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.

December 4, 2015

Assignment Record– Rev. John Lloyd Caskey

MINNESOTA
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: John Lloyd Caskey was ordained for the St. Cloud diocese in 1982. He worked in numerous St. Cloud parishes, mostly as pastor, and held a variety of leadership positions in the diocese. Notably, Caskey is not indexed in the 1986-1988 Directories, and in 1991-1992 he served as Sacramental Minister at a parish in the New Ulm diocese before returning to St. Cloud. In December 2007, Caskey was investigated by police under suspicion that he sent anonymous “obscene and suggestive” letters to an 18-year-old male. Caskey admitted to sending the letters. During the course of the investigation, police discovered child pornography on Caskey’s computer. He pleaded guilty to charges of possession of child pornography in August 2008 and was sentenced in May 2009 to one month in prison and five years’ probation. Bishop Kinney removed Caskey from his three parishes in January 2008. The Directories show him to be on “Special Assignment” through 2011.

Ordained: 1982

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.

Real life Father Ted suspended for blowing church’s cash on cars, holidays and a facelift for his mum

ITALY
Mirror (UK)

BY IAN SPARKS , STEVE DOOHAN

A Catholic priest is facing trial in Italy for squandering £70,000 of church cash on holidays, luxury cars – and a facelift for his mum.

The 57-year-old churchman was put in charge of a £10million bequest to his parish in Legnaro, near Venice.

But instead of distributing all the money to charities for the poor, he splashed out on two sports cars, a motorbike, a skiing holiday and a break at a Mediterranean beach resort.

The priest even paid for a cosmetic skin tuck for his elderly mother, local police said.

The case is reminiscent of the plot of the classic sitcom Father Ted , where Irish priest Ted Crilly was exiled to Craggy Island as punishment following an embezzlement scandal from a fund set up to take an ill girl to Roman Catholic shrine Lourdes.

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.

Healing rites held throughout Helena Diocese for sex abuse victims

MONTANA
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Morris-Young | Dec. 4, 2015

While its sexual abuse settlement and bankruptcy proceedings fade into history, the Helena, Mont., diocese’s “road less traveled” to healing and outreach for victim survivors continues, most recently through seven “deeply moving” prayer services throughout the sprawling see.

Helena Bishop George Thomas, who presided at each, described them as “one of the most difficult and challenging tasks in my 40 years of priesthood.”

During his homily repeated at each site, Thomas admitted he “experienced a deep sense of inadequacy as I searched to find words to express the sadness and sorrow I feel toward those who have suffered, so often in silence, for years if not decades.”

Called “Vespers — A Healing Journey,” the rites took place from Sept. 30-Oct. 8 throughout the diocese which is more than one and a half times the size of Ireland.

Nearly 1,200 participated, diocesan officials said.

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

PROSECUTORS SEEK ADDITIONAL SEX-ASSAULT VICTIMS OF YOUTH PASTOR

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Weekly

BY MATT COKER
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2015

Like the Orange County Sheriff’s Department before it, the district attorney’s office is turning to the public to locate other potential victims of Sean Patrick Aday, the 38-year-old youth pastor who is scheduled to be arraigned this morning on charges of forcibly raping a female church member and sexually abusing three other female church members.

The resident of Lake Forest, which is also where his Grace Community Church is located, could get 29 years in state prison if he is convicted of one felony count of forcible rape, one felony count of sodomy by force, one felony count of sexual penetration by foreign object and force, three felony counts of sexual battery by restraint, and four misdemeanor counts of sexual battery, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s office. Aday was out of custody on $500,000 bail heading into this morning’s 8:30 a.m. hearing in Santa Ana.

He is accused of assaulting the females, who ranged in age from their late teens to early 20s, at Grace Community Church, throughout Orange County and during church sponsored international trips to such locales as Moldova, Costa Rica and South Africa, according to the sheriff’s department.

The OCDA updates:

* Between, Jan. 1, 2008, and Nov. 6, 2015, Aday is accused of sexually assaulting Jane Doe 1 including forcible rape, sodomy, and sexual penetration by foreign object and force.
* Between July 1, 2015, and Oct. 1, 2015, the defendant is accused of sexually touching Jane Doe 2 against her will while she was restrained and inducing her to sexually touch him.
* On four occasions between Nov. 30, 2014, and Oct. 1, 2015, Aday is accused of committing sexual battery on Jane Doe 2, Jane Doe 3, and Jane Doe 4.

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 wants Spotlight film offered in Chatham

CANADA
The Observer

By Vicki Gough, Chatham Daily News
Friday, December 4, 2015

A recently released American drama film depicting The Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigative team of journalists into the Massachusetts Catholic sex abuse crimes is not on a movie play list in Chatham.

Rob Talach, a London lawyer, is trying to reverse that decision.

Talach said he strongly urged officials at Galaxy Cineplex, which operates a movie theatre in Chatham, to show the movie locally, but was told Spotlight was not on its distribution plan.

“Chatham-Kent has been the epicentre (of Catholic sex abuse scandals) with one of the worst cases – (Charles Henry) Sylvestre and a number of other priests,” Talach told The Daily News.

In a Chatham court in 2006, Sylvestre pleaded guilty to indecent assault against 47 young girls and was sentenced to three years in prison.

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

Experts’ Oscar predictions update: ‘Spotlight’ widens lead, Leonardo DiCaprio & Brie Larson far in front

UNITED STATES
Gold Derby

By Paul Sheehan
Dec 03 2015

Our 22 Oscar experts drawn from major media outlets have now seen all the top contenders (save for “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”) and have been busy updating their predictions. We have clear frontrunners in five of the eight top races. However, Director, Supporting Actor and Adapted Screenplay are turning into real contests.

“Spotlight” has widened its lead for Best Picture, with 16 Experts backing it compared to three apiece for “The Martian” and “The Revenant.” That gives this docudrama chronicling the efforts of Boston Globe reporters to expose pedophile priests leading odds of 5/1 versus 15/2 for the others.

“Spotlight” helmer Tom McCarthy has 11 Experts predicting him to win Best Director; that is good enough for leading odds of 5/2. However, “The Martian” director Ridley Scott, who has lost this race three times, has the support of seven experts. And last year’s big winner for “Birdman,” Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu has five of us in his corner. Both of them have odds of 4/1. McCarthy does look like a lock for Original Screenplay with 15 Experts predicting him and co-writer Josh Singer to win.

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.

Bahamas–Secret records about 3 ex-Bahamas abusive cleric are released

BAHAMAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Dec. 4, 2015

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

Hundreds of pages of long-secret records about three child molesting Catholic priest who spent years in the Bahamas have been released. Church officials should tell parents, parishioners and the public about them.

Fr. Richard Eckroth, Fr. Thomas Gillespie and Fr. Finian McDonald worked at Saint Augustine’s in Nassau the Bahamas. They’re all “credibly accused” of abuse, according to their church supervisors, and have been or are being sued for abuse.

McDonald admitted abusing 200 children and traveled frequently to Bahamas until 2002.

[Star Tribune]

Eckroth is accused of abusing boys and girls and at one point was ordered back to St. John’s Abbey from Bahamas and then sent for treatment.

[KARE]

Gillespie allegedly abused at least four students and church officials admitted to one another in 2002 that he had molested kids.

Nassau Archbishop Patrick C. Pinder should personally visit the parishes near where these priests lived or worked, begging victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to come forward. He should also use parish bulletins, church websites and pulpit announcements across the entire diocese to seek out others who may have been assaulted and are still suffering. And he should permanently post on his diocesan website the names, photos and whereabouts of every child molesting Bahamas area cleric, whether alive or dead, diocesan or religious order, or admitted, proven or credibly accused. (About 30 US bishops have done this. It’s the bare minimum a bishop should do to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded.)

We hope that every single person who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes or cover ups in the Bahamas will summon the strength to speak up. Kids are safer only when victims, witnesses and whistleblowers are courageous enough to act. Silence is tempting but it only helps wrongdoers.

It’s important that people with suspicions or knowledge of these crimes and cover ups call the independent professionals in law enforcement, not the biased amateurs in church positions.

NOTE – The attorneys involved in the records release are Jeff Anderson (651 227 9990 office, 612 817 8665 cell, jeff@andersonadvocates.com) and Mike Finnegan (651 227 9990 office, 612 205 5531 cell,mike@andersonadvocates.com). The Minnesota church spokesman who’s responsible for information about the priests is Brother Aelred Senna (320 363 2004, asenna@csbsju.edu, 320 363 2085 phone, 320 363 3039 (faxsjainfo@csbsju.edu).

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.

NH–He’s left the Catholic church but is now Unitarian minister

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Dec. 4, 2915

Ousted predator priest is cleric in another denomination
Victims want church officials to warn the public about him
He’s left the Catholic church but is now Unitarian minister

A New Hampshire priest who was ousted because of credible allegations of child sex abuse has apparently been a minister for years at a rural New Hampshire Unitarian church.

Fr. Mark Fleming now heads South Parish Unitarian in Charlestown, NH (603 826 3418)

SNAP was notified recently of Fleming’s position by a New Hampshire man who suspected that the cleric wasn’t being fully honest about his past. Fr. Fleming did disclose to at least a few individuals that he’d been a Catholic priest.

“This is an outrageous betrayal that should never have happened,” said Rob Brown of Manchester, an abuse victim of a different predator. “I suspect that Unitarians didn’t properly vet this guy or they didn’t tell their flock the full truth about him.”

In 2002, Fr. Fleming was accused, in a civil lawsuit, of sexually abusing three brothers in the 1980s. The case went to the NH Attorney General’s office but it was not prosecuted. Catholic officials said that Fr. Fleming was not defrocked but his right to minister was reportedly revoked and he was sent to therapy for two years. Then, he reportedly left priesthood in 1986.

[BishopAccountability.org]

“Shame on Bishop Peter Libasci and his predecessor, Bishop John McCormack, for refusing to do more to warn the public about Fr. Fleming,” said David Clohessy of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “And shame on Unitarian officials for ordaining him and giving him access to kids.”

Brown and Clohessy are urging Catholic and Unitarian officials in New Hampshire to use church websites and parish bulletins and pulpit announcements to warn others about Fr. Fleming.

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.

MN–$5 million spent on archdiocesan bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Dec. 4, 2015

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

We’re deeply saddened – but not surprised – by the news that $5 million has been spent on the St. Paul archdiocesan bankruptcy. It’s tragic how much bishops will spend to keep their abuse cover ups covered up.

[Minnesota Public Radio]

We’re convinced that church officials seek Chapter 11 protection to preserve their reputations, not their assets. They’ve learned that bankruptcy stops all lawsuits, discovery and depositions enabling church staff who are concealing child sex crimes to keep concealing child sex crimes.

We hope St. Paul Catholics will donate more generously than ever, but will give to institutions that prevent and expose child sex crimes, not to their archdiocese.

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.

Duterte tags priest who fondled him

PHILIPPINES
The Standard

December 05, 2015 by John Paolo Bencito

PRESIDENTIAL aspirant Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte on Thursday night revealed the name of the Catholic priest who allegedly molested him and several other high school boys when they were teenagers in the 1950s while studying at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Davao University.

“That priest was [the late] Fr. Paul Falvey. He wanted to touch [our private parts.] It happened during our generation, two years ahead of us and two years following us,” Duterte told Davao-based reporters on Thursday night.

“It cost him some P25 million because other victims filed a case. It was a case of fondling—you know what—he did during confession, that’s how we lost our innocence early,” Duterte said.

It took the young Duterte seven years to finish high school after being expelled from the Ateneo de Davao University for misconduct. He eventually finished high school at the Holy Cross of Digos.

“It was a sort of sexual awakening for each of us,” Duterte said. “We realized quite early that life was like that. How would you complain? We were afraid.”

Duterte also said that a joke in which he cursed the Pope for the traffic jam during his visit in January was not aimed at the pontiff but at incompetent government officials who could not handle the situation.

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

Bishop would not take abuse to police

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

A retired Melbourne Catholic bishop says he never contemplated telling police about child sex abuse complaints.

Bishop Hilton Deakin, a former Melbourne archdiocese vicar-general and auxiliary bishop, has told the child abuse royal commission he was to verbally report any sexual misconduct complaints to then archbishop Frank Little and there was to be no further discussion.

He says while an auxiliary bishop in 1994, he also told the Apostolic Nuncio, the Pope’s representative in Australia, Doveton parish priest Fr Peter Searson was a “most evil person doing evil things to little children”.

“I was hoping and praying that something would be done,” he told the commission.

A barrister for three abuse victims, Cassie Serpell, suggested there was a range of other actions he could have taken.

