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 8, 2016

Diocese bankruptcy settlement progressing

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Jan. 7, 2016

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

ALBUQUERQUE – Plans to finalize a settlement agreement in the Diocese of Gallup’s Chapter 11 case are moving forward, according to statements made by diocesan attorneys during a status conference before U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma Wednesday.

Fifteen attorneys representing clergy sex abuse claimants, the Gallup Diocese and its insurers, two Franciscan provinces and St. Bonaventure Indian Mission and School attended the hearing either in person or telephonically. The hearing, which moved quickly, featured little discussion and was notable for its lack of disputes or dissension.

Thomas D. Walker, the diocese’s Albuquerque bankruptcy attorney, said a proposed settlement agreement will be circulated next week to all the different parties in the case, with some of the attorneys working to draft their own revisions.

“And so progress is being made,” Walker told Thuma. A meeting scheduled for Friday, he added, will focus on the non-monetary terms of the agreement.

Susan Boswell, the diocese’s lead bankruptcy attorney, said she hoped a reorganization plan will be filed in early February.

Young Kim, an attorney for Michael P. Murphy who was hired to be the future claims representative, voiced one unresolved problem during the hearing Wednesday. Citing confidentiality issues, Kim declined to provide names or details about the circumstances, but he told Thuma he had not been able to make progress getting one of the parties to return his calls and talk with him.

The judge said he wouldn’t press Kim about who he was “trying to talk to” and “why they aren’t calling him back,” but he left that open as a subject for future discussion.

“If there’s a problem, I want to hear about it,” Thuma said.

The only other concern raised about the proposed settlement agreement came from Assistant U.S. Trustee Ronald Andazola. The position of his office, Andazola said, was that all the terms of the settlement should be public information.

The next status conference is scheduled for Jan. 19.

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

Lawyer alleges 231 children were abused at Catholic choir in Germany

GERMANY
The Globe and Mail (Canada)

BERLIN — The Associated Press
Published Friday, Jan. 08, 2016

More than 200 children may have been abused, some of them sexually, by adults working with a Catholic children’s choir in southern Germany, a lawyer tasked with investigating the allegations said Friday.

Ulrich Weber said the 231 alleged victims included 50 who made “plausible” claims of sexual abuse at the Regensburger Domspatzen boys’ choir and two associated boarding schools between 1953 and 1992.

Weber, who was commissioned by the Catholic diocese of Regensburg, said that former Domspatzen conductor Georg Ratzinger must have known of at least some of the abuses. Ratzinger, the older brother of Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI, has previously denied knowledge of the incidents.

Allegations of abuse surfaced several years ago, at a time when the Catholic Church’s handling of such claims was being widely scrutinized following a series of high-profile cases in Europe and the United States.

Weber said his eight-month investigation involved interviews with more than 140 people, including 70 alleged victims. He concluded that almost a third of all pupils at two primary feeder schools for the choir, one in Etterzhausen and one in Pielenhofen, suffered some form of abuse.

The sexual assaults ranged from stroking to rape, he said.

“The events were known internally and criticized, but they had almost no consequences,” Weber said.

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Lawyer warns that 231 boys at German choir school could be abuse victims

GERMANY
The Guardian

Agence France-Presse in Berlin
Friday 8 January 2016

At least 231 children at a famous boys’ choir school in Germany were victims of physical abuse, according to a lawyer tasked by the Catholic institution with investigating allegations, giving a far higher figure than thought for the scandal, which dates back decades.

The Regensburger Domspatzen, a 1,000-year-old choir in Regensburg, Bavaria, was dragged into the massive sexual abuse scandal plaguing the Catholic church in 2010 when allegations of assaults that took place several decades ago went public.

The choir was run by Pope Benedict’s elder brother, Georg Ratzinger, from 1964 to 1994 when most of the claimed abuses took place.

Ratzinger has said that the alleged sexual abuse was “never discussed” in the time that he ran the choir attached to the boarding school.

Lawyer Ulrich Weber, who had been commissioned by the diocese to look into the cases, said at a press conference on Friday that his research, which included 70 interviews with victims, uncovered abuse that took place from 1945 to the early 1990s.

“I have here 231 reports of physical abuse,” he said.

These ranged from sexual assault to rape, severe beatings and food deprivation, said Weber.

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BRANDON MCDADE PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO MOLESTING 5 BOYS AS YOUTH PASTOR

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Weekly

BY MATT COKER
FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 2016

Youth pastor Brandon Ernis Lee McDade pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Thursday to molesting five boys under the age of 16 on Grace Hills Church property in Aliso Viejo.

The 30-year-old, who resides in Laguna Hills or Mission Viejo (depending on if you believe his Facebook profile or the Orange County District Attorney’s office respectively), also molested one of the boys at an Orange County movie theater and another at a San Bernardino County camp, during church-sponsored youth trips, according to prosecutors.

The alleged crimes happened between June 2009 and this past December, the OCDA claims. Sheriff’s deputies who’d been contacted by an alleged victim’s parent arrested McDade on Dec. 9, and he was released from jail after making his $20,000 bail. But an additional victim was discovered in the ongoing investigation after the arrest, the OCDA claims.

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DIOCESE OF PORTLAND SUED IN DECADES-OLD ABUSE CASE

MAINE
Church Militant

by Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • January 7, 2016

PORTLAND, Maine (ChurchMilitant.com) – The diocese of Portland, Maine is being sued over allegations that a former bishop covered up a sex abuse scandal.

In seperate civil complaints filed in November, six men claim they were sexually abused by Fr. James Vallely, a Portland diocesen priest, between 1958 and 1977 and that the bishop worked to protect the abusive pastor.

The victims, who were between the ages of 8 and 15 at the time, allege the abuse occured in three different parishes while they served as altar boys of the respective churches.

According to four of the victims, the abuse occured while Fr. Vallely was a priest at St. Michael Catholic Church in South Berwick; a fifth claims he was sexually abused by Vallely in Portland’s St. Dominic Catholic Church; the last asserts Vallely molested him while acting as visiting pastor at St. John Catholic Church in Bangor in 1969.

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Tortured for Jesus: kids were abused in Christian shelters

INDIA
The Freethinker

Thirty children, all from poor familes, have been removed by police from two homes run by the Emmanuel Seva Group in Greater Noida and Meerut.

According to this report, one of the rescued kids – a boy aged 9 – alleged that he was forced to convert to Christianity, hung by the wrists from a ceiling fan, starved for days and beaten mercilessly for failing to recite Bible passages.

The child, who along with his younger sister and brother had been confined to the home for three years, said their stay was like a “jail term”.

I was allowed to meet my parents once a month for only 15 minutes. The only thing I was taught was the Bible. They forced me to memorise its passages.

They gave us good clothes whenever visitors came. They made us stand in line and recite Bible passages. Once the guests left, the shelter in-charge snatched away our clothes, sweets and gifts and we were back in rags again.

His 11-year-old sister said the children were forced to sleep on a dirty floor that was littered with rodent droppings.

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Jesuits reached settlement of 2 lawsuits against former St. Louis University President Daniel O’ Connell

MISSOURI
Lawyer Herald

A former president of St. Louis University was sued by two women over sexual abuse. Daniel O’ Connell was a known professor at St. Louis and in the late 1960. On Wednesday, according to an activist group, one woman was said to have received a total of $281,000 to settle Daniel O’ Connell’s case. The woman also claimed that officials breached an agreement to bar the professor from teaching.

During the counselling sessions in 1960, a female undergraduate alleges that Daniel O’ Connell used his authority in school to sexually abuse. And in 2012, the same woman filed a lawsuit stating that the professor held her on his lap while indulging in masturbation. The woman said that Daniel O’ Connell told her that sex would bring her closer to God. Daniel O’ Connelly and the lawyers of St. Louis University denied such allegations.

From 1974-1978, Daniel O’ Connell became St. Louis University’s president, however the allegations of sexual abuse did not stop. It was reported last week that St. Louis University and the Jesuits of Missouri Province agreed to pay ‘Jane Doe 929′ $200,000 to settle the 2012 case filed against the professor. Days before reaching an agreement with Jane Doe 929, another victim went to file lawsuit against Daniel O’ Connell again. The University then agreed to pay her $81,000.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 8 January 2016 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– Fr. Juan Carlos Elizalde Espinal as bishop of Vitoria (area 350, population 329,000, Catholics 298,000, priests 291, permanent deacons 5, religious 738), Spain. The bishop-elect was born in Mezkiritz, Spain in 1960 and was ordained a priest in 1987. He holds a licentiate in spiritual theology from the Pontifical University of Comillas in Madrid, and has served in a number of roles in the archdiocese of Pamplona y Tudela, including director of diocesan university residences, parish priest and professor of theology and head of pastoral ministry of the Public University of Navarra. He is currently episcopal vicar of the zone of Pamplona-Cuenca-Roncesvalles. He succeeds Bishop Miguel Jose Asurmendi Aramendia, S.D.B., whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese upon reaching the age limit was accepted by the Holy Father.

– Cardinal Ricardo Blazquez Perez, archbishop of Valladolid, Spain, as member of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA).

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An unhelpfully emotive word in a sensitive context

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

IF there is one issue that is guaranteed to inflame passions within the Catholic Church, it is sexual health. In late August 2004 Cardinal Keith O’Brien, the then President of the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland, attacked the Scottish Executive’s forthcoming sexual health strategy. The country faced one of the biggest challenges to its morality in a generation, he argued, as sexual health service providers pushed a “value-free agenda, focusing on a biological/mechanical approach to sex education.” He demanded that the Executive consider alternative approaches which set sexual activity within a moral context.

Much has changed since then but the Church still keeps a close eye on the issue. Now it has rounded on part of a new Scottish Government strategy to address teenage pregnancy. A plan to locate sexual health drop-in centres near schools was not merely “sinister”, it said, but redolent of an “underhand” strategy to impose a moral standpoint opposed to the Catholic schools’ moral perspectives. It also argued that Catholic schools could not be required to signpost young people towards family planning services such as emergency contraception. However, it is worth mentioning that the Church supports other parts of the strategy and approves of the manner in which sex education now focuses on relationships rather than on the sexual act in isolation.

Much concern has been expressed over under-age sex leading to unwanted pregnancies and to single, teenage motherhood, with all the impact on society that that implies. But great efforts have been made to address the rate of teen pregnancies. Last summer it emerged that the Scottish rate had fallen to its lowest-ever level. In 2007 it was 57.7% per 1,000 population: in 2013 it was 37.7%. Clearly, much intelligent, thoughtful work had gone into achieving this reduction, but much more remains to be done in addressing the fact that the number of young women who become mothers is still much higher in deprived areas.

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Deutlich mehr Missbrauchsfälle bei Regensburger Domspatzen

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

Bei den Regensburger Domspatzen hat es wesentlich mehr Misshandlungsfälle gegeben als bisher angenommen. Von 1953 bis 1992 seien mindestens 231 Kinder von Priestern und Lehrern des Bistums verprügelt oder sexuell missbraucht worden, sagte der von Bistum und Chor mit der Klärung des Skandals beauftragte Rechtsanwalt Ulrich Weber am Freitag in Regensburg.

„Die sexuellen Übergriffe reichten von Streicheln bis zu Vergewaltigungen“, berichtete der Rechtsanwalt. Weber geht davon aus, dass die Dunkelziffer der misshandelten Kinder noch deutlich höher liegt. Er rechnet damit, dass etwa jeder Dritte der rund 2100 Vorschüler zwischen 1953 bis 1992 unter körperlicher Gewalt litt.

Webers Zahlen sind deutlich höher sind als diejenigen, die das Bistum Regensburg im Zuge seiner eigenen Nachforschungen vor rund einem Jahr öffentlich gemacht hatte. Im vergangenen Februar hatte das Bistum mitgeteilt, dass Berichte von 72 früheren Mitgliedern des weltberühmten Chors aus den Jahren 1953 bis 1992 vorlägen, die so schwer geschlagen worden seien, dass von Körperverletzung auszugehen sei. Die Kirche hatte zudem angekündigt, jedem von ihnen eine Entschädigung von 2500 Euro zu zahlen.

