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.

January 28, 2016

Hundreds welcome priest cleared of sex abuse back to chapel

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

Hundreds of people packed into St Bride’s Parish Church this morning (Thursday) to welcome back Father Paul Morton – their parish priest and friend wrongly accused of sex abuse.

Father Morton was last April cleared of any wrongdoing by the police after an eight-month investigation into the alleged historic offences.

But the priest, who has been at the helm of the Cambuslang chapel for 15 years, was subject to a further investigation by the Catholic Church.

Concluded in December, it also vindicated the East Kilbride native of any wrongdoing.

Following a petition calling for Father Morton’s speedy return to St Bride’s, the priest took to the alter to celebrate the Feast of St Thomas Aquinas.

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.

“Das System Regensburg”

DEUTSCHLAND
Zeit

[The Regensburg System]

Warum wird das Ausmaß der Gewalt und des Missbrauchs bei den Domspatzen erst jetzt bekannt? Ein Gespräch mit dem ehemaligen Diözesanrat Fritz Wallner

Interview: Evelyn Finger
28. Januar 2016

DIE ZEIT: Herr Wallner, Sie kennen das Bistum Regensburg gut: 22 Jahre gehörten Sie dem Diözesanrat an, einem katholischen Laiengremium, das dem Bischof beigeordnet war. Jetzt fordern Sie den Rücktritt des Generalvikars Michael Fuchs. Warum?

FRITZ WALLNER
ist Vize-Vorsitzender der katholischen Organisation “Laienverantwortung Regensburg”.

Fritz Wallner: Weil die Bistumsleitung schon lange gewusst oder zumindest geahnt haben muss, dass die Zahl der Gewalttaten gegen Domspatzen eklatant war und damit auch die Zahl der Täter. Trotzdem wurde immer wieder so getan, als handele es sich um Einzelfälle. Vor fast sechs Jahren versprach der damalige Bischof Gerhard Ludwig Müller: Was in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten durch einzelne Erzieher, Lehrer und Bedienstete den Chorknaben angetan wurde, muss lückenlos aufgeklärt werden. Doch dann wurde die Aufklärung verschleppt, auf Anzeigen nicht reagiert. Erst in den letzten acht Monaten hat der Sonderermittler Ulrich Weber einen Großteil der Fälle zusammengetragen: Es sind ungefähr dreimal so viele wie bislang behauptet.

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.

CONVICTED PEDOPHILE MENDEL TEVEL RELEASED FROM JAIL

NEW YORK/CALIFORNIA
Jewish Community Watch

Posted on January 27, 2016

Menachem Tewel, 32, commonly known as Mendel Tevel, was released from prison today on good behavior after serving less than seven months of a one year sentence.

Tevel was arrested in Beverly Hills, Calif. and extradited to Brooklyn, New York in October 2013 after a warrant was issued for his arrest for several counts of criminal sex acts with minors. In April of 2015, Tevel agreed to a plea bargain with the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office, stipulating he plead guilty to only two counts for criminal sexual acts in the third degree, which under New York penal law constitutes anal or oral sex with a minor under the age of 17 while the defendant is over the age of 21. The Kings County court sentenced him to a one-year imprisonment term on June 8 2015.

As a result of the conviction, Tevel is required to register as a sex offender within 10 days of his release. In the event that he returns to California, he will be required to register there as well.

Tevel’s victims ranged from ages 6 to 14 years old. The abuse occurred over the span of nearly a decade. At the time of the arrest in Beverly Hills, Tevel was working in close proximity with children at the JEM Community Center. Tevel’s father-in-law, Rabbi Hertzel Illulian, is the founder and director of the JEM Center.

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.

‘Spotlight’ producer joins The Center for Investigative Reporting’s board

UNITED STATES
Reveal: The Center for Investigative Reporting

For information or interviews, contact:
Meghann Farnsworth, Managing Director, Distribution, Operations and Engagement, mfarnsworth@cironline.org

EMERYVILLE, Calif. – Blye Faust, producer of the Oscar-nominated film “Spotlight,” has joined the board of directors of The Center for Investigative Reporting.

CIR Executive Board Chairman Phil Bronstein announced Faust’s appointment as “Spotlight” had just won best picture at the 2016 Critics’ Choice Movie Awards and been nominated for six Academy Awards, including best picture.

Founded in 1977, CIR is the nation’s first independent, nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization dedicated to public service journalism. CIR empowers the public through groundbreaking investigative storytelling that sparks action, improves and saves lives, and protects our democracy. CIR reports expose injustices and failures of accountability and lead to new legislation, policy reforms, criminal investigations, grassroots organizing, changes in the public conversation and more. In a media world where speed, competition and the chase for digital clicks define success, CIR prioritizes the public’s need to know and has been on the cutting edge of the shift in where and how news is delivered.

Faust’s appointment coincides with the launch of “Reveal,” from CIR and PRX (Public Radio Exchange), the nation’s first weekly public radio show and podcast to highlight the value and impact of journalism in the public interest. It also comes as CIR is creating its new documentary unit, Reveal Films, to build on its successful history of producing award-winning documentary films, new digital platforms and a growing public appetite for deeply told true stories.

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.

Cardinal George Pell too ill to fly to US a week before Ballarat decision

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Alex Hamer
Jan. 28, 2016

Cardinal George Pell is still too ill to fly, according to reports.

The former Ballarat priest said he could not appear in December hearings in Melbourne of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse because of his health.

This health update puts his February appearance at the Royal Commission in doubt.

The December sessions heard from Ballarat victims of sexual abuse at the hands of priests, and Cardinal Pell, now the Vatican’s top money man, was to appear and give evidence on his time in the diocese.

His lawyers’ request to appear via video link, which he will do for the US appearance he has just cancelled, was refused by the Royal Commission.

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.

Acusan a Francisco de encubrir a pederastas

MEXICO
Tabasco Hoy

[Former priest Alberto Athie said sexual abuse by clergy is still a problem and Pope Francis has not taken concrete steps to stop it.]

Virgilio Sánchez
Agencia Reforma

El ex sacerdote Alberto Athié afirmó que el Papa Francisco combate la pederastia sólo en el discurso, pues mantiene el modelo de protección a los sacerdotes que han cometido abusos sexuales contra los niños.

“La realidad de la pederastia sigue vigente con Francisco y corresponde a él acabar, de él depende que esto termine o no, si él no lo hace, la pederastia continuará y él continuará siendo responsable de esa pederastia”, dijo en su visita a Oaxaca.

El activista señaló que Francisco tiene excelentes discursos sobre este abuso cometido a niños en todo el mundo, que nadie cuestiona, pero que no se han traducido en acciones.

Expuso que el tribunal que creó en el Vaticano para sancionar los abusos de todo tipo cometidos por sacerdotes está dentro de la estructura de la Congregación de la Doctrina de la Fe; que es la misma que en el pasado dejó pasar los casos de pederastia.

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.

Four ID themselves as survivors of sexual abuse

NEW MEXICO
Albuquerque Journal

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Journal Staff Writer
Thursday, January 28th, 2016

Two men and two women who have filed lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe each took the podium at a public “rally for survivors” event Wednesday to drop their anonymity and identify themselves as survivors of sexual abuse by priests.

The four, identified in lawsuits as John or Jane Does, told about 100 people that they were abused as children by priests, and described their later battles with guilt, shame and substance abuse. The disclosures followed those in December of two men who are suing the archdiocese.

“For me, I find this is a way to shed the guilt and shame I carried around for 40 years,” said John Lund, 54, who contends he was repeatedly raped by Clive Lynn in the early 1970s when Lynn pastored St. Therese of the Infant Jesus Parish in Albuquerque.

Lynn later served in churches in Mora and Raton before the archdiocese removed him from ministry in 1985. Church officials said Lynn had later moved to Great Britain, according to news reports.

“This man was my best friend, my father figure, my hero,” Lund said in a reception room at the Albuquerque Museum. “I was from a fractured home and I didn’t have that in my life. He exploited that.”

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 worthy film that just doesn’t fly: Spotlight reviewed

UNITED KINGDOM
Spectator

Deborah Ross

Like The Revenant and The Big Short, Spotlight is yet another Oscar contender ‘based on true events’ — although it has now been suggested that The Revenant was 99.7 per cent made up. (Does this matter? Only, I suppose, in the sense that you should know what you’re watching.) But we’re on firm ground with Spotlight, where the events — the Boston Globe’s uncovering of systemic child abuse by Catholic priests in Massachusetts — are a matter of record, although how you make a film about something so awful, I don’t know.

Personally, I wanted the film to give it to the Church with both barrels, and let rip with fury, but it’s too restrained for that. Instead, what we have is conscientiously dogged, as well as somewhat repetitive, driving the same points home over and over. Indeed, if I’d had £1 for every time the script employed the phrase ‘But this is the Church we’re talking about!’, it would have been an odd way to make money, but I’d have come away quite well off all the same.

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.

Rally against local Bishop

NEBRASKA
KLKN

[with video]

Posted by: Laurann Robinson
lrobinson@klkntv.com

“Bishop Finn needs to be defrocked, demoted and disciplined,” said Judy Jones with the group SNAP, which stands for Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests.

Some want a bishop in Lincoln to be removed from the church.

In 2012, Bishop Robert Finn was found guilty of failing to report suspected child abuse.

And now that he’s relocated to minister here in Lincoln, some residents want him out of the church, completely.

Jones adds, “we are here today to hand–deliver a letter to Bishop Conley, begging him to reverse his decision to have Bishop Finn minister in the diocese.”

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.

State Law ‘Murky’ On Reporting Sexual Abuse

RHODE ISLAND
Rhode Island Public Radio

[with audio]

Alumni from St. George’s School in Middletown have accused the school of breaking the law by failing to report allegations of sexual abuse spanning decades. But as Rhode Island Public Radio’s Elisabeth Harrison reports, there’s more ambiguity in state law than you might think, and it may have contributed to the school’s failure to report the abuse.

It sounds obvious that a school should report allegations of sexual abuse right away. But when the alleged abuser is a teacher or another school employee, the reality is that doesn’t always happen.

“Most instances where these allegations come to light, the perpetrator is in denial or fabricating excuses. It’s rare that an administrator is given a clear-cut case,” said Tim Conlon, an attorney who has handled many cases of sexual abuse involving schools and the Catholic Church.

According to Conlon, institutions like a church or a school generally want to avoid controversy, and parents may seek to shield their children from further trauma.

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.

NSW child abuse compensation claims statute of limitations should be lifted, survivors better supported, Greens MP says

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By the National Reporting Team’s Natasha Robinson and Rebecca Armitage

The NSW Government is under pressure to act immediately to introduce legislation to lift the statute of limitations that bars victims of abuse in institutional care from pursuing civil compensation cases.

Government says scheme designed for those who cannot seek payment through courts
The call came as the NSW Government reached legal settlements with women who were abused as girls at the Parramatta Girls Training School.

The ABC understands that the State Government has reached a legal settlement with about 15 women who sued the state after suffering abuse at the Parramatta institution, which housed teenage girls between 1950 and 1974.

The home, also known as the Parramatta Girls Home, was the subject of a hearing of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in 2014.

At that time, it was revealed that a number of women had tried to pursue civil claims against the state for abuse including bashings and rapes suffered at the notoriously brutal Parramatta Girls Home.

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.

Royal commission hears Anglican clergy ‘shared secret understanding of attraction to boys’

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Wednesday 27 January 2016

Senior Anglican clergy shared a secret understanding of each other’s attraction to young boys, a royal commission has been told.

The inquiry into the Church of England Boys’ Society being held in Hobart heard evidence on Thursday from the convicted child sexual offender Louis Daniels, 68, a former archdeacon who was one of Tasmania’s top-four church leaders in the early 1990s.

Daniels has since been jailed for pleading guilty to abusing 12 boys.

He was asked about his interaction with fellow former clergy and lay men Garth Hawkins, Robert Brandenburg, Simon Jacobs and John Elliot, all of whom have each faced abuse allegations.

“We would sort of reach the point of acknowledging a mutual gayness but there was a point which you didn’t go past,” Daniels said. “There is a whole secrecy kind of context that’s built into the whole situation.”

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.

Pohlad company bids on archdiocese chancery property

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By ELIZABETH MOHR | emohr@pioneerpress.com
January 28, 2016

Two more for-sale properties of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis have bidders, including a development company owned by the Pohlad family, which has a history of supporting local Catholic organizations.

The Pohlad company, United Properties Development LLC, has offered $2.75 million for the chancery building, across the street from the St. Paul Cathedral, which houses archdiocese offices and the archbishop’s residence.

In a separate proposed purchase, a buyer has offered $365,000 for the archdiocese’s Hazelwood property, a rural home in Greenvale Township, Dakota County, that was donated to the church in 1998.

The proposed purchases are subject to approval by a federal bankruptcy judge.

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.

George Pell too unwell to fly, days before decision on royal commission appearance

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Wednesday 27 January 2016

Australia’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal George Pell, is still too unwell to fly and will address a philanthropic Catholic organisation in the US on Thursday via video link from Rome.

It comes days before Australia’s royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse is due to hear from Pell’s lawyers about whether he will be well enough to appear in person before the commission in February, when hearings are due to continue in Ballarat.

Pell angered Australian child sexual abuse victims in December when he cancelled his flight to Melbourne days before he was due to appear before the commission. The Vatican said Pell was too ill to travel although his specific medical condition was not disclosed.

A directions hearing will be held by the royal commission in Sydney on Friday 5 February to hear whether Pell will appear in person when hearings resume.

