ABUSE TRACKER

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

April 6, 2016

Reporters, filmmaker shine ‘spotlight’ on investigative journalism

MASSACHUSETTS
news@Northerastern

April 6, 2016 by Joe O’Connell

The final scene of the Academy Award-​​winning film Spot­light por­trays the reporters and edi­tors who made up The Boston Globe’s inves­tiga­tive team fielding a bar­rage of calls from sur­vivors of the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal on the day in 2002 when the team broke the story.

Walter Robinson, AS’74, a former jour­nalism pro­fessor at North­eastern and a Globe editor who led the Spot­light team, described that day as the end of the begin­ning for his team. Col­lec­tively they wrote some 600 sto­ries on the scandal and earned the Globe the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Ser­vice for their inves­tiga­tive work.

“I feel like our world exploded,” Robinson told a standing-​​room only crowd in the event space on the 17th floor of East Vil­lage. “And those phones rang for months. In just the first sev­eral weeks we had more than 300 vic­tims just in the Boston arch­dio­cese call us.”

Robinson shared those mem­o­ries during a thought-​​provoking event on Tuesday evening that exam­ined the making of Spot­light and how the work of those Globe jour­nal­ists con­tinues to impacted inves­tiga­tive journalism.

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.

Manny Waks Takes His Crusade Against Pedophilia to Israel, but Still Can’t Escape His Demons

ISRAEL
Haaretz

Aimee Amiga Apr 06, 2016

The well-known advocate for child sex abuse victims in Australia recently moved to Israel. He talks to Haaretz about continuing his mission here.

Manny Waks has shared his personal story of being sexually abused as a child so many times that he appears almost numb to the trauma. He is well-known in Australia, especially within the Jewish community, as a resilient survivor and an outspoken advocate for victims who has brought the issue of pedophilia to national attention.

But the poise with which he crusades on behalf of others belies his own lingering demons. As the number of people who confide in him grows, he says, it gets harder to make peace with his own past.

“It’s destructive,” Waks, 39, tells Haaretz in Ramat Hasharon, the central Israeli city where he and his family have lived since November, after being forced to leave Australia. “It’s literally destructive to deal with these things on a daily basis. There are days when I’m paralyzed, when I cannot work.”

When that’s not the case, Waks runs Kol V’Oz, an organization he launched here in Israel that serves as an umbrella group for institutions worldwide dealing with child sexual abuse in the Jewish community. It plans to offer training, best-practice materials, advocacy and research, to map the prevalence of child sexual abuse across global Jewish communities and the services currently available to victims, among other things.

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.

Lawyer Alex Lewenberg apologises for telling Yeshivah sexual abuse victim not to assist police

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Kirsten Veness

A Melbourne lawyer who represented Yeshivah Centre child sex offender David Cyprys has apologised in court for telling an abuse victim not to assist a police investigation.

Alex Lewenberg, 75, was found guilty of two counts of professional misconduct at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) in March and now faces possible suspension.

In 2011, Mr Lewenberg represented Yeshivah College security guard David Cyprys, who was charged with, and later convicted of, child sex offences.

Mr Lewenberg told one of Cyprys’ victims they should not assist the police prosecution of a fellow Jewish person, no matter what the accusation.

During a phone conversation the victim recorded in October 2011, Mr Lewenberg said “I’m disappointed that you would participate, and that was my disappointment and that’s why I’m not exactly delighted that another Yid would assist police against an accused, no matter whatever he’s accused of”.

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.

Bystanders beat the crap out of youth pastor they caught molesting a 6-year-old boy

TEXAS
Raw Story

BETHANIA PALMA MARKUS
06 APR 2016

A Texas youth pastor who was caught allegedly sexually abusing a 6-year-old child was beaten by witnesses who say they attacked him to stop the abuse, Fox4 reports.

Dallas police arrested Willie Lee Bell Jr., 29, who was a youth pastor at First United Methodist Church of Cedar Hill. Authorities say he lured the kindergartner behind an apartment, where he molested him. Bell is also implicated in a February sexual assault of two other children, Fox4 reports. All victims are aged 6 and 7.

“It’s painful. It’s devastating. It’s a nightmare,” the mother of a 6-year-old victim told the station.

She said her child was playing outside with other kids when Bell lured him behind a building.

Fox4 reports that court records show it’s not the first time Bell has been accused of sexually abusing children — he was accused of showing pornography to a child in Tennessee.

One victim told authorities that the man abusing him was wearing “church shoes.”

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.

Enda Kenny urged to apologise to survivors of mother and baby homes in Ireland

IRELAND
Newstalk

6 Apr 2016
Sinéad Farrell

The acting Taoiseach is being urged to apologise to the survivors of Ireland’s mother and baby homes.

The Coalition of Mother And Baby Home Survivors say an inquiry on the now notorious facilities is causing strife within their community. It was sparked by the discovery of hundreds of babies’ remains on the premises of a former home in Tuam.

The group are planning to hold a protest outside the Dáil later today. Paul Redmond, founder of the Coalition of Mother and Baby Home Survivors, says they will continue with their campaign until their demands are met.

“For a lot of people it would simply be the Taoiseach and Government acknowledging and aologising for what has actually happened.”

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 to St. Cloud diocese: Turn over files

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

David Unze, dunze@stcloudtimes.com
April 6, 2016

A Stearns County judge has ordered the Diocese of St. Cloud to turn over the files of all priests who have been accused of the sexual abuse of children.

And in a separate order, a different judge has denied the diocese’s request to dismiss a claim that it created a “public nuisance” by not telling the public about child-molesting priests with connections to the diocese.

The orders, filed within the last week, mean that lawyers representing clergy sex abuse victims will have a chance to review those files and release portions to the public. In one other Minnesota diocese, the release of similar files led to criminal charges.

The two decisions are a “one-two punch to the long-standing practices of concealment and deceit by the Diocese of St. Cloud,” said Attorney Jeff Anderson.

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.

PENNSYLVANIA REFORMING SEX ABUSE LAW AMID HOMOSEXUAL ABUSE CRISIS

PENNSYLVANIA
Church Militant

Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • April 6, 2016

Legislators seek abolition of statute of limitations

HARRISBURG, Pa. (ChurchMilitant.com) – Pennsylvania legislators are pushing for reform in the state’s sex crime laws.

In an action Tuesday the Pennsylvania House Judiciary Committee voted 26 to 1 to support a bill seeking to abolish the criminal statute of limitations. Spearheaded by Republican majority chairman Ron Marsico of Dauphin, House Bill 1947 would ensure “no one who sexually abuses a child … will ever be free from criminal prosecution merely because of a lapsed statute of limitations.”

“The issue of the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases is not a new one in the legislature,” Marsico explains in a statement released Monday.

The proposed changes would also raise “the civil statute-of-limitations age to age 50” from its current ceiling of age 30.

However the tentative reforms will have no retroactive effect. According to Rep. Marsico this is because of the potentially “huge negative impact” such clauses would have on many nonprofit organizations who could face catastrophic lawsuits “for actions that may have occurred decades ago by people who are no longer even affiliated” with the groups.

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.

Brother Damien P. Chong, O.Carm., 76

MASSACHUSETTS

[assignment record – BishopAccountability.org]

Nov 1, 2014

PEABODY: Brother Damien P. Chong, O.Carm, died Friday morning at the Lahey Clinic Medical Center following a long illness. He was born in Honolulu, Hawaii on June 5, 1938, the son of the late Libert and Hannah (Akee) Chong and attended Saint Louis High School in Honolulu, HI and Archbishop Carroll High in Washington, D.C.

He made his Simple Profession on September 8, 1958 and his Solemn Profession on September 8, 1961, both in Akron, Ohio. From 1961 until 1991, he was assigned from Crespi High School, Mt. Carmel, La. and taught Tying, Drafter and General Science and was Pastoral Associate at St. Gelasius in Chicago.

Brother Damien had spent the last 15 years living at Our Lady of Scapular Priory in Peabody. He served in many different capacities at the Carmelite Chapel at the North Shore Mall and at the Discalced Carmelite Monastery in Danvers. He maintained the grounds, decorated the church for the holidays and was an all around handyman, and he was a gourmet chef as well.

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.

Assemblywoman told she can’t screen ‘Spotlight’ at Capitol

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KEN LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Monday, April 4, 2016

Here is the the lead item from my “Albany Insider” column this morning:

A state assemblywoman’s desire to use Academy Award-winning movie “Spotlight” to boost her fight to help child sexual abuse victims has run into a roadblock—her own chamber’s leadership.

Assembly Democratic leaders are refusing to allow Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Queens) from holding a screening of the film at the Capitol complex during a two-day lobbying effort in May to build support for her bill to make it easier for people sexually abused as kids to bring lawsuits as adults.

Markey’s office, which received a Blueray copy of this year’s Best Picture winner that chronicles the Boston Globe’s investigation into sexual abuse by priests, was originally told it was a copyright issue.

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.

Lovett: N.Y. Assembly blocks pol from showing ‘Spotlight’ to push child-rape law

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT

ALBANY — A state assemblywoman’s desire to use the Academy Award-winning movie “Spotlight” to boost her fight to help child sexual abuse victims has run into a roadblock — her own chamber’s leadership.

Assembly Democratic leaders are refusing to allow Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Queens) from holding a screening of the film at the Capitol complex during a two-day lobbying effort in May to build support for her bill to make it easier for people sexually abused as kids to bring lawsuits as adults.

Markey’s office, which received a Blu-ray copy of the Best Picture winner that chronicles the Boston Globe’s investigation into sexual abuse by priests, was originally told it was a copyright issue.

Since then, Markey aide Michael Armstrong says he paid $200 to the film’s distributor for a license to show it one-time in a legislative hearing room.

But that is still not enough for Assembly leadership, who now say it’s about precedent.

“It’s just not something we do on government property,” said Michael Whyland, spokesman for Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie. “It would open the door to showing all sorts of things that some people might find objectionable, not that “Spotlight” is. We just don’t want to go down that road.”

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.

Assembly wasn’t always leery of screenings at the Capitol

NEW YORK
Times Union

By Casey Seiler, Capitol bureau chief on April 4, 2016

Ken Lovett of the Daily News reported Monday that the Assembly’s leadership rejected Queens Democrat Marge Markey’s request to hold a screening of the Oscar-winning drama “Spotlight” at the Capitol.

The film concerns the Boston Globe’s coverage of the pedophilia coverup by the city’s Catholic Diocese. Markey has for years backed legislation that would extend the statute of limitations for victims of sexual abuse in New York. The bill is opposed by the state’s Catholic Conference.

According to Lovett’s column, the Assembly initially claimed the screening would have violated the film’s copyright. After Markey obtained clearance and paid a fee for the screening, the Democratic leadership issued a backup objection.

“It’s just not something we do on government property,” Michael Whyland, spokesman for Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, told Lovett. “It would open the door to showing all sorts of things that some people might find objectionable. … We just don’t want to go down that road.”

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.

Whole Foods CEO John Mackey Quits Marc Gafni’s Think Tank

UNITED STATES
Forward

John A. Oswald
April 6, 2016

Disgraced spiritual guru Marc Gafni has suffered another black eye with the resignation of Whole Foods co-founder and CEO John Mackey from his vaunted think tank, The Forward has learned.

Mackey so far has issued no statement on his reason for stepping down from the Center for Integral Wisdom, but his departure comes as Gafni continues to be dogged by allegations of sexual improprieties stretching back years.

The Forward in January published an essay by Sara Kabakov, who alleged that Gafni molested her repeatedly, beginning when she was 13.

Gafni, who is now in his mid-50s, was 19 when the alleged abuse started, Kabakov said. The once-promising Jewish leader said the relationship with her was consensual.

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.

Vatican guide says Francis’ family document puts doctrine ‘at service of pastoral mission’

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Apr. 6, 2016

VATICAN CITY
A Vatican reading guide sent to Catholic bishops globally ahead of the release of Pope Francis’ widely anticipated document on family life says the pontiff wants the church to adopt a new stance of inclusion towards society and to ensure its doctrines are “at the service of the pastoral mission.”

The guide — sent by the Vatican’s office for the Synod of Bishops in preparation for Friday’s release of “Amoris Laetitia; On Love in the Family” — explains that Francis “encourages not just a ‘renewal’ but even more, a real ‘conversion’ of language.”

“The Gospel must not be merely theoretical, not detached from people’s real lives,” states the guide. “To talk about the family and to families, the challenge is not to change doctrine but to inculturate the general principles in ways that they can be understood and practiced.”

“Our language should encourage and reassure every positive step taken by every real family,” it continues.

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.

Justice out of balance

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Catholic

By A. B. Hill

HARRISBURG – Parish volunteers and employees who work with children know firsthand the measures now in place to protect the children in their care from abuse, including background checks and safe environment training about recognizing and reporting signs of abuse.

However, state lawmakers are considering amendments to legislation that could lead to the closure of parishes, schools, and ministries of today’s Catholics, who are in no way responsible for abuse that occurred decades ago.

The proposal would retroactively nullify the statute of limitations for filing a civil lawsuit alleging childhood sexual abuse. It would force parishes, dioceses, schools, and charities to defend cases that are 30, 40 or 50 years old, long after the perpetrator and possible witnesses have died or clear evidence is gone.

“Every nonprofit organization is at risk,” says Robert O’Hara Jr., executive director of the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, “Nothing in the proposed Pennsylvania legislation would send any perpetrators to jail. Rather, it will put individual parishes and neighborhood Catholic schools in the firing line for lawsuits that are nearly impossible to defend against.”

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.

FBI probe finds NYPD traded services for Super Bowl tickets, luxe trips

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Shawn Cohen, Jamie Schram and Kate Sheehy April 6, 2016

The gifts were lavish — Super Bowl tickets and vacations to China and London.

The favors were troubling — using NYPD cops to provide security for private cash and jewelry deliveries and police escorts for funerals and airport trips to transfer bodies to Israel.

New details emerged Tuesday in the FBI’s corruption investigation into the police department, including how deep-pocketed businessmen who were the original targets of the probe sought out high-ranking members who they knew could “get things done for them,” sources told The Post.

“They don’t go to police officers or detectives. They’re too far down the food chain,’’ a law enforcement source said of the politically connected businessmen.

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.

NYPD rocked by massive corruption probe

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Shawn Cohen

April 5, 2016

The FBI is investigating suspected NYPD corruption focusing on the relationship between two politically connected businessmen and a slew of officers throughout the ranks, multiple sources told The Post on Monday.

The feds are grilling about 20 cops — including three deputy chiefs and the head of the Upper East Side’s 19th Precinct — over gifts and foreign trips that the businessmen may have doled out to them in exchange for favors, law enforcement sources said.

A grand jury also has been convened, sources said.

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

EXCLUSIVE: NYPD officer involved in federal financial fraud probe, including possible money laundering, accepting gifts

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY JOHN ANNESE, JOHN MARZULLI, ROCCO PARASCANDOLA NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, April 5, 2016

An NYPD officer tangled in the snare of a federal probe has been put on modified duty and stripped of his badge and gun, the Daily News has learned.

Michael Milici, a longtime community affairs detective in the 66th Precinct, was placed on restricted detail after he refused to answer questions from a grand jury, sources said Monday.

The trouble began when the feds launched a financial fraud inquiry within the NYPD. It grew out of an earlier probe by the FBI and the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s Office that involved fraud and possible money laundering, sources said.

Now investigators are also trying to determine if some NYPD officers accepted gifts from Jewish community leaders — including a Borough Park activist with close ties to city officials, sources told The News.

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.

Police Precinct Ensnared in FBI Corruption Probe

NEW YORK
Forward

Josh Nathan-Kazis
April 6, 2016

On the Jewish holiday of Purim, ultra-Orthodox big shots in Brooklyn invite police officials over for holiday meals. Then, they share the pictures on social media in an implicit contest over who drew the highest-ranking officer.

Now, those cozy relationships are drawing scrutiny amid a reported federal corruption investigation involving Orthodox businessmen and a raft of New York Police Department officials.

One informed source, a private security consultant who works in the Orthodox community, told the Forward that one of the businessmen named in press reports about the investigation, Hasidic activist Jeremy Reichberg, flaunted his ties to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio to exert influence in the NYPD’s 66th Precinct, which encompasses Boro Park and other heavily Orthodox Brooklyn neighborhoods.

“He’s working with the Mayor’s office, so he had a little bit more connection than any other schmuck on the street,” said Joe Levin, founder of T.O.T. Private Consulting, a security consulting firm specializing in the Orthodox community.

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.

Bill to expand rights of child sex abuse victims clears state House panel

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Liam Migdail-Smith

The push to give victims of child sexual abuse more time to take legal action against their abusers and the organizations that shield them has cleared a major hurdle.