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

Spotlight on ‘Spotlight’: Two Armenians Who Took On the Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
The Armenian Weekly

By Katie Vanadzin on December 3, 2015

Special for the Armenian Weekly

It’s no secret by now that Boston has been Hollywood’s darling for the past few years. Just this fall, two Boston-themed movies have been released. For once, one of them wasn’t about Whitey Bulger. Released to rave reviews on Nov. 6, “Spotlight” stood out as a very different sort of “Boston movie.” Part of what sets it apart is that the story it portrays likely would never have been known had it not been for the tireless work of two Boston-area Armenians: veteran reporter Stephen Kurkjian and attorney Mitchell Garabedian.

Set in 2001, the film centers on the Spotlight team at the Boston Globe, the investigative team that has broken many of the city’s most defining stories. At that time, the team, made up of Walter “Robby” Robinson, Sacha Pfeiffer, Michael Rezendes, Ben Bradlee Jr., and Matt Carroll, was investigating the sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church, the discovery of which would ricochet around the world. But in early 2001, no one knew that the problem extended beyond Boston, and the reporters were as shocked as the public when the extent of the abuse within Boston alone was brought to light.

The cracks in the surface of the church’s reputation had begun to emerge in 1992, when Kurkjian investigated the case of James Porter, a priest in Fall River, Mass., who was convicted in 1993 of molesting 28 children and sentenced to 18-20 years in prison. Though Kurkjian discovered a handful of other priests between 1992 and 1993, who followed the same pattern of repeat abuse and quiet reassignments to new parishes, he had no inkling of the scope of the church’s cover-up.

Kurkjian, portrayed in the film by Gene Amoroso, worked as a reporter for the Boston Globe for 40 years and was a founding member of the Spotlight team in 1970 before relocating to Washington, D.C., to become chief of the paper’s Washington bureau. He returned to the Spotlight team shortly after the story on the sex abuse scandal broke and the team was flooded with calls from former victims. In the film version, this is right about when the credits begin to roll, but as Kurkjian can attest, there’s quite an epilogue.

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

George Pell should be given a fair go at royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DECEMBER 5, 2015

Gerard Henderson
Columnist

As far as I am aware, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse had not previously flagged a date for the expected appearance of any witness.

But last week it issued a witness list for its latest case study. Only one expected appearance date was specified, namely “Cardinal ­George Pell (from 16 December approx.)”.

This advance notice is helpful to the media to prepare for the appearance of the royal commission’s highest profile witness so far, who happens to be the third most senior figure in the Vatican.

Pell has his supporters and opponents inside and outside the Catholic Church.

Frank Brennan, the Jesuit priest and author, has been a considered critic of the present prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, on some matters, through the years. However, in an article published in the online Eureka Street magazine on November 23, Brennan essentially called for Pell to receive a fair go at the royal commission and in the media.

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.

Legal costs in Archdiocese abuse case top $5M

MINNESOTA
KARE

AP

MINNEAPOLIS – The cost of legal and professional services in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis bankruptcy case has topped $5 million.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel approved more than $3 million in fees on Thursday to cover services provided for the archdiocese’s financial reorganization and clergy abuse claims.

Kressel reminded attorneys that he ordered the case to mediation to “save money and speed up the process.”

Acting Archbishop Bernard Hebda says the complexity of the case is a big reason for the costs.

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

Ex-archbishop feared Rome’s reach: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Geelong Advertiser

A former Melbourne archbishop feared the reach of Roman canon law and being left with egg on his face if the Vatican overturned a priest’s removal, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

The commission has heard Archbishop Frank Little failed to remove a number of pedophile priests, which former vicar-general and auxiliary bishop Hilton Deakin believes was partly due to his fears about Rome.

The 1974-1996 archbishop, who died in 2008, feared the Vatican authorities would find in a priest’s favour on appeal to Rome, Bishop Deakin said.

“I think the archbishop was very much motivated and governed by his own problem about Roman law, about Roman authority, about dismissing a priest and having him come back and then finding egg all over his face and that sort of stuff,” he said on Friday.

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.

Jesuit priest who allegedly molested Duterte had other victims

PHILIPPINES
Rappler

The presidential aspirant says the now deceased Fr Paul Falvey SJ abused several other students at Ateneo de Davao

DAVAO CITY, Philippines – Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte on Thursday night, December 3, identified the Jesuit priest who allegedly abused him in high school, and said he was “afraid” to file a complaint at the time.

But he added he had already forgiven the priest who was his teacher when he was a freshman student at the Ateneo de Davao high school.

The now deceased priest, Paul Falvey SJ, also molested his peers at the Ateneo de Davao besides himself, according to Duterte.

Duterte was a student of Ateneo de Davao high school before he was expelled and went to Holy Cross of Digos.

Duterte told Rappler, “I will not file a case against the priest because I belong to the Catholic Church,” while some of those molested reportedly filed complaints. Falvey, according to Duterte, was ordered to pay “some P25 million” in damages.

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.

Duterte names priest who allegedly molested him as teen

PHILIPPINES
Philippine Daily Inquirer

By: Germelina Lacorte

DAVAO CITY – Mayor Rodrigo Duterte late Thursday named the priest, who allegedly molested him and several other high school boys, when he was a teenager studying at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Davao University (AdDU) here.

Duterte, who vowed to keep his mouth shut pending a talk with Davao Archbishop Romulo Valles on Friday, said the priest who made him and several other boys lost their innocence was the late Fr. Paul Falvey, S.J., one of the Jesuit priests at AdDU when he was still in his first year high school.

“It happened during our generation, two years ahead of us and two years following us,” Duterte told reporters Thursday night. “It cost him some P25 million because other victims filed a case, it was a case of fondling—you know what—he did during confession, that’s how we lost our innocence early,” the mayor told reporters here around 9 p.m. Thursday.

He said he did not file a case because he was still a young boy at that time, and he was afraid. “It was a sort of sexual awakening for each of us,” he said, “We realized quite early that ganun talaga ang buhay (life was like that), “Paano magreklamo (How would you complain)?” he asked, “Takot kami (We were afraid).”

Duterte said that’s why he has high regard for Archbishop Oscar Cruz, who voiced out his strong criticism against him. “That’s why, I respect Bishop Oscar Cruz, who is very frank and very brutal in his language, I respect him, kasi hindi siya (because it was not him),” Duterte said, adding that it “was an actionable wrong.” “I was only 14 or 15, I am now 70 years old. How do you suppose I should file a case?” he asked reporters.

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.

Duterte names priest who sexually molested him

PHILIPPINES
Cococuts Manila

On Thu, Dec 3, Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte named the priest who allegedly molested him and several other high school boys, when he was a teenager studying at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Davao University (AdDU).

“Duterte tagged the late Fr. Paul Falvey, S.J., one of the Jesuit priests at AdDU when he was still in his first year high school, as the one who sexually molested him,” reports Germelina Lacorte in Philippine Daily Inquirer.

Duterte related: ‘“It happened during our generation, two years ahead of us and two years following us. It cost him some P25 million because other victims filed a case, it was a case of fondling—you know what—he did during confession, that’s how we lost our innocence early.”

The report noted: “Duterte, who vowed to keep his mouth shut pending a talk with Davao Archbishop Romulo Valles, explained that he did not file a case because he was still a young boy at that time, and he was afraid.”

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.

Comment: Cardinal Pell on the stand

AUSTRALIA
SBS

By Madonna King
4 DEC 2015

Chrissie Foster remembers her husband Anthony handing George Pell a photograph of their daughter Emma. Her arms and wrists were bloodied; the tell-tale signs that she wanted the torture that followed years of abuse to stop.

“I wanted to explain to him how Emma was telling the truth – she was only 14 or 15 at the time,’’ Chrissie tells me. “I wanted to break through this clerical belief that victims are liars and were after money.

“I thought if I could speak to him and tell him about Emma and how I was a good Catholic … I did lots of things around the Parish…that I wasn’t the enemy, and that this had happened to my daughter.’’

“It was too horrible. He didn’t bat an eyelid. There was no intake of breath. There was nothing.’’

Foster remembers Pell’s hard tone. “He didn’t let my husband finish his sentences. He’d just jump in with a legal point.’’ She remembers phrases like “prove it in court’’ or “take your evidence to court’’, and showing him the photograph of Emma was a last ditch effort to be heard.

“We hadn’t shown anyone that photo,’’ Chrissie says. “It was too horrible. He didn’t bat an eyelid. There was no intake of breath. There was nothing.’’

About 15 months later, Chrissie and Anthony found out a second daughter, Katie, had also been abused by Father Kevin O’Donnell, who has since died.

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.

St. Paul Archdiocese attorneys’ fees top $5 million this year

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune DECEMBER 3, 2015

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has spent $3.3 million on lawyers’ and professional fees in recent months, bringing to at least $5 million the costs incurred this year by attorneys handling the church’s bankruptcy and related clergy abuse issues.

At a court hearing Thursday, U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Robert Kressel approved payments for dozens of law firm staffers who are addressing the archdiocese’s deep troubles, including its financial reorganization and related parish claims, its 400-plus clergy abuse claims and two abuse cases pending with the Ramsey County attorney’s office.

Most of the work was done between June and October.

Kressel listened as attorney after attorney explained why his firm should be paid from the archdiocese estate. While saying he appreciates the work being done to advance the archdiocese’s financial reorganization, Kressel reminded the attorneys that he ordered the case to mediation specifically “to save money and speed up the process.”

Acting Archbishop Bernard Hebda said the complexity of the case is a big reason for the legal fees.

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.

Church of England pays £35,000 to man abused by expert on canon law

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent
@harrietsherwood
Friday 4 December 2015

The Church of England has paid £35,000 in compensation and apologised to a survivor of clerical sexual abuse in the latest in a string of cases involving senior church figures.

The diocese of London has also agreed to an independent review of how the church handled the allegations of abuse, which date back to the 1980s.

The settlement was made days after Judge Lowell Goddard’s independent inquiry into child sex abuse announced that the church would be among its first investigations.

The survivor, who has remained anonymous, named his abuser as Garth Moore, an authority on ecclesiastical law and chancellor of the dioceses of Southwark, Durham and Gloucester. Moore died in 1990.

The survivor was 16 at the time of the abuse and an occasional server at St Mary Abchurch in the City of London, where Moore was vicar.

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.

Bishop accused of protecting paedophile priests refuses to appear at inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

December 4, 2015

Nino Bucci
Exclusive

Bishop Ronald Mulkearns​ is set to again evade questioning over his role as an alleged protector of paedophile priests, with the former Ballarat Bishop expected to shun a royal commission hearing despite being compelled to appear as a witness.

The testimony of Bishop Mulkearns, and the second grilling of Cardinal George Pell, shaped as a crucial piece of the final weeks of the commission’s hearings into institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

But Fairfax Media has been told that Bishop Mulkearns, who turned 85 last month, will not appear, again blaming ill-health.

The development appears to be a major blow to the commission, as Bishop Mulkearns was considered central to a failure to prevent decades of child sexual abuse at Catholic schools in the Ballarat region.

It can also be revealed that Brisbane Bishop Brian Finnigan will be called to give evidence, and is expected to be questioned about whether he was complicit in covering up abuse when he worked as Bishop Mulkearns’ secretary in Ballarat.

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

‘Spotlight’ & ‘Truth’

UNITED STATES
Commonweal

Richard Alleva
December 4, 2015

Before the so-called Second Golden Age of Television was launched on cable, the one network show that captivated me (and in re-runs still does) was Law and Order, whose most curious feature was the mostly missing private lives of its regular characters. These cops and DAs pursued clues, interrogated suspects, cut deals…and never went home. The drama was strictly of the workplace. Domestic details eventually crept in but only when they were tied to the investigations and prosecutions at hand. Later, showrunner Dick Wolf created a spin-off, Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, which took a different tack, immersing us in the private affairs and foibles of its heroes—so much so that the series continually tipped over into soap opera.

There is a similar contrast between two current movies, Spotlight and Truth. Both are about the splendors and miseries of journalism, and both are based on real events. Spotlight shows how the Boston Globe exposed the full extent of the sexual abuse of minors perpetrated by priests in the archdiocese of Boston. It portrays the Globe’s reporters as heroes, but theirs is a workaday heroism without flourishes or frills—no preachy monologues paying tribute to freedom of the press, no clichés of journalists jutting their jaws while righteously facing down hypocrisy and corruption. By contrast, Truth—about the downfall of Dan Rather at CBS—is soaked in personality. Specifically, the personality of Mary Mapes, Rather’s producer on 60 Minutes Wednesday. I was never sure whether the movie was urging me to lament the decline of the evening news or to weep for the misery of one nobly striving, high-strung producer.

