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.

July 7, 2014

Pope Francis lambasts Catholic bishops who helped cover up child abuse

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian

Lizzy Davies in Rome
theguardian.com, Monday 7 July 2014

Leaders of the Roman Catholic church who failed to “respond adequately” to reports of child sex abuse by paedophile priests caused “even greater suffering” to their victims and will in future be held accountable, Pope Francis has said; in a clear rebuke to bishops who helped cover up the scandal and shield abusers.

In his strongest condemnation yet of the clerical abuse that shook the Catholic community around the world, Francis asked for forgiveness on behalf of the church not only for the perpretrators of abuse but those senior figures whose “sins of omission” he said had exacerbated the problem.

The sexual abuse of minors by priests and other men of the cloth was, he said, was a “crime and grave sin” that required the church to “make reparation”. The Argentinian pontiff delivered the powerful homily at a morning mass in the Vatican before a group of six abuse victims, including two from the UK. Sixteen months into his papacy, it was his first such encounter.

“It is something more than despicable actions,” Francis said of clerical sex abuse. “It is like a sacrilegious cult, because these boys and girls had been entrusted to the priestly charism in order to be brought to God. And those people sacrificed them to the idol of their own concupiscence.”

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 Meets Abuse Victims, Begs Forgiveness for Church

VATICAN CITY
NBC News

BY CLAUDIO LAVANGA AND CASSANDRA VINOGRAD

ROME – Pope Francis begged forgiveness for the Church on Monday and cited the need for “reparation” as he met with victims who had suffered at the hands of Roman Catholic priests.

The pontiff invited six victims of abuse from Ireland, Germany and Britain to attend an early-morning private Mass at the Domus Sanctae Marthae, the residence next to St. Peter’s Basilica where he lives.

Francis called the abuse a “grave sin” decrying how it was hidden for “so much time” and “camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained.”

“I ask for the grace to weep, the grace for the Church to weep and make reparation for her sons and daughters who betrayed their mission, who abused innocent persons,” the pope said in his homily. “I beg your forgiveness, too, for the sins of omission on the part of Church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of 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.

Pope meets sex abuse victims, says clergy actions cloaked in complicity

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Asking for forgiveness, Pope Francis told abuse survivors that “despicable actions” caused by clergy have been hidden for too long and had been “camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained.”

“There is no place in the church’s ministry for those who commit these abuses, and I commit myself not to tolerate harm done to a minor by any individual, whether a cleric or not,” and to hold all bishops accountable for protecting young people, the pope said during a special early morning Mass for six survivors of abuse by clergy. The Mass and private meetings held later with each individual took place in the Domus Sanctae Marthae — the pope’s residence and a Vatican guesthouse where the survivors also stayed.

In a lengthy, off-the-cuff homily in Spanish July 7, the pope thanked the men and women — two each from Ireland, the United Kingdom and Germany, for coming to the Vatican to meet with him. The Vatican provided its own translations of the unscripted homily.

The pope praised their courage for speaking out about their abuse, saying that telling the truth “was a service of love, since for us it shed light on a terrible darkness in the life of the church.”

The pope said the scandal of abuse caused him “deep pain and suffering. So much time hidden, camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained.”

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.

Papst Franziskus empfing erstmals Missbrauchsopfer

VATIKAN
Nachrichen

ROM. Papst Franziskus hat am Montag drei Stunden mit Opfern von sexuellem Missbrauch durch Kleriker verbracht. Sechs Personen, je zwei aus Deutschland, Irland und England, waren von Kardinal Sean O Malley, dem Erzbischof von Boston, zu dem Treffen eingeladen worden.