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At least 200 kids abused in Regensburg choir

GERMANY
The Local

Fresh cases of abuse in Regensburg cathedral choir were revealed by investigators on Friday, who said at least 231 children have been abused by priests and teachers since the 1950s in a scandal that has rocked the Bavarian city.

Lawyer Ulrich Weber, who is leading the investigation in Regensburg, said on Friday that between 1953 and 1992, at least 231 children were beaten or sexually abused by priests and teachers of the diocese.

This number was much larger than previously thought – 72 cases of abuse had been reported by last April.

“The sexual abuse ranged from fondling to rape,” said Weber.

He added that the number of unreported cases would bring this figure higher, estimating that around one-third of the 2,100 students during that time period were subject to physical violence.

The Domspatzen – or “Cathedral sparrows” – boys choir of St. Peter’s Cathedral has been plagued by scandal since reports of sexual abuse in Church communities across the country first emerged in 2010.

At that time, a Berlin school announced that around 50 former students had reported they were sexually abused by priests. Afterward, lawyers for victims came forward with allegations of abuse at dozens of other Catholic institutions.

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“Domspatzen”-Skandal weitet sich aus

DEUTSCHLAND
N-TV

[“Domspatzen” scandal is widening]

Der älteste Knabenchor Deutschlands begeistert Menschen in aller Welt. Im Februar 2015 wird jedoch ein Missbrauchsskandal bei den Regensburger Domspatzen öffentlich. Der zuständige Anwalt korrigiert die Zahl der Opfer nun deutlich nach oben.

Bei den Regensburger Domspatzen haben Priester und Lehrer über Jahrzehnte mindestens 231 Kinder geschlagen, gequält oder sexuell missbraucht. Das gab der Rechtsanwalt Ulrich Weber bekannt, der von der katholischen Kirche und dem weltberühmten Chor mit der Aufklärung des Skandals betraut wurde. Die in seinem Zwischenbericht genannte Zahl der Misshandlungsfälle ist wesentlich größer als bisher angenommen. Weber geht davon aus, dass die Dunkelziffer noch deutlich höher liegt. Er rechnet damit, dass etwa jeder Dritte der rund 2100 Schüler der “Spatzen” zwischen 1953 bis 1992 unter körperlicher Gewalt litt.

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Mehr als 200 Kinder der Regensburger Domspatzen misshandelt

DEUTSCHLAND
Berliner Morgenpost

[More than 200 children were abused in the Regensburg cathedral choir.]

Bei den Regensburger Domspatzen wurden laut Medienbericht mehr Kinder missbraucht als bisher bekannt. Sie wurden nicht nur geschlagen .

Regensburg. Bei den Regensburger Domspatzen hat es wesentlich mehr Misshandlungsfälle gegeben als bisher angenommen. Von den 1950er bis in die 1990er Jahre hinein seien mindestens 231 Kinder von Priestern und Lehrern des Bistums Regensburg verprügelt worden, sagte der vom Bistum mit der Aufklärung beauftragte Rechtsanwalt Ulrich Weber auf einer Pressekonferenz am Freitag.

Weber geht in seinem vorgestellten Zwischenbericht davon aus, dass die Dunkelziffer der misshandelten Kinder noch deutlich höher liegt. Er rechnet damit, dass etwa jeder Dritte der rund 2100 Vorschüler zwischen 1953 bis 1992 unter körperlicher Gewalt litt.

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Bischof Voderholzer zu Fällen sexuellen Missbrauchs und körperlicher Gewalt

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Regensburg

[Bishop Voderholzer speaks of cases of sexual abuse and physical violence in the diocese.]

Liebe Schwestern und Brüder im Herrn, zu den schweren Lasten und den bedrückenden Erfahrungen des Bischofsamtes gehört die Konfrontation mit den Fällen sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Priester und kirchliche Mitarbeiter und die Fälle von körperlicher Gewalt, vor allem in der Einrichtung in Etterzhausen und Pielenhofen, die erst jüngst wieder in der Öffentlichkeit dargestellt wurden und viele Menschen auch über das Bistum hinaus tief betroffen gemacht haben und betroffen machen.

Sie dürfen mir glauben: Es schmerzt mich und tut mir in der Seele weh: jeder einzelne Fall, hinter dem ja ein Mensch steht, eine Kinderseele in diesen Fällen, schwer gequält, oft für das Leben gezeichnet. Ich kann es nicht ungeschehen machen und die Betroffenen nur um Vergebung bitten.

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Statement

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Regensburg

Nach achtmonatiger Untersuchungszeit ist es nun möglich, konkrete erste Ergebnisse zu den Missbrauchs- und Misshandlungsfällen bei den Regensburger Domspatzen herauszugeben. Besonders wichtig ist mir bei dieser Zwischenbilanz auch, dass die Opfer über den Weg der Offentlichkeit zum Stand meiner Arbeit informiert werden.

Die Ausgangssituation: Zum Zeitpunkt meines Einstiegs hatte das Bistum die Zahl von 72 anerkannten Opfern körperlicher Gewalt eingeräumt und konkret zwei wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs verurteilte Beschuldigte, die in Zusammenhang mit den Domspatzen standen, namentlich genannt. Für mich waren zunächst vor allem intensive Opfer-, Verantwortungsträger- und Drittgespräche wichtig, um einen eigenen Eindruck vom Umfang der Taten zu bekommen.

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Priest sentenced for ‘rape and assault’

AUSTRALIA
The Local

A Catholic priest from Lower Austria who had what he claims was a consensual love affair with a younger man has been sentenced to four years in prison for rape and sexual assault.

When the allegations first surfaced, Father Fabian’s parishioners reportedly rallied around to support him, with the Kurier newspaper reporting that his sexuality and close relationship with the adult son of a family friend was an open secret.

The 49-year-old was sentenced by a court in Wiener Neustadt for repeatedly drugging and sexually assaulting his 26-year-old acquaintance. The sentence was upheld on Thursday by the high court in Vienna – with the judge saying it was important to send a signal to the clergy that sexual assaults will not be taken lightly.

His lawyer, Michael Dohr, maintains that the relationship was a love affair and “a private matter which had nothing to do with his position as a pastor – so saying this will act as a deterrent to others is a joke.”

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Herr Focke und die dunkle Seite der Kirche – Ex-Heimkind berichtet von Gewalt, Vergewaltigung und Ausbeutung

DEUTSCHLAND
Volksfreund

[Bettenfeld) Wolfgang Focke’s life is not easy – and it never was. He has spent in four children’s homes nearly 18 years. There he was raped by his own admission, beaten and forced to diverse works. Today the 69-year-old lives in Bettenfeld and is still fighting for reparation.]

(Bettenfeld) Wolfgang Fockes Leben ist nicht einfach – und das war es nie. Fast 18 Jahre hat er in vier Kinderheimen verbracht. Dort wurde er nach eigener Aussage vergewaltigt, geschlagen und zu diversen Arbeiten gezwungen. Heute wohnt der 69-Jährige in Bettenfeld und kämpft noch immer für Wiedergutmachung.

Wolfgang Focke erzählt seine Lebensgeschichte. Es ist eine dieser Geschichten, die sich selbst der Autor eines Horrorromans nicht besser hätte ausdenken können. Wolfgang Focke ist eines der bekanntesten Gesichter der Missbrauchsszene. Das ehemalige Heimkind hat seine Geschichte bereits in vielen Talkshows und Zeitungen erzählt. In unzähligen Ordnern und Sammelmappen hat er penibel die Dokumente aufbewahrt, die sein Schicksal belegen. Mit seinen Ordnern ist er nun nach Bettenfeld gezogen. Von dort aus führt der 69-Jährige seinen Kampf um Wiedergutmachung und Entschädigung fort.

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Georg Ratzinger soll davon gewusst haben

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[The longtime head of the cathedral choir, Georg Ratzinger, must have known of the numerous cases of mistreatment in the boys’ choir in the opinion of victims lawyer Ulrich Weber. Weber announced today at a press conference that overall he found 231 incidents of sexual abuse involving boys in the choir.]

Der langjährige Chef der Regensburger Domspatzen, Georg Ratzinger, muss nach Überzeugung des Opferanwalts Ulrich Weber von den zahlreichen Misshandlungsfällen bei dem Knabenchor gewusst haben. Das gab Weber heute bei einer Pressekonferenz bekannt. Insgesamt sprach er von 231 Vorfällen.

Auf die Frage, ob Ratzinger die Missstände bekannt gewesen seien, sagte der vom Bistum Regensburg als Sonderermittler eingesetzte Anwalt wörtlich: “Davon muss ich ausgehen.” Der 91–jährige Georg Ratzinger ist der Bruder von Papst Benedikt. Er war 30 lang, bis 1994, Domkapellmeister und Leiter des weltberühmten Knabenchores. Ratzinger hält sich aktuell in Rom auf und war für eine Stellungnahme nicht zu erreichen.

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Aufklärungsbericht: Wesentlich mehr Missbrauchsfälle bei Regensburger Domspatzen

DEUTSCHLAND
Spiegel

[Significantly more cases of abuse at Regensburg Cathedral Choir]

Priester und Lehrer des Regensburger Bistums haben mindestens 231 Kinder misshandelt, das geht aus einem Zwischenbericht zur Aufklärung der Vorfälle bei dem Domspatzen-Chor hervor. Die Dunkelziffer könnte noch deutlich höher liegen.

Bei den Regensburger Domspatzen hat es wesentlich mehr Misshandlungsfälle gegeben als bisher angenommen. Von 1953 bis 1992 seien mindestens 231 Kinder von Priestern und Lehrern des Bistums verprügelt oder sexuell missbraucht worden, sagte der von Bistum und Chor mit der Klärung des Skandals beauftragte Rechtsanwalt Ulrich Weber in Regensburg.

“Die sexuellen Übergriffe reichten von Streicheln bis zu Vergewaltigungen”, berichtete der Rechtsanwalt. Weber geht davon aus, dass die Dunkelziffer der misshandelten Kinder noch deutlich höher liegt. Er rechnet damit, dass etwa jeder Dritte der rund 2100 Vorschüler zwischen 1953 bis 1992 unter körperlicher Gewalt litt.

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I wanted to help pope says Chaouqui

ITALY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Cosenza, January 7 – ‘Vatileaks 2′ defendant Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui defended herself at a press conference Thursday, saying she had been trying to help Pope Francis and not bidding for a place in the Roman Curia when she allegedly gave journalists confidential documents.

“My problem was helping the Holy Father, not getting a place in the Curia,” said the Calabrian-born PR expert, who denies passing on files to the journalists for two expose’-style books.

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I’ll never betray State secrecy

ITALY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Cosenza, January 7 – Vatileaks 2 defendant Francesca Chaouqui said Thursday she would never betray confidential remarks by Pope Francis or divulge the content of classified documents.

“No one will ever find out from me anything about conversations I had with the pope or any documents I got and read,” she told a press conference.

“I will never betray my State secrecy,” she said, “even if my son should be born in prison”.

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Balda gave journalists documents

ITALY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Cosenza, January 7 – Vatileaks 2 defendant Francesca Chaouqui said Thursday her co-defendant Msgr Lucio Vallejo Balda passed confidential Vatican financial documents on alleged financial mismanagement and overspending to two journalists who used them to write two books.

“It’s true, it was me who introduced the two journalists to Msgr Lucio Vallejo Balda, but there was never any agreement to pass them private papers,” she told a press conference at her home town of San Sosti in Calabria.

“It was Msgr Balda who handed over those documents to show that reform had not been put into practice,” she said.

Chaouqui and Balda – who claims she had a brief affair with him – are among five Vatileaks 2 defendants.

Vallejo Balda and PR expert Chaouqui were both members of the now-defunct COSEA commission set up to advise Pope Francis on the reform of the Holy See’s economic and administrative structure.

Investigative journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi and Vallejo Balda’s former assistant Nicola Maio are also on trial.

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Vatileaks suspect will not plead for pope pardon

ROME
Manila Bulletin

AFP

A former PR consultant to the Vatican on trial along with four others for leaking or publishing secret papers said on Thursday she would not ask Pope Francis for a pardon.