Spotlight’s most salient virtue is a Spartan economy of storytelling that lets us lucidly follow the reporters as they track down their story. We witness the gradual discovery of horrifying crimes and an almost equally horrifying cover-up. “Spotlight” was the name of the Globe’s special investigative team, and the film shows how each member of the team had his or her special contribution to make. Some members interview victims; one tries to connect with a lawyer who was handling the lawsuits of dozens of victims; another approaches the former assistant DA who was in charge of the John Geoghan case, which led to further revelations; Spotlight’s chief, Robby Robinson, uses his friendship with a church attorney to secure facts; and the Globe’s new editor, Marty Barron, must establish some sort of relationship with Cardinal Bernard Law himself. It’s as if the many pieces of a huge jigsaw puzzle had been flung into a Boston windstorm, each piece landing in a different neighborhood. The storyline might have fragmented amid so much to-ing and fro-ing, but the script by director Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer keeps it all under control. No scene goes on too long or is cut off too soon. And despite the film’s inherently painful material, it never sinks into either sensationalism or mawkishness. The moviegoer’s intelligence is honored by the absence of stentorian music, overacting, and visual rhetoric. Spotlight is the most sinewy film I’ve seen in a long time.

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.

December 3, 2015

Priest held for sexual assault

INDIA
The Hindu

Lawrence Johnson, the priest who was on the run after allegedly sodomising a 13-year-old boy from his area, was arrested on Wednesday evening. The Shivaji Nagar police said Johnson was picked up from a friend’s residence in Shivaji Nagar, after they received a tip-off . “Johnson was produced in court on Thursday and remanded in our custody till December 5. We are investigating whether he has similarly targeted other minors in the locality in the past,” said Senior Police Inspector Balasaheb Jadhav, Shivaji Nagar police station.

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.

Reference for pedophile priest `crazy’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

A Melbourne bishop wrote a character reference for a priest he hardly knew who was facing child sex abuse charges, an inquiry has heard.

Bishop Hilton Deakin said he had no hesitation writing the reference for Fr David Daniel, despite not knowing him very well, and the priest told him he was innocent.

He said it was later that Daniel was found guilty.

“If you ask me now, I know more about Daniel than I did when I wrote it, I must say, and I think it was a bit crazy writing it, knowing what I now know. But at that time that didn’t occur to me,” Bishop Deakin told the child abuse royal commission.

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

Victims of sexual abuse by clergy opened up to Michel Bastarache

CANADA
CBC News

By Jennifer Choi, CBC News

A former Supreme Court justice testified today in a lawsuit between the Diocese of Bathurst and its insurance company.

Michel Bastarache took the stand and described how victims told him how they were sexually abused by Catholic priests in the diocese dating back to the 1950’s.

“Eighty per cent of people told me I was the first person they told,” said Bastarache in a Moncton courtroom. “About half of those people told me I’d be the last.”

Bastarache was in charge of a confidential conciliation or compensation process for victims of molestation by priests in the Bathurst diocese.

He was hired in 2010 by Bathurst’s bishop at the time, Valery Vienneau, who is now the Archbishop of Moncton.

“At that time I thought it would be 30 people and only two priests involved, but I interviewed 90 people,” said Bastarache.

The victims reported sexual abuse by a total of 26 priests in the diocese

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

Approved archdiocese expenses in bankruptcy now top $5 million

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Martin Moylan Dec 3, 2015

The judge overseeing the bankruptcy of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on Thursday approved the payment of about $3.3 million in legal and professional fees.

The payments cover services provided from June through October. Court records indicate the church’s total bill for its bankruptcy and related litigation since the bankruptcy filing in January now exceeds $5.1 million.

Archbishop Bernard Hebda released a statement after the court hearing.

“In the end, we hope the spirit of cooperation and good will among all parties — including the U.S. Bankruptcy Court — will help us reach the ultimate goal of a fair resolution of the claims as quickly as possible,” he said. “We believe that the legal expenses that have been incurred and approved by the court are a necessary part of achieving that objective.”

Judge Robert Kressel said he’s starting to get nervous about the speed and cost of the bankruptcy. The archdiocese is in mediation with abuse victims and insurers, hoping to reach a settlement.

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

A Jubilee By Popular Acclaim

ROME
Chiesa

Mercy for all except the hierarchical Church, too closed-off and backward to deserve the pope’s forgiveness. But in the meantime two cases with uncertain outcomes have exploded: the trial of Balda and Chaouqui and the clash with the supreme court of Chile

by Sandro Magister

ROME, December 4, 2015 – With the jubilee inaugurated last Sunday in the heart of deepest Africa, Pope Francis has bent an instrument of ancient devotion to a new purpose entirely his own.

The jubilees do not have a good reputation – it was precisely the selling of indulgences that scandalized Luther – and yet the pope has brought them back into vogue for the living and for the deceased, in remission of the pains of purgatory. No one can therefore accuse him of abandoning tradition.

But the form is one thing, the substance is another. Because Francis is keeping only one part of that tradition alive: forgiveness. A forgiveness that is for all those who step through the holy door, go to confession, and receive communion. Only that the holy doors are everywhere. Even the door of a prison cell can become one, the pope has said, if only one asks God for mercy. …

> Ricca and Chaouqui, Two Enemies in the House (26.8.2013)

Not with prudence, for having wanted to haul into the dock even the two Italian journalists who wrote about it, in a bizarre revival of the index of prohibited books.

And even less with mercy, seeing the salacious pages that have been leaked from the court documents and have exposed to public ridicule not only the monsignor and the lady, already highly active in inflicting damage on themselves, but also her unfortunate relatives, completely uninvolved in the matter.

*
Bergoglio appeals to the people of the jubilee against the hierarchy for his other purifying enterprise as well, against clerical sex abuse of minors.

He says that he is unyielding with the bishops who cover up such misconduct and he has in fact removed some of them. But at the same time he shows himself merciful to excess with one cardinal who was one of his main electors in conclave, the Belgian Godfried Danneels, who in 2010 tried to conceal the sexual misconduct of the bishop of Bruges at the time, Roger Wangheluwe, with the victim being his young nephew. The scandal became public, but it does not appear to have bothered Pope Francis, who twice even put Danneels at the top of the list of synod fathers personally appointed by him, in a sign of great esteem, and promoted the cardinal’s protege as the new archbishop of Brussels:

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

DIOCESE OF SIOUX CITY PROMULGATES SAFE ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM IN CATHOLIC SCHOOLS

IOWA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Sioux City – The Catholic Globe

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

As Bishop of the Diocese of Sioux City, I am firmly committed to the safety of all people, especially children and the vulnerable, who participate in our parish, school, and diocesan programs. The current Safe Environment Program employed in our diocese is well-designed and working well to meet that goal. This program helps to ensure that all children and young people are kept safe. Our safe environment policies and practices have focused on educating parents, teachers, clergy, and all volunteers who work with children about the dangers of child predators, how to be aware of the behaviors exhibited by those who intend to victimize children, and how to report such behavior.

We recognize, in addition, that the prevention of child sexual abuse requires more than adult awareness, education, and training about the nature and scope of the problem. We must also give our children the tools they need to overcome the advances of someone who intends to do them harm. The newly-available Teaching Touching Safety curriculum is a tool designed to assist parents, teachers, catechists, youth ministers, and volunteers in this important task.

The U.S Conference of Catholic Bishops has issued guidelines for training programs in Catholic schools in order to ensure that children are given the tools they need to keep themselves safe. The Teaching Touching Safety curriculum, produced by the Virtus Company, through the National Catholic Risk Retention Group, meets these guidelines.

By this letter, I hereby promulgate the Teaching Touching Safety curriculum, for the training of children in the schools and parishes of the Diocese of Sioux City.

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.

Milwaukee’s Massive Pedophile Priest Problem

WISCONSIN
Urban Milwaukee

By Bruce Murphy – Dec 2nd, 2015

Probably no city has gotten more attention for its clergy sex abuse problem than Boston. It’s been called “the epicenter” of the crisis, and it is once again in the Spotlight, which is the name of a widely acclaimed new movie that dramatizes the Boston Globe’s 2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative series on pedophile priests.

The newspaper reported that the Boston archdiocese quietly settled child molestation claims against at least 70 priests and routinely transferred abusive priests to other parishes. The series blew the lid on a scandal that soon became a national and even international one, as more victims came forward and newspapers began aggressively reporting their stories.

In America alone, more than 6,900 priests have been accused of pedophilia, as USA Today has reported. By 2012, 16,787 people had come forward to say they were abused by priests as children, according to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, and the church had spent more than $2.6 billion in civil suits in the U.S. But that figure turned out to be an underestimate: the National Catholic Reporter tallied the data and found the total payout has been $4 billion.

The sheer scale of the scandal is astounding. The Conference commissioned a study which concluded that 4 percent of all priests who served from 1950-2002 had been accused of molesting minors. If the rate was that high for teachers in the U.S., that would equal 120,000 pedophiles.

But Peter Isely, the Milwaukeean who is Midwest director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, believes the percentage of pedophile priests is much higher. “If you look at federal reporting where there have been grand juries investigating this, the percentage gets near 10 percent.”

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.

Sexueller Missbrauch im Kindergarten Pfungstadt: Mann wird angeklagt

DEUTSCHLAND
Main-Echo

[The Darmstadt public prosecutor brought a charge in the case of sexual abuse of children in a Catholic nursery in southern Hesse Pfungstadt. The accused man is suspected of nine cases of sexual abuse and possession of child pornography.]

Die Staatsanwaltschaft Darmstadt hat Anklage im Fall des sexuellen Missbrauchs von Kindern in einer katholischen Kindertagesstätte im südhessischen Pfungstadt erhoben.

Der beschuldigte Mann werde wegen des Verdachts auf sexuellen Missbrauch in neun Fällen und des Besitzes kinderpornographischer Schriften vor dem Amtsgericht Darmstadt angeklagt, teilte die Staatsanwaltschaft am Mittwoch mit.

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.

Prete arrestato ad Ostuni per pedopornografia: lettera all’arcivescovo e al papa, “ci vuole una commissione di inchiesta”

ITALIA
Noi Notizie

[Priest arrested for child pornography in Ostuni: Letter to the Archbishop and the Pope, “it takes a commission of inquiry”.]

Ostuni, Francesco Legrottaglie, 67enne, fu arrestato. Secondo l’accusa, aveva il computer pieno di immagini pedopornografiche, con tanto di nomi di santi dati alle cartelle contenenti tali immagini. Di seguito il testo del documento indirizzato dal gruppo Manifesto4Ottobre all’arcivescovo di Brindisi-Ostuni, Domenico Caliandro, documento indirizzato anche a papa Francesco e al segretario generale della Conferenza episcopale italiana, Nunzio Galantino:

Gent.mo Arcivescovo,

nel maggio scorso, qualche giorno dopo l’arresto di un parroco nella città capoluogo con l’accusa di violenza sessuale su minori di 14 anni con l’aggravante dell’abuso di autorità, Le indirizzammo una lettera* a conclusione della quale chiedevamo di istituire una commissione di inchiesta come avevano fatto due diocesi italiane, Verona e Bressanone.

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

Priest abuse spotlight shone on Rochester too

NEW YORK
Democrat and Chronicle

Steve Orr and Sean Lahman, @seanlahman December 3, 2015

Spoiler alert: This article contains information about the ending of the film Spotlight

Roman Catholics in the Rochester region were stunned when the Rev. Eugene Emo, a priest who had served in a dozen area churches and hospitals over the course of 35 years, was placed under arrest in February 1996.

Father Emo, then 60 years old, a beloved figure to some parishioners but already a subject of scorn to others, was charged with sexual abuse. He was hauled out of a rectory on Oxford Street in the city in handcuffs.

What followed was a chain of events that mirrored, in more ways than one, the story told in the hit film Spotlight. That film, which is getting a good deal of Best Picture Oscar buzz, depicts a year-long investigation by the Boston Globe newspaper of sexual abuse by priests and attempts by church officials in that city to cover up that activity.

As the film relates, the newspaper had written before about abusive priests in Boston. Some of that coverage had been quite extensive. But until the Spotlight team began its work, reporters had never connected the dots by examining the scope of the problem and the Boston archdiocese’s handling of it.

Spotlight culminates with the January 2002 publication of the investigative team’s first story, which exposes the presence of dozens of abusive priests in the archdiocese who had been reassigned, placed on leave or allowed to retirement rather than being punished by the church and the law for their misconduct. As the film ends, scrolling text describes the reaction to the Globe’s Puliter Prize-winning reportage and lists the many American cities in which priest-abuse scandals ensued.

Rochester, New York is on that list. A review of the Democrat and Chronicle’s clip files reveals that what happened here is exactly parallel to events in Boston.

Before Father Emo’s arrest, the Democrat and Chronicle and its now-closed sister paper, the Times-Union, had covered the cases of at least four priests accused of sexual abuse.

