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.

February 10, 2016

Archdiocese Settles Sexual Abuse Lawsuit Against a Priest with Prior Naugatuck Ties

CONNECTICUT
Patch

By BRIAN MCCREADY (Patch Staff) – February 10, 2016

The Archdiocese of Hartford has agreed to pay a former altar boy $500,000 to settle a sexual abuse lawsuit against a priest, the Connecticut Post reports.

The allegations date back to the mid 1980s and the accused priest was placed on leave in 2010.

The Rev. Stephen Bzdyra was accused in a lawsuit of sexually molesting an altar boy between 1985 to 1990 while he was at St. Francis Church in New Haven and St. Hedwig Church in Naugatuck.

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 arrested over alleged ‎€30m fraud

ITALY
The Guardian (UK)

Agence France-Presse in Rome
Wednesday 10 February 2016 1

Italian police have announced the arrest of a retired cleric suspected of having defrauded investors of ‎€30m (£23m), which they were told would help fund a humanitarian foundation.

The Argentinian-born Patrizio Benvenuti, 64, former military chaplain in Italy who retired to the Canary Islands, had won the confidence of investors due to his work in the Vatican’s legal tribunal.

He has been placed under house arrest and a European arrest warrant has also been issued for one of his close collaborators, 54-year-old Christian Ventisette, a French businessman involved in finance and property.

The inquiry has identified nine suspected accomplices and nearly 300 victims, most of them elderly people living abroad.

The financial police said on Wednesday that the victims sent money “in the hope of entrusting their savings to finance and property-sector experts as well as with the will to contribute to and help the humanitarian foundation Kepha,” which was run by Benvenuti.

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.

Truffa da 30 milioni di euro, arrestato monsignore in partenza per le Canarie

ITALIA
TGCOM24

13:50 – Monsignor Patrizio Benvenuti, alto prelato 64enne di origini argentine, è stato arrestato dalla guardi di finanza di Bolzano. E’ accusato di una truffa da 30 milioni di euro ai danni di quasi 300 persone, prevalentemente residenti all’estero e per lo più in età avanzata. I soldi versati al sacerdote, destinati alla sua fondazione umanitaria Kepha, finivano in un articolato meccanismo di riciclaggio tra persone, società estere e italiane.

Sequestrata lussuosa villa del ‘400 a Piombino – La Gdf ha sequestrato in via preventiva una lussuosa dimora del Quattrocento a Piombino, Villa Vittoria (valore 8 milioni di euro), e un grande sito archeologico a Selinunte (valore 850mila euro). Sigilli anche per un edificio a Poggio Catino, in provincia di Rieti (valore di 530mila euro) e altri immobili e terreni a Poppi, ad Arezzo (valore di 670mila euro).

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

Catholic Church child abuse: Pope Francis passes up meeting with Mexican victims of serial abuser Marcial Maciel

MEXICO
Independent (UK)

Michael Day Rome @michael2day

Pope Francis begins a high-profile visit to Latin America this week in what should be a series of celebrations for the Argentinian pontiff.

Attention instead looks set to be fixed again on arguably the single most shocking case of multiple child abuse, cover-ups and conspiracy in a series of worldwide clerical paedophilia cases.

Even before Francis touches down in Mexico city, victims of serial abuser Marcial Maciel, the close friend of Pope John Paul II, and head of the Legionaries of Christ, are dismayed that Pope Francis will not find time to meet them despite him spending a whole week in Mexico.

The Mexican religious institution had at its height 800 priests, 15 universities, and more than 100 prep schools. Maciel, who died in the US in 2008, aged 86, is said to have exploited his power and position to abuse boys and young men for many decades. It is even thought he abused two of his own children from relations with two women.

Despite this, he continued to have the ear of Pope John Paul II, and accompanied him during papal visits to Mexico in 1979, 1990 and 1993 – long after formal charges had been filed against him in ecclesiastical courts in Rome.

Barbara Blaine, the president of the US-based support group SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), said: “Of course, Francis should meet with the Mexican victims. But it seems he only meets victims of abuse for good PR.”

She added: “He doesn’t seem to meet the victims who are likely to cause controversy.” Given the “proven layers of conspiracy and cover-up” over Maciel, she said such a meeting would not be easy for the Vatican to “stage manage”.

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.

Archdiocese settles sex abuse lawsuit

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

By Daniel Tepfer
Wednesday, February 10, 2016

New Haven—The Archdiocese of Hartford has agreed to pay $500,000 to settle a sex abuse allegation against a New Haven priest, the lawyers for the plaintiff announced Wednesday.
The settlement was reached just weeks before the civil trial was to begin.

The Rev. Stephen Bzdyra, was accused in a lawsuit of sexually molesting an altar boy between 1985 and 1990 at St. Francis Church in New Haven and St. Hedwig Church in Naugatuck.

Bzdyra was placed on administrative leave by the archdiocese in 2010.

“One source of comfort for the plaintiff is that upon commencement of this case the diocese took Bzdyra out of circulation—as he was a fully active priest until that time,” said the plaintiff’s lawyer, Joel T. Faxon. “This is the only time in my twenty-year career where we were able to actually have a pedophile priest put on the shelf—which protected any number of children from potential abuse.” .

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

UPDATE: Judge sets Feit’s bond at $750,000 in Irene Garza case

TEXAS/ARIZONA
The Monitor

LORENZO ZAZUETA-CASTRO KRISTIAN HERNANDEZ | STAFF WRITER

UPDATE 12:15 p.m. : A Maricopa County Judge set a $750,000 bond for John Feit Tuesday morning following the unsealing of his indictment in Hidalgo County.

During his arraignment Feit stated he plans to fight extradition.

“My instinct is to fight extradition,” Feit said as he stood before the judge. “This whole thing makes no sense because the crime in question took place in 1960.”

Feit was charged with first degree murder punishable by up to life in prison. His next court appearance was scheduled for Feb. 24.

UPDATE 11:57 a.m. : Hidalgo County District Attorney Rick Rodriguez will not comment on the case at this time but said the process to have John Feit extradited to the area is underway.

UPDATE 11:45 a.m. : Presiding Judge Mario Ramirez did not set a bond after unsealing the John Feit indictment Wednesday morning.

Judge Luis Singletary will be responsible for the bond. Singleterry said he would not set a bond until Feit was extradited back to McAllen.

UPDATE 11:30 a.m. : Indictment states John Feit caused the death of Irene Garza by asphyxiation.

UPDATE 11:10 a.m. : A grand jury indictment accusing former Sacred Heart priest of the April 16, 1960 murder of Irene Garza was unsealed Wednesday morning at the 332nd Hidalgo County District Court.

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.

Video: Former McAllen priest John Feit says he’ll fight extradition from Arizona

ARIZONA/TEXAS
Valley Central

John Feit — the former McAllen priest accused of killing beauty queen Irene Garza in April 1960 — told an Arizona judge Wednesday that he’ll fight extradition to Texas.

Feit appeared in court Wednesday morning in Maricopa County, Arizona.

When Feit said he opposed extradition to Texas, the judge set a $750,000 cash-only bond.

“This whole thing makes no sense to me because the crime in question took place in 1960,” Feit said, according to a video recording of the court appearance published on the Maricopa County website.

The judge scheduled the next hearing for Feb. 24.

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.

Ex-priest fighting extradition in 56-year-old murder case

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

By Aaron Nelsen
February 10, 2016

McALLEN — A former priest in custody for the murder of a McAllen teacher in 1960 is contesting his extradition to Texas, authorities said Wednesday.

John Feit, 83, was arrested Tuesday in Phoenix on a murder charge in the death by asphyxiation of 25-year-old Irene Garza.

Several months after Garza’s body was found, Feit was charged with assaulting another woman in nearby Edinburg. He fled the state and was declared a fugitive before surrendering. The case against him ended in a mistrial but in 1962, he pleaded no contest to aggravated assault and was fined $500.

According to various news sources, he entered Assumption Abbey, a Trappist monastery in southwest Missouri, in 1963. He left the church in 1972, and later married and had children. It wasn’t immediately clear how long he has been living in Arizona.

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

A judge has breathed new life into a priest sexual abuse case that has dogged the Archdiocese of Chicago for a decade

CHICAGO (IL)
Daily Journal

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 10, 2016

CHICAGO — A judge has breathed new life into a priest sexual abuse case that has dogged the Archdiocese of Chicago for a decade.

Cook County Circuit Judge Clare McWilliams ruled Tuesday that those who were sexual abuse victims of former priest Daniel McCormack after September 2000 can seek punitive damages from the archdiocese if their lawsuits proceed to trial.

McWilliams found it reasonably likely that victims’ attorneys could prove the archdiocese “showed utter indifference” to children’s safety because it ordained McCormack despite knowing he’d engaged in sexual misconduct.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to abusing five children and was sentenced to five years in prison.

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

Catholic bishops not obliged to report clerical child abuse, Vatican says

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Rome
Wednesday 10 February 2016

The Catholic church is telling newly appointed bishops that it is “not necessarily” their duty to report accusations of clerical child abuse and that only victims or their families should make the decision to report abuse to police.

A document that spells out how senior clergy members ought to deal with allegations of abuse, which was recently released by the Vatican, emphasised that, though they must be aware of local laws, bishops’ only duty was to address such allegations internally.

“According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds,” the training document states.

The training guidelines were written by a controversial French monsignor and psychotherapist, Tony Anatrella, who serves as a consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family. The Vatican released the guidelines – which are part of a broader training programme for newly named bishops – at a press conference earlier this month and is now seeking feedback.

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.

Italy arrests priest for allegedly defrauding elderly savers

ITALY
Yahoo! News

By Isla Binnie

ROME (Reuters) – A Roman Catholic prelate has been arrested for allegedly defrauding hundreds of elderly people out of millions of euros through an elaborate money-laundering scheme, Italian police said on Wednesday.

Monsignor Patrizio Benvenuti, 64, originally from Argentina, has been placed under house arrest, and an international arrest warrant has been issued for French financier and property dealer Christian Ventisette, 54, whom authorities have not been able to find, finance police said in a statement.

Police said the pair persuaded 300 would-be savers in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Luxembourg, the United States and Italy to invest 30 million euros ($34 million), encouraged by the promise of helping a charitable foundation.

Contacted by Reuters, Benvenuti said he “substantially rejected” the accusations aimed at him personally. He added that he did not know about finance, suggesting Ventisette had been responsible.

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 joins campaign calling for inquiry to cover abuse within the Catholic Church

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Pressure on the Scottish Government to widen the scope of an inquiry into historic child abuse has grown after a priest joined calls for institutions of the Catholic Church to be covered.

Father Gerry Magee, Parish Priest of Saint Winin’s Church, Kilwinning, has agreed to chair White Flowers Alba, a group representing victims of abuse within the Catholic Church.

The group is demanding the Government extend the inquiry, which is being chaired by Susan O’Brien QC, to include the abuse suffered by anyone at non-residential settings run by the church, including schools and nurseries. At present, unlike a similar inquiry in England, the Scottish inquiry only covers those abused in residential care.

Under-fire education secretary Angela Constance will meet victims of abuse tomorrow [Thurs] at Holyrood to hear their concerns. Fr Magee will attend along with members of White Flowers Alba, and his involvement with the group has been backed by the Bishop of Galloway, Bill Nolan.

He said: “I feel that the government is letting the people down and has let the people down. These people were treated like dirt by their abusers and they are continuing to be treated like dirt by the government and the Church.

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 suspected in 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen arrested

ARIZONA/TEXAS
CBS News

Last Updated Feb 10, 2016

PHOENIX, Ariz. –A priest suspected in a 1960 Texas murder was arrested Tuesday in Scottsdale. The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the arrest of Father John Feit, reports CBS affiliate KPHO.

The body of Irene Garza, 25, was found in an irrigation canal in McAllen, Texas in April 1960. The last time anybody saw the beauty queen, she was going to confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Feit, 27 at the time, heard that confession. He was a visiting priest.

“48 Hours” aired a story about the case — “The Last Confession” — on March 1, 2014. The story was updated on July 26 that year.

Feit now faces a murder charge in Garza’s death, and is awaiting extradition to Texas, officials said.

Hidalgo County District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez said he presented the case against Feit to a grand jury last week. Ricardo said: “We felt that we had sufficient evidence to present to a grand jury. It was presented last week, and they came back with a true bill.”

While police interviewed hundreds of people in connection with Garza’s murder, Feit was their focus. He was the last person to see Garza alive.

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.

Ex-priest again fights suspicion in 1960 rape-slaying of woman last seen at confession

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

BRENDA RODRIGUEZ and DOUG J. SWANSON
Staff Writers

Editor’s note: This story appeared in the Nov. 3, 2002, editions of The Dallas Morning News.

McALLEN, Texas – Those who knew and loved Irene Garza remember her as serenely beautiful and deeply religious. When the 25-year-old schoolteacher was raped and murdered in 1960, some of them – devout Catholics like Miss Garza – began to ask a single, corrosive question: Could a man of God have committed such a horrible crime?

Forty-two years later, they’re still asking it.

Not long after Miss Garza’s muddy, battered body was pulled from a murky canal, the Rev. John Feit, a Catholic priest, denied killing her. Many in McAllen believed he was lying.

As police try to reignite the cold investigation, Mr. Feit continues to insist he is innocent. “I did not kill Irene Garza,” he said recently.

And many persist in their suspicion that he’s not telling the truth. Clint Mussey, McAllen’s police chief in 1960, says he strongly suspected Mr. Feit at the time. That feeling hasn’t abated.

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.

Anatomy of a murder case

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

Editor’s note: This timeline of events appeared in the Nov. 21, 2004, editions of The Dallas Morning News.

John Feit has been the prime suspect in Irene Garza’s rape and murder since April 1960, when she vanished after going to church in McAllen on the night before Easter. Here are key dates in the case:

1960

March 23: A man attacks Maria America Guerra, 20, while she prays alone at a church in Edinburg. He flees after she bites his finger and screams. Ms. Guerra later identifies the man as Father Feit. A witness says she saw Father Feit running from the church shortly after the screaming.

April 16: Irene Garza, 25, disappears after going to Sacred Heart Catholic Church near her McAllen home. Her parents, with whom she lives, tell police she phoned a priest about 6:45 p.m. to arrange for a confession and promised to return home soon. Several parishioners say they saw her that evening at the church, which had long lines of people waiting to make confessions. Her car is found about a block from the church.

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.

D.A. Loses Appeal In Msgr. Lynn Case; Bail Motion May Be Next

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2016

By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams lost an appeal in state Superior Court this morning in his crusade to keep Msgr. William J. Lynn behind bars.

Williams had asked the full, nine-member court to review a Dec. 22nd decision by a three-court panel of Superior Court judges that reversed Lynn’s conviction and ordered a new trial. But in a one-sentence decision released this morning, the Superior Court announced that the D.A.’s application “requesting reargument” of the case had been “DENIED.”

Lynn has remained behind bars pending appeals in the case. The 64-year-old monsignor is currently working for 19 cents an hour as the prison librarian at the State Correctional Institute in Waymart, Pa. But now that the state Superior Court has ruled on the D.A.’s appeal, it will surprise nobody if Lynn’s lawyers file a motion for bail.

Meanwhile, the D.A. has a decision to make; whether he will appeal the state Superior Court decision overturning Lynn’s conviction to the state Supreme Court, where he has been successful in the past. The D.A. has not yet issued any public pronouncements on what he will do. But in a press conference last month, Williams vowed to do whatever was necessary to keep Lynn in jail.

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.

Victims seek “action, not apology” from bishop

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Feb. 10

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

Springfield’s bishop is issuing an apology when he should be protecting kids, exposing predators, punishing enablers and releasing abuse records. Tangible steps will do more to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded that all the words, gestures and apologies.

[MassLive]

Bishop Mitchell Rozanski’s priorities are backwards. The actual safety of innocent kids trumps the purported return of wayward believers. There are 48 publicly accused Springfield area child molesting clerics. What’s Rozanski doing to help make sure they’re in treatment or supervised or being investigated, charged, prosecuted or kept away from kids today?