“Those who are innocent do not ask to be pardoned,” Francesca Chaouqui told journalists, ruling out a similar course of action to former pontiff Benedict XVI’s butler who was found guilty in the first Vatileaks trial in 2013 but later pardoned.

Chaouqui insisted prosecutors have “nothing that could lead to a conviction”, and the only thing that ties her to the leaks are accusations made against her by Spanish priest Lucio Vallejo Balda, who is also on trial.

Vallejo Balda has portrayed his former friend Chaouqui as a manipulative temptress, saying he was tempted to break his vow of celibacy because of her sexual advances, a claim she has rubbished.

Chaouqui insists that while she did stay in a hotel with him in Florence, he shared the room with his mother that night.

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Should a Catholicpriest be removed from ministry for past sexual misconduct?

ILLINOIS
WTMJ

Roman Catholic priest Bruce Wellems has served as a youth advocate and community organizer in one of Chicago’s poorest and most dangerous neighborhoods. Sexual molestation allegations against Fr. Wellems when he was a teenager have raised questions on whether or not he should be allowed to continue his ministry.

The Chicago Tribune reports that when this misconduct surfaced during his time serving in California, Los Angeles’ Archbishop removed him instantly. Afterwards, Fr. Wellems returned to Chicago where their archbishop is now trying to determine the best course of action concerning Fr. Wellems’ misconduct.

Wellems admits to the allegations, but claims that his past actions do not reflect the person he is today.

“These allegations had nothing to do with who I was as a person,” Fr. Wellems says. “In my adult life I’ve done nothing against children. There’s nothing that’s ever come up.”

What do you think should happen to Fr. Wellems? Should he be allowed to continue his ministry, or should he be defrocked? Jeff Wagner will be discussing the topic in the 12 p.m. hour.

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Youth pastor charged with sexually assaulting five underaged boys while working at Aliso Viejo church

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Register

By ALMA FAUSTO / STAFF WRITER

A former youth pastor at an Aliso Viejo church has been charged with sexually assaulting five boys under the age of 16, the District Attorney’s Office said Thursday.

Brandon Ernis Lee McDade, 30, of Mission Viejo, is charged with two felony counts of committing lewd acts upon a child under the age of 14, four felony counts of lewd acts on a child between ages 14 and 15, and two misdemeanor counts of child annoyance. He also faces a sentence enhancement for having multiple victims.

Authorities say the incidents happened between June 2009 and Dec. 20, 2015. At the time, he was working at Grace Hills Church in Aliso Viejo and had access to children. McDade had been employed by the church for approximately six years, Orange County Sheriff’s Department officials said after his arrest.

“McDade is accused of sexually assaulting the victims while the victims were on church property,” according to a statement released by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office. “The defendant is accused of molesting one of the victims at a movie theater in Orange County and molesting another victim while the victim was attending a youth church camp in San Bernardino County.”

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Court documents reveal details of former Anson minister’s arrest

TEXAS
KTXS

By Andrew McMillan, Digital Media Assistant, amcmillan@ktxs.com

ABILENE, Texas –
The former Anson youth pastor accused of having a sexual relationship with an underage girl was caught because of a suspicious vehicle report, according to search warrants filed in Taylor County.

Callan Rice, 26, was arrested Dec. 28 for indecency with a child after confessing to the crime.

Court documents say police responded to a suspicious vehicle call on Dec. 20 behind the old Genghis Grill building on S. Clack Street. The officers found Rice and a girl under the age of 17 inside Rice’s truck. The child denied that she had any intimate involvement with Rice.

The officers found their stories suspicious and made a report.

The next day, the girl’s father told an officer he had concerns that Rice had sexually abused his daughter, court documents say.

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Second survivors’ group threatens to snub abuse inquiry

SCOTLAND
The National

JANICE BURNS

A SECOND group of people who suffered abuse as children have threatened to boycott the public inquiry into historical allegations in Scotland.

White Flowers Alba (WFA) has already indicated it will take no part in the process and now members of the In Care Survivors’ group (INCAS) have said the Scottish Government was treating them with contempt and could be set to follow suit.

Ministers have insisted the public inquiry, chaired by Susan O’Brien QC, is the widest Scotland has ever seen, and it will investigate abuse in residential settings such as boarding and secure schools as well as among foster families.

These include allegations of abuse at the former Fort Augustus Abbey School and its junior school in East Lothian.

However, survivors have said it fails to address many other cases, including where priests abused children in parishes, and in youth organisations.

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Accused priest, governor’s cousin, dies

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

By Neil Vigdor Thursday, January 7, 2016

A Catholic priest who fought to clear his name from being associated with a $12 million sexual abuse settlement against the Diocese of Bridgeport and was a cousin of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has died.

The Rev. Joseph J. Malloy, 71, who was assigned to parishes in Bridgeport, Trumbull, Stratford and the gov ernor’s home city of Stamford , died Saturday at Stamford Hospital. He was laid to rest Wednesday.

The clergyman went to his grave maintaining that he never fondled a former altar boy at St. Catherine of Siena Church in Trumbull, as he was accused of doing by the unidentified parishioner and the man’s attorney.

But the diocese, beset by 26 claims of sexual abuse, agreed to include Malloy in the 2001 settlement that named five other priests. All but two of them were defrocked.

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Rutter: Even death doesn’t diminish former bishop’s arrogant legacy

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

David Rutter

In 2005, this was a snippet of Bishop Joseph Imesch’s then-sealed sworn deposition detailing two decades of child sexual abuse by Joliet Diocese clerics under his management:

Imesch: “As far as I can remember, I think (priest) Gary (Berthiaume) admitted to me that he had done it before the conviction.”

Lawyer for abuse plaintiffs: “If he had told you that he had committed the offense against the child, isn’t that evidence of the crime?”

Imesch: “That’s a job for the police. I’m not going to get involved in that. That’s not my responsibility. … I’m not going to say, ‘Hey, police, go check on my priest.’ ”

This is a terrible sin’s haunting indifference, which, despite settlements under duress, the Catholic Church still can’t expunge from its ecclesiastical collar. The blood of innocents does not wash off so easily.

Imesch is dead two weeks now. The church found no way to bury his deeds, except to ignore them.

Imesch fought for a decade to shield his secrets, as he had protected known abusers, and decried the court’s bad manners for ultimately revealing them.

So many children. So many hideous wrongs left unpunished.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 7 January 2016 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father erected the apostolic exarchate for Syrian Catholics in Canada with territory taken from the Eparchy of Our Lady of Deliverance of Newark. The Holy Father appointed Fr. Antoine Nassif as first exarch of the newly-erected apostolic exarchate. Bishop-elect Nassif was born in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1969 and ordained for the Syrian Catholic patriarchal eparchy in 1992. After ordination he served in various roles including: principal of the school of Charfet, Lebanon; vice-pastor in two parishes; and, most recently, as rector of the Patriarchal Major Seminary of Charfet. He speaks French, English, and Italian.

Yesterday, 6 January, the Holy Father appointed:

Bishop Luiz Gonzaga Fechio as Bishop of Amparo (area 2,084, population 381,500, Catholics 314,000, priests 53, permanent deacons 1, religious 123), Brazil. Bishop Fechio was previously auxiliary of Belo Horizonte, Brazil.

Bishop Juarez Sousa da Silva as Coadjutor Bishop of Parnaiba (area 20,839, population 623,000, Catholics 514,000, priests 48, religious 69), Brazil. Bishop da Silva was previously bishop of the Diocese of Oeiras, Brazil and apostolic administrator of Sao Raimundo Nonato, Brazil.

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Testimony begins for ex-pastor in Las Vegas child sex trial

NEVADA
The Eagle

Associated Press

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Testimony has begun in the trial of a former storefront church pastor and international fugitive accused of sexually assaulting girls in his Henderson congregation under the guise of counseling.

Otis Holland’s defense attorney Carmine Colucci told a jury Thursday the teenage girls accusing the former United Faith Church congregation leader of abusing them might have concocted stories because they thought they loved Holland.

Prosecutor Robert Langford told jurors many of Holland’ church teachings revolved around the idea that most women have desires but sexual hang-ups that prevent them from achieving spiritual goals.

The 59-year-old Holland has pleaded not guilty to 17 felonies including child sexual assault, lewdness and bribing a witness.

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Trial opens for former Las Vegas pastor on sex charges

NEVADA
Las Vegas Review-Journal

By David Ferrara
Las Vegas Review-Journal

A former Las Vegas pastor used his church as an outlet to rape several minor girls, a special prosecutor said Thursday during opening statements of a sexual assault trial.

Otis Holland, now 59, fled Southern Nevada in 2011 after Henderson police issued an arrest warrant alleging several counts of sexual assault of a victim younger than 16 years old, one count of child abuse and one count of conspiracy to commit a crime.

“Mr. Holland’s church was unique in one very dark way: he had a fundamental belief about spirituality and sexuality,” said Robert Langford, who is prosecuting on the case. “And that’s what this case is going to be about. He believes you could not begin to attain spirituality if you were troubled by your sexuality. And that’s what he preached.”

Holland was the pastor for United Faith Church, which held services in a storefront on Hacienda Avenue, near Tropicana and Eastern avenues. He met privately with the girls under the guise of “counseling” them about sexual issues, and then performed sex acts on them, Langford said.

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St. George’s School agrees to new probe of sex abuse

RHODE ISLAND
Boston Globe

By Bella English GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 08, 2016

After weeks of public pressure, the board of trustees at embattled St. George’s School agreed on Thursday to appoint a new “third party independent investigator” to oversee a comprehensive investigation of sexual abuse at the school. The decision was announced in a joint statement by board chair Leslie Heaney and by rape victim Anne Scott, speaking on behalf of SGS for Healing, a group of victims and other alumni.

The decision came after a two-hour meeting between attorneys for the victims and trustees of the prestigious Episcopal preparatory school in Middletown, R.I, and was the first accord between the two sides.

Since December, when Scott went public with her story, accounts have grown of sexual abuse at St. George’s. More than 40 former students have told lawyers they were raped or molested at St. George’s, mostly in the 1970s and 1980s, by what both the school and victims’ attorneys acknowledge were at least nine staff or student perpetrators.

The new investigator will be agreed upon by both the board and the victims, and they hope to appoint someone next week.

“Today’s decision is a very important first step in what we hope will be a process of reconciliation and healing,” Scott said.

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Sale of St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese building approved

MINNESOTA
The Journal

January 7, 2016
Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A federal bankruptcy judge has approved the sale of a building owned by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Judge Robert Kressel on Thursday approved the sale of the Hayden Center to the Minnesota Historical Society for $4.5 million. It’s the first of four real estate holdings expected to be sold by the archdiocese this year.

The archdiocese filed for bankruptcy protection last January, saying it couldn’t pay for mounting claims filed by people who said they were sexually abused by clergy.

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Bedford pastor suspended amid molestation allegations from the ’70s

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY MARIA MILLER THURSDAY, JANUARY 7TH 2016

BEDFORD, Pa. — A Bedford County pastor has been removed from his position after accusations of sexual abuse in the 1970s and 1980s. Rev. Howard White will no longer serve as a fill-in pastor at St. James Episcopal Church after the Episcopal Diocese removed him this week.

The allegations against White stem from a boarding school in Rhode Island where authorities said more than two dozen students have come forward.

Rhode Island state police said that boarding school has acknowledged it didn’t report abusers to authorities and has apologized for not doing more. In the meantime, an attorney for three alleged victims has released documents from the school that he says show White was fired and asked to stay away for at least five years.

Three alleged victims identified in an internal investigation by St. George’s School in Middletown, Rhode Island, allege their abuse came at the hands of White.

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St. George’s School Agrees to Inquiry Into Sexual Abuse

RHODE ISLAND
The New York Times

by KATHARINE Q. SEELYEJAN. 7, 2016

BOSTON — St. George’s School, an elite Rhode Island prep school embroiled in a widening sexual abuse scandal spanning decades, said Thursday that it would commission a new, independent investigation into allegations of misconduct against former staff and former students.

The investigation is to be undertaken by a third party to be chosen with the approval of a group of victims who have been critical of the school’s handling of the matter.