The Rev. Gerard Guli of Holy Rosary Church in Rochester and the Rev. Thomas Corbett of St. Theodore’s Church in Gates were arrested by police on sex-abuse charges in 1989 and 1991, respectively. Neither was convicted. Both left their churches and Guli left the priesthood. Corbett remained a priest and worked in the diocesan offices until at least 2002.

In the summer of 1993, a woman filed a sex-abuse civil suit against Brother John Heathwood, a popular teacher at Bishop Kearney High School in Irondequoit. A few months later, the Rev. Robert Winterkorn resigned his pastoral post at St. John the Evangelist Church in Spencerport after acknowledging a sexual relationship with an adult woman.

Winterkorn’s privileges were removed, according to Bishop Matthew Clark, and he died in 2005. The lawsuit against Heathwood was eventually dismissed, and he retired from teaching in 1993. Heathwood was a member of the Christian Brothers, so he was not subject to oversight by the Rochester Diocese.

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

A Survivor’s Take On Spotlight

UNITED STATES
Catholics4Change

by C4C Guest Blogger

Last Friday night, I saw the movie “Spotlight” with two friends. It had been on my “to do” list since I had first seen the trailer. As a Clergy Abuse Survivor, it was interesting to me how the Catholic Church would be portrayed. All too often, Catholic apologists bash the media and critics as being “anti-Catholic” and haters – convenient defenses to cover the scandal within the Church. I was hoping that “Spotlight” would not fall into that trap.

One of the defenses that is also used is “that was in the past – it is not happening now.” However abuse from the past continues to surface involving present day priests. Two years ago, it became public that my abuser was being investigated.

This public announcement caused dozens, myself included, to file additional complaints with the Archdiocese. After two years of investigations, both by the Archdiocese and law enforcement officials in several counties, my abuser decided to quietly remove himself from the priesthood after one claim was substantiated by the Church. He disappears from the roll of active priests in good standing however does not appear on the list of priests who have had their faculties suspended or removed – sort of a clergy “limbo.”

The movie takes place in Boston – a city with many similarities to Philadelphia. A city of neighborhoods. A city where people identify so closely with their parish – their high school. A city where the Catholic Church has substantial influence. All of the major characters, with the exception of the Jewish editor, identify themselves as Catholic even though they admit that they are not regular churchgoers.

First, I want to say that every Catholic should see this movie. Many have closed their eyes for far too long and failed to educate themselves on the extent of the clergy abuse scandal and cover up. As has been said, “those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.”

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.

Pedophile priests destroyed trust: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Megan Neil
December 4, 2015

It will take generations to restore the trust destroyed by priests who sexually abused children, the former second-in-charge of the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese predicts.

Former vicar-general Bishop Peter Connors says church leaders completely failed to deal with pedophile priests as they tried to protect the church.

“There has been a terrible abuse of the trust that people gave implicitly to priests,” Bishop Connors told the child abuse royal commission.

“That trust was sacred but it was destroyed by priests, the way they acted.

“It will take generations for that trust to be restored.”

Bishop Connors, the vicar-general from 1976 to 1987, has admitted he should have done more after a teenage boy was abused by Fr Wilfred “Bill” Baker in 1978.

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

Youth pastor charged with sodomy and rape suing sheriff

ALABAMA
WAAY

Breken Terry Bterry@waaytv.com

Charles Adcock, the former youth pastor at Woodward Avenue Baptist Church whose charged with more than two dozen counts of rape and sodomy is suing Colbert County Sheriff Frank Williamson.

Adcock was charged in September 2014 for sex abuse crimes and let out on bond, but then brought back to the Colbert County Jail because he allegedly broke the conditions of his bond by taking another job as a youth minister in Texas.

Court documents filed at the end of November by Adcock’s attorney requesting a “Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus” to allow Adcock to go before a judge and plead his case on why he should be let out on bond.

The civil suit also says the church where Adcock was part-time employed knew of his sexual abuse charges in Alabama but were not allowing him unsupervised time with minors.

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.

MI–Group praises lawsuit vs. abusive Catholic tutor

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Dec. 3, 2015

Statement by SNAP leader Bill McAlary (616-514-0654, bllmack1@gmail.com)

A young man who was sexually abused as a youngster by a tutor is filing a civil lawsuit against Catholic officials. We applaud his courage and are glad that he’s taking steps to expose those who ignored or concealed these heinous crimes. We’re especially grateful because too often, child sex crimes by women against boys and girls are minimized.

[MLive]

We strongly suspect that evidence will prove Grand Rapids Catholic church and school officials knew or should have known about Abigail Simon’s six months of abuse perpetrated on this boy. We agree with attorney Ven Johnson who says the diocese is “in the dark ages” about the sexual abuse of kids.

We hope that anyone who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes or cover ups in Grand Rapids – by clergy, teachers or staff – to call police, protect kids and expose those commit or conceal horrific crimes against the vulnerable.

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.

Amid Scandal, the Pope Sticks With Reforms

VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Business

Carol Matlack John Follain

More than two and a half years after Pope Francis took office determined to clean up corruption, the Vatican is still finding financial skeletons in its many closets.

Two new books chronicle widespread mismanagement in the Holy See, including auditors’ discovery of $1.5 billion stashed in hidden accounts and the use of alms for the poor to plug holes in the church budget. The Holy See had a €25.6 million ($27.2 million) deficit in 2014. One of the books, Merchants in the Temple, by Gianluigi Nuzzi, also includes a description of a 2013 tape recording of Francis telling senior clerics that spending was “out of control.”

Adding to the impression of disarray, the Vatican in November filed criminal charges against a Spanish monsignor and two other members of a financial reform team appointed by the pope. They’re accused of leaking information to the books’ authors, who also face trial in a Vatican court. All the accused have denied any wrongdoing. “The trial is a sign the Vatican is on the defensive, and a sign of weakness,” says Emiliano Fittipaldi, author of the second book, Avarice. The Holy See hasn’t disputed the authenticity of the material, but the pope has called the breach of secrecy “a grave illegal act.”

€25.6 million
The Holy See’s 2014 budget deficit

The scandal doesn’t appear to have slowed Francis’s reform push. In the latest move, he’s ordered a panel of leaders from the Vatican and the Vatican bank, aided by professional auditors, to determine the value of the church’s massive financial and real estate holdings—including St. Peter’s Basilica and the Sistine Chapel. The group held its first meeting on Nov. 27. “You can’t plan if you don’t understand what your assets and obligations are,” says Danny Casey, right-hand man to Francis’s economic czar, Cardinal George Pell. “It’s not our money. The stakeholders are the 1.2 billion faithful and the many we serve,” says Casey, in an interview at the ornate Apostolic Palace, which includes part of the Vatican museums and the papal apartments. (Francis doesn’t live there, having opted instead to stay in a modest Vatican guesthouse.)

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.

Sex, Spies and Berlusconis: Vatileaks II Trial Unleashes a Sleazy New Sideshow

VATICAN CITY
Daily Beast

Barbie Latza Nadeau

How the Vatican’s ill-advised plan to prosecute two journalists is backfiring badly.

VATICAN CITY — Be careful what you wish for.

If the Vatican had hoped to teach reporters a lesson in restraint by putting two journalists on trial for printing leaked documents, it was sorely mistaken. In fact, the global outrage at the Holy See’s attempt to stifle the free press may in fact be just what’s fueling a frenzy of steamy secrets and a no-holds-barred attitude that has been making the Vatican look more like a hotbed of ill repute than a holy place of prayer and moral guidance.

What started as a fairly banal Vatileaks II trial—in which a monsignor, a public-relations specialist, an administrative assistant, and two journalists faced charges for leaking and printing classified financial documents that, frankly, weren’t all that surprising nor all that secret—has turned into a tale of illicit sex, spies, extortion, and computer hacking.

Spanish Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda and PR specialist Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui were both on a committee set up by Pope Francis to offer guidance to help straighten out the Holy See’s muddled finances. According to prosecutors, they, with the help of Balda’s administrative cleric, allegedly fed journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi documents from the committee that showed the depth of corruption and questionable financial practices that were the norm in the Vatican for decades.

The journalists’ books sought to outline gross financial malpractice through balance sheets and petty gossip about overspending. But what has emerged on the sidelines of the case is, frankly, far more titillating.

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.

One guilty count against former priest dismissed

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Somerset County, Pa.

A judge rejected a request for new trial but dismissed one of Father Joseph Maurizio’s guilty counts on Wednesday.

Back in September, the former Somerset County Priest was found guilty of three counts of illicit sexual activity with Honduran children who lived in an orphanage.

According to the Altoona Mirror, because one of Maurizio’s victims allegedly changed his story about the abuse, his statement could not be used as “proof” that the acts had actually occurred.

The 70 year old is set to be sentenced on February 2nd, 2016.

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.

Bishop to Duterte: Name priest who ‘abused’ you

PHILIPPINES
CNN

By Alex Ho, CNN Philippines
Thu, December 3, 2015

Metro Manila (CNN Philippines) — There seems to be no end in sight yet to the tiff between Davao City Mayor Rodrigo “Rody” Duterte and some members of the Catholic clergy over a controversial statement involving Pope Francis and the traffic jam during the recent papal visit to the Philippines.

This time around, Manila Auxiliary Bishop Broderick Pabillo called out Duterte on Thursday (December 3) to give details about his claims that he was sexually abused by a priest during his high school days at the Ateneo de Davao.

In a statement, Pabillo said Duterte should “stop the drama” and instead elaborate on his allegations.

“If there’s a mistake committed against him, he must reveal it immediately,” Pabillo said so that complaints or charges can be filed against the alleged priest involved.

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.

Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 3 December 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:

– accepted the resignation from the office of auxiliary of the diocese of Down and Connor, Ireland, presented by Bishop Anthony J. Farquhar, upon reaching the age limit.

– erected the new diocese of Guasdualito (area 35,184, population 200,000, priests 13, religious 9) in Venezuela, with territory taken from the dioceses of San Fernando de Apure and Barinas, making it a suffragan of the metropolitan metropolis of Merida.

– appointed Fr. Modesto Gonzalez Perez, S.B.D., as the first bishop of the new diocese of Guasdualito. The bishop-elect was born in 1959 in San Antonio de los Alpes, Venezuela, gave his religious vows in 1983 and was ordained a priest in 1986. He holds a licentiate in education from the Universidad Simon Rodriguez in Caracas and in pastoral theology from the Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain. He has served in a number of pastoral roles, including parish vicar, bursar, parish priest, provincial counsellor and local superior. He is currently director of the Don Bosco agricultural centre in Molinete, in the archdiocese of Maracaibo.

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

The Vatican can’t seem to get out of the secrets business

UNITED STATES
Reuters

By John Lloyd December 1, 2015

Leaking is essential to journalism. It is the ethical problem at the heart of the trade — since much leaking depends on the leaker breaking a promise not to leak. The conundrum is “solved” by appealing to the higher cause of holding power to account.

That rationale can vary from having the force of exposing official lies or corporate fraud to the grubbiness of publishing details, usually sexual, of the private life of well-known people. But leaking is especially essential in the coverage of the intelligence services, and of the way in which security in the face of militant jihadism is administered. It’s necessary to get beyond bland statements and partial briefings, and get some purchase on the scope and methods of institutions now, in every state, much more powerful and much larger than they had been since the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s.

The George W. Bush administrations were as angered as any before them by the leaking which surrounded their actions, especially in the second half of the 2000s. But, as reporters learned to their delight, the wars within it, in key departments like Justice and State as well as in the security services, meant that leakers had a large interest in getting their objections out, and in weakening opponents whom they thought wrong, or dangerous.

Under President Barack Obama, however, whose administration is more disciplined and which has been directed to go hard on leakers, the pickings — say reporters — are thinner, the penalties harsher. Jeffrey Sterling, a former CIA officer who leaked material on Iran to New York Times reporter James Risen for his 2006 book State of War; John Kiriakou, also once with the CIA, who disclosed information about a brother officer to journalists; and Stephen Kim, a former State department expert, who gave details of contacts between the United States and North Korea to a Fox News reporter, have all served or are serving jail sentences for their acts.

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.

Putting sexual violence and abuse center stage

ISRAEL
Arutz Sheva

By Raphael Poch
First Publish: 12/3/2015

There has been a dramatic change over the past three decades with regard to how the Jewish community, and more specifically the Orthodox Jewish community, deals with the after effects and trauma of sexual violence and abuse. This change is not only taking place in the Modern-Orthodox world, but also in the Ultra-Orthodox (haredi) world.

Debbie Gross, founder and director of religious women crisis center Tahel told Arutz Sheva, that this is due to the work that Tahel and other organizations have been doing.

“25 years ago, no one was talking about domestic violence and sexual abuse in the Orthodox community. We saw last year that people were talking about it. That is due to our work. So we created a conference about it.”