Bishops’ apologies often sound good but are largely public relations. They don’t protect a single child, expose a single predator, punish a single concealer or deter a single cover up.

The diocese should take tangible steps so that the church no longer will need to give apologies. The goal should be no more victims.

Victims can heal from clergy sex crimes with or without bishops’ words. Kids, however, cannot protect themselves from predator priests without bishops’ actions. Rozanski should warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about two priests who molested in Springfield, are still priests now but live elsewhere, unsupervised, among unsuspecting families.

They are

— Fr. Albert J. “Al” Blanchard. A girl reported having been abused by Blanchard, church officials found her claims to be credible and Blanchard “accepted responsibility” for his behavior and agreed to stay away from minors. He went on to become a certified social worker and “help” street kids in the western Boston suburbs, according to BishopAccountability.org, an independent web-based archive.

In 2009, Blanchard was a volunteer in the Springfield diocese, as a co-leader of a support group for families of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people. The support group included teenagers. Blanchard’s victim complained to the diocese. The diocese did not remove Blanchard from the volunteer position until a news reporter called them a year after the victim’s complaint. As recently as 2006, church officials let Blanchard teach CCD classes.

— Fr. David M. Farland. Here’s what BishopAccountability.org reports about him: Permanently removed from ministry in 2002. Name not publicly released until 3/06. Accusation of abuse of a minor in the early 1990’s, according to the diocese. The matter was handled internally by his superiors who removed Farland from any ministry with access to minors according to Diocesan spokesman. On medical leave in 1994. Last assignment was St. Michael’s cathedral. Admin. process found allegations credible. Life of Prayer & Penance. May be living in RI.

Rozanski should take immediate steps to alert police, prosecutors, parishioners, parents and the public about ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Fr. Farland and Blanchard. These two predator priests could be assaulting kids and young people today. They could be in Springfield today or this weekend, visiting old parishioners and hurting their kids.

With real outreach by Rozanski, Fr. Farland and Blanchard might even be prosecuted, convicted and imprisoned, sparing others decades of devastating pain.

(Rozanski may claim one or both of these priests have been defrocked. But changing a predator’s job title doesn’t change his or her actual behavior. Catholic officials can’t recruit, educate, ordain, hire, supervise, train, transfer and shield offenders but suddenly cut ties and deny responsibility once the offenders are caught. Rozanski is responsible for the safety of his flock. That includes warning his flock about those who assault kids and may do so again.)

Presumably, Rozanski’s letter is intended to bring healing. But wounded adults can heal themselves, with or without action by bishops. Innocent kids and vulnerable adults, however, cannot protect themselves from predators without action by bishops.

Rozanski should put announcements in every parish bulletin at the first opportunity, begging those who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by Blanchard or Fr. Farland to step forward and call police.

We hope that every single person who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes in western Massachusetts will find the courage to speak up. We hope they’ll call the independent professionals in law enforcement, not the biased and often self-serving bureaucrats in church offices. And we hope they’ll seek independent sources of help, by confiding in therapists, social workers or support groups like ours.

By breaking their silence, victims, witnesses and whistleblowers can find healing, protect others, expose wrongdoers and deter cover ups.

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.

Despite new witnesses, South Texas DA refuses to pursue ex-priest in 1960 murder case

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

BROOKS EGERTON begerton@dallasnews.com
Staff Writer

Published: 10 February 2016

Editor’s note: This story appeared in the Nov. 21, 2004, editions of The Dallas Morning News.

McALLEN, Texas – Police thought they had cracked the sensational old murder case and finally could make an arrest. They thought their new witnesses might finally mean justice for Irene Garza, a schoolteacher who vanished from church on Easter weekend in 1960 after meeting a young priest named John Feit.

The police, however, ran into an immovable opponent on their own side of the law: veteran Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra, who refused to prosecute.

Mr. Guerra publicly criticized investigators’ work and called the case unsolvable unless “you believe pigs can fly.” He refused for months to take it to a grand jury before relenting under pressure from the victim’s family. He had assistant prosecutors present evidence this year – but they had “no targets in mind,” Mr. Guerra acknowledged recently, and the secret proceeding ended with no indictment.

The main obstacles to prosecution, Mr. Guerra said, are contradictory physical evidence gathered in 1960 and the new witnesses’ unreliability.

But old police records obtained by The Dallas Morning News call that explanation into question, as do interviews with the new witnesses.

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.

Ex-Catholic priest, 83, is arrested for the murder of beauty queen, 25, whose body was found face down in a canal 56 years ago, days after he heard her confession

TEXAS
Daily Mail (UK)

By WILLS ROBINSON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

A former Catholic priest who is now an 83-year-old married grandfather has been charged with murdering a 25-year-old beauty queen in 1960 after hearing her confession.

Irene Garza, a second grade teacher once crowned Miss South Texas, was last seen alive heading to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, Texas, to see John Feit, then 27, the day before Easter, almost 56 years ago.

Five days later her lifeless body was found wrapped in burlap, face down in a nearby canal. An autopsy later found she had been raped while unconscious and suffocated.

Feit was considered the prime suspect for more than half a century, but was finally arrested on Tuesday in Scottsdale, Arizona.

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Cardinals’ council formally proposes two new Vatican offices

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Feb. 10, 2016

VATICAN CITY

The nine cardinals advising Pope Francis on reforming the Catholic church’s central bureaucracy have submitted a final proposal for the creation of two new high-level Vatican offices, a spokesman said Tuesday.

The Council of Cardinals have finalized their recommendations for a new Laity-Family-Life office and a Justice-Peace-Migrants office, said Vatican spokesman Jesuit Fr. Federico Lombardi.

The cardinals’ group had been meeting with the pope in Rome Monday and Tuesday for the 13th of its in-person meetings. The group is advising the pontiff on reforming the Vatican bureaucracy, commonly known as the Roman Curia.

The idea for two new high-level Vatican offices has been discussed for months. Lombardi said it is now up to the pope to determine what to do with the proposals.

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: Chicago Archdiocese can be punished for its part in McCormack abuse case

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

Manya Brachear Pashman
Chicago Tribune

A decade after former Roman Catholic priest Daniel McCormack was arrested for molesting children at his West Side church, a Cook County judge has ruled that victims abused by McCormack after September 2000 can seek punitive damages against the Chicago Archdiocese if their lawsuits go to trial.

In a six-page ruling issued Tuesday, Cook County Circuit Judge Clare McWilliams wrote that it was reasonably likely that victims’ lawyers could prove to a jury that by ordaining McCormack and assigning him to parishes, the archdiocese acted with “utter disregard” and therefore deserves to be punished.

While the ruling only applies to this one case, scheduled for trial July 22, it’s likely to guide future civil cases involving McCormack. Furthermore, if cases make it to the trial stage and juries impose punitive damages, it could cost the church millions on top of what it has already paid out to compensate victims of the convicted sex offender.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to molesting five boys and was sentenced to five years in prison. His case led to an overhaul of Chicago church policy and has cost the archdiocese millions of dollars in settlements, which insurance no longer covers. Every case has been settled before making it to trial.

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 abuse commission member responds to leave of absence controversy

ROME
Natonal Catholic Reporter

Marie Collins | Feb. 9, 2016

VIEWPOINT

Editor’s Note: Marie Collins is an Irish sexual abuse survivor and a member of Pope Francis’ Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. She wrote the following statement for NCR following the commission’s decision Saturday that fellow member Peter Saunders take a leave of absence from their work.

As a survivor of child clerical sexual abuse I spent many years silent, then many years speaking out to expose the way the Catholic Church had protected itself and abandoned children to the abusers in its midst. The anger I felt at the continuing reluctance by many Church leaders to report the perpetrators, to cooperate with civil authorities, to treat survivors with justice was overwhelming.

Then came the Pope’s decision in 2013 to set up the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors and my own appointment to that body. This Commission was being put in place to work on devising policy and structural change which could be recommended to the Pope to improve child protection in the future and ensure that all church leaders would implement these policies.

I had to decide if there was any hope that this Commission, through its advice to the Pope, would bring about permanent change within the universal Church or would it be a wasted effort, just a PR exercise. In the end I decided that if there was any hope at all, of protecting children in the future better than in the past, then I should take part.

You do not need to be a survivor to be passionate about the safety of children, about ending the horror of child rape and about change in the Church. I have found the members of the Commission to be sincere individuals contributing from their own area of expertise to the development of new policies.

They are working towards the implementation throughout the world of best practice in safeguarding, education in the area of abuse and justice for survivors. Policies produced are then recommended to the Pope. They are not pawns complicit in a PR exercise but good people with the safety of children at heart.

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.

Collins: Abuse commission member’s leave followed difficult discussions on group’s purpose

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Feb. 10, 2016

ROME
One of the members of Pope Francis’ commission on issues of clergy sexual abuse has responded to the controversy sparked by the group’s decision to ask another of its members to take a leave of absence from their work.

Marie Collins, an Irish abuse survivor who is one of the 17 members of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, writes Wednesday in a statement for NCR that the leave of absence request arose after a “difference in understanding of the mission and the powers” of the group.

The decision taken by the group, she states, was to ask fellow member Peter Saunders to “take leave of absence to decide how he could contribute to the Commission.”

Collins also strongly refutes allegations made by other abuse survivors that members of the commission believe the sexual abuse crisis has ended and is “behind us already.”

“This is not true,” she writes. “It’s for the very reason that it is NOT behind us that the Commission members are working so hard to change things.”

Collins is writing Wednesday in the first public response from a commission member to the controversy over the leave request for Saunders, a British abuse survivor and founder of the UK’s National Association for People Abused in Childhood.

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Judge: Chicago Archdiocese can be punished for part in McCormack sex abuse case

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Chicago Tribune

February 10, 2016

By Manya Brachear Pashman

Read original article

A decade after defrocked Roman Catholic priest Daniel McCormack was arrested for molesting children at his West Side church, a Cook County judge has ruled that victims abused by McCormack after September 2000 can seek punitive damages against the Chicago Archdiocese if their lawsuits go to trial.

In a six-page ruling issued Tuesday, Cook County Circuit Judge Clare McWilliams wrote that it was reasonably likely that victims’ lawyers could prove to a jury that by ordaining McCormack and assigning him to parishes, the archdiocese acted with “utter disregard” and therefore deserves to be punished.

While this ruling is based on a motion filed in only one victim’s case, scheduled for trial July 22, it’s likely to guide future civil cases involving McCormack. Furthermore, if cases make it to the trial stage and juries impose punitive damages, it could cost the church millions on top of what it has already paid out to compensate victims of the convicted sex offender.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to molesting five boys and was sentenced to five years in prison. His case led to an overhaul of Chicago church policy and has cost the archdiocese millions of dollars in settlements, which insurance no longer covers. Every case has been settled before making it to trial.

“We have a long history of trying to deal responsibly with these cases to resolve them in a fair and compassionate manner,” said John O’Malley, an attorney for the archdiocese. “But sometimes you can’t do that for one reason or another and the case winds up in court, as this one did. We will continue to act responsibly and compassionately because that’s what we’re about.”

Allegations against McCormack became public in 2006, four years after Cardinal Francis George urged America’s bishops to remove any priest from ministry for a single act of sexual abuse.

But the cardinal himself, when notified that McCormack had been taken into custody by Chicago police in August 2005 for allegedly abusing a boy, did not remove him from ministry until a second arrest in January 2006. Later, outside auditors commissioned by the cardinal uncovered more than 30 missteps by the archdiocese in its handling of the McCormack case. So far, all of the civil suits have been settled before making it to trial.

Eugene Hollander, the attorney for a man who says he was sexually assaulted twice at St. Agatha in the North Lawndale neighborhood in September 2000, said the discovery process for the most recent lawsuits has uncovered more damning evidence that church officials failed to follow their own policies created in the early 1990s and ignored manifold signs that McCormack presented a threat long before that first arrest.

“Even Cardinal George testified in this case, ‘We acted like we were in silos, we didn’t share information, we should have done more,'” Hollander said, referring to the video testimony of George recorded in 2014.

During a hearing on the motion last week, Hollander said witnesses have testified that as an undergraduate at Niles College, McCormack molested a seminarian who had passed out drunk — misconduct that was reported to a counselor at Niles but never documented.

Depositions also revealed that years later when McCormack went to Mexico to learn Spanish with other students from Mundelein Seminary, they observed him hitting on a young man who appeared to be a minor, Hollander said. In reporting that to seminary officials, one of the seminarians added that he recalled McCormack engaging in oral sex with other seminarians at Niles, Hollander said.

When the then-rector of Mundelein Seminary, Gerald Kicanas, now the bishop of Tucson, Ariz., and then-vice rector Msgr. John Canary confronted McCormack, he admitted it, Hollander said, and the leaders notified Cardinal Joseph Bernardin. Yet, even though standard protocol called for expelling a seminarian who acted out in this way, Hollander said, Bernardin ordained McCormack in 1994.

“A jury could find that the defendants were aware that there was a problem of priests and pastors abusing individuals in their official capacity, and yet were reckless in investigating an individual who was training to become a priest when questionable circumstances, some involving borderline-consensual sexual activity, kept occurring,” McWilliams wrote in her ruling.

The judge pointed out that policies established by Bernardin’s own Commission on Clerical Sexual Misconduct called for “documenting seminarians as they progressed in their studies” and unifying the file system to maintain consistent records after they become priests.

McCormack’s first assignment happened to be at St. Ailbe Catholic Church on the South Side, which “was recovering from its own sex abuse scandal at the time he was appointed.” Two other clerics, John Calicott and the late Victor Stewart, have been accused of abusing minors there.

“As such, it is clear the defendants knew and recognized that there was a serious issue of clerical misconduct and recognized that they needed to take active measures to prevent dangerous individuals from being placed in a position where they would be a threat to the well-being of others,” McWilliams said.

During the hearing, archdiocese attorney Jim Geoly argued that the court should prevent inflammatory claims that stir the emotions of a jury and lead to an unfair trial.

“This is an inflammatory allegation, it is child sexual abuse,” Geoly said. “And the court needs to be very careful about inviting the jury to vent anger unless the evidence is really there to support that kind of punitive damage claim.”

That McCormack might have had consensual sexual relations during seminary shouldn’t lead the archdiocese automatically to presume he’s a threat, he said. Geoly also argued that the archdiocese is at a disadvantage because the records from McCormack’s psychological evaluations after concerns arose in seminary have been sealed by the court.

“We actually requested to use the records because we believe they help us,” Geoly said.

Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University and an advocate for victims of clergy sex crimes, said punitive damages are uncommon in abuse cases, namely because the Supreme Court has discouraged them in personal injury cases over the last decade.

“These are the kinds of cases that might trigger a jury to give a large punitive damage even if there’s not proven compensatory damage,” she said, adding that a majority of abuse cases end up being settled and rarely go to trial.

She said such rulings can threaten dioceses financially since insurance often doesn’t cover punitive damages. But that would not be a jury’s problem, she said. Jurors’ main consideration is how much does it take for the defendant to start listening and do the right thing for the public interest.

Betsy Bohlen, chief operating officer for the archdiocese, said insurance no longer covers any claims involving McCormack, and those cases alone have strained the archdiocese — both spiritually and financially.

“There is no doubt there are a lot of things that have suffered,” Bohlen said. “Our own people have suffered in terms of the victims. And that’s a great sin that has happened to people who are faithful people. It’s created significant credibility problems in a world that’s secularizing.”

Though the archdiocese has maintained Bernardin’s pledge years ago that no money from the collection plate would be used to cover sex abuse settlements, the scandal has had an impact on the long-term financial stability of the church. So far, the sale of unused real estate has covered the costs, Bohlen said.

“We’ve had a plan in place for selling real estate based on market conditions and what makes sense for that real estate in a way that doesn’t create any fire sales,” she said. “We’re limited in the kind of investments we can make because those funds have gone elsewhere.”