With a 26-1 vote Tuesday, the state House Judiciary Committee advanced a bill to overhaul the statutes of limitation for victims of child sex abuse. The bill had languished in the committee for years. The House is expected to consider the plan for final approval next week.

The bill would end time limits for criminal charges and give victims until age 50 to pursue civil cases. Now, the age limits are 50 for criminal cases and 30 for civil cases.

State Rep. Mark Rozzi, who has led the reform push, called the committee’s bill a good but incomplete first step.

He said the plan would help future victims but not those who have already passed the current civil limit. He plans to propose an amendment that would make the changes retroactive, allowing victims who are now between 30 and 50 years old to file civil cases.

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.

New Vatican office will control ‘dot-catholic’ doman

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

April 05, 2016

The Vatican Secretariat for Communications has established a new bureau, entitled DotCatholic, to manage the new top-level internet domain by the same name.

In 2013, the Vatican sought and won exclusive control of internet addresses that end in “.catholic”. (This top-level domain includes the use of “.catholic” in English, Chinese, Arabic, and Russian.) The new Vatican office will be charged with using that domain to “share the teachings, the message, and the values of the Catholic Church with the broader global community in cyberspace,” the Vatican announced.

Mauro Milita, the former director of information technology for Vatican Radio, has been named to head the new office, which will have a staff of seven internet experts.

A top-level domain name appears last in the string of words used to identify Internet locations. For example, in this website’s name, “www.catholicculture.org”, the top-level domain name is “org”. This is supposed to give an idea of the general nature of the entity which uses the name—in this case a non-profit organization rather than a for-profit company. The lower level name “catholicculture” is an organizational identifier. And “www” designates the specific computer within the organization’s network which hosts the service in question (in this case, a world wide web server).

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

Priest who had child and decade-long secret relationship with woman 42 years his junior passes

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Denise Calnan

06/04/2016

A priest who hit global headlines in 2006 for having an affair with a woman 42 years his junior has passed away.

Fr Maurice ‘Mossie’ Dillane shocked parishioners when he retired from the priesthood in January 2006 after his long-term affair with a local woman was revealed. He received a massive outpouring of public support and sympathy at the time.

He passed away peacefully on Monday in the care of UCH Galway. A private removal will be held on Thursday to St Brigid’s Church, Portumna for Requiem Mass at noon.

Fr Dillane was a native of west Co Limerick and was a late vocation who joined the priesthood after working in banking.

He later served as a missionary priest in San Antonio, Texas for several years.

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Residential school survivors must control their own stories: Editorial

CANADA
Toronto Star

Editorial

They are survivors of Canada’s notorious residential schools. As First Nations children, many suffered psychological, cultural, physical and sexual abuse at the hands of a racist system designed to “take the Indian out of the child.” Many fought back heroically.

The heart-wrenching testimony that many of them gave about their years of privation and worse in the schools — part of a process in which Ottawa and church groups have paid out $5 billion in compensation to 80,000 survivors — is sacred evidence, and a sacred trust.

It is only fitting that Ontario’s highest court has just upheld the right of 38,000 survivors who sought specific compensation for sexual and other abuse through a special assessment process to decide individually over the next 15 years whether to preserve their stories in an archive. Otherwise the records will be destroyed.

Granted, there is a compelling argument for preserving as much of the testimony as possible in the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation archive as an indelible indictment of a shameful chapter in our collective history. The Star hopes that many survivors will agree, and deposit their records with the centre. The truth, in all its searing specificity, should not be lost to future generations.

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.

Oscar in hand, ‘Spotlight’ screenwriter returns to Globe

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Mark Shanahan GLOBE STAFF APRIL 05, 2016

Winning an Oscar is wonderful, but no one talks about the hassle of having to cart the thing around afterward. Josh Singer, who, along with director Tom McCarthy, won the Academy Award for best original screenplay for “Spotlight,” showed up in the Globe newsroom Tuesday with a Star Market bag containing a shoebox.

Inside the box, loosely sheathed in bubble wrap, was the golden statuette that Singer accepted on stage at The Dolby Theatre in LA in February. Not so glamorous, right?

Singer said the Oscar, which stands 13½ inches tall and weighs 8½ pounds, typically draws the attention of TSA agents, who worry the screenwriter might be carrying a bomb. It happened again this week on his way to Boston.

“The guy took it out of the box and wiped the whole thing without ever acknowledging what it was,” said Singer. “At some point, another TSA agent came over and said, ‘Hey, is that thing real?’ ”

Singer stopped at the Globe before giving a talk Tuesday night at Northeastern. He credited the newspaper for its Pulitzer Prize-winning series that exposed the child sex abuse scandal within the Catholic Church. And he invited staff to take a selfie or two with Oscar.

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Church’s PR Strategy: Deny, Duck, Dodge and Distance Yourself, by SNAP

UNITED STATES
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

Look at how they distance themselves.

I’m embarrassed to admit this, but I can’t help it: Sometimes, I feel sorry for the public relations professionals who advise church officials on how to deal with clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

How do you defend the indefensible? You may be the smartest PR person in town. But how do you “spin” widely-documented and clearly devastating decades of deliberate deceit? Decades of callousness and recklessness that have caused horrific harm to more than 100,000 children (according to estimates by Catholic “experts” themselves)?

Well, these PR folks have settled on a standard formula they’re convinced works. It can be summed up as “Deny, duck, dodge and distance yourself.”

And it’s pretty clearly that church officials LOVE this approach.

It’s evident in how quickly bishops shout “He’s not our guy!” when a Franciscan or Marianist is caught molesting in their diocese. It’s evident in how quickly Jesuit staff say “He’s not one of us!” when a diocesan priest is arrested for abusing a child at a Jesuit facility.

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.

Cedar Hill youth pastor accused of sexually assaulting 3 young boys

TEXAS
Fox 4

A Cedar Hill youth pastor is accused of sexually assaulting three boys. Up until his arrest, Willie Lee Bell Jr. ministered to children at First United Methodist Church of Cedar Hill.

Police say Bell lured and sexually assaulted the boys at an apartment in February and was caught in the act last week at a Dallas apartment. He is facing charges for two sexual assaults of little boys in Cedar Hill.

The mother of the most recent victim, who didn’t want to be identified, says her 6-year-old kindergartner was lured behind an apartment building while he was playing outside.

“It’s painful. It’s devastating. It’s a nightmare,” the mom said.

Witnesses caught a man abusing her child Thursday afternoon. The mom says bystanders attacked Bell to stop him.

“If it wasn’t for them, he probably would have done more to my child,” said the mom.

Dallas police arrested the 29-year-old in West Oak Cliff. Police say two young boys said a man abused them behind their apartment complex on East Little Creek Road in February. The boys said the man was wearing “church shoes.”

United Methodist Church of North Texas said, in a statement, it has no knowledge of any criminal acts happening at the church, and that it’s cooperating with police.

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

Acting Taoiseach urged to apologise to Mother and Baby home survivors

IRELAND
Breaking News

The acting Taoiseach is being urged to apologise to survivors of Ireland’s mother and baby homes.

The Coalition of Mother and Baby home Survivors will hold a protest outside the Dáil later today.

The group has said an inquiry into the now notorious facilities is dividing their community.

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.

Scale of historical child abuse will be examined for the first time in official crime figures as next nationwide survey will ask every adult in the country if they are victims

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By IAN DRURY HOME AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT FOR THE DAILY MAIL

Questions about historical child abuse have been included in the Government’s official crime survey for the first time.

Thousands of adults have been quizzed by the Office for National Statistics to try to expose the full extent of such crimes in the past.

The Crime Survey for England and Wales has incorporated a new category of questions with officials asking respondents whether they had experienced emotional, physical or sexual abuse while growing up.

The survey will attempt to uncover accurate figures on offending at places such as schools, sports clubs or in the family home, who carried out the attacks, the victim’s relationship to the culprit, and the age assaults began.

The ONS said it had decided to include questions on child sex abuse because the issue had become ‘topical’ after scandals involving Jimmy Savile and other celebrities were exposed.

The Government has also set up a landmark £100million inquiry into the blizzard of historic child sex abuse allegations, including against VIPs, churches, schools, local councils and MPs, led by High Court judge Justice Lowell Goddard.

The Crime Survey is seen as the most authoritative indicator of crime rates because it takes account of offences not reported to the police by victims.

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Cardinals Baldisseri, Schönborn to present Papal exhortation

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The Press Office of the Holy See has called a conference and briefing for journalists in connection with the publication of Pope Francis’ highly anticipated post-Synodal Exhortation, Amoris Laetitia, on “The Joy of Love”, for 11:30 AM Rome Time on Friday, April 8th, in the John Paul II Hall of the sala stampa facility.

Presenting the document will be the General Secretary of the Synod of Bishops, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, and the Archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal Christoph Schönborn OP, along with a couple of married academics, Professor Francesco Miano and Professor Giuseppina De Simone, of the University of Tor Vergata (Rome) and the Theological Faculty of Southern Italy, respectively.

Below, please find the official announcement in English

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Accredited journalists are informed that on Friday 8 April 2016at 11.30 a.m., in the Aula Giovanni Paolo II of the Holy See Press Office, a Press Conference will be held for the presentation of the post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation of the Holy Father Francis, Amoris laetitia, on love in the family.

The panel will be composed of:

Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, general secretary of the Synod of Bishops;
Cardinal Christoph Schönborn, O.P., archbishop of Vienna;
The married couple Professor Francesco Miano, lecturer in moral philosophy at the University of Rome at Tor Vergata, and Professor Giuseppina De Simone in Miano, lecturer in philosophy at the Theological Faculty of Southern Italy in Naples.

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Students of elite Sydney schools sue over historic sex abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Four elite Sydney schools are facing multimillion-dollar lawsuits by former students who say they suffered sexual abuse during their time at the colleges.

Ten damages claims have been filed in the NSW Supreme Court against four schools – Knox Grammar, Waverley College, De La Salle College Revesby Heights and The Scots College – according to Sydney lawyer Ross Koffel.

A former Knox student, Mr Koffel said he is preparing two further claims and is investigating another eight potential cases.

He said the students involved were allegedly sexually abused by teachers on school grounds or during a school activity, and the schools are accused of failing in their duty of care to the students.

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New York Child Abuse Laws Are ‘Regressive’ and ‘Absurd’

NEW YORK
Washington Square News

WSN Editorial Board
April 6, 2016

Governor Cuomo came under fire on Monday from sexual abuse victims and child advocates, who called on him to support legislation extending New York’s current statute of limitations for criminal charges and civil suits against accused abusers. The statute in question limits legal action to the age of 23, making it one of the most restrictive in the nation. New York State needs to support the victims of some of the most heinous crimes imaginable by reforming the statute of limitation and providing greater resources for the abused.

Despite being called “regressive” and “absurd,” the statute has avoided resistance in the legislature. Four attempts at extending the statute of limitations that passed the State Assembly have been halted by the Senate, even as other states have extended their statues. Some states, like Florida, even eliminated their statutes of limitations. Even within New York State laws, rape is one of the few charges in the penal code with no statute of limitations. By definition assault of a person who cannot give consent, like a minor, is rape. The fact that child victims are given less time to pursue justice than adult victims is beyond logic. It is unfair to expect children of abuse at the age of 17 to be able to overcome such a horrific trauma within five years. Minors who have the courage and strength to overcome trauma to pursue justice should have a day in court, regardless of their age, so a grand jury — not legislators — can judge a case on its merits.

In addition to extending the statute of limitations, other measures can be taken on a community level in order to protect children from sexual abuse. Increased outreach in schools, daycares, community centers and religious institutions could play a role both in preventing and detecting child abuse. This outreach includes broader education about abuse for parents and caregivers, more widely accessible counseling options for children and their families, as well as age-appropriate programs to teach children how to recognize and report abuse. While these measures and others like them are not always foolproof, coupling them with a longer statute of limitations can make these policies go a long way in providing justice for victims and families.

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Private funeral for Victorian bishop

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Megan Neil – AAP on April 6, 2016

A former Victorian bishop who moved pedophile priests between parishes will have a small and private funeral.

Bishop Ronald Mulkearns died before completing his evidence to the child abuse royal commission about the Catholic Church’s handling of pedophile priests during his 1971-1997 years in charge of the Ballarat diocese.

Bishop Mulkearns, a priest for 60 years, died from cancer in his Ballarat nursing home on Monday, aged 85.

A funeral mass will be held on Monday morning in the Nazareth House Nursing Home’s chapel.

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Lucy Turnbull targeted for Salvos support

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Lucy Turnbull has come under fire for launching the Salvation Army’s $74 million fundraising drive while abuse victims from the charity’s children’s homes await compensation.

The prominent businesswoman and prime minister’s wife launched the charity’s annual Red Shield Appeal in front of about 500 supporters, including former NSW governor Professor Dame Marie Bashir, in Sydney on Wednesday.

She pledged $50,000 to the appeal on behalf of her family’s charitable trust, the Turnbull Foundation.

But survivors of abuse at Salvation Army children’s homes criticised Mrs Turnbull’s involvement with the charity, which they say refuses to fully back a national redress scheme for abuse victims.

Thirteen members of the support group Care Leavers Australia Network protested outside the Westin hotel in Sydney’s CBD as Mrs Turnbull addressed the Red Shield Appeal launch.

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No time to say goodbye

CANADA
The Telegram

Civil trial moves to second former Mount Cashel Orphanage resident

One day in 1952, three brothers were playing pond hockey in their rural community far from St. John’s when their uncle came to get them to go to Mount Cashel.

“I felt terrible,” one of the boys, now a senior, told a courtroom of the experience of leaving his friends and schoolmates. “Never even had time to say goodbye.”

Terrible was also the word he used to describe his first impression of the now infamous east-end St. John’s orphanage run by the Catholic lay order Christian Brothers.

But, he said, his war-veteran father, a double amputee, could not care for them after their mother died.

When asked by abuse claimants’ lawyer Paul Kennedy why his father chose faraway Mount Cashel, the man replied people of that generation put clergy “on a pedestal.”

They were a Catholic family and clergy were viewed as doing no wrong, he said.

“That turned out to be different,” said the man, now in his 70s, who began testimony late Tuesday afternoon at the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador in a civil trial to determine whether the Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s is liable for the physical and sexual abuse of boys perpetrated by some members of the Christian Brothers several decades ago.

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Alleged sexual assault victim testifies

WEST VIRGINIA
Herald-Dispatch

HUNTINGTON – The victim in a sexual assault case alleging 40 counts of sexual abuse by a Huntington man gave more than two hours of testimony Tuesday during the first day of trial in Cabell County Circuit Court.

Randall Pennington was indicted in September 2014 on 20 counts of second-degree sexual assault and 20 counts sexual abuse by a person in a position of trust. The case points to alleged incidents between Oct. 1, 2013, and Dec. 31, 2013.

Cabell County prosecutors allege the incidents occurred at Pennington’s home in the West End of Huntington when the alleged victim was 12.

During opening statements, assistant prosecutor Kellie Neal told the jury of 10 women and four men (two jurors are alternates) that the victim’s mother was a single mother who trusted a lifelong friend to watch her child while she worked the night shift at a local hospital.

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Lawsuit: Mormons Sexually Abused Navajo Foster Children

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

Brandy Zadrozny

Two siblings say a foster program that placed Native American children with white Mormon families failed to intervene and stop years of alleged abuse.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints did nothing to protect two Navajo children from sexual abuse in the 1970s and early 1980s while they were enrolled in a program to convert and assimilate Native American students, according to a lawsuit filed in Navajo Nation District Court last week.

The plaintiffs are asking for unspecified damages, as well as a letter of apology to them and to the entire Navajo Nation; a change in church policy requiring church members to report charges of sexual abuse to the police; and the creation of a task force that would help to restore the Navajo culture that some participants say the program effectively erased.

Now-adult siblings RJ and MM—The Daily Beast does not identify alleged victims of sexual abuse—left their home on a reservation in Sawmill, Arizona at ages 10 and 11, respectively, to be part of the Mormon church’s Indian Student Placement Program, a controversial voluntary foster care initiative that baptized some 40,000 children between 1947 and 2000 and brought them to live with white, Mormon families during the school year.

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EXCLUSIVE: N.Y. attorney general urges state lawmakers to loosen limit on when kid victims can seek justice for sex abuse

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Wednesday, April 6, 2016

ALBANY — Do something, Albany!

State lawmakers should stop wasting time and pass legislation to make it easier for people sexually abused as children to seek justice as adults.

The call to action — contained in a letter to legislative leaders — came from the desk of state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman on Tuesday.