But it appears Pell is still too unwell to travel. His office confirmed that his membership address to Foundations and Donors Interested in Catholic Activities, at its Miami symposium, will be delivered via video link from the Vatican, where Pell is the chief financial adviser.

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.

Youth club volunteer preyed on victim, 13

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Stephen Maguire

Richard Blackburn, a volunteer at the Congregational Church Youth Club in Raphoe, Co Donegal, attacked Rachel McAuley for up to two years and even put a bed in the vehicle.

Ms McAuley yesterday waived her anonymity so that Blackburn could be named in court.

He groomed his victim at the youth club between 2000 and 2002. Ms McAuley was 13 when the abuse began and was just short of her 15th birthday when it ended.

She went to gardaí in 2011 to reveal the tale of abuse.

Letterkenny Circuit Court heard how Blackburn bought his victim presents, including a mobile phone, so he could keep in touch.

Blackburn, aged 57, of Carnone, Raphoe, pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual assault. Ms McAuley said in her victim impact statement read to the court that he had abused her “daily” between 2000 and 2002.

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.

Commission names Tas sex offender

AUSTRALIA
Townsville Bulletin

A convicted child sex offender and former priest who changed his name while in prison has failed in a bid to be preserve his “blameless” new identity.

Garth Hawkins, now 70, spent almost six years in jail for offences against seven boys while he worked as an Anglican priest at different townships across Tasmania in the 1970s and 1980s.

A royal commission hearing in Hobart on Thursday was told that during his time in prison – in 2009 – Hawkins changed his name by deed poll to Robin Goodfellow.

In English folklore, Robin Goodfellow is a character known for his pranks and mischievousness.

“He has managed to make a fresh and blameless start in life,” lawyer Roger Baker told the hearing as he asked for a non-publication order on Goodfellow’s name.

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.

What more must be done to safeguard children in all schools?

UNITED KINGDOM
Lexology

United Kingdom January 28 2016

Andrew Lord from the abuse team at Leigh Day considers what lessons must be learnt following the serious case review into the activities of former teacher William Vahey.

William Vahey was a respected humanities teacher who worked at the prestigious Southbank International School (SIS) between 2009 and 2013. Having worked in numerous international schools over several decades, his laid-back teaching style made him popular amongst the pupils.

However, behind the façade, Vahey was a child abuser who administered drugs to several of the pupils before taking indecent images and sexually abusing them whilst they were unconscious.

Earlier this week the Local Safeguarding Children Board published their serious case review into Vahey and SIS. It made clear that a number of opportunities to challenge Vahey on his inappropriate behaviour towards children were missed, and the Department of Education has subsequently warned SIS that more must be done to ensure children are safeguarded in the future.

This appalling case has highlighted how institutional child abuse within the UK is not just a ‘historic’ problem, Vahey was able to evade criticism and investigation by “hiding in plain sight” even with our ‘modern-day awareness’ of child protection matters.

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.

Personal files of clergy abuse victim were made public

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune JANUARY 27, 2016

Louise read with curiosity that St. John’s Abbey was making public its files on 18 monks who had sexually abused minors — until she clicked open the online file about the monk who abused her.

To her horror, she found more than 100 pages of highly personal information about herself taken from medical documents and e-mails she had shared with a Minneapolis therapist whom the abbey had referred her to.

The mother of two said that when she responded to the abbey’s call for abuse victims to step forward and be healed, she never expected to be victimized again.

“This was not about healing; it was betrayal,” said Louise, whose last name is not being used to protect her identity. “There’s no way to construe this as a response to an offer of healing and counseling.”

After Louise sent a scathing e-mail to Abbot John Klassen last week, her files were pulled offline.

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.

Movie review: Spotlight

NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand Herald

By Peter Calder

Journalists are constantly exasperated by the depiction of journalism in the movies: crusading reporters who never take notes write their own (very bad) headlines for stories based on hunches, improbable disclosures, lucky breaks and dramatic confrontations.

So among the many deeply satisfying aspects of this film, which stakes an early claim for a spot on the year’s top-10 list, is that the reporters in it act like reporters. They make a lot of phone calls, take notes, wheedle and plead and doorstep: they use rulers to guide their line-by-line searches through directories and documents (the film is set in the internet’s infancy); they drink a lot of bad coffee.

The embedded idea – that most good journalism is unglamorous, hard-slog drudgery – may seem an unprepossessing concept for a film. But Spotlight enthralls because it remains so faithful to the facts, eschewing cheap theatrics and heroic mythmaking. Like the journos whose work it depicts, it never forgets that it’s all about the story.

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

Boys’ club ‘a sitting duck’ for child sexual abuse, Anglican ex-priest and paedophile says

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

by Emilie Gramenz

A disgraced former Anglican priest has told a child sexual abuse inquiry in Hobart that a poorly managed boys’ club is a “sitting duck” for paedophiles, and that the church’s culture encourages offending.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the Anglican Church and its youth group, the Church of England Boys Society (CEBS), at a public hearing in Hobart.

In particular, the commission is investigating the probability of a multi-state paedophile ring operating within CEBS between the 1960s and 1990s.

Ex-priest Louis Daniels, a convicted Tasmanian paedophile, was asked if he believed there was a culture that facilitated offending within CEBS.

He said the nature of CEBS’s activities, including camps and tours with young boys, provided opportunity.

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.

Lake Bluff Man Says Priest Abused Him

ILLINOIS
Daily North Shore

by Steve Sadin • January 27, 2016

LAKE BLUFF — Dave Ohlmuller is well-known on the North Shore as a Platform Tennis Hall of Famer, coach and father. He also said he is a survivor of sexual abuse at the hands of a Roman Catholic priest and is fighting to prevent what happened to him from happening to others.

Ohlmuller, 46, said his memories of abuse came rushing back when his son turned 11. He said he felt intense feelings of fear and anger stemming from his days as an altar boy in New Jersey. Ohlmuller said he was sexually abused multiple times. His feelings made him an overprotective father.

“I’m not a little overprotective, I’m way overprotective,” Ohlmuller said of his son. “I want to know where he’s going all the time, who he’s with. We live in a nice place. It shouldn’t have to be like that here.”

When the memories returned in 2015, Ohlmuller did two things. He reached out for support to get counseling and he hired lawyer Mitch Garabedian, who was featured in the current Academy Award nominated movie “Spotlight.” Garabedian called his client a hero.

“Dave Ohlmuller should be proud of himself for being so courageous to stand up to the church,” he said. “There were thousands of abusers and thousands of enablers and most people were silent. He is a real hero.”

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.

Boys’ club ‘a sitting duck’ for child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
The New Daily

ANDREW DRUMMOND

The culture of an Anglican boys’ society based on camping and touring provided an opportunity for sexual predators, an offender says.

A convicted child sex offender has described an Anglican boys’ society as a “sitting duck” for predators.

Former Tasmanian archdeacon Louis Daniels, 68, on Thursday gave evidence to a royal commission investigating the Church of England Boys’ Society across the island state and also in Brisbane, Sydney and Adelaide.

Daniels, who has been jailed for his abuse of 11 boys and has settled a civil claim with another, was asked about the culture within the church and whether its branches helped facilitate his offending.

“A boys’ society, unless it is very closely managed, is a sitting duck,” he replied.

Allegations against Daniels were first raised in 1981 by the mother of a 14-year-old Hobart boy who had been sexually propositioned.

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.

The church was corrupt to the core’: meet the Oscar-nominated heroes of Spotlight

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Nigel Farndale
28 January 2016

The Boston Globe’s painstaking investigation into paedophile priests led to arrests, lawsuits and an Oscar-tipped film. But their fight for justice isn’t over yet

In January 2002, a newspaper in Boston broke a story that was to shake the Roman Catholic Church to its very foundations. It concerned the sexual abuse of children by more than 70 priests, and the systematic attempts by Cardinal Bernard Law, the Archbishop of Boston, to cover up their crimes.

For years, the Cardinal had been reassigning known paedophiles — moving them from parish to parish — effectively allowing them to prey on new victims. He had, moreover, been approving out-of-court settlements to their victims, in order to buy their silence.

The Boston Globe’s report was the result of a six-month investigation by the paper’s semi-autonomous Spotlight team — three men and one woman. It began when a new editor took over the paper and asked the team to follow up on a column about Rev John Geoghan, a local priest accused of having sexually abused dozens of young parishioners.

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.

George Pell potentially too unwell for royal commission appearance

AUSTRALIA
9 News

The Vatican are yet to confirm whether Australia’s most senior Catholic priest, Cardinal George Pell, will be well enough to return ahead of his scheduled appearance at the royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse when it resumes next month.

Last month, Cardinal Pell angered child sexual abuse victims when he cancelled his flights just days before he was originally due to appear in Ballarat – citing ill health as the reason for his non-appearance.

The Ballarat sitting was deferred until February, so that Pell could attend when his health had improved.

The royal commission will hold a directions hearing in Sydney on February 5 to determine whether Pell will be well enough to travel to Australia for the resumption of hearings later in the month.

This has not been the only commitment Cardinal Pell has skipped due to poor health.

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.

‘Spotlight’: Sexual Abuse and Journalistic Zeal, Without Melodrama

ISRAEL
Haaretz

Uri Klein Jan 28, 2016

“Spotlight,” directed by Tom McCarthy (“The Station Agent,” “The Visitor”), is a melodrama that manages not to be melodramatic, and that is its main virtue. We’ve seen quite a few pictures about journalists who take on a powerful institution (Alan J. Pakula’s “All the President’s Men” from 1976 is the paradigmatic example) or spend years pursuing an elusive target (e.g., David Fincher’s 2007 movie “Zodiac”). But while those films had a melodramatic side that provided a great deal of suspense, what makes “Spotlight” effective is how dry it is.

This virtue is especially notable given that the story involves a team of four investigative journalists for The Boston Globe (they form a team nicknamed “Spotlight”) who fight to expose numerous cases of child molesting within the Catholic Church in Boston and the cover-up engineered by church officials. The church is particularly powerful in Boston because much of the population is Catholic – as are many readers of The Boston Globe, who might resent seeing this kind of exposé in their 
paper.

The movie opens with a 
prologue taking place in 1976, when a priest accused of molesting children is arrested and then released to the church, which is supposed to deal with him by its own means. “Spotlight” is openly critical of The Boston Globe and other Boston newspapers for ignoring this and similar cases, which were reported only in short items relegated to the inside pages of the paper. The story then moves to 2001, when Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber) becomes the new editor of The Boston Globe. The first Jew ever to hold this position, he is determined to look into the matter and assigns the task to the Spotlight team.

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 in Mexico Protecting a Priest Accused of Sexually Abusing 100 Children

MEXICO
Latin One

Ma. Elena | staff@latinopost.com
Jan 28, 2016

Mexico’s Catholic Church is being accused of protecting a priest who allegedly sexually abused about 100 children.

During a press conference, a letter written by the mother of one victim was read aloud, according to EFE (via Fox News Latino). It was directed to Pope Francis, who is scheduled to visit Mexico in February.

In the letter, the mother asked the pontiff for justice for the victims in order to assure that “this doesn’t happen again,” the news outlet added. The accused is Rev. Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, whose first sexual abuse allegedly took place almost a decade ago.

Alejandro de Jesus of the Oaxaca Children’s Forum said that “in 2006, Gerardo Silvestre abused a 9-year-old boy during a six-month internship” in San Pablo Huitzo, a parish in the southern state of Oaxaca, EFE further reported. De Jesus added that after that, “more than 100 victims were dragged in” during the years in which he served as a priest at seven different locations.

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.

January 27, 2016

State appoints Listecki, others to commission on family

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Jason Stein of the Journal Sentinel Jan. 27, 2016

Madison— A member of a powerful conservation foundation, Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listeki and a prominent Latino commentator have all been named to Gov. Scott Walker’s new commission on the family.

The Future of the Family Commission will present recommendations to the Republican governor in December. Walker said he hoped the 10-person panel would find ways to help successful families as well as those facing challenges or breakdowns.

“If we have strong families, there’s almost no challenge we can’t face,” Walker said.

The commission’s chairwoman is Department of Children and Families secretary Eloise Anderson, who has held that post since 2011. Walker appointed Anderson to the post and she in turn appointed the other members.

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Group speaks out against Lincoln Catholic bishop

NEBRASKA
KETV

By Andrew Ozaki

LINCOLN, Neb. —A group that speaks on behalf of survivors abused by priests when they were young protested Wednesday morning in front of the Catholic chancery in Lincoln.

The group voiced frustration over the first bishop in the U.S. who was criminally convicted of sheltering a priest suspected of child sex abuse and is now in the Lincoln diocese.

Holding pictures of children abused by clergy, members of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) stood together on Wednesday.

“We want to prevent more clergy sex crimes and cover-ups,” Judy Jones said. “And the way that happens is by disciplining those who commit and conceal crimes and misdeeds.”

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Catholic Church accused of shielding priest who abused some 100 children in Mexico

MEXICO
Inside Costa Rica

MEXICO CITY, January 27th, 2016 (EFE) The Oaxaca Children’s Forum was joined Tuesday by several priests and activists in accusing Mexico’s Catholic hierarchy of protecting a priest who may have abused around 100 children.

The accusation was made at a press conference at which a letter was read from the mother of one of the victims directed to Pope Francis, who will visit Mexico next month, in which she asks the pontiff for justice for the victims and action to ensure that “this doesn’t happen again.”

The main target of the complaint is the archbishop of Antequera-Oaxaca, Jose Luis Chavez Botello, who is being accused of covering up the cases by not conducting a thorough investigation of abuses that occurred in seven indigenous communities.