Das Treffen sei intensiv und bewegend gewesen, berichtete Lombardi. Jedes Missbrauchsopfer habe tiefe Dankbarkeit für die Möglichkeit eines Gesprächs mit dem Papst gezeigt. Die sechs Personen nahmen an der Morgenmesse im vatikanischen Gästehaus Santa Marta teil, bei der Franziskus auf Spanisch eine Predigt hielt. Darin wurde das Problem des Missbrauchs durch Kirchenleute breit thematisiert, informierte der Sprecher. “Der Papst hat das Thema Missbrauch auf direkte Weise in Angriff genommen. Es handelt sich um einen starken und vielsagenden Text”, sagte der vatikanische Pressesprecher.

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.

Bishops will be held accountable on abuse, Pope Francis tells survivors

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (UK)

Pope Francis has told abuse survivors that bishops who fail to protect children from abuse “will be held accountable”.

Speaking at Mass in the chapel of his residence, the Pope said: “There is no place in the Church’s ministry for those who commit these abuses, and I commit myself not to tolerate harm done to a minor by any individual, whether a cleric or not. All bishops must carry out their pastoral ministry with the utmost care in order to help foster the protection of minors, and they will be held accountable.”

He compared child abuse by priests and bishops to “a sacrilegious cult” and said that such crimes had “a toxic effect” on faith and hope in God.

“Some of you have held fast to faith, he said, “while for others the experience of betrayal and abandonment has led to a weakening of faith in God. Your presence here speaks of the miracle of hope, which prevails against the deepest darkness. Surely it is a sign of God’s mercy that today we have this opportunity to encounter one another, to adore God, to look in one another’s eyes and seek the grace of reconciliation.”

Six abuse survivors – two each from Ireland, Britain and Germany – attended the Mass. The Pope received afterwards them at his residence, the Domus Sanctae Marthae. Vatican spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi said Francis spent 30 minutes with each of the six visitors.

FULL TEXT OF POPE FRANCIS’S HOMILY

The scene where Peter sees Jesus emerge after a terrible interrogation… Peter whose eyes meet the gaze of Jesus and weeps… This scene comes to my mind as I look at you, and think of so many men and women, boys and girls. I feel the gaze of Jesus and I ask for the grace to weep, the grace for the Church to weep and make reparation for her sons and daughters who betrayed their mission, who abused innocent persons. Today, I am very grateful to you for having travelled so far to come here.

For some time now I have felt in my heart deep pain and suffering. So much time hidden, camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained until someone realized that Jesus was looking and others the same… and they set about to sustain that gaze.

And those few who began to weep have touched our conscience for this crime and grave sin. This is what causes me distress and pain at the fact that some priests and bishops, by sexually abusing minors, violated their innocence and their own priestly vocation. It is something more than despicable actions. It is like a sacrilegious cult, because these boys and girls had been entrusted to the priestly charism in order to be brought to God. And those people sacrificed them to the idol of their own concupiscence. They profane the very image of God in whose likeness we were created. Childhood, as we all know, young hearts, so open and trusting, have their own way of understanding the mysteries of God’s love and are eager to grow in the faith. Today the heart of the Church looks into the eyes of Jesus in these boys and girls and wants to weep; she asks the grace to weep before the execrable acts of abuse which have left life long scars.

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 ‘Begs Forgiveness’ of Victims of Sex Abuse

VATICAN CITY
New York Times

By JIM YARDLEY
JULY 7, 2014

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis held his first meeting with victims of clerical sex abuse on Monday, leading them at a private Mass at a small Vatican chapel where he asked for forgiveness and described the abuse as a “grave sin,” even as some critics criticized the meeting as a publicity stunt.

“Before God and his people, I express my sorrow for the sins and grave crimes of clerical sexual abuse committed against you,” Francis said during his homily at the Mass, according to a text released by the Vatican. “And I humbly ask forgiveness. I beg your forgiveness, too, for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse made by family members, as well as by abuse victims themselves.”

Francis met with six victims — two each from Ireland, the United Kingdom and Germany — and first greeted them when they arrived at a Vatican guesthouse on Sunday. They reconvened on Monday morning for Mass and then ate breakfast together before the pope held individual meetings with the victims that, in total, lasted more than three hours.

