afraid to move because he thought Apuron would do more things to him. He said he curled up and cried, and “Never stopped crying.”

Quintanilla said he is not sure Apuron remembers him.

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Man Accuses Archbishop Anthony Apuron of Molesting Him As a Child

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Clynt Ridgell

Flanked by attorney David Lujan and his family members Roy Taitague Quintanilla held a mini-press conference in front of the entrance to the Chancery office in Agana Heights.

Guam – A 52 year old man has stepped forward with a serious allegation saying that Archbishop Anthony Apuron molested him when he was 12 years old.

“My name is Roy Taitague Quintanilla. I was sexually abused by Anthony Sablan Apuron forty years ago,” said the alleged victim.

In front of a small podium at the entrance of the Archdiocese’s Chancery Office in Agana Heights Roy Taitague Quintanilla read from a letter he wrote directly to the Archbishop of Guam.

“Dear Archbishop Apuron. When I was twelve years old and an altar boy you molested me when you were the pastor of Agat. After a movie you drove all of the altar boys home. I was the last of the altar boys in the van. I thought you were going to take me home like the others but instead you asked if I could sleep at your house the priest house so I could help you at the church in the morning. You insisted I sleep in your bedroom even though I told you I wanted to sleep in the living room. I felt so uncomfortable being alone with you in your bedroom. Moments later I felt your hand squeeze my penis and testicles through my pants. I was trying my best to push your hand away it was painful. I used both hands and my legs to try and block you from touching me and squeezing my private parts because it was painful and extremely uncomfortable. I remember I didn’t sleep that night. I was too afraid to move because I thought you would do more things to me. I just curled up I cried then and I’ve never stopped crying,” said Quintanilla.

Quintanilla says he told father Jack Nilan about the alleged incident before telling anyone else but it wasn’t made clear exactly when he told Father Nilan or when he told others about the alleged incident.

“I hope someday you will be sorry for what you did to me. I am still trying to forgive you. It’s been a long time since this tragic experience and it feels like it just happened yesterday. I want closure,” said Quintanilla adding, “I have been silent for 40 years. Mainly because I thought all this time I was your only victim and because I was embarrassed, humiliated, degraded and terribly confused about what to do. I thought if I said anything that people would not believe me or that people would retaliate against me for coming forward. Archbishop Apuron I will not be silent anymore,”

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Gelzinis: Where’s the mercy for the church’s supporters?

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Peter Gelzinis Tuesday, May 17, 2016

A disconsolate Veronica Tutunjian crystallized the grim mood in the foyer of St. Francis Xavier Cabrini Church in Scituate yesterday afternoon.

“I thought this was supposed to be a year of mercy,” she said, joining five stalwart friends and parishioners who were part of an insurgent effort to hold on to the doomed church they love. “Where’s the mercy?”

Sadly, for those ladies who formed a barricade of faith for nearly a dozen years, the U.S. Supreme Court doesn’t place any extra weight on Pope Francis’ worldwide call for mercy in 2016.

Yesterday, the high court passed on taking up a last-ditch attempt by the St. Francis Cabrini rebels intent on holding on to their beloved church.

In doing so, the court cleared the way for Cardinal Sean O’Malley and the archdiocese to evict the faithful squatters and take control of the church and its adjacent property, which happens to sit on ultra-prime South Shore real estate.

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Archdiocese of Agana Statement on Sexual Abuse Allegation Against Archbishop Apuron

GUAM
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Agana

May 17, 2016

In the spirit of commitment set by Pope Francis, the Archdiocese of Agana affirms its commitment to upholding its Sexual Misconduct and Harassment Policy, and assures the Faithful that in light of the recent allegations of sexual abuse by Roy Quintanilla, dating back 40 years ago to Our Lady of Mount Carmel parish in Agat, that proper steps have been initiated, as outlined and guided by our policy. Deacon Larry Claros, the Sexual Abuse Response Coordinator has been informed and is coordinating a response, which includes convening the Archdiocesan Review Board.

We entrust ourselves to the Holy Spirit, who will lead us to the truth.

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Archdiocese responds to sex abuse accusations against Apuron

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

[with copy of the statement from the archdiocese]

Kyle Daly, kjdaly@guampdn.com May 17, 2016

The Archdiocese of Agana on Tuesday evening issued a statement saying the local church’s sexual abuse response coordinator “has been informed and is coordinating a response” to allegations that Archbishop Anthony Apuron sexually abused a 12-year-old altar boy about 40 years ago.

The archdiocese’s statement said that in light of the allegations, “proper steps have been initiated” as outlined by the archdiocese’s sexual misconduct and harassment policy.

“Deacon Larry Claros, the Sexual Abuse Response Coordinator has been informed and is coordinating a response, which includes convening the Archdiocesan Review Board,” the statement says.

Tuesday morning, a 52-year-old man, Roy Taitague Quintanilla, of Hawaii, told members of the media that Apuron sexually abused him when he was 12 years old.

Quintanilla said he was an altar server for Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in Agat when the abuse took place.

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Archbishop Apuron Ends Silence; Denies Sexual Abuse Allegations

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

Archbishop Anthony Apuron denies all allegations that he sexually abused Roy Quintanilla.
Guam – Archbishop Anthony Apuron is ending his years-long silence, speaking to the media for the first time since a series of allegations were launched against him; the most serious of which is from Roy Quintanilla who accused the archbishop of sexually molesting him 40 years ago.

PNC obtained the archbishop’s exclusive statement. Below is a transcript of Archbishop Apuron’s statement.

My dear faithful,

As you know there has been a series of attacks against myself and the catholic church in these past three years. As predicted just four days ago, these malicious ads have now resulted in a false accusation of sexual abuse. To be absolutely clear and to avoid any misinterpretation of my statement, I deny all allegations of sexual abuse by Roy Quintanilla. I humbly ask for your prayers and encourage all our faithful to pray for me and for those behind this concerted effort to injure our catholic church. I will continue to defend the faith and give my life for the truth. Thank you. Si Yu’os Ma’ase.

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The Return of Youth Pastor Watch

UNITED STATES
The Stranger – Slog

by Dan Savage • Apr 29, 2016

Youth Pastor Watch was a regular feature on Slog for years.