According to the archdiocese, it has paid out a total of $139 million in clerical sexual abuse claims, but it would not release the total for McCormack settlements. However, last fall, it had received at least 30 substantiated claims against McCormack.

“We have always held that the amounts of settlements are not ours to disclose,” a spokeswoman said, adding that the archdiocese is “disappointed in the ruling and will respond in court at the appropriate time.”

mbrachear@tribpub.com

Twitter @TribSeeker

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EL PARAÍSO DE LOS PEDERASTAS: DE MACIEL A NUESTROS DÍAS

MEXICO
SinEmbargo

Por Shaila Rosagel febrero 10, 2016

Distintos testimonios y documentos acusan que las violaciones sexuales de menores por parte de sacerdotes habrían iniciado hace décadas, pero siempre existe una especie de protección por parte de la alta jerarquía católica y de las autoridades civiles encargadas de investigar.

Ciudad de México, 10 de febrero (SinEmbargo).– En marzo de 2015 el Papa Francisco dijo en entrevista con Valentina Alazraki, corresponsal de Televisa en el Vaticano, que el fundador de la Legión de Cristo, Marcial Maciel, era un “gran enfermo” y que “sería raro” que no tuviera un “padrinito”, por ahí, que encubrió las acusaciones en su contra por casos de abuso sexual cometidos contra de cientos de niños.

“Uno puede presumir que sí (hubo encubrimiento), aunque siempre en justicia hay que presumir la inocencia, pero sería raro que no tuviera algún padrinito por ahí, medio engañado, medio que, que sospechaba y no supiera”, le dijo.

Marcial Maciel Degollado fue un “depredador sexual”, aseguran sus víctimas. En noviembre de 1997 ocho de ellas, ex Legionarios de Cristo, publicaron una carta dirigida al entonces Papa Juan Pablo II, luego de que ese mismo años hubieron público a través del diario Hartford Courant de Connecticut, Estados Unidos, el abuso sexual que sufrieron.

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Missbrauch: Ruhrbistum untersuchte über 190 Hinweise

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Essen

[The Essen diocese has received 192 reports of sexual violence. The number is based on evidence presented by victims and by the diocese’s own research. All personnel files of living priests were audited by an external firm. The allegations date back to the early 1950s and many of the accused have died and some could not be identified by name.]

Sämtliche Mitarbeiter des Bistums Essen nahmen an Präventionsschulungen teil.

Seit Bekanntwerden des Missbrauchsskandals in der katholischen Kirche vor sechs Jahren lagen dem Bistum Essen insgesamt 192 Hinweise auf sexualisierte Gewalt vor. Grundlage dafür waren sowohl Hinweise von Opfern wie auch eigene Recherchen. Zudem wurden sämtliche Personalakten lebender Priester durch eine externe Anwaltskanzlei geprüft. Die Vorwürfe reichen bis zum Beginn der 1950er Jahre zurück, viele der Beschuldigten sind bereits verstorben, einige konnten namentlich nicht ermittelt werden.

Diese Hinweise betreffen Priester, Diakone, Ordensangehörige sowie haupt- und ehrenamtlich tätige Mitarbeiter. Von den 58 beschuldigten Priestern sind 42 verstorben. Unter den 35 beschuldigten Ordensangehörigen sind 14 Ordenspriester (davon acht verstorben) und 21 Ordensschwestern (davon 11 verstorben). 12 Priester wurden strafrechtlich verfolgt, 7 von ihnen auch verurteilt. 8 Priester wurden auch kirchenrechtlich verurteilt, 7 Verfahren sind noch nicht abgeschlossen.

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Jewish Care Victoria responds to The Age article, and individual concerned responds

AUSTRALIA
Manny Waks

10/2/2016

​In response to yesterday’s article in Melbourne, Victoria’s The Age newspaper, Jewish Care has issued a public statement, which is reproduced below. Below that is the response by the individual referred to in Jewish Care’s statement.

Jewish Care public statement

Bill Appleby, Jewish Care CEO formally responds to an article that has been published in The Age newspaper on February 10, 2016 entitled Yeshivah Centre Abuse Victims Fear Bullying, Intimidation.

Last December, we announced that we would assist the Yeshivah Centre in the operation of their Redress Scheme which was established to offer assistance to victims of child sexual abuse.

Jewish Care agreed to operate a confidential 1800 number and email address for abuse victims. In addition, our President Mike Debinski was engaged in a personal and separate capacity to oversee the operation of the Scheme.

Our Board agreed to assist Yeshivah because we felt that we were uniquely and appropriately placed to offer assistance to the victims and that we have the relevant expertise in the area to most effectively respond to survivors of abuse; ensuring a caring and empathetic initial response to what is no doubt a traumatic disclosure.

The Board and I are extremely disappointed with the article as it contains a number of serious factual errors. Unfortunately, Jewish Care has been mentioned in The Age article as having breached a victim’s trust after an email sent to the Board of Jewish Care was sent to a member of the Committee of Management at the Yeshivah Centre.

It is absolutely vital to understand that the author of the email mentioned in the article did not identify as a victim, nor did the email contain any victim information. The content of the email only raised an issue of perceived governance concerns. Those concerns have been clarified by the Board with the assistance of independent legal advice.

The article also stated that Jewish Care is the administrator of the new sexual abuse Redress Scheme. This is incorrect. Jewish Care is not the administrator of the Yeshivah Redress Scheme. The Scheme is administered independently of Jewish Care and I have previously described our limited role above.

We believe the implication that Jewish Care Directors released information about a victim to another body is defamatory and formally requested The Age newspaper on the 9th February to immediately retract these inaccuracies.

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Break in ‘unholy’ cold case: Police arrest former beauty queen’s priest in her 1960 killing

TEXAS
Washington Post

Yanan Wang February 10

Fifty-six years ago, a young schoolteacher went to church during Holy Week and never came home.

The next day, a few of her possessions were found scattered along the road outside the local Sacred Heart Church, as Texas Monthly recounted. One high-heeled shoe, a patent-leather handbag, a piece of crumpled white lace.

The following week, her body was found, fully dressed and badly bruised, retrieved from a canal in which someone had left her to decompose, her corpse washed clean of evidence. An autopsy found that she had been raped while comatose.

This was Irene Garza, a 25-year-old, dark-haired belle of McAllen, Tex., who was once named Miss All South Texas Sweetheart. She was her high school’s homecoming queen, the first person in her family to graduate from college and a teacher for disadvantaged children.

Above all, Garza was a devout Catholic. The last place she was seen was at Confession.

The last person to see her? According to Texas Monthly, it was her priest.

The then-27-year-old John Feit was known to be easygoing, if not a little aloof. He had dark hair and horn-rimmed glasses, according to Texas Monthly. On the night of Garza’s disappearance, the priest heard Confessions and celebrated midnight Mass. That was the extent of his activities that night — or, at least, the extent of what he has disclosed to authorities in the last five decades.

Nevertheless, speculation festered. Many in the valley town knew that there was a chance Feit could have been Garza’s killer, but few dared to say it out loud. He was never indicted in the years just after her slaying, nor was he indicted when the case against him was presented to a grand jury in 2004. …

In he beginning, the evidence pointing to Feit was telling but not sufficient to sustain a charge, officials said. While the investigation into Garza’s slaying went on for months after her death, Feit was charged with a separate but eerily similar crime. At a Sacred Heart Church in a neighboring town, a college student named Maria America Guerra reported that she had been attacked three weeks before Garza disappeared.

While she was kneeling at the Communion rail, CBS reported, a man matching Feit’s description grabbed her from behind and tried to put a rag over her mouth.

When asked to pick her assailant out of a police lineup, Guerra chose Feit. When he took a polygraph test and denied that he had harmed either Garza or Guerra, the examiner concluded that he was lying.

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Ex-Priest John Feit arrested in 1960 murder of Irene Garza

TEXAS
ArkLaTex

by ALASTAIR JAMIESON and PHIL HELSEL

A former priest has been arrested over the 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen and schoolteacher Irene Garza, officials and campaigners said Tuesday.

John Feit, 83, was arrested in Scottsdale, Arizona on a murder charge out of Hildago County, Texas — where the one-time Miss South Texas was found dead in a canal, authorities said.

Feit was jailed pending extradition to Texas, a spokesman for the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in Arizona said in a statement.

His arrest came after a Texas grand jury indicted him on the murder charge, NBC affiliate KPNX in Phoenix reported. It wasn’t immediately clear what new information, if any, led to the charge.

Twenty-five-year-old Garza was last seen at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen on April 16, 1960. Her body was found April 21 in a canal, according to the Texas Rangers website.

Her family set up a campaign website, Justice for Irene, to sustain public interest in the case even after five decades passed. An update late Tuesday on the site’s associated Facebook page said: “Justice has been served.”

“Charges are being filed… that’s a major break in this 56-year-old case,” it said.

Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director of campaign group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said she was “deeply grateful” Feit was apprehended.

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Sharon Knight MP slams Cardinal George Pell in parliament

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Matthew Dixon
Feb. 10, 2016

WENDOUREE MP Sharon Knight has made an impassioned attack on Ballarat’s Cardinal Pell in a speech she believes reflects the disappointment of much of the city at his failure to return.

Ms Knight told Parliament if Cardinal George Pell’s health condition will be proven to be a “sham” if he ever returns to Australia.

During the speech in the Victorian Parliament on Wednesday morning Ms Knight made it clear Cardinal Pell’s decision meant he should never return to the country.

“Importantly, the Commissioner (for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse) found that Cardinal Pell’s health is not expected to improve so that the risk of his travelling is removed,” she said.

“So, George Pell, stay right where you are. I don’t ever expect to see you back in this country. I don’t expect that you will set foot in Ballarat ever again.”

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The controversy at Mount St. Mary’s goes national after professors are fired

MARYLAND
Washington Post

Susan Svrluga
February 9

Professors from universities across the country — from Stanford to North Carolina Central to the University of Nebraska to Harvard — signed a petition Tuesday calling on the Mount St. Mary’s University administration to reinstate professors who had been fired.

Within hours of being posted, the petition had more than 2,400 digital signatures, a symbol of the outrage from some in the campus community as well as in broader academic circles who viewed the terminations as retribution against faculty who had opposed the president. They also said the decisions threaten the academic freedom at the private Catholic university in Maryland and violate the school’s core principles.

Alumni wrote letters to the university’s board, parents emailed the Archdiocese, and students planned a day of fasting and prayer for the campus on Ash Wednesday.

The controversy began months ago, when the provost and some professors had raised concerns when the president asked for a list of students unlikely to succeed in college several weeks into the school year; one said it was too early to separate those who would do well from those likely to drop out. Simon Newman, the president, told professors, “there will be some collateral damage.”

Newman also said, as first reported by the student newspaper the Mountain Echo and independently confirmed by The Washington Post, that “this is hard for you because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you can’t. You just have to drown the bunnies … put a Glock to their heads.”

On Monday, many were shocked by the abrupt termination of a tenured professor who had objected to the president’s policies, and a law professor and former trustee who had been the adviser of the Mountain Echo, the student paper that published a special edition about the president’s student retention plan.

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Scandal? What Scandal? Philadelphia Inquirer Ignores Blockbuster Story of Bogus Accusations Against Priests In Its Own Backyard

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
TheMediaReport

One would think that the scandal of a drug-addled Philadelphia man making false abuse accusations against multiple Catholic priests – all of whom were convicted and landed in prison, where one has already died – would merit at least a tiny mention in Philly’s newspaper of record, the Philadelphia Inquirer. Heck, it was noteworthy enough to merit a huge cover story in Newsweek magazine only a couple weeks ago.

And indeed during the trials against these priests, the Inquirer gave wall-to-wall coverage with countless stories and hysterical headlines.

But the Inky’s editor-in-chief, Bill Marimow, has made it clear that he has no interest in informing his readers about a fraud being perpetrated right in his own backyard against the Catholic Church.

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Child abuse inquiry taking some evidence ‘as a matter of urgency

SCOTLAND
The Courier

An independent inquiry into the abuse of children in care is to take evidence from some seriously-ill and elderly victims “as a matter of urgency”, its chair has announced.

Susan O’Brien QC said that while the inquiry is “not quite ready” to call for survivors and witnesses to come forward, it had decided to take evidence from a small number of people.

The inquiry, which could take up to four years, will cover allegations of abuse of children in formal institutional care including faith-based organisations, children’s homes and secure care as well as those in foster care, long-term hospital care and boarding schools.

It covers the period “within living memory” up to December 17 2014 and will have the power to compel witnesses to attend and give evidence.

Ms O’Brien said it would be called the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry, adding that references to historical abuses “is misleading” and could deter survivors from coming forward.

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Scottish child abuse inquiry ‘not fit for purpose’, say victims

SCOTLAND
Common Space

Survivors of child abuse criticise narrow scope of inquiry ahead of government meeting

THE EXCLUSION of the Catholic Church and other religious institutions from the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has prompted heavy crticism from survivors’ groups.

The O’Brien Inquiry, established by the Scottish Government to investigate allegations of child abuse in residential settings and chaired by QC Susan O’Brien, has been criticised by In Care Abuse Survivors Scotland (INCAS), which wants the remit extended to include the Catholic Church. It said the government is ignoring the views of survivors of abuse.

In a letter to education secretary Angela Constance, quoted by the BBC, INCAS parliamentary officer Alan Draper said:

“The failure will result in institutions and organisations, who have covered up criminal activity, escaping public scrutiny, and prosecution.

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Catholic Church “let off the hook” in Scottish abuse probe

SCOTLAND
Premier

Wed 10 Feb 2016
By Antony Bushfield

The Catholic Church is being “let off the hook” for failing children, the In Care Abuse Survivors Scotland (INCAS) group has claimed.

It has called for the Scottish Government to include the faith in the country’s inquiry into the abuse of children in care.

The independent inquiry will be led by Susan O’Brien QC and will cover allegations of abuse of children in formal institutional care including faith-based organisations, children’s homes and secure care as well as those in foster care, long-term hospital care and boarding schools.

It will not cover the wider issue of abuse within the Church and has no powers to look at incidents in parishes or day schools.

INCAS spokesman Alan Draper is quoted by the BBC as saying the inquiry should “fit the purposes of survivors, not those institutions that have failed generations of children”.

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Child abuse inquiry: Angela Constance defends remit

SCOTLAND
BBC News

A Scottish government minister has defended its inquiry into child abuse after survivors’ groups called for its remit to be extended.

Campaigners have claimed institutions such as the Catholic Church and Boy Scouts could be “let off the hook”.

But Education Secretary Angela Constance said the scope of the inquiry was “very far reaching”.

And she said religious organisations were covered when they had looked after children in a residential capacity.

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has been tasked with “raising public awareness of the abuse of children in care, providing an opportunity for public acknowledgement of the suffering of those children and a forum for validation of their experience and testimony.”

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Indian priest claimed superiors knew he abused before

FLORIDA
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

The Catholic diocese of Palm Beach in Florida was not informed that a priest convicted there last year on charges related to child abuse had a similar history in India.

Strabane-born Fr John Gallagher began canon law proceedings last summer against the Florida diocese after he was disciplined for raising questions about the Indian priest’s conduct.

The case by the Irish priest against Bishop Gerald Barbarito now rests with the Vatican’s new tribunal of accountability, set up to investigate the actions of bishops when faced with child abuse allegations.

Fr Jose Palimattom, who began working in Palm Beach in late 2014, admitted showing obscene images to a minor there on January 4th 2015. He subsequently pleaded guilty, served a sentence, and was deported to India.

According to police reports of the case seen by The Irish Times, investigating officers were told by three people that Fr Palimattom admitted he abused a minor in India prior to his arrival in the US, and said church authorities in India were aware of this.

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Archdiocese knew of allegations against art teacher

NEW MEXICO
KOAT

[with video]

SANTA FE, N.M. —Deputies recently served a search warrant at the Archdiocese of Santa Fe as part of an investigation involving an art teacher arrested after being accused of sexually touching young female students.