The main protagonist in the case is the Rev. Gerardo Silvestre Hernandez, who is accused of committing the first abuse almost a decade ago.

“In 2006, Gerardo Silvestre abused a 9-year-old boy during a six-month internship” in San Pablo Huitzo, a parish in the southern state of Oaxaca, the forum’s Alejandro de Jesus said.

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Book documents molestation in conservative Baptist churches

UNITED STATES
Baptist News

By Bob Allen

As the Oscar-nominated movie Spotlight shares the story of the Boston Globe’s 2001 expose of child molestation and cover up in the Catholic Church, a new book by a Baptist author makes the case that clergy sexual abuse isn’t just a Catholic problem.

Author Jeri Massi says abuse victims have been written off, discarded and even vilified in the pulpits of both Independent Baptists and the Southern Baptist Convention. Her The Big Book of Bad Baptist Preachers catalogues 100 cases of preachers and churches involved in child molestation scandals in the last 20 years.

“The sexual abuse of children is part and parcel of the cultures of the Independent Baptists and Southern Baptists,” Massi says in the book’s introduction.

When confronted by the scale of the problem, she says, Baptist leadership has “at best turned a deaf ear and at worst has countered with threats and intimidation.”

Massi says abuse victims and their advocates are routinely accused of “painting with a broad brush.” In her own Independent Fundamental Baptist tradition, she says she has been depicted as sexually promiscuous, a drug addict and a witch and had her life threatened three times.

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Protesters call for embattled Catholic bishop to be removed

NEBRASKA
Lincoln Journal Star

By ERIN ANDERSEN | LINCOLN JOURNAL STAR

A handful of protesters gathered outside the Catholic Chancery Wednesday and delivered a letter asking Lincoln Bishop James Conley to remove embattled Bishop Robert Finn from his post as chaplain for the School Sisters of Christ the King convent.

The protesters, two of whom represented SNAP — the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests — say Finn violated the trust of Catholics and broke the law when he failed to report allegations of child abuse by his priests during his tenure with the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. They say he should be defrocked and not retain the power or prestige associated with the title of bishop.

In 2012, Finn was found guilty of the misdemeanor crime of not reporting to police allegations of child pornography against Father Shawn Ratigan, who later was convicted and sentenced to 50 years in prison.

Finn, the first U.S. bishop to be charged with failing to report child sex abuse to police in a timely manner, was placed on two years probation, which he completed.

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Brisbane archbishop blamed for 1980s abuse

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

A victim of child sexual abuse has blamed the now-Brisbane Anglican archbishop for putting him in bed with the perpetrating priest.

Giving evidence to a royal commission in Hobart on Wednesday, the 52-year-old who cannot be named for legal reasons recounted how he was raped in January 1981, then aged 17, at Triabunna on Tasmania’s east coast.

Former priest Garth Hawkins has since been convicted of the abuse but the victim insists it was incumbent Archbishop Phillip Aspinall who set up the opportunity.

“I wouldn’t have been there without Archbishop Aspinall,” the victim said.

“He put me in that bed.”

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Child sex offenders to give evidence

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

AAP

Twelve years after the Anglican diocese of Tasmania was first alerted to allegations of child sex abuse by an assistant Hobart priest, he was selected to lead a youth group.

Louis Daniels, 68, will be one of two convicted sex offenders who on Thursday will give evidence to a royal commission hearing.

In 1981 Daniels was rebuked by then-Bishop Henry Jerrim for acting in a sexually inappropriate way with a boy, the commission has been told.

“Bishop Jerrim told Mr Daniels to amend his life,” counsel assisting the commission, Naomi Sharp said.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: church aware of claims in 1978

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Tessa Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

The Anglican Diocese of Adelaide was first made aware of allegations that an employee of the Church of England Boys’ Society was sexually abusing children in about 1978, but he stayed on in various roles relating to the church until 1998, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse yesterday began hearings into the Church of Eng­land Boys’ Society, the fifth public hearing relating to the Anglican Church.

In her opening address, counsel assisting the inquiry Naomi Sharp said the hearing in Hobart would look at the responses of the CEBS and the Anglican dioceses of Tasmania, Adelaide, Brisbane and Sydney to allegations of child sexual abuse by those involved in or associated with CEBS.

The hearing would focus on five men convicted of or charged with sex offences against boys, ­including Robert Brandenburg, who served as South Australian CEBS chief commissioner in the 1970s and manager of campsites for the diocese of Adelaide in the 1980s. His employment was transferred to Anglicare SA in 1989 and he retired in 1998.

In 1999, Brandenburg was charged with 24 counts of unlawful sexual intercourse and 341 counts of indecent assault. He committed suicide two days before he was due to face court.

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Oaxaca archbishop accused of cover-up

MEXICO
Mexico News Daily

The Catholic Church in Oaxaca was accused yesterday of covering up sexual crimes by one of its priests and punishing others who raised the accusations.

And one of the latter admitted that he — along with “the majority of priests in Oaxaca” — has a family.

Apolonio Merino Hernández made the admission after a press conference held by the Oaxaca Children’s Forum and various priests and activists, where the archbishop of Oaxaca was accused of covering up sexual abuse by Gerardo Silvestre Hernández.

The conference was told that Merino was transferred to a distant and remote parish in the Mixteca as punishment for speaking out against Silvestre and on behalf of victims. Last August, he was suspended.

As many as 100 indigenous youngsters are believed to have been abused by Silvestre, beginning in 2006.

The priest was on a six-month internship in San Pablo Huitzo where he abused a nine-year-old boy, the conference was told, after which there were “more than 100 victims” in seven different parishes where Silvestre served.

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Acusan al arzobispo José Luis Chávez Botello de proteger a padres pederastas

OAXACA DE JUáREZ (MEXICO)
IMAGEN RADIO [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

January 27, 2016

By Adela Micha

Read original article

El sacerdote Apolonio Merino Hernández, de la Arquidiócesis de Antequera-Oaxaca, fue suspendido de su cargo supuestamente por haber denunciado los presuntos actos pederastas de su colega Gerardo Silvestre Hernández.

En entrevista con Adela Micha para Grupo Imagen Multimedia, el padre Apolonio anunció que solicitará una audiencia con el Papa Francisco en la próxima visita de éste a Oaxaca.

Nadie ha buscado a las víctimas; pedimos que se aplique la justicia y se escuche a los afectados”, puntualizó Merino Hernández.

Apolonio señaló a la comisión que el arzobispo José Luis Chávez Botello forma de estar involucrada en el caso. “El padre Gerardo Silvestre se encuentra en prisión, pero está exculpado por la iglesia católica”.

Tengo familia, lo acepto; mantuve una relación que ya terminé y tengo hijos”, reconoció Merino.

Los detalles a través de Imagen Radio.

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In Our View: Church Right to Shed Light

WASHINGTON
The Columbian

It was a small and painful action, yet a necessary one.

The Archdiocese of Seattle this month released what officials say is a comprehensive list of 77 Catholic Church officials accused of sexually abusing children in Western Washington between 1923 and 2008. While the disclosure cannot mitigate the actions of the accused, nor the shameful cover-up that followed, nor the pain of the victims, it hopefully can provide a small step toward healing.

The list includes 11 priests who at some point during their careers had been assigned to Clark County parishes, although it is not clear how many of them faced allegations while at local parishes. The names previously had been disclosed through court records or media reports, meaning that the list was far from revelatory. It also means that the priests named in the document have faced accusations carrying at least some level of validity, limiting the risk of falsely accusing the innocent.

Meanwhile, the disclosure represents the continuing efforts of the Church to heal from within and salve the wounds left festering from decades of turning a blind eye to abuse. “I will continue to pray for all survivors of sexual abuse, and deeply regret that vulnerable individuals in the Church’s care have been harmed,” Archbishop J. Peter Sartain wrote in a letter accompanying the disclosure.

As has been documented as occurring at other locations throughout the country, the Archdiocese of Seattle for years made a habit of moving accused priests to an unsuspecting parish where they would continue their abusive actions. In recent decades, the archdiocese that covers Western Washington has paid $74 million to settle 392 legal claims in connection with sexual abuse. While these settlements and the list released this month cannot assuage the actions of the abusers or Church officials, it does represent a step toward rapprochement between the actions and the ideals of the Church. As depicted in the Oscar-nominated film “Spotlight,” it wasn’t long ago that the Archdiocese of Boston attempted to hide documents from the media that would prove the Church tacitly protected abusive priests.

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‘No regrets’ at speaking up about paedophile priest – Father John Gallagher

FLORIDA
Derry Journal (Northern Ireland)

Erin Hutcheon
erin.hutcheon@derryjournal.com

A Derry priest who has been frozen out of his priestly duties in the USA after refusing to cover up sex crimes by another priest, says he has no regrets about what he did.

Father John Gallagher who now lives in Palm Beach but previously ministered in the Long Tower parish told the Journal how the locks were changed on his parochial house after he refused to put a paedophile priest on a plane rather than co-operate with police.

This week the Strabane born priest broke his silence after almost a year and he says he has concerns that the priest at the centre of the sex crimes could still be working as a priest, and be a danger to children.

This week Father’s Gallagher’s story made headline news across the world. Indeed one of this friends remarked: “There are only two people in the U.S. news today – Donald Trump and Father John Gallagher.”

The Irish priest’s facebook page has been flooded with messages of support and he says he has received letters and cards from people all over the world, many from his former parishioners in Derry,

Father Gallagher interviewed the priest Fr Jose Palimattom in January 2015 along with a retired police officer when he was made aware that he had shown indecent images to a young teenager.

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Mexican priest accused of sexually abusing about 100 children

MEXICO
Fox News Latino

Several priests and activists joined the Oaxaca Children’s Forum Tuesday in accusing Mexico’s Catholic hierarchy of protecting a priest who may have abused about 100 children.

The accusation was made at a press conference at which a letter was read aloud who was written by the mother of one victim directed to Pope Francis, who will visit Mexico next month. In it, she asks the pontiff for justice for the victims and action to ensure that “this doesn’t happen again.”

The main target of the complaint is the archbishop of Antequera-Oaxaca, José Luis Chávez Botello, who is accused of covering up the cases by not conducting a thorough investigation of abuses that occurred in seven indigenous communities.

The main target of the allegations is the Rev. Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, who is accused of first abusing a child almost a decade ago.

“In 2006, Gerardo Silvestre abused a 9-year-old boy during a six-month internship” in San Pablo Huitzo, a parish in the southern state of Oaxaca, Alejandro de Jesus of the the Children’s Forum said.

According to de Jesus, after that, “more than 100 victims were dragged in” during the years in which Silvestre served as a priest at seven different locations.

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Accused Priest Had No Role at Our Lady of Sorrows School, Says Principal

NEW JERSEY
The Village Green

BY: MARY MANN

Officials report that Fr. Michael Walters, a priest who formerly worked as an assistant pastor at Our Lady of Sorrow Church in South Orange and who has recently been accused of sexual misconduct with minors at another parish in the 1980s, had no role in the school there and no contact with students.

Media outlets reported earlier this month that Fr. Walters was removed from his ministry at the church in October amid allegations that he sexually assaulted two minors in the early 1980s.

Walters, 60, denies the allegations and reportedly left the ministry by “mutual agreement” with the Archdiocese of Newark.

David Ohlmuller, 46, told NJ.com that Walters fondled him, kissed him and offered him wine on various occasions in 1982, when Ohlmuller was 12 and a parishioner at St. Cassian Church in Montclair, NJ. A second accuser, who wishes to remain anonymous, said that Walters molested her during the same time period when she was 13 and 14. Both are being represented by Boston-based attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented hundreds of accusers in the sexual abuse scandal that has engulfed the Catholic Church in recent years.

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Seattle archdiocese publishes list of clergy accused of sexual abuse of minors

WASHINGTON
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Morris-Young | Jan. 27, 2016

The Seattle archdiocese published Jan. 15 a list of clergy and religious “accused of sexual abuse of a minor who have served or resided in Western Washington,” according to an archdiocesan press release.

“The individuals named on the list posted to the archdiocesan website have allegations that are either admitted, established or determined to be credible,” the release said.

According to the release, “Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain apologized for the actions of those who abused minors” and said publishing the list builds on the archdiocese’s efforts at transparency, accountability and urging victims to come forward.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), however, issued a press release the same day, saying “every time a predator’s name is publicized, kids are safer,” but also charging it “suspects this is an incomplete list that was prompted by external pressure.”

“Seattle Catholic officials should have disclosed and posted these clerics’ names long ago. Now, they should put it in each parish bulletin, several times a year, and permanently on each parish website,” Seattle SNAP officials said, adding, “About 30 U.S. bishops have taken this step, almost always belatedly, grudgingly, incompletely and only because parishioners, prosecutors or lawmakers prod them to do so.”

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Getting the truth-the old-fashioned way

UNITED STATES
The Journal

Sean Flamand, Movie Reviewer
January 27, 2016

Phil Saviano (Neal Huff) sits on one side of an office, clutching a cardboard box in his lap. He’s the only one in the room who’s not part of The Boston Globe’s Spotlight team of investigative journalists.While the newspaper has reported on Saviano previously, other reporters have given the impression that they don’t put much stock in him as a source. But these four journalists are different. They’re methodical, they’re patient, and –most importantly – they’re listening. Saviano tells his story of abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest, a slow descent from innocuous favors like collecting hymnals and taking out the trash – to sinister and abusive ones that we don’t want to imagine but are told anyway, as the film lays it out for us that the priest asked an 11-year-old Saviano to perform oral sex on him. “How do you say no to God, right?” asks Saviano with tragic irony. Tom McCarthy’s “Spotlight” (2015) tells the story of how The Boston Globe exposed the rampant sexual abuse among priests in the Roman Catholic Church. It’s a fact-based story, and this reality didn’t need any embellishment to be both compelling and deeply disturbing. The power of “Spotlight” is embedded in words – conversations like the above with Saviano; the legalese and loopholes of getting all the information; and how something as innocent as “sick leave” became sinister.