I started doing weekly YPW posts during the long-but-way-shorter-than-we-thought-it-would-be fight for marriage equality. Religious bigots were running all over the country claiming we had to protect the children from married same-sex couples because married gay couples would want to have kids and won’t someone please think of the children! These same religious bigots didn’t seem interested in protecting kids from the sexual predators in their own churches. They didn’t want to have a conversation about who was actually preying on vulnerable kids. They didn’t want anyone thinking about that. Et voilà, Youth Pastor Watch!

I didn’t stop doing Youth Pastor Watch because youth pastors weren’t raping kids anymore—and regular pastors too—but because religious bigots stopped emphasizing the “protect the children” argument. There were just too many gay parents already out there—some parenting the friends of President Obama’s daughters—and there was just too much evidence showing gay parents were as good as straight parents. So the bigots de-emphasized “protect the children!” and switched to the argument they would take all the way to the Supreme Court: straight people suck. That argument didn’t go over well. (As I predicted it wouldn’t.)

But “protect the children” is back.

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Former pastor found guilty of all but one count

OHIO
Times-Journal

By Michelle Chalfant Times-Journal Writer

Dennis V. Wright, 67, was found guilty by a jury of his peers on 14 of the 15 sex related charges involving a total of three victims.

Wright was found guilty of sexually abusing a teenage girl who lived in the area, a mentally challenged adult woman, and another church member, during a time when Wright served as the pastor of the Old Emory Church on Jimes Emory Road in Madison Township.

One of the victims was his own son, who at 37 years of age now, was only 10 years old at the time of the crime dating back to 1989 and 1990.

Wright was convicted of assaulting the teenage girl on many occasions between 2012 and 2015 and the mentally challenged adult in both 2009 and 2010. It was during the investigation that the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office and the Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) uncovered the third victim, Wright’s son.

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Prayer service for victims of sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

[with video]

Johnstown, Cambria County, Pa.

Members of the Catholic faith gathered at Saint Andrews in Johnstown for a prayer service for victims and survivors of sexual abuse.

Paul Claar stood outside of Saint Andrews before the prayer service. representing those victims.

“I went to the diocese back in 1994 with my claim,” remembered victim Paul Claar. “Had a lawsuit that was settled in 2004 which was ironically a decade to the day later and was hoping to bring exposure to it then.This is not to discredit this religion. My goal is to promote our religion but it needs cleaned up.”

He hopes to see change in the church.

“Just have more accountability, transparency into the problem and to address the problems that people keep putting under the rug.”

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Anglican church sets up Parish Recovery Team to support abuse survivors

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Liz Farquhar

Newcastle’s Anglican church says it has developed a long-term framework to help survivors of child sexual abuse tell their stories and recover.

Decades of abuse within the church will be investigated at a two-week public hearing of the Royal Commission in Newcastle, starting in August.

The ABC has previously reported that several alleged paedophile rings are being investigated by police and the Royal Commission.

Dead priest Peter Rushton, acknowledged by the Anglican diocese as a paedophile, is a focus of the police and Royal Commission probes.

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Shocked by girl’s slaying, pope decries pedophilia but rules out French cardinal’s ouster for keeping quiet

VATICAN CITY/PARIS
Japan Times

REUTERS/AFP-JIJI
MAY 17, 2016

VATICAN, CITY/PARIS – Pope Francis called for “severe punishment” for pedophiles on Sunday after new details emerged in Italy of the 2014 death of a 6-year-old girl who is alleged to have been thrown from an eighth-story balcony by her abuser.

“This is a tragedy. We should not tolerate the abuse of minors,” Francis said, departing from prepared remarks at his weekly Sunday message and blessing to tens of thousands of people in St. Peter’s Square.

“We must protect minors and severely punish abusers,” he said.

Though the Catholic Church itself has been rocked by its own abuse scandals, he did not mention them on Sunday as he has in the past. …

In an interview with the Catholic daily on Monday, the pope said it would be “contradictory, imprudent” to seek Cardinal Philippe Barbarin’s resignation at this stage.

“We will see after the end of (any) trial. But (to seek his resignation) now would be to imply guilt,” the pontiff said.

Francis said he believed Barbarin had “taken the necessary measures, he took things in hand. He is brave, creative, a missionary. We should now wait for the outcome of the civilian judicial procedure.”

Barbarin, the archbishop of Lyon, France’s second-largest city, is facing a storm over his handling of allegations against Father Bernard Preynat, accused of sex attacks on four boy scouts between 1986 and 1991.

Preynat was placed under formal investigation in January, but his lawyer argues the alleged crimes are now beyond the statute of limitations.

In March, prosecutors in Lyon ordered a preliminary investigation into three accusations by civilian plaintiffs that Barbarin’s diocese knew about the abuses a number of years ago but failed to inform the authorities.

According to the diocese, Barbarin first received testimony from an alleged victim in mid-2014, and relieved Preynat of priestly office in May 2015.

An association called La Parole Liberee (The Liberated Word) says it has identified between 50 and 60 victims.

In other comments he made to La Croix, the pope floated the idea of visiting France, but said he was unable to say when it would take place.

“Last year, some suggestions started to be made about a trip of this kind, comprising a stop in Paris and its suburbs, in Lourdes and in a city where no pope has been, Marseille for example, which represents a gate that is open to the world,” Francis said.

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Man recalls ‘naked antics’ in 1950s with adult at church

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

Editor’s note: This story deals with subjects of a sexual nature and details may be disturbing to some readers.

Dave Casker, in his own words, was an early sexual bloomer.

So, when a man who was involved in activities at Our Mother of Sorrows parish made advancements toward him, Casker, then about 11 years old, thought it was interesting. They allegedly would engage in sexual activities – although never oral or anal – at the man’s house, the school office, in the church basement and at other locations for a few years in the 1950s.

“Most of our encounters were, I think, him just liked having a little guy naked with him,” Casker said during a recent interview at The Tribune-Democrat, responding to reports of widespread child sexual abuse across the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

“It was just kind of playing on the bed or playing on whatever was a comfortable surface,” Casker said. “It was naked antics in a sense rather than actual sex.”

His reactions to the sexual acts – then and now – might seem atypical. He said the man was not a member of the clergy.

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‘I apologize for the pain’: Bishop leads prayer vigil for victims of priest abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

Bishop Mark Bartchak started his reflection on Monday by posing the question “What can you possibly say at a time like this?” during a prayer service for victims of sexual abuse.