Another search warrant was served at Santo Nino Catholic School, where Aaron Chavez, 47, worked.

Deputies were able to retrieve a laptop, SD cards and personnel files to assist in the investigation, documents show. Chavez currently faces five charges for inappropriately touching students.

According to court records, one of the victim’s parents reported the alleged abuse to the archdiocese nearly four years ago. Those records show the archdiocese did its own investigation, but concluded the allegation was unsubstantiated.

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Authorities arrest former priest in connection with murder case

TEXAS
Valley Morning Star

By KRISTIAN HERNANDEZ and LORENZO ZAZUETA-CASTRO Staff Writers

EDINBURG — The man suspected of killing a McAllen woman more than 50 years ago was arrested yesterday.

John Feit, a former priest with Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, was arrested by the Texas Rangers, Hidalgo County District Attorney’s Office investigators and McAllen police in Arizona. He was never charged with killing 25-year-old beauty queen Irene Garza in 1960, but was widely accused of the crime.

District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez con-firmed his office presented the case to the grand jury last Thursday, and it came back with an indictment.

“We had kept it quiet as much as we could — we sealed the indictment,” he said.

Rodriguez said the next step is to see whether or not Feit will contest his extradition to Texas or waive it.

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Father John Feit update: Priest suspected in 1960 murder case arrested in Arizona

ARIZONA
ABC 15

SCOTTSDALE, AZ – A priest wanted in the 1960 murder of a second grade school teacher was taken into custody in Scottsdale Tuesday night.

The Hidalgo County District Attorney’s Office arrested former priest John Feit in the murder of Irene Garza.

The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department arrested Feit outside of his apartment in Scottsdale.

According to ABC15 sister station KRGV.com , Feit is officially being charged with the murder of Garza. No one was ever arrested for the crime until Tuesday.

Feit has enjoyed life in the community in Arizona since the early 1970s. He’s married, has children and grandchildren and is a regular volunteer at his church.

Now, Feit will face charges for a crime he is accused of committing almost 56 years ago.

Feit spent time in the Rio Grande Valley in 1960 and was allegedly the last person to see Garza alive. She was 25 years old at the time.

The second grade teacher was going to confession at Sacred Heart Church the night before Easter Sunday, April 1960.

Feit heard her confession, but what happened after that was unknown. Garza never came back home.

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Priest suspected in 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen arrested in Scottsdale

ARIZONA
Tucson News Now

[with video]

By Catherine Holland

PHOENIX (KPHO/KTVK) –
A priest suspected in a 1960 Texas murder was arrested Tuesday in Scottsdale. The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the arrest of Father John Feit.

The body of Irene Garza, 25, was found in an irrigation canal in McAllen, TX in April 1960. The last time anybody saw the beauty queen, she was going to confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Feit, 27 at the time, heard that confession. He was a visiting priest.

“48 Hours” aired a story about the case — “The Last Confession” — on March 1, 2014. The story was updated on July 26 that year.

While police interviewed hundreds of people in connection with Garza’s murder, Feit was their focus. He was the last person to see Garza alive.

As the investigation continued, another young woman came forward and said Feit attacked her three weeks before Garza’s murder. Feit was tried in 1961, but the jury deadlocked. To avoid another trial, he pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and was fined $500.

No charges were filed against Feit in Garza’s murder. Feit eventually left McAllen, and the case went cold amid what many believed was a cover-up by the church.

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Former KRGV Reporter Surprised by Arrest in 56-Year-Old Murder Case

TEXAS
KRGV

[with video]

WESLACO- In 2003, CHANNEL 5 NEWS tracked down John Feit in Arizona. Even then, Irene Garza’s family had not given up hope to seek justice for her murder.

Former CHANNEL 5 NEWS reporter Kristine Galvan reported on the Irene Garza story. She said she was surprised about Feit’s arrest on Tuesday.

“Oh my gosh, this is an incredible development,” Galvan said. “I was completely floored when I learned… that John Feit had been arrested.”

Galvan reflected on the passage of so much time and the people attached to the case.

“It’s been decades,” Galvan said. “And if you think about all the people who were involved in the case, from 1960, most of them are not here. So for Irene’s family to have a shot at seeing justice done, this is a suspect who’s in his 80s, it’s just absolutely incredible.”

Galvan said she knows there is much ahead in Irene Garza’s case.

“This family just never gave up,” Galvan said. “We have to remember people are innocent until proven guilty. But I am just so happy for that family. They are at least getting to go through this process and allow the system to determine if this man killed their loved one.”

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Ex-Priest Arrested for 1960 Murder

TEXAS
KRGV

[with video]

MCALLEN – A former priest is in custody for a murder that happened in 1960. A grand jury indicted 83-year-old John Feit for the murder of Irene Garza, a McAllen elementary school teacher.

Garza was last seen alive heading to confession at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen, where Feit served as a priest. Five days later, two people found the 25-year-old’s partially clothed body in a canal.

There was a massive search for Garza’s murderer. City leaders spared no expense in attempts to find her killer. Investigators always considered Feit a person of interest in the case.

When they drained the canal where Garza’s body was discovered, they found an Eastman Kodaslide Viewer. Feit signed a statement admitting the Kodaslide Viewer belonged to him.

In 1960, police questioned him. His story changed over the course of questioning.

The Catholic diocese of San Antonio sent Feit away from the area. Feit wasn’t charged in the case; however, two people claimed he confessed to Garza’s murder.

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SNAP Organization Speaks Out on 56-Year-Old Murder Case

TEXAS
KRGV

WESLACO- An organization worked closely with Irene Garza’s family in her murder case.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests Director David Clohessy said the organization continued to follow the case for decades. The arrest of John Feit may now bring closure to Irene Garza’s family.

“Even though… Feit is yet to be convicted, just his arrest, we believe, will really be comfort for them and, quite frankly, make citizens of Arizona safer,” Clohessy said.

Clohessy said he can’t believe Feit was sent to Arizona to work at Catholic Charities as a suspected murderer.

“He was suspected of having murdered this young, vulnerable woman,” Clohessy said. “And yet, Catholic officials let him move to Phoenix, where he worked around very vulnerable young woman in Catholic Charities.”

Clohessy said he wants answers from the Catholic Diocese of Brownsville.

“We believe that Brownsville Catholic officials recruited, educated, ordained, hired, transferred, shielded Father Feit for decades,” Clohessy said.

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Authorities working to extradite former McAllen priest linked to 1960 murder

TEXAS
Valley Central

[with video]

BY ANALISE ORTIZ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9TH 2016

A former McAllen priest accused of killing Irene Garza nearly 60 years ago was taken into custody Tuesday.

The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office, who worked with the Texas Rangers, McAllen police investigators and the Hidalgo County District’s Attorney’s Office, arrested 83-year-old John Feit at his home in in Scottsdale, Arizona on Tuesday. He was later booked into Maricopa County jail.

An investigation into Garza’s death was launched after her body was pulled from an irrigation canal in McAllen in 1960.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests told CBS 4 News that the arrest is a victory for those who continued to fight for Garza.

“This is a win for Irene Garza. The credit, the vindication, the validation – it’s all theirs and we hope that each and every person that knew her and loved her sleeps a little easier tonight. And we believe that they will,” said SNAP Director David Clohessy.

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Ex-priest arrested in connection with 1960 killing of McAllen beauty queen

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

By Aaron Nelsen

McALLEN — A former priest who was a suspect in the death of a McAllen beauty queen in 1960 was arrested Tuesday in Arizona.

John Feit, who faces a murder charge in the death of 25-year-old Irene Garza, was taken into custody in Maricopa County,where he awaits extradition to Texas.

“We felt that we had sufficient evidence to present to a grand jury. It was presented last week, and they came back with a true bill,” said Ricardo Rodriguez, the district attorney of Hidalgo County.

Garza was a prom and homecoming queen at Pan American College, and the Miss All South Texas Sweetheart 1958.

On April 16, 1960, Garza visited Sacred Heart Church in McAllen where Feit — who was 27 at the time — was a priest. She planned to go to confession that evening but never returned home, her body was found days later in an irrigation canal.

Feit, now in his 80s, long has been the subject of intense scrutiny in the murder of Garza, a faith-driven school teacher, but was never arrested until now.

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Former priest arrested in 1960 slaying of McAllen schoolteacher

TEXAS/ARIZONA
The Dallas Morning News

Claire Z. Cardona Follow @clairezcardona Email ccardona@dallasnews.com
Published: February 9, 2016

The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department arrested former priest John Feit on Tuesday in the 1960 murder of a 25-year-old McAllen schoolteacher, officials said.

Feit, 83, was taken into custody on Tuesday afternoon outside his apartment in Scottsdale, Ariz., KRGV-TV reported.

The sheriff’s department arrested Feit on a murder charge from the Hidalgo County Prosecutor’s Office and the Texas Rangers, said Maricopa sheriff’s Deputy Joaquin Enriquez.

Feit will be charged after his initial appearance in front of a Texas judge. He is being held without bail until he can be extradited to Texas.

“Right now, he’s not going anywhere,” Enriquez said.

Irene Garza’s parents said their daughter planned to go to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen for a confession on April 16, 1960. Her body was found several days later in an irrigation ditch about a mile from the church where Feit was a priest.

An autopsy determined she had been raped and bludgeoned.

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Police: Ex-priest arrested in Scottsdale for murder

ARIZONA
Arizona Republic

Christopher Silavong, The Republic | azcentral.com February 9, 2016

An 83-year-old former priest was arrested on Tuesday in Scottsdale in connection with the 1960 slaying of a Texas beauty queen, authorities said.

John Feit was booked into 4th Avenue Jail in Phoenix and is awaiting extradition to Hidalgo County, Texas, where he is facing a murder charge, according to the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office.

In a statement released Tuesday night, sheriff’s spokesman Joaquin Enriquez said deputies assisted the Hidalgo County District Attorney’s Office and the Texas Rangers in making the arrest.

Irene Garza was 25 years old when her body was found in a canal in April 1960. At the time, Feit was a Catholic priest and considered a lead in the case. He left the priesthood, but accusations of his alleged involvement have continued to dog him.

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AZ–Priest arrested for TX murder; Victims respond

TEXAS/ARIZONA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 201

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org

A priest who has long lived in Arizona has been arrested for murdering a Texas girl. We are deeply grateful that John Feit has been apprehended

[The Monitor]

We are thrilled that Rene Guerra – who has refused to aggressively pursue a murder case involving a priest — was defeated at the polls and that newly elected prosecutor Ricardo Rodriguez honored his pledge to re-open this troubling case.

[The Monitor]

Guerra made biased and hurtful comments that will make it harder for police and prosecutors to pursue criminals (because he publicly and inappropriately attacked the honesty of a witness, which deters other witnesses from stepping forward)

[SNAP]

We hope that this move brings some hope to Garza’s family. And we hope that anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy crimes or cover ups in the Brownsville diocese will call police, expose wrongdoers, protect others and start healing.

We also hope that Brownsville Bishop Daniel Flores will use personal appeals, parish bulletins, church websites and pulpit announcements to beg others with information or suspicions about Feit to call law enforcement immediately. Now is no time for Catholic officials to act powerless or for citizens to be complacent. Every shred of evidence – no matter how small, old or seemingly insignificant – should be withheld from police and prosecutors.

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Ex-priest John Feit arrested in Irene Garza murder case from 1960

TEXAS/ARIZONA
CNN

[with video]

By Gary Tuchman, Scott Bronstein and Ed Payne, CNN
Wed February 10, 2016

(CNN) John Feit, a former Catholic priest, has been arrested in a 56-year-old murder case.

Irene Garza was last seen alive the night before Easter 1960 when Feit heard her confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, Texas. Five days later, searchers found the lifeless body of the 25-year-old former Miss South Texas face down in a canal.

Feit, 83, has long been the main suspect in the case, but he wasn’t arrested until Tuesday in Scottsdale, Arizona.

The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office arrested him on a murder charge out of the state of Texas, according to the Hidalgo County, Texas, Prosecutor’s Office and the Texas Rangers. Authorities are working to extradite him from Arizona.

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Ex-priest arrested in 1960 killing of Texas schoolteacher

TEXAS
Washington Times

By – Associated Press – Wednesday, February 10, 2016

MCALLEN, Texas (AP) – A former priest has been arrested in Arizona in the 1960 slaying of a 25-year-old Texas schoolteacher.

Eighty-three-year-old John Feit was arrested Tuesday by the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department and awaits extradition to Texas. Feit faces a murder charge in the death of Irene Garza.

Authorities say Garza visited Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, where Feit was a priest, on April 16, 1960. Garza had planned to go to confession that evening but never returned, and her body was found days later in an irrigation canal.

According to an autopsy, Garza died from a head injury. Feit was a suspect in the killing but was never charged in the case.

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Former priest arrested in 1960 murder of Texas schoolteacher

TEXAS/ARIZONA
Fox News

Authorities in Arizona arrested a former Catholic priest Tuesday in connection with the 1960 murder of a Texas schoolteacher.

John Feit, 83, was arrested by Maricopa County Sheriff’s deputies outside his apartment in Scottsdale, ABC 15 reported. He faces a murder charge in connection with the death of 25-year-old Irene Garza, of McAllen, Texas.

Garza, a former beauty queen, was last seen going to confession on Easter Saturday, 1960. Her body was found several days later in an irrigation ditch about a mile away from Sacred Heart Catholic Church, where Feit served as a priest. An autopsy showed that Garza had been raped and bludgeoned to death.

Feit was believed to have been the last person to see Garza alive, having heard her confession. He was questioned at the time of the woman’s murder and denied any involvement.

The Dallas Morning News reported that Feit was prosecuted on a charge of assault with intent to rape in connection with another incident earlier that year. However, the case resulted in a mistrial and he pleaded no contest to a charge of aggravated assault.

Feit left the priesthood in the 1970s, married and settled in Arizona.

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The Pope’s Pursuit of Global Relevance Should be Quashed Because of Continuing Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on February 10, 2016 by Betty Clermont

“The world looks to this great wisdom of yours,” the pope told China’s Xi Jinping. Francis “urged the world not to fear China’s growing power and conveyed a message of friendship” to the president in an interview published Feb. 2.

Pope Francis granted a 40-minute private audience to Iran president Hassan Rouhani on Jan. 26. If they discussed Iran’s alliance with Russia supporting Syrian president Bashar al-Assad’s “extermination” of his civilian population, it was not mentioned in the Vatican’s press release – a strange omission for a pope who is always urging compassion for the Assad’s refugees.

Pope Francis will meet with Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill and Cuban president Raul Castro on Feb. 12 in Cuba. Kirill is a close ally of Pres. Vladimir Putin, so the meeting has Putin’s approval. Kirill will be in Cuba at the invitation of Castro to celebrate the historic ties between the Russian Orthodox church and the island nation, a result of Cuba’s historical alliance with Russia. The meeting was probably arranged after Castro met Kirill in Moscow when he went to discuss with Putin “increased bilateral cooperation with Russia and the implementation of joint projects” last May and then flew directly to a private meeting with Pope Francis.

Pope Francis’ prestige outside the Catholic Church rests entirely on his being viewed as a moral authority. Yet recent events prove his continuing contempt for past, present and future victims of clerical sex abuse. The only outspoken member of the pope’s sex abuse commission was booted out on Feb. 6. “Peter Saunders has frequently argued that the panel is writing ineffectual guidelines instead of exposing predator priests who continue to molest children.” …

Peter Saunders, a British survivor of clerical sex abuse who was ousted from the pope’s Commission for the Protection of Minors, said that he felt betrayed by Pope Francis.

“Of course Pope Francis has established he is part of the problem,” Saunders said in an interview. “That breaks my heart because when I met him 18 months ago I thought there was a sincerity and a willingness to make things happen, and I am afraid that has been dashed now.”