We never see any of the abuse firsthand, of course. Instead, we see exactly what these reporters saw – tortured and mentally scarred victims, wringing their hands and struggling through stories no one should have to tell. Any outsider hearing these stories is led to wonder: “Why is nothing being done about this?” Indeed, as “Spotlight” points out, it took an outsider in new (and Jewish) editor-in-chief Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber) for anyone to get curious enough to investigate. Baron puts Spotlight on the case, a part of The Boston Globe that specializes in truly in-depth reporting – sometimes putting out only one or two stories in a year, as the team’s head Walter “Robby” Robinson (Michael Keaton) explains in one scene. Outside of the conversations, the most action-packed sequences of “Spotlight” aren’t action-packed at all.
They’re scenes of combing through dusty directories in dimly lit storerooms, hunting for names that will lead to more perpetrators entangled the scandal. Somehow, though, McCarthy makes the down-to-earth representation of true investigative journalism gripping, and the film becomes something of an elegy for this brand of journalism in that respect. It could be contested that “Spotlight” doesn’t pay enough attention to its core characters.

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Sacrificing Victims On The Altars Of Silence And Power

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

Tue, 01/19/2016
Guila BenchimolSpecial To The Jewish Week

Stories about sexual violence and rabbis behaving badly continue to make headlines. These incidents are not restricted to the Jewish world; sexual violence and abuse of power know no boundaries of faith. Yet Jewish communities are left with questions begging to be answered: How do we react to these crimes? How should we react?

But we must first ask: Why do these behaviors persist? Because we let them happen. Our community reinforces a culture of silence, and even when victims overcome it, we often blame the victims. If we want this to stop, it is time to look in the mirror.

All too often, when powerful individuals commit sex crimes, silence is the default reaction. In all of the recent cases, the rumors and rumblings about inappropriate behavior that circulated for years before abuse came to light were met with silence. Ignoring rumors about misconduct or “creepy” behavior empowers individuals to carry on acting inappropriately and may even embolden them to venture further. Silence enables abuses of power to continue and allows inappropriate actions to develop into illegal ones.

Because of our silence, many cases of sex crimes never get reported. And when they are reported, we excuse the behavior of our leaders and instead question that of their victims.

Powerful individuals often rise above suspicion. In the ongoing case of Marc Gafni, his position of power has been cited to explain why people ignored the allegations against him as a spiritual teacher who has had numerous sexually and/or psychologically abusive relationships. When communities have to face the idea that their leaders may not live up to their virtuous public personas, they experience cognitive dissonance. They are reluctant to accept that a member of a religious group, especially a leader, would behave in ways that go against their avowed ethical norms. Aware of the pushback they will generate, victims or concerned community members may feel powerless to speak out against the powerful. Further, those who abuse their power can easily orchestrate cover-ups or ensure they are not held accountable for their actions. But once we recognize this cognitive dissonance, we can challenge and confront those who make excuses for a leader’s misconduct.

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A Tale of the Pure at Heart

GUATEMALA
Foreign Policy

Uriel Goldman’s bushy eyebrows knit together in dismay when he sees a cockroach skittering across the tiled floor near the entrance of his cramped Guatemala City apartment. Despite the warm spring weather, he is dressed in a heavy calf-length coat, velvet wide-brimmed hat, and bulky shoes with stockings — all black. He maneuvers his broad frame into the next room to grab a broom, careful to avoid a gantlet of obstacles scattered around the awkward space: a mini-fridge, a folded-up mattress, a basket of laundry, a bag of groceries. He gently sweeps the bug out the door and into an equally cluttered stairwell.

Goldman, who is in his mid-40s, sits down in a blue plastic chair and sighs. “It’s the seventh month,” he says, “that we are in this terrible situation.” Seven months of pretending that a run-down office building that once housed Guatemala’s immigration directorate is a suitable place for 14 families to live, sleeping six or more people to a room. Seven months of dealing with scores of restless kids who are tired of being cooped up indoors because their parents think the city’s Zona 9 neighborhood, thick with traffic and peppered with sporadic crime, is no place for children to play.

But they’re here, Goldman says of his family and friends, because they have no other choice.

Goldman is a member of and spokesman for Lev Tahor (“Pure Heart” in Hebrew), an ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect that has been bouncing around the Western Hemisphere for the better part of two decades. Before winding up in Guatemala City, Lev Tahor lived for several months in San Juan La Laguna, a small Mayan village about 100 miles west of the capital. In August 2014, however, village leaders ordered the group to leave. They cited irreconcilable differences: Locals had complained that Lev Tahor’s men refused to touch the hands of female shopkeepers and that sect members bathed nude in the lake. According to Goldman, authorities threatened to cut off electricity and water if Lev Tahor didn’t go. So it did, with followers’ earthly belongings strapped to the roof of one of Guatemala’s iconic Technicolor “chicken buses.”

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To The Woman Who Slept With My Husband

UNITED STATES
Hevria

Editor’s Note: This piece is written by Marc Gafni’s third ex-wife who was married to him from 1998 to 2004. She wrote about her experience in a recent post for the Times of Israel.

I will never forget your apology to me. Tearful, remorseful, awful.

You kept it a secret. You held it in for well over a decade. Embroidered it into your skin…Sequestered from sight and air and left it rotting there inside of you.

Sometimes I imagine all the sick little secrets he ever spawned…all drawn upon the skin of the women who entrusted their silence, their innocence, their sense of shame, to him.

I remember how broken you were. How over-spilled with shame. Begging my forgiveness.

And all I could think was, no I don’t forgive you. I don’t.

Because I don’t blame you. I don’t have a drop of blame to add to this flask of self-guilt you continue to sip.

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US-Bischof gibt Posten als Aushilfspriester auf

MICHIGAN
Katholisch

Der US-amerikanische Erzbischof John Nienstedt (68) hat seinen Dienst als Aushilfsgeistlicher in einer Kleinstadt vorzeitig beendet. Die Anwesenheit Nienstedts, der im Zuge eines Missbrauchsskandals von der Leitung seines Erzbistums Minneapolis zurückgetreten war, habe unter den Gläubigen für Spannungen gesorgt, schrieb der katholische Pfarrer der Kleinstadt Battle Creek, John Fleckenstein, im aktuellen Pfarrblatt.

Die Seelsorgetätigkeit Nienstedts habe “Ärger und Angst” unter den Katholiken ausgelöst, so der Pfarrer. Angesichts der “von den Gläubigen unserer Gemeinde geäußerten Bedenken” und der “unbeabsichtigten Uneinigkeit, die seine Anwesenheit verursacht”, habe Nienstedt angeboten, das Bistum Kalamazoo im Bundesstaat Michigan wieder zu verlassen, schrieb Fleckenstein. Ursprünglich war geplant, dass Erzbischof Nienstedt für ein halbes Jahr als Hilfsgeistlicher in Battle Creek mitarbeitet. Während dieser Zeit sollte er unter anderem Werktagsmessen, Krankenbesuche und Gottesdienste in einem Pflegeheim übernehmen.

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Klasnic-Kommission berichtete Papst über ihre Tätigkeit

VATIKANSTADT
der Standard

[A special independent victim protection commission met with Pope Francis and said they have decided 1,600 cases of clergy abuse in Austria.]

Unabhängige Opferschutzkommission entschied in sechs Jahren rund 1.600 Fälle

Vatikanstadt/Wien – Papst Franziskus hat die von der römisch-katholischen Kirche beauftragte Unabhängige Opferschutzkommission zur Aufarbeitung von Missbrauchsfällen empfangen. Nach der Generalaudienz berichtete die Kommission mit Waltraud Klasnic an der Spitze bei einem Treffen über ihre Tätigkeit in den sechs Jahren ihres Bestehens, vermeldete “Kathpress” am Mittwoch. Rund 1.600 Fälle wurden entschieden. – derstandard.at/2000029873889/Klasnic-Kommission-berichtete-Papst-ueber-ihre-Taetigkeit

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Stellungnahme des Bistums zu TV-Sendung

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Hildesheim

WDR greift Fall des ehemaligen Pfarrers Peter R. erneut auf

In der TV-Sendung „Richter Gottes“ (geplante Ausstrahlung heute um 22.10 Uhr) äußert sich laut einer heute veröffentlichten Pressemitteilung des Senders WDR die Mutter einer heute 20-jährigen jungen Frau aus Hildesheim, die von dem ehemaligen Pfarrer Peter R. mutmaßlich sexuell missbraucht worden ist. Die Mutter gibt demnach an, auch sie sei ab 1993 von R. sexuell belästigt worden. Das Bistum Hildesheim sei seit September 2015 über ihren Fall informiert. Man habe aber bislang keinen Kontakt zu ihr aufgenommen. Dazu nimmt das Bistum Hildesheim wie folgt Stellung:

Es besteht bis zum heutigen Tag kein Kontakt zwischen dem Bistum Hildesheim und der Mutter des jungen Mädchens. Die näheren Umstände ihres Falles und die von ihr gegenüber Peter R. konkret erhobenen Vorwürfe, welche in der erwähnten Pressemitteilung des WDR dargestellt werden, waren dem Bistum bisher nicht bekannt. Eine Schilderung oder Aussage der Mutter liegt dem Bistum nicht vor. Die Mutter hat sich bislang nicht mit dem Bistum in Verbindung gesetzt.
Während eines mit Weihbischof Heinz-Günter Bongartz und Sr. Ancilla Schulz (Ansprechpartnerin für Verdachtsfälle sexuellen Missbrauchs) am 18. September 2015 geführten

Gesprächs teilten die Großeltern der jungen Frau mit, zwischenzeitlich habe sich bestätigt, dass ihre Tochter ebenfalls Opfer eines sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Peter R. geworden sei. Kurz vor dem Erstgespräch mit dem Mädchen und ihrer Religionslehrerin am 04. März 2010 hatte der Mann der Lehrerin – ohne dies näher auszuführen – gegenüber dem damaligen Personalchef Bongartz den allgemeinen Verdacht kommuniziert, dass wahrscheinlich auch die Mutter des Mädchens von Peter R. sexuell belästigt worden sei.

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Bistum Hildesheim: Familientragödie über zwei Generationen

DEUTSCHLAND
Spiegel

Von Peter Wensierski

Neue Vorwürfe gegen das Bistum Hildesheim: Auch die Mutter eines betroffenen Mädchens soll vor Jahren von Priester R. missbraucht worden sein. Jetzt fordert der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der Bundesregierung einen unabhängigen Ermittler.

Ein junges Mädchen namens Anna* wandte sich 2010 an das Bistum Hildesheim und erhob schwere Vorwürfe gegen Pfarrer Peter R. Der stand damals schon im Zentrum des großen Missbrauchsskandals am Berliner Canisius-Kolleg – doch das Bistum Hildesheim gab die neuen Hinweise erst Monate später an die Staatsanwaltschaft weiter. Der Fall wurde im vergangenen November bekannt, das Bistum geriet wegen seiner mangelnden Aufklärungsarbeit massiv in die Kritik.

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Neue Missbrauchsvorwürfe im Bistum Hildesheim

DEUTSCHLAND
Osnabrucker Zeitung

Köln. In den 70er- und 80er-Jahren soll ein Priester mindestens 100 Kinder am Berliner Canisius-Kolleg missbraucht haben. Vor Kurzem berichtete eine junge Frau aus dem Bistum Hildesheim, der Mann habe auch sie bedrängt. Nun meldet sich die Mutter mit ähnlichen Vorwürfen zu Wort.

Das Bistum Hildesheim muss sich mit neuen Missbrauchsvorwürfen im Fall des früheren Pfarrers Peter R. beschäftigen. Nach Recherchen des WDR hat sich ein weiteres mutmaßliches Opfer gemeldet. Dabei handele es sich um die Mutter der jungen Frau, die als Elfjährige von dem Geistlichen bedrängt worden sein soll, teilte der WDR mit. Die heute 20-Jährige hatte vor kurzem vom Bistum eine Geldsumme in Anerkennung ihres Leides erhalten. – Ex-Pfarrer Peter R. belastet: Neue Missbrauchsvorwürfe im Bistum Hildesheim | noz.de – Lesen Sie mehr auf:

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Neuer Missbrauchsvorwurf

DEUTSCHLAND
WDR

[Another victims has come forward with an allegation against Fr. Peter R. in the Hildesheim diocese.]

Im Fall des Missbrauchstäters Pfarrer Peter R. hat sich nach WDR Recherchen ein weiteres mutmaßliches Opfer gemeldet. Es handelt sich um die Mutter einer heute 20jährigen jungen Frau aus Hildesheim, die in der WDR/ARD Dokumentation „Richter Gottes“ vom 30.11.2015 bereits selbst ihren Missbrauch durch den pensionierten Pfarrer Peter R. öffentlich gemacht hatte. Der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der Bundesregierung fordert nun einen unabhängigen Ermittler vor Ort.