He urged Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan (R-Suffolk County) and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D-Bronx) to quickly allow a floor vote on legislation that would extend or eliminate the time limit abuse victims have to bring criminal and civil cases.

“The Legislature has discussed and debated this issue for years, and now it is time to act,” Schneiderman wrote. “Prosecutors must be empowered to deliver justice in these cases.

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ORANGE COUNTY PASTOR, MISSIONARY CHARGED WITH SEXUAL ASSAULT OF CHILDREN

CALIFORNIA
ABC 7

By ABC7.com staff
Tuesday, April 05, 2016

SANTA ANA, Calif. (KABC) — An 80-year-old missionary and former pastor was charged with sexually assaulting two girls under the age of 10, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

Prosecutors said Douglas Whinery, of Tustin, approached a 10-year-old girl and her 8-year-old relative at a park in Tustin on Nov. 7, 2011.

Whinery groomed his victims by befriending their family, providing money for a place to live, taking the victims to school, having the victims spend the night in his home, and inviting them to attend church with him, according to prosecutors.

He was actively involved at Olive Crest Church in Santa Ana, Foothill Family Church in Foothill Ranch, and Grace Church in Yorba Linda, according to prosecutors.

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UPDATE: Trial underway for former chuch youth leader charged with sex crimes

WEST VIRGINIA
WSAZ

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) — Tuesday marked the first day in the trial of a former church youth group leader accused of sexually assaulting and abusing a 12-year-old boy while he was watching him.

Randall Pennington faces 20 counts of second-degree sexual assault and 20 counts of sexual abuse by a person in a position of trust. According to investigators, the alleged assaults took place between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, 2013, while the boy was at Pennington’s home.

In their opening arguments Tuesday, the prosecution and defense both took the stand.

The defense began by talking about Pennington’s relationship with the alleged victim. According to the reported victim, now 14 years old, he would stay at Pennington’s home frequently while his mother was at work.

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Former Orange County pastor accused of molesting two girls

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

Joseph Serna

A former pastor and missionary has been charged with sexually assaulting two young girls he met in Tustin, officials said.

Douglas Dale Whinery, 80, pleaded not guilty Tuesday to four counts of lewd acts upon a child under 14 and two counts of oral copulation or sexual penetration of a child under 10, Orange County prosecutors said. Whinery, a Tustin resident, is due back in court Tuesday.

Although he no longer is a pastor or missionary, Whinery remained active at the Olive Crest Church in Santa Ana, the Foothill Family Church in Foothill Ranch and the Grace Church in Yorba Linda until his arrest last week, authorities said.

In 2011, authorities said, Whinery approached a 10-year-old girl and her 8-year-old family member in a Tustin park and befriended their family. Over the next 4 ½ years, Whinery gave the family money to find a place to live, took the girls to school and church and even had sleepovers at his home, prosecutors say. During that time, he allegedly repeatedly sexually assaulted them, Tustin police said.

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Retired asst. pastor charged with molestation of a minor

OKLAHOMA
Duncan Banner

By Christian Betancourt The Duncan Banner

Police arrested a 71-year-old retired Duncan assistant pastor after they say he had indecent acts with an out-of-town 10-year-old female relative while she visited last summer.

Jody Hilliard, 71, was arrested and charged with two counts of lewd or indecent acts with a child under 12, a felony.

According to police reports, on March 11, detectives with the Duncan Police Department received a report from the Department of Social Services in the state where the victim resides advising them about an ongoing sexual abuse while the minor was in Duncan.

The report stated Hilliard allegedly touched the girl in her private parts without clothes on and made her touch him in his genital area.

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Spencers Wood reverend jailed for child sex offences

UNITED KINGDOM
getreading

A reverend from Spencers Wood has been jailed for 15 years after pleading guilty to child sex offences and possessing indecent images of children.

Reverend Peter Jarvis of Clares Green Road was sentenced at Winchester Crown Court on Tuesday, April 6, two months after entering his guilty pleas.

The 51-year-old admitted to two counts of causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity by a person in a position of trust and one count of possession of indecent images of children during a re-trial.

He was sentence to 15 years in prison in relation to the two charges of causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity. The judge also sentenced him to nine months for one count of possession of indecent images of children, but his sentences will run concurrently.

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Reading vicar jailed for abusing two teenage girls

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A vicar from Reading has been jailed for 15 months after he pleaded guilty to sexually abusing two teenage girls.

The Reverend Peter Jarvis, 51, of Spencer’s Wood, admitted two counts of causing or inciting a girl aged between 13 and 17 to engage in sexual activity.

He also pleaded guilty to possessing an indecent image of a child. His crimes were between 2009 and 2011.

The Bishop of Reading, the Rt Revd Andrew Proud, said it was a matter of “sorrow and regret” for the church.

He added that Jarvis has been suspended from his duties at St Michael’s Church in Spencers Wood, Reading, and a disciplinary process had started.

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Pennsylvania: Bill Extending Deadlines in Abuse Cases Advances

PENNSYLVANIA
New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
APRIL 5, 2016

The State Legislature, under pressure after the release of a grand jury report documenting an extensive cover-up of clergy sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, took action on Tuesday to give victims more time to seek justice. Many child abuse victims do not speak up until later in life, citing shame or fear. The House Judiciary Committee passed a bill that would change the state’s statute of limitations in child sexual abuse cases, eliminating the time limit for bringing criminal charges and extending the deadline for victims to file civil lawsuits to age 50 from age 30. The bill was amended to include child sexual abuse cases against schoolteachers and government officials. The legislation is scheduled to be brought to the full House on Monday.

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House eyes statute of limitations; Bill passes out of committee

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

Legislation, supported by state Rep. Bryan Barbin, D-Johnstown, that would eliminate the statute of limitations for criminal prosecution in future child sexual abuse cases and raise the limit to age 50 in civil cases passed through the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday.

House Bill 1947 will next go to the full House for consideration.

“It needs to be done,” said Barbin, a member of the Judiciary Committee.

“If we’re going to do it, it needs to be done right and be done for everybody. I’m very thankful that we moved it through committee.”

Statutes of limitations have come to the local forefront, since, in March, the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General released a grand jury report, alleging the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown carried out a decades-long coverup to shield at least 50 priests and other religious leaders accused of sexually abusing children.

However, due to the statutes, charges were only able to be filed against three priests from the Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, who allegedly let Brother Stephen Baker remain at Bishop McCort High School even though they reportedly knew about allegations of sexual abuse made against him.

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Pa. House committee passes bill to toughen child abuse penalties

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Steve EsackContact Reporter
Call Harrisburg Bureau

Pa. House committee passes bill to toughen criminal and civil penalties against child abusers

HARRISBURG — One month after a state attorney general’s report accused two Catholic bishops of allowing priests to molest and rape children with impunity, a group of lawmakers has gotten tougher on child sex abuse.

A bill that passed the House Judiciary Committee by a 26-1 margin Tuesday would make it harder for some child sex abusers — and employers who protect them — to escape criminal and civil penalties.

But critics say the bill does not go far enough because it would only affect future crimes against children and does not help past victims with no legal recourse to seek justice.

The bill would treat future child sex-abuse crimes like murder, which can be prosecuted any time, by dropping the 30-year statute of limitations on when criminal sex-abuse charges can be filed.

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Help is available for survivors of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Hutchinson Leader

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

By JEREMY JONES jones@hutchinsonleader.com

Much is yet unknown about a list of 16 priests released by the New Ulm Diocese, named as those who had been credibly accused of sexual abuse. Seven of those priests served in McLeod County, and they are all retired or dead.

It’s hard to know who may have been hurt by these accused priests, but Safe Avenues wants all survivors of sexual abuse to know they are not alone.

“They should know that if they need us, we will be there with them every step of the way,” said Debbie Preston, an outreach advocate with the Willmar-based victim’s advocacy group for victims of sexual and domestic violence.

Safe Avenues has an outreach office in Hutchinson, which works with victims of sexual violence in McLeod County.

“We can help if you were a victim 10 minutes ago, 10 years ago … 30 years ago,” Preston said. “It doesn’t matter (when). We will advocate for you.”

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A sickening spotlight on my hometown

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily News

By Daniel McDonald – April 5, 2016

Like many longtime reporters, I celebrated the Oscar victory for Spotlight and the fearless journalism that exposed the Catholic Church’s clergy sex abuse scandal in Boston.

3 Months Ago

2 Months Ago

5 Months Ago

I would soon see the story, and the scandal, from a very different perspective.

Two days after the Oscar ceremony, news broke about another widespread church coverup. I found myself poring over a grand jury report outlining in sickening detail the abuse of hundreds of children by at least 50 priests and religious leaders in western Pennsylvania’s Altoona-Johnstown Diocese — in my hometown.

I moved away long ago, but I still have family there. I visit regularly, and my mom was a devoted parish volunteer during her lifetime. I figured I might recognize a few of the accused or some of the churches. I quickly realized things stretched far beyond that.

The names of priests and parishes from my childhood appeared, one after another, all familiar. My grade school priest. Not one but two pastors from my neighborhood parish, a half block from my childhood home. The principal, vice principal and music director from my high school. A priest I once met with to consider officiating my wedding. The priest at the church my four nieces and nephews attended. The chaplain of the nearby Catholic hospital, where my mom volunteered.

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‘Spotlight’ turned on Bridgewater State

MASSACHUSETTS
Wicked Local Bridgewater

The Enterprise

Posted Apr 5, 2016

BRIDGEWATER – A former Boston Globe reporter portrayed in the movie “Spotlight” stood in front of Bridgewater State University students on Tuesday and exposed the truth about the Academy Award-winning film: It was pretty darn accurate.

Matt Carroll, the data analyst portrayed by Brian d’Arcy James in “Spotlight,” came to campus to talk about the film and his more recent work as a research scientist at MIT’s Media Lab.

And as a journalist committed to seeking truth, Carroll commended the filmmakers’ sensitivity to telling a true story.

“The look and feel of everything was authentic — for the most part, it was incredibly accurate,” said Carroll. “All in all, it’s been a wonderful ride.’

“Spotlight” chronicles the Globe’s coverage of the cover-up of sexual abuse committed by Catholic priests in the Boston area.

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State police to investigate priest abuse case in Wayne County

PENNSYLVANIA
Pocono Record

By Kathleen Bolus
The Times-Tribune (TNS)

Posted Apr. 5, 2016

Diocese of Scranton and law enforcement officials would not release any more information Monday concerning allegations that the Rev. Martin M. Boylan engaged in sexual misconduct with a minor.

The allegation is still under investigation, and no more information is available, Wayne County District Attorney Janine Edwards said Monday. However, she released a statement that the statute of limitations will not run out until the victim reaches age 50. The age of the victim, who is now an adult, has not been disclosed.

“No further comment will be issued at this time,” Edwards said.

State police will be investigating the allegation, she said.

The Diocese of Scranton immediately notified Edwards’ office on Friday evening after it received an allegation of sexual misconduct involving a minor against the Rev. Boylan, 68. The alleged abuse took place in Wayne County, the diocese said in a statement Friday.

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Private funeral for Victorian bishop

AUSTRALIA
Bay 93.9

06 April 2016

The funeral for a former Victorian bishop who knew about pedophile priests will be limited to family and close friends.

A former Victorian bishop who moved pedophile priests between parishes will have a small and private funeral.

Bishop Ronald Mulkearns died before completing his evidence to the child abuse royal commission about the Catholic Church’s handling of pedophile priests during his 1971-1997 years in charge of the Ballarat diocese.

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April 5, 2016

QUE REFORMA LOS ARTÍCULOS 209 BIS Y 400 DEL CÓDIGO PENAL FEDERAL, A CARGO DEL DIPUTADO RAFAEL HERNÁNDEZ SORIANO, DEL GRUPO PARLAMENTARIO DEL PRD

HERMOSILLO (MEXICO)
Sistema de Información Legislativa de Secretaría de Gobernación, Gobierno de México [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

April 5, 2016

Read original article

Planteamiento del problema por resolver con la presente iniciativa

La iniciativa con proyecto de decreto que reforma y adiciona el Código Penal Federal, que se propone ante ésta soberanía, se halla en el terreno de la defensa de los derechos de las niñas, niños y adolescentes, pues consiste en castigar severamente a las personas que cometen el delito de pederastia y a las que facilitan el traslado o remueven a otro lugar de trabajo a los sujetos activos que llevan a cabo la comisión del delito de pederastia. Asimismo, se propone castigar a los encubridores cuando tengan una relación de jerarquía derivada de relaciones laborales, docentes o de cualquier otra índole que implique subordinación entre la persona agresora y la víctima menor de 18 años.

Argumentos

Pederastia, del griego paiderastía, es definida en el Diccionario de la Real Academia Española como “inclinación erótica hacia los niños” y “abuso sexual cometido contra niñas y niños”.1

El abuso sexual infantil es ampliamente definido como toda conducta en la que un menor de edad es utilizado para la estimulación sexual por parte de una persona adulta. Las formas de abuso sexual infantil incluyen la participación en actividades sexuales, exposición indecente a un niño, preparar a un menor en producción, difusión o uso de la pornografía que implica imágenes de abuso infantil.2

Así entonces, el abuso sexual infantil se refiere a cualquier y todo acto de índole sexual entre un adulto y un niño o niña, obviamente sin el consentimiento de ellos, y muchas veces con violencia física, aunque la mayoría de os casos es con violencia emocional.

La pederastia es un delito grave que se presenta en espacios educativos, albergues, hospitales, orfanatos, seminarios, lugares de culto religioso y centros de tratamientos contra adicciones y en el convergen no sólo la acción perniciosa del adulto y la vulnerabilidad del menor de edad, sino que además se presenta el poder intrínseco que posee el adulto sobre éste, envolviéndole por medio de diversas argucias con el único propósito de someterlo, a fin de satisfacer un deseo personal por encima del interés superior del infante.

La pederastia es un problema universal que necesita de medidas continuas de prevención y protección efectiva por parte del Poder Legislativo, sobre todo cuando las víctimas son menores de edad, quienes usualmente no logran reponerse del sufrimiento durante muchos años o durante toda su vida, de ahí que el delito no se denuncie o se tarden muchos años en acumular fuerzas suficientes para hacer público su caso. Por este motivo, este delito es un punto pendiente en la agenda política y legislativa nacional.

La Convención sobre los Derechos del Niño, decretada por la Asamblea General de la ONU, el 20 de noviembre de 1989 en Nueva York, México, igual que el Vaticano y muchos otros países, han ratificado voluntariamente la Convención de las Naciones Unidas sobre los Derechos del Niño y se han comprometido en informar regularmente al Comité de los Derechos del Niño sobre el cumplimiento de la Convención, ya que se trata de un documento vinculante en derecho internacional que ampara, entre otros, el derecho de los niños a protección frente a la violencia y los abusos sexuales, previstos en los artículos 16, 19 y 34, entre otros.

Si bien México, el Vaticano y todos los Estados adscritos a la Convención de los Derechos del Niño y como integrantes de la ONU tienen responsabilidades en el ámbito de los derechos humanos de los menores de edad y deben proteger a las y los niños de los abusos sexuales que contra ellos realice cualquier servidor público o miembro de la jerarquía católica o cualquier otro culto religioso.

En 2011, el país decretó elevar a rango constitucional el interés superior de la niñez. Este derecho humano de las niñas y los niños tiene como base el párrafo noveno del artículo 4o. constitucional, que establece: “En todas las decisiones y actuaciones del Estado se velará y cumplirá con el principio del interés superior de la niñez, garantizando de manera plena sus derechos. Los niños y las niñas tienen derecho a la satisfacción de sus necesidades de alimentación, salud, educación y sano esparcimiento para su desarrollo integral. Este principio deberá guiar el diseño, ejecución, seguimiento y evaluación de las políticas públicas dirigidas a la niñez”.

De ahí que el Estado mexicano sea responsable cuando los derechos fundamentales de las y los ciudadanos son violados por los servidores públicos, pero también es responsable cuando, aun no siendo servidores públicos los agresores, las instituciones no previenen, no persiguen y no castigan a quienes cometen delitos que debe sancionar la ley penal federal.

El servidor público, clérigo de la Iglesia o cualquier otra persona derivada de parentesco con el menor de edad en cualquier grado, tutela, curatela, guarda o custodia, relación laboral, médica, cultural, doméstica o de cualquier índole que cometió el delito de pederastia debe ser encausado ante la justicia penal. Por ello, la investidura –en el caso del servidor público o ministro de culto religioso– no debe suponer impunidad, ni mucho menos la autoridad civil o la iglesia católica, como institución moral, debe seguir encubriendo a los pederastas.