“The way the Church and the commission operates,” Saunders said, “is also at the heart of why abuse within the Church is still so rampant and widespread.” He added: “It is because everything has to exist under conditions of secrecy and darkness and I am not prepared to work like that and I am not prepared to be silenced on an issue as important as child protection.”

“As a parent, it breaks my heart when I hear of serious allegations of abuse that are not going to be tackled.” Saunders said the notion that clerical sex abuse was a problem of past decades – an argument Vatican officials have assiduously promoted – had to be challenged. “This is not in any sense a historical issue or problem,” he said. “It has to be tackled now. The pope could do so much more and he is doing next to nothing.”

“This is a societal problem – but if the Church, the so-called moral leadership of the world, does not take a lead in this area it would quite rightly be considered morally bankrupt in every other area.”

Saunders now says he realizes the commission was always going to be about “smoke and mirrors” and that he is convinced the Church will never act alone to cure the “cancer” in its midst. “I made it clear that I would not be a member of a public relations exercise. The protection of our children is much more important than that.”

In fact, the commission was inaugurated as a “public relations exercise.”

On July 1, 2013, the United Nation’s Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) sent a request to the pope for “detailed information on all cases of child sexual abuse” committed by clergy and religious for the past 15 years and set Nov. 1 as a deadline for a reply.

Pope Francis responded to the CRC on Dec. 4 by stating his government would not disclose that information. He was criticized by the media for his response.

The next day, the creation of an “advisory” Commission on the Protection of Minors with no authority was announced.

Saunders also acknowledged that a Vatican tribunal supposedly instituted last June – reported as the pope’s “most significant move yet to deal with the sexual abuse scandals” by the media – to crack down on bishops who cover up for predators “exists in name only.” The new system gave the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith the authority to “judge bishops with regard to crimes of the abuse of office when connected to the abuse of minors.”

In a January report: “A former official in the Diocese of Regensburg (Germany) accused Cardinal Gerhard Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), of systematically covering up sexual abuse cases during his decade as bishop of the Bavarian diocese. Fritz Wallner, who once worked as chairman of Regensburg’s lay diocesan council, claims that the then-Bishop Müller and his vicar-general, Mgr Michael Fuchs, introduced what Mr. Wallner called, ‘The Regensburg System,’ which prevented such abuse cases from coming to light.” (Müller’s appointment of Fr. Peter Kramer, an already-convicted child sex abuser, as pastor in Regensberg, was well-known before Pope Francis promoted him to cardinal.)

Of course, if Pope Francis was really going to hold bishops accountable who failed to deal properly with clergy sexual abuse, he’d have to start with himself. As Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the pope advocated for convicted sex offender, Fr. Julio Grassi, and tried to discredit his young victims.

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Chris Marshall: Only one chance for child abuse inquiry

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL
Tuesday 09 February 2016

There’s a part in the Oscar-nominated Spotlight where a journalist assures an abuse survivor that previous failures to listen to his story will not be repeated this time around.

The film tells the real-life story of how The Boston Globe helped uncover sexual abuse in the Catholic Church amid claims it was systematically covered up by moving paedophile priests to different parishes.

But it also explores how the authorities and the media repeatedly failed to take accusations against the Church seriously.

The film was released just months after the Church in Scotland issued a “profound” apology to victims.

Archbishop Philip Tartaglia said Scottish bishops were “shamed and pained” by the abuse that had taken place.

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Gap in child sex abuse law leaves victims unprotected

TEXAS
KXAN

[with video]

By Brian Collister
Published: February 9, 2016,

AUSTIN (KXAN) — A once troubled teenager claims her church preacher and trusted family friend preyed on her weakness and molested her. But when she came forward, police said it was too late to press criminal charges.

Texas has laws to protect children from sexual abuse and seek justice for their abusers, but KXAN has discovered a gap in one of those laws, leaves some young victims unprotected.

The young woman we met recently says she fell into this gap in the law after she put her trust in a youth pastor at a Pflugerville church 10 years ago. She asked we not reveal her identity because she says the pastor molested her in 2006 when she was just 17 years old.

After troubles at home, she says the pastor invited her to live with his family so he could counsel her.

“I was going to their home to overcome my childhood abuse, and I trusted that he was going to fulfill that,” the young woman recounted to KXAN. “The physical touching started with a back adjustment and escalated very quickly to him coming into my room at night and pulling up my shirt, my bra, and touching me on the floor of my room.”

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Ex-St. George’s School chaplain now target of N.C. abuse probe

RHODE ISLAND
Boston Globe

By Bella English GLOBE STAFF FEBRUARY 10, 2016

In 1974, when the Rev. Howard H. White Jr. was quietly let go as assistant chaplain at St. George’s School in Middletown, R.I., after admitting to sexual misconduct with a male student, headmaster Tony Zane wrote White a letter telling him he “should not be in a boarding school” and “should seek psychiatric help.”

White went on to work at two other private schools, and neither reported complaints. But now North Carolina police are investigating a woman’s claim that, when she was a teenager, White sexually abused her at Grace Church in the Mountains in Waynesville, N.C., where he worked as a rector from 1984 to 2006. The investigation was first reported Saturday by the Providence Journal.

The woman, speaking publicly for the first time, told the Globe Tuesday that she was a sophomore in high school in the mid-1980s when White began to molest her in the church rectory, where he encouraged kids to spend time. She was diagnosed with PTSD in 2004, and said she is “terrified” of being found by White.

The woman said she is cooperating with law enforcement.

“I’m either going to be part of the solution, or I’m a coconspirator hiding it, just like everyone else,” she said.

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Springfield Bishop Rozanski asks for forgiveness, calls for those alienated by Catholic Church to return in pastoral letter

MASSACHUSETTS
MassLive

[the pastoral letter]

By Dan Glaun | dglaun@masslive.com
on February 10, 2016

SPRINGFIELD – As the world’s Catholics prepare for Lent’s 40 days of spiritual repentance, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield is issuing its own message of apology and renewal – to current and lapsed Catholics, to parishioners wounded by church closures, to victims of sexual abuse by priests and to LGBT Catholics alienated by the Church’s stance on gay rights.

In his pastoral letter issued on Ash Wednesday, the Most Rev. Mitchell T. Rozanski wrote that the church, inspired by the approachable tenor of Pope Francis’ approach to the papacy, is rededicating itself to evangelism – including the welcoming-back of Catholics who no longer feel represented by the Church.

“As the Diocese of Springfield, we must acknowledge this need for mercy, and ask forgiveness of God and each other for past sins and offenses. There are many people hurting in our Catholic community from the pain caused by our past failings as a diocese, as well as the grievous actions of some who ministered in our Church,” Rozanski wrote. “So, before I ask anything of you, let me as your bishop be the first to apologize and ask your forgiveness. ”

The pastoral letter is the diocese’s first to include a formal apology for Springfield’s priest sexual abuse scandal, Rozanski said, though Rozanski has previously expressed sympathy for abuse victims. The Diocese has paid out over $12 million to dozens of abuse victims for the actions of clergy like former Bishop Thomas Dupre, who resigned in 2004 after the Republican reported that two former altar boys had accused him of sexual abuse.

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Advocacy group wants Columbus bishop to publicize recent seminarian arrest

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

By JoAnne Viviano
The Columbus Dispatch • Tuesday February 9, 2016

An advocate for victims of sexual assault criticized the leader of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus on Tuesday for being “quiet and passive” about the recent arrest of a former seminarian on charges that he planned to travel to Mexico to rape infant and toddler girls.

Bishop Frederick Campbell should instead hold a public meeting to alert the community about the charges leveled against Joel A. Wright, who until late last month, was studying to be a priest at Pontifical College Josephinum on the Far North Side, said Judy Jones, Midwest associate director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. The network also wants Campbell to use the pulpit, church bulletins and church websites to encourage anyone who suspects Wright of crimes to contact police.

“This is too serious for Bishop Campbell to just sit back and do nothing,” Jones said at a Downtown news conference outside the diocese’s St. Joseph Cathedral. “He needs to aggressively reach out to anybody who had contact with Joel Wright, anyone who may have any information, any kind of knowledge, or anyone who has been harmed by him.”

Wright was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Homeland Security investigators in San Diego on Jan. 29 on charges of traveling with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct and to engage in sex with a child younger than 12. A Josephinum spokesman has said that Wright, 23, of Vermont, was expelled that day even before his arrest because he had left school without permission.

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Australian priest accused of child molest now in Sarawak in search of ‘young Asian men’

MALAYSIA/AUSTRALIA
Today

KUALA LUMPUR — A Catholic priest from Australia, who was suspended for allegedly abusing two boys, is now residing in Sarawak and in search of “young Asian men”, the Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) reported today (Feb 10).

The Australian daily said that the priest, one Father Peter Grasby, moved to Kuching while on paid leave and is currently using a gay dating website “Planetromeo”, with his profile having been viewed some 7,907 times.

“Father Grasby says on his profile that he is a 66-year-old Catholic who ‘happens to like younger Asian men’ aged from 18 to 35 but is ‘not on here looking for sex…’

“The profile also lists details about his genitals and sexual preferences, and he describes himself as a ‘well-educated and really soft-hearted mature GWM [gay white male]’” the SMH reported.

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Bishop Rozanski releases pastoral letter with focus on mercy

MASSACHUSETTS
Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield – iobserve

By Peggy Weber

SPRINGFIELD – Springfield Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski offers an invitation and a challenge in his new pastoral letter, “The Wideness of God’s Mercy,” released Feb. 10, Ash Wednesday.

In the letter, he offers words of welcome and notes that the letter was inspired by the Jubilee Year of Mercy declared by Pope Francis. However, he said it also was a direct response to the people of the Diocese of Springfield.

“When we began this process of looking at our evangelization, one of the suggestions was to reach out to people – both those who are in the pews and those who are Catholics but not practicing their faith,” he said. “We wanted to ask them different questions about their perceptions of the faith or perhaps why they don’t practice.”

More than 3,000 people took the diocese’s online survey and many wrote comments. Bishop Rozanski said he wanted to assure those people that they had been heard.

He wrote in his pastoral letter: “There are many people hurting in our Catholic community from the pain caused by our past failings as a diocese, as well as the grievous actions of some who ministered in our church. The reality of that pain is that it still echoes many years later.”

He adds, “Before I ask anything of you, let me as your bishop be the first to apologize and ask your forgiveness.”

He said he was sorry for any pain caused by parish and church closings, the sexual abuse scandal and any other occurrences. He noted that most people encounter church on the parish level and that more effort must be made to make people feel welcome and accepted.

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Bishop Mitchell Rozanski seeks forgiveness for Diocese of Springfield’s misgivings

MASSACHUSETTS
Berkshire Eagle

By Dick Lindsay
rlindsay@berkshireeagle.com @BE_DLindsay on Twitter

SPRINGFIELD — The Most Rev. Mitchell T. Rozanski has apologized to and seeks forgiveness from Western Massachusetts Catholics pained by the clergy sex abuse scandal, church closings and any disconnect from their local parishes.

In an open pastoral letter titled “The Wideness of God’s Mercy,” the bishop for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield also called upon diocesan priests to get out among parishioners and work to make them a vital part of their churches.

Rozanski issued the letter on Ash Wednesday, the start of Lent, which he says is a time of mercy and evangelization. The epistle also coincides with the Jubilee Year of Mercy, which was declared by Pope Francis in December and lasts through the end of the liturgical year on Nov. 20.

In the letter, the bishop called for clergy and lay people to continue the healing for the church’s “past sins and offenses.”

“There are many people hurting in our catholic community from the pain caused by our past failings as a diocese, as well as the grievous actions of some who ministered in our church,” he writes. “The reality of this pain is that it still echoes many years later, as was given witness in our recent diocesan survey.”

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Mass protest over parish priest Father John Walshe spreads to second school

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 10, 2016

Timna Jacks
Education Reporter

More than 40 parents pulled their children out of mass at a Melbourne Catholic school on Wednesday in protest over an allegedly abusive priest.

Parents at St John Vianney’s Primary School in Parkdale are calling for the resignation of parish priest Father John Walshe.

​Father Walshe, who defended Cardinal George Pell at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, has been accused of sexually abusing an 18-year-old seminarian in 1982.

The parents collected their children before mass at 11:30am, and dropped them back at school after 1pm.

Some parents took their children to other parishes instead – the St Patrick’s School parish in Mentone and Our Lady of Assumption parish in Cheltenham.

The parents’ protest comes a week after about 20 parents at Mentone’s St Patrick’s School – which is in the same parish – withdrew their children from weekly mass.

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Church left in the dark over paedophile priest Peter Grasby’s Asian relocation

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 10, 2016

Nino Bucci
Crime reporter for The Age

The Archdiocese of Melbourne did not know a paedophile priest, who the church had put on paid leave, had left Australia.

The Age revealed on Wednesday that Father Peter Grasby, who was put on administrative leave in 2012, had left Melbourne for Malaysia and was seeking the company of “younger Asian men” using gay dating websites.

The church confirmed that the complaint against Father Grasby, which related to abuse at St Joseph’s in West Brunswick against a boy aged as young as 10, had been upheld in 2013.

The church said the complaint had also been referred to police, despite saying at the time that the victim had declined to report to the force.

Father Grasby was assistant priest at the time of the sexual abuse, which started in the late 1970s and may have continued until the early 1980s.

The priest asked to move overseas in August 2013, a Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne spokesman said.

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Aussie priest, who fled to Malaysia, reportedly seeking ‘young Asian men’

AUSTRALIA/MALAYSIA
Asia One

Wednesday, Feb 10, 2016

An Australian Catholic priest who was accused of child sexual abuse has moved to Malaysia, where he is reported to be seeking the friendship of young Asian men on a gay dating website.

Sydney Morning Herald today (Feb 10) reported that Father Peter Grasby, who was suspected of abusing boys from at least two Melbourne parishes during his almost 40 years as a priest, left Australia for Kuching in East Malaysia’s Sarawak state last month.

Father Grasby was also alleged to have propositioned a former parisher on a gay dating website, reported the news site.

Father Grasby reportedly describes himself as a 66-year-old Catholic who “happens to like younger Asian men” aged from 18 to 35 in his profile on gay dating website Planetromeo. But he is not looking for sex, because he is “getting a bit too old”, according to the profile.

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Sarawak says would deport Aussie priest accused of child molest, homosexuality

AUSTRALIA/MALAYSIA
Today

FEBRUARY 10, 2016

KUALA LUMPUR — Sarawak Immigration authorities said today (Feb 10) that they will expel an Australian priest accused of sexually abusing children in his home country, if he is found to be living in Kuching.

Responding to reports of a Father Peter Grasby who is said to have been suspended pending investigations into claims he abused two young boys and currently residing in Kuching where he is searching for “young Asian men”, the department said they will check if he has entered the state.

“We will deport the former priest if he is found to be in Sarawak,” Mr Ken Leben, who will assume duty as Sarawak’s new Immigration Department director on Feb 15, told Malay Mail Online.

Sarawak Minister of Welfare, Women and Family Development Fatimah Abdullah said if Grasby has a criminal record the police should be alerted so that they could monitor him.

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February 9, 2016

Escándalo de abuso sexual de curas de Campeche

(MEXICO)
Regeneración [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 9, 2016

Read original article

Los sacerdotes Martín Mena Carrillo y Francisco Velázquez Trejo fueron demandados por cometer abuso sexual contra Luis Felipe Izquierdo Cundafe entre 2007 y 2008.

Luis Felipe Izquierdo Cundafe presentó una demanda por daño moral en el Juzgado Tercero Civil del Primer Distrito Judicial de Campeche contra los padres Martín Mena Carrillo y Francisco Velázquez Trejo, además demandó a Ramón Castro y Castro, Obispo de Cuernavaca, y José Francisco González González, Obispo de Campeche, por supuesto encubrimiento.

El actual «sacerdote veterocatólico», como se define, presentó la demanda por daño moral y psicológico el 30 de noviembre del año pasado.