The school and the victims group, which calls itself “S.G.S. for Healing,” said in a joint statement that the investigation would be independent, comprehensive and not limited “in scope or time period and will be conducted in a manner sensitive to victims who may have already provided information.”

The Rhode Island State Police are conducting a separate investigation. And the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania has restricted a retired priest from his duties after the priest was named Tuesday by lawyers for former students as having molested three boys at St. George’s in the 1970s.

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SPOTLIGHT ON THE VULNERABLE

UNITED STATES
First Things

by Philip Lawler
1 . 8 . 16

Any major American newspaper would immediately fire a reporter who was caught using composite characters or inventing quotations for his stories. Hollywood naturally plays by different rules. A film “based on” a true story is considered acceptable; “recreated” dialogue is the norm. We expect print journalists to report on things as they are, while filmmakers are free to depict things as they might have been.

Spotlight, in which director Tom McCarthy recounts how the Boston Globe blew the lid off a simmering sex-abuse scandal in the Boston archdiocese, is a paradoxical product. The film pays tribute to dogged investigative reporters, while itself blithely ignoring the standards to which those journalists adhered. Somehow it works. Treating a historical episode as a drama, Spotlight successfully conveys the essence of the story: the frustrations and triumphs of the reporters, the enduring agony of abuse victims, and the flavor of life in a city dominated by disaffected Irish Catholics.

None of the characters in Spotlight behaves quite like the real people I know. (The portrayal of Cardinal Bernard Law, by Len Cariou, is particularly weak, conveying neither the strength of personality nor the tragic flaws of that unhappy prelate.) Yet the actors are thoroughly convincing insofar as they show how their characters might have behaved in given circumstances. Strong performances (particularly by Mark Ruffalo as Michael Rezendes and Michael Keaton as Walter Robinson) and lively pacing drive the story forward. And the plot line—the breaking of a major news story—sustains the excitement.

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Bedford priest named in sexual abuse case

PENNSYLVANIA
The Altoona Mirror

January 8, 2016
By Ryan Brown (rbrown@altoonamirror.com) , The Altoona Mirror

A retired priest working as a long-term substitute at Bedford’s St. James Episcopal Church was placed on administrative leave this week after he was named in a decades-old abuse case unfolding at a Rhode Island boarding school.

The Rev. Howard White has worked as a “supply priest” – a temporary priest without full powers – at St. James for eight years before his suspension, Bishop Audrey Scanlan, head of the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania, said in an interview. On Tuesday, former students at Rhode Island’s prestigious St. George’s School identified White as one of several previously unnamed suspects in a sexual abuse case there.

“I have moved to immediately restrict Fr. White’s ministry and to provide for the pastoral care of the congregation that he currently serves,” Scanlan said Wednesday in a written statement. “I have no information that leads me to believe that there have been any incidents of abuse at St. James, Bedford, but it is imperative that we employ all the safeguards that are available to us while the investigation (continues).”

Allegations against White and other former St. George’s employees date to the 1970s and ’80s, with alumni now claiming at least 23 students faced sexual abuse. A school investigation published in December claimed “Employee No. 2” – now identified as White – had engaged in inappropriate contact with at least three male students before or during 1974.

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Priest Suspended Amid Abuse Claims

PENNSYLVANIA
Valley News

By Michael Rubinkam
Associated Press
Friday, January 8, 2016

An Episcopal priest has been suspended from a Pennsylvania church after being accused this week of molesting three boys at an elite boarding school in Rhode Island more than 40 years ago.

More than two dozen students allege they were molested or raped at St. George’s School in Middletown, R.I., in the 1970s and ’80s. A lawyer for three former students named the Rev. Howard White on Tuesday as being among the six perpetrators the school identified after an internal investigation.

White has not been charged with a crime, and did not return a phone message left Thursday at his home by The Associated Press. He told The New York Times on Tuesday that the allegations were “news to me.” Asked by the newspaper if he had been fired because of the accusations, he said, “That isn’t really true.” He told The Boston Globe he had no comment.

A retired priest, White has been serving as a long-term, fill-in pastor at St. James Episcopal Church in Bedford, Penn., about 100 miles east of Pittsburgh.

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January 7, 2016

Bill Gothard, Christian counseling ministry leader with ties to TLC’s Duggar family, target of sexual assault lawsuit by 10 women

UNITED STATES
New York Daily News

BY LAURA BULT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Updated: Thursday, January 7, 2016

Ten women filed a bombshell lawsuit Wednesday alleging decades of sexual assault and rape by the longtime leader of Christian homeschooling ministry, Bill Gothard, who preaches modesty among women and has ties to Republican politicians and the reality TV Duggar family.

The lawsuit is the latest development after numerous women who sought counseling at Gothard’s Institute of Basic Life Principles, a prominent religious homeschooling ministry, came forward accusing the magnetic leader of sexual abuse, some of whom were minors at the time

The 81-year-old unmarried former president of the IBLP resigned from the ministry in 2014 after more than 30 women said they had been molested by him, according to the Washington Post, which first reported the story.

The lawsuit filed in an Illinois circuit court includes allegations that range from sexual harassment, inappropriate touching and hand-holding, molestation and rape, according to the complaint provided to the Daily News by the lawyers representing the women at the Texas Gibbs Law Firm.

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More women accuse DuPage ministry of sex abuse

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Christy Gutowski
Chicago Tribune

More former followers of the DuPage County-based Institute in Basic Life Principles have joined a multimillion-dollar lawsuit alleging leaders of the renowned conservative ministry conspired to cover up decades of inappropriate conduct.

Five additional women, totaling 10 plaintiffs, filed an amended 110-page lawsuit Wednesday in DuPage County alleging they were victims of “sexual abuse, sexual harassment and inappropriate/unauthorized touching” while they were participants, interns or employees of the institute.

Besides monetary damages, the women asked a judge to impose a “constructive trust” on IBLP’s assets to prevent leaders’ alleged plans to liquidate resources estimated at more than $100 million while they close the institute’s headquarters near Oak Brook and relocate to Texas “in an attempt to flee the jurisdiction (state of Illinois) where this wrongful conduct occurred,” according to the lawsuit.

In October, five of the women sued IBLP and its board of directors. Naperville attorney Shawn Collins later sought to dismiss the suit on behalf of IBLP, arguing it lacked specific facts such as dates, acts and named perpetrators to support such claims. Lawyers for the women did not fight the challenge and instead refiled the suit this week with the addition of five more accusers.

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Former Rye priest guilty over indecent child images

UNITED KINGDOM
Rye & Battle Observer

A former Rye priest pleaded guilty to charges in connection with more than 3,000 indecent pictures of children yesterday (Wednesday, January 6).

Paul Clarke, formerly of Watchbell Road but now lives in Manchester, entered the pleas at Lewes Crown Court.

The 71-year-old had been charged with possessing an indecent image of a child, possession of prohibited images and making a total of 3,100 indecent images of children.

Clarke, of Redclyffe Road, Urmston, Greater Manchester, was arrested after a search of his home in the residential presbytery attached to St Anthony’s Church on November 13, 2014.

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Boarding School Agrees to New Investigation of Sex Abuse

RHODE ISLAND
ABC News

By MICHAEL RUBINKAM AND DENISE LAVOIE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jan 7, 2016

An elite Rhode Island boarding school agreed Thursday to hire a new, independent investigator to look into allegations of sexual abuse made by at least 40 former students covering four decades.

Lawyers for the people who allege they were molested or raped by former school employees and students said they reached an agreement late Thursday with administrators at St. George’s School, a $56,000-a-year coeducational, Episcopalian school in Middletown, Rhode Island.

Many of the alleged victims had questioned the thoroughness of the school’s first investigation, which was led by the law partner of the school’s attorney. In a report last month, the school said that investigation found that 26 students had been sexually abused in the 1970s and ’80s by six former employees. The school acknowledged it didn’t report abusers to authorities at the time and apologized for not doing more.

Since then, Massachusetts lawyers Eric MacLeish and Carmen Durso said they have heard from at least 40 people who say they were abused by former staffers and students at the prep school.

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Judge sets May deadline for Diocese of Duluth abuse claims

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By Tom Olsen

A U.S. bankruptcy judge has set a May 25 deadline for victims of child sexual abuse by priests to file claims against the Diocese of Duluth.

Judge Robert Kressel set the deadline, also known as a “bar date,” after a hearing Thursday morning in Minneapolis. The deadline gives victims the full opportunity to seek damages under the Minnesota Child Victims Act, which is set to expire the same day.

The diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last month after being hit with a $4.9 million verdict in the first case to go to trial under the Child Victims Act.

At the time of the filing, the diocese was already facing five additional lawsuits and 12 claims stemming from abuse allegations. Victims’ attorneys said they expected those numbers to swell ahead of the filing deadline.

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Deadline Set for Duluth Diocese Bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Fox 21

Raeanna Marnati, Web Producer, rmarnati@kqdsfox21.tv

In court Thursday, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel gave creditors, including survivors of childhood sex abuse, until May 25 to file claims in the bankruptcy case.

The decision requires all information about survivors of sexual abuse to be kept confidential.

The Diocese of Duluth filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection on December 7.

The decision to file bankruptcy came after a Ramsey County jury awarded $8.4 million to a man who says he was molested as a boy by a priest form the Duluth Diocese.

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U.S. Bankruptcy Court Sets Deadline for Diocese of Duluth Survivors

MINNESOTA
The Legal Examiner

Posted by Mike Bryant
January 7, 2016

Survivors of sexual abuse have until May 25, 2016 to seek justice against their attackers. That is just a little over firm months away. The Window that has been limited due to bankruptcy by the diocese is part of a federal court order. Anyone who was sexually abused by an priest of the diocese, or who believes the diocese is liable for their abuse must act before the May 25 bankruptcy filing.

Nationally renowned priest abuse attorney Jeff Anderson’s website details instructions. There are a number of key points:

• You must file a claim by May 25.
• Your privacy and confidentiality can be protected.
• Filing your claim can help you and help protect children.

Please act now, because any further delay will result in loss of your right to make a claim

Abuse of children and the continued silence by the offenders needs to be prevented. If you suffered, saw, or suspected such events, it is important to know that there is help out there.

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Judge sets deadline in Duluth Diocese bankruptcy case

MINNESOTA
Northlands News Center

By Kevin Jacobsen

January 7, 2016

Duluth, MN (NNCNOW.com) — A Bankruptcy judge has set a deadline in the Diocese of the Duluth bankruptcy case.

Judge Robert J. Kressel set a May 25th deadline for creditors, including survivors of childhood sexual abuse, to confidentially file claims

The decision requires all information about survivors of sexual abuse to be kept strictly confidential.

“Any survivors out there who are suffering in silence, blaming themselves, can now confidentially get help and take action,” said attorney Mike Finnegan, “But time is running out.”

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Today’s St. George’s School Letter to Alumni and Parents

RHODE ISLAND
SGS for Healing

From: Community.stgeorges.edu on behalf of Board Chair
Thursday, January 07, 2016 6:05 PM
Subject: Investigation Update

Dear St. George’s School Alumni and Parents,

On behalf of the Board we want to provide an update concerning an agreement reached today with the Alumni/Victim group “SGS for Healing.” Details can be found in the following statement. We remain committed to an ongoing dialogue with survivors and to ensuring a safe environment for all students at St. George’s.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 7, 2016, 5 p.m.
Joint Statement of St. George’s School and the
Alumni/Victim’s Group SGS for Healing

As a result of an agreement reached this afternoon between St. George’s School and the Alumni/Victim Group “SGS for Healing,” the Board of Trustees has announced that it will retain a third-party independent investigator to be agreed upon by the parties in order to oversee a comprehensive investigation of sexual abuse at St. George’s School. This investigation will not be limited in scope or time period and will be conducted in a manner sensitive to victims who may have already provided information.

Said Leslie Heaney, SGS Board Chair: “The Board is committed to a truly impartial investigation. There is nothing more important to us than that the review be thorough and exhaustive, and that its findings are found to be reliable and credible by all parties, particularly the victims.”