Es importante que el legislador reconozca que esta iniciativa al Código Penal Federal tiene una larga historia, pues es bien sabido que en muchos países y en el nuestro han existido propuestas sobre este asunto. Por eso, se insiste en la importancia de contar con una reforma que castigue severamente a los pederastas y a los encubridores de este delito.

Para dar una idea de las trasformaciones que se han venido dando en el mundo respecto al delito de pederastia, podemos decir que, mucho es el tiempo y las décadas que habrían de pasar para que el Vaticano reconociera abiertamente la existencia de agresiones, abuso sexual y pederastia clerical contra miles de niños cometidos en muchas partes del mundo, incluido el país.

Como es sabido, en julio de 2013 el Comité de los Derechos del Niño de la Organización de las Naciones Unidas (ONU), presentó con base a los informes presentados por el Estado Vaticano una serie de recomendaciones, las que se incluyen en el documento; Lista de cuestiones relativa al segundo informe periódico del Vaticano (CRC/C/VAT/2) y donde en el punto 11 del mismo, se señala:

11. En vista del reconocimiento por parte de la Santa Sede de la violencia sexual contra niños cometida por clérigos, monjes y monjas en numerosos países de todo el mundo y vista la escala de los abusos, sírvanse dar información detallada de todos los casos de abusos sexuales de niños cometidos por clérigos, monjes y monjas o puestos en conocimiento de la Santa Sede durante el período que abarca el informe. En todos estos casos, rogamos informen detalladamente de

a) Las medidas introducidas para que ningún miembro del clero acusado actualmente de abusos sexuales pueda seguir en contacto con niños; los casos específicos en los que se adoptaron medidas inmediatas para evitar que siguieran en contacto con niños; y los casos en que los sacerdotes fueron trasladados a otras parroquias o a otros Estados donde siguieron teniendo acceso a niños y abusando de ellos.

b) Las instrucciones explícitas impartidas en todos los niveles del clero para que se cumpliera la obligación de notificar a las autoridades nacionales competentes todos los casos de abusos sexuales y los casos en que se dieron instrucciones de no denunciar esos delitos y en qué nivel del clero.

c) El tipo de apoyo y protección prestados por la Santa Sede a los niños víctimas de abusos sexuales que testificaron contra quienes habían abusado de ellos sexualmente y los casos en que se silenció a los niños para reducir al mínimo el riesgo de que saliera a la luz lo sucedido.

d) Las investigaciones y las acciones legales incoadas en virtud del derecho penal canónico contra los autores de delitos sexuales y sus conclusiones, así como la cooperación prestada por el Estado parte en las causas abiertas en los países en los que se cometieron abusos.

e) El número de niños víctimas que han recibido asistencia para su recuperación, en particular apoyo psicológico y para la reintegración social, y han obtenido una indemnización. En relación con el párrafo 98 del informe de la Santa Sede, rogamos aclaren si se impuso la confidencialidad de las acciones a los niños que habían sido víctimas como condición para recibir una indemnización.

f) Las medidas adoptadas para prevenir futuros casos de violencia sexual en las instituciones dirigidas por la Iglesia Católica y facilitar información sobre la prevención a los niños y sus familias.3

Esta solicitud recibió atención de los medios, pero cuando se emitió la respuesta del Vaticano ante el Comité de la ONU en diciembre de 2013, este no proporcionó la información completa solicitada por el Comité. A pesar de afirmar que considera que la Convención sobre los Derechos del Niño es “el más importante entre las normas del derecho internacional”, se negó a proporcionar esta información, indicando que la cuestión no estaba comprendida en su jurisdicción y que esta “no es la práctica de la santa sede para divulgar información sobre la disciplina religiosa”.4

Con base en lo anterior, hoy en todo el mundo, es notorio que los delitos cometidos en agravio de las y los menores de edad se han incrementado alarmantemente. Los abusos sexuales, la prostitución, la pornografía y la trata infantil conforman altos niveles delictivos, que en su mayoría quedan en la impunidad y, por tanto, las víctimas de estos actos viven una permanente demanda de justicia, cuando se animan a denunciar y pueden contar con una defensa de calidad para hacer efectivo un derecho humano fundamental.

La Iglesia católica es una de las protagonistas cuando se habla de escándalos por abusos sexuales a menores de edad. Para dar una idea de los abusos sexuales contra niñas, niños y adolescentes, desde tiempo atrás, se ha documentado los diversos abusos sexuales de menores de edad por sacerdotes de la Iglesia católica o integrantes laicos de las diversas órdenes religiosas que imparten culto en el país.

En México se ha comprobado que el abuso sexual clerical es tan antiguo como la Iglesia misma. Las acusaciones de abuso en fechas recientes han sido constantes por lo menos desde la década de 1950. El caso más conocido fue, sin duda, el del fundador de Los Legionarios de Cristo, Marcial Maciel Degollado, del cual existen pruebas contundentes y documentos probatorios en manos del Vaticano respecto de los abusos sexuales cometidos contra niños por parte de este sacerdote en México y otros países desde la década de 1940.5 Sin embargo, las autoridades civiles encargadas de investigar y sancionarlo y las autoridades del Vaticano no cesaron del ministerio al sacerdote ni limitaron sus actividades, sino por el contrario lo protegieron y lo encubrieron sistemáticamente e incluso, posteriormente, fue reconocido y promovido públicamente por Juan Pablo II, lo cual le permitió continuar cometiendo delitos impunemente en contra de niños durante muchos años.6

Los niños víctimas del abuso sistemático de Maciel pertenecieron a la congregación religiosa Los Legionarios de Cristo. Estos niños fueron separados de sus familias y llevados a países lejanos (controlando su correspondencia y visitas muy esporádicas), donde permanecían bajo el control casi absoluto del fundador y superior, que a su vez era su director espiritual, su director de disciplina y estaban obligados a través de un voto especial de silencio (llamado de caridad), a guardar absoluto respeto al superior, a no criticarlo por nada y ante nadie y, por lo mismo, a guardar el secreto de su pederastia y drogadicción.7

Desafortunadamente no es sólo este personaje quien es reconocido como perpetrador de este tipo de daños contra cientos de niñas y niños mexicanos durante largo tiempo, sino también están los casos de otros sacerdotes como: Eduardo Córdova Bautista, quien abusó de decenas de niños, Francisco Javier Castillo, Guillermo Gil Torres, José de Jesús Cruz Rodríguez, Noé Francisco Estrada Hernández, todos de San Luis Potosí. Nicolás Aguilar en Puebla (acusado de abusar sexualmente de más de 90 niños y niñas en México y en Estados Unidos), Carlos López Valdés en el Distrito Federal (abusó de niños que fueron invitados a ser acólitos de la parroquia de San Agustín en la delegación Tlalpan), y Gerardo Silvestre Hernández (cura pederasta acusado de abuso sexual de al menos 45 niños indígenas de Oaxaca), Juan Cárdenas en Guanajuato (abusó sexualmente de varios menores, en la casa hogar Niño Don Bosco), Juan Carlos Moreno Loza, Nuevo León (fue acusado de embarazar a una menor, después fue trasladado a otras parroquias para evitar conflictos), Vicente Serrano Aparici, Baja California Sur (presunto responsable de haber abusado sexualmente de niños), Heladio Ávila Avelar, Jalisco (confeso de haber cometido abuso sexual en contra de tres menores de edad), Jonás Guerrero, Culiacán, Marcelino Hernández, Colima, y Raúl Vera, de Coahuila (presuntos responsables de haber abusado sexualmente de niños). Éstos son tan sólo algunos de los muchos sacerdotes acusados jurídicamente de estos hechos, quienes no han recibido ningún requerimiento ministerial ni castigo judicial para responder por los probables delitos cometidos de pederastia, más aun han sido protegidos por autoridades religiosas y civiles, lo que deriva en impunidad para estos delitos.

Asimismo, tenemos por ejemplo que, en septiembre de este año, la Iglesia católica admitió 620 casos de pederastia en Australia cometidos entre 1960 y 1980. Así también asumimos los abusos sexuales en la diócesis de Boston (Estados Unidos) en 2001, retratado con mucha maestría por la ganadora del Oscar, versión 2016 como la mejor película, Spotlight (En primera plana, como se conoció en México), que trata sobre como un grupo de periodistas del periódico The Boston Globe destapó los casos de abuso sexual infantil causados por sacerdotes católicos. Parte de una historia real que durante años, líderes religiosos encubrieron los casos de pederastia y transfirieron a los sacerdotes a otras parroquias en lugar de castigarlos. En 2007, el arzobispo de Los Ángeles (Estados Unidos) pidió perdón a los afectados por los abusos sexuales infantiles por parte de sacerdotes. Dicho sea de paso, la arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles pagó más de 660 millones de dólares a víctimas de sacerdotes para evitar que los casos llegaran al Tribunal Superior del Estado. Cabe señalar que los arreglos extrajudiciales son indebidos, no son éticos ya que no hay sanción y el delito queda impune y sin reparación del daño para la víctima.

En junio de este año, el prelado de la arquidiócesis de Filadelfia, Willian Lynn, fue el primer alto cargo de la Iglesia en Estados Unidos condenado por abusos a menores. En 2010, el propio Benedicto XVI manifestó su arrepentimiento por el millar de casos de abusos sexuales y violaciones sufridos por niños y niñas, víctimas de curas católicos en Irlanda; en el mismo año el líder de la Iglesia católica alemana, Robert Zollitsch, pidió perdón tras una investigación en la que estaban implicados 46 jesuitas. La Conferencia Episcopal de Holanda también pidió perdón el pasado año por los casos de abusos sexuales a menores de edad. En tanto, en Chile, la polémica gira en torno al Obispo de Osorno, Juan Barros, acusado por los fieles de la diócesis de haber encubierto al sacerdote Fernando Karadima, condenado por Roma por abusos sexuales, entre otros países.

Entre 2004 –cuando se recibieron casi 800 denuncias– y la actualidad, la maquinaria canónica ha procesado miles de causas, y casi un millar de sacerdotes -848- han sido expulsados del sacerdocio, “reducidos al estado laical”, según datos de la Comisión Pontificia para la Tutela de Menores, creada por el Jefe del Estado Vaticano, el papa Francisco, de nombre secular Jorge Mario Bergoglio, y que intenta coordinar la respuesta de la Iglesia frente a este cáncer.

Más de la mitad de las denuncias acaba llegando a juicio por la vía canónica y alrededor de tres de cada cuatro concluyen con la condena del acusado. Al margen del proceso religioso bajo las leyes canónicas del Estado Vaticano, hay casos por la vía civil en cada país. De las casi 6 mil denuncias presentadas ante el Vaticano, entre 2004 y 2013, la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe estudió “3 mil 420 casos creíbles de abusos a menores de 18 años”. Es decir, la mitad de las presentadas.

El año 2004 tiene muchas más demandas que el resto porque recogía conductas delictivas cometidas desde 1950. De estos más de 3 mil casos, se expulsó a 848 sacerdotes. En el resto de casos, los sacerdotes fueron simplemente sancionados con distintas penas, que el informe vaticano no especifica, pero que podrían ir desde una sanción temporal a un traslado, o a evitar su trato con menores de edad.8

Ante estos hechos, el Jefe del Estado Vaticano, Francisco aprobó una reforma del Código Penal del Estado de la Ciudad del Vaticano que considera, entre otras, la introducción del delito de tortura, la supresión de la cadena perpetua y una amplia y mayor definición de los delitos de trata de personas, prostitución, violencia sexual, pornografía infantil, posesión de material de pornografía infantil y abusos contra menores.

También equiparó los abusos contra discapacitados psíquicos adultos a los cometidos contra menores e introdujo un nuevo delito por el que se castigaba la adquisición, posesión y difusión “por parte de un miembro del clero, en cualquier modo y con cualquier medio”, de imágenes pornográficas que tengan como objeto a menores de 14 años.

Si bien antes el reto era denunciar a los pederastas que abusaban de las niñas y los niños ante autoridades ministeriales o eclesiásticas, pero debido al esquema de protección de las autoridades federales y locales y el encubrimiento institucional por parte de las máximas autoridades del Estado Vaticano, incluyendo a los jefes del Estado Vaticano, Juan Pablo II y Benedicto XVI y, así como también, como en el caso de la Ciudad de México, por los Cardenales, ahora, las víctimas optaron por hacer sus denuncias ante los medios de comunicación, lo cual ha servido para que se la opinión pública conozca su historia como víctimas del delito de pederastia, no sólo por los daños a su integridad física y moral, sino por el permanente descrédito a sus denuncias, privilegiando la reiterada protección y encubrimiento del sacerdote y de sus actividades delictivas por parte de su propia congregación de cardenales.

Por otro lado, debemos reconocer que en el caso de México, los abusos sexuales de menores de edad que estudian en los centros escolares, tanto públicos como privados por parte de los docentes, sigue en aumento. Los abusos sexuales contra niñas, niños y adolescentes son conocidos, de ahí se desprende la recomendación general 21 que emitió la Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos (CNDH), dirigida a la Secretaría de Educación Pública (SEP), Gobiernos de los Estados de la República y Jefe de Gobierno del Distrito Federal, sobre la prevención, atención, sanción de casos de violencia sexual en contra de niñas y niños en centros educativos públicos y privados, publicada el 21 de octubre del 2014, en el Diario Oficial de la Federación.

La recomendación en su numeral 24, señala que de enero de 2000 a agosto de 2014, la CNDH recibió un total de 190 quejas, en contra de la SEP y de secretarías de educación de diversas entidades federativas por casos relacionados con abuso sexual, acoso sexual y violación.

De las quejas (numeral 25), hicieron alusión a 210 agraviados de los 0 a los 17 años, de los cuales 146 fueron niñas y 64 niños; de los 233 considerados presuntos responsables señalados por las víctimas, 218 eran hombres y 15 mujeres, destacando que 107 eran alumnos y 126 forman parte del personal del centro escolar donde ocurrieron los hechos.

De dichas quejas (numeral 26), una fue presentada por un caso de educación inicial, 24 por casos suscitados en preescolar, 71 en primaria, 52 en secundaria, 37 en media superior y 5 en educación especial.

Asimismo, en el periodo 2000-2014 (numeral 27), la CNDH emitió 18 recomendaciones relacionadas con algún tipo de violencia sexual en centros escolares, de las cuales 14 fueron dirigidas a la SEP, una al gobierno del estado de Oaxaca, una al gobierno del estado de Michoacán, una al gobierno de Zacatecas y una a la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

En las 18 recomendaciones (como se señala en el numeral 30) se documentó que eran 28 los agresores o servidores públicos involucrados en los hechos, de los que 21 eran hombres y 7 mujeres, quienes desempeñaban diferentes cargos en los centros escolares en los que ocurrió el abuso, quienes se desempeñaban como profesores, prefectos, personal de intendencia y empleados administrativos. Tan sólo en el periodo 2010-2014 se emitieron 13 de estas recomendaciones. No obstante que dichas recomendaciones se han emitido de manera reiterada, los casos de violencia sexual continúan ocurriendo.

De igual forma, como se prevé en el numeral 36, los organismos defensores de derechos humanos en las entidades federativas recibieron del año 2000 al 2013, un total de 657 quejas? mientras, de año 2000 a 2013 se registraron mil 997 quejas relacionadas con violencia sexual en centros escolares públicos.

De las 28 entidades federativas que contestaron a la solicitud de información de la CNDH, se observó que del año 2000 al 2013, existió un registro de mil 997 quejas denunciadas ante las secretarías de educación relacionadas con violencia sexual en centros escolares públicos, de los cuales 6 fueron presentadas por casos de violencia sexual en educación inicial, 204 en preescolar, 722 en primaria, 849 en secundaria, 179 en educación media superior y 15 en instituciones de educación especial, mientras que en 22 casos no se especificó el nivel en el que se encontraban los alumnos agredidos.

En el numeral 205, se hace la recomendación de la CNDH, para que los delitos sexuales que son cometidos por un servidor público en ejercicio de sus funciones, abusando de su jerarquía y de su posición de suprasubordinación en relación con la víctima, se agrave la pena con la destitución e inhabilitación para ejercer encargos públicos.

De igual forma, en su numeral 206, se considera importante que exista un agravante para los delitos de índole sexual cometidos en contra de niñas y niños de todo el país.1

Con estas bases, hoy nadie puede cerrar los ojos a lo evidente, pues la sociedad está evolucionando de modo que está pendiente de que se castigue severamente a los pederastas que abusan sexualmente de las niñas, niños y adolescentes y que, por ello el legislador de no puede pasar por alto estos compromisos y cambios en la sociedad.