Ya en julio de 2015, el originario de Huimanguillo, Tabasco, había hecho público el presunto caso de pederastia, aunque no había emprendido acciones legales.

El escrito que Izquierdo presentó al juez señala que a principios de 2007, cuando tenía 16 años, viajó de Mérida a Ciudad del Carmen, para participar en una misión de paz.

Durante la misión de 15 días, a la cual fueron otros jóvenes, conoció en la parroquia de la «Divina Providencia» al padre Martín, quien lo invitó a entrar al Seminario de Campeche.

Izquierdo aceptó y en julio del mismo año regresó a dicha iglesia, donde Martín le dijo que primero se haría cargo del apoyo espiritual a grupos juveniles de la comunidad.

Según la demanda, el padre dio a Izquierdo un trato «muy especial», con regalos y paseos, hasta que una noche de agosto lo invitó a su habitación, en la casa de la parroquia.

«Estaba (el padre) con una botella de licor y me dijo ‘toma’, y me dio a tomar, era la primera vez que tomaba licor. Entonces comenzó a tocarme la pierna y acariciaba mi parte íntima.

«Mientras me acariciaba mi miembro, con voz excitada me decía ‘esto es normal, no pasa nada, esto es cariño que se demuestra cuando uno quiere mucho, y yo te quiero mucho’. Ese día me hizo sexo oral en la hamaca donde dormía», aseguró Izquierdo en el documento.

Días después, Martín lo volvió a invitar a su cuarto, a lo cual accedió. El escrito señala que esa noche el entonces adolescente fue obligado a penetrar al padre. En octubre del mismo año, Luis Felipe conoció en la ciudad de Campeche al padre Francisco Velázquez Trejo, «El Bimbo», de la parroquia del «Sagrado Corazón de Jesús».

Meses después, ya en 2008, el padre Francisco fue a la «Divina Providencia» y luego de ingerir bebidas alcohólicas con el padre Martín y Luis Felipe, invitó a éste a su habitación.

«Comenzó a tocarme mis genitales. Yo estaba muy nervioso porque el cuarto de Martín quedaba cerca y se podía enojar conmigo.

«En ese momento el padre Francisco me dijo que lo penetrara porque sabía lo que hacía con Martin, y me amenazó. Me vi obligado a (hacerlo)».

Intentos de suicidio y exilio

Luis Felipe relata que también fue acosado por otro padre identificado como «Leobardo», por lo que intentó suicidarse en tres ocasiones, cuando ya había entrado al Seminario.

Cuenta que el 18 de marzo de 2009 se tomó «un montón» de pastillas que había en la enfermería del seminario. Días después hizo lo mismo y luego trató de ahorcarse.

El joven llamó entonces a sus tíos Rafael y Miguelina, quienes fueron por él una semana después. Sin embargo, regresó al Seminario a finales del mismo año.

Durante «buen tiempo», refiere, se dio cuenta que Martín le hizo lo mismo a otros menores, por lo que decidió revelar el abuso al entonces Obispo de Campeche, Ramón Castro y Castro.

Sin embargo, éste lo amenazó con meterlo a la cárcel si ventilaba algo. El padre Francisco también lo contactó para ofrecerle dinero a cambio de no decir nada.

Luis Felipe se fue del seminario y viajó a Chile donde radica actualmente y profesa la religión veterocatólica, también conocida como Iglesia católica antigua.

Revelación

El demandante dice que envió cartas contando lo sucedido al Cardenal Norberto Rivera, al Obispo de Tabasco Gerardo de Jesús, así como al Arzobispo de Yucatán y al Nuncio Apostólico.

«Pasaron los meses y me llegó un correo, era el Obispo Ramón Castro y Castro, reclamándome y reprochándome por qué había enviado cartas a los Obispos.

«Manifestándome que él me había apoyado económicamente y me apoyó en todo», apunta. En dicha comunicación, aparentemente en 2014, Castro le pide a Luis Felipe hablar primero antes de recurrir a «otras formas».

El año pasado, Luis Felipe envió una carta al Papa Francisco con detalles del caso. El contenido de la misiva se publicó en el Diario Tribuna de Campeche el 2 de julio.

«Entre los sacerdotes hay autoprotección, son una mafia porque la Iglesia no sanciona a los responsables. Tengo la decisión de denunciar estos hechos ante las autoridades competentes.

«Con el fin de que no continúen esos atropellos y violaciones cometidos por los sacerdotes católicos, porque no sabemos cuántos menores han sufrido lo mismo», indica.

Luis Felipe asegura que los «predicadores de la fe» se aprovecharon de él para obligarlo a cometer actos indignos, denigrantes y humillantes que dejan secuelas perdurables.

«Se me expuso al descrédito, deshonor y desprecio de amigos, familiares y de la sociedad, con lo que se me afectó en mis sentimientos, honor, decoro, reputación, creencias, vida privada».

Con información de Reforma.

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MEDIA RELEASE – FEBRUARY 9, 2016

UNITED STATES
Road to Recovery

Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, is outraged that one of the two victim/survivors of clergy sexual abuse who serve on the Vatican’s Commission on Sexual Abuse, Peter Saunders of the United Kingdom, has been asked to step aside from the commission for pointing out and criticizing the “snail’s pace” progress of the commission

Road to Recovery, Inc. understands and empathizes with Peter Saunders in his frustration with the Papal Commission’s lack of substantive results and accomplishment since Pope Francis and Cardinal Sean O’Malley have determined for the commission its role, goals, and function; thus, the Papal Commission on Sexual Abuse is not independent

STATEMENT OF ROAD TO RECOVERY, INC.

Road to Recovery, Inc. calls on Pope Francis and Cardinal Sean O’Malley to:

1) Apologize to sexual abuse victim/survivor Peter Saunders for the retaliation he has been subjected to for attempting to hold the Papal Commission on Sexual Abuse faithful to its two-fold mission of helping to protect children and assisting local churches in dealing with the sexual abuse of children and young people.

2) Step aside and allow the Papal Commission on Sexual Abuse to determine its own goals, procedures, and policies, and provide the commission with the resources needed to fulfill the mission determined by its members.

3) Cease leading and directing the Papal Commission on Sexual Abuse and allow the victim/survivors, mental health professionals, and academic sexual abuse experts who are members of the commission to select their own Chairperson, committee structure, and goals.

4) Allow the “Tribunal on Bishop Accountability,” which was introduced by Pope Francis on June 6, 2015, but has not yet been constituted, be the responsibility of the Papal Commission on Sexual Abuse, giving it authority to investigate complicit bishops and make recommendations to Pope Francis on the dismissal of bishops.

5) Act swiftly and judiciously on the submissions of the American Catholic Whistleblowers Steering Committee regarding the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ handling of clergy sexual abuse cases and its request for the firing of three bishops for mishandling clergy sexual abuse cases.

CONTACT
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D. – Co-founder and President, Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800
roberthoatson@gmail.com – www.road-to-recovery.org

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THE LAST CONFESSION

TEXAS
CBS News

[Background story about Irene Garza’s murder.]

Produced by Lourdes Aguiar, Peter Shaw and Jennifer Simpson Ashmawy

[This story first aired on March 1, 2014. It was updated on July 26.]

It’s been more than 50 years, but the shadow of the unsolved murder of Irene Garza still hangs over McAllen, Texas.

“This was an atrocious case,” Noemi Ponce Sigler told “48 Hours” correspondent Richard Schlesinger. “And I couldn’t understand it. To this day, I can’t understand it.”

Sigler, who is part of Irene’s extended family, has never been able to forget this case — especially after she visited her aunt’s house several years ago.

“There was a portrait of Irene that I hadn’t looked at in years,” Sigler said. “So, I went up to the picture and I was mesmerized… And that’s when I said … ‘Irene where did you go?’ … I wanna know what happened to her.”

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Arrest Made in 56-Year-Old Murder Case

TEXAS
KRGV

The Hidalgo County District Attorney’s Office made an arrest in the murder of Irene Garza. She’s the second grade school teacher who was murdered in 1960.

No one was ever arrested for the crime until today.

CHANNEL 5 NEWS’ Cary Zayas was there when the former priest John Feit was arrested in Phoenix on Tuesday.

The former Reverend John Feit is officially being charged right now with the murder of Irene Garza.

We will continue following this story.

Note: Original post said “66-year-old” it should be “56-year-old murder case.

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Authorities arrest priest in connection with Irene Garza case

TEXAS
The Monitor

STAFF REPORT | Posted: Tuesday, February 9, 2016

The man suspected in connection with the 1960 murder of a McAllen woman was arrested Tuesday.

John Feit, a former priest who was with Sacred Heart , was arrested by Maricopa County Sheriff’s office in Arizona Tuesday. He was never charged with killing the 25-year-old beauty queen in 1960, but was widely accused of the crime.

District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez confirmed late Tuesday his office presented the case to the grand jury last Thursday and they came back with a true bill.

“We had kept it quiet as much as we could — we sealed the indictment,” he said.

Rodriguez said the next step is to see whether or not Feit will contest his extradition to Texas or waive it.

“We would have to get a governor’s warrant. It usually happens even it’s contested,” Rodriguez said.

Former Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra came under fire when the case was reopened and went to an Hidalgo County grand jury in 2004, but the grand jury failed to indict.

When current DA Ricardo Rodriguez beat out the incumbent in March 2014, Guerra challenged him to finally solve the case. Garza’s family also asked Rodriguez to pursue it.

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SNAP Calls For Catholic Church To Host Public Meeting Regarding Joel Wright

OHIO
10TV

[with video]

By Maureen Kocot
Tuesday February 9, 2016 7

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The group SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is calling on the Catholic Diocese of Columbus to hold a public meeting, and to discuss the arrest of former seminary student, Joel Wright.

The Columbus diocese has repeatedly told 10TV it has no affiliation whatsoever with Wright.

Homeland Security says in January, the 23-year old tried to travel to Mexico to buy three girls, ages 1, 2, and 3, for sex.

Wright was sponsored by another diocese, the Steubenville Catholic Diocese, to study to be a priest at the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus.

On Tuesday, SNAP urged Bishop Frederick Campbell to talk openly to Columbus parishioners about this case.

“When they’re sitting back and saying nothing and doing nothing,” SNAP member Judy Jones said.

Jones wants to know why Wright wasn’t exposed sooner?

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Former St. Boniface priest sentenced to 2 years behind bars

CANADA
CBC News

The former priest of a St. Boniface parish has been sentenced to two years behind bars for sexual assault.

Last July, Ron Leger pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual assault and one count of sexual interference with someone under the age of 16.

Leger, 77, used to lead Holy Family Parish and founded Teen Stop Jeunesse. He was defrocked by the church last summer.

The charges against Leger relate back to a series of incidents that occurred between 1984 and 2004.

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NM–Records from church HQ seized in child sex case; Victims respond

NEW MEXICO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy, director of SNAP (314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

Police have seized documents from the headquarters of the Catholic church in New Mexico because of a child sex abuse case. We applaud this move and hope it results in top church officials being criminally charged for ignoring or hiding evidence about possible child sex crimes.

[New Mexican]

All too often, law enforcement agencies are not aggressive in pursuing those who commit or conceal heinous crimes against kids in religious settings. All too often, they go after the predators but not the enablers. All too often, they take church officials’ word that church staff have little or no relevant information in these cases.

Such a naïve approach is irresponsible, especially given the long and continuing pattern of Catholic officials valuing secrecy over openness and protecting their own careers over their flocks.

So we applaud the decision by New Mexico secular authorities to secure and execute search warrants on both the church headquarters and a parochial school (Santo Nino Regional Catholic School in Santa Fe).

We hope every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes by Aaron Chavez or cover ups by his colleagues will come forward, get help, expose wrongdoers, protect kids and start healing.

And we hope Archbishop John Wester will use personal news conferences, pulpit announcements, church bulletins and parish websites to beg anyone with information or suspicions about crime by Chavez or cover ups in the Santa Fe archdiocese to call police and prosecutors.

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Police seize Santa Fe archdiocese files in molestation case

NEW MEXICO
Seattle PI

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Authorities have seized records from the Archdiocese of Santa Fe as part of an investigation into claims that a Catholic school teacher inappropriately touched female students.

The New Mexican reports (http://bit.ly/1mpCoUk ) that Santo Nino Regional Catholic School art teacher Aaron Chavez has been charged with five counts of sexually touching young girls during classes.

The archdiocese says the 47-year-old Chavez was placed on administrative leave.

Affidavits for search warrants filed in district court Monday say deputies took items from the school and archdiocese offices, including student files, teacher’s personnel files, a laptop computer and electronic memory cards.

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Purge at the Mount

MARYLAND
Inside Higher Ed

February 9, 2016
By Scott Jaschik

The president of Mount St. Mary’s University in Maryland on Monday fired two faculty members without any faculty review of his action or advance notice. One was a tenured professor who had recently criticized some of the president’s policies. The other was the adviser to the student newspaper that revealed the president recently told faculty members concerned about his retention plans that they needed to change the way they view struggling students. “This is hard for you because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you can’t. You just have to drown the bunnies … put a Glock to their heads,” the president said.

Many believe a third faculty member may also be fired, as he also has criticized the president’s policies. Administrators were seen trying to find that faculty member today for an urgent meeting, which is how the two who were fired were dismissed. It is unclear whether they were able to locate the third faculty member.

Monday’s firings follow the dismissal on Friday of Provost David Rehm, who also raised questions about President Simon Newman’s retention plans. (Rehm held on to his faculty position.)

Newman’s letter firing the tenured professor — Thane M. Naberhaus of the philosophy department — accused him of disloyalty. …

Mount St. Mary’s is a small Roman Catholic university, with a strong emphasis on a rigorous and traditional liberal arts education.

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Priest convicted of molestation will not get a new trial

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Johnstown-area priest convicted of molesting orphans in Honduras will not get a new trial after a judge on Monday ruled that his lawyer failed to show that new evidence regarding one of the victims would result in an acquittal.

U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson, presiding in Johnstown, denied Rev. Joseph Maurizio’s request for a second trial and set sentencing for March 2.

Rev. Maurizio was convicted in September of traveling to Honduras under the guise of doing missionary work and molesting three boys between 2004 and 2009.

The priest’s lawyer, Steven Passarello, had argued that one line in a statement by one of the alleged victims, in which he said Rev. Maurizio did not molest him, had been improperly withheld by government lawyers.

The victim made the claim in a five-page victim-impact report on Sept. 20, the day before closing arguments.

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CMU Student Files Lawsuit Against Isabella County Priest

MICHIGAN
9 and 10 News

By Karie Herringa, Web Producer

Father Denis Heames was a priest at the St. Mary’s Parish on the campus of Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant.

Back in July, Father Denis Heames was placed on administrative leave by the Catholic diocese of Saginaw after he was accused of violating priestly conduct. He was permanently replaced by Father Thomas McNamara in August.

Last month, a CMU student filed a lawsuit against Father Heames, stating he initiated weekly one-on-one counseling to help her spiritually after joining the parish in August 2012. From there, the relationship became sexual.

According to the lawsuit, Father Heames hired the student as a media intern for the parish in 2012 in an attempt to help conceal their relationship.

The student worked for the parish and had a relationship with Father Heames for two years.

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Catholic Church officials deny responsibility for supervising priests in damages lawsuit

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Giselle Wakatama

The Catholic Church is arguing it has no responsibility for the supervision of its priests, as it fights a damages case launched by an alleged victim of a dead priest in the New South Wales Hunter Valley.

A 2013 special commission of inquiry found the Catholic Church knew that father Denis McAlinden was a paedophile, dating back to the 1950s.

Among those officials who allegedly knew was the dead bishop Leo Clarke, whose estate is now being pursued as part of a damages case brought by a woman known as LG.

The inquiry found the former bishop failed to report McAlinden throughout the 20 years he was in his job.

The inquiry also found bishop Clarke’s inaction in relation to the paedophile priest was inexcusable.