Der Fall hatte für Schlagzeilen gesorgt, da das Bistum Hildesheim im Fall des jungen Mädchens 2010 keinen Hinweis auf einen Missbrauch gesehen hatte und weder die Erziehungsberechtigten noch die staatlichen Behörden umgehend informierte, obwohl es sich bei dem beschuldigten Pfarrer um einen der beiden Haupttäter des Missbrauchsskandals am Berliner Canisius-Kolleg mit mutmaßlich über 100 Opfern handelte. Erst auf Druck der Erziehungsberechtigten informierte das Bistum die zuständige Staatsanwaltschaft, ohne allerdings über die bekannte Vorgeschichte des Täters zu informieren. Der Pfarrer wurde wie ein Ersttäter behandelt, das Verfahren gegen Zahlung einer Geldauflage wegen mangelnden öffentlichen Interesses eingestellt. Ehemalige Canisus-Schüler, sowie die Opfergruppe „Eckiger Tisch“ forderten daraufhin im Dezember 2015 den Rücktritt des Hildesheimer Bischofs Norbert Trelle. Nach anhaltender Kritik am Vorgehen des Bistums räumte Bischof Norbert Trelle in dem Fall nachträglich Fehler ein.

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The Right Way To Deal With A Sexual Advance

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

Tue, 01/26/2016
Gillian Steinberg
Special To The Jewish Week

Twenty years ago, my Hillel rabbi, a bearded man in a black suit with a velvet kipa who presented himself as a committed Orthodox Jew, invited me to the Hillel building one evening to hang out with him and some other students. When I arrived, the building was dark, and he and I sat down to wait for the others. We chatted for a while, but when the other students didn’t arrive, I suggested that I call them to see when they were coming.

The rabbi inched closer to me on the sofa and said, “They aren’t coming. I didn’t actually invite them.” Taken aback, I asked what he meant, and he said, “Would you like to go for a drive with me?” I said no, and he began to tell me that he was attracted to me, that he wanted to be close to me, that he’d like to spend time alone with me. He reached out to touch me.

I was a new graduate student, just out of college, and he was in his 50s. I knew his wife from Shabbat dinners, and his older children were my age. I had seen him as a religious role model: an observant Jew interested in music, connected to the modern world, deeply spiritual but also an intellectual. And he was trying to cheat on his wife with me on the Hillel sofa.

In that shocking moment, I had the presence of mind to tell him how uncomfortable I was; I pulled away from him and left the building, shaking.

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Priest punished for informing on paedophile colleague

FLORIDA
The Freethinker

A report last year said that the Diocese of Palm Beach was instrumental in bringing the pervert to the attention of the police. The diocese said in a statement:

The Diocese of Palm Beach immediately contacted authorities and cooperated in the investigation conducted by the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. This cooperation resulted in the arrest of Father Palimattom.

If this were true, the diocese is to be commended.

But the truth, according to this report, is that the priest was reported to the police not by the diocese but by a whistle-blowing colleague, Fr John A Gallagher, above, who now claims that he is being punished for involving the police instead of following Church orders to put Palimattom on a plane back to India.

Gallagher, 48, originally from Strabane in Co Tyrone, says that he has been demoted, that the locks on his parochial house were changed and he was placed on medical leave by his bishop in the diocese.

The Irish priest says that on the night he found out about Palimattom, who had been at the parish of the Holy Name of Jesus Christ in West Palm Beach for just one month, was told by a Florida Church official:

We need to make him go away, put on a plane.

He had been instructed to send Palimattom to Bangalore. Gallagher was also by the same official:

Do not keep written notes.

After the priest was arrested and his bail set at $10,000, the Catholic Church dealt with the victim’s family through lawyers and an out-of-court settlement was made.

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Rechnitz Confronts Insularity

UNITED STATES
Times of Israel

Michael J. Salamon

Thee Yeshiva World News posted a video of Shlomo Yehuda Rechnitz speaking at a gathering in Lakewood New Jersey a few days ago. The headline read – “A Path-Breaking Speech by R’ Shlomo Yehudah Rechnitz About Serious Issue Facing Lakewood Community”. By the time the video was posted on the news site I must have seen Rechnitz’s comments and video links on my Facebook and Twitter feeds posted at least a dozen times.

R. Rechnitz is famous for his generosity and is according to Wikipedia “an American businessman and philanthropist. He is the founder of TwinMed, LLC and owner of Brius Healthcare Services, the largest nursing home provider in the State of California.” He recently purchased meals for some 400 American soldiers returning to the US who he met by chance while he was traveling to Israel, in the Shannon airport. He also purchased Powerball lottery tickets for his employees.

What Mr. Rechnitz said in Lakewood deserves the attention it is receiving. He called to task the mind set of Lakewood insularity that seeks to exclude certain individuals, especially children, who do not fit exactly into the rigid and increasingly stringent mold that the community stridently demands. You can watch the video and hear his passion and concern, and every word spoken is true. He confronts the false belief of superiority and that “your children are not good enough for my children” to go to school with and he speaks of the unacceptable rigidity the community adheres to exclude others even though they are part of the same group.

Rechnitz is spot on. I cannot begin to tell you how many families I have seen, who have taken a full day to drive to see me, to try to help their children, and themselves get through the trauma of rejection, and THEN go right back to the same community that has rejected them. The rejection is often for things like wearing a kippah that is not large enough for the community standards or davening without a jacket, or a skirt that does not go quite the minimum two and a half inches below the knee, or Gd forbid, speaking to a member of the opposite sex, or wanting to go to college or…well you get the picture.

But beyond this is the fact that there are now a good number of Lakewood people trying to discredit Rechnitz. As the owner of a large chain of health facilities it is inevitable that his organization is under investigation. He has not been personally implicated and there have not been any reports finalized yet. Still, for many Lakewooders Rechnitz is now persona non grata, and someone to vilify. But that cannot happen. And that is what really makes this story so important.

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Needed – New Orthodox Leadership

UNITED STATES
Times of Israel

Michael J. Salamon

Just last week a colleague told me that a patient that she had been seeing for years had told her that she was molested by a rabbi four years ago. The therapist said to me “Four years ago I made the mistake of asking the wrong rabbi if I should report it. At that time my rabbi told me not to report him. So I asked him again this week. He gave me the same answer.” So she did not report the abuser to the proper authorities.

I asked her if caring for her patient by seeing that some form of justice was performed or, possibly protecting others by having the authorities prosecute him or, her license, which made her a mandated reporter regardless of the outcome of the investigation, ever entered her mind when she asked the “wrong rabbi” both times after these four years. I wonder if I can call her a colleague or even a therapist anymore but, my colleague, the therapist was quiet. She would not respond. It’s a Talmudic suggestion “silence is as if an admission” in this case of a breach of appropriate protocol maybe even malpractice or malfeasance. Then, perhaps out of a sense of guilt, she told me the name of the rabbi who abused her patient – it was the same man that my new patient, someone who just recently started seeing me, told me about just two weeks earlier. She too had been abused by him. My patient and I discussed options about reporting and we decided that she, a mature adult, would like to do so herself. So she did report him. In that two week time I received a call from a detective who asked some questions about the molester and let it slip, deliberately I believe, that the abusing rabbi was a predator and had been one for likely 30 years. The detective said in just a few days of investigation he has been able to determine that it is likely that the rabbi abused as many as 40 or more young women.

Think for just a second about the implication of the detectives comment. Had someone reported the abuser earlier, even just four years ago, so many women might never have been abused. Now think about the issue of hypocrisy. Why are there still leaders and supporters who are insistent that abuse not be reported?

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Bistum Hildesheim: Neue Vorwürfe

DEUTSCHLAND
netzwerkB

[New allegations of sexual abuse of minors have been made in the Hildesheim diocese.]

Gegen das Bistum Hildesheim gibt es neue Vorwürfe: Angeblich soll die Mutter eines betroffenen Mädchens vor Jahren von Priester R. auch missbraucht worden sein. Die Staatsanwaltschaft sei eingeschaltet, um zu ermitteln.

netzwerkB fordert schon seit 2010 eine Anzeige- und Meldepflicht bei Straftaten gegen die sexuelle Selbstbestimmung – Bischof Trelle könnte so gesetzlich zur Verantwortung gezogen werden, wenn der Vorwurf der Vertuschung ihm nachgewiesen würde.

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You Are The Second Abuser

UNITED STATES
Pop Chassid

One of the “advantages” of being a writer who writes about his traumatic experiences with mental illness is that many people open up to me about the pains they’ve gone through.

I am simply amazed at how many people have gone through horrific trauma in their lives. I cannot tell you how many people I’ve met who have been raped, abused, manipulated by moral crooks, gone through moments of mental instability (to say the least), or been through other traumatic moments. It’s come to make me realize just how much is hidden underneath the existence we’ve come to think as “normal.”

I actually find their opening up to be amazing, not a negative thing. Any trauma can be addressed. Any pain can become a source of growth, even if the scar always remains, even if every time we touch it we wince. And opening up is a sign of that growth.

But there is something else I’ve seen, something that has caused me enormous pain among that beauty.

The world still has not become a safe place for them to be open.

I often imagine to myself a world where my friends felt comfortable enough to share their pain with the world (if they so wished): a world that would understand, or try to understand. A world that would embrace them. Care for them.

What a beautiful world that would be.

That’s not the world we live in.

We live in a world where 68% of rape victims don’t accuse their abusers. Why? Many reasons, but a big one is the very real feeling that the world will shame them if they come forward.

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School announce new name changed after Bishop George Bell child abuse settlement

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

A SUSSEX secondary school has decided to change its name because the senior clergyman it was named after was accused of being a paedophile who sexually abused a young child.

Bishop Bell School in Priory School, Eastbourne, was named after George Bell, the late bishop of Chichester, who died 57 years ago.

Last October it was revealed the Church of England had issued a formal apology for alleged sexual abuse committed by Bell against a young child, whose identity and gender has not been disclosed, in the 1940s and 50s.

Now the governing body has voted to become St. Catherine’s College, and the new name will be used when the school formally converts to a Church of England Academy ahead of the next school year in September 2016.

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Sex abuse victims demand more action on Michigan archbishop issue

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Rosemary Parker | rparker3@mlive.com
on January 27, 2016

KALAMAZOO, MI — Victims of sexual abuse by priests and their supporters staged a demonstration here Tuesday to show they are not satisfied with the swift removal last week of a controversial Roman Catholic archbishop from the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul who had come to a parish in Battle Creek.

Archbishop John Nienstedt resigned from his archdiocese in June after it was hit with civil and criminal charges that church officials had repeatedly failed to act on complaints of a priest who was eventually convicted of molesting three boys.

Nienstedt arrived at St. Philip parish in Battle Creek Jan. 6 at the invitation of the pastor there and had planned to stay six months, voluntarily helping out the Rev. John Fleckenstein, an old friend.

The Diocese of Kalamazoo initially had approved Nienstedt’s work here, citing documentation from his superiors that he was a priest in good standing.

But the archbishop moved on on Jan. 21 after parents, community members and victims of clergy sex crimes protested his presence.

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WEST PALM BEACH PRIEST CLAIMS BISHOP RETALIATED AGAINST HIM FOR REPORTING FELLOW PRIEST WITH CHILD PORN TO POLICE

FLORIDA
Farmer, Jaffe, Weissing, Edwards, Fistos & Lehrman, P.L.
pathtojustice.com

Written by Adam Horowitz, January 26th, 2016

Father John Gallagher, a priest of the Diocese of Palm Beach, is alleging that he was retailated against by the Diocese of Palm Beach because he told law enforcement authorities that a fellow priest, Rev. Jose Palimattom, showed pornographic material to a minor. According to Father Gallagher, the Diocese of Palm Beach retailiated against him for being a whilestblower and exposing the priest’s illegal conduct. Gallagher alleges that the Diocese’s Bishop Gerald Barbarito denied him a promotion, demoted him, urged him to resign from the priesthood, transfered him to another parish, and locked him out of his parochial residence at Holy Name of Jesus Christ Catholic Church in West Palm Beach.

In January 2015, Palimattom, a 48-year old Catholic priest assigned to Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in West Palm Beach, was arrested in for having child pornography on his cell phone and showing the images to a minor. According to police records, the priest asked a 14-year old boy from his parish to help him delete pictures from his cell phone. In so doing, the boy discovered dozens of images of nude pre-pubescent boys on the priest’s cell phone with tags such as “little boys.” According to Father Gallaagher, the victim that night told a friend who reported it to a church employee who told Father Gallagher. Gallagher then set up a meeting with Father Palimattom and a retired law enforcement officer. According to Gallagher, Rev. Palimattom confessed which prompted Gallagher to report the incident to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s office. Palimattom was eventually sentenced to six months in jail and one year of probation for showing obscene materials to a minor.

According to Father Gallagher, he twice attempted to report Father Palimattom to the Diocese of Palm Beach but no action was taken by the Diocese. He also says the Diocese of Palm Beach’s retaliation against him began soon after he called law enforcement. Gallagher says the Diocese of Palm Beach would have preferred to put Rev. Jose Palimattom “on a plane” back to his native India rather than him report the child pornography to law enforcement. In April 2015, Gallagher said Diocese of Palm Beach Gerald Barbarito denied him a promotion he was owed and in fact demoted him with no explanation. Gallagher was soon transfered from his position in West Palm Beach to a parish in Stuart, Florida. Gallagher also claims he was asked to resign from the priesthood. Gallagher reports that he later had health complications, including a heart attack. While Bishop Barbarito did visit him in the hospital, Gallagher contends that the Bishop refused to anoint him or bring him Communion. When Gallagher got out of the hospital, he alleges that that locks had been changed on his parochial residence and a new priest had moved in.