In his homily, Francis vowed “not to tolerate harm done to a minor by any individual, whether a cleric or not,” and declared that bishops would be held accountable for protecting minors. He said the abuse scandals had had “a toxic effect on faith and hope in God.”

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.

Francesco Zanardi, violentato: «È un’operazione di facciata»

ITALIA
Il Tempo

[Summary: Francesco Zanardi, a survivors of clergy abuse in Italy who heads the Abuse Network, said the meeting between the pope and victims of abuse is a “farce.” He said he didn’t care about the meeting and does not believe in a “turning point” at the Vatican. Zanardi said there are no legal instruments to combat clergy abuse even by the Italian State and there is no obligation for the bishops to report about.]

«L’incontro di Papa Bergoglio con le vittime degli abusi? Ne ero a conoscenza, ma non ci interessa. Allo stato attuale, è una farsa mediatica». Francesco Zanardi è stato una delle centinaia di minori vittime accertate di violenza sessuale perpetrata da sacerdoti, ed è presidente della Rete L’Abuso Onlus, che si occupa di dare sostegno e assistenza, legale e psicologica, a chi denuncia molestie o abusi. Zanardi non crede a una «svolta» da parte del Vaticano, nemmeno di fronte ai duri intendimenti esternati da Papa Francesco. L’assenza di strumenti giuridici per il contrasto del fenomeno, anche da parte dello Stato italiano, il non obbligo di denuncia da parte dei vescovi e, a suo dire, una vera e propria rete di copertura internazionale, farebbero dell’Italia una sorta di «paradiso legale dei pedofili».

Zanardi, lei non è convinto degli intendimenti di Papa Francesco, vero?

«Ad oggi no. Abbiamo delle vittime che non sono risarcite né seguite, e i sacerdoti non vengono nemmeno più spretati. Localmente le diocesi continuano a insabbiare questi casi, a fare il solito lavoro di stalking nei confronti delle vittime. Per i vescovi portare brutte notizie in Vaticano non è una bella cosa».

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 apologizes for ‘sacrilegious cult’ of Church’s sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
GMA Network (Philippines)

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis, in his strongest words ever on the sexual abuse of minors by Roman Catholic clerics, told victims on Monday that the abuse was “camouflaged with a complicity” and begged forgiveness.

In the homily of a Mass with six victims of abuse, he said the Catholic Church “must weep and make reparation” for what it did to victims and begged forgiveness for what he said had become “a sacrilegious cult” that profaned God. —Reuters

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 slams Church ‘complicity’ in sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
Bangkok Post

AFP

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis slammed the “complicity” of Catholic Church leaders in covering up sexual abuse on Monday, after his first meeting with victims of paedophile priests.

Pope Francis leads a mass at St Peter’s basilica in the Vatican, on June 29, 2014

The pope told the six he was sorry for “the sins and grave crimes of clerical sexual abuse committed against you”.

“So much time hidden, camouflaged, with a complicity that cannot be explained.”

“I know that these wounds are a source of deep and often unrelenting emotional and spiritual pain, and even despair. Some have even had to deal with the terrible tragedy of the death of a loved one by suicide,” he added.

“The deaths of these so beloved children of God weigh upon the heart and my conscience and that of the whole Church,” the 77-year-old 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.

Pope Francis holds his first meeting with clergy sex abuse survivors

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

[open letter to the pope from four survivors of clergy abuse in Argentina]

BY MICHELLE BOORSTEIN July 7

Pope Francis met for the first time Monday with people sexually abused by priests, reportedly saying Mass with six survivors and then meeting privately with each for half an hour.

Immediate details were scarce, as representatives of the survivors and the Vatican said they’d not discuss the meeting until afterwards. Even the names of the survivors were not released; two each came from Great Britain, Ireland and Germany.

Vatican blogger Rocco Palmo reported that half were men and half were women. Reuters reported that the meeting was at the pope’s Vatican residence.

In April, Francis asked for forgiveness for “the damage” done by clergy abusers and created a commission, half of whose named members are women. One of the women is a survivor.