Sin duda, el delito de pederastia contra las niñas, niños y adolescentes no sólo constituye un brutal ataque a la libertad, a la salud y al derecho de sano esparcimiento, sino también a la dignidad de los seres humanos. Los abusos a menores de edad se dan en todas las clases sociales, ambientes culturales o razas. También, en todos los ámbitos sociales, aunque la mayor parte ocurre en el interior de los hogares y se presentan habitualmente en forma de tocamientos por parte del padre, los hermanos o el abuelo (las víctimas suelen ser, en este ámbito, mayoritariamente niñas). Si a estos se añaden personas que proceden del círculo de amistades del menor de edad y distintos tipos de conocidos, como son los docentes, ministros de culto religioso e instructores de cualquier actividad deportiva, recreativa y cultural.

En efecto, pese a los avances referidos en el derecho internacional y nacional, esta conducta antijurídica se sigue incrementando a lo largo de todo nuestro país, sobre todo, por docentes y ministros de culto religioso. Sin embargo, la iglesia y el Estado al estar enterada de ello, en la mayoría de los casos únicamente se ha determinado el cambio de escuela, iglesia, estado o país del presunto responsable de la comisión del delito o la utilización del silencio como principal arma, pero nunca se ha determinado presentarlo ante la justicia penal para que sea juzgado y castigado con todo el peso de la ley.

Es importante decirlo con claridad, en México existe un inmovilismo absoluto por parte del Estado y de la Iglesia en el tema de los abusos sexuales por sacerdotes y educadores, razón por la cual los diferentes casos de abuso sexual continúan en la impunidad. La justicia defiende al victimario y no a las víctimas. Los jueces y los ministerios públicos actúan como cómplices de los delincuentes por el poder de la Iglesia y del Estado, lo cual coloca a las niñas, niños y adolescentes en estado de indefensión absoluto, ante el poder que ejercen las y los adultos quienes abusando de dicho poder, violentan sus derechos humanos sin importarles la grave afectación que ocasionan.

Hoy, en el país la pederastia ha aumentado en forma considerable, por lo que se debe priorizar el interés superior de la niña, niño y adolescente.

Según los datos del Departamento de Investigaciones sobre Abusos Religiosos y el Centro de Investigaciones del Instituto Cristiano Mexicano, 30 por ciento (4 mil 200) de los 14 mil sacerdotes católicos que aproximadamente existen en México, comenten algún tipo de abuso sexual contra niñas y niños.

También destacó que hasta 2010 se calculaba que en México había aproximadamente 14 mil 618 presbíteros atendiendo una red de 6,101 parroquias. De acuerdo con datos publicados en medios de comunicación, se calculaba que de 2001 a 2010 el Vaticano abrió unos 100 procesos canónicos contra sacerdotes mexicanos acusados de abusos sexuales contra niñas y niños.10

Con relación a los centros escolares del país, se destaca que de 2000 a la fecha, el país acumula al menos 2 mil 28 casos de ataques sexuales contra menores de edad en escuelas; una tercera parte nunca fue investigado, pese a ser denunciados; en el resto de los casos la sanción contra los agresores consistió en simples llamadas de atención, suspensiones temporales o la reubicación del atacante en otro plantel.11

Como revela la Recomendación General 21 de la Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos –publicada el pasado 20 de octubre en el Diario Oficial de la Federación–, los centros educativos en donde más agresiones sexuales se cometen en contra de niños y niñas son las secundarias (con 42.5 por ciento de las denuncias), seguido de las primarias (36 por ciento), los planteles de educación preescolar (10 por ciento) y por último el nivel medio superior (con 9 por ciento); mientras, las entidades federativas con mayor incidencia de este tipo de delitos son Distrito Federal, Veracruz, estado de México, Jalisco y Guanajuato.

Ante estos hechos, resulta imperativo prevenir, atender y erradicar los problemas asociados con el delito de pederastia cuando la víctima es menor de 18 años, ya que vulnera gravemente su esfera de protección para un pleno desarrollo integral y tomando en cuenta que estos actos ocasionan traumas para el resto de su vida y derivan en lesiones psíquicas que son un daño para la persona que es víctima de este delito, así como cambios de humor repentinos, problemas de sueño, pesadillas, hiperactividad, aislamiento, problemas para recibir cumplidos, rechazo al acercamiento físico, fobias, y en general conductas autodestructivas. Un proceso de este tipo deja secuelas psicológicos que pueden llegar hasta su vida adulta, e incluso, nunca ser superadas.12

Sin duda, debemos reconocer que hoy la sociedad reclama un castigo más severo al sujeto activo del delito de pederastia y también a quien encubra al agente de este delito. Tan grave es el asunto de pederastia que Jorge Mario Bergoglio (Francisco) en el Vaticano tuvo que nombrar hace unos meses un tercer secretario adjunto de la Congregación para que se ocupara única y exclusivamente de estos delitos. Más aun, el mismo Francisco en el vuelo de vuelta de México, con base en una pregunta formulada por un periodista, dejó claro: “No hay lugar en la Iglesia para los abusadores y sus cómplices. Un obispo que cambia a un sacerdote de parroquia cuando se detecta una pederastia es un inconsciente y lo mejor que puede hacer es presentar la renuncia. ¿Clarito?”

Por tanto, discutir y en su caso aprobar la iniciativa de reforma al Código Penal Federal permitirá un cambio radical en la actitud de la iglesia y de las autoridades civiles del país, donde podrán incluir aspectos como los siguientes: procurar acciones eficientes de las autoridades civiles y ministros de culto religioso contra servidores públicos y sacerdotes pederastas.

Es clara la necesidad de que el legislador atienda esta realidad y tipifique más conductas, así como endurezca las penas para los agresores sexuales de menores de edad, pues es necesario que exista un delito equiparable al delito

de pederastia, para sancionar severamente a las personas que cometen el delito de pederastia y a las que facilitan el traslado o remueven a otro lugar de trabajo a los sujetos activos que llevan a cabo la comisión del delito de pederastia, así como cuando teniendo conocimiento de esta conducta realizada por su subordinado no acuda a la autoridad competente para denunciar el hecho o no haya evitado la continuación de la comisión del acto; porque estas conductas son las nuevas formas de delinquir que están permitiendo que algunas acciones escapen a la justicia y desde luego queden impunes.

La finalidad de la iniciativa permitirá eliminar la política de silencio de los directores de escuelas y clérigos para que cumplan con sus obligaciones como ciudadanos denunciando y asumiendo ante el aparato de justicia los casos de pederastia, pero sobre todo ya no podrán esconder, trasladar o cambiar de sede cuando se trate de instituciones religiosas, educativas o culturales al delincuente, así como evitarán la continuación de la comisión del acto en contra de un menor de dieciocho años por parte de sus subordinados, a fin de que el encubridor o protector no acabe convirtiéndose en un pederasta más.

Tomando en consideración lo anterior, se propone aumentar la penalidad al delito de pederastia con una mitad de la penalidad de prisión, al que haga uso de violencia moral o cualquier otra circunstancia que hiciera más vulnerable a la víctima. Además de que el autor del delito tendrá la obligación de sujetarse a tratamiento médico integral hasta por el tiempo que dure la pena, más allá de una cuestión potestativa como está prevista en el Código Penal Federal.

Asimismo, con independencia de que el autor del delito de pederastia pierda, en su caso, la patria potestad, la tutela, la curatela, la adopción, el derecho de alimentos y el derecho que pudiera tener respecto de los bienes de la víctima, en términos de la legislación civil, en ningún momento cesará su obligación alimentaria para con ella, ya que a la víctima no se le puede dejar sin los recursos económicos suficientes para sufragar sus necesidades alimentarias ydesalud.

También se propone aumentar en dos terceras partes la pena, cuando fuere cometido con intervención directa o inmediata de dos o más personas o si se cometieran en contra de dos o más víctimas o cuando el autor del delito haya puesto en peligro la vida del menor de dieciocho años. Es decir, se insta a castigar la pederastia con penas más justas respecto a los casos más graves, como se han expuesto bajo estos tres supuestos normativos.

El espíritu de esta reforma y adición del Código Penal Federal es que también los ministros de culto religioso o los instructores de cualquier actividad deportiva, recreativa, cultural o de cualquier índole, en ejercicio de sus funciones o con motivo de ellas cuando cometan el delito de pederastia, además de la pena de prisión antes señalada, sean inhabilitados, destituidos o suspendidos, de su empleo público o profesión por un término igual a la pena impuesta.

Conforme a este supuesto, se requiere que el agente tenga la condición clerical o instructor de cualquier actividad deportiva, recreativa, cultural o de cualquier índole, en el momento de cometer el delito para ser sujeto de derecho penal.

Finalmente, además de las penas previstas en el delito de encubrimiento, se castigará al encubridor con una mitad más cuando tenga una relación jerárquica derivada de relaciones laborales, docentes o de cualquier otra índole que implique subordinación entre la persona agresora y la víctima menor de dieciocho años. Este delito que se propone, no sólo es para el delito de pederastia sino para cualquier delito, pero siempre y cuando el encubridor abuse de su jerarquía y de su posición de superior inmediato entre la persona agresora y la víctima menor de 18 años.

La iniciativa de reforma y adición del Código Penal Federal contribuye con el Estado en su papel protector del interés superior de las niñas, niños y adolescentes.

Fundamento legal

Con fundamento en los artículos 71, fracción II, de la Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos y 6, numeral 1, fracción I, 77 y 78 del Reglamento de la Cámara de Diputados, pongo a su consideración la presente iniciativa con proyecto de

Decreto que reforma y adiciona el Código Penal Federal
Único. Se reforma y se adicionan dos párrafos al artículo 209 Bis y se adiciona un párrafo al artículo 400 del

Código Penal Federal, para quedar como sigue:

Capítulo VIII Pederastia

Artículo 209 Bis. … …

Si el agente hace uso de violencia física o moral o cualquier otra circunstancia que hiciera más vulnerable a la víctima, las penas se aumentarán en una mitad más.

El autor del delito deberá ser sujeto a tratamiento médico integral el tiempo que se requiera, mismo que no podrá exceder el tiempo que dure la pena de prisión impuesta.

Además de las anteriores penas, el autor del delito perderá, en su caso, la patria potestad, la tutela, la curatela, la adopción, el derecho de alimentos y el derecho que pudiera tener respecto de los bienes de la víctima, en términos de la legislación civil, pero en ningún momento cesará su obligación alimentaria para con ella.

Cuando el delito fuere cometido por un servidor público, profesionista, ministro de culto religioso o instructor de cualquier actividad deportiva, recreativa, cultural o de cualquier índole, en ejercicio de sus funciones o con motivo de ellas, además de la pena de prisión antes señalada, será inhabilitado, destituido o suspendido, de su empleo público o profesión por un término igual a la pena impuesta.

Las penas se aumentarán en dos terceras partes, cuando fuere cometido con intervención directa o inmediata de dos o más personas o si se cometieran en contra de dos o más víctimas o cuando el autor del delito haya puesto en peligro la vida del menor de dieciocho años.

Se equipara al delito de pederastia y se sancionará con las mismas penas previstas en el primer párrafo del presente artículo, al servidor público, ministro de culto religioso o cualquier persona que tenga una relación jerárquica sobre el agresor en virtud de una relación laboral, docente o de cualquier otra índole, cuando después de la ejecución del delito y sin haber participado en él, traslade o remueva a otro lugar de trabajo dentro o fuera del territorio nacional al responsable del delito o cuando teniendo conocimiento de esta conducta realizada por su subordinado no acuda a la autoridad competente para denunciar el hecho o no haya evitado la continuación de la comisión del acto en contra de un menor de dieciocho años.

Capítulo I Encubrimiento

Artículo 400. Se aplicará prisión de tres meses a tres años y de quince a sesenta días multa al que I. a VII. …

Además de las penas previstas en el primer párrafo del presente delito, se incrementarán en una mitad cuando el agente tenga una relación jerárquica derivada de relaciones laborales, docentes o de cualquier otra índole que implique subordinación entre la persona agresora y la víctima menor de dieciocho años.

Transitorio
Único. El presente decreto entrará en vigor el día siguiente al de su publicación en el Diario Oficial de la

Federación.

Notas

1 Real Academia Española. Diccionario de la lengua española . Madrid, España, 2001. 2 Abuso sexual en niños y la Santa Sede, mimeo, traducción, junio de 2014.

3 Lista de cuestiones relativa al segundo informe periódico de la Santa Sede Comité de los Derechos del Niño, sexagésimo quin to periodo de sesiones, 13 a 31 de enero de 2014, tema 4 del programa provisional, “Examen de los informes de los Estados parte”.

4 Abuso sexual en niños y la Santa Sede, obra citada.
5González, FernandoM.(2010). Maciel.LosLegionariosdeCristo.Testimoniosydocumentosinéditos.España:Tusquets.

6 En 1994, Karol Wojtyla, como representante de la Iglesia católica y jefe del Estado Vaticano-Santa Sede, nombró a Marcial Maciel como líder de la juventud.

7 González, obra citada, página 34.

8 http://www.sinembargo.mx. En una década, el Vaticano ha recibido 6 mil demandas por pederastia: informes internos, 6 de marzo de 2016.

9 Diario Oficial de la Federación. Recomendación general 21 sobre la prevención, atención y sanción de casos de violencia sexual en contra de las niñas y los niños en centro educativos. 20 de octubre de 2014.

10 Comisión de Derechos Humanos del Distrito Federal (2014). Boletín 016/2014: La CDHDF hace eco de la exigencia de la ONU para erradicar la pedofilia clerical. 7 de febrero de 2014, de la CDHDF. Sitio web: http://www.cdhdf.org.mx/index.php/boletines/boletines- 2014/3655-boletin -0162014.

11 http://www.animalpolitico.com/2014/10/ataques-sexuales-en-escuelas-se-d uplicaron-en-los-ultimos-4-anos-segun-pesimista-informe- oficial/ 22 de octubre de 2014.

12 Díaz Rojo, José A., Pedofilia y Pederastia, CSIC, Valencia, España, 2002. Dado en el Palacio Legislativo de San Lázaro, a 5 de abril de 2016. Diputado Rafael Hernández Soriano (rúbrica)

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Cardinal Dolan slammed for ‘secrecy’ in priest porn case

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Maura Grunlund | grunlund@siadvance.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests accused Cardinal Timothy Dolan of “secrecy” in the way the archbishop of New York has handled the case of a former pastor from Staten Island who was allegedly found in possession of “child pornography.”

The Rev. Keith Fennessy, prior head of St. Margaret Mary R.C. Church in Midland Beach, “was discovered with pornographic material on his computer that violated the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” according to an article in Catholic New York.

Cardinal Dolan accepted an archdiocesan review board recommendation in March that Father Fennessy not be allowed to serve as a priest, according to Catholic New York.

The cardinal knew about the accusations against Father Fennessy for “months or years” before informing the public, according to David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

Clohessy stressed that “Cardinal Timothy Dolan is among the most secretive US Catholic officials when it comes to the safety of children.”

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Maurizio case: Motion to freeze convicted priest’s money denied

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By David Hurst dhurst@tribdem.com

U.S. District Judge Kim R. Gibson has denied a motion to freeze a convicted former Central City priest’s assets because of delayed efforts to repay his court debts.

In a one-page order, Gibson denied federal prosecutors’ request, saying the Rev. Joseph Maurizio’s “fine and restitution payments have been received by the Clerk of Court.”

Court documents, including copies of several treasurer’s checks dated March 26, show the payments were made last week – albeit after an earlier court deadline – with $50,000 sent to pay off court-issued fines.

But the payments included $10,000 in restitution each of two former Honduran orphans – both now adults – who were victims during Maurizio’s mission trips to the impoverished country, a jury found last year.

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Witnesses: Scallops for the bishop, toast for the kids

UTAH
KITV

By Ann O’Neill CNN

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (CNN) — A decade after the arrest of polygamous prophet Warren Jeffs, insiders say his church has literally become a place of feast or famine, of haves and have-nots.

Prison has done little to loosen Jeffs’ hold on many of his followers, even if he is now a convicted child-sex offender serving a life sentence. They still await his revelations and follow his directives, both difficult and bizarre.

But some members are leaving the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints — and disobeying their prophet’s longstanding orders to avoid law enforcement and “answer them nothing.”

These FLDS outcasts are talking to the FBI.

They include the former cooks and drivers for the Jeffs family, as well as ex-wives and others who hovered close to the church leaders and their power center. Their words fill hundreds of pages of freshly filed federal court documents, bringing outsiders into the cloistered world of the FLDS like never before.

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Archdiocese: Ex-pastor found with porn hasn’t been defrocked

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Maura Grunlund | grunlund@siadvance.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — The Archdiocese of New York has not taken steps to permanently remove the Rev. Keith Fennessy from the priesthood, despite its allegations that the former Staten Island pastor was caught with child pornography that violates the church’s own safeguards to protect children.