Anne Scott, from the SGS class of 1980 said. “Today’s decision is a very important first step in what we hope will be a process of reconciliation and healing. We look forward to the input of all alumni/victims on today’s developments and the new investigation.”

For further information, please contact:
For St. George’s School: Joseph Baerlein, (617) 443-9933
For Anne Scott and SGS for Healing: Eric MacLeish, (617) 817-1797 or Carmen Durso (617) 728- 9123.

Yours truly,
Leslie B. Heaney ’92
Chair of the Board of Trustees
St. George’s School • 372 Purgatory Road, Middletown, RI 02842

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St. George’s to hire third party investigator after sex abuse claims

RHODE ISLAND
WPRI

[with video]

Nancy Krause with The Associated Press
Published: January 7, 2016

BEDFORD, Penn. (WPRI/AP) –St. George’s School in Middletown announced Thursday it will hire a third party investigator to look into claims of sexual abuse.

The bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania announced this week she has suspended The Rev. Dr. Howard White in the investigation into widespread allegations of sexual abuse at the school.

White, who has not been charged with a crime, is a retired priest who has been serving as a long-term fill-in pastor at St. James Episcopal Church in Bedford, about 100 miles east of Pittsburgh.

In a statement to Eyewitness News, St. George’s School and the Alumni/Victim’s Group “SGS for Healing” said:

As a result of an agreement reached this afternoon between St. George’s School and the Alumni/Victim Group “SGS for Healing,” the Board of Trustees has announced that it will retain a third party independent investigator to be agreed upon by the parties in order to oversee a comprehensive investigation of sexual abuse at St. George’s School.

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Arrest warrant issued for priest who admitted sex with teenage boy

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Mark Mueller | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on January 07, 2016

An arrest warrant has been issued for a suspended New Jersey priest who admitted to a reporter in August that he engaged in a sexual encounter with a teenage boy 13 years ago.

Union County’s presiding municipal court judge, Joan Robinson Gross, issued the warrant for the Rev. Manuel Gallo Espinoza Thursday afternoon, one day after the alleged victim in the case filed a sexual assault complaint in Plainfield Municipal Court.

The Rev. Manuel Gallo Espinoza, seen in social media photos (top), fled the country in 2003 after a 15-year-old boy accused him of rape. At bottom is a copy of the visa he received when he returned to the United States to work as a teacher.

The accuser, Max Rojas Ramirez, contends Gallo Espinoza raped him in the rectory of a Plainfield church just before Easter in 2003, when he was 15. The priest, who was removed from ministry by the Archdiocese of Newark after the accusation was made, then fled to his native Ecuador.

It’s not known where Gallo Espinoza is living now. In June of last year, NJ Advance Media disclosed he had returned to the United States to work as a teacher in Maryland and Virginia before disappearing in 2014.

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Haredi Child Sex Abuser Yehuda Kolko Loses Appeal, Will Stay In Prison Until At Least 2026

NEW JERSEY
Failed Messiah

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

Rabbi Yosef Kolko will remain in prison.

The former haredi camp counselor from Lakewood, New Jersey will serve the rest of 15-year sentence in state prison after a two-judge appellate court panel rejected his claim that he was coerced by members of the haredi community to falsely plead guilty to sexually assaulting an 11-year-old child in his care at the camp, the APP reported.

Judges Harry G. Carroll and Thomas W. Sumners of the Appellate Division of Superior Court ruled yesterday that Kolko’s claims were meritless.

Kolko pleaded guilty in May 2013 during his trial.

Kolko was a counselor at the Yachad summer camp run by the Yeshiva Bais Hatorah School in Lakewood. He also taught at Yeshiva Orchos Chaim School in Lakewood. The abuse took place there in 2008 and 2009, when the child was 11- and 12-years-old.

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Judges reject molester’s claims plea was forced

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Kathleen Hopkins, @Khopkinsapp January 7, 2016

TOMS RIVER – A former Orthodox Jewish camp counselor from Lakewood will remain in state prison after judges rejected his claims that he was coerced by his religious community to falsely admit he molested a youngster in his charge.

A two-judge panel on Wednesday refused to allow Yosef Kolko to take back his guilty plea to multiple sexual assault charges in a high-profile case that exposed how Lakewood’s Orthodox Jewish community handled molestation allegations.

Judges Harry G. Carroll and Thomas W. Sumners of the Appellate Division of Superior Court deemed meritless Kolko’s claims that he was coerced to plead guilty to aggravated sexual assault, attempted aggravated sexual assault, sexual assault and endangering the welfare of a child who had attended a Yeshiva summer camp where he once worked as a counselor.

As a result, Kolko, 39, of Lakewood will continue to serve a 15-year term in state prison, imposed in 2013 by Superior Court Judge Francis R. Hodgson.

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10 Women Accuse Christian Leader Tied To Duggars Of Rape, Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
Talking Points Memo

ByALLEGRA KIRKLAND
Published JANUARY 7, 2016

A prominent leader in the conservative Christian homeschooling movement was accused of sexual abuse and rape in a lawsuit filed Wednesday by 10 former members of his ministry, The Washington Post reported.

The suit alleges that Bill Gothard, the former head of the Institute in Basic Life Principles, sexually abused some of the women and concealed sexual abuse committed against other young women by family members. One unnamed plaintiff also alleged that Gothard raped her after she reported to the ministry that she had been raped by her father, according to the report.

Gothard told the Post on Wednesday that the rape and sexual harassment allegations against him were false.

“That’s horrible,” he said. “Never in my life have I touched a girl sexually. I’m shocked to even hear that.”

Gothard, who is 81 years old and has never been married, resigned from the ministry in 2014 after more than 30 women accused him of molesting and sexually harassing women he worked with at the ministry.

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Abuse allegations catch up to a former rabbi.

CALIFORNIA
Monterey County Weekly

Sara Rubin

People who have met Marc Gafni describe him as magnetic, the kind of person who draws you in. The part-time Pacific Grove resident has built a successful career as a spiritual leader, author and speaker. He’s a founder of the Center for Integral Wisdom, an “activist think tank” based on promoting a philosophy of personal and cultural transformation.

Gafni, 55, himself has gone through transformations in his career, working under different names in different countries, in the religious and secular realms.

Judy Mitzner knew Gafni in 1986, when he was Mordechai Winiarz, a 24-year-old orthodox Jewish rabbi, and she was an observant 16-year-old. She was staying with him and his wife, and says he approached her basement bedroom, said “You know what you want,” and climbed into bed naked with her.

“At the time, the rabbinate said, ‘We’re sorry to hear that, but we’re going to deal with it internally,’” Mitzner recalls.

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Priest who admitted sex with 15-year-old boy is subject of criminal complaint

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Mark Mueller | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on January 07, 2016

Five months after a suspended priest admitted to a reporter that he had a sexual encounter with a 15-year-old boy in 2003, the alleged victim filed a criminal complaint against the clergyman in municipal court Wednesday, saying prosecutors have been slow to act in the case.

The accuser — Max Rojas Ramirez, now 28 — said his sexual assault complaint is intended to speed a resolution in authorities’ investigation of the Rev. Manuel Gallo Espinoza, who has been sought for questioning by the Union County Prosecutor’s Office.

“I want him to be charged,” Ramirez said before filing the complaint Wednesday afternoon in Plainfield Municipal Court. “I want justice to be served. It’s been a long time, and nothing has happened.”

The Rev. Manuel Gallo Espinoza, seen in social media photos (top), fled the country in 2003 after a 15-year-old boy accused him of rape. At bottom is a copy of the visa he received when he returned to the United States to work as a teacher.

Because the charge is an indictable offense, a Superior Court judge must find probable cause to support it before issuing an arrest warrant. Ramirez said a hearing on the issue had been tentatively set for Feb. 1. The prosecutor’s office, which has not brought its own charges, declined to comment on the complaint.

New Jersey lawmakers abolished the statute of limitations on sexual assault in 1996.

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Priest Defrocked for Child Sex Abuse Dies in 3-Fatality Crash

MICHIGAN
Deadline Detroit

January 7th, 2016

A former priest who was defrocked over sexual abuse allegations, was one of three people killed in a car crash in Livonia earlier this week, The Detroit News reports.

Joseph Sito, 80, of Livonia, who had been a priest at several Mettro Detroit parishes, died in the Monday accident. Two people in another car also died.

The News writes that Sito was laicized by the Vatican in 2004, which means the Vatican returned him to the status of layman and severed his ties with the archdiocese.

“It’s a tragic accident,” Ned McGrath, spokesman for the local Archdiocese, according to the News reports. “I guess he had a medical event. Three people are dead. It’s a terrible thing.”

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St. Paul archdiocese property is sold to Minnesota Historical Society

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune JANUARY 7, 2016

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis was back in bankruptcy court Thursday, where a judge approved the $4.5 million sale of an archdiocese building to the Minnesota Historical Society.

The St. Paul property was the first of four real estate holdings slated to be sold this year. There are signed bids on the other properties, including the archbishop’s home.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel approved the sale of the Monsignor Hayden Center at 328 W. Kellogg Blvd, a former Catholic school that currently houses most of the archdiocese’s offices. In November, the Minnesota Historical Society signed a purchase agreement for the property, which sits across the street from the society’s museum and library.

Kressel, however, was critical about the length of time — more than six months — that the property was on the market. The center is a desirable piece of real estate, he said, located just outside downtown St. Paul.

“I feel like a lot of time and money went into marketing this,” he said.

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Soldier ‘admitted abuse but was never prosecuted’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Banbridge Leader

A serving soldier admitted abusing a boy from a residential home run by Anglican missionaries in Lisburn but was never prosecuted, a public inquiry lawyer said.

The serviceman first came to Northern Ireland at the start of the Troubles in 1969 and visited Manor House Children’s Home in Lisburn to take children on day trips and play football, his testimony to police said.

Stormont’s power-sharing administration has established an independent probe which has received allegations of physical and sexual wrongdoing at the institution run by the Society for the Irish Church Missions to the Roman Catholics.

Christine Smith QC, counsel for the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry, which is being held in Banbridge, said one alleged perpetrator was later interviewed by police.

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Inquiry into Manor House claims

NORTHERN IRELAND
Lisburn Today

This week the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry turned its attention to claims of abuse at Manor House, the former children’s home in Lisburn.

Manor House, which closed in 1984, was run by the Society of Irish Church Missions (ICM), an organisation with links to the Church of Ireland.

The Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry is investigating child abuse in residential institutions in Northern Ireland from 1922 to 1995.

The allegations of abuse relating to Manor House have been made by some former residents who lived at the home during periods in the 1940s, 1960s and 1970s.

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Historical child abuse inquiry ‘could lose support of survivors’

SCOTLAND
STV

A group of people who were abused as children are threatening to withdraw cooperation from the public inquiry into child abuse in Scottish institutions.

The group, In Care Abuse Survivors (Incas), says repeated requests for meetings with the minister who ordered the inquiry have been turned down.

But the Scottish Government claims abuse survivors have had “unprecedented levels of access” to ministers and civil servants.

Incas spent years campaigning for before education secretary Angela Constance ordered the Historical Child Abuse Inquiry in December 2014. The group, which represents hundreds of people, who were abused in care, now says it has concerns over the way the inquiry is developing.

After a meeting with Ms Constance in May 2015, Incas says they have not been granted an audience with the minister since. The group has now accused her of treating them with “contempt and indifference.”

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Survivors threaten to walk away from abuse inquiry

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL
07 January 2016

Survivors of historical child abuse are threatening to boycott a public inquiry into the issue amid criticism of the education secretary.

The group In-Care Abuse Survivors (Incas) said it was being “treated with contempt” by Angela Constance.

The national inquiry began its work late last year under the leadership of Susan O’Brien QC.

However, many survivors of abuse feel the remit of the inquiry is too narrow because it only covers those who were abused in residential care. There are also concerns about compensation payments and access to legal aid.

In a statement, Incas said: “Survivors have made repeated requests for a face-to-face meeting. Ms Constance has, however, continued to refuse to engage with survivors.”

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Survivors’ organisation threatens abuse inquiry boycott

SCOTLAND
BBC Scotland

By Reevel Alderson
BBC Scotland’s social affairs correspondent

A second organisation representing survivors of child abuse in Scotland has threatened to boycott the public inquiry established to investigate historical allegations.