It is a question many members of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown have wrestled with since the state Office of the Attorney General released a grand jury report in March that accused the organization of being involved in a decades-long coverup to protect priests and other religious leaders who allegedly sexually abused children.

“As we gather this evening for this prayer, I am very much aware that a lot of people are hurting and have been hurting for some time because children and young people have been sexually abused by clergy and religious, as well as by others, and we must continue our efforts to safeguard our children and young people at all times,” Bartchak told an audience of about three dozen worshipers at St. Andrew Church.

“We need to assist those who are hurting, not just those who were victimized, but their families and others in our parishes and communities who share their pain.”

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Vandergrift Man Headed To Altoona To Send Message About Clergy Sex Abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburgh

[with video]

May 17, 2016 By Ralph Iannotti

VANDERGRIFT (KDKA) — Robert Mizic, 45, of Vandergrift will be joining several other abuse victims and drive to Altoona Tuesday evening.

They will be protesting outside a church there, where the local bishop will be holding a prayer service for victims of sexual abuse.

Mizic says he was abused by a priest both sexually and physically decades ago while growing up outside Philadelphia.

The priest who abused him, he told KDKA-TV’s Ralph Iannotti, never apologized or was never prosecuted, even though he went to police to complain not long after the incidents took place.

Mizic came out publicly several weeks ago about the abuse he suffered, just after a statewide grand jury reported widespread abuse of perhaps hundreds of children in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, by as many as 50 priests and others.

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May 16, 2016

Cura pederasta de SLP, impune por negligencia de la PGJ

SAN LUIS POTOSí (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

May 16, 2016

By Verónica Espinosa

Read original article

SAN LUIS POTOSÍ, S.L.P., (apro).- La Procuraduría de Justicia del estado será obligada a reparar el daño ocasionado a un menor de edad que fue víctima de violación por parte del sacerdote Francisco Javier Castillo Ríos, cuyo delito permanece impune en parte debido a las omisiones y deficiente integración de la averiguación por parte de dos agentes del Ministerio Público especializados en delitos sexuales que tuvieron la investigación en sus manos. La Comisión Estatal de Derechos Humanos determinó emitir esta recomendación, que va dirigida al procurador Federico Garza Herrera, pero que determina señalar por negligentes en el manejo del caso a los agentes Irene Guadalupe Ayala Cerda y Miguel Ángel Trujillo Morales, ambos especializados en atención de delitos sexuales y violencia intrafamiliar de la PGJ estatal. Su negligencia permitió que se negara la orden de aprehensión y el posterior enjuiciamiento del clérigo. El padre Castillo abusó durante dos años (entre 2012 y 2014) de “José”, a quien conoció en el Seminario menor, lo obligó a verlo y lo sometió a abusos sexuales “porque era parte de los sacrificios que debía hacer” porque José quería ser sacerdote. Lo amenazaba con hacerle daño a su mamá y abusar de otros niños si él se negaba. José tenía ocho años cuando comenzó a ser víctima del sacerdote pederasta. La historia fue publicada por Apro el 31 de mayo del 2014. Castillo, oficiante en la iglesia del Sagrado Corazón en Ojocaliente, era uno de los tres sacerdotes que en ese entonces fueron señalados como pederastas en la iglesia potosina, al estallar el escándalo del representante legal de la arquidiócesis, Eduardo Córdova Bautista, quien fue denunciado penalmente por 19 de sus víctimas y continúa prófugo. El 3 de junio de ese año, unos días después de hacer pública la denuncia contra el padre Castillo, la madre del menor, María Guadalupe, acudió a la Comisión Estatal de Derechos Humanos donde se inició un expediente de queja. Dos años más tarde, la CEDH emitió la recomendación 08/2016 en la que concluyó que la integración deficiente de la averiguación impidió que se pudiera obtener la orden de captura contra el sacerdote, lo que generó impunidad. Inconsistencias e impunidad En la relatoría de hechos de la recomendación se da cuenta de la denuncia penal que María Guadalupe acudió a presentar junto con su hijo José a la agencia del Ministerio Público, misma que fue recibida por la agente Irene Guadalupe Ayala Cerda y quedó registrada bajo el expediente AP/PGJE/SLP/SDSF/209/2012. “José Francisco García Hernández, en la denuncia que presentó el 20 de junio de 2012, relató la agresión sexual que sufrió, precisando que su agresor durante mes y medio le dejaba dinero por la puerta ubicada en la parte posterior de su domicilio, y le enviaba mensajes de texto a su teléfono celular para que no dijera nada, y que algunos mensajes los vio su mamá, y fue como ésta se enteró del abuso sexual, mismo que le atribuyó a un ministro de culto”, detalla el informe. Y agrega: “De acuerdo con las constancias que se agregaron al expediente de queja, se observó que la Lic. Irene Guadalupe Ayala Cerda, Agente del Ministerio Público Especializada en la atención de Delitos Sexuales y Violencia Familiar…omitió solicitarle el teléfono celular (al menor), a efecto de dar fe del contenido de los mensajes de texto aducidos por la víctima, circunstancia que obstaculizó la debida investigación, ya que la víctima en su denuncia manifestó que recibió mensajes de su agresor, por lo que es de observarse que la información contenida en el teléfono resultaba un elemento importante para poder vincular la participación del agresor en el ilícito denunciado”. Además, María Guadalupe ratificó ante la CEDH lo que declaró a los medios: que al acudir a presentar la denuncia no se le permitió estar presente con su hijo cuando éste rindió su declaración, a pesar de tratarse de un menor de edad. Ambos fueron apresurados por la agente para que expusieran lo sucedido “lo más rápido posible”. La agente Ayala Cerda prácticamente no movió un dedo para efectuar indagatorias que permitieran demostrar los actos criminales del sacerdote Castillo: no se recabaron datos adicionales, tampoco se amplió el examen médico. Todo esto se realizó casi un año después, cuando el asunto fue turnado a otro agente, Miguel Ángel Trujillo Morales (también de la Agencia especializada en atención a delitos sexuales y violencia familiar, con sede en el DIF estatal), aunque las omisiones continuaron, ahora por parte de éste. Cada que María Guadalupe acudía a preguntar cómo iba el caso, Trujillo le respondía: “se está investigando”. En el 2013, el Centro estatal de atención a víctimas asignó a María Guadalupe y a José un asesor jurídico, quien inicialmente no tuvo acceso a la averiguación previa y recibió la misma respuesta por parte del agente Trujillo Morales: “el caso está en estudio”. “Se observó que las omisiones de los agentes del Ministerio Público, trajeron como consecuencia la deficiente integración de la averiguación previa, lo cual generó que el 22 de febrero de 2013, el Juzgado Octavo del Ramo Penal negara la orden de aprehensión por falta de elementos que acreditaran el cuerpo del delito, lo que fue confirmado en apelación, al establecerse que no se comprobaron los elementos que integraron el cuerpo del delito por el cual se ejercitó la acción penal”, fue una de las conclusiones de la CEDH. La apelación fue solicitada por el asesor jurídico enviado por el Centro de atención a víctimas, quien finalmente pudo efectuar algunas diligencias en representación del menor. En junio del 2014, una psicóloga del Centro de atención a víctimas concluyó que José presentaba un cuadro depresivo por estrés postraumático. El 13 de abril del 2015, luego de una ampliación de declaración del menor, procedió de nuevo el ejercicio de la acción penal. Pero el juez octavo penal determinó el sobreseimiento de la averiguación, al considerar que había vencido el plazo para aportar pruebas y solicitar nuevamente la orden de aprehensión contra el sacerdote. El 29 de octubre del 2015, magistrados de la Segunda Sala del Supremo Tribunal determinaron la reposición del procedimiento, ratificaron la negativa de la orden de aprehensión y concedieron seis meses más para aportar pruebas en la averiguación. Sin embargo, esto no fue notificado ni a la madre del menor ni al asesor jurídico. Revictimización En la recomendación, la Comisión estatal de derechos humanos señaló que la Procuraduría de Justicia no privilegió el interés superior del menor y su trabajo deficiente ha permitido que prevalezca la impunidad, por lo que deberá reparar el daño en la medida de lo posible por estos agravios. “De no repararse este daño le impedirá curar la afectación moderada presentada, derivada de un probable proceso de exhibición como víctima y la sensación de incertidumbre y enojo por la lentitud de su proceso legal, ello derivado en parte por las omisiones de los Agentes del Ministerio Público Investigador. “Toda vez que en lugar de velar por el respeto a sus derechos como víctima, se le expuso a la revictimización, sufriendo así una doble afectación, la primera como víctima de la agresión sexual, y la segunda, como víctima de conculcación a sus derechos humanos, al no dar una respuesta efectiva”, enfatizó el organismo. Como medidas de reparación, además de iniciar las indagatorias internas para determinar la sanción que deberá aplicarse a los dos agentes señalados directamente como responsables, la Procuraduría deberá corregir la integración de la averiguación y proceder para que se ejerza acción penal en contra del sacerdote. La reparación deberá incluir el tratamiento psicológico que requiera José, y que se envíen a la Comisión estatal las constancias sobre su cumplimiento. Finalmente, la PGJ estatal deberá colaborar en el seguimiento e inscripción de José en el Registro Estatal de Víctimas, a efecto de que él y su madre tengan acceso al Fondo de Ayuda, Asistencia y Reparación Integral.