Sexual abuse attorney Adam Horowitz, who has handled numerous sexual abuse against the Catholic Church in the State of Florida, stated: “Many Dioceses in the Catholic Church have a long and troubling history of trying to keep a lid on matters which cause scandal to the church and punishing those within the church who let the Church’s secrets out. In this case, Father Gallagher should be commended for his action in bringing Father Palimattom to justice. If in fact Father Gallagher is being retaliated against for exposing a priest with a sexual interest in children, it is a shameful example of the Catholic Church failing to protect kids and putting its own reputation ahead of the safety of children.”

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Polish court rules that a priest’s son inherits his wealth

POLAND
Times Union

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A Polish court has ruled that a 6-year-old boy is the only heir of a prominent priest, who was his father.

The case of the estate of Monsignor Waldemar Irek has riveted this predominantly Catholic nation ever since the 54-year-old priest’s death in 2012, when the boy’s mother came forward with the claim. To prove her case, she had Irek’s body exhumed for a DNA test which confirmed he was the boy’s father.

Marek Poteralski, spokesman for the court in Wroclaw, said Wednesday the court ruled that the boy was Irek’s closest family and the sole inheritor, according to the law. The verdict is subject to appeal by Irek’s mother and niece.

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Frenar la pederastia clerical está en manos del Papa Francisco: Athié

MEXICO
Proceso

[OAXACA, – If the Pope Francisco does nothing to stop priestly pedophilia it will continue “and he will remain responsible (of the evil that afflicts the Catholic Church),” said the former priest Alberto Athie Gallo.]

OAXACA, Oax. (apro).- Si el Papa Francisco no hace nada para frenar la pederastia sacerdotal, ésta continuará “y él seguirá siendo responsable (de ese mal que aqueja a la Iglesia católica)”, afirmó aquí el exsacerdote Alberto Athié Gallo.

Además el activista adelantó que en el marco de la visita del máximo jerarca de la Iglesia católica a México, del 12 al 17 de febrero próximo, entregarán a la Nunciatura Apostólica una serie de documentos sobre los cientos de casos de abuso sexual cometidos por clérigos que fueron protegidos por la jerarquía católica, así como cartas de familiares y víctimas.

Durante la conferencia “Pederastia clerical en Oaxaca”, Athié lamentó que aunque el Vaticano cuenta con un tribunal para juzgar a los obispos encubridores de sacerdotes pederastas, la realidad es que se quedó en el mero discurso porque ninguno ha sido llamado a cuentas.

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Snap Priest Protest

MICHIGAN
MLive

SNAP President Barbara Blaine and Phillip Frederickson hold signs and pictures of children sexually abused by priests during a call-to-action at the Catholic Diocese of Kalamazoo on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016 in which they hand-delivered a letter to the diocese to publicly urge Michigan bishops to seek out anyone who may have been hurt by a now-disgraced Twin Cities Archbishop.

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Royal commission told Anglican Church took no action after paedophile was found naked in spa bath with 10-year-old boy

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

Nigel Hunt
The Advertiser

THE Anglican Church took no action after employee and suspected paedophile Robert Brandenburg was found naked in a spa bath with a 10-year-old boy, a royal commission has been told.

Former Archbishop Ian George ordered an inquiry into the incident.

But both Dr George and the then head of Anglican Community Services, Gerard Menses, accepted Brandenburg’s explanation the spa romp was “innocent in nature”.

Neither the diocese nor ACS, which employed Brandenburg as a manager of youth campsites, took any further action.

Neither was the incident reported to police for investigation.

This was despite records showing that representatives of the Adelaide diocese of the Anglican Church were first made aware of detailed allegations of sexual abuse of children by Brandenburg as early as 1978.

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Pedophile priest promoted despite allegations

AUSTRALIA
The Advocate

By ADAM LANGENBERG
Jan. 27, 2016

A PEDOPHILE priest was promoted to Archdeacon of Burnie by a former Anglican Bishop who had been told of allegations he had behaved inappropriately with young boys, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is holding hearings in Hobart from Wednesday to Friday, February 5.

In her opening address, Counsel Assisting Naomi Sharp said then Bishop of Tasmania Phillip Newell was made aware of allegations from three boys about inappropriate behaviour from Louis Daniels in 1987, then the chairman of the Church of England Boys Society.

Daniels and former Tasmanian Priest Garth Hawkins, both convicted pedophiles, are the main focus of the inquiry relating to Tasmania.

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Editorial: Lift statute of limitations on sex assault

COLORADO
Reporter-Herald

Like dozens of other women across the country, two Colorado women, aspiring models back in the 1980s, say Bill Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted them.

And like the others, they say they did not come forward immediately after the alleged assaults because they realized no one would have believed them.

Now their voices have been added to a growing list of women whom many people do believe.

Now the two women have asked Colorado legislators to reconsider a law has placed a statute of limitations on sexual assault cases. Ten years after they happen, they can no longer be prosecuted.

Legislators are expected to consider a bill this session that would remove the statute of limitations. It would not be retroactive and would not change anything for the two women.

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St. George’s Taps PR Firm Tied to Boston Diocese’s Effort to Avoid Paying Abuse Victims

RHODE ISLAND
GoLocalProv

Wednesday, January 27, 2016
GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Despite promises by the leadership of St. George’s to be transparent and get to the bottom of the sexual abuse scandal that has claimed more than 40 children as victims, the prep school has hired the controversial Boston public relations firm Rasky Baerlein. The firm worked to create the message for the Diocese of Boston’s effort to avoid payment to victims by declaring bankruptcy.
In 2002, Rasky Baerlein was hired by the Diocese’s law firm Goodwin Proctor “to advise the firm on communicating the complexities of a bankruptcy filing to several audiences, including priests, parishioners, and the wider public, according to the sources,” reported the Boston Globe.

Despite representing two of the most widespread sex abuse cases in New England history, the PR firm denies this is a specialty. In an email to GoLocal, President of Rasky Baerlein Joe Baerlein writes, “No (we do not have a sexual abuse specialty) we are a communications and public affairs firm with offices in Boston and DC. We have mostly corporate and institutional clients across a series of vertical industries, i.e., healthcare or energy. We do a significant amount of work in reputation and crisis management.”

The Board of St. George’s hired Rasky Baerlein to manage the communications tied to questions about the years of sexual abuse. The firm prominently claims that they are experts at crisis communications:

A smart, strategic communications plan – developed in close coordination with the legal team and executed with care – helps confront misinformation, advance positive messages, and condition the environment for a favorable result. We’ve worked with leading law firms to guide clients through contentious legal battles, including complex multi-state litigation, civil and criminal proceedings in state and federal courts, and class action lawsuits.

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Video: Child abuse survivors take their former Catholic diocese to court

UNITED KINGDOM
Belfast Telegraph

Survivors of child abuse within the Catholic Church are taking their former diocese to court after allegations of an institutional cover-up going back decades. The claims – dating back to the 1950s and featuring pupils at a church school in the north west of England – mirror those in the recent Spotlight film, tipped for Oscars success for its real-life depiction of similar allegations in the Catholic Church in Boston, US, in the 1980s. Lawyers acting on behalf of the British victims, who were aged between 11 and 15 at the time of the abuse, said they hope the positivity met with Spotlight’s release will help give other victims the strength to come forward and make allegations.

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Child abuse survivors take their former Catholic diocese to court

UNITED KINGDOM
Lancaster Evening Post

Tuesday 26 January 2016

Survivors of child abuse within the Catholic Church are taking their former diocese to court after allegations of an institutional cover-up going back decades.

The claims – dating back to the 1950s and featuring pupils at a church school in the north west of England – mirror those in the recent Spotlight film, tipped for Oscars success for its real-life depiction of similar allegations in the Catholic Church in Boston, US, in the 1980s.

Lawyers acting on behalf of the British victims, who were aged between 11 and 15 at the time of the abuse, said they hope the positivity met with Spotlight’s release will help give other victims the strength to come forward and make allegations.

Thomas Beale, representing victims with London-based child abuse lawyers AO Advocates, said there were “significant” similarities between Spotlight and the allegations of abuse at St Bede’s Catholic school in Manchester decades ago.

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Irish priest in conflict with church authorities over child abuse-related case

FLORIDA
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

An Irish priest who has been serving in Florida since 2000 claims he has been ostracised by the church for reporting abuse-related activities of a fellow priest to local police.

Fr Jose Palimatton was arrested and charged with possession of pornography and distributing it to a minor. He later pleaded guilty in court, served a sentence, and has been deported to his native India.

Fr John Gallagher (48) from Strabane, Co Tyrone, has since initiated canon law proceedings against Bishop Gerald Barbarito of the Diocese of Palm Beach at the Vatican.

He has also spoken about the case with Cardinal Seán O’Malley of Boston, chairman of the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors.

Fr Gallagher was critical of Cardinal O’Malley’s handling of the case, saying the commission should discuss the matter but had failed to do so.

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Church official tries to distance congregation from sex crimes investigation

LOUISIANA
WBRZ

By: Trey Schmaltz

BATON ROUGE – Officials are trying to distance their church from a sex abuse investigation.

A teenager who identified himself as a minister at Jesus Name Apostolic Temple was arrested Monday on indecent behavior with a juvenile charges. Kentrell Jackson, 18, remained in jail as of this writing. He is being held on a $30,000 bond. Tuesday night, authorities added more charges for Jackson after they learned of two more victims. One victim’s accusation led to an additional indecent behavior charge while the other added sexual battery and another count of indecent behavior to his list of charges.

Police said Jackson admitted to molesting 19 children over the last ten years.

On Tuesday, Linda Grant, who identified herself as a co-pastor at the church, said in a phone interview with WBRZ Jackson first confessed to clergy and the congregation and was then turned over to authorities. Police, though, said in arrest documents, they were made aware of potential abuse after a disturbance at a home near the church off Mohican in North Baton Rouge.

“He came to the church and made a confession,” Grant said in the conversation. She refused to be interviewed on TV.

Grant added although Jackson claimed to be affiliated with the church, he was not an employee and had preached at the church on occasion though not recently.

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Royal Commission told South Australian Anglican Church paedophile Robert Brandenburg had an estimated 80 victims

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

Colin James
The Advertiser

HORRIFIC details of child sex abuse perpetrated by a paedophile network within the Anglican Church — including a South Australian with an estimated 80 victims- have been detailed to a royal commission.

The Archbishop of Sydney, Glenn Davies, this morning publicly apologised to victims of the network — which operated in South Australia, New South Wales, Queensland and Tasmania between the 1960s and 1990s.

His lawyer told the Royal Commission into the Institutional Response into Child Sexual Abuse that he was “deeply sorry” for the pain and anguish suffered by young boys sexually abused by members of the Church of England Boys’ Society (CEBS), including priests.

“The Archbishop is deeply sorry that this terrible abuse of trust occurred,” she said.

“He apologises to the survivors for this breach of trust.”

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Child sexual abuse royal commission: Victim says he was abused ‘because of’ Brisbane Archbishop Phillip Aspinall

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Emilie Gramenz

A royal commission witness in Hobart has blamed now-Archbishop of Brisbane Phillip Aspinall for the abuse he suffered at the hands of a convicted paedophile.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining responses to sexual abuse allegations in the Church of England Boys Society (CEBS), which is run through the Anglican Church.

The witness known as BYF said he was heavily involved in Anglican Church youth groups and told the hearing it was common for youth group members to stay on floors in rectories or people’s homes while travelling.

BYF told the commission he stayed at the rectory with Tasmanian rector Garth Hawkins while travelling with another youth, Phillip Aspinall, who is now Archbishop of Brisbane.

The hearing heard he and Mr Aspinall were sleeping on the floor when Hawkins came into the room, sat next to BYF and ran his fingers through his hair, telling him he was good looking and offering for him to sleep in his bed.

BYF refused.

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Brisbane archbishop blamed for 1980s abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A victim of child sexual abuse has blamed the now-Brisbane Anglican archbishop for putting him in bed with the perpetrating priest.

Giving evidence to a royal commission in Hobart on Wednesday, the 52-year-old who cannot be named for legal reasons recounted how he was raped in January 1981, then aged 17, at Triabunna on Tasmania’s east coast.

Former priest Garth Hawkins has since been convicted of the abuse but the victim insists it was incumbent Archbishop Phillip Aspinall who set up the opportunity.

‘I wouldn’t have been there without Archbishop Aspinall,’ the victim said.

‘He put me in that bed.’

A group of youths linked to the Church of England Boys’ Society had gathered at Triabunna where Hawkins was then priest.

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Spotlight is a cry from the heart for sexual abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Spotlight (M)
Director: Thomas McCarthy (Win Win)
Starring: Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber, Brian d’Arcy James, Stanley Tucci.
Rating: ****1/2

Some kept hoping, while others kept preying

Both a cry from the heart for victims of sexual abuse and a vivid reminder of the fading art of investigative journalism, Spotlight is deservedly one of the frontrunners for the next Best Picture Oscar.

Superbly acted and scripted, this powerful factual drama tells the true story of The Boston Globe’s 2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning expose of systematic molestation of the young by Catholic priests.

The role played by the higher reaches of the Catholic Church in keeping a cover-up firmly in place for several decades became a crucial focus for the Globe.

The end result was a series of revelations which shocked America — and also, the general public’s perception of organised religion — to its foundations.

Many of the Globe’s key findings have since been echoed in disturbingly similar scenarios all over the world, including right here in Australia.