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After Six Months Away, Pastor at Center of Church Cover-up Scandal Returns

MISSOURI
Riverfront Times

Posted By Danny Wicentowski on Tue, Feb 9, 2016

Who does Steve Wingfield think he’s fooling? The question seemed to twist through the pastor’s sermon on Sunday, which he delivered before an audience of roughly 200 in the main chapel of First Christian Church of Florissant, or FCCF.

It was Wingfield’s first trip to the pulpit of the evangelical church since his unceremonious banishment to a six-month sabbatical in August, and his return was met with high anticipation from those still faithful to the church and the Wingfield family name.

For Wingfield’s detractors — which by now include hundreds of former congregants — there was nothing but disappointment.

Wingfield’s sabbatical came after months of bad press and infighting within the north county megachurch. Under Wingfield’s leadership, FCCF worked feverishly to insulate itself from scandal after a former youth minister named Brandon Milburn was unmasked as a serial child molester and sentenced to 25 years in prison.

As chronicled in a Riverfront Times feature story, several congregants-turned-whistleblowers maintain that Wingfield ignored warnings about Milburn’s behavior and even trusted him with access to the church’s youth programs. In response, Wingfield and FCCF sued the whistleblowers and did everything he could to shut them up. It didn’t work. Then the pastor went on leave.

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MO–Complicit pastor is back on the job; Victims respond

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

A vengeful, selfish pastor is back on the job while the brave whistleblowers he sued and hurt are still suffering, as are the families whose kids were abused by a now-imprisoned child molester who worked at the church.

[Riverfront Times]

Six months ago, the board of First Christian Church of Florissant put Rev. Steve Wingfield on leave, after he had “banned former FCCF members, (and) his own brother, pastor Paul Wingfield of White Flag Church, pressured a Christian college to fire an outspoken professor-turned-critic,” according to the Riverfront Times.

The controversy erupted after several courageous and concerned congregants began challenging church officials over how they dealt with Brandon Milburn, who sexually assaulted several youngsters.

These individuals, including Doug Lay, Dawn Varvil and Titus and Kari Benton, are heroes. They were ostracized and wounded because they dared to question an egomaniac minister and support abuse victims. And even now, virtually no official at FCCF has taken a single step to ameliorate their suffering. It’s utterly tragic.

Shame on FCCF’s Stan Dubose, vice chairman of the board of elders, and on every person who brought Wingfield back to the church and sat passively by while he ducked and dodged in his sermon last Sunday, expressing no real contrition whatsoever for his selfish, mean-spirited attacks on his own church members.

Ministers should not sue church members, period. They should welcome, not attack, those who expose wrongdoing, prevent abuse and help victims.

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MI–Saginaw priest is sued; Victims respond

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016

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

A Saginaw priest is being sued for sexually exploiting a college student. We applaud her courage while we deplore the secrecy of Saginaw’s bishop.

[Central Michigan Life]

For about two years, Fr. Denis Heames of St. Mary’s University parish manipulated, deceived, hired and supervised a student named Megan Winans. For about a month, Saginaw Bishop Joseph Cistone kept silent about Winans’ lawsuit against church officials, which was filed Jan. 14.

Shame on Bishop Cistone for keeping the case quiet for weeks. Why is his delay problematic? Because hours and days are crucial in a sex abuse case. Every minute a predator’s crimes are kept secret gives him and his allies’ time to destroy evidence, fabricate alibis, intimidate victims, threaten witnesses and discredit whistleblowers.

We suspect Fr. Heames has hurt other vulnerable students families with similar clerical misconduct. So we urge Bishop Cistone to aggressively reach out to others who may have been hurt by Fr. Heames.

Many know about child molesting Catholic clerics. But few realize priests abusing vulnerable adult parishioners is as or more widespread but still deeply hidden. It’s always wrong and hurtful for doctors to have sex with patients, therapists to have sex with clients and ministers to have sex with congregants. That’s especially true in Catholicism, where parishioners are taught, from birth, to respect and trust priests as holy celibate men who can forgive sins and get them into heaven.

In 17 states, it’s a crime for a cleric to have sex with a congregant.

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Diocese bankruptcy settlement hits a snag

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Feb. 3, 2016

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

ALBUQUERQUE – Attorneys for the Diocese of Gallup will not be filing a plan of reorganization in U.S. Bankruptcy Court this week as they had predicted in January.

And hopes for a finalized settlement agreement with clergy sex abuse claimants might be sabotaged by an ongoing dispute between two parties in the bankruptcy case.

The dispute, which has been the subject of vague discussions in previous hearings, spilled out into open court during a status hearing Tuesday before Judge David T. Thuma. It involves an impasse between Michael P. Murphy, the future claims representative, and Catholic Mutual, which offers liability coverage to the Gallup Diocese.

As the future claims representative, Murphy will represent anyone who might come forward in the future with a clergy sex abuse claim against the diocese. Catholic Mutual has agreed to issue a certificate coverage to the diocese to cover the amount of the future claims fund.

Most of Tuesday’s hearing was dominated by back and forth discussion of the divisive issue separating Murphy and Catholic Mutual — how much of an inquiry into Catholic Mutual’s financial condition Murphy should be allowed as part of his fiduciary duty and how much financial information Catholic Mutual is willing to provide Murphy.

David Spector, an attorney for Catholic Mutual, objected to the “extraordinary review of the books and records of the financial condition of Catholic Mutual” that he claimed Murphy and Young Kim, Murphy’s representative in court, were insistent on receiving. Spector said Catholic Mutual was willing to let Murphy view only a financial balance sheet — after Murphy had signed an “ironclad protective order” that would protect the confidential nature of the information.

“But that is as far as we’ll go,” Spector said. “We won’t go any further. Mr. Murphy and Mr. Kim have insisted that that is the starting point.”

Under questioning by Thuma, Kim was unwilling to say Murphy might not want further financial information from Catholic Mutual. Kim noted that Catholic Mutual is not regulated or overseen by any organization and it is not a rated insurer.

Spector, who threatened to withdraw financing for the future claims fund, also complained that Murphy had been recommended for the future claims representative position by attorneys representing clergy sex abuse claimants. That, however, is not backed up in the court record. Murphy was actually nominated by attorneys for the Diocese of Gallup in a court motion filed Feb. 11, 2015. Diocesan attorneys cited Murphy’s experience as the future claims representative in church bankruptcy cases in Stockton, California; Fairbanks, Alaska; and Davenport, Iowa.

James Stang, legal counsel for the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, which represents the interests of clergy sex abuse claimants, weighed into the dispute and expressed frustration that the Gallup Diocese’s settlement could fall apart if Catholic Mutual does not finance the future claims fund.

“Are we really going to lose this entire deal because people are speculating that someone’s going to be unreasonable or someone’s going to refuse to offer an answer to a question?” Stang said. “And that’s what’s frustrating me. I just can’t understand why we can’t at least start the first step on this path and see where it goes.”

By the end of the nearly hour long hearing, the judge also appeared frustrated by the lack of resolution. Addressing diocesan attorney Lori Winkelman, Thuma asked, “What happens to your time line if this conversation just continues ad nauseam and we never get anywhere?”

“We’ve got to get this figured out,” Thuma added, “and we’ve got to do it soon.”

Thuma then scheduled another continued status hearing Wednesday afternoon, and he instructed Kim to talk with Murphy and communicate Murphy’s views to the other parties in the bankruptcy prior to Wednesday’s hearing.

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Diocese bankruptcy lurches forward again

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Feb. 4, 2016

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

ALBUQUERQUE – The Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case is back on track — at least until next week.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma held a continued status hearing Wednesday afternoon after a dispute Tuesday threatened to derail the Gallup Diocese’s plans to file a plan of reorganization. Different representatives from both sides stepped forward to cooperate on a couple initial steps to possibly mend the breach.

On Tuesday, Thuma navigated a legal conflict between Catholic Mutual, the insurer for the diocese, and Michael P. Murphy, the future claims representative who has the responsibility of representing the interests of any clergy sex abuse claimants who might come forward in the future.

David Spector, an attorney for Catholic Mutual, had vehemently objected to allowing Murphy a review of Catholic Mutual’s financial books and records, while Murphy’s representative, Young Kim, declined to agree that Murphy would be satisfied with viewing only a financial balance sheet from Catholic Mutual. Thuma had told Kim to talk with Murphy and report back during Wednesday’s hearing.

Murphy, who is returning to the United States from Hong Kong Friday, appeared at Wednesday’s hearing telephonically. He and Everett Cygal, an attorney for Catholic Mutual, agreed to work together to get a protective order signed that would guard the confidentiality of Catholic Mutual’s financial information.

Murphy also agreed to view the documents Catholic Mutual is willing to show him, which are the most recent audited balance statement and recent unaudited balance statements.

“It has been the offer that Catholic Mutual has been making for several months now to the future claims rep,” Cygal said.

In response, Murphy said he’s been willing to look at those documents for some time.

If Murphy believes the documents indicate Catholic Mutual has the financial wherewithal to cover the future claims fund, he will give the court a “thumbs up” and presumably the Gallup Diocese’s settlement agreement and plan of reorganization will continue to move forward.

However, if Murphy’s inspection of the documents leads to a “thumbs down,” the case could once again derail by the next status hearing Tuesday.

Susan Boswell, the diocese’s lead bankruptcy attorney, told the court she was continuing to work on the plan of reorganization in spite of the dispute.

“This issue simply cannot be the thing that drives whether or not this plan gets confirmed,” Boswell said.

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Diocese bankruptcy costs exceed $3.6 million

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Feb. 6, 2016

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

ALBUQUERQUE – As the Diocese of Gallup pushes to conclude its Chapter 11 case in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, its bankruptcy costs have exceeded $3.6 million. Attorneys, accountants and other professionals submitted quarterly billing statements totaling $340,520.07 for the period of Oct. 1 through Dec. 31, adding up to a total current cost of $3,587,597.65.

However, the quarterly statements do not represent a completely accurate total of the Gallup Diocese’s bankruptcy expenses. They do not include the $38,675 the diocese has paid the U.S. Trustee Program, which oversees the administration of bankruptcy cases.

The statements also do not include miscellaneous expenses the diocese has been paying each month from its bank accounts, such as the $45,000 the diocese paid Tucson Realty & Trust Co. and Accelerated Marketing Group to conduct two property auctions in September. Those U.S. Trustee and miscellaneous bankruptcy payments total more than $93,000 and push the post-bankruptcy filing total to more than $3.6 million.

In addition, prior to filing its Chapter 11 petition Nov. 12, 2013, the Diocese of Gallup made payments to some of its bankruptcy law firms and its accounting firm.

Unless otherwise stated, the following final quarterly figures for 2015 and the total fees and expenses will not be paid until the Gallup Diocese has an approved plan of reorganization:

-Quarles & Brady LLP: The Diocese of Gallup’s lead bankruptcy law firm from Tucson submitted a quarterly statement of $180,208.33 for legal fees and expenses. The firm’s total post-petition legal bill is now $1,994,521.23.

-Keegan, Linscott & Kenon P.C: This Tucson accounting firm has been overseeing the Gallup Diocese ‘s finance office. The firm submitted a quarterly statement for $18,596.50 in fees – its lowest quarterly bill during the bankruptcy. It did not bill for any expenses. The firm’s total post-petition bill is now $431,385.96.

-Stelzner, Winter, Warburton, Flores, Sanchez & Dawes P.A.: The diocese’s special counsel law firm from Albuquerque billed $303.87 in fees this quarter. The firm’s total post-petition bill is now $12,435.21.

-Insurance Archaeology Group: This insurance research company did not submit a statement for this quarterly period. To date the company has billed the Gallup Diocese $48,819 and has received payment for that amount.

-Estate Valuation Consultants Inc.: This real estate appraisal company did not submit a statement for this quarterly period. To date the company has billed the diocese $22,100 and has received payment for that amount.

-Michael P. Murphy: Murphy is the court appointed future claims representative who will represent any clergy sex abuse claimant who might come forward in the future. Murphy has not been paid yet, but his fee of $50,000 plus expenses will be due and payable upon the effective date of any plan of reorganization.

-Walker & Associates P.C.: The diocese’s Albuquerque bankruptcy law firm did not submit a statement for this quarter. To date, the firm has billed $18,062.40 in post-petition fees and expenses.

-Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP: This California law firm is the legal counsel for the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, which represents the interests of clergy sex abuse survivors who have filed claims against the diocese in the bankruptcy case. Although the committee represents abuse claimants, the Diocese of Gallup is responsible for those legal fees. The law firm submitted a quarterly statement for $141,412.37 in fees and expenses. The firm’s total post-petition bill is now $1,060,273.85.

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Syracuse Catholic diocese closes controversial retirement home for priests

NEW YORK
Syracuse.com

By John O’Brien | jobrien@syracuse.com
on February 09, 2016

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Catholic Diocese of Syracuse has closed its retirement home for priests after 59 years, citing financial concerns.

The decision to close the Tommy Coyne Residence for Priests in December was unrelated to concerns raised last year by survivors of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of priests, diocese spokeswoman Danielle Cummings said.

The diocese had been planning for two years to close the home because of the expense, Cummings said. She wouldn’t say how many priests were living in the 22-room home when it closed.

“The building simply was becoming too costly and the repairs needed did not justify continuing it as a retirement residence for priests,” she said.

Over the past 15 years, the facility was home to at least four priests against whom the diocese had found credible allegations of child-molesting, according to public records. Those priests were monsignors Charles Eckermann, Charles Sewall and John Zeder, and the Rev. Chester Misercola.

Another priest who lived at the home in recent years, the Rev. Robert Ours, was convicted of possessing child pornography.

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State Police start internal investigation after arrest of accused child molester

NEW MEXICO
KRQE

SANTA FE (KRQE) – State Police have started an internal investigation following the arrest of an art teacher, who had been investigated by their officers years ago.

State Police got a complaint against Aaron Chavez in 2012, accusing him of touching a student at Santo Nino Catholic School where he works. But State Police say investigators never took action and they don’t know why.

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Police seize Santa Fe archdiocese files in molestation case

NEW MEXICO
KRQE

SANTA FE (AP) – Authorities have seized records from the Archdiocese of Santa Fe as part of an investigation into claims that a Catholic school teacher inappropriately touched female students.

The New Mexican reports that Santo Nino Regional Catholic School art teacher Aaron Chavez has been charged with five counts of sexually touching young girls during classes.

The archdiocese says the 47-year-old Chavez was placed on administrative leave.

Affidavits for search warrants filed in district court Monday say deputies took items from the school and archdiocese offices, including student files, teacher’s personnel files, a laptop computer and electronic memory cards.

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Sheriff’s deputies seize Archdiocese records in molestation case

NEW MEXICO
The New Mexican

Posted: Monday, February 8, 2016

By Uriel J. Garcia
The New Mexican

Santa Fe County sheriff’s deputies have seized records from the Archdiocese of Santa Fe as part of an investigation into allegations that an art teacher at the Santo Niño Regional Catholic School inappropriately touched female students.

Affidavits for search warrants filed Monday in state District Court say deputies took various items Friday from archdiocese offices in Albuquerque as well as the school south of Santa Fe, including files on five students, the teacher’s personnel files, a laptop computer and electronic memory cards.

Criminal complaints filed recently in Santa Fe County Magistrate Court charge Aaron Chavez, 47, with five counts of sexually touching young girls during classes.

The archdiocese said last week that Chavez was placed on administrative leave as a result of the criminal investigation. On Monday, a spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Chavez is currently free on bond, court records show.

Chavez’s lawyer, John Samore, has said his client “denies and will vigorously defend against these allegations.”

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Bishop of Durham defends Church of England paedophiles who made ‘mistakes’

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sun

EXCLUSIVE By DAVID WOODING, Sunday Political Editor
6 Feb 2016

A BISHOP leading a probe into paedophile priests was blasted last night for describing their child abuse as “mistakes”.