Members of the In Care Survivors’ group (INCAS) said the Scottish government was treating them with contempt.

Another organisation, White Flowers Alba (WFA) has already indicated it will take no part in the process.

Ministers have insisted the inquiry, announced in 2014, is the widest ever.

Chaired by Susan O’Brien QC, it will investigate abuse in residential settings such as boarding and secure schools as well as among foster families.

These include allegations of abuse at the former Fort Augustus Abbey School and its junior school in East Lothian.

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Reverend Named In St. George’s Scandal Restricted From Pastoral Duty In Pennsylvania

RHODE ISLAND
Rhode Island Public Radio

By ELISABETH HARRISON & JOHN BENDER

As the St. George’s sexual abuse allegations continue to unfold, an Episcopal reverend named in the investigation has been relieved of some duties in the small Pennsylvania town where he now works.

The Rev. Dr. Howard White served as an assistant chaplain at St. George’s, a prep school in Middletown, in the 1970s. In a report prepared by attorneys representing the alleged victims, White is accused of sexual misconduct with male students during his time at the school.

The report states that White was ordered to leave the school for at least five years, by then-headmaster Tony Zane. White subsequently worked at another boarding school after leaving St. George’s. He has since retired and works as a long-term supply priest at St. James Episcopal Church, in Bedford Pennsylvania, a small community about 100 miles east of Pittsburgh.

The head of the Pennsylvania diocese, Bishop Audrey Scanlon, has “restricted” White’s duties, and she announced the decision in a letter to church members issued on Wednesday. Scanlon writes that she has “no information” that would leave her to believe there have been incidents of abuse at St. James.

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Episcopal priest suspended amid abuse claims at St. George’s prep school

PENNSYLVANIA
Tampa Bay Times

Associated Press
Thursday, January 7, 2016

An Episcopal priest was suspended from a Pennsylvania church after being accused this week of molesting three boys at an elite boarding school in Rhode Island more than 40 years ago.

More than two dozen students allege they were molested or raped at St. George’s School in Middletown in the 1970s and ’80s. An attorney for three former students named the Rev. Howard White on Tuesday as being among the six perpetrators the school identified after an internal investigation.

White, who has not been charged with a crime, is a retired priest who has been serving as a long-term fill-in pastor at St. James Episcopal Church in Bedford, about 100 miles east of Pittsburgh.

Episcopal officials moved swiftly after his name surfaced, saying he would be subjected to church discipline.

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Mehr Missbrauchsfälle bei den Domspatzen als bisher bekannt

GERMANY
Süddeutschen Zeitung

January 7, 2016

[The number of cases of abuse of youth in the Regensburg diocese’s cathedral choir is much higher than previously known.]

– Die Zahl der Missbrauchsfälle bei den Regensburger Domspatzen liegt wesentlich höher, als bisher bekannt.

– Das geht aus dem Zwischenbericht des unabhängigen Chefaufklärers Ulrich Weber hervor.

– Er geht davon aus, dass mindestens jeder dritte der 2400 Domspatzen zwischen dem Zweiten Weltkrieg und den frühen Neunzigern zum Gewaltopfer wurde.

By Andreas Glas

REGENSBURG – Bei den Regensburger Domspatzen hat es wesentlich mehr Missbrauchsfälle gegeben, als bisher bekannt gewesen sind. Das sagte der mit der Klärung des Missbrauchsskandals beauftragte Rechtsanwalt Ulrich Weber im Gespräch mit der Süddeutschen Zeitung.

Seinen Recherchen zufolge seien bis in die Neunzigerjahre hinein mindestens 200 Kinder von Priestern und Lehrern des Bistums verprügelt und darüberhinaus etliche Kinder sexuell missbraucht worden. Die Kirchenleute hätten teils regelmäßig misshandelt, auch Vergewaltigungen habe es gegeben. Was die Zahl der sexuellen Übergriffe betrifft, will Weber nähere Details an diesem Freitag im Rahmen einer Pressekonferenz in Regensburg nennen.

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Follow-Up To St. George’s Prep School Abuse Story

RHODE ISLAND
Morning Edition, National Public Radio

January 7, 2016

On Wednesday’s show, some 40 former students at St. George’s School in Rhode Island said they were abuse by staff members starting in the 1970s. The former head of the school has responded.

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Episcopal priest suspended from Pennsylvania church over abuse allegations at boarding school

PENNSYLVANIA
Associated Press

January 7, 2016

By Michael Rubinkam

An Episcopal priest has been suspended from a Pennsylvania church after being accused this week of molesting three boys at an elite Rhode Island boarding school more than 40 years ago.

Dozens of students allege they were molested or raped at St. George’s School in Middletown in the 1970s and ’80s. A lawyer for three former students named the Rev. Howard White on Tuesday as being among the six perpetrators the school identified after an internal investigation.

White is a retired priest who has been filling in at St. James Episcopal Church in Bedford, about 100 miles east of Pittsburgh.

Episcopal officials say he would be subjected to the church’s disciplinary process.

White has not been charged with a crime. He did not return a phone message left at his home Thursday.

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Fallo canónico absuelve a sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual a menores

CHILE
Publimetro

January 7, 2016

Por consiguiente, el padre Manuel Hervia puede reintegrarse al ministerio sacerdotal sin ninguna restricción, en concordancia con lo que estime el Arzobispo de Concepción, arquidiócesis en la cual el sacerdote está incardinado.

El Arzobispado de Santiago, luego de haber concluido el proceso judicial penal realizado a instancia de la Santa Sede en el Tribunal Interdiocesano de Santiago en contra del presbítero Manuel Enrique Hervia Olave, denunciado por supuesto abuso sexual de menores, comunica que el fallo es absolutorio.

Por consiguiente, el padre Hervia puede reintegrarse al ministerio sacerdotal sin ninguna restricción, en concordancia con lo que estime el Arzobispo de Concepción, arquidiócesis en la cual el sacerdote está incardinado.

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Reintegran a sus funciones a cura acusado de abusos sexuales a menores

El Arzobispado de Santiago dio a conocer el fallo absolutorio del Tribunal Interdiocesano sobre la presunta responsabilidad del prebístero Manuel Hervia en relación a un caso de abuso sexual.

CHILE
24HORAS.CL TVN

January 5, 2016

El Arzobispado de Santiago comunicó el fallo absolutorio del Vaticano contra el prebístero Manuel Hervia, denunciado por el presunto abuso sexual a nueve niñas -entre cinco y nueve años- en un hogar de menores en el hogar San Francisco de Regis de Santiago en 2011.

A través de un comunicado, la autoridad eclesiástica comunicó la resolución y detalló que el cura se reintegrará a sus funciones.

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Iglesia absuelve a sacerdote acusado de abusos sexuales a menores

[Church absolves priest accused of sexual abuse of minors]

Manuel Enrique Hervia Olave señaló que “abusar de un niño, una niña o un joven es un pecado espantoso y un delito grave”.

CHILE
La Nación

January 5, 2016

[The Archbishop of Santiago reported that after the conclusion of the criminal trial conducted at the request of the Holy See at the Inter-diocesan Tribunal, the presbiter or Manuel Enrique Hervia Olave was acquitted of the charges of sexual abuse that weighed against him from 2011. — Google Translate.]

El Arzobispado de Santiago comunicó que, luego de haber concluido el proceso judicial penal realizado a instancia de la Santa Sede en el Tribunal Interdiocesano, el presbítero Manuel Enrique Hervia Olave fue absuelto de las acusaciones de abuso sexual a menores que pesaba en su contra desde el año 2011.

Tras el fallo, “el padre Hervia puede reintegrarse al ministerio sacerdotal sin ninguna restricción, en concordancia con lo que estime el Arzobispo de Concepción, arquidiócesis en la cual el sacerdote está incardinado”, dice el comunicado.

También a través de una declaración pública el sacerdote indicó que “esta sentencia absolutoria canónica viene a confirmar lo mismo que ya los tribunales de justicia del Estado chileno habían establecido en abril del 2013”.

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Children were in serious risk of abuse at Catholic ‘care’ facility

UNITED KINGDOM
The Freethinker

January 7, 2016

By Barry Duke, Editor

[Photo caption: Anthony McCallen, 69, left, and James Carragher, 75, this week began lengthy jail sentences for sexually abusing boys in their care at St William’s residential home and school run by the Roman Catholic De La Salle order in Market Weighton, Yorkshire, until its closure in 1994.]

According to this report, former chaplain McCallen, an ordained Roman Catholic priest, was jailed for 15 years for 11 sex offences, including one of male rape, against four boy He was cleared of eight other charges.

McCallen, of Whernside Crescent in Ingleby Barwick, Stockton-on-Tees, had previously been jailed for two years for abusing two boys, children of his parishioners at the Sacred Heart Church in east Hull, and other offences.

Former headmaster Carragher, a member of the De La Salle order, was jailed for nine years for 24 sexual offences, including three counts of male rape, against seven boys. Carragher, of Cearns Road in Prenton, Wirral, was cleared of a further 30 charges.

It was his third conviction for abusing pupils at St William’s, for which he was previously jailed for 21 years.

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Inquiry into Manor House claims

NORTHERN IRELAND
Ulster Star

January 7, 2016

This week the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry turned its attention to claims of abuse at Manor House, the former children’s home in Lisburn.

Manor House, which closed in 1984, was run by the Society of Irish Church Missions (ICM), an organisation with links to the Church of Ireland.

The Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry is investigating child abuse in residential institutions in Northern Ireland from 1922 to 1995.

The allegations of abuse relating to Manor House have been made by some former residents who lived at the home during periods in the 1940s, 1960s and 1970s.

They claim the abuse was perpetrated by some staff, visitors and other children at the home.

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Absuelven a sacerdote acusado de abusos sexuales en hogar de menores de Chile

[Priest accused of sexual abuse in children’s home is acquitted in Chile]

CHILE
ACI Prensa

January 6, 2016

By Bárbara Bustamante

SANTIAGO, 06 Ene. 16 / 11:17 am (ACI).- El Arzobispado de Santiago de Chile informó de la conclusión del proceso eclesiástico contra el sacerdote Manuel Enrique Hervia Olave, a quien se absolvió tras haber sido acusado de abusos sexuales en un hogar de menores de Chile en el año 2011. Tras la sentencia, el presbítero podrá volver sin restricción alguna a ejercer su ministerio.

A través de un comunicado dado a conocer ayer, el Arzobispado informó que “luego de haber concluido el proceso judicial penal realizado a instancia de la Santa Sede en el Tribunal Interdiocesano de Santiago en contra del presbítero Manuel Enrique Hervia Olave, denunciado por supuesto abuso sexual de menores, comunica que el fallo es absolutorio”.

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Who will win a Golden Globe — and who should?

UNITED STATES
USA TODAY

January 7, 2016

By Brian Truitt

Awards don’t always play out the way viewers might expect, so USA TODAY’s Brian Truitt predicts who will win and who should win in top movie categories at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards (NBC, Sunday, 8 p.m. ET/5 PT).

DRAMA

Carol

Mad Max: Fury Road

The Revenant

Room

Spotlight

Will win/should win: Spotlight

There is clear competition for the Oscar best picture front-runner, from sprawling epic Revenant to artful action movie Mad Max to the sumptuously 1950s Carol. However, director Tom McCarthy’s look at The Boston Globe’s exposé of the Catholic Church abuse cover-up is an amazingly crafted affair, so expect the journalism drama to continue its awards season run here in a big way.

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Before the Oscars, Some Films Face the Truth Test

CALIFORNIA
The New York Times

January 7, 2016

By Michael Cieply and Brooks Barnes

LOS ANGELES — About 45 minutes into “The Big Short,” Adam McKay’s “true story” — or so it says on the billboards — of Wall Street greed, the actor Finn Wittrock turns to the camera and confesses, “O.K., so this part isn’t totally accurate.”

No, he admits, the real-life counterpart to his character didn’t find a road map to the housing crisis of the mid-2000s lying around the marbled lobby of a JPMorgan Chase tower. Actually, he and his investing partner had heard and read about it elsewhere. But, hey, lighten up. It’s just a movie ….