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Priest pleads guilty to fondling 12-year-old

MISSISSIPPI
WDAM

By Eddie Robertson, Reporter

JONES COUNTY, MS (WDAM) –
The Jones County priest accused of sexually abusing a child in 2015 pleaded guilty to fondling Monday as part of a plea deal.

The judge sentenced Jose Vazquez, 36, to 15 years in prison. When he is released, he will be deported back to Mexico.

Vazquez was arrested by the Jones County Sheriff’s Department in September 2015 and was originally charged with two counts of sexual battery of a minor.

A news release from the Jones County Sheriff’s Department said deputies were dispatched Sept. 9, 2015, after the boy’s father “reported inappropriate behavior between his son and a priest who previously worked in Jones County.”

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More twists and turns as Vatican trial enters Dan Brown territory

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Latest witness tells of electronic bugs, threatening letters and secret meetings

Paddy Agnew in ROME

The more you attend the so-called Vatileaks 2 trial in the Vatican, the more it seems the whole thing has been dreamed up by a Dan Brown wannabe.

For example, when Msgr Alfredo Abbondi, head of office in the Vatican’s prefecture for economic affairs, took to the witness stand for a three-hour long deposition last Saturday, he spoke of “secret services”, “electronic bugs”, “threatening letters” and “secret meetings”.

He even told how a colleague had offered to “break a chair over my back”, while he said the atmosphere in his office was so bad he had asked to be transferred four times.

Vatileaks 2 is the Vatican City State trial which opened last November and in which five people are accused of “illegally procuring” and “successively revealing” confidential Holy See documents.

All those indicted – Spanish Msgr Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, his Italian lay assistant Nicola Maio, lay consultant Francesca Chaouqui and journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi – have been charged under section IX of the Vatican’s “Crimes against the Security of the State”.

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PRESS RELEASE

PENNSYLVANIA
Sister Maureen Turlish

[note: This does not connect to a web site.]

WHO:
Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput

WHAT:
Has called a meeting of all Philadelphia Archdiocesan clergy

WHERE:
At St. Helena’s, 1489 Dekalb Pike in Blue Bell, PA (Montgomery County)

WHEN:
Tuesday afternoon, May 17th, 2016
At 2 p.m. or 6 p.m.

WHY:
Address expected to cover proposed PA legislation on
Childhood sexual abuse including Statute of Limitation reform

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With abuse bill looming, Chaput calls priest meeting

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Maria Panaritis, STAFF WRITER

Archbishop Charles Chaput has called all Catholic priests from southeastern Pennsylvania to meetings Tuesday to discuss proposed state legislation – as lawmakers in Harrisburg this week consider a bill that for the first time would allow some victims of child sex abuse to sue their attackers and the institutions that employed them.

The priests have been asked to attend one of two meetings, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., at St. Helena Church in Blue Bell, Montgomery County, according to a source with knowledge of the event.

The invitations, from by Msgr. Daniel Sullivan, vicar of clergy for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, did not specify which legislation would be discussed.

Archdiocesan spokesman Ken Gavin declined Monday to discuss the gathering, calling it “a private one between the Archbishop and the clergy,” and noting that “such meetings take place on a regular basis.”