Tahel’s conference last year was attended by over 650 people from around the world. Gross said that the major aspect of last year’s conference was idea sharing and cooperation.

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.

North Richmond principal left to supervise priest amid allegations of child ab

AUSTRALIA
Leader

December 3, 2015
Chad Van Estrop
Melbourne Leader

A FORMER principal of St James primary, North Richmond was told to supervise the school’s parish priest near children, as he continued working, amid allegations of child sexual abuse in the early 1990s, the Royal Commission has heard.

Patricia Taylor told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse this week she was warned about Father Wilfred Baker during an “off the record” meeting with the Catholic Education Office in 1992.

Ms Taylor said she was also told by the office to prevent children from being in confessional rooms with Baker and never be alone with him.

Ms Taylor told the commission she felt “abandoned” and “vulnerable” when dealing with Baker.

“I was charged with protecting a community from someone who was known to have fairly serious allegations made against them,” Ms Taylor said.

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

The Vatican Loves Johnny Dangerously (According to Michael Keaton)

UNITED STATES
GQ

BY MICHAEL HAINEY

A year ago, Michael Keaton took wing above Manhattan, soaring over the city in Birdman, riding the thermals of his out-of-this-world performance to help deliver a best-picture Oscar for that film. Now Keaton—a man whose Beetlejuice-and-Batman glory days seemed long behind him—has returned with another prestige role, in Spotlight, the story of The Boston Globe’s investigation of the Catholic clergy’s sex-abuse scandal back in 2002.

“I’ve been doing the same thing all along,” he insists. “It’s not that I wasn’t working. It’s that as you get older, you gain experience and you learn to wait for the right project. It’s like being an experienced hitter. You learn to foul off pitches—’not right for me…not right for me…’—and you stay in the box, patient, until they throw you the pitch you want. The pitch you know you can crush.”

I sat down with the actor at a restaurant in Livingston, Montana, about an hour from the ranch he owns out here, nestled in the gorgeous country between the Crazy Mountains and the Yellowstone River.

When working on your Spotlight role, do you go back to childhood memories? You were raised Catholic. I was raised Catholic, too. But it’s strange: I had nothing but the best experiences with the priests in my parish. They were terrific teachers.

I’m with you. I had an old-school nun who beat my hand with a ruler. “Go stand in the corner.” Stupid, mean, shameful punishment. It was what it was. And it shaped me. It was never a horrible thing. That said, I got lucky. I had some terrific nuns. But I got lucky. We both did. Now…those motherfuckers [the priests who abused children] have to pay the price. And as much as I respect my boy Fran [Pope Francis], ’cause that guy’s pushing a rock up a hill, he left the United States without saying, “I’m not going to stop until everyone who is culpable pays the right price.” Which he didn’t do. And he probably won’t, unfortunately. That’s a huge disappointment. But.

And yet, on the other hand, he’s said more than anyone.

I’ve never seen anyone…anything like this. Never seen a world leader with this impact.

Is it true you arranged for your mother to meet Pope John Paul II?

Yeah. I… [affects a bad-gangster voice] negotiated. Worked a deal. [laughs] I got a call years ago. The pope was on tour. Coming to the States.

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.

CBS Celebrates ‘Very Powerful,’ ‘Fantastic’ Liberal Reporter Movie

UNITED STATES
Newsbusters

By Matthew Balan | December 2, 2015

Wednesday’s CBS This Morning raved over the new movie Spotlight, which touts the work of the investigative reporters at the liberal Boston Globe who chronicled the Catholic priest sex abuse scandal in the Archdiocese of Boston. Gayle King gushed, “Gosh, that movie was so good.” She later labeled the movie “very powerful.”

Fill-in anchor Kristen Johnson asserted that the new release was “such a fantastic movie.” The morning newscast brought on left-wing actor Mark Ruffalo and the Boston Globe correspondent he played in the movie, Mike Rezendes.

Johnson set up Rezendes to praise the movie, along with his profession: “When you saw the movie, were you pleased with how real it was?” The guest replied, “Yeah. I think the movie is incredibly authentic….I love the message that it gives about investigative reporting. I love the message it gives about clergy sex abuse.”

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

Ordenaron la excarcelación del sacerdote Juan Gutiérrez

ARGENTINA
Elancasti

[Priest Juan de Dios Gutiérrez, accused to sexually abusing a 16-year-old, was released from jail after spending 36 days in detention.]

BELÉN- El sacerdote Juan de Dios Gutiérrez (28), acusado de haber abusado sexualmente de una adolescente de 16 años, fue excarcelado tras haber pasado 36 días detenido, luego de que el juez de control de Garantías resolviera que recupere la libertad tras fijarle una caución de $50.000 y morigerarle la acusación planteada originalmente por la fiscalía.

La resolución del juez de Control de Garantías, Carlos Rodolfo Moreno, se conoció ayer al mediodía. En la audiencia de prisión preventiva realizada la semana pasada, el fiscal de la causa, Jorge Alberto Flores, había pedido que Gutiérrez continuara detenido e imputado por los delitos de “abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante agravado por ser un ministro de algún culto religioso reconocido o no”, y “corrupción de menores”.

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.

Attorney for former youth minister says he didn’t violate bond conditions

ALABAMA
WTVM

By Marie Waxel

MUSCLE SHOALS, AL (WAFF) –
It’s a last ditch effort to get a former Muscle Shoals Youth minister released on bond.

According to court paperwork, attorneys for Kyle Adcock are wanting the sheriff to allow their client to go before a judge to discuss the recent bond revocation.

Adcock’s attorney told WAFF 48 News, he doesn’t believe his client violated any of his original bond conditions therefore should be released from jail.

Earlier this fall authorities learned Kyle Adcock had been serving as a worship pastor in Texas.

A clear violation of his supervision orders which allowed him to live in Texas with his parents.

The courts issued a warrant out for his arrest, and Adcock returned to the Colbert County jail in October.

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.

Public hearing into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

3 December, 2015

The Royal Commission will hold the second part of the public hearing regarding Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat at the County Court of Victoria, Melbourne, commencing on Monday, 7 December 2015.

The scope and purpose of the second part of this public hearing is to inquire into:

The response of the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat and of other Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat to allegations of child sexual abuse against clergy or religious.

The response of Victoria Police to allegations of child sexual abuse against clergy or religious which took place within the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat.

Any related matters.

Cardinal George Pell is expected to give evidence from 16-18 December in relation to both Case Study 35 (the response of the Archdiocese of Melbourne to allegations of child sexual abuse) and Case Study 28 (the response of Catholic authorities in Ballarat to allegations of child sexual abuse.)

Date: Monday 7 December 2015
Duration: 7-15 December.
Hearing times: 10:00am – 4:00pm AEDT
Location: County Court of Victoria, 250 William Street, Melbourne, Victoria

The Royal Commission will provide a webcast of proceedings in the Trench room at the Ballarat Town Hall, Sturt Street, Ballarat, and the proceedings will be live streamed on the Royal Commission website www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au.

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.

Concerns over low conviction rate of clerics accused of abuse

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sarah MacDonald
PUBLISHED
03/12/2015

The head of the Catholic Church’s safeguarding watchdog has expressed concern at the low conviction rate of those accused of child sexual abuse.

Teresa Devlin, CEO of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church (NBSCCCI), said just 4pc of all allegations result in a conviction.

Ms Devlin was commenting on the findings of the latest tranche of audits by the watchdog which examined 53 allegations made against 44 priests, brothers or nuns across 20 religious orders.
The allegations cover the period between 1941 and 2009 and resulted in no criminal convictions, which Ms Devlin said is “very, very hard”.

Speaking to the Irish Independent, she said: “Coming forward with an allegation is probably the hardest thing that anybody does because there are so many barriers in their way.”

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.

Mother and baby homes: Plenty of information about adoption records to be found if State wishes to look

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Thursday, December 03, 2015

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

The Government says an audit of adoption records held by the State is of very limited benefit, but recent revelations prove otherwise, writes Conall Ó Fátharta

THIS Government has consistently repeated the mantra that an audit of adoption records held by the State was “of very limited benefit” — despite revelation after revelation from this newspaper.

An examination of just a fraction of these records revealed that a religious order reported significantly higher levels of infant deaths to the State than it recorded privately, and that child victims of rape were present in mother and baby homes right into the 1980s.

There are tens of thousands of files in the hands of the State in relation to how unmarried women and their children were treated in state-licensed and funded mother and baby homes and adoption agencies. It seems nobody wants to take a look at them.

It’s not like they haven’t been asked. Adoption campaigners have called for an audit of all records for years. The Government and the Adoption Authority have ignored all requests.

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.

Finnat offices searched, Vatican warrant

ROME
ANSA

ANSA) – Rome, December 2 – Italian finance police on Wednesday searched the Rome offices of Banca Finnat Euroamerica and seized documentation, working on a Vatican warrant. The bank’s president, Giampietro Nattino, is under investigation in the Vatican for alleged insider trading and money laundering. Nattino is being probed following statements implicating him in suspect operations by Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, the disgraced former head of analytic accounts at the Holy See’s asset-management agency APSA.

Scarano is under investigation in Rome after being arrested in 2013 for allegedly trying to illegally smuggle 20 million euros into Italy for rich friends.

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

Judge tosses part of child-sex verdict against Somerset County priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Liz Zemba
Thursday, Dec. 3, 2015

A federal judge threw out one of the guilty verdicts a jury delivered against a Somerset County priest accused of traveling to Central America to have sex with boys but denied a request for a new trial on the remaining four counts.

The Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 70, was found guilty Sept. 22 of three counts of engaging or attempting to engage in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places and one count each of possession of child pornography and money laundering.

Federal prosecutors said Maurizio used a self-run charity based in Johnstown, Humanitarian Interfaith Ministries, to visit a Honduran orphanage numerous times between 1999 and 2009, promising candy and cash to boys to watch them shower, have sex or fondle them.

Maurizio, the former pastor of Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Central City, had pleaded not guilty and did not testify during the seven-day trial.

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

Cassady indicted on seven sex counts with minors

KENTUCKY
Central Kentucky News

By TODD KLEFFMAN tkleffman@amnews.com

The former youth minister of a Danville church was indicted Monday by a Boyle County grand jury on seven felony counts related to illegal sexual activities with minors.

Bobby Cassady, 28, of 515 Tenikat St., was charged with three counts of first-degree unlawful transaction with a minor, two counts of first-degree sexual abuse, promoting a sexual performance by a minor and possession of material portraying a sexual performance by a minor.

Cassady’s bond was set at $50,000. Danville Detective Robert Ladd testified before the grand jury.

Cassady’s attorney, Ephraim Helton, declined to comment on the indictment Tuesday.

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.

Church responds to child rape lawsuit in email to congregation

TENNESSEE
Brentwood Home Page

By SAMANTHA HEARN
Published: December 2, 2015

After a family filed a lawsuit against Fellowship Bible Church on Monday for negligence in the rape of their 3-year-old child, the church has now commented on the issue in an email sent to its congregation.

The family, represented by Kathryn Barnett of Morgan & Morgan, filed the lawsuit after their 3-year-old was sexually assaulted and raped by a teenage volunteer at the church’s Brentwood campus last year. The teen has since appeared in court and plead guilty to aggravated sexual battery.

The complaint was filed with the Williamson County Circuit Court on Monday, Nov. 30 stating that Fellowship Bible Church was negligent and reckless in the handling of the incident, even going so far as to try and hide the incident from other church members.

The church is now saying that the allegations presented against them in the lawsuit are false, and that they immediately reported the incident to the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services as well as Brentwood Police when they were advised of the incident.

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.

Mother in church beating death pleads guilty to assault charges

NEW YORK
Rome Sentinel

On the day that 19-year-old Lucas Leonard was beaten to death at the Word of Life Christian Church, his mother admitted this morning that the teenager didn’t want to go.

But Leonard went with his family, sat through a day-long service, and then was attacked by church leaders, fellow members and his own family, authorities said.

He would not leave the building alive.

“The last I saw him, he was standing,” said the teen’s mother, 59-year-old Deborah Leonard in County Court this morning.

Leonard pleaded guilty today to first and second-degree assault. She will be sentenced to five years in state prison if she cooperates with the District Attorney’s Office and testifies against the other eight defendants, including her husband and her daughter.

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.

Fellowship Bible Church denies trying to hide boy’s rape

TENNESSEE
Tennessean

Collin Czarnecki, cczarnecki@tennessean.com

After a family filed a $37.5 million lawsuit against a Brentwood church for negligence in the sexual assault of their 3-year-old son, the church has issued a response.

According to a lawsuit filed Monday, the family’s son was raped by a male teenage volunteer in a bathroom of Fellowship Bible Church of Williamson County during church on Aug. 24, 2014. The teenager pleaded guilty to aggravated sexual battery.