Rt Rev Paul Butler made the remark in reference to ex-Bishop of Gloucester Peter Ball, jailed last year for a string of offences.

The Bishop of Durham told the House of Lords: “We have to recognise that it’s possible for great people to make mistakes.”

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VATICAN REMOVES SHADY PANEL MEMBER

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the Vatican’s suspension of one of the members of its commission on priestly sexual abuse:

The Vatican has announced that Peter Saunders, one of two representatives of abuse victims on its Commission for the Protection of Minors, has been suspended from the commission.

Saunders refuses to go quietly, however, saying only Pope Francis can dismiss him from the commission—even though, by his own statement, the commission’s vote to suspend him was unanimous, save for one abstention. So unless we are to assume bad faith on the part of every one of the 16 other commission members—beginning with its president, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston—there must be some merit to the members’ conclusion that they could not work with Saunders.

We have long had our own concerns about Saunders. From his savage attack last June on Australian Cardinal George Pell—whom Saunders never met—branding him as “callous,” “coldhearted,” “almost sociopathic”—to seeming inconsistencies in Saunders’ personal tale of abuse, we have good reason to question his character.

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G-9 meeting: Decentralization and the new dicasteries

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The latest meeting of the Council of Cardinals, Pope Francis’ closest advisers, ended on Tuesday. During their meetings, the cardinals discussed the theme of ‘synodality’ and Pope Francis’ call at last year’s Synod of Bishops for the Church to move towards “a healthy decentralization.” The other main item on the agenda was a discussion and approval of the cardinals’ final proposals concerning the two new dicasteries that are being set up within the Roman Curia.

Pope Francis attended all three sessions, held on Monday morning and afternoon and on Tuesday morning. Often called the G-9, the Council of Cardinals is a group of cardinals chosen by the Pope to advise him on governing the Church and reforming the Roman Curia. It meets at regular intervals.

At a briefing following the end of this meeting, Father Federico Lombardi, the Director of the Holy See’s Press Office, summarized the main issues discussed.

Father Lombardi said the first session of the G-9 discussed the issues raised during the Pope’s keynote speech at the Synod of Bishops on October 17th 2015. This speech reflected on the theme of synodality within the Church and spoke of the need “to proceed towards a healthy decentralization” and Father Lombardi said this call by the Pope remains an importance reference point for the ongoing work of reforming the Curia.

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Victims seek Catholic bishop’s help

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

OH–FACT SHEET: Accused Catholic sex offender clerics linked to The Josephinum in Columbus

They also release list of 8 accused Columbus clerics
All attended same school as just-arrested seminarian
SNAP: “Ohio church staff ignored repeated red flags”
Prelate should hold “open public meeting” about case
“Why do Catholic institutions still put kids at risk?” group asks
All priests should “reach out now to any local victims,” SNAP says

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and supporters will disclose the names of eight publicly accused sex offender clerics who spent time at a Columbus seminary. They will also beg the top Catholic official in Columbus to

—hold an open public media about the “troubling” pending case of a seminarian who offered $150 to babysit Ohio kids and arranged to buy infants and toddlers for sex, and
—use pulpit announcements, church bulletins and parish websites to “prod anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes or misdeeds by the seminarian to call police.”

WHEN
Tuesday, Feb. 9 at 1-p.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the St Joseph Cathedral, 212 East Broad St. in Columbus

WHO
Three-four members of a self-help group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including a Missouri woman who is the organization’s associate Midwest director

WHY
Victims are upset that Columbus Bishop Frederick Campbell is largely “being silent and passive” about Joel A. Wright, the recently-arrested Columbus seminarian who had arranged to buy, adopt and rape Mexican youngsters.

Until last month, Wright was a student at The Pontifical College Josephinum, just north of Columbus, and within the boundaries of Bishop Campbell’s diocese. (Bishop Campbell in fact has taught at the Josephinum.)

But in cases like this, SNAP says, bishops “distance themselves from and pretend to be powerless over Catholic institutions in their dioceses,” instead of “stepping up, admitting responsibility and aggressively helping law enforcement.” According to Catholic church practice, custom and law, a bishop is responsible for the safety and well-being of his entire flock, SNAP says.

“If Josephinum staff were ripping off Columbus Catholics financially, Bishop Campbell wouldn’t be passively sitting back and keeping quiet,” said Judy Jones, SNAP’s assistant Midwest director. “He can and should do more.”

“The only prudent assumption is that Wright has assaulted or exploited kids around here,” Jones said. “And Columbus Catholic officials have the ability and duty to see if that’s true by using their resources to beg others with information or suspicions about Wright to call police.”

SNAP is also releasing what it says is “a partial list” of “publicly accused sex offender clerics who have spent time at the Josephinum.” The group believes most of them, including Wright, also helped out at Columbus area parishes temporarily, another reason they say Bishop Campbell should do outreach seeking other victims of Wright.

News accounts show that Ohio Catholic officials had at least three warnings about Wright. But it seem clear that they did little or nothing to heed those warnings, SNAP says.

1) An informant for Homeland Security called and wrote to Josephinum staff about Wright and his efforts to buy infants or toddlers so he could abuse them.

2) Franciscan University officials in Steubenville reported to police that Wright had offered to pay $150 to babysit young kids alone (but the university may not have told Josephinum officials).

3) Wright’s mother admits that more than 40 seminaries across the US had rejected her son’s applications for enrollment. (She claims it was because of his physical disabilities, but SNAP leaders don’t believe this is true.)

On Jan. 29, he was arrested in San Diego en route to Mexico to obtain youngsters. At the time, his studies were sponsored by Steubenville Bishop Jeffrey Montforton.

[10TV]

This “horrific case” shows that the Catholic hierarchy still act recklessly with kids’ safety, SNAP says.

“Once again, Catholic officials endanger kids by ignoring clear, repeated warnings about an obviously sexually troubled cleric,” said David Clohessy, SNAP’s director. “And once again, when abuse reports surface, Catholic officials basically clam up instead of aggressively reaching out. They should be using pulpit announcements, church bulletins, parish websites and mailing lists to help find victims, witnesses and whistleblowers who could help law enforcement prosecute and convict Wright so kids will be protected from him for many years to come.”

SNAP is especially worried that Wright may have molested one or more Ohio children. When asked if he had ever had sex with an infant before, Wright wrote “had made it very close.”

[10TV]

Wright is originally from Vermont. A photo of Wright is at BishopAccountability.org

Columbus diocesan priests: Fr. Ronald J. Atwood, Fr. Thomas J. Brosmer, Fr. Michael Ellifritz, Fr. Joseph N. Fete, Fr. Michael F. Hanrahan, Fr. Robert E. “Paul” Hayden, Fr. David Heimann, Fr. Philip J. Jacobs, Fr. Raymond E. Lavelle, Fr. Frederick A. Loyd, Fr. Thomas L. McLaughlin, Fr. Samuel E. Ritchey, Fr. Francis R. Schaefer, Br. Fintan Shaffer (a.k.a. Guy Dale Shaffer), Fr. Martin “Marty” V. Weithman, Fr. Robert A Brown, Fr Aaron AJ Cote, Francis A Benham, and John J. Walsh
http://www.columbustruth.org/Photo_Page_Columbus.html

CONTACT

Judy Jones (314 974 5003, SNAPjudy@gmail.com), Carol Zamonski, 614 447 2084, doro@copper.net, David Clohessy (314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com), Barbara Dorris (314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

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Yeshivah Centre abuse victims fear bullying, intimidation

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

February 9, 2016 –

Timna Jacks
Education Reporter

Yeshivah Centre abuse victims still fear they will be bullied and ostracised if they disclose their abuse, one year after widespread cover-ups and intimidation of victims was revealed at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Fairfax Media is aware of at least four Yeshivah victims who have refused to take compensation from the centre, in protest against its new redress scheme.

They don’t trust the new scheme, fearing that their confidential disclosures will be handled poorly, or leaked to third parties, which they fear might lead to harassment and ostracisation.

Jewish Care Victoria – an organisation engaged by Yeshivah to receive initial inquiries from survivors of abuse – has already breached one victim’s trust, after a private email sent to the board of Jewish Care was leaked to a board member at Yeshivah.

“This identifies me to Yeshivah – that was the last thing that I want,” said the victim, who did not want to be named.

“Yeshivah, and in particular, its leadership, has a terrible history of bullying and harassing victims and the last thing victims want is to be identified to Yeshivah, because of that history.”

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Bistum unterscheidet bei Entschädigung der Opfer

DEUTSCHLAND
Welt

[The Regensburg diocese has paid out secretly much more money to victims of abuse than was previously known.]

Ein unabhängiger Anwalt klärt jetzt den Skandal bei den Regensburger Domspatzen auf. Derweil zahlt das Bistum Regensburg insgeheim viel mehr Geld an Missbrauchsopfer als bisher bekannt. Von Tim Röhn , Christian Eckl, Regensburg

Es gibt bei dieser Sache so viele Emotionen – Angst, Scham, Wut und auch Rachegelüste. Darum ist es gut, dass nun ein Mann wie Ulrich Weber die Zügel in der Hand hält. Weber, groß, breit, Rechtsanwalt, ist ein nüchterner Typ, seine Mimik und Gestik sagen: Ist mir wurscht, was ihr von mir denkt. Der 45-Jährige sitzt am Esstisch seines Regensburger Einfamilienhauses und sagt über sich: “Ich verstehe mich als Aufklärer, der die Basis für Aufarbeitung schafft.”

Deshalb beschäftigt er sich seit einem Dreivierteljahr mit fast nichts anderem mehr als dem Missbrauchsskandal bei den Regensburger Domspatzen, einem der berühmtesten und ältesten Kirchenchöre der Welt. 2010 hatte es erste Berichte über körperliche und sexuelle Gewalt bei den Domspatzen gegeben – ernsthaft untersucht werden die Vorfälle erst, seitdem Weber, der Mitarbeiter der Opferschutzorganisation Weißer Ring ist, zum unabhängigen Chefaufklärer ernannt wurde.

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Will Pope Francis confront the ‘devil’ in the Mexican Church?

MEXICO
Fusion

by Rafa Fernandez De Castro | February 9, 2016

MEXICO CITY—When Pope Francis visits Mexico from Feb. 12-17, many people will be watching to see if he finally addresses the Vatican’s failures to prevent and punish cases of child sexual abuse by some members of the Mexican clergy.

There’s plenty of such scandals to address—from a priest in Oaxaca accused of abusing indigenous minors to the fugitive priests of San Luis Potosí on the run from sexual abuse charges. There are other cases of the Church hierarchy allegedly protecting accused pedophile priests such as Nicolas Aguilar Rivera, who was transferred from Puebla to Los Angeles, California, after facing several accusations in Mexico.

But perhaps the most notorious case is that of Marcial Maciel, a priest accused of sexually abusing dozens of minors during his tenure as the leader of the powerful Catholic order known as “The Legionaries of Christ.” Maciel founded The Legion in Mexico City in 1941 as a movement to prepare young men for the priesthood and Catholic leaders from across Latin America. Today, the Legion is best known for creating dozens of private schools and universities that primarily serve Mexico’s middle- and upper-classes.

In a recent interview with a Mexican reporter, Pope Francis said Maciel, who died in 2008, was “sick, greatly sick.” But he downplayed the Vatican’s involvement in any cover-up. The pope told Televisa that Maciel most likely had an enabler within The Vatican—someone who “suspected and didn’t know” about the priest’s pederasty.

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Vorschläge zugunsten von Missbrauchsopfern

ROM
Zenit

Missbrauchsopfer sollen künftig unmittelbar von kirchlichen Repräsentanten Antwort auf ihre Anfragen erhalten. Die Päpstliche Kommission zum Schutz von Minderjährigen sieht dies so vor. Zudem ist ein „Welttag des Gebets“ und eine Bußliturgie in Vorbereitung. Eine Erhöhung der Transparenz kirchlicher Verfahren soll durch Arbeitsgruppensitzungen über die rechtlichen Aspekte des Kinderschutzes vorbereitet werden. Daran werden auch externe Experten teilnehmen. Eine Internetseite mit vorbildlichen Praxisbeispielen zum Kinderschutz wird darüber hinaus entwickelt.

Mit einer Reihe von Bischofskonferenzen sowie mit Konferenzen von Orden und Kongregationen arbeitet die Kommission zusammen, dabei einem Wunsch Papst Franziskus‘ folgend. Mitglieder der Kommission haben sich im zurückliegenden Jahr mit Vertretern von Einrichtungen aus Europa, Lateinamerika, Asien, Ozeanien und Australien getroffen. Ab März werden die Kontakte nach Afrika eng ausgebaut. In einer Woche beginnt zudem an der Päpstlichen Universität Gregoriana ein Diplomkurs zum Schutz von Minderjährigen, mit 19 Teilnehmern aus vier Kontinenten.

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Missbrauchsopfer Saunders wirft Papst Untätigkeit vor

VATIKAN
religion@orf

Der Brite Peter Saunders, der im Jahr 2014 von Papst Franziskus in die Kinderschutzkommission des Vatikans berufen wurde, hat dem Kirchenoberhaupt weitgehende Untätigkeit beim Kampf gegen die Pädophilie vorgeworfen.

Er habe immer das „Recht auf freie Rede“ für sich in Anspruch genommen, sagte Saunders AFP-Journalistin Ella Ide. Dies sei aber „mit der Funktionsweise der Kirche und der Kommission nicht kompatibel“. Hier liege der Schlüssel dazu, warum „Missbrauch in der Kirche noch immer so verbreitet“ sei.

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Peter Saunders wirft Papst Franziskus Untätigkeit vor

VATIKAN
T-Online

Der Brite Peter Saunders, der im Jahr 2014 von Papst Franziskus in die Kinderschutzkommission des Vatikans berufen wurde, hat dem Kirchenoberhaupt weitgehende Untätigkeit beim Kampf gegen die Pädophilie vorgeworfen. “Der Papst könnte so viel mehr tun – und er tut fast nichts”, sagte Saunders. Saunders ist selbst ein Missbrauchsopfer.

Der Vatikan erklärte am Montag, Saunders sei aufgefordert worden, aus der Kinderschutzkommission auszutreten. Saunders sagte dazu, lediglich der Papst könne ihn dazu zwingen, die Kommission zu verlassen. Er habe sein Amt nicht niedergelegt.

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Two ex-Marist brothers could attempt to avoid trial on child sex abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

February 9, 2016

Christopher Knaus and Megan Gorrey

Two former Marist brothers have signalled they will try to avoid going to trial on historical child sexual abuse charges.

John William Chute, 83, and Gregory Joseph Sutton, 64, were among four men police charged with fresh offences as part of an ongoing investigation into child sexual abuse in ACT schools in the 1980s.

Chute did not appear in court to face two charges of indecent assault on a male and two acts of indecency on a person aged between 10 and 16.

His defence lawyer told Magistrate Bernadette Boss his client was infirm and suffered from Parkinson’s disease and dementia.

The court heard Chute, known as Brother Kostka, was the subject of separate charges in NSW that were set to come before court on Friday.

He had been assessed by experts to determine whether he could be declared unfit for trial.

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Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese puts two priests on leave amid sex abuse allegations

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY LAUREN HENSLEY MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8TH 2016

ALTOONA, Pa.– The Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese said two more priests are on leave, each facing allegations of child sex abuse.

This brings the total to three suspended priests in just over a month. Each case involves allegations made decades ago.

Sunday Bishop Mark Bartchak announced Sunday the Rev. David Arseneault seen from Huntingdon’s Holy Trinity and the Rev. James Coveney, who is retired from Saint Mark’s Church in Altoona, have both been placed on leave from the ministry.

They are two priests accused in two separate incidents, but the church said they have one thing in common, the accusations date back about 20 years. Why is the church now choosing to review these accusations?

“I can’t answer that question but obviously Bishop Bartchak feels it is important to review these cases,” said Tony DeGol, secretary for communications.

6News sought to question the bishop directly but we were told he was unavailable.

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