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OUR OPINION: North Dakota dioceses should release names of priests

NORTH DAKOTA
Grand Forks Herald

By Tom Dennis Today

Two weeks ago, the Archdiocese of Seattle published a list of its clergy and other employees who’d been credibly accused of sexually assaulting children.

The archdiocese took this step on its own—not because of a court ruling, not because a legal settlement forced its hand, but because the publication was the right thing to do.

“This action is being taken in the interest of further transparency and accountability, and to continue to encourage victims of sexual abuse by clergy to come forward,” as the archbishop of Seattle wrote in a letter to the archdiocese.

North Dakota’s two Roman Catholic dioceses should follow the Seattle archdiocese’s lead, and release their own lists of priests who’ve been accused.

Thus far, the North Dakota dioceses have refused to do so, a Forum News Service story reported on Sunday (“Lists of North Dakota priests accused of sex abuse still under wraps,” Page A4).

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Peter Hollingworth expected to apologise to victim of child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Tuesday 26 January 2016

The former Australian governor general Peter Hollingworth is expected to apologise to a victim of child sexual abuse during a royal commission hearing in Hobart.

Outlining the evidence that will be presented during eight days of evidence, counsel assisting the commission Naomi Sharp said on Wednesday that Hollingworth had been alerted to the alleged abuse of a boy in Brisbane in 1993 when he was head of the Brisbane Anglican diocese.

“Archbishop Hollingworth will also give evidence and it is anticipated he will apologise to [the victim] and his family and say that the approach he took … was a ‘serious error of judgment’,” Sharp said.

Hollingworth is one of 28 witnesses expected to face the hearing, among a list of survivors and perpetrators from allegations dating back to the 1960s across Tasmania and in Adelaide, Sydney and Brisbane.

The evidence linked to Hollingworth relates to John Elliot, who was a lay member of the Church of England Boys’ Society from the late 1950s. The first report of his misconduct against a boy was made to the Brisbane diocese in mid-1993 and was immediately escalated to Hollingworth, the commission was told.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: Convicted paedophiles to give evidence at church youth group hearings in Tasmania

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Emilie Gramenz

A Tasmanian sexual abuse survivor who started a victims advocacy group said a member of the clergy took a special interest in him and cultivated a father-figure relationship before beginning to abuse him.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining responses to sexual abuse allegations in the Church of England Boys Society, or CEBS, run through the Anglican Church.

Stephen Fisher told the hearing Garth Hawkins, a rector from Devonport, associated with leaders of CEBS despite not being officially involved.

“Sometimes Hawkins treated me with respect and provided me with respect and encouragement, but as soon as I relaxed he would try to take advantage of me,” he said.

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Victims want names of abusive Charleston priests published

SOUTH CAROLINA
Houston Chronicle

January 27, 2016

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Two victims of childhood sexual abuse have renewed calls for the Catholic Diocese of Charleston to publish a list of priests accused of misconduct with minors.

The diocese told The Post and Courier of Charleston in 2014 that 32 priests have been accused of having abused minors in its jurisdiction since 1950, but the priests have never been publicly identified by the church.

The Post and Courier (http://bit.ly/1S9OjUy) reports that 68-year-old Barbara Dorris of St. Louis and 49-year-old Allen Sires, both abuse victims, stood outside the diocese’s property Tuesday, saying that the release of the names is both necessary and long overdue.

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Priest says diocese punished him for reporting sex offender; church officials say he’s lying

FLORIDA
Sun Sentinel

Kate Jacobson
Sun Sentinel

A day after a local priest accused the Palm Beach Diocese of kicking him out for reporting sexual misconduct, church officials fired back and called the priest a liar.

Father John Gallagher said officials from the Palm Beach Diocese strongly suggested he take a leave of absence after he reported a visiting priest had shown child pornography to a 14-year-old boy after Mass.

But Church officials said they did no such thing, and said Gallagher’s accusations are “a complete misrepresentation.”

“Father Gallagher is blatantly lying and is in need of professional assistance as well as our prayers and mercy,” the diocese said in a statement Tuesday.

Gallagher said he contacted the Sheriff’s Office about the Rev. Jose Palimattom’s interactions with the boy, and church officials were angry at him for not coming to them first.

“[The Church’s] response was, ‘We used to put people like this on the plane,'” Gallagher said. “I said, ‘that’s fine, but the Sheriff’s Office is on its way.’ They asked how much they knew.”

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Abuse victims renew call to publish names of abusive priests in Charleston

SOUTH CAROLINA
Post and Courier

Christina Elmore

Two victims of childhood sexual abuse renewed calls Tuesday for the Catholic Diocese of Charleston to publish a list of priests accused of misconduct with minors.

The local call came on the heels of recent litigation alleging that a man was left out of a 2007 class-action suit against the diocese and the release earlier this month of 77 names by the Archdiocese of Seattle.

The list of priests and other clergy represents those who have lived or served in western Washington since the 1920s and “for whom allegations of sexual abuse of a minor have been admitted, established or determined to be credible,” according to The Associated Press.

The Charleston diocese told The Post and Courier in 2014 that 32 priests are alleged to have abused minors in its jurisdiction since 1950, but the priests were never publicly identified by the church.

Standing a stone’s throw from the church’s waterfront property on West Ashley’s Orange Grove Road, two abuse victims said the release of the names is both necessary and long overdue.

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Quietly uncovering a Church scandal

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Jim McDermott | 27 January 2016

Spotlight (M). Director: Tom McCarthy. Starring: Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber. 129 minutes

When word first circulated a few years ago of a new film chronicling the 2001-2002 Boston Globe investigation into sexual abuse of children in the Catholic Church, I think most expected something along the lines of a scathing excoriation. More than 13 years after that story broke, as cases and cover-ups continue to be revealed (and perpetrated), you can hardly say such an approach wouldn’t be warranted. Mainstream Hollywood is also not generally known for painting with a delicate brush.

But Spotlight, released in the US last October (and in Australia this week) and now an Academy Award nominee, forgoes the predictable and the preachy in favour of a quiet, nuanced story hard to turn away from. The set-up: Globe Spotlight editor Walter ‘Robby’ Robinson (Michael Keaton) runs a small team of investigative reporters given complete independence; they follow the stories they think worthy of in-depth coverage, and print only when they’re ready.

Until, that is, new editor-in-chief Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber) asks them to look into the case of Father John Geoghan, who was being accused of sexually assaulting a child. None of the team — played by Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams and Brian d’Arcy James — want to take the story: Boston’s an Irish Catholic enclave; to cross then-Cardinal Bernard Law was to find yourself at odds with not only him but most of the city’s important people.

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Archbishop Phillip Aspinall dismissed ’80s abuse complaint: Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

TIM PALMER: The child sex abuse royal commission has heard that three decades ago, the current Archbishop of Brisbane, Phillip Aspinall, brushed off a complaint that a priest had abused a boy.

A witness gave evidence to the commission that Phillip Aspinall had some time before the complaint suggested the teenager sleep in the priest’s bed.

The inquiry is in Hobart examining how the Church of England Boys Society and the Anglican dioceses of Tasmania, Sydney, Adelaide and Brisbane handled abuse allegations against five paedophiles connected with the church.

And a warning: Samantha Donovan’s report contains graphic material.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: The royal commission has heard that paedophile Anglican priests Garth Hawkins and Louis Daniels raped or sexually abused several boys in Tasmania in the 1980s.

The commission was told that Phillip Aspinall, now the Archbishop of Brisbane, was a leader in the Tasmanian Church of England Boys Society at the time and involved in its camps.

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Tyrone priest John Gallagher ‘a hero for exposing paedophile’ in US

FLORIDA
Belfast Telegraph

A US-based priest from Co Tyrone who was frozen out of the Catholic Church after exposing abuse should be treated as a hero, it has been claimed.

The Catholic Whistleblowers Steering Committee said it was outraged after Fr John A Gallagher was effectively fired for reporting a colleague to police after he showed sickening child porn images to a boy aged 14.

Father Jose Palimattom – who had been at the parish of the Holy Name of Jesus Christ Catholic Church in West Palm Beach for just four weeks – showed the teenager up to 40 images. Police believe he was grooming his victim.

Fr Gallagher, who is originally from Strabane, is living in a friend’s home after the locks at his parochial house were changed and he was placed on medical leave by his bishop in the Diocese of Palm Beach, Florida.

The 48-year-old claims he was told by a Church official to put Palimattom on a plane rather than co-operate with police.

Yesterday, the Catholic Whistleblowers – a network in the Church dedicated to supporting survivors of abuse and exposing cover-ups – said Fr Gallagher “has been treated shabbily”.

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Irish American Cardinal Raymond Burke blames women for church’s problems

UNITED STATES
Irish Central

Dara Kelly @irishcentral January 27,2016

The crisis in Catholicism apparently has one source: women. According to Cardinal Raymond Burke, since the 1960’s women have “feminized” the church and discouraged “manly” men from participating in clerical life.

Burke, 66, the firebrand conservative who was recently demoted by Pope Francis to the ceremonial post as patron of the Order of Malta, pointed to the introduction of altar girls as an example.

Serving mass is a “manly” job argues the Irish American Cardinal, and so the participation of women and girls in the daily life of the church has had a chilling effect that has led to a drop in morale and priestly vocations.

“Young boys don’t want to do things with girls. It’s just natural,” Burke, a Wisconsin native with Tipperary roots, told a group called The New Emangelization (a conservative organization that exists to put the “man” back in evangelization).

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January 26, 2016

United Properties offers $2.75M for bankrupt Twin Cities archdiocese’s chancery

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Martin Moylan Jan 26, 2016

A major real estate developer wants to buy the Summit Avenue chancery of the bankrupt Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Minneapolis-based United Properties has offered $2.75 million for the chancery, but other parties could top that offer for the nearly 4 acre site in St. Paul. Any sale will be subject to court review.

The sloping chancery property could accommodate a five-story building without blocking views of the nearby Cathedral of St. Paul, said Paul Donovan of the firm selling properties for the archdiocese.

“Any reasonable developer wants to respect the grandeur of Summit Avenue,” Donovan said. “And this would be a great opportunity to make a very tasteful development that complements the rest of Summit.”

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Activistas retoman lucha contra pederastia clerical antes de visita del papa

MEXICO
Vanguardia

A menos de tres semanas de la visita del papa Francisco a México, un grupo de activistas retomó hoy su lucha contra la pederastia clerical en el país al acusar a la Iglesia de proteger a un cura acusado de abusar de 100 niños y adolescentes en zonas indígenas y encarcelado por corrupción de menores.

El protagonista central de la historia es el sacerdote Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, al que se le atribuyeron inicialmente en 2006 abusos contra un niño de nueve años en la parroquia de San Pablo Huitzo, indicó en una rueda de prensa el representante del Foro Oaxaqueño de la Niñez (FONI) Alejandro de Jesús al exponer el caso.

Según De Jesús, después de aquello “se han rastreado a más de 100 víctimas” en los años posteriores en que Silvestre fue destinado a siete comunidades por la Arquidiócesis de Antequera-Oaxaca en la sierra de ese estado sureño, uno de los más pobres e indígenas de México.

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México: Iglesia encubre a cura multipederasta

MEXICO
Telemundo

[The Oaxacan civil organization called Forum for Children along with several priests and activists on Tuesday accused the Mexican Catholic Church of protecting a priest who may have abused hundreds of children. Priest Silvestre Gerardo Hernandez since 2013 has been in prison after allegations were made that he abused minors.The accusation against the priest was made at a press conference in which a letter from the mother of a victim sent to Pope Francis was presented. The pope will visit Mexico in February. The pope is asked to bring justice for children and teenagers so that such abuse will not happen again.]

La organización civil Foro Oaxaqueño de la Niñez, del sur de México, junto con varios sacerdotes y activistas, acusó el martes a la Iglesia mexicana de proteger a un cura que pudo haber abusado de un centenar de menores y que desde 2013 está en prisión para ser procesado por la justicia por corrupción de menores.

La acusación fue realizada en una rueda de prensa en la que se leyó una carta de la madre de una de las víctimas dirigida al papa Francisco, que visitará México en febrero, en la que pide al pontífice “justicia” para los niños y adolescentes blanco de esos abusos y que “no vuelva a suceder”.

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Woman challenges Magdalene redress refusal

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Ann O’Loughlin

A woman who claims she was forced to work unpaid in a Magdalene laundry for 10 years has challenged the minister for justice’s decision excluding her from the State’s redress scheme for victims of those institutions.

The woman claims she was used as forced and unpaid labour from the age of eight to 18 at two laundries, in Waterford and Dublin, during the 1970s and early 1980s.

She had applied to be included in the redress scheme established in 2013 to compensate survivors of the Magdalene laundries but her application was turned down on the grounds that, at the relevant time, she was a resident of industrial schools and not the laundries themselves.

Michael Lynn, counsel for the woman, said the minister had, in her refusal, told the woman she should have sought compensation under the Residential Institutions Redress Scheme. However, his client, because she lives abroad, did not hear about that scheme in time, and her application for inclusion in it was refused as being out of time.

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Prosecution questions first panel of potential jurors in former priest’s sex abuse case

LOUISIANA
KPLC

By Johnathan Manning

LAKE CHARLES, LA (KPLC) –
The prosecution questioned a panel of 21 potential jurors Tuesday in a former priest’s sex abuse trial.

The defense must now question the panel, then both sides will question another panel as the two sides work to put together a 12-person jury.