But the meetings come as the state Senate has begun to meet with advocates about a bill to extend the civil statute of limitations on child sex abuse to age 50. Approved overwhelmingly by the House earlier this year, the measure would allow victims to file lawsuits for abuse that happened in some cases several decades ago.

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Letter to Bishop goes unanswered

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

By Carolyn Donaldson | cdonaldson@wtajtv.com
Published 05/16 2016

Hollidaysburg, Blair County

New allegations have been brought against the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic diocese.

These allegations come from alleged victims, who have identified their abusers as priests and a sister still currently working within the diocese.

George Foster is the Altoona businessman and Catholic who has heard from victims, police and attorneys after he first wrote an editorial in a local paper in 2002, writing that abusers in the church should be thrown out. They’ve continued to contact him over the years. He provided the Attorney General’s office with names of dozens of victims and abusers, which lead to a grand jury investigation this past March.

Now he says he has more names of alleged abusers.
Last week, Foster sent a letter with those names to Bishop Mark Bartchak.
A copy of that letter dated May 11th was sent to members of the media Monday morning.

Foster says these new allegations came after dozens of alleged abuse victims called him. Foster says he has shared this information with the Attorney General’s office. The allegations range from inappropriate searches of chat rooms known for homosexual behavior, to sexual incidents involving a priest and a victim. In this case, the victim allegedly went to confession and expressed thoughts of sexual confusion. It’s alleged the priest had sexual relations with the victim following this sacrament of confession.

Foster says several priests named in the letter are “higher ups” in the diocese.

Monday he called for 5 active priests and a sister to be removed from their current posts and investigated. Foster claims these religious men and woman all have credible charges of misconduct brought up.

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More Allegations Against Altoona Johnstown Diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

New allegations have been brought against the Altoona/Johnstown Catholic Diocese in a letter sent to the Bishop from George Foster. In the letter, dated May 11th and sent to several media outlets Monday morning, the man who provided the PA Attorney General’s Office with information about priest sex abuse is now calling for five active priests and a sister to be removed from their current posts and investigated. George Foster claims these religious men and woman all have credible charges of misconduct brought up. WTAJ News has reached out to the Bishop’s office for a response. The PA Attorney General’s office hotline has taken over 300 calls since it was established. We will have more on this story tonight on WTAJ News and in our special report Tuesday at 6 and 11.

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Information on the trial for dissemination of reserved information and documents, 16.05.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bollettino

Vatican City, 14 May 2016 – Today, Saturday 14 May, at 9.30 a.m. a further hearing was held in the ongoing trial for the dissemination of reserved information and documents in Vatican City State Tribunal, according to information provided by the director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J. It was attended by the members of the Tribunal (Professors Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Piero Antonio Bonnet, Paolo Papanti-Pelletier and Venerando Marano), the Promoter of Justice (Professors Gian Pietro Milano and Roberto Zannotti), and the defendants, Ángel Lucio Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui and Nicola Maio, whereas the defendants Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi were absent. All five respective legal representatives were present: Emanuela Bellardini, Laura Sgrò, Rita Claudia Baffioni, Lucia Teresa Musso and Roberto Palombi.

The hearing was dedicated fully to the further examination of witnesses, and at the beginning of the hearing an Ordinance was read by which the Tribunal ruled that three of the witnesses requested by Chaouqui’s defence – Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin, Cardinal Santos Abril y Castelló, archpriest of the Basilica of St. Mary Major, and Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, Almoner of His Holiness – would not be present. Indeed, the Chancellor had received communications from aforementioned three prelates, in which they declared that they would invoke article 248, paragraph 2 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, according to which public officials shall not be compelled to give evidence of what has been confided to them as part of their duty, other than in cases in which the law expressly obliges them to inform the public authorities. However, Cardinal Parolin added that he wished to specify that he did not have any information to refer regarding the issue for which he was cited as a witness, namely the relationship between the defendants Vallejo Balda and Chaouqui.

Therefore, the testimonies of three witnesses were heard: Bishop Augusto Paolo Lojudice, auxiliary of Rome, requested by Chaouqui’s defence; Roberto Minotti, former head of information technology at the Prefecture for Economic Affairs at the time of the events in question; and Msgr. Alfredo Abbondi, official at the same Prefecture, requested as witnesses by the Promoter of Justice. The witnesses answered questions from the Promoter of Justice, the counsels for the defence and the panel of judges.

Following the interrogation of each witness, the respective report was read and approved. The hearing ended shortly before 3 p.m. The next hearings are scheduled to take place on Monday 16 May at 3.30 p.m., and Tuesday 17 at 10.30, during which the examination of witnesses is expected to continue and to be concluded.

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Priest who served in Biloxi Diocese sent to prison for sex abuse

MISSISSIPPI
Sun Herald

A Catholic priest who once served in the Diocese of Biloxi has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for the sexual abuse of a child, the Laurel Leader-Call is reporting.

A judge also ordered Jose Vazquez deported, the paper said.

Vazquez was arrested in September at a family’s home in west Jones County after a 10-year-old boy’s father called police and reported inappropriate behavior between Vazquez and the boy.

Police said Vazquez admitted having several sex acts with children in Jones County and other jurisdictions. Vazquez at the time was pastor at St. Francis Xavier in Wiggins and St. Lucy Mission in Lucedale.

Vazquez, a native of Mexico, was ordained in San Juan, Mexico, by the Most Rev. Thomas J. Rodi, archbishop of Mobile, in 2008. He was a deacon at several parishes in the Biloxi diocese before he was ordained.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/news/local/crime/article77957547.html#storylink=cpy

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Perverted priest braces for long sentence

AUSTRALIA
Bay 939

Rebecca McDonald / 17 May 2016

A former Geelong Christian Brother who admitted to abusing young boys is due to be sentenced today.

William Stuart Houston has been found guilty of sex crimes against three victims.

He also admitted to offences against three other boys, all committed while he worked at St Augustine’s Orphanage in Highton in the 1960s.

The Melbourne County Court had earlier heard Houston was a supervisor at the orphanage during the time of the offences.

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Redemptorist priest in Quebec gets four years for sexually abusing boys

CANADA
CFJC

The Canadian Press

QuEBEC — A former Redemptorist priest has been given a four-year prison term for sexually abusing young boys 40 years ago.