But survivors and their advocates – particularly in Argentina – have been critical of the pope, saying he never met with victims in his many years as a church leader there and didn’t comply with the Vatican’s demand that countries create guidelines for handling sex-abuse allegations.

No Argentine survivors were included in Monday’s meeting. It wasn’t clear how people were picked to attend.

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 meets with victims abused by priests

VATICAN CITY
The Journal News

[with video]

Eric J. Lyman, Special for USA TODAY 8:41 a.m. EDT July 7, 2014

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis met and prayed with six European victims of pedophile priests for the first time Monday, in what is being cast as a gesture designed to help change the mentality toward sexual abuse scandals that have severely tarnished the church’s image.

The encounter with victims from Britain, Ireland and Germany was low key. The victims met the pope briefly Sunday night, according to Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi, and then joined him for a private Mass on Monday morning. After that, he met with each in his private apartment for about 30 minutes of informal discussions about their individual experiences.

The Vatican did not release the names of the victims, and none attended Lombardi’s briefing to the media. However, the Vatican quoted Francis as expressing “sorrow” for the “sins and grave crimes” of the clerical abuse against them.

“I beg your forgiveness, too, for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately” to reports of sex abuse, the pope said.

The meetings are significant because it is the first time Francis — at least officially — has met with the victims of clerical sex abuse. It is also the first time such victims have met with a pontiff on the Vatican grounds.

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 begs abuse victims to forgive

VATICAN CITY
Irish Independent

Pope Francis has begged forgiveness from the victims of clergy sex abuse in his first meeting with abuse survivors.

The Vatican quoted Francis as expressing “sorrow” in his homily at a private Mass with six victims today for the “sins and grave crimes” of clerical sex abuse against them.

The Pope added: “I beg your forgiveness, too, for the sins of omission on the part of Church leaders who did not respond adequately.”

Earlier, Vatican spokesman the Reverend Federico Lombardi said two Irish, two British and two German victims had met separately for about 30 minutes apiece with Francis at the pope’s Vatican hotel.

He said Francis had already greeted the six on Sunday evening at dinner.

Other abuse survivors not at the meeting said the encounter will not ease complaints that the Vatican has failed to punish bishops and other prelates who systemically covered up the abuse of minors.

A German survivor advocacy spokesman, Norbert Denef, called the meeting “nothing more than a PR event”.

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URGENT – Pope Clerical Abuse Forgiveness

VATICAN CITY
KSPR

(CNN) — Pope Francis on Monday asked for forgiveness for the sins of church leaders who didn’t “respond adequately” to reports of clerical abuse. During a Mass with six victims of clerical sexual abuse, Francis said: “I beg your forgiveness, too, for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse made by family members, as well as by abuse victims themselves. This led to even greater suffering on the part of those who were abused and it endangered other minors who were at risk.”

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 to sex abuse victims: I beg your forgiveness

VATICAN CITY
Miami Herald

BY FRANCES D’EMILIO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has begged forgiveness from the victims of clergy sex abuse in his first meeting with several abuse survivors.

The Vatican quoted Francis as expressing “sorrow” in his homily at a private Mass with six victims Monday for the “sins and grave crimes” of clerical sex abuse against them.

Added the pope: “I beg your forgiveness, too, for the sins of omission on the part of Church leaders who did not respond adequately” to sex abuse reports.

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HOMILY OF POPE FRANCIS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

HOLY MASS IN THE CHAPEL OF THE DOMUS SANCTAE MARTHAE WITH A GROUP OF CLERGY SEX ABUSE VICTIMS

Monday, 7 July 2014

The scene where Peter sees Jesus emerge after a terrible interrogation… Peter whose eyes meet the gaze of Jesus and weeps… This scene comes to my mind as I look at you, and think of so many men and women, boys and girls. I feel the gaze of Jesus and I ask for the grace to weep, the grace for the Church to weep and make reparation for her sons and daughters who betrayed their mission, who abused innocent persons. Today, I am very grateful to you for having travelled so far to come here.