The archdiocese defended the handling of its case against Father Fennessy, an ordained priest since 1984 who headed St. Margaret Mary R.C. Church in Midland Beach from 2006 to June 2010.

Catholic New York said that the pornography was found on Father Fennessy’s computer.

He served as pastor of St. Columba’s parish in Manhattan from 2011 until June 15, 2015, when he was removed from ministry after the pornographic material was discovered, according to Catholic New York.

Joseph Zwilling, communications director for the archdiocese, confirmed that “the images were of minors.”

Zwilling stressed in a statement supplied to the Advance that Father Fennessy “will never again be permitted to function as a priest.”

However, the archdiocese has not yet decided whether it will ask the Vatican to defrock Father Fennessy.

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Convicted KC priest featured among notable priests from St. Louis in Catholic magazine

MISSOURI
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Joe Holleman

The latest issue of “Catholic St. Louis” magazine carries a feature highlighting 12 local men who rose to powerful positions in the church.

One of the men is Bishop Robert Finn — the former bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph who was convicted in 2012 of failing to report a priest suspected of sex abuse. The magazine feature makes no mention of his conviction.

A Vatican investigation showed that Finn waited six months before telling police about the Rev. Shawn Ratigan, whose computer held lewd photos of girls taken in and near churches where he worked.

Ratigan was eventually sentenced to 50 years in prison for child pornography. Finn later resigned from his position in Kansas City.

The magazine is published six times a year by the Archdiocese of St. Louis. It is included in deliveries of the St. Louis Review, the archdiocese’s newspaper.

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Sudbury civil sexual abuse case settlement: lawyer, victim speak out

CANADA
CBC News

[with audio]

The man who suffered sexual abuse from a northern Ontario Catholic priest was the victim of a man given “nine lives” by the Roman Catholic Church, his lawyer says.

In the early 1990s, John Edward Sullivan plead guilty to sexually abusing boys during his career as a Catholic priest.

He served about two years in jail for his crimes.

More than 20 years after his conviction, one of Sullivan’s victims launched a civil case in Sudbury looking for $3 million in financial compensation.

A week before the civil trial, Sullivan died at the age of 90.

But the victim’s lawyer, Rob Talach, said the priest’s death did not affect this case.

“The evidence of Father Sullivan had been captured in a video examination well over two years ago. He is as guilty as guilty can be,” he said.

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Australia School Headmistress Sued Over Sex Abuse Claim

AUSTRALIA
Forward

JTA

The former principal of a Jewish day school in Melbourne is being sued by one of her alleged victims.

The lawsuit filed last week against Malka Leifer in Victoria’s Supreme Court in Melbourne was launched by the sister of a victim of Leifer who was awarded $1.27 million by the court last year, the Australian reported Tuesday. The new lawsuit alleges that Leifer sexually abused the sister while she was a student and then a teacher at the haredi Orthodox Adass Israel School.

Leifer, who fled to Israel after the sex abuse allegations surfaced, is currently under house arrest in the haredi Orthodox city of Bnei Brak as the Israeli government considers an extradition request from the Australian government. Australia has requested Leifer’s extradition to face 74 charges of sexual abuse of girls at the haredi Orthodox school she once led.

A Jerusalem court last month ordered a second psychiatric evaluation of Leifer, the former principal of the Adass Israel School, before ruling on the extradition. Leifer came to Israel in 2008.

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PA–Abuse bill moves in PA legislature; Victims respond

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

We’re glad Pennsylvania lawmakers are finally moving to reform the state’s archaic, predator-friendly statute of limitations but disappointed that because there’s no civil window, hundreds who have committed or concealed child sex crimes will remain hidden and escape responsibility.

[PennLive]

It’s safe and easy for lawmakers to ‘crack down’ on those who assault kids and hide crimes years down the road. But that alone is irresponsible. Steps must be taken now to expose those who have or are hurting kids and concealing crimes today. That’s tougher, because it takes real courage to take on purportedly powerful individuals like Catholic bishops and allegedly powerful lobbyists like insurance companies. But that’s what must happen if kids are to be protected right now in Pennsylvania.

We hope other lawmakers will insist that a civil window be enacted now, so that coaches, teachers and ministers who are molesting or have molested kids, or have hidden or are hiding those crimes, will face consequences for their wrongdoing and be stopped from further wrongdoing.

But no matter what lawmakers in Harrisburg do or don’t do, we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions in Pennsylvania to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Nuncio says pope considering First Nations invitation to visit Canada

CANADA
Catholic Philly

BY CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE

OTTAWA, Ontario (CNS) — The apostolic nuncio to Canada said Pope Francis is considering an invitation for a visit, during which many Canadians hope he would apologize for the Catholic Church’s role in running Indian residential schools.

“The pope has received this invitation, this request, from the First Nations,” said Archbishop Luigi Bonazzi, nuncio. “He is considering it.”

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada — set up to discover what happened in the government-funded, church-run residential schools, issued 94 calls to action last year. One was for the pope to apologize — on Canadian soil — for the Catholic Church’s role in Indian residential schools.

“We heard many survivors say, ‘My church has not apologized to me,’” Marie Wilson, a commission member, said at an Ottawa news conference March 30.

Asked if an apology from Pope Francis would be enough, she responded, “I’m certain it won’t be enough. It’s all just movement forward.”

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Procesaron a un cura por abuso sexual en Santiago del Estero

ARGENTINA
Diario Uno

[Prest Julian Ruiz, who worked in the parish of Pampa de los Guanacos of Santiago del Estero, was indicted on charges of sexual abuse and corruption of minors.]

Un cura que se desempeñaba en la parroquia de Pampa de los Guanacos de Santiago del Estero fue procesado acusado de abuso sexual y corrupción de menores.

El juez ad hoc de Monte Quemado, Aristóbulo Barrionuevo (h), resolvió procesar al sacerdote Julián Ruiz como supuesto autor del delito de abuso sexual con acceso carnal y corrupción de menores en perjuicio de un joven, a la vez de ampliar la acusación por otros dos casos que el religioso habría perpetrado en perjuicio de dos sujetos, mayores de edad al momento en que se habrían producido los hechos y que ninguno de los dos denunciaron.

Según El Liberal de Santiago del Estero, el religioso se desempeñaba en la parroquia de Pampa de los Guanacos cuando fue acusado por el menor de edad quien manifestó haber sido víctima de abusos sexuales por parte del prelado.

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Sodalicio: fundador Luis Fernando Figari expulsado por abuso sexual (VIDEO)

PERU
Expreso

LIMA. El superior general del Sodalicio (SVC), Alessandro Moroni Liabrés, anunció – a través de un vídeo – que el Sodalicio decidió expulsar a su fundador Luis Fernando Figari, luego que se comprobaran las acusaciones en su contra por abuso sexual. Fue considerado como persona no grata.

“Hoy salimos al frente para dar a conocer públicamente cuál viene siendo la respuesta del Sodalicio frente a estos hechos tan tristes y condenables… Perdón a la víctimas por cualquier tipo de abuso o atropello de parte de cualquier miembro de nuestra institución y a los denunciantes por no haber obtenido una respuesta contundente de parte de nuestras autoridades”, señaló Moroni Liabrés.

Asimismo, también se anunció que el Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana (SVC) entrará en una etapa de restructuración, además de dejar en claro que su fundador Luis Fernando Figari ha sido expulsado de esta congregación religiosa.

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Sodalicio: “Luis Fernando Figari es culpable de los abusos”

PERU
El Comercio

A más de cinco meses de las denuncias de abusos sexuales y físicos perpetrados dentro del Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana (SVC), el movimiento declaró culpable a su fundador, Luis Fernando Figari.

A través de un video difundido en Youtube, Alessandro Moroni Llabrés, superior General del SVC, pidió perdón a las víctimas de dichas vejaciones y anunció una reestructuración del movimiento.

“Perdón a las víctimas de cualquier tipo de abuso y atropello que hayan sido objeto por parte de cualquier miembro de nuestra organización. Perdón a los denunciantes que por años no obtuvieron una respuesta satisfactoria y contundente de parte de nuestras autoridades”, expresó.

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Catholic society says founder guilty of sex abuse in Peru

PERU
Peru Reports

The Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (SCV) apostolic society has declared its founder, Luis Fernando Figari, guilty of sexual abuse against minors.

Five months after Pedro Salinas’s book “Half Monks, Half Soldiers” published allegations of widespread psychological and sexual abuse from former members in the conservative society, SCV superior general Alessandro Moroni released a video statement saying his organization had initiated Figari’s removal.

“After hearing the witness accounts, we find Luis Figari guilty of the alleged abuses,” Moroni said. “And we declare him a persona non-grata in our organization which completely deplores and condemns his behavior.”

Moroni added that he had personally met with Pope Francis in December to request the removal of Figari from the SCV society. Moroni also apologized to Figari’s victims and to other members of SCV scandalized by the charges.

“We recognize the sin of not reacting immediately,” Moroni said. “We are sure that by the grace of God, our great family will survive and move forward beyond the errors of its leaders, who from now on have decided to start anew.”

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House mulls major changes to child sex abuse law

PENNSYLVANIA
WITF

Written by Mary Wilson, Capitol Bureau Chief | Apr 5, 2016

The state House is poised to consider major changes to the statutes of limitations on child sex abuse cases in Pennsylvania, one month after the release of a grand jury’s findings that the clergy of the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic diocese covered up of child sex abuse allegations for decades.

The bill, passed by the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, would eliminate the time limit for bringing criminal charges in a child sex abuse case. It expands the timeframe for bringing civil suits, giving victims until they’re 50 years old, instead of 30.

Rep. Mark Rozzi (D-Berks), who has renewed his public crusade for statute-of-limitations reforms since the Altoona-Johnstown case was made public, said the plan should also include a two-year period when even expired cases can be brought by law enforcement and victims, since so many weren’t ready to confront their abusers until well after the statute of limitations had expired.

“When we talk about the hundreds of victims that have been abused,” said Rozzi, “this bill does nothing for them.”

He plans to amend the bill when it reaches the House floor.

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NY–NYC’s Dolan continues abuse secrecy, victims say

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

Today, more evidence emerges showing that Cardinal Timothy Dolan is among the most secretive US Catholic officials when it comes to the safety of children.

Last week, the website of Dolan’s archdiocesan newspaper quietly posted a short notice that Fr. Keith Fennessy has been suspended because of child pornography.

[Catholic New York]

As best we can tell, Dolan never

–told anyone when Fr. Fennessy was first accused,
–told anyone when church officials deemed the accusations against Fr. Fennessy credible, or
–told anyone about the outcome of the criminal investigation into Fr.Fennessy,
–told anyone where Fr. Fennessy is now living, or
–begged other victims, witnesses or whistleblowers to come forward and call police.

In other words, for months or years, Dolan has known Fr. Fennessy was accused of child pornography. Yet he kept silent, giving Fr. Fennessy years to destroy evidence, intimidate victims, threaten whistleblowers, discredit witnesses, fabricate alibis, flee the country and hurt more kids. Dolan also gave Fr. Fennessy at least ten months (and likely longer) to ingratiate himself into more trusting families who Dolan kept in the dark about the priest’s crimes.

Shame on him. This is a clear violation of Dolan’s repeated pledges to be “open and transparent” about clergy sex crimes. It’s also a violation, we believe, of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops abuse policy – the so-called Charter for the Protection of Children – which mandates such “openness and transparency.”

Many bishops send a news release to secular media when a priest is accused of child sex crimes. Many send another news release when those accusations are deemed “credible.” As best we can tell, Dolan refused to do this, instead opting – as he has time and time again – for secrecy.

And even now, Dolan posts nothing about these serious, credible allegations on his archdiocesan website.

We urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions in the New York Archdiocese to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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FL–Predator preacher passes away, Victims respond

FLORIDA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home,davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A credibly accused Florida predator preacher has passed away. Now, we beg his former church members and colleagues to aggressively seek out anyone else who may have been hurt by him using church websites, pulpit announcements, social media and “word of mouth” so that the wounded may be consoled and learn that they aren’t alone.

[Sun Sentinel]

We are glad that Rev. Jeffrey London can no longer hurt kids. We’re glad too that his victims can hopefully sleep better at night knowing that he can’t assault any more children. But we fear that there may be dozens of others who were assaulted by Rev. London who are still trapped in silence, shame and self-blame. Perhaps his death will free some of them and prod them to step forward and get comfort and guidance from therapists and groups like ours.

We hope that all of Rev. London’s victims – whether hurt long ago or more recently – find the strength and courage to step forward, get help, expose wrongdoing and start healing. And we hope they find consolation.

Now that he’s passed on, we hope his former church colleagues and supervisors will be more forthcoming about Rev. London’s crimes and about those who ignored, concealed and enabled them.

We urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in churches or institutions in the Miami to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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RI–Predator priest passes away, Victims respond

RHODE ISLAND
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home,davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A credibly accused Rhode Island predator priest has passed away. Now, we beg Bishop Thomas Tobin to aggressively seek out anyone else who may have been hurt by him” by using church bulletins, parish websites and pulpit announcements so that the wounded may be consoled and learn that they aren’t alone.

[BishopAccountability.org]

[obituary]

We are glad that Fr. Louis Diogo can no longer hurt kids. We’re glad too that his victims can hopefully sleep better at night knowing that he can’t assault any more children.

We hope that all of Fr. Diogo’s victims – whether hurt long ago or more recently – find the strength and courage to step forward, get help, expose wrongdoing and start healing. And we hope they find consolation.

Now that he’s passed on, we hope Rhode Island Catholic officials will be more forthcoming about Fr. Diogo’s crimes and about those who ignored, concealed and enabled them.
He worked in churches in Providence, East Providence, Bristol, Newport, Swansea and River Point.

We urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions in Rhode Island to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Welcome to the Mennonite Abuse Prevention List

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

The church reforms when sufficient numbers of men and women demand integrity and honesty from themselves and force transparency and accountability from those who aspire to serve and lead. It has always been so. A.W. Richard Sipe

The Mennonite Abuse Prevention List (MAP List) is a resource provided by the Anabaptist Mennonite Chapter of SNAP. As part of the Survivors Network of Those Abused By Priests, we are a group that seeks to serve survivors of abuse who come out of an Anabaptist or Mennonite tradition. We resolve to do all within our power to prevent abuse by church officials, employees or lay workers from within Anabaptist or Mennonite families, communities, agencies or institutions. We are not governed by or affiliated with any church institution or agency.

The life of a child, a teenager or an adult of any gender can be forever altered by an experience of abuse. A child, a teenager, or an adult of any gender can also become a perpetrator of abuse. They can be partnered, married, single or divorced and are often loved and respected members of our communities. Perpetrators can have hundreds of targeted victims in a lifetime. If a sexual assault occurs one time, there is risk of it occurring again.

The Department of Justice defines sexual assault as “any type of sexual contact or behavior that occurs without the explicit consent of the recipient” and it is against the law. Children under the age of 18 are not considered by law to be capable of giving consent. But predators are well aware that children can be groomed during childhood to ensure “consent” for sexual contact as soon as they become of age. Even though these scenarios are not likely to gain a conviction in court, they are deeply damaging, especially when the perpetrator is ordained by the church as a “servant of God.” We believe a sexualized relationship of any kind and at any age with someone who holds authority over one’s spiritual well being and care, regardless of perceived consent, poses a serious risk of long term harm. SNAP Mennonite leader Dr. Cameron Altaras describes the experience in her speech at the 2015 annual SNAP convention in Alexandria, VA.

Unlike an accidental injury to the physical body, sexual abuse causes an emotional and spiritual wounding that becomes extremely difficult to diagnose and treat. It often takes years, decades, even lifetimes, to make the connections and process the insidious impact on one’s life. The damage and pain from the event(s) ripple out beyond the victim and perpetrator to their families, friends, congregations, colleagues, significant others, denominations and whole communities. Those who have taken their own lives are the true victims. Those of us who have lived to call ourselves Survivors feel humbled, grateful, and extremely fortunate. We want to help others heal and prevent further abuse from happening.

Were you violated by someone in an Anabaptist community of faith? Maybe it happened a long time ago and you have never told anyone. Maybe it happened to someone in your family and you carry their pain. Maybe you are currently being abused by someone or love someone who is being harmed. Maybe the only evidence you have is your own experience.

We believe you. It is not your fault. You are not alone. We will support you in finding your voice, telling your truth in whatever setting and timeline feels right for you. Our goal is to help you review the many options available for you to find healing and aid in the prevention of further harm to others. By breaking their silence, victims, witnesses and whistleblowers like you can find healing, protect others, expose wrongdoers and deter cover ups.