Jean-Claude Bergeron was sentenced in Quebec City today.

Bergeron, 76, was found guilty last December on various sex-related charges involving seven students at the Saint-Alphonse seminary in Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupre, near Quebec City.

The abuse occurred between 1976 and 1980 and the boys were about 12 years old.

The Crown was seeking a prison term of between 42 months and four years, while the defence wanted a sentence to be served in the community.

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Diocese to hold prayer service in State College for sex abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Centre Daily Times

BY SHAWN ANNARELLI
sannarelli@centredaily.com

Bishop Mark Bartchak is planning to hold prayer services for sexual abuse victims in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese of the Roman Catholic Church.

The services come more than two months after a Pennsylvania grand jury alleged that two former bishops covered up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by dozens of clergy.

Bartchak will preside at three prayer services for healing, according to a release.

“All victims of abuse and their families, as well as the faithful of Altoona-Johnstown, are invited to join the bishop in prayer for those who have been harmed,” the release said.

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Pope gets media’s attention as he rebrands church, papacy, says priest

NEW YORK
Catholic News Service

By Ed Wilkinson Catholic News Service
5.16.2016

BROOKLYN, N.Y. (CNS) — Pope Francis has rebranded the Catholic Church and the papacy, and the media have taken notice.

That was the message delivered by Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, who delivered the keynote address May 11 at the Brooklyn Diocese’s observance of World Communications Day.

Sponsored by the DeSales Media Group, the event in downtown Brooklyn drew about 250 people.

Father Rosica, CEO of Canada’s Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation and the English-language attache to the Holy See Press Office at the Vatican, was presented with the Brooklyn Diocese’s St. Francis DeSales Distinguished Communicator Award by Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio.

“Prior to Pope Francis, when many people on the street were asked: ‘What is the Catholic Church all about? What does the pope stand for?’ The response would often be, ‘Catholics, well they are against abortion, gay marriage and birth control. They are known for the sex abuse crisis that has terribly marred and weakened their moral authority and credibility,'” said Father Rosica.

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Pope Stands by French Cardinal Facing Abuse Cover-up Claims

FRANCE
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS — May 16, 2016

Pope Francis has voiced support for a French cardinal who has faced allegations of covering up cases of pedophile priests in his Lyon parish, saying he shouldn’t resign.

Francis said in an interview with French Catholic daily La Croix coming out Tuesday that a resignation of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin “would be a mistake, an imprudence.”

“Based on the information I have, I think in Lyon, Cardinal Barbarin has taken the necessary measures and has taken things well in hand,” the Pope said. “He is a brave and creative man, a missionary.”

Francis said “we must now wait for the result of the proceedings before the civil courts,” but resigning now “would amount to admitting guilt.”

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Samaritan SafeChurch – Religious Leaders Step Up to Support Reform of PA Statutes of Limitation for Child Sexual Abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Samaritan SafeChurch

by Linda Crockett, Director of SafeChurch/SafePlaces

Christian faith community leaders are adding their voices to the growing cry for reform of PA’s Statutes of Limitations to support access to justice for survivors, accountability for those who harm, and protection of children. A “sign-on” letter to Senator Stewart Greenleaf (R-Montgomery/Bucks), chair of the Judiciary Committee, is circulating to religious leaders across the state, and I am encouraged by many who indicate they are signing. The link for sign on is open until May 27 at http://www.pcar.org/communities-faith-support-reforming-pas-statutes-limitations-child-sexual-abuse-cases

The letter, initially drafted by SafeChurch as part of a coalition of organizations convened by the PA Coalition Against rape, encourages the Judiciary Committee to act swiftly to move HB 1947, passed by the House last month, in its current form to the Senate for a vote. We also call on Senator Greenleaf to champion the legislation in the Senate. As it stands, the bill will:

1. Eliminate the criminal statutes of limitations for certain child sexual assault cases

2. Extend the civil statute of limitations from at 30 to age 50 to give survivors additional time to attempt to seek damages
• By the time many survivors of child sexual abuse in Pennsylvania begin to deal with their abuse, they are well past their 30th birthday and the window for justice is closed by the civil statute of limitations.

3. The extension of the civil statutes would be “retroactive” for survivors older than 30 but younger than 50 – in other words, those people would now have until age 50 to file.

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Bischof Ackermann: vom Missbrauchsbeauftragten zum Vertuscher

DETUSCHLAND
MissBiT – Sexueller Missbrauch durch Angehörige der katholischen Kirche im Bistum Trier

[On 25 February 2010, Bishop Dr. Stephan Ackermann was appointed by the German Bishops’ Conference as abuse officer. Three weeks later, Ackermann admited decades of cover-up of its predecessor and promises enlightenment and transparency.]

Am 25. Februar 2010 wurde Bischof Dr. Stephan Ackermann von der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz zum Missbrauchsbeauftragten ernannt. Bereits drei Wochen später räumt Ackermann jahrzehntelange Vertuschung seiner Vorgänger ein und verspricht Aufklärung und Transparenz. Man wolle mit „all den zur Verfügung stehenden Mitteln zur Aufklärung beitragen.“

Aufgrund des öffentlichen Drucks vereinbart die Deutsche Bischofskonferenz im Juni 2011 einstimmig, zusammen mit dem renommierten Kriminologen Prof. Dr. C. Pfeiffer (KFN) eine „Missbrauchsstudie“ zu erstellen. Betroffene sowie die Öffentlichkeit werden vertröstet und hingehalten. Im Nachhinein sollte sich herausstellen, dass die Studie von Anfang an nicht realisierbar war.

Im März 2012 wurde bekannt, dass Ackermann selbst weiter pädophile Priester, die zum Teil vorbestraft waren, in seinem Bistum beschäftigt. Dies wurde sowohl von Betroffenen als auch von Kirchenmitarbeitern als unhaltbar kritisiert.

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Clergy must be retrained to deal with abuse claims, bishops to be told

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

Harry Farley JUNIOR STAFF WRITER 16 May 2016

The Archbishop of Canterbury has offered a full apology to victims of clerical sex abuse
The Bishop of Crediton, Sarah Mullally, will present an action plan to the Church of England’s House of Bishops in York, according to the Guardian. In it she will recommend that bishops’ local power be curtailed so that a consistent, nationwide response can be implemented.