The lawsuit alleges the church urged the family to not pursue charges and asked them to attend another church campus.

The lawsuit further states that the church “sought to hide the truth about the perpetrator pedophile and about the rape of (the 3-year-old) from other families.”

But in a statement to its congregation, Fellowship Bible Church Pastor Bill Wellons wrote that those allegations are false.

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.

Teen sex assault victim files lawsuit against tutor, Catholic schools, diocese

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Barton Deiters | bdeiters@mlive.com
on December 02, 2015

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – The 15-year-old victim of sexual assault by Catholic school tutor Abigail Simon is 18 now and has filed a lawsuit seeking at least $25,000 from Simon, the private school system, the diocese and several administrators.

The now 18-year-old graduate of Catholic Central High School is represented by Detroit-based Ven Johnson – a so-called “super lawyer” and one-time partner of Geofrey Fieger. The suit was filed in Kent County District Court.

Johnson says the goal of the suit is to bring the diocese “out of the dark ages” when it comes to the sexual abuse of students, including male students, by staff or teachers.

“You cannot do this to your children and pretend not to notice,” Johnson said, adding that in cases such as these the Catholic church has tried to “ignore them and sweep them under the rug.”

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.

Abuser priests were ‘ticking time bombs’

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

AAP

THE Catholic Church knew pedophile priests were ticking time bombs but covered up their evil deeds to protect its reputation, former church leaders admit.

MINUTES of a special issues committee meeting at a 1992 Australian Catholic Bishops Conference reveal: “It was agreed that there are serious time bombs ticking away in a number of diocese at the present time.”

Former Melbourne archdiocese vicar-general Bishop Peter Connors said there were time bombs ticking away in a number of dioceses including Melbourne’s Doveton parish, where a succession of pedophile priests were sent from the 1970s to the 1990s.

“That would certainly be the case I think particularly in the Diocese of Ballarat, the big time bomb was ticking away there,” Bishop Connors told the child abuse royal commission.

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

Archbishop Cruz tells Duterte: File complaint on sexual abuse claims

PHILIPPINES
GMA Network

File a complaint.

This was the reaction of Archbishop Emeritus Oscar Cruz on claims by Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte that a priest sexually abused him when he was young.

In a report aired on News To Go on Thursday, GMA News’ Raffy Tima quoted Cruz as saying that while he understands Duterte’s manner of speaking, for which the presidential aspirant has drawn flak, the mayor’s “serious” claim against clergymen is another matter altogether, and that Duterte should file a case against the abusers.

“I think he should not just let go of this like that. Kung talagang reformer siya, he should follow through. Hindi ‘yung sasabihing, ”Wag na, kawawa naman sila.’ Oh, come on, walang ganiyanan,” he said.

Earlier, Cruz scored Duterte for his profanity-laced declaration speech last Monday, saying “Delikado ang mga ganitong nilalang.

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

Judge tosses one Maurizio verdict

PENNSYLVANIA
Altoona Mirror

December 3, 2015
By Phil Ray (pray@altoonamirror.com) , The Altoona Mirror

The federal judge who presided over the child sexual abuse trial of a Somerset County priest has rejected a defense request for a new trial but has tossed out one of five guilty verdicts returned by the jury on Sept. 22.

Altoona attorney Steven P. Passarello, who represented the Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., said U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson’s decision to reverse the jury’s verdict on one of the charges of illicit sexual abuse against a child was a “major victory” for the defense.

“Very rarely… rarely, does a judge grant a motion of acquittal,” Passarello said.

Sentencing for the 70-year-old former pastor of Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church in Central City is scheduled for Feb. 2.

Passarello said he doesn’t know what the four remaining charges will mean in terms of time behind bars. He will know more when a presentence report is completed.

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

Spotlight: A telling exposé of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
World Socialist Web Site

By Joanne Laurier
3 November 2015

Directed by Tom McCarthy; screenplay by McCarthy and Josh Singer

Tom McCarthy’s Spotlight is a taut, quasi-political thriller that chronicles the Boston Globe’s landmark 2002 exposure of widespread child sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the Boston area.

The ‘Spotlight’ in the title refers to the newspaper’s four-person investigative unit that brought to light the long-term, systematic cover-up by Church officials of the abuse carried out by more than 70 local clergy. The Globe, having been recently acquired by the New York Times, won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for the story.

In McCarthy’s movie, the Spotlight team consists of its blunt editor Walter “Robby” Robinson (Michael Keaton), reporters Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams) and Michael Rezendes (Mark Ruffalo), and researcher Matt Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James).

Spotlight opens with a brief sequence in which Father John Geoghan, a serial pedophile whose history of abuse was a factor in triggering the investigation, is walking out of a Boston police station a free man. (In his 30-year career, Geoghan molested at least 130 children.) The Globe’s new editor-in-chief Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber)—non-Bostonian and non-Catholic—pushes the Spotlight team to start looking into sexual abuse by priests.

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

Judge Says Hibbing Priest Will Face Felony Charges

MINNESOTA
KDAL

Dave Strandberg

HIBBING, MN (MNN) – A Minnesota district judge has refused to drop felony charges against a Catholic priest from Hibbing who’s accused of sexually abusing girls. Sixth District Judge David Ackerson says the state has enough evidence to send the case of 30-year-old Brian Lederer to a trial. He’s charged with seven counts of sexual assault and child pornography possession. Not-guilty pleas have been entered in the case, and a pre-trial conference is set for December 24th. Investigators accuse Lederer of touching breasts and sexual organs of girls age-10-to-14 over their clothes.

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.

December 2, 2015

Priest accused of theft has $350,000 put away for retirement

CANADA
Windsor Star

TREVOR WILHELM, WINDSOR STAR

At age 43 — with hundreds of thousands in retirement savings — Rev. Robert Couture was already talking about being able to retire comfortably.

“I was moving in that direction,” Couture, 53, testified Wednesday in his criminal trial.

The former pastor of Tecumseh’s Ste. Anne Parish spent Day 8 of his trial on the witness stand Wednesday taking questions from his lawyer and the prosecutor.

Couture is charged with theft over $5,000. He is accused of stealing between $170,000 and $234,000 from 2002 to 2010.

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.

‘He’d flog me so hard I’d wet myself’: Man tells of horrific sex abuse inflicted on him age 10 at a children’s home after he was taken from his family as a baby

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By NICOLE LOW FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

A man haunted by the sexual and physical abuse he allegedly suffered at the hands of his adoptive father at a home for Aboriginal children in the 1960s has spoken out for the first time.

John Gordon was 10-years-old when he was adopted by Donald Henderson and his wife at Retta Dixon Home in Darwin, the ABC reports.

From 1964 to 1975, the Hendersons worked at the government-funded, religious home in Darwin where Mr Gordon had lived since he was removed from his family as a baby as part of the Stolen Generation period.

Mr Gordon told the ABC he felt ‘special’ and ‘chosen’ when they decided to adopt him but his Mr Henderson turned his life into a nightmare by allegedly molesting and beating him.

‘I remember when he used to give me beatings. It wasn’t just a slap on the ass… he’d flog me that hard I’d wet myself,’ he said.

‘I still have dreams about it. The last time I had dreams like that I woke up the whole house screaming.’

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

Priest tells jury he didn’t steal money from Tecumseh church

CANADA
CBC News

A southern Ontario Catholic priest accused of embezzling more than $150,000 to fund his lavish lifestyle defended himself for a second day in Windsor Superior court Wednesday.

Rev. Robert Couture, formerly of Ste. Anne Parish in Tecumseh told a jury he broke church policy by asking couples to donate money when marrying them, but he maintained he did not pocket church funds.

During cross examination the Crown presented a letter between Couture and a bishop, which indicates parishioners were being charged double for wedding services with $100 going to the church and another $100 to the priest.

Couture, 52, was charged with theft over $5,000 nearly two years ago after a provincial police investigation of the church’s accounts revealed at least $169,000 in irregularities. The Crown claims Couture stole cash in several ways, including taking portions from collection plates and charging fees to funeral homes.

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

Catholic Church had abuse ‘time bombs’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

The Catholic Church knew it had child abuse “time bombs” ticking away in a number of Australian dioceses, an inquiry has heard.

A special issues committee meeting at the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference in 1992 noted: “It was agreed that there are serious time bombs ticking away in a number of dioceses at the present time.”

That was the case in a number of dioceses, former Melbourne archdiocese vicar-general Bishop Peter Connors, who chaired the committee, told the child abuse royal commission.

It also included Melbourne’s Doveton parish, where a succession of pedophile priests were sent.

“There would certainly be other dioceses where that problem, of time bombs ticking away, existed,” Bishop Connors said.

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

Church knew paedophile priests were a ‘ticking time tomb’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

December 3, 2015

Beau Donelly

The Catholic Church described paedophile priests working in parishes across Australia as ticking “time bombs”, damning minutes from a high-level meeting of top church officials reveals.

Minutes tendered to the child abuse royal commission from a 1992 special issues committee meeting at the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference said it was agreed there were “serious ‘time bombs’ ticking away in a number of dioceses” at the time.

The former second-in-charge of the Melbourne Archdiocese, Bishop Peter Connors, who chaired the committee, testified on Thursday that the reference applied not only to churches in Melbourne but also in other dioceses.

“The reference to time bombs can only be understood as a reference to dioceses where there were priests operating who had had serious allegations against them, or the church had accepted were sexual offenders,” senior counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness, SC, said.

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

Mark Ruffalo and reporter Michael Rezendes talk “Spotlight”

UNITED STATES
CBS News

[with video]

Oscar buzz is strong for “Spotlight,” the movie that shares the true story of the Boston Globe investigative team uncovering the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal.

“I think the movie is incredibly authentic, and I think it captures the substance and spirit of what we did just incredibly well. So I’m very pleased with it,” said reporter Michael Rezendes Wednesday on “CBS This Morning.” Rezendes was part of the team that won a Pulitzer Prize for the coverage.

Mark Ruffalo, the two-time Academy Awards nominee who plays Rezendes in the film, said he felt it was the right time to tell the story again.

“It had a particular reach at the time when the Boston Globe told the story, but we could take it a little bit further into the culture by making a movie out of it,” Ruffalo said. “And it just felt so honest, and it left out the salacious part of the story and went directly to the investigation. So you’re allowed to enter this world and look at this very hard story in a dispassionate way, so by the end of it, you get a real, moral certitude about where you end up.”

Ruffalo shadowed Rezendes, finding out that “a great reporter dedicates his life to his work.”

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.

Family: Tennessee church hid bathroom rape of 3-year-old, lied to parents and urged against prosecution

TENNESSEE
The Raw Story

DAVID EDWARDS
01 DEC 2015

A family filed a lawsuit this week against a church in Brentwood, Tennessee for allegedly covering up the rape of their 3-year-old child.

The lawsuit, which was obtained by WTVF, indicates that the family left their 3-year-old-boy in the care of the church’s Children’s Ministry on the Sunday of August 24, 2014.

When the boy said that he did not want to go back to church the next week, the family discovered that a teenage volunteer had raped the child in one of the church’s bathrooms.

The family explained in the lawsuit that they confronted church leaders, who initially claimed that the child was lying about the incident.

The church later “urged the [family] not to pursue criminal charges against the perpetrator,” the lawsuit stated.

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.

Truth and Reconciliation Commission will present final report into residential schools Dec. 15

CANADA
CBC News

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission will present its final report into the history and legacy of Canada’s residential school system on Dec. 15 in Ottawa.

The commission’s summary report released in June made 94 recommendations, including changes in policies and programs. Its chair, Justice Murray Sinclair, called Canada’s treatment of aboriginal children a “cultural genocide” on communities.

Sinclair, as well as commissioners Marie Wilson and Chief Wilton Littlechild, will present the final report, which will include details on the thousands of children who never returned home from residential schools.

As part of its mandate, the commission was tasked with doing specific research into the history of children who died or went missing while in the care of school officials.

At least 3,200 students never returned home — in a third of those cases, their names were not recorded and in half their cause of death was not recorded, according to Wilson.

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.

Allegations of sexual abuse being reported promptly, says audit

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

An audit of 20 religious congregations by the Catholic Church child protection watchdog has found allegations of sexual abuse are now being reported promptly in almost all cases to the relevant authorities .

The latest traunch of reviews, published on Wednesday, looked at congregations including The Legionaries of Christ, The Oblates of Mary Immaculate and The Mercy Sisters, which continue to have substantial public ministry with children. The remaining 17 congregations are elderly and have had little or no contact with children. No allegations of sexual abuse had been levelled against them.

Teresa Devlin, chief executive of the Catholic Church’s Maynooth based National Board for Safeguarding Children, said the latest reports showed the safeguarding of children had now become “a reflex” and a “first consideration” with religious congregations.