Our email at mennonite@snapnetwork.org is confidential. You may also write to us anonymously or by name at MAP List, P.O. Box 442632, Lawrence, KS, 66044. Your name and contact information will not be shared without your permission.

We welcome additional documentation and information on suspected, known or admitted Mennonite predators. Your identity as our source will also remain confidential.

We are grateful this MAP List can be housed under the umbrella of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. You may have seen the Oscar winning Best Picture film Spotlight, which tells the story of how SNAP survivors helped the Boston Globe expose the clergy abuse crisis in Boston. Even though “Priests” is in its title, SNAPnetwork.org is open to religious and nonreligious persons who were sexually violated by anyone inside or outside a faith community. SNAP is the world’s oldest and largest support group for sexual abuse victims and their loved ones. It was founded by survivors of Catholic priests in 1988 and now has more than 21,000 members in over 79 countries.

Finally, if you have come to this website because you are actively engaged in predatory behavior or fear you may become so, we urge you to seek help immediately from an independent, intensive, experientially-based, inpatient treatment program like Patrick Carnes’ Gentle Path at The Meadows in Wickenburg, AZ. If you believe you have broken the law and are truly repentant, you will voluntarily submit yourself to civil authorities and find others to support you in doing so.

SNAP Survivor Support Groups are both anonymous and confidential and open to survivors and their loved ones. A survivor group meets in Harrisonburg, VA the 1st Thursday of every month. Call 540-214-8874 for more information.

Or call the SNAP Help Line at 1-800-SNAP-HEALS

CREDIBLY ACCUSED CLERGY AND CHURCH WORKERS
Please click on names for more information about each individual.

Andrew Max Eggman

David B. Eller

Marco Funk

Stephen J. Geyer

Jess Jay McCall

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National–Offending Mennonite church staff are listed on website

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, April 5, 2016

For more information: David Clohessy (314-566-9790 cell, davidgclohessy@gmail.com), Barbra Graber (540-214-8874, mennonite@snapnetwork.org), Barbara Dorris(314-503-0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org, Barbara Blaine (312-399-4747, bblaine@snapnetwork.org)

Sex-offending church workers are listed for first time on website
Admitted, convicted & credibly accused clergy & employees are exposed
Mennonite/Anabaptist officials who cover up abuse will also be tracked
Exposing abuse “helps survivors heal, protects the vulnerable,” group says

A support group for survivors of sexual abuse is announcing the release of a list of credibly accused, admitted, and convicted sexual predator Mennonite and Anabaptist clergy and employees.

[SNAP]

Called the Mennonite Abuse Prevention (MAP) list, it aims to be a collection of the names and photos of Anabaptist and Mennonite clergy and church workers who have been credibly accused of sexual misconduct, abuse, assault, and/or harassment. Officials who cover up abuse will also be tracked.

The list includes men who now live in Oregon, Pennsylvania and Canada and two whose whereabouts are unknown. One now works as a counselor.

Members of the Anabaptist Mennonite Chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org) compiled and released the list because, they say, Mennonite officials are not taking “meaningful action to effectively stop predators, or make this information easily available to church members or the public.”

Currently, the list only displays five names, but its compilers plan to add more names in small installments, as their research is completed and more documentation received.

“While some offending Mennonites have been named and archived in denominational or independent publications, these announcements are not easily accessible to church members and researchers who seek a better understanding of sexual violence in Mennonite settings,” said MAP list researcher and SNAP Mennonite member Stephanie Krehbiel of Kansas City, Missouri. “The MAP list is designed to make the small print larger, to create transparency around sexual violence in Mennonite institutions and communities, prevent more such violence and to help survivors still struggling with their experiences discover that they are not alone.”

Anabaptism began during the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century, and today includes a complex network of churches and communities including Mennonites, Church of the Brethren, and the Amish. Known for their pacifism, there are more than one million Anabaptists worldwide in loosely affiliated denominations and conferences that vary in the conservatism of their faith. While the MAP list currently lists primarily Mennonite offenders, its creators are collecting information on offenders from other Anabaptist groups as well.

Hosted on the international SNAP website SNAPnetwork.org, the MAP list follows a model already established by similar websites that document sexual abuse in other faiths, including BishopAccountability.org, Pokrov.org, and Protectjewishkids.com.

To be placed on the MAP list, offenders must have been named elsewhere through established media sources, internal institutional documents, court records, or any combination of the above.

While SNAP members have been compiling and researching the MAP List for some time, its initial release was spurred by the January arrest of former Eastern Mennonite University vice president Luke Hartman for solicitation of prostitution. Hartman’s charges were dismissed on a technicality on March 29. Lindale Mennonite Church pastors and board of elders admitted in a letter to the congregation on March 20, that Hartman had abused another member of the church. Lindale officials knew of the abuse in August 2014 but apparently told neither the police nor their congregation, and Hartman remained in his position as vice president at Eastern Mennonite University until his arrest in January 2016.

“We want Mennonites to understand that the closed and secretive way that these officials are handling these abuse allegations is part of a much larger pattern of predatory Mennonite church workers and complicit institutions,” said Krehbiel.

“Where there is secrecy, denial, and lack of transparency, sexual violence thrives,” said SNAP Mennonite leader Barbra Graber of Harrisonburg, Virginia. “Despite growing evidence that such approaches re-traumatize victims and enable further abuse, most Mennonite churches and institutions still attempt to manage abuse situations quietly, internally, and at risk to public safety. The health and wellbeing of Mennonite faith communities will be better served when information about who is committing that abuse and how it is being addressed becomes accessible.”

Anyone who has information and evidence of sexual abuse in Anabaptist Mennonite churches is urged to contact SNAP. Documentation concerning legal actions taken, dismissals from posts and/or media coverage may be sent via email to mennonite@snapnetwork.org or mailed to MAP list, P.O. Box 442632, Lawrence, KS, 66044.

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PA House Committee Advances Child Sex Abuse Statute Of Limitations Bill

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Philly

April 5, 2016 By Tony Romeo

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — The state House Judiciary Committee has advanced legislation long sought by advocates that would eliminate the statute of limitations for criminal prosecution of child sexual abuse.

In addition to eliminating the statute of limitations for criminal prosecutions, the bill passed by the House Judiciary Committee would give victims of child sex abuse until the age of 50 to bring civil cases.

Republican Ron Marsico, the chairman, says the committee’s action is not merely a response to recent charges brought against priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

“It’s not just that case… obviously, it’s been the Philadelphia incidents. We knew we had to – at least the committee decided that we had to go ahead and move forward with legislation.”

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Former Mount Cashel orphanage resident tested on memories

CANADA
The Southern Gazette

Barb Sweet

Published on April 05, 2016

The first of four former residents of the Mount Cashel orphanage to testify at a civil trial to determine whether the Roman Catholic Church Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s, is liable for actions of the Christian Brothers, is being cross-examined today by the church’s lawyer.

Toronto lawyer Chris Blom tested the man, now in his 70s, this morning on his memory of certain events, on his feelings toward his father for putting him and his four brothers in the orphanage and on his reasons for not pursuing a PhD in teaching.

The witness, 77, said he left the orphanage at age 15 with his best friend on Boxing Day 1955. The pair had no winter coats and dragged their few belongings in a cardboard box, tied with a rope, through the snow to the friend’s grandmother’s house. There had been a blizzard the night before and his friend was late getting back to the orphanage. According to the witness, his friend was held by the throat by one of the Brothers and got the “bejesus” beat out of him because of that tardiness.

The witness took a chair and hit the Brother to defend his friend and the two of them were ordered out on Boxing Day, he said.

But Blom pointed out to the court that the movie the witness said the orphanage residents watched that night — said to be “Gunfight at the OK Coral” — was not released until a couple of years later.

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Statement from the Chair of the Inquiry April 2016

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

A number of commentators have this week spoken out, inaccurately, about the Inquiry Chair and the way in which the Inquiry will conduct its work. I want to correct those inaccuracies.

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse is unprecedented in both size and scope. It came about as a result of catastrophic failures of institutions to recognise and address the extent of child sexual abuse in England and Wales. Those failures destroyed the lives of children and left them growing up in a society that let them down.

We know of high profile cases where abusers, such as Jimmy Savile, used their positions of trust within institutions to gain unfettered access to children. And in towns like Rotherham, Oxford and Rochdale, we know that organised gangs and networks have targeted vulnerable children for sexual abuse. We also know that the widespread sexual abuse of children has taken place outside of the media spotlight, in the care system, in residential schools, in custody and in other institutional settings. And we know from recent research by the Children’s Commissioner that only around one in eight children who are sexually abused are ever identified by statutory agencies.

As Chair of the Inquiry, I have been asked to investigate the full range of institutions in England and Wales to identify the failures which may have contributed to the sexual abuse of children. The Inquiry is also asked to make recommendations that will help to keep children safe in the future.

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Another convicted serial clerical molester dead

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

[PICOT, CHARLES JEAN – obituary]

Thanks to Derek we have news that 69-year-old thrice convicted serial molester Father Charles Picot is dead. He died 31 March 2016 in Montreal. His funeral will be held 15 April 2016.

Picot was scheduled for trial 10-11 May 2016 in Bathurst New Brunswick. No more adjournments and legal dilly-dallying around now. There will, obviously – and sadly for the complainants – be no trial.

This may seem strange to some, but I have found that the death of their molester is a difficult time for victims. Please keep the many Picot victims in your prayers at this time. Remember particularly those who had hoped to see justice done this May.

Note that the funeral will be held in the Magnus Poirier funeral home and not in a church.

(Father John Sullivan, another convicted serial molester, died in Montreal 27 March 2016. His funeral arrangements were also handled by Magnus Poirier.)

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Child abuse prevention: Raising awareness and reporting within community

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY ERIKA STANISH TUESDAY, APRIL 5TH 2016

While legislation was introduced abolishing the statute of limitations on Monday, some are pushing for more to be done about child abuse.

The Pennsylvania Family Support Alliance is urging those in the community to step up and be vigilant in the role of protecting kids.

With April being Child Abuse Prevention Month, those involved in the PFSA hope to help the community raise awareness, recognize the signs and report child abuse if they see it.

“You can’t wait. If you wait, it might be too late,” said Angela Liddle, CEO and president of the PFSA.

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House panel approves bill to reform statute of limitations on sex crimes

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

By an overwhelming margin, the Pennsylvania’s House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday morning gave its support to a bill that would reform the state’s sex crime law.

House Bill 1947, sponsored by Majority Chairman Ron Marsico (R-Dauphin), would abolish the criminal statute of limitations for future criminal prosecutions.

Under the proposed legislation no one accused of a sexual crime will ever be free from criminal prosecution because of a lapsed statute of limitations. The bill would also raise the civil statute-of-limitations age to age 50.

The bill does not include retroactive components. Victims advocates have long pushed for reforms to the retroactive parameters in the law to allow victims who have “timed out” of the legal system to seek legal recourse.

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„Viele reagieren bei der Kirche wie bei der Polizei“

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

Von KATJA THORWARTH

Der Politologe und Autor Carsten Frerk über Religionsgesellschaften als Wirtschaftsunternehmen, ihre immer noch starke Vernetzung und die Scheu der Politiker, sich mit ihnen anzulegen.

Herr Frerk, welchen Status haben die Kirchen im Staat?
Das ist nicht eindeutig geklärt. Nehmen Sie den Körperschaftsstatus: Eigentlich sind einige Religionsgesellschaften Körperschaften des öffentlichen Rechts. Die Kirchen aber sagen: Wir sind keine gewöhnlichen Körperschaften, die vom staatlichen Hoheitsrecht abgeleitet werden, sondern Körperschaften göttlicher Stiftung. In das Lobbyregister des Bundestages müssen sie sich trotzdem nicht eintragen, sondern haben quasi eine De-facto-Akkreditierung.

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NY TIMES ABUSE STORY OMITS KEY FACTS

UNITED STATES
Catholic league

Bill Donohue comments on an incomplete New York Times story:

On the front page of today’s New York Times there is a story about priestly sexual abuse that occurred “long ago” in a western Pennsylvania diocese. The story’s omissions are glaring. Here are some of them:

* Readers never learn what “long ago” means. In fact, the cases of alleged abuse extend back to World War II.

* Readers never learn why old cases of alleged abuse at one high school in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown was sufficient cause for the local D.A. to refer these cases to the state Attorney General.

* Readers never learn why a grand jury of decades-old allegations in the diocese was summoned, but no other institution, public or private, was probed. It simply cannot be that there are no old cases outstanding in any other institution in the state. So why the cherry-picking?

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Victims want Atlanta’s Catholic leader to ID accused pedophiles

GEORGIA
Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A victims’ support group says Atlanta’s top Catholic cleric isn’t being transparent about child sexual abuse by priests, instead withholding records that could protect children and help survivors.

For more than a year, the group has been pressing Archbishop Wilton Gregory to reveal the identities of any priests, deacons, brothers or nuns accused of molesting children who spent time working in the Atlanta area. The nationwide Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, wants a list of names posted on the archdiocese website, something more than 30 Roman Catholic bishops across the country have already done.

Such a list would likely include names that have never been publicized, where accusations were handled internally then locked away in church archives.

But Gregory, SNAP members claim, is being stubbornly opaque. About a half dozen activists, most of them victims, staged a small protest this week on the sidewalk outside the Cathedral of Christ the King in Buckhead, holding up posters that said “Protect children” and “Keep kids safe.”

“We think it’s time to stop the secrecy,” SNAP Outreach Director Barbara Dorris said. “We think it’s time to start putting the protection of children first.”

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Harsh words for former Sault priest and church

CANDA
The Sault Star

By Harold Carmichael, The Sudbury Star
Tuesday, April 5, 2016

The victim of a now-dead priest he calls a “serial molester” had harsh words for the Catholic Church after settling his lawsuit in Sudbury on Monday.

The victim, identified only as P.J.J., issued the statement following an out-of-court settlement with the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie.

“This five-year ordeal has cemented my thoughts that this church from the top down is not truly interested in action “¦ only hollow words of apology to placate the masses,” he wrote in a statement released by Beckett Litigation Lawyers of London, Ont.

“If they were truly repentant I would call for them to immediately defrock the pervert collars (I cannot bring myself to ever use the term priest or father), and then offer all the support required to assist the victims. This would also mean to stop defending the convicted collars in litigation immediately.

“These moves would make the church much more acceptable to victims.”

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Broward ex-pastor convicted of child sex abuse dies while serving life in prison

FLORIDA
Sun Sentinel

Paula McMahon

Jeffery London, the former South Florida youth pastor and charter school official who was sentenced to life for a child sex abuse conviction seven months ago, has died in federal prison.

London, 52, formerly of Broward County, died last week, March 29, in custody at the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, western Missouri, the U.S. Bureau of Prisons confirmed Tuesday.

A prison spokesperson declined to provide the cause of death, writing in an emailed response that it “is not considered public information and will not be disclosed.”

London had survived cancer some years ago, according to trial testimony.

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Editorial: Justice for clergy abuse victims remains a fight

MASSACHUSETTS
Daily Hampshire Gazette

Editorial

Tuesday, April 05, 2016

The Springfield Diocese took the unusual step last week of adding the name of a dead priest to a shameful list: Catholic clergy against whom “credible” allegations of child sexual abuse have been made.

The step came with word that the diocese just settled — for an undisclosed sum — a civil lawsuit brought in 2013 by a Chesterfield man. The suit alleged that this same priest, the late Rev. Paul Archambault, sexually abused the plaintiff for nearly four years, starting around 2006 when the victim was 13. The abuse occurred nearly 50 times in various locations, the man and his attorney claimed, from a Northampton home to a Chicopee parish to a Catholic shrine in Vermont. Confronted later, in 2011, the priest shot himself in the head at age 42 inside a closet at the Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Parish rectory.

All are sorrowful facts — for the Archambault family and all who loved this troubled man and for those he apparently subjected to inappropriate physical and sexual contact.

That’s about as much as most people can bear to hear. This settlement can seem like old news. It comes years after a landslide of legal actions against the Catholic Church. But protecting vulnerable people from sexual abuse demands rigor and attention. And that’s why we think this tragic case deserves closer consideration, in a spirit of moving this issue toward understanding and reconciliation.