The Archbishop of Canterbury asked Mullally to compile the report amid accusations the Church continued to ignore or even bully those who came forward with allegations of sex abuse.

One victim who has raised his right to anonymity said he experienced “enduring harassment, vilification and intimidation” from senior clergy when he tried to speak about his experiences.

The Church of England’s devolved structure means each bishop retains control over the systems in their diocese. It is as yet unclear whether the House of Bishops will accept the reduction in control proposed by Mullally’s report.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Gregory H. Poser, O.S.C.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Gregory Poser was ordained for the The Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross (Crosiers) in 1975. He worked in parishes in the Archdioceses of St. Paul-Minneapolis MN, and the Dioceses of Kalamazoo MI and St. Cloud MN. He lived at various times in Crosier communities in the Dioceses of Ft. Wayne-South Bend IN and St. Cloud MN, and the Archdioceses of Chicago IL and St. Paul-Minneapolis MN. In 1991 he was transferred to Indonesia, where he lived and worked as a missionary for many years. In 2003 he returned to MN, where he assisted simultaneously at three parishes and a mission church. Poser was suspended from those assignments in May 2016, when the diocese received a report that he had sexually abused a minor when he was working at Shoreview MN parish in the 1970s.

Ordained: 1975

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WASHINGTON POST IS DISHONEST

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on an editorial in yesterday’s Washington Post:

The Washington Post is on a tear, ripping the Catholic Church for defending itself against professional victims’ advocates and their lawyers. On April 20, it ran an editorial blasting the Vatican for not moving fast enough to commence a tribunal that would investigate bishops who allegedly failed to discipline an offending priest. Yesterday, it ripped dioceses that fight bills that would lift the statute of limitations on the sexual abuse of minors. In doing so, it showed how utterly dishonest it is.

It is dishonest to pretend that an institution that has been ravaged with claims by rogue lawyers has no right to defend itself. For example, church-suing lawyer Jeffrey Anderson has boasted how he is “suing the s*** out of them [the Catholic Church] everywhere.”

It is dishonest to pretend that the Catholic Church is the only institution opposing the elimination of a fundamental civil liberty, namely the statute of limitations. Many religious organizations have done the same, and when public schools are included in bills to revise this statute, the teachers’ unions lead the charge to defeat them.

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Church refers civil lawsuit plans to attorneys

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Shawn Raymundo, sraymundo@guampdn.com May 17, 2016

The Archdiocese of Agana last week announced plans to file civil lawsuits against those who’ve been spreading “malicious lies” about the local Roman Catholic Church, as well as taking cases through the church’s own court system.

The announcement was made in a media release issued Friday. In the release, the archdiocese doesn’t clearly state who it specifically plans to take to court.

Pacific Daily News on Monday asked the archdiocese in an email questions regarding the civil suits and whether the charges will be related to slander and libel. The church on Monday said the matter has been referred to its attorneys.

“The media will have to be patient until the matter takes its course through its formal proceedings,” the church wrote in an email.

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Bishops don’t always have to agree with Francis to back him

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Editor May 16, 2016

These days, when the classic Catholic parlor game of deciding who in the Vatican is for the pope and who’s against him gets underway, German Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller often figures near the top of most lists for the latter camp.

Prefect of the Vatican’s powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and thus an indirect heir to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became Pope Benedict XVI, Müller is perceived as a doctrinal conservative often struggling to hold the line against the more revolutionary tendencies unleashed under Pope Francis.

There are, of course, exceptions to every rule. Müller, for instance, is a close friend of Gustavo Gutierrez and a supporter of a moderate form of liberation theology. In general, however, he’s not seen as an especially “Francis” kind of guy, often perceived as representing the traditional yin to the pope’s maverick yang.

To hear Müller himself tell it, however, that’s just plain bunk.

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Diocese to hold prayer service in Benscreek for sex abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Monday marks the first of three prayer services that Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown leaders hope will provide some healing to victims of child sexual abuse.

Bishop Mark Bartchak plans to preside over the gatherings at St. Andrew in Benscreek on Monday, Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in Altoona on Tuesday and Our Lady of Victory in State College on Thursday.

All of the meetings, which are to begin at 7 p.m., will include exposition of the blessed sacrament, evening prayer, a homily and the sacrament of reconciliation.

The services, which were first announced in April, come more than two months after a Pennsylvania grand jury found two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by dozens of clergy over four decades.

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Abuse claims report “to demand major C of E training overhaul”

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Mon 16 May 2016
By Alex Williams

The way top Church of England clergy are trained to handle allegations of sexual abuse must change radically to ensure victims are not ignored or intimidated, a new report is apparently set to say.

According to the Guardian, Sarah Mullally, the Bishop of Crediton, will present an action plan she was asked to produce by the Archbishop of Canterbury, following an independent inquiry by safeguarding expert Ian Elliott into the institution’s handling of the case of a victim known as “Joe”.

The newspaper claims “Joe” “struggled to be heard by the Church of England over the sexual abuse that has blighted his life” for nearly 40 years and his claims were not dealt with.

Sarah Mullally’s document, which is due to be put before the General Synod’s House of Bishop next week, is also expected to propose a more consistent national approach for responding to claims of wrongdoing.

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Portsmouth Abbey Abbot Abruptly Resigns

RHODE ISLAND
Patch

By MARK SCHIELDROP (Patch Staff)

PORTSMOUTH, RI—The abbot and chancellor at Portsmouth Abbey School has abruptly resigned after admitting misconduct.

Rev. Dom Caedmon Holmes’ resignation was the subject of a letter to the school community from the school’s board of regents chairman and the school’s headmaster.

Holmes’ resignation “followed his acknowledgement of personal struggles involving conduct inconsistent with our expectations and with the Benedictine ideals,” according to the letter.

School officials said they aren’t aware of the abbot’s conduct affecting any students.

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Portsmouth Abbey abbot out after conduct inconsistent with monks’ ideals

RHODE ISLAND
Providence Journal

[with copy of the letter from the school]

By Carol Kozma
Journal Staff Writer

PORTSMOUTH, R.I. — The Right Rev. Dom Caedmon Holmes, the abbot at the Portsmouth Abbey School has resigned suddenly and has left the monastery and campus under unclear circumstances.