“Reporting to the civil authorities is prompt, case files are recorded correctly and risk is properly assessed,” she said. What was “most heartening” she said, was that “child safeguarding is an ingrained component of the religious life and child related activities” of religious congregations reviewed, she said. “It has become a reflex and their first consideration, ” she added.

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.

‘International law applies to Vatileaks’

ROME
ANSA

(ANSA) – Rome, December 2 – Interior Minister Angelino Alfano has said that the rules of international law will apply in the case of three Vatican officials put on trial for allegedly leaking confidential papal documents to two journalists who are also being tried in the Vatican.

“We have the Italian penal code and the Vatican has its own judicial system,” Alfano said in response to questions from journalists on the Vatileaks trial. “In these circumstances the rules of international law will apply.” “If found guilty, we will give more thought to the matter,” he added.

“But we’re not in that phase yet.” Five people are currently on trial in the Vatican for allegedly leaking confidential documents. The trial of Immacolata Chaouqui, a public relations expert, investigative journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, Monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda and his former assistant Nicola Maio opened last Monday.

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.

Victorian paedophile priest also abused women

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

AAP

An inquiry’s heard a woman’s conversion to Catholicism involved having sex with her priest, who threatened that she couldn’t get married otherwise.

The child abuse royal commission heard paedophile priest Father Peter Searson agreed to coach the 18-year-old to her baptism in 1974 so she could marry her Catholic fiance.

It heard Searson, then a chaplain at the Villa Maria Society for the Blind, started touching her during the lessons before it escalated to sex.

The woman and her husband complained to then Melbourne Archbishop Frank Little in 1975 and reported being raped to police in 1997.

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

Italy Police Obtain Banca Finnat Documents for Vatican Probe

ITALY
Bloomberg Business

Sergio Di Pasquale
December 2, 2015

Italy’s finance police obtained documents from Banca Finnat Euramerica SpA in Rome on Wednesday as part of a Vatican probe into alleged market manipulation and money-laundering, according to a police official familiar with the investigation.

The police were acting at the request of Vatican authorities, said the official, who asked not to be identified because of internal policy. Italian news agency Ansa first reported the news earlier today.

A Vatican spokesman had no comment, while a representative of the Rome-based bank didn’t have an immediate comment.

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.

No convictions over 53 allegations of church abuse

IRELAND
RTE News

The Catholic Church’s child protection watchdog has found that 53 allegations of child abuse against 44 members of three religious orders have resulted in no convictions.

The finding was made in audits by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church (NBSCCC) of accusations against Sisters of Mercy, the Oblates and Legionaries of Christ.

The review focused on the handling of allegations since 1975, but some of the cases stretched back as far as 1941.

The Sisters of Mercy was criticised by the Ryan Commission for overuse of corporal punishment and neglect in residential institutions while “some very serious incidents of sexual abuse were perpetrated by lay staff in some schools”.

Today’s review found that since 1975, 31 allegations of child abuse have been made to the Sisters of Mercy against 17 nuns.

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.

Duterte dared: Tell all on priest abuses

PHILIPPINES
The Philippine Star

By Evelyn Macairan (The Philippine Star) | Updated December 3, 2015

MANILA, Philippines – Manila Auxiliary Bishop Broderick Pabillo yesterday dared Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte to tell all on the sexual abuse he claims to have suffered at the hands of priests when he was a young student.

Pabillo, once the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines-Public Affairs Committee chairman, said the 70-year-old mayor should “immediately tell what happened.”

“This is what Pope Francis had said, that people should come out so the matter can be investigated,” Pabillo said.

He said that if Duterte, who has joined the May 2016 presidential race, feels that he was abused then he should say it. If he was abused, even if he has not yet filed a complaint about it, he should have said something a long time ago.

“This happened to him a long time ago, yet he kept it to himself,” said Pabillo.

The bishop said he pities Duterte because he has been carrying this burden for a long time and he has not said anything about it.

Pabillo added that priests, just like others, are not perfect.

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.

Duterte reveals being abused by priest when young

PHILIPPINES
Sun.Star

Wednesday, December 02, 2015
By BEN O. TESIORNA
KARINA V. CANEDO

PRESIDENTIAL candidate and Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte has described the Roman Catholic religion as “not so sacred, after all,” after he dropped a bombshell against the Church after being criticized for “cursing” Pope Francis in his speech Monday.

On Tuesday evening, Duterte revealed on national television news program that he was sexually abused by a priest when he was in high school.

“I can’t tell you the names. Kaming lahat dumaan kami,” Duterte said, saying he and his classmates were sexually abused by a priest during his younger years.

Duterte spent years of high school at Ateneo de Davao but graduated at another Catholic-run school Holy Cross of Digos High School.

He made the revelation after Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) president Archbishop Socrates Villegas wrote a strongly worded statement against Duterte.

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.

Chaouqui raided for computer access

ROME
ANSA

(ANSA) – Rome, December 2 – The home of Vatileaks 2 defendant Francesca Chaouqui and her husband Corrado Lanino was raided Tuesday because of suspected illicit access to computers in connection with a Terni probe into suspected irregularities in the sale of a castle at Narni, judicial sources said Wednesday. Lanino, a computer expert, is suspected of helping his wife access files with the help of another man, former Italian premier’s office staffer, Mario Benotti, whose premises were not searched, the sources said.

Rome prosecutors on Monday placed Chaouqui and Lanino under investigation for suspected irregularities in the sale of San Girolamo castle.

In another development this week, Rome prosecutors placed Silvio Berluscon’s brother Paolo under investigation for suspected embezzlement in the Terni probe. Chaouqui allegedly promised the younger Berlusconi to act on judicial requests to the Vatican regarding Silvio Berlusconi’s purported accounts at the Vatican Bank – a suggestion the Berlusconis have denied.

Chaouqui, a public relations expert, is currently on trial in the Vatican along with four others for allegedly leaking confidential documents.

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

Vatican scandal over leaked documents broadens to include Silvio Berlusconi’s family

ITALY
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 02 Dec 2015

A Vatican scandal over leaked documents that has uncovered a murky web of sex, espionage and computer hacking has taken a new twist, with the alleged involvement of the family of Silvio Berlusconi.

Three Vatican officials are on trial for allegedly leaking confidential papal documents to two Italian investigative journalists, revealing subterfuge, waste and mismanagement at the heart of the Holy See.

One of the Vatican employees, a public relations executive named Francesca Chaouqui, is now accused of threatening Paolo Berlusconi, Silvio Berlusconi’s brother.

Paolo, the younger brother of the former prime minister, is the editor of Il Giornale, a Right-wing daily newspaper.

Mrs Chaouqui allegedly ordered him to rein in one of his journalists, who had written unflattering articles about her after she was appointed to a commission, set up by Pope Francis, to review the Vatican’s tangled finances.

She allegedly warned Paolo Berlusconi that unless he acted, she would put pressure Vatican authorities to investigate secret accounts allegedly held by the Berlusconi family at the Vatican bank.

The Berlusconi brothers denied that they had ever held accounts at the Vatican bank, formally known as the Institute for Works of Religion.

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.

Schlammschlacht im Vatikan: die dreckige Wäsche der «Unbefleckten»

ROM
Aargauer Zeitung

Rom: Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui soll nicht nur vatikanische Geheimnisse verraten, sondern auch die Gebrüder Silvio und Paolo Berlusconi erpresst haben. Für den Kirchenstaat wird die Affäre zur immer grösseren PR-Katastrophe. von Dominik Straub, Rom

Der Prozess wegen Geheimnisverrats vor dem vatikanischen Gericht ist vorerst vertagt worden; das hindert die beiden Hauptangeklagten aber nicht, in der Öffentlichkeit ausgiebig dreckige Wäsche zu waschen.

So behauptet der spanische Monsignore Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda in einem «Memorandum», das auf wundersame Weise den Weg aus seiner vatikanischen Zelle zur Römer Zeitung «La Repubblica» gefunden hat, dass seine mutmassliche Komplizin Francesca Immacolata (die Unbefleckte) Chaouqui regelmässige Teilnehmerin an Silvio Berlusconis Partys gewesen sei.

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.

Francesca Chaouqui to reveal more Vatican sleaze and corruption

ITALY
The Australian

TOM KINGTON
THE TIMES
DECEMBER 3, 2015

The Italian woman on trial at the Vatican for leaking embarrassing details of sleaze at the Holy See has claimed the scandal is nothing compared with what she plans to reveal next.

PR expert Francesca Chaouqui said two books filled with tales of Vatican corruption and greed that she allegedly helped to supply information for contained only “15 per cent” of what she knew. She added that in eight months she would be freed from the secrecy clause in her Vatican contract. “Gay lobby? It’s worse than that,” she said, giving no more ­details.

Ms Chaouqui, 33, risks being jailed for eight years if she is convicted by a Vatican court of leaking sensitive information collected by a committee that was formed in 2013 by the Pope to root out corruption at the Vatican.

Also on trial is Father Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, a Spanish priest and fellow committee member, as well as two authors who turned committee documents into best-selling books.

The Pope said on Tuesday that it had been a mistake to hire Ms Chaouqui and Father Vallejo Balda, but joked: “Thank God ­Lucrezia Borgia is no longer around!” a reference to the daughter of a 15th-century pope who ­reputedly poisoned her enemies.

“I am no Lucrezia Borgia — I have never poisoned anyone,” Ms Chaouqui said yesterday, adding she was three months pregnant.

While Ms Chaouqui blames the leaking of committee ­documents on Father Vallejo Balda, she and her husband, who is an IT specialist, are said in a separate case to be under investigation by Italian magistrates for hacking.

She said she was suing Father Vallejo Balda for claiming that she had bullied him into releasing the documents and that she had ­seduced him at a convention in Florence.

“How is that possible? He shared a room with his 85-year-old mother, whom he adores,” she said. “He is either subservient to women or hates them.”

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

EDITORIAL: US church leadership is in transition

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

EDITORIAL

In Florence, Italy, last month, Pope Francis addressed the Italian church and gave a bracing, 50-minute exhortation on how integral change is to a healthy life of the church.

“Before the problems of the church, it is not useful to search for solutions in conservatism or fundamentalism, in the restoration of obsolete conduct and forms that no longer have the capacity of being significant culturally,” he told the gathered clerics and laypeople.

At another point, he said, “Christian doctrine is not a closed system incapable of generating questions, doubts, interrogatives — but is alive, knows being unsettled, enlivened. It has a face that is not rigid, it has a body that moves and grows, it has a soft flesh: It is called Jesus Christ.”

It was one more item in a persistent litany of invitations that Francis has offered the entire church — but most specifically his bishops — to a freedom that presumes a willingness to wrestle both with the demands of the law and human realities that expose the law as inadequate to many circumstances at hand.

Less than a week later, the U.S. bishops gathered in Baltimore (Page 1), and it seems the invitation was overlooked by many, perhaps ignored, and even, among some, feared and rejected. During three days of deliberations, the leaders of the American church considered priorities and plans for the future and a political document intended to guide Catholic voters.

What the American church received for the effort was a stale offering of old documents, largely ineffective in their previous iterations and sounding today, in parts, embarrassingly tone-deaf to current realities.

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.

Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 2 December 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:

– appointed Msgr. Rodolfo Luis Weber, prelate of Cristalandia, Brazil, as metropolitan archbishop of Passo Fundo (area 12,000, population 550,000, Catholics 436,000, priests 142, religious 543), Brazil.

– accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the diocese of Santo Amaro, Brazil, presented by Bishop Fernando Antonio Figueiredo, O.F.M., upon reaching the age limit. He succeeded by Bishop Giuseppe Negri, P.I.M.E., coadjutor of the same diocese.

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

Child safety in the Catholic Church now its “first consideration”, reports find

IRELAND
Newstalk

Jack Quann

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI) says child safety in the church is now its “first consideration”.

The NBSCCCI has published a set of 20 reviews which they say “reinforces” progress made.

Full reviews were carried out on the Legionaries of Christ, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate and The Mercy Sisters – as all three continue to have contact with children.

The other 17 orders and congregations had a more limited review carried out, as they have little or no contact with children and no allegations of sexual abuse levelled against them.

“All 20 reviews showed good safeguarding practice, prompt reporting of allegations to the civil authorities and to managing risk”, the NBSCCCI says.

“What we are seeing here are a series of good habits having been created,” said Teresa Devlin, CEO of the NBSCCCI.

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

Pope Francis-Islamic State Plot: Four Arrested In Italy For Planning ISIS Attack On Pontiff Following Paris Terrorism

ITALY
International Business Times

By Jess McHugh

Acting on a tip from the FBI, Italian authorities arrested four people in Italy and Kosovo Tuesday who were suspected of planning an attack on Pope Francis, the Local reported. The seat of the Roman Catholic Church is the Vatican, situated just outside of Rome, where security has been high since the Islamic terror organization known as the Islamic State group, ISIS or Daesh, threatened attacks on the Italian capital.