… Even “Spotlight,” Open Road Films’ critically acclaimed look at The Boston Globe’s investigation of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests, has its fact-conscious detractors.

“Over all, I think the film is a misrepresentation of how the Church dealt with sexual abuse cases,” said David F. Pierre Jr., who has criticized the film’s veracity online and has challenged The Globe’s investigation in his book “Sins of the Press: The Untold Story of The Boston Globe’s Reporting on Sex Abuse in the Catholic Church.” In a phone interview, Mr. Pierre said that the movie’s biggest flaw was its failure to portray psychologists who, as cases surfaced, assured church officials that abusive priests could be safely returned to their duties after treatment.

Tom Ortenberg, Open Road’s chief executive, said in an email, in part, “Mr. Pierre is perpetuating a myth in order to distract from real stories of abuse, stories that continue to come to light every day.

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An accused priest, a long-suffering victim: The hero in this sad tale is … a journalist

UNITED STATES
GetReligion

January 6, 2016

By Bobby Ross Jr.

We’ve said it before: Negative posts about media coverage of religion are so much easier to write than positive ones.

When critiquing a less-than-perfect story, there are flaws to point out. Unanswered questions to raise. Bias to criticize.

But when a story hits all the right notes — compelling subject matter, fair treatment of all sides, no sign of where the reporter stands — it’s tempting to say, simply, “Hey, read this!” and move along.

That’s the case with Godbeat pro Manya Brachear Pashman’s in-depth report on whether a Chicago priest should return to ministry after revelations of teen misconduct:

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Roman Catholic priest accused of possessing crack cocaine

Police found him with about 800 milligrams of a “rocklike substance believed to be crack cocaine”

NEW YORK
Associated Press

January 7, 2016

By Michael Balsamo

MINEOLA, N.Y. – A New York priest whose sister was beheaded by her son in 2014 was arrested Wednesday on drug possession charges after he was caught with crack cocaine, police said.

Rev. Robert Lubrano pleaded not guilty to charges of criminal possession of a controlled substance after being arrested at a motel in Bethpage, Long Island, early Wednesday morning.

The 63-year-old Lubrano, who police say is a Roman Catholic priest but isn’t currently working at a church, was arrested after officers conducting a separate narcotics investigation saw him exchange cash with another man in the motel’s parking lot, police say.

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What’s on Pope Francis’ plate for the first part of 2016

ROME
Crux

January 7, 2016

By John L. Allen Jr., Associate editor
john.allen@cruxnow.com

Pope Francis is famously a pontiff who seems to be missing an “off” switch, but the first quarter of 2016 shapes up as a period so dense with activity it may tax even his prodigious reservoirs of energy.

From foreign policy challenges to a potential turning point in Catholic/Jewish relations, from a six-day trip to Mexico that includes a stop at the US border, to a jam-packed schedule for his jubilee Year of Mercy, the opening part of the year promises to be full of drama.

No doubt it will all seem memorable and consequential at the time, but looking back, those moments may be recalled as no more than early tremors of what could be the new year’s first papal earthquake: Francis’ much-anticipated apostolic exhortation drawing conclusions from his two tumultuous synods of bishops on the family.

That document is now expected sometime in late February or March, with one hypothesis being a release date of March 19, the feast of St. Joseph and a patron of the family.

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In 2016, Pope Francis wants a Church on the move: The pope closes the holiday season with a call for new missionary hustle

ROME
Crux

January 6, 2016

By John L. Allen, Jr., Associate editor
john.allen@cruxnow.com

Pope Francis closed out the holiday season Wednesday by calling Catholicism to a new sense of missionary hustle, urging the Church to reach out to all the peoples of the world and insisting that “mission is her vocation.”

“To proclaim the Gospel of Christ is not simply one option among many,” the pope said, “nor is it a profession.” Instead, Francis said, it’s the “very nature” of the Church.

“There is no other way,” he said.

To accomplish that goal, the pope said, requires Christians “to go forth, to leave behind all that keeps us self-enclosed, to go out from ourselves and to recognize the splendor of the light which illumines our lives.”

In other words, for 2016 Pope Francis seems to want a Church on the move.

The pontiff made the comments in his homily for the traditional Jan. 6 Mass of the Epiphany, a feast that celebrates the moment when the Christmas star led the Magi, or three wise men, to the infant Jesus. On the Vatican’s calendar, the feast of Epiphany is considered to mark the close of the holiday season.

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Liberia: Episcopal Church Suspends Priests For Alleged Raping a Minor

LIBERIA
AllAfrica

The News

The Episcopal Church of Liberia has indefinitely suspended its priest assigned in Grand Kru County in connection with the alleged raping of a 10-year-old girl in the county.

In a release issued last evening from the Church, Archbishop Jonathan B.B. Hart said the church is shocked and dismayed about news report concerning the involvement of its priest in “this barbaric and heinous act.”

Bishop Hart, who is also Archbishop of the International Province of West Africa, explained that the priest will remain suspended from all functions of the Episcopal Church of Liberia until he can exonerate himself in a court of law.

He keeping with Canon XXIX, Bishop Hart constituted ‘The Ecclesiastical Court’ made up of three priests of the Episcopal Diocese to further investigate the allegation levied against the priest.

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Kansas City deacon removed after affair allegations

MISSOURI
KMBZ

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A Kansas City deacon has been placed on leave after the diocese says he admitted to having an affair with a woman, violating his marriage vows.

After receiving an allegation in October, the diocese conducted an investigation.

Deacon Dwayne Katzer admitted to the allegations, and has been removed from service as Director of the Diaconate and Diaconate Formation Offices.

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Applications for core participant status

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

5 January

Individuals and organisations that wish to be designated as a core participant in relation to the following investigations are being asked to submit their applications before 5 February 2016:

The Anglican Church
Lambeth Council
Cambridge House, Knowl View and Rochdale

A core participant has a formal role as defined by legislation. Core participants have special rights in the Inquiry process. These include receiving disclosure of documentation, being represented and making legal submissions, suggesting questions and receiving advance notice of the Inquiry’s report. It is not necessary to be a core participant in order to provide evidence to the Inquiry.

Applicants should read the guidance for potential core participants and the Inquiry’s FAQs. In particular applicants should note that applications should be set out in writing on no more than 4 sides of A4 paper and as a minimum should include the information set out at paragraph 14 of the guidance.

It will not be necessary for victims and survivors who attend a Truth Project session to be designated as core participants, as the Inquiry will not make individual factual finding on the basis of what is said during the private Truth Project Hearings. They will however enable the Inquiry to piece together a broader picture of the scale and nature of institutional child sexual abuse in England and Wales.

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Inquiry Research Project seeking bids to carry out research work

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

4 January

The research strand of the Inquiry is seeking to commission researchers to carry out a Rapid Evidence Assessment (literature review) to answer the following question;

“What can be learnt from different jurisdictions, outside of England and Wales, about the role of institutions in preventing child sexual abuse and exploitation?”

To express an interest in receiving the full tender documents, when they are published in the week commencing 18th January, please go to the Crown Commercial Services Contracts Finder website (notice SO16186) before the 15th January.

Please direct any queries about the research through the Contracts Finder website.

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Deacon is removed from KC diocese office after allegedly violating marital vows

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star

BY IAN CUMMINGS
icummings@kcstar.com

A deacon in the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph was removed from service after being accused of violating his marital vows with a woman, according to an announcement from the diocese on Tuesday.

Bishop James Johnston removed Deacon Dwayne Katzer from his position as director of the Diaconate and Diaconate Formation Offices. Deacons are ordained ministers of the Catholic Church who perform various tasks, including baptisms and officiating marriages and funerals. Married men can become deacons.

Katzer also was removed from all other ministerial duties and placed on administrative leave for an indefinite period, according to the statement.

Diocese officials said the allegation against Katzer came in October, prompting an investigation by diocese officials.

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New charges allege religious leader, who has ties to the Duggars, sexually abused women

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Sarah Pulliam Bailey January 6

Ten women on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against Bill Gothard, who for decades was a major force in the conservative Christian homeschooling movement, charging him and leaders in his ministry with sexual abuse, harassment and cover-up.

Gothard, who urged Christians to shun things like short skirts and rock music, is accused of raping a woman. The same woman says she was raped by one of the ministry’s “biblical counselors.”

The lawsuit is part of a battle between dozens of women and the Institute in Basic Life Principles, which was until recently an influential homeschooling ministry, and its charismatic leader Gothard, who urged Christians to focus on their “biblical character” and have large families. Gothard has never been married.

Gothard, 81, resigned from the ministry in 2014 after more than 30 women had alleged that he had molested and sexually harassed women he worked with, including some who were minors.

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‘Porn viewers risk becoming child abusers’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

The child pornography market is expanding dramatically and viewing it could be the catalyst for some to engage in hands-on abuse of children, experts say.

The warning is contained in a research report to the child sex abuse royal commission as it tackles how to abuse-proof institutions where children are at risk.

The report on child exploitation material in the context of institutions says while there is no evidence to support a direct causal link between viewing child pornography and abuse, the “material may be a strong risk factor” for people already disposed to sexual aggression and deviancy with children.

The report prepared by University of Tasmania researchers says the market for child exploitation material is expanding and easy to access even within workplaces.

Jeremy Prichard and Caroline Spiranovic, who have published research on the explosion of child porn on the internet, point out that research in the area is relatively new and very few studies have examined child pornography in the context of workplaces.

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Sex Abuse Statute of Limitations Reform 2015 Year in Review: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

UNITED STATES
Verdict

Marci A. Hamilton

The movement to eliminate and revive expired statutes of limitations (SOLs) for child sex abuse made significant progress in 2015. It also inspired a new and related SOL reform movement for all rape victims, young and old, as the SOLs became a major factor in the dozens of out-of-statute allegations against Bill Cosby, as I discuss here. Finally, there is a decided trend in SOL reform that needs to be stemmed and reversed before our children will be safe: legislators’ willingness to let institutions off the hook.

The SOL reform movement is also increasingly global. There is a growing global movement to extend or eliminate the SOLs in many countries, and particularly in Australia, where the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has conducted searching inquiries into many arenas of abuse, from churches to schools to sports.

The movement also hit the big screen with the release of the award-winning motion picture, Spotlight, which chronicles the Boston Globe journalists’ path to breaking the story of the Catholic hierarchy covering up priest abuse and illustrates how the SOLs blocked justice. It also educates the public on the dynamic of sex abuse cover up—it takes a connected set of adults to ignore the serial victimization of children while powerful men protect their positions of power. Like the Cosby revelations, Spotlight educates the public about the costs of abuse and the perils of blocking justice for the deserving.

The Good: Steps Forward in SOL Reform for Child Sex Abuse Victims

Following the trends of recent years, over a dozen states considered serious SOL reform in 2015, and a number of them made significant progress. As I discussed in my half-year review, here, Georgia took the most remarkable leap forward, while Pennsylvania and New York continue to be controlled by the viselike grip of the Catholic bishops, or, in other words, stalled. For a snapshot of all of the states in 2015, look here.

Other states continued to make incremental improvements as Florida eliminated its criminal SOL for 16- to 18-year-olds; Indiana extended its criminal SOL to age 31; and Utah eliminated the civil SOL against the perpetrator. While each of these reforms left much to do in each state, they were good developments for child protection and will identify hidden predators in the future.

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‘Spotlight’ shines on an all-to-real scandal

WISCONSIN
Chippewa Herald

LARRY ANNETT For The Herald

IF YOU GO
“Spotlight”
Now showing at Micon Cinema in Eau Claire
Rated R, 2hr., 20min.
Showtimes:
Wednesday, Jan. 6 -Thursday, Jan. 7, 7:25 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 8 – Sunday, Jan. 10, 9:40 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 25 – Thursday, Dec. 31: 1, 4, 7 and 10 p.m.

Spotlight (now playing at Micon — Eau Claire) is a lightly fictionalized story of the team of Boston Globe reporters who in 2002 exposed pedophile priests and the Catholic Church’s attempts to cover-up their behavior.