Former priest Mark Anthony Broussard is accused of sexually assaulting boys when he was a priest in Calcasieu between 1986 and 1991. He faces five sex charges – two counts of aggravated rape, one count of aggravated oral sexual battery, one count of oral sexual battery and one count of molestation of a juvenile.

Broussard was initially indicted on 224 counts of sexual abuse, but the charges were reduced to five which reflect the entirety of the accusations.

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Hobart inquiry to examine ‘culture’ of sexual abuse against boys

AUSTRALIA
Mercury

PATRICK BILLINGS
Mercury

A FORMER Anglican bishop of Tasmania promoted a paedophile priest to Archdeacon of Burnie despite being told about his abuse of young boys, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is holding public hearings in Hobart today.

Counsel assisting Naomi Sharp’s opening address has given harrowing details of persistent sex abuse against young boys in Tasmania at the hands of Anglican priests during the 1970s and 1980s.

The commission is inquiring into abuse perpetrated by Anglican priests and other men involved in The Church of England Boys’ Society and how that institution responded when the abuse was revealed.

The society was a youth movement connected to the church, known for its camping trips.

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Diocese of Palm Beach Releases Statement Regarding the Recent Article by an Irish Newspaper

FLORIDA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach

By: DPB Office of Communications
Date: January 25, 2016

In response to an article recently published in a newspaper in Ireland, the Diocese of Palm Beach is issuing the following statement:

“The recent article written by Greg Harkin for the Irish Independent Newspaper in Ireland regarding the allegations of Father John Gallagher against the Diocese of Palm Beach is a completely inaccurate representation of the facts. The diocese stands by our January 6, 2015, Press Release (included below) regarding the criminal charges against Father Jose Palimattom, OFM. In this widely-distributed statement and made available in print and on our website the Diocese of Palm Beach stated our immediate response, contact and cooperation with authorities regarding the investigation. Additionally, the diocese released a letter on January 8, 2015, to the parishioners of Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church (included below). We once again release those items.

As for the other allegations which the article reports were made by Father John Gallagher, the Diocese of Palm Beach deems them to be a completely inaccurate reflection of the facts. Father Gallagher’s reassignment was not related to the incident with the visiting priest.

In part, these inaccuracies include:

* Father Gallagher was not demoted but given a new assignment with residence.
* The locks were not changed at Father Gallagher’s former parochial house, leaving him homeless.
*Father Gallagher requested a medical leave freely on his own and has been negligent in informing the Diocese of his current residence.

The Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach encompasses the five counties of Palm Beach, Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River and Okeechobee. Comprised of 280,000 Catholics in 53 parishes and missions, the Diocese also serves the faithful community through its schools.

***
The following are copies of the January 6, 2015 statement released by the Diocese of Palm Beach and the January 8, 2015 letter to the parishioners and congregation of Holy Name Catholic Church.

Diocese of Palm Beach Releases Statement Regarding the Criminal Charges of Reverend Palimattom, OFM

(Palm Beach Gardens, FL) January 6, 2015 – In response to the arrest and criminal charges filed against Reverend Jose Palimattom, OFM, a priest visiting from India, the Diocese of Palm Beach is issuing the following statement:

“The Diocese of Palm Beach is greatly concerned and takes very seriously the charges against Father Jose Palimattom, OFM. Father Palimottom is a priest of the Franciscan Province of St. Thomas the Apostle in India and began serving in December 2014 at Holy Name of Jesus Parish in West Palm Beach, a parish of the Diocese of Palm Beach. Father Palimattom was arrested yesterday on charges of possession of pornography and distributing it to a minor.

Upon learning about the allegations, the Diocese of Palm Beach immediately contacted authorities and cooperated in the investigation conducted by the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. This cooperation resulted in the arrest of Father Palimattom.

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Diocese of Palm Beach Releases Statement to Respond to Allegations Made by Father John Gallagher

FLORIDA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach

By: DPB Office of Communications
Date: January 26, 2016

In response to recent media coverage of allegations made against the diocese, the Diocese of Palm Beach is issuing the following statement:

“The Diocese of Palm Beach is very disappointed in the actions of Father John Gallagher who, through a complete misrepresentation of the case of Father Jose Palimattom, has brought unfair and slanderous allegations against the Church and the Diocese of Palm Beach. Father Gallagher has acted in a similar manner in other situations in the past and has been given every opportunity for correction, including the possibility of professional assistance.

Father Gallagher has publicly stated that he contacted the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office the evening the incident occurred. The sheriff’s report indicates that Father Gallagher was not the one who made the report. He also publicly stated that he contacted the Diocese the evening the incident occurred. The Diocese of Palm Beach did not receive any communication from him until the next day. Upon learning of the allegation, the Diocese of Palm Beach immediately contacted authorities and learned that the incident had already been reported to them by the boy’s family, not Father Gallagher.

The Diocese of Palm Beach acted in a prompt, thorough, and cooperative manner in regard to Father Palimattom. Father Gallagher was not in any way demoted or removed because of the incident. He was not named as pastor of Holy Name of Jesus Church for a number of reasons not related to the incident involving Father Palimattom. He was given a new assignment with all the reasons explained to him. Access to his residence was never denied him, nor was he refused the sacraments. At his request he was placed on medical leave and continues to receive salary, health insurance and benefits. At the present time he has not made known to the Diocese his whereabouts.

Father Gallagher is blatantly lying and is in need of professional assistance as well as our prayers and mercy.

The Diocese is very concerned regarding the manner in which the media is presenting this case, especially when the Diocese had released to it information that should have caused more than reasonable caution in presenting misleading information from Father Gallagher.”

The Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach encompasses the five counties of Palm Beach, Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River and Okeechobee. Comprised of 280,000 Catholics in 53 parishes and missions, the Diocese also serves the faithful community through its schools.

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Diocese strikes back against priest’s assertions

FLORIDA
Palm Beach Post

By Joe Capozzi – Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

PALM BEACH GARDENS —
A day after a priest blasted the Palm Beach Diocese’s handling of a sexual abuse case, diocese officials struck back, calling Father John Gallagher a liar in need of professional assistance.

In an extraordinary public rebuttal, the normally reticent diocese blasted as “unfair and slanderous” Gallagher’s assertion that he had been demoted and locked out of his parish months after reporting a fellow priest’s sex crime.

“Father Gallagher is blatantly lying and is in need of professional assistance as well as our prayers and mercy,” the diocese said in a statement.

The statement reads in whole:

“The Diocese of Palm Beach is very disappointed in the actions of Father John Gallagher who, through a complete misrepresentation of the case of Father Jose Palimattom, has brought unfair and slanderous allegations against the Church and the Diocese of Palm Beach. Father Gallagher has acted in a similar manner in other situations in the past and has been given every opportunity for correction, including the possibility of professional assistance.

Father Gallagher has publicly stated that he contacted the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office the evening the incident occurred. The sheriff’s report indicates that Father Gallagher was not the one who made the report. He also publicly stated that he contacted the Diocese the evening the incident occurred. The Diocese of Palm Beach did not receive any communication from him until the next day. Upon learning of the allegation, the Diocese of Palm Beach immediately contacted authorities and learned that the incident had already been reported to them by the boy’s family, not Father Gallagher.

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Group shows support for whistleblower priest

FLORIDA
CBS 12

BY AL PEFLEY TUESDAY, JANUARY 26TH 2016

PALM BEACH GARDENS (CBS12) — A West Palm Beach priest who says the church shunned him after he turned in a pedophile priest is getting a show of support.

Demonstrators came together outside the Diocese of Palm Beach in Palm Beach Gardens Tuesday afternoon.

About 10 members of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, gathered on the sidewalk near the Diocese to support Father Gallagher.

A couple of them held signs at a news conference. But they did not conduct a demonstration or march.

“Instead of being praised for protecting a child victim of sexual abuse, it seems as though the Bishop and the Church are punishing the ones who are doing the right thing,” said SNAP member David Pittman.

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Supporters rally behind whistleblower priest

FLORIDA
WPBF

[with video]

By Angela Rozier

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. —Supporters of a local catholic priest who says he’s been ostracized from the church because he blew the whistle on a church sex scandal is getting support.

Nearly a dozen supporters stood outside the Palm Beach Diocese offices at 9995 N. Military Trail in Palm Beach Gardens Tuesday afternoon to show support for Father John Gallagher.

David Pittman, who is a local member of SNAP which stands for Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests, attended the rally.

“We want to know why because he did the right thing, he reported a sexual predator. A predator who was convicted,” said Pittman.

Gallagher was a priest at The Holy Name of Jesus in West Palm Beach in January of last year.

Mireille Kulikowski also attended the rally. Kulikowski said she attends The Holy Name of Jesus Parish and said Gallagher is a good priest.

“I want Father Gallagher back in good spirit and good health,” said Kulikowski.

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Safeguarding and the Catholic Church in England and Wales

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Catholic News

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

This year will see an increased focus on safeguarding in the Catholic Church in England and Wales with the start of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sex Abuse, led by Judge Lowell Goddard. In agreement with the Bishops, the National Catholic Safeguarding Commission and the Catholic Safeguarding Advisory Service the CCN has put together the following update on safeguarding in the Catholic Church in order to ensure that Catholic parishioners are aware of the importance placed on safeguarding in the Church and the safeguarding procedures used across England and Wales.

All allegations of abuse reported to the Church in England and Wales are immediately passed on to the police. The Church works closely and cooperatively with the statutory authorities as these allegations are investigated. Following this investigation, which follows UK law, the Church conducts its own internal investigation, following Canon law.

The safeguarding of children, young people and vulnerable adults is at the heart of the Church’s mission. There is no place in the Church, or indeed society, for abuse, a grievous crime which can affect people for their entire lives.

Victims come first. This has not always been the case. The Church deeply regrets all instances of sexual abuse and the abuse of minors and vulnerable adults, and accepts that grave mistakes were made in the past.

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Royal commission into child sexual abuse to focus on Church of England Boys’ Society

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Emilie Gramenz

A youth group operated by the Anglican Church will come under investigation during a week of public hearings in Hobart by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Hearings into the Church of England Boys’ Society (CEBS), a children’s group similar to Scouts, run by the Anglican Church, will run from January 27 until February 5.

The Anglican dioceses of Tasmania, Adelaide, Sydney and Brisbane will come under scrutiny as the hearings investigate their responses to allegations of child sexual abuse connected with CEBS.

Of particular interest will be convicted paedophiles Louis Daniels, Garth Hawkins, Robert Brandenburg, Simon Jacobs and John Elliott.

The Anglican Church set up a board of inquiry in 2003 to examine allegations of a tri-state paedophile ring operating from the early 1960s into the 1990s.

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JESUITS OF THE NORTHEAST PROVINCE ARE RE-VICTIMIZING A CLERGY SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIM

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

Media Release – January 26, 2016

Jesuits of the Northeast Province are insensitive and re-victimizing Neal E. Gumpel, a childhood clergy sexual abuse victim of Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, a deceased, serial, pedophile Jesuit priest

Jesuits admit to having credible information from approximately five (5) persons (besides the victim) about Neal E. Gumpel’s childhood sexual abuse by Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ and still refuse to settle Neal E. Gumpel’s claim reasonably

Jesuits have refused to reasonably settle the childhood sexual abuse claim of Neal E. Gumpel

What
A demonstration and leafleting alerting the media, parishioners of a Jesuit-sponsored parish, and the general public that the Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), has insulted and re-victimized a childhood sexual abuse victim of a Jesuit priest by refusing to settle his claim reasonably. The Jesuits have already settled at least one public claim against Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ.

When
Wednesday, January 27, 2016 from 11:00 am until 1:00 pm

Where
On the public sidewalk outside the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, 980 Park Avenue (between East 83rd and East 84th Streets), New York, NY 10028 – 212-288-3588

Who
Neal E. Gumpel, a childhood sexual abuse victim of Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, a serial pedophile Jesuit priest; Members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, including its Co-founder and President, Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D.

Why
The Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) knows that Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, was a serial molester of minor boys. The Province settled at least one public claim against Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, in the past. Neal E. Gumpel’s credible factual account of having been sexually abused as a minor child by Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, at Maine Maritime Academy in Castine, Maine, when Fr. Roy Alan Drake was a professor and Jesuit priest at Maine Maritime Academy, was credibly supported by approximately five (5) individuals, in addition to Neal E. Gumpel. Now, the Northeast Province of the Jesuits, which has found that Neal E. Gumpel’s claim is credible, has insulted and re-victimized Neal E. Gumpel by refusing to reasonably settle his claim. Demonstrators will ask parishioners and the general public to voice their outrage to the Jesuits of their parish and the Northeast Province (whose headquarters are around the corner on East 83rd Street) and demand of the Northeast Jesuit leadership that they treat Neal E. Gumpel with compassion, fairness, and justice.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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Church in Florida denies Irish priest frozen out for warning about paedophile

FLORIDA
Irish Independent

Greg Harkin
PUBLISHED
26/01/2016

VICTIMS of clerical sex abuse have staged a protest in Florida in support of an Irish priest who claims he was ostracised by the Catholic Church for calling police to arrest a paedophile cleric.

The march and protest at the Diocese of Palm Beach came after a spokeswoman for the church there finally issued a statement on the affair and denied a decision to move Fr John Gallagher was linked to the incident.

Tonight, Fr John Gallagher, from Co Tyrone, stood by his allegation that the Catholic Church was unhappy that he had called police before telling his Bishop about the actions of Fr Jose Palimattom.

The Indian-born cleric was arrested at the Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in West Palm Beach in January last year after showing child porn images on his phone to a 14-year-old boy.
Fr Gallagher, who called detectives, alleged that a church official had told him to put Palimattom on a plane.

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