For some time now I have felt in my heart deep pain and suffering. So much time hidden, camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained until someone realized that Jesus was looking and others the same… and they set about to sustain that gaze.

And those few who began to weep have touched our conscience for this crime and grave sin. This is what causes me distress and pain at the fact that some priests and bishops, by sexually abusing minors, violated their innocence and their own priestly vocation. It is something more than despicable actions. It is like a sacrilegious cult, because these boys and girls had been entrusted to the priestly charism in order to be brought to God. And those people sacrificed them to the idol of their own concupiscence. They profane the very image of God in whose likeness we were created. Childhood, as we all know, young hearts, so open and trusting, have their own way of understanding the mysteries of God’s love and are eager to grow in the faith. Today the heart of the Church looks into the eyes of Jesus in these boys and girls and wants to weep; she asks the grace to weep before the execrable acts of abuse which have left life long scars.

I know that these wounds are a source of deep and often unrelenting emotional and spiritual pain, and even despair. Many of those who have suffered in this way have also sought relief in the path of addiction. Others have experienced difficulties in significant relationships, with parents, spouses and children. Suffering in families has been especially grave, since the damage provoked by abuse affects these vital family relationships.

Some have even had to deal with the terrible tragedy of the death of a loved one by suicide. The deaths of these so beloved children of God weigh upon the heart and my conscience and that of the whole Church. To these families I express my heartfelt love and sorrow. Jesus, tortured and interrogated with passionate hatred, is taken to another place and he looks out. He looks out upon one of his own torturers, the one who denied him, and he makes him weep. Let us implore this grace together with that of making amends.

Sins of clerical sexual abuse against minors have a toxic effect on faith and hope in God. Some of you have held fast to faith, while for others the experience of betrayal and abandonment has led to a weakening of faith in God. Your presence here speaks of the miracle of hope, which prevails against the deepest darkness. Surely it is a sign of God’s mercy that today we have this opportunity to encounter one another, to adore God, to look in one another’s eyes and seek the grace of reconciliation.

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.

Conspiracies target Maltese economist at the Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Malta Independent

Monday, 07 July 2014
by John Cordina

As a fresh shake-up – the second in as many years – appears imminent at the Vatican Bank, Maltese economist Joseph F.X. Zahra, entrusted by Pope Francis to serve in two entities seeking to reform the bank and the Vatican’s economic affairs, is facing accusations of being at the centre of a conspiracy.

According to sources which spoke to Italian newspaper Il Giornale and news magazine L’Espresso, Mr Zahra is heading a so-called “Maltese lobby” which is seeking to gain control over the Vatican Bank – whose official name is the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR) – for their financial gain.

When contacted by The Malta Independent, Mr Zahra categorically rejected the accusations, but also said that they were to be expected given his involvement in the reform process of a financial institution whose history has often been marked by controversy.

“A clear mandate for reforms was given to the Reform Commission by Pope Francis last year. Sadly these are the expected reactions that one gets during a reform process. Experience has shown that a price one pays in any reform is that of fabricated stories and other allegations that are aimed at eroding credibility of the reform process.”

Mr Zahra stressed that he was not in a position to comment on the workings of the two entities the Pope appointed him to serve in, but a report on La Repubblica – a sister newspaper to L’Espresso – suggests that he may have been caught up in the crossfire as factions within the Holy See are divided over the direction the reforms should take.

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Irish abuse survivor describes meeting with Pope as a ‘huge vindication’

VATICAN CITY
Irish Independent

Sarah Mac Donald
Published 07/07/2014

ONE of the two Irish survivors of abuse who met Pope Francis this morning in the Vatican has described the meeting as a “huge vindication” for her.

Marie Kane, who has never spoken publicly about the abuse she suffered at the hands a curate in the archdiocese of Dublin, told the Irish Independent that the meeting with the Pope would help bring her healing.

“It was pretty amazing. There were no time constraints on the meeting and the only others in the room were Marie Collins, who came as a support to me and [Cardinal] Sean O’Malley who acted as translator,” she said.