How do you make a movie about horrific child abuse without showing the abusers, much less the abuse itself? Even documentaries show the crime scene and dwell on the emotional recollections of the survivors. But writer/director Tom McCarthy has built an engaging narrative where the action is largely limited to watching reporters plead with their sources to tell them the truth.

Although this story eventually became an international scandal, its seeds could not have found a more fertile soil than Boston, a city obsessed with ethnic politics and a church that dominates the city’s working classes — a city where every confrontation carries the weight of tribal loyalties.

The movie’s story is not about child abuse per se, but about how a small group of tenacious reporters uncovered the priests’ behavior and how the church marshalled its resources to protect itself. As one of the reporters tells a church lawyer, “we’ve got two stories here: the sexual abuse by priests and the story of a group of lawyers who have turned child abuse by priests into a cottage industry. We’re going to print one — you decide.” The crimes may be unforgivable, but the cover-up is unconscionable.

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Jury seated in trial of former pastor

NEVADA
Las Vegas Now

[with video]

By Nikki Bowers | nbowers@8newsnow.com
Published 01/06 2016

LAS VEGAS

The jury in the Otis Holland trial was seated Wednesday evening.

The former Las Vegas pastor is on trial for allegedly sexually assaulting children. According to law enforcement officers, Holland lured young girls in his congregation by offering private counseling sessions.

After the allegations were made, Holland fled to Mexico, but he was eventually arrested in Tijuana.

The youngest victim is said to now be 12 years old.

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New sexual abuse lawsuit filed against Diocese of Winona

MINNESOTA
WXOW

WINONA, Minn. (KTTC) — –
A new civil lawsuit has been filed against the Diocese of Winona, alleging sexual abuse of a teenager in 1962.

The Hamilton James law group filed the lawsuit Tuesday on behalf of the victim. A criminal complaint says Fr. Richard Hatch was a priest at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Winona when he allegedly sexually abused a boy who was 13 or 14 years old at the time.

The complaint alleges the Diocese knew about Hatch’s behavior, but did not not address the misconduct.

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Dozens of parishioners appeal for Father John Walshe’s removal after allegations of sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A group of Catholic parishioners in Melbourne’s south-east are calling for their parish priest, Father John Walshe, to be removed, after it was revealed he was investigated over alleged sexual abuse.

The ABC revealed last month a Catholic Church investigation found Father Walshe had sexually abused an 18-year-old trainee priest in 1982.

In 2012 the church apologised to the victim John Roach and paid compensation of $75,000, but it did not make the finding public.

More than 100 people from the parish met to discuss the matter on Wednesday night.

A spokeswoman told the ABC they passed a resolution saying they had lost faith in Father Walshe and wanted him removed as their parish priest.

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January 6, 2016

Police Investigating Sexual Abuse Claims at Prestigious New England Boarding School

RHODE ISLAND
People

[documents and video]

BY CHRIS HARRIS @chrisharrisment 01/06/2016

Two New England attorneys are saying they’ve been in touch with more than 40 alumni of an affluent Rhode Island boarding school that allege staff members or other pupils sexually assaulted them during the 1970s and 1980s.

PEOPLE spoke Wednesday with Eric MacLeish, one of the two lawyers behind a press conference held on Tuesday in which four graduates of the St. George’s School in Middletown accused school officials of covering up years of systemic abuse.

“I have never run across anything like this,” MacLeish, who has spent his career representing victims of childhood sexual abuse, tells PEOPLE; he’s a St. George’s alum.

“Officials were not reporting claims from students but instead, imposing gag orders on those victims,” MacLeish explains. “There are prosecutable crimes that occurred here and I expect more victims will be coming forward.”

At Tuesday’s press conference, MacLeish and his co-counsel, attorney Carmen Durso, issued a 36-page response to findings released by St. George’s headmaster, Eric Peterson, and the school’s Board of Trustees back in December.

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Only on 10: Former headmaster denies sex abuse cover-up

MASSACHUSETTS/RHODE ISLAND
NBC 10

BY ADAM BAGNI, NBC 10 NEWS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6TH 2016

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. — A former headmaster at St. George’s School in Middletown denies claims that he covered up, or ignored, student allegations of sexual abuse.

The elite prep school is currently engulfed in a major sexual abuse scandal.

Tony Zane, who ran the school from 1972-1984, spoke exclusively to NBC 10 News on the steps of his New Bedford home Wednesday.

“I never called her crazy,” he said.

The 85-year-old is fighting off allegations from the 1970s and ’80s. Alleged victims claim he protected sexual abusers and was anything but supportive.

“I walked into his office. I told him what happened. He looked at me and said, ‘You’re just a distraught young lady. You’re mentally unstable,'” said alleged victim Katie Wales Lovkay.

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Tampa Prep notifies parents after former teacher is linked to sexual abuse scandal

FLORIDA
Tampa Bay Times

By Sara DiNatale, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, January 6, 2016

TAMPA — Tampa Preparatory School has sent a letter to parents informing them of the private school’s connection to an unfolding sexual abuse scandal in Rhode Island.

Franklin Coleman, a Tampa Prep music teacher from 1997 to 2008, has been accused of sexually abusing boys while working at St. George’s School, an Episcopalian prep school in Middletown, R.I.

One of the accusers, Hawkins Cramer, spoke with the Tampa Bay Times on Tuesday and said Coleman sexually abused him while he was at St. George’s from 1981 to 1985.

Coleman did not respond to several attempts by the Times to contact him this week. He denied comment to a New York Times reporter outside his Newark, N.J. home Tuesday. He told the reporter to “talk to my lawyer,” but did not provide a name. He has not been charged with any crimes.

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Bishop Scanlan Issues Letter to Diocese in Response to the Recent Issues Involving Retired Priest of Central Pennsylvania

PENNSYLVANIA/RHODE ISLAND
Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania

Author: Diocesan staff
Published: Wednesday, January 6, 2016

January 6, 2016
Feast of the Epiphany

Dear members of the Diocese of Central Pennsylvania,

You may have read in today’s newspapers that a member of our Central Pennsylvania clergy, the Rev. Dr. Howard White, is among the subjects of an investigation into widespread allegations of sexual abuse during the 1970s and 1980s at St. George’s School in Middletown, Rhode Island. The Rev. Dr. Howard White served at the school during this time and is now a retired priest who currently serves as a long-term supply priest at St. James Episcopal Church, Bedford (PA).

St. George’s School recently released the report of its investigation and the Rhode Island State Police are conducting a criminal investigation into episodes discussed in that report. Yesterday, former students of St. George’s named Fr. White as one of the alleged abusers described in the report.

I learned about this situation as it was developing from my colleague, the Rt. Reverend W. Nicholas Knisely, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island, who serves as an ex officio member of the board at the school. I have moved to immediately restrict Fr. White’s ministry and to provide for the pastoral care of the congregation that he currently serves. I have no information that leads me to believe that there have been any incidents of abuse at St. James, Bedford, but it is imperative that we employ all the safeguards that are available to us while the investigation of the Rhode Island State Police continues and while the formal ecclesiastical discipline process involving Fr. White unfolds. The Diocese of Central Pennsylvania is committed to upholding our policy of Zero-Tolerance of any adult sexual misconduct and/or child abuse by any member of the clergy, staff persons or volunteers.

If there are those in our diocese who have a need to talk about this or any related incidents, please know that I am ready to listen and respond in a confidential pastoral manner or make provisions for appropriate care.

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Pennsylvania bishop restricts ministry of former St. George’s School assistant chaplain

RHODE ISLAND
Providence Journal

By Karen Lee Ziner
Journal Staff Writer Posted Jan. 6, 2016

A Pennsylvania bishop moved swiftly to restrict the Rev. Dr. Howard White, former assistant chaplain at St. George’s School in Middletown, from his Pennsylvania church ministry following Tuesday’s revelation that White “is among the subjects of an investigation into widespread sexual abuse during the 1970s and 1980s.”

The Rev. Canon Audrey Cady Scanlan, Bishop of the Diocese of Central Pennsylvania, wrote a letter to members of her Episcopal diocese Wednesday that explains her decision. White is now a retired Episcopal priest serving as a long-term supply priest at St. James Episcopal Church in Bedford, PA.

White was named in a document released by three St. George’s alumnae at a Boston press conference Tuesday. The women, Anne Scott (Class of ’80), Katie Wales Lovkay (’80) and Joan Reynolds (’79), were sexually abused by the school’s former athletic trainer the 1970s.

Their document rebuts an investigative report that the school issued in December, and calls for an independent investigation and accuses the school of covering up the abuse for decades. The response document identifies by name several former St. George’s staff — White among them — whom the school’s report references as perpetrators, by number only.

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IPA slams Vatican for attempting to silence authors

ROME
The Bookseller

Published January 6, 2016 by Natasha Onwuemezi

The International Publishers Association (IPA) and the Italian Publishers Association (AIE) have condemned the Vatican for attempting to jail two authors who alleged corruption and financial wrongdoing in the Holy See.

The authors – journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi – are on trial along with three Vatican employees over documents leaked from the Vatican and then published in two new books: Avarice by Fittipaldi and Merchants in the Temple by Nuzzi.

The pair have been charged with criminal misappropriation and misuse of leaked documents. The three Vatican employees have been accused of illegally obtaining and leaking confidential documents.

According to the Telegraph, the books “lift the lid on alleged financial mismanagement within the Holy See, including the alleged use of charitable donations for refurbishing lavish apartments for cardinals and a former Vatican secretary of state.”

The IPA has joined with the AIE and European journalism and freedom of speech watchdogs to condemn the Vatican, with IPA president, Richard Charkin, calling the court case an “affront to the dignity of journalists and publishers everywhere.”

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Former victims collaborate on Radio 4 documentary to tell inside story of Altrincham teacher’s abuse trial

UNITED KINGDOM
Altrincham Today

Two former victims of an Altrincham schoolteacher jailed for nine years over a “shocking abuse of trust” have collaborated on a new Radio 4 documentary telling the inside story of the trial.

The Abuse Trial, which will be broadcast on Monday at 8pm, will be presented by journalist David Nolan and executive produced by Phil Maguire of PRA Productions.

Both are former pupils of St Ambrose College in Hale Barns, and both suffered abuse at the hands of Alan Morris, who was subsequently jailed for nine years in August 2014 in a case that involved dozens of old boys.

Nolan waived his right to give evidence at the trial in order to work on a behind-the-scenes short film for Granada Reports, which went on to win a Royal Television Society award.

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3 killed in Livonia crash ID’d

MICHIGAN
The Detroit News

Candice Williams and Mark Hicks, The Detroit News January 5, 2016

Officials have released the names of three people killed Monday afternoon in a multi-vehicle crash in Livonia.

Joseph Sito, 80, of Livonia, Suzanne Wernette-Robb, 67, of Redford Township and Bernadine Karby, 88, of Livonia all died from multiple injuries in the crash at Five Mile and Levan, according to the Wayne County Medical Examiner’s Office on Tuesday. The manners of death have been ruled an accident.

According to police, Sito was heading west on Five Mile about 4 p.m. when he crossed the center line, striking an eastbound Ford Focus.

A Ford minivan also was involved in the crash; several occupants reported injuries, police said.

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Defrocked priest among 3 killed in Livonia crash

MICHIGAN
The Detroit News

One of the three people killed in a multi-car crash this week at a Livonia intersection was a former priest at several Metro Detroit Catholic parishes who was defrocked over sex abuse allegations.

Joseph Sito, 80, of Livonia, who died in the Monday accident, was laicized by the Vatican in 2004, said Ned McGrath, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Detroit. By laicizing Sito, the Vatican returned him to the status of layman and severed his ties with the archdiocese.

“It’s a tragic accident,” McGrath said Wednesday. “I guess he had a medical event. Three people are dead. It’s a terrible thing.”

According to police, Sito was westbound on Five Mile about 4 p.m. Monday when he crossed the center line and his car struck an eastbound Ford Focus. A Ford minivan also was involved in the crash, which also killed two occupants of the Focus: Suzanne Wernette-Robb, 67, of Redford Township, and Bernadine Karby, 88, of Livonia.

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