A letter dated May 12, and addressed to the Portsmouth Abbey community, stated that Holmes, the head of the monastery, departed after “his acknowledgement of personal struggles involving conduct inconsistent with our expectations and with Benedictine ideals.”

On Sunday, assistant headmaster John Perreira in an email to The Providence Journal said, “We have received no allegation of sexual abuse, or have knowledge that this involves any students or other persons. We strive to be transparent with our community so they can communicate to us any issues or concerns that they have. Consistent with that goal and current best practices, we have provided an independent law firm contact should anyone have information we need to hear.”

He added he did not have any further comments, and repeated that Holmes had resigned due to his own struggles. The letter, signed by the Board of Regents’ Chair W. Christopher Behnke and Headmaster Daniel McDonough, does not describe the personal struggles or the situation under review.

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The chancellor of Portsmouth Abbey School has resigned over what the school calls “conduct inconsistent” with its expectations

RHODE ISLAND
Daily Journal

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 15, 2016

PORTSMOUTH, Rhode Island — The chancellor of Portsmouth Abbey School has resigned over what the school calls “conduct inconsistent” with its expectations.

The Providence Journal reports (http://bit.ly/1OuGWkw) the school sent a letter to the Portsmouth Abbey community May 12 that said the Rt. Rev. Dom Caedmon Holmes had departed after “his acknowledgment of personal struggles” involving conduct inconsistent with “Benedictine ideals.”

The school says it has no knowledge that Holmes’ conduct affected any students, but it has retained an independent law firm to “review the situation.” The letter provides no further details.

Assistant Headmaster John Perreira says the school hasn’t received any allegations of sexual abuse.

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Abbot suddenly resigns from Portsmouth Abbey

RHODE ISLAND
ABC 6

By Niza Viñas
nvinas@abc6.com

The Portsmouth Abbey School has announced their abbot has suddenly resigned after admitting misconduct.

A letter was sent to the parents and staff from the school’s board regarding Rev. Dom Caedmon Holmes’ resignation.

According to the letter, Holmes’ resignation is followed by his “acknowledgment of personal struggles involving conduct inconsistent with our expectations and with the Benedictine ideals.”

The school officials also say they are not aware that Holmes’ conduct affected any students.

Additionally, the letter indicates that an independent law firm has been assigned to follow up with any further issues or concerns. Anyone with information can call Debevoise & Plimpton at (212) 909-6996.

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Abuse survivors press Stormont on compensation scheme

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

A redress scheme for victims of historical child abuse must be part of the new programme for government, abuse survivors will tell politicians later.

Survivors will gather at Stormont to reveal details of a compensation scheme that they want the incoming executive to adopt.

They will set out recommendations for out-of-court payments as an alternative to civil court proceedings.

The report will also recommend two categories of compensation.

These include a “common experience payment” for all former residents of homes where abuse was endemic, as well as compensation in individual cases.

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Fugitive British priest lived in Kosovo under false name

KOSOVO
Reuters

PEJA, KOSOVO | BY FATOS BYTYCI

A British former priest wanted for child sex abuse lived as a historian in Kosovo, was treated to cakes by his neighbors and almost died in a freak accident a year ago, local people told Reuters on Sunday.

Lawrence Soper was arrested on Wednesday in the town of Peja following an international arrest warrant.

Soper is accused of sex offences while he was a teacher in the 1970s and 1980s in Britain. British media said the former abbot from Ealing, west London, now in his 70s, had jumped bail in 2011 and a European warrant was subsequently issued.

For the past 4 or 5 years he lived under the name Andrew Charles Kingston in a secluded street near the center of Peja. He had even started to speak Albanian.

“We were shocked,” said a neighbor, who declined to be named.

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Diocese to hold prayer services for sex abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
SFGate

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. (AP) — A Roman Catholic diocese is planning to hold several prayer services for sexual abuse victims more than two months after a Pennsylvania grand jury found two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by dozens of clergy over four decades.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports (http://bit.ly/1OuKvMN ) Bishop Mark Bartchak of the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is planning to hold a service Monday evening at St. Andrew Parish in Johnstown, followed by another Tuesday evening at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in Altoona.

A third is planned Thursday evening at Our Lady of Victory Parish in State College.

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Canadian cult leader ‘The Prophet’ faces trial after allegedly abusing church members

CANADA
Christian Times

Suzette Gutierrez Cachila
15 MAY, 2016

The leader of a cult-like church in Ontario, Canada faced trial in court on Tuesday, May 10 over several charges including sexual assault.

Fred King, also known as “The Prophet” to his followers, allegedly abused church members by punching, kicking, and spitting on them. At times, he would even make some of them strip naked before the rest of the congregation.

The 57-year-old leader of the Church of Jesus Christ Restored is facing charges from as far back as 1978 until 2008 when he was the head of the cult-like organization. He assumed leadership upon the death of his father, Stanley, whose wives were also passed to him.

The charges filed against King include issuing death threats and sexual interference. In 2012, former church members accused him of physical and sexual assault. He disappeared when the allegations surfaced. He was found hiding in a hotel in Hamilton and was arrested in 2014.

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Still protecting its own

MARYLAND
Washington Post

By Editorial Board May 15

“In 1995, two individuals alleged sexual abuse by Father Robert Hopkins in the 1970s.”

“In 1999, an individual alleged sexual abuse by Father Timothy Murphy in the late 1960s to early 1970s.”

“In 2002, an individual alleged sexual abuse in the mid-1970s by Dennis Pecore, who was then a religious brother.”

ON AND ON it goes. These accounts, and several dozen others like them, now appear on the website of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore, which recently published a list — or rather, republished one from 2002 with 14 additional names — of clergy alleged to have abused children. Similar lists have been published by other dioceses, which in recent years have taken steps to atone for years of sweeping such cases under the rug by adopting more forthcoming policies and providing counseling to victims of abusive priests.

The church says the publication of these names will provide acknowledgment to victims that they are not alone. By seeing their abusers publicly identified and shamed, victims may be “empowered to find out that other people have alleged against the same person,” according to Sean Caine, spokesman for the archdiocese.

That’s a fair point but an inadequate one. For while the archdiocese is extending one sort of validation to victims, it’s simultaneously pressing to deny most of them another sort: the opportunity to seek redress in the courts.

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