In all six survivors of abuse, two from Ireland, two from Britain and two from Germany met the Pope individually this morning, the first official meeting the pontiff has held since his election in March 2013. The other Irish survivor was a man. His identity remains unclear at the moment.

According to Marie Kane, the Pope “listened intently” to her and “at times seemed frustrated by what he was hearing” about her experiences. Her case was covered in the Murphy Report into the mishandling of allegations of clerical abuse in the archdiocese of Dublin. Her abuser was taken out of ministry but has not been defrocked.

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.

An ex-priest faces a trial re St Stanislaus College, Bathurst, NSW

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

A former Catholic priest has been committed to stand trial in the Sydney District Court on 10 counts of indecently assaulting a male. The order, involving former priest Peter John Ryan, 71, now living in western Sydney, was made on 30 June 2014 by a magistrates court. The alleged victim was a student of St Stanislaus College boys’ school, New South Wales.

The magistrate, in Bathurst Local Court, placed Ryan on a list for a preliminary procedure, to be held soon with a judge in Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court. The Sydney judge would then schedule the Ryan case for subsequent steps in the prosecution process, probably months later.

The Bathurst magistrate authoritesed Ryan to remain on bail. The bail conditions include Ryan reporting to a particular Sydney police station twice a week. He is banned from approaching or contacting the alleged victim and any prosecution witnesses.

Ryan was charged earlier in 2014 by police officers attached to Strike Force Belle, which was established in 2008 to investigate allegations regarding St Stanislaus’ College at Bathurst, 200 kilometres west of Sydney, in the 1970s and 1980s.

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C9 to meet again in September and draft text on Curia reform is not available yet

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

During this week’s meeting, the Council of Cardinals discussed the IOR, the Governorate, the Secretariat of State and the role of women, lay people and couples in the Vatican. Procedures for the appointment of bishops were also discussed.The overall tone of the meeting was “free, frank and friendly”

IACOPO SCARAMUZZI
VATICAN CITY

The nine cardinals assisting the Pope with the reform of the Roman Curia and the government of the universal Church, the “C9” as it is called, will meet again in September following a four-day meeting, which ran from Tuesday to today, the fifth since the start of the pontificate. Other meetings will also be held in December and February but it is not certain that the February gathering will give birth to the new apostolic constitution that would replace the “Pastor Bonus”, the blueprint for the Vatican’s various congregations, pontifical councils and offices. The Pope and his cardinal advisors discussed the role of women, lay people and married couples in the Roman Curia and of the Nunciatures, with a focus on the process for the nomination of bishops. In terms of the IOR, changes are expected in the Institute’s governance and these will be presented at a press conference with Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican Secretary of the Economy, next Wednesday.

The C9 will next meet from 15 to 17 September, from 9 to 11 December and from 9 to 11 February, the Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi said during a press briefing. But Fr. Lombardi did not confirm whether the Council of Cardinals would conclude its work at the last of these meetings: “It is too premature to say whether it is the final meeting,” he said. “No drafts have been produced for a new apostolic constitution,” Fr. Lombardi said. “We are moving along at a steady pace but more time is needed” before the Council concludes its work. The Vatican spokesman denied one journalist’s suggestion that the work of the C9 is slowing down. The downside of an assembly that “represents the Church and all its various components across various continents and throughout the world” is that meetings cannot “last that long” and the group’s work “cannot be completed quickly.” There is no sense of urgency in the process of Church reform but the Pope is, of course, free to decide to speed things up.

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STL priest abuse civil trial begins

MISSOURI
KSDK

ST. LOUIS (AP) – A civil lawsuit against the Archdiocese of St. Louis and a former Catholic priest accused of sexual misconduct goes to trial Monday in a case that could reveal further details on hundreds of abuse complaints against church employees over decades.