All four people arrested by police during raids are from Kosovo, a region inside Serbia in southeastern Europe where international recognition remains disputed. The four people stand accused of participation in a terror ring with specific intent to target the pope.

“The [alleged] terrorist team propagated the ideology of jihad through social networks,” police said, as reported by the Local. The group allegedly claimed on social media that Francis would be “the last pope.”

The Italian government has conducted raids and added additional police to patrol the streets in Rome, after a series of coordinated terror attacks on Paris Nov. 13 left 130 dead and hundreds more wounded.

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.

“Fragwürdiges Verhalten”

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

[The Hildesheim diocese is facing serous allegations. A young woman said she was sexually harassed at age 11 by Father R. She reported this to the diocese in 2010. The case was handed over to the public prosecutor only in November and by the grandparents and not the church. In addition, it is alleged the diocese did not cooperate with the authorities and attempted to conceal that the priest previously been accused to abuse at Canisius College in Berlin.]

Das Hildesheimer Bistum sieht sich schwerwiegenden Vorwürfen ausgesetzt. Eine junge Frau gibt an, im Alter von elf Jahren von dem Pater R. sexuell bedrängt worden zu sein. Das hatte sie nach eigenen Aussagen 2010 dem Bistum mitgeteilt. Die Übergabe an die Staatsanwaltschaft erfolgte allerdings erst im November des Jahres durch die Großeltern – und nicht durch die Kirche. Ferner arbeitete das Bistum nicht mit den Behörden zusammen und verschwieg, dass der beschuldigte Geistliche sich bereits am Canisius-Kolleg an Kindern vergangen haben soll.

Die Opferinitiative “Eckiger Tisch” fordert nun den Rücktritt des mit dem Fall befassten Hildesheimer Bischofs Norbert Trelle. Dieser trat vor die Presse und befand, der Vorwurf einer Verschleppung und Vereitelung sei ungeheuerlich.

Der NDR Kultur Redakteur Florian Breitmeier findet die Vorgehensweise der Verantwortlichen im Bistum Hildesheim im aktuellen Missbrauchsfall bedenklich.

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.

Wie eine Zeitung die Kirche zum Hinschauen brachte

BOSTON (MA)
Die Welt

2002 stießen Journalisten in Boston auf Erschütterndes: 80 Priester hatten sich, teils über Jahrzehnte, an ihren Schutzbefohlenen vergangen. Der Beginn des Missbrauchsskandals der katholischen Kirche. Von Alexander Görlach

Wenn man durch Bostons Straßen schlendert, fallen einem die vielen Kirchtürme auf, die der Stadt einen großen Teil ihrer europäischen Anmutung geben. Die Omnipräsenz der sakralen Architektur spiegelt die Bedeutung der katholischen Kirche in der Ostküstenmetropole wieder. Diese Türme sind nun die trutzigen und unheimlichen Statisten in “Spotlight”, ein Dokumentarspielfilm, der den Missbrauchsskandal in der katholischen Erzdiözese von Boston zum Thema hat.

Vor knapp 15 Jahren stießen Journalisten des “Boston Globe (Link: https://www.bostonglobe.com/) ” auf ein Nest aus sexueller Gewalt und Vertuschung: Geistliche, die sich an Kindern vergingen, und eine Öffentlichkeit, die weggeschaut hat. Spotlight, Suchscheinwerfer, ist der Name der Reportergruppe beim “Boston Globe” und der Titel des Films. Mit dem Streifen nun sind das Leid der Betroffenen und ihrer Familien zurück im Lichtkegel.

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.

Filipino bishops slam ‘Dirty Harry’ presidential hopeful

PHILIPPINES
Bangkok Post

MANILA – Catholic bishops in the Philippines lashed out Tuesday at a presidential candidate popularly known as “Dirty Harry”, after he made a rambling and obscenity-filled speech cursing the pope.

Rodrigo Duterte, whose hardline anti-crime reputation has seen him compared with Clint Eastwood’s no-nonsense enforcer, sparked the ire of the influential Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, which questioned if he deserved to be president.

“When a revered and loved and admired man like Pope Francis is cursed by a political candidate and the audience laughs, I can only bow my head and grieve in great shame,” said a statement, issued by the group’s president, Archbishop Socrates Villegas.

The comments are a rare personal criticism of a presidential candidate from senior church leaders in the largely-Roman Catholic nation.

Duterte, the longtime mayor of the southern city of Davao, declared his intention on Monday to run for president in the 2016 election, referencing a January visit to Manila by Pope Francis, whom he blamed for a massive traffic jam.

“Pope, you son of a whore, why don’t you go home,” he said, to the guffaws of a crowd of supporters.

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

Vatican leaks? You ain’t seen nothing yet, says PR  woman

VATICAN CITY
The Times (UK)

Tom Kington Rome
December 2 2015

The Italian woman on trial at the Vatican for leaking embarrassing details of sleaze at the Holy See has claimed that the scandal is nothing compared with what she plans to reveal next.

Francesca Chaouqui, a PR expert, said that two books filled with tales of Vatican corruption and greed that she allegedly helped to supply contained only “15 per cent” of what she knew.

She added that in eight months’ time she would be freed from the secrecy clause in her Vatican contract.

“Gay lobby? It’s worse than that,” she said, giving no more details.

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.

Vatileaks scandal broadens, embroils Berlusconi brothers

ROME
IBN Live

AFP

Rome: A Vatican leaks scandal that was already rich in claims of sex, scheming and spying has widened to embroil Silvio Berlusconi and add allegations of blackmail and computer hacking to the mix.

Former prime minister Berlusconi denied late Tuesday that he had had any contact with Francesca Chaouqui, an ex-PR consultant to the Vatican who is one of five people, including two journalists, on trial over the leaking of classified Holy See documents.

Berlusconi issued the denial after it emerged that his brother Paolo, a newspaper publisher, had been named in an Italian investigation into Chaouqui and her husband Corrado Lanino which is separate from but related to the Vatican case.

Prosecutors suspect that Chaouqui attempted to pressure Paolo Berlusconi into sacking the newspaper Il Giornale’s Vatican correspondent Fabio Marchesi Ragona by threatening to expose Silvio for supposedly holding a secret account at the Vatican bank.

Silvio Berlusconi’s lawyer Niccolo Ghedini said his client was never informed of such a threat.
“Besides, it would have been impossible to make any ‘demands’ since there is no possible link between President Berlusconi and Vatican affairs or the Vatican bank,” he said.

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

Kirche weist Vertuschungsvorwurf im Missbrauchsskandal zurück

DEUTSCHLAND
MOZ

[Church rejects blame in abuse scandal cover-up.]

Hildesheim (DPA) In den 70er und 80er Jahren soll ein Priester mindestens 100 Kinder am Berliner Canisius-Kolleg sexuell missbraucht haben. 2010 berichtete ein Mädchen dem Bistum Hildesheim, dass der Mann auch sie sexuell bedrängt habe. Doch zunächst passierte nichts.

Das Bistum Hildesheim hat Vertuschungsvorwürfe im Skandal um sexuellen Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche vehement zurückgewiesen. Der 2010 von einer 14-Jährigen erhobene Missbrauchsvorwurf gegen einen Pfarrer sei keinesfalls zu spät an die Staatsanwaltschaft weitergegeben worden, sagte Bischof Norbert Trelle am Dienstag in Hildesheim.

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.

Vatileaks: Berlusconi brothers embroiled

ITALY
The Local

A Vatican leaks scandal that was already rich in claims of sex, scheming and spying has widened to embroil Silvio Berlusconi and add allegations of blackmail and computer hacking to the mix.

Former prime minister Berlusconi denied late on Tuesday that he had had any contact with Francesca Chaouqui, an ex-PR consultant to the Vatican who is one of five people, including two journalists, on trial over the leaking of classified Holy See documents.

Berlusconi issued the denial after it emerged that his brother Paolo, a newspaper publisher, had been named in an Italian investigation into Chaouqui and her husband Corrado Lanino which is separate from but related to the Vatican case.

Prosecutors suspect that Chaouqui attempted to pressure Paolo Berlusconi into sacking the newspaper Il Giornale’s Vatican correspondent Fabio Marchesi Ragona by threatening to expose Silvio for supposedly holding a secret account at the Vatican bank.

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.

Bishop offers ‘healing prayer service’ for victims

MISSOURI
St. Joseph News-Press

By Jena Sauber St. Joseph News-Press

A healing prayer service at St. Mary’s Catholic Church will look to address issues of sexual abuse and work toward healing, according to the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.

The Dec. 6 service will be led by Bishop James Johnston and is part of a series of services in the area.

“There has always been a desire to do more outreach to try and help victims come back to the church, or at least see the church being empathetic and sorrowful,” said Kathleen Chastain of the Office of Child and Youth Protection with the Diocese of Kansas City St. Joseph. “… We are trying to provide coverage throughout our geographical region and parishes where there has been a great deal of hurt.”

It will be the fifth of the services in the diocese since they began in August. The service will include prayer and symbolic candle lighting, said the Rev. Chuck Tobin of St. Mary’s. The Office of Child and Youth Protection, priests and licensed counselors also will be at the service to provide assistance as requested.

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.

Why the Vatican should not prosecute journalists

ROME
CathNews

As Pope Francis tours Africa he is bound to point out that one of the major scourges afflicting people across the continent, alongside disease, poverty and war, is corruption. And if he knows what he is talking about, as he surely does, he will be aware that an energetic free press is an invaluable ally in combating this pernicious blight.

Yet the Holy See is in the process of prosecuting representatives of the free press for publishing leaked documents which expose corruption within the Vatican itself. How does the Pope escape a charge of double standards, which his enemies are sure to lay?

He is entitled to say, as all governments which are leaked against in the media would argue, that trust is an essential requirement in any organisation, and trust is undermined when journalists publish leaked documents.

But that understandable irritation which all governments experience from time to time has to be set against the far more fundamental principle of freedom of the press. That is why, in any nation where the rule of law is respected, press freedom is guaranteed. And that is the freedom not just to publish stories the powers-that-be approve of, but far more fundamentally, the freedom to publish stories they do not.

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

Former priest Henry Moloney guilty of sex assault on pupil

IRELAND
BBC News

A former priest has been found guilty of indecently assaulting a secondary school student in the 1980s in the Republic of Ireland.

Henry Moloney worked at the time as a choirmaster and music teacher at Rockwell College, near Cashel, County Tipperary.

The 77-year-old, of Kimmage Manor, Dublin, was found guilty of seven counts of indecent assault on the schoolboy.

He had denied the charges.

The victim had told Clonmel Circuit Court how the abuse began near the start of a school year after Moloney asked him to join the choir.

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

Former priest guilty of indecent assault at secondary school

IRELAND
RTE News

A former priest has been found guilty of indecently assaulting a secondary school student in the 1980s while working as a choirmaster and music teacher.

Henry Moloney, 77, with an address at Kimmage Manor in Dublin was found guilty at Clonmel Circuit Court last night of seven counts of indecent assault, all of which took place within one school year in the 1980s at Rockwell College outside Cashel.

He will be sentenced on 15 December, following the preparation of a victim impact report, and has been remanded on bail.

An eighth charge, that he indecently assaulted the boy in an area near the boy’s home during a St Stephen’s Day visit during that year, was withdrawn from the jury by Judge Thomas Teehan.

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

Priest got two women pregnant: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A Melbourne priest who married a pregnant woman also fathered a second child after being moved to another state, an inquiry has heard.

Former Melbourne archbishop Frank Little tried to convince the married woman to give the baby up for adoption, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

His former second-in-charge Bishop Peter Connors said he was angry with the way the archbishop handled the case and organised for financial assistance for the woman over many years.

The unnamed priest was moved from one side of the Melbourne archdiocese to the other after telling Archbishop Little he got the woman pregnant.

When it came close to the woman’s due date, the priest told the archbishop ‘my position’s becoming intolerable’, because of the pressure put on him by the woman, the inquiry heard.

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.

Church ‘completely failed’ on child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Melbourne’s Catholic leaders completely failed to deal with pedophile priests as they tried to protect the church, the archdiocese’s former second-in-charge admits.

Former vicar-general Bishop Peter Connors says he has no excuse for why he failed to protect children from Fr Wilfred Baker, who abused 21 children between 1960 and 1985.

‘There was a complete failure of the archbishop and his advisers to deal with these issues,’ Bishop Connors told the child abuse royal commission.

Commission chair Justice Peter McClellan said the failings were often said to be motivated by a desire to protect the church.

Bishop Connors agreed it was a fundamentally damning allegation of the church.

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