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Raymond Edward Lavelle

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

Lavelle Reverend Raymond Edward Lavelle died on December 31, 2015 while under long-term care at Mohun Health Care Center. The son of Patrick and Celia (McNulty) Lavelle, he was born March 30, 1930 in Cleveland, Ohio. He graduated from the college program at Saint Meinrad Minor Seminary (Saint Meinrad, IN) in 1951, later completing his philosophy studies at the former Saint Charles Borromeo Seminary (Columbus) in 1953 and his theology studies at Saint Vincent Seminary (Latrobe, PA) in 1957. He was ordained on May 25, 1957 by Bishop Edward G. Hettinger. During his ministry Fr. Lavelle served on a number of diocesan boards and committees; he also served in several parishes until his retirement in 2000, spending part of his retirement years as a hospital chaplain and assisting at Saint Paul Parish (Westerville) before physical infirmities confined him to Mohun Health Care Center for several years prior to his death.

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Louis M. Diogo

RHODE ISLAND
Rebello Funeral Home

[assignment record – BishopAccountability.org]

December 11, 1920 – April 4, 2015
Resided in Pawtucket, RI

LOUIS M. Diogo, 94, Pastor Emeritus of St. Elizabeth Parish in Bristol, died peacefully surrounded by his family and friends on Holy Saturday, April 4, 2015 at home.

Born December 11, 1920, in Bretanha, Sao Miguel, Azores, a son of the late Jose and Helena (de Sousa Faria) Diogo, he attended public schools in Sao Miguel, Azores. He completed studies for the priesthood at the Seminary of Angra, Azores, and was ordained a priest on June 23, 1946 in the Cathedral Church of Angra by Bishop Guilherme A. C. Guimaraes.

From 1946 to 1953 Fr. Diogo was secretary in the Seminary in Angra. In 1954 he came to the United States and became assistant pastor for a short period at Jesus Saviour Parish in Newport then at St. Anthony Parish in West Warwick. In June 1957 he was transferred to St. Francis Xavier Parish in East Providence and in 1964 he returned to Jesus Saviour Parish in Newport. In December 1965 he became administrator of Our Lady of the Rosary Parish in Providence and served there until his transfer in 1972 to St. Elizabeth Parish, Bristol, also as administrator. In December 1983 Fr. Diogo was incardinated into the Diocese of Providence and appointed pastor of St. Elizabeth Parish, Bristol, where he served until his retirement in 1993.

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Another journey into the hell of sexual abuse by priests: Two Altoona-Johnstown questions

UNITED STATES
GetReligion

Terry Mattingly

Trust me. I understand that it would be almost impossible to write a daily news report about the hellish subject of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy that would please all readers. However, someone has to do this work and do it well.

It’s hard to talk about this story having “two sides,” unless you get more specific about the actual topic of a given report. After decades of reading this coverage – some of it courageous, some of it rather shoddy – I think it’s crucial for reporters to make it clear that there are multiple issues being discussed linked to these horrible crimes against God and innocent children and teens.

First, there is the issue of secrecy among high church officials. At this point, you will encounter few people anywhere in Catholicism who have the slightest interest in openly defending what cannot be defended. Maybe behind the scenes? If so, nail them.

However, this brings us to a more complex, and related, issue. How, precisely, should predators in the past be prosecuted and punished? The biggest issue is whether to lift the statute of limitations – which imposes deadlines on when victims can bring civil suits or state prosecutors can press charges against alleged abusers. In some cases, lawmakers have attempted to target the clergy, alone, in these legal efforts, even exempting, to name one example, teachers in public schools from facing new accusations.

The second question is also linked to the prosecution of priests. Should it be assumed that accused priests are guilty until proven innocent, if that can be proven? How do reporters handle cases in which memories have faded, or the details in stories have become muddled?

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Why London must not be allowed to suppress the awful truth about Kincora

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

As the alleged VIP paedophile ring story at Westminster crumbles, there is still one scandal involving powerful people, blackmail and the abuse of children that continues to churn out disturbing, but credible, material from the past: Kincora.

The so-called former ‘boys’ home’ – an inappropriate, cruel misnomer if ever there was one – in east Belfast has this enduring ability to cast up fresh demons which haunt the lives of the victims that were sent there and also raise serious questions for the British state in Northern Ireland.

Last week’s revelations about the paedophile doctor, Morris Fraser, contained this killer line: that a Freedom of Information request about the child psychiatrist’s work in Belfast during the early years of the Troubles was blocked on the grounds of “national security”.

Which raised the possibility that Fraser, who – incredibly – was allowed to keep practising in his field of child psychiatry right up until the mid-1990s, despite a number of convictions for sexually abusing boys, was a “protected species” by the security services.

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Mount Cashel Civil Trial Begins at Supreme Court

CANADA
VOCM

Monday , April 4 2016

A civil trial involving the victims of Mount Cashel, the Catholic Church, and the Christian Brothers began today at Supreme Court in St. John’s. The complainants were all residents of the orphanage between the 1940s and 1960s. The trial is set to be lengthy, and will continue into June.

In his opening statement this morning, lawyer Mark Frederick said the Archdiocese is not responsible for the faults of the Christian Brothers, who he says essentially acted as wardens at Mount Cashel. Lawyer for the victims, Geoff Budden, says the church has not done anything to adequately address the years of sexual and physical abuse suffered by the boys who once lived at the orphanage.

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Priest convicted of sexual assault pays $70,000 in fines

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

April 5, 2016

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Catholic priest convicted of molesting orphans in Honduras has paid $70,000 in court-ordered fines and restitution costs that were the subject of a tussle with the U.S. Attorney’s office last week.

Federal prosecutors had asked for a judge to freeze $1.2 million in assets held by Joseph Maurizio because they said he hadn’t paid the fine and they feared he was trying to transfer money and property to a relative.

But his lawyers have produced papers showing he has paid the money and U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson in Johnstown last week rejected the freeze request as moot.

Maurizio, 70, was sentenced March 1 to 17 years in federal prison and ordered to pay the fines within 10 days of sentencing. Prosecutors said he didn’t and also said he had deeded 42 acres in Paint Township and Windber to relatives for $1. In addition, Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Haines said he had told his niece in a recorded jailhouse call that he intended leave his accounts with a “zero balance.”

But Maurizio’s lawyers later produced documents indicating he’d paid the money, saying there was no “malicious intent to not comply” with the judge’s order.

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Jack the Insider: ‘The disgraceful life of Bishop Ronald Mulkearns’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

One should never speak ill of the dead as the saying goes. I think we can rule it out in the case of the former Bishop of Ballarat Ronald Austin Mulkearns who died yesterday. He was 85 years of age.

Mulkearns’ predecessor, James Patrick O’Collins was five months shy of his 95th birthday when he passed away in 1983. Bishops tend to live long lives. Maybe it’s because they don’t have to worry about lay concerns like paying the mortgage or the rent or even where their next meal is coming from. Perhaps bishops like O’Collins and Mulkearns lived such long lives because God was not so keen to have them join him.

Both bishops oversaw and facilitated the activity of paedophile priests in the Ballarat Diocese. There are literally thousands of victims in the post-war to present period. Giving evidence at the Royal Commission in February, Mulkearns stammered out apologies and claimed he did not know what to do when it came to paedophile priests. He was, he said, simply ill equipped to deal with marauding serial offenders like Gerald Ridsdale and Monsignor John Day.

Last night I saw an SBS news report on Mulkearns’ death. The report concluded by saying Mulkearns had never reported offending clerics to police. It was a rookie mistake for any journalist who has put a toe into the foul water of the Ballarat Diocese. Of course Mulkearns had never reported to police that his priests had raped children. The real story is the cops came to him.

In the mid-1990s, Victoria Police looked to charge Mulkearns for his role in protecting and facilitating paedophile priests but the charges did not proceed. The truth is the police had plenty to charge Mulkearns with but that would mean opening up a dirty secret and one Victoria Police would hold close for more than forty years.

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Group wants list of Catholic sex abusers published

GEORGIA
11 Alive

[with video]

ATLANTA – A group of survivors is pushing Catholic bishops in Georgia to publish the names of every cleric involved in sexual abuse.

The demand comes from SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests). The group rallied Monday afternoon near the Atlanta Catholic Cathedral of Christ the King, holding signs asking the church to “protect children” and “keep kids safe.” They also displayed photos of children from across the country at the age they say they first started to experience abuse. Most are now adults.

SNAP says too many of the bishops and deacons accused of hurting them have been quietly disciplined by the church, or not at all. That means there’s no criminal history to warn other groups about the dangers posed in letting them around children.

That’s why Barbara Blaine, who says she was raped for nearly four years starting in 8th grade, wants bishops to publish names, photos, and work histories of every cleric with a substantiated claim of sexual abuse filed against them. Today, they directed that request to the Archdiocese of Atlanta.

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Prestigious private schools face multi-million dollar lawsuits from alleged abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Exclusive by the National Reporting Team’s Lorna Knowles

Some of Australia’s most prestigious private schools are being sued for millions of dollars by men who allege they were sexually abused by teachers and staff.

Sydney lawyer Ross Koffel is bringing multiple claims for damages in the NSW Supreme Court against schools including The Scots College, Knox Grammar, Waverley College and De La Salle, Revesby Heights.

Mr Koffel told the ABC he had been approached by a large number of men who allege they were abused at private schools around the country.

“It just seemed to me to be the same problem in school after school after school and it surprised us how many schools, how many students are affected,” Mr Koffel said.

“It is a systemic problem in the institutions, in the schools. We’re alleging sexual abuse of the students during school hours in most cases and on the school premises, and it just really couldn’t be worse.”

Ten separate claims against The Scots College, Knox Grammar, Waverley College and De La Salle College, Revesby Heights have been lodged and another two claims will be lodged on the coming months.

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EXCLUSIVE: Sex abuse victims press Gov. Cuomo to support extending statute of limitations against abusers

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY REUVEN BLAU NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Sex abuse victims and child advocates turned up the heat Monday on Gov. Cuomo, calling on him to support legislation that would extend the statute of limitations for criminal charges and civil suits lodged against accused abusers.

For years, Joel Engelman, who was allegedly abused by a yeshiva principal, said he has lobbied Albany lawmakers to extend the statute — saying that school administrators can’t be trusted to do the right thing.

“The governor needs to take a stronger and more public stance on this issue,” said Engelman, 30. “The silence is deafening. The governor is pretty much saying he’s not interested in this bill passing.”

Cuomo said he was willing to consider some type of change to the law, but he did not elaborate.

“Those guilty of sexual abuse need to be held accountable, and we would support changes to help ensure victims have their day in court and maintain due process,” said Cuomo’s spokesman Richard Azzopardi.

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Hotline response validates lifting statute of limitations

PENNSYLVANIA
The Courier-Express

Joy Norwood Apr 2, 2016

The fact that 250 calls have been made to a child-abuse hotline since the recent report of decades-long sexual crimes across the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is tragic, but not surprising.

On March 1, the Office of Attorney General said priests and others associated with the diocese had been abusing children for decades across eight counties. The AG’s report directly named 35 alleged abusers, and said their crimes had been hidden by bishops who chose to move the priests from parish to parish rather than involve legal authorities.

A subsequent grand jury presentment on March 15 accused three former leaders of the Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, of allowing Brother Stephen Baker to work among local children knowing he had been accused of sexual assault previously in Ohio and Michigan.

As many as 100 former Bishop McCort High School students have said Baker abused them when they were students.

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Commentary: Don’t discriminate against child-abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

APRIL 5, 2016

By Sue A. Fugate

The thought of child sexual abuse stirs emotions of fear and anger in me as a mother of two. The more I hear about this problem, the more troubled I am at its prevalence and the lack of consistency among institutions and governments trying to deal with it.

The recent grand jury report about crimes that date back as far as the 1950s in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is the latest revelation. I won’t pretend to know the pain survivors of abuse experience or the helplessness their families feel, but I do empathize with their suffering and support their need for healing.

In the name of healing, some legislators propose changes to Pennsylvania law that would waive the civil statute of limitations for some – but not all – abuse survivors. To that, I respond as an attorney. I can’t ignore the law, nor should any elected official pledged to serving the public good. After taking a long, hard look at the consequences of such proposals, I believe they should cause serious concern for anyone who believes the law must be applied fairly and equally to all.

Any such legislation would end up creating two classes of child victims in the name of a political quick fix wrapped in emotional expedience. It would also financially penalize innocent families – members of churches and parish communities – who had nothing to do with past evil actions by a criminal few.

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Father Fennessy Barred From Priestly Ministry

NEW YORK
Catholic New York

Father Keith Fennessy, who was discovered with pornographic material on his computer that violated the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, may not return to priestly ministry.

Law enforcement officials and the archdiocesan review board both examined the details of the allegation. As a result of its investigation, the review board recommended earlier this month that Father Fennessy no longer be permitted to serve as a priest. Cardinal Dolan accepted the board’s recommendation.

Father Fennessy had most recently served as pastor of St. Columba’s parish in Manhattan from 2011 until June 15, 2015, when he was removed from ministry after the pornographic material was discovered.

The matter was also immediately turned over to the Manhattan and Staten Island District Attorney’s offices, said archdiocesan spokesman Joseph Zwilling.

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Report: Ex-Midland Beach pastor defrocked over computer porn

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Ryan Lavis | lavis@siadvance.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — A priest who once served as pastor of St. Margaret Mary R.C. Church in Midland Beach has been defrocked after pornographic material was allegedly discovered on his computer, according to a report in Catholic New York.

The material, the report said, was in violation of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, which is a set of procedures that were established in 2002 by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for addressing allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy.

The Rev. Keith Fennessy was removed from the ministry in June 2015 after the pornographic material was discovered, according to the report.

Father Fennessy had served as pastor of St. Margaret Mary Church from 2006 to June 2010, when he left the parish amid a controversy over the sale of a portion of the church’s property to the Muslim American Society, according to previous Advance reports.

He also served as parochial vicar at St. Peter’s Church, New Brighton, from 2004-2005, and later as an administrator of Our Lady of Mount Carmel-St. Benedicta, West Brighton, according to Catholic New York. Most recently, Father Fennessy had served as pastor of St. Columba’s parish in Manhattan.

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‘Who were you going to tell?’

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on April 04, 2016

Catholic officials sat on one side of Courtroom No. 2 Monday at the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador while former Mount Cashel orphanage residents and their supporters sat on the benches across the aisle.

In the morning, the leads on two teams of lawyers outlined opposing arguments of whether the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s is liable for physical and sexual abuse of boys by members of the lay order Christian Brothers at the infamous orphanage from the 1940s to the 1960s.

And in late morning and all afternoon, the first of four men who will lay bare their experiences at this civil trial their life stories got to the unsettling descriptions of a childhood forever marked by his experiences with the Christian Brothers and a couple of employees at the orphanage.

The man cannot be named because of a publication ban in the John Doe case.

He told of grubs in daily rations of porridge, rat and mice droppings in bread and starved boys so desperate that they looked for scraps in a vat of swill collected from the leftovers of patients at city hospitals. That swill was meant for the pigs on the orphanage farm, but the boys would look for bits of meat and anything else edible.

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Details scarce in former Hazleton, Mountain Top priest abuse allegation

PENNSYLVANIA
Standard Speaker

KATHLEEN BOLUS, STAFF WRITER
Published: April 5, 2016

Diocese of Scranton and law enforcement officials would not release any more information Monday concerning the allegations the Rev. Martin M. Boylan engaged in sexual misconduct with a minor.

The allegation is still under investigation and no more information is available, Wayne County District Attorney Janine Edwards said Monday. However, she released a statement that the statute of limitations will run out when this victim reaches the age of 50. The age of the victim, who is now an adult, is unknown.

“No further comment will be issued at this time,” Edwards said.

State police will be investigating the allegation, she said.

The Diocese of Scranton immediately notified Edwards’ office on Friday evening after it received an allegation of sexual misconduct involving a minor against Boylan, 68. The alleged abuse took place in Wayne County, the diocese said in a Friday statement.

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French cardinal reiterates promise to cooperate with police on abuse

FRANCE
Catholic Herald (UK)

by Jonathan Luxmoore
posted Tuesday, 5 Apr 2016

Police raided the offices of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin to search for information related to the case of Fr Bernard Preynat

A French cardinal reiterated his promise to cooperate with law enforcement officials after his offices were raided in connection with charges of failing to discipline a priest now charged with abuse.

Police raided the offices of Lyon Cardinal Philippe Barbarin on March 30 to search for information related to the case of Fr Bernard Preynat, charged with “sexual aggression and rape of minors” between 1986 and 1991 at Lyon’s Saint-Luc parish, where he ran a large Catholic Scout group over two decades.

“The investigators conducted a search, and the Lyon Archdiocese was made to hand over items sought by the justice authorities,” the cardinal’s office said in a statement after the search.

“The cardinal has many times expressed his willingness to cooperate in full transparency with the judicial process and confidently remains at its disposal, hoping the authorities will calmly reveal the truth and allay the suffering of victims.”

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