A 22-year-old woman identified only as Jane Doe is accusing Joseph Ross of molesting her as a small girl when she attended St. Cronan Church between 1997 and 2001. It’s one of only two child sexual abuse cases against the St. Louis archdiocese to go to trial without being dismissed our settled out of court.

The woman’s lawyers hope to introduce evidence from other abuse complaints after the archdiocese was ordered to turn over records in those cases, but the judge has set limits on the use of that information.

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Pope Francis meets Irish clerical sex abuse victims at Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Irish Central

Patrick Counihan @irishcentral July 07, 2014

Pope Francis has concluded his first meeting with victims of clerical abuse – two of them from Ireland.

Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley was present when the Pontiff met six clerical abuse survivors from Ireland, Britain and Germany in Rome.

Cardinal O’Malley had earlier attended a meeting of the so-called G8 council of cardinals on reforming the governance of the Catholic Church.

The American cardinal and other members of the Child Protection Commission, including Irish survivor Marie Collins, were expected to attend the papal Mass.

The Pope met the victims as a Vatican commission moves to address the problem of clerical sex abuse in developing countries.

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Pope meets victims of sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
IOL

July 7 2014
By Philip Pullella

Vatican City – Pope Francis holds his first meeting with victims of sexual abuse by priests on Monday, an encounter that some say should have happened long ago, and victims from his native Argentina say they are pained over their exclusion.

Six victims, two each from Ireland, Britain and Germany, will attend the pope’s private morning Mass in his Vatican residence and then meet with him afterwards, according to people who organised the meeting.

Francis has said he would show zero tolerance for anyone in the Catholic Church who abused children, including bishops, and compared sexual abuse of children by priests to a “Satanic Mass”.

But he has also come under fire from victims groups for saying in an interview this year that the Roman Catholic Church has done more than any other organisation to root out paedophiles in its ranks.

Why the pope waited nearly 16 months since his election in March 2013 to meet with sexual abuse victims is not clear, particularly as his predecessor, former Pope Benedict, met several times with them during his trips outside Italy. …

“I think its very important that the pope meet with victims,” said Anne Doyle of Bishops Accountability, a US-based documentation centre on abuse in the Catholic Church.

“We know that this pope is capable of compassion and his refusal to meet with sexual abuse victims so far has been inconsistent with the mercy he has shown with so many marginalised. This is something that he had to rectify,” she said.

Victims groups have said the pope had a spotty record of dealing with abuse cases in Argentina when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires, and victims from that country sent him a letter asking him why they were not invited.

“This fact pains us,” four victims of sexual abuse by priests said in a letter sent to the pope and made available to Reuters.

“You must know the things that happen here and why the victims have been fighting for so many years, as well as the new cases that are surfacing,” said the letter, signed by four victims.

Doyle, of Bishops Accountability, said the pope should quickly follow up with “several core actions” to show that the meeting is not merely ceremonial.

“He definitely must explicitly tell his bishops that all Church officials must report crimes and suspected crimes to civil authorities,” pointing that in a number of developing countries it is up to the victim to report sexual crimes.

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How did paedophilia come to be such a problem in Britain?

UNITED KINGDOM
The Spectator

Alexander Chancellor

One problem from which I am confident I don’t suffer is paedophilia. I have always liked picking up babies and hugging them, especially my own children or grandchildren, but never in the ‘Rolfie deserves a cuddle’ kind of way. The idea of sexually lusting after children seems to me not only abhorrent but almost unimaginable. If anything is against nature, it must be to regard children as sexual objects.

I have always known of course, that paedophiles exist. I was aware of it when, as an eight-year-old, I went to a prep school in Berkshire where the headmaster would snog the prettiest boys (alas, not me) in their dormitory beds and where the violin teacher had a habit of placing his hand on my thigh. But this was fairly innocuous stuff, and only later did I learn that some paedophiles have urges so strong that they will not or cannot keep them within tolerable bounds.

Accordingly, parental panic about paedophilia has sometimes brought about controversial responses such as ‘Megan’s Law’ in the United States, which decreed that the identities of convicted sexual offenders should be made known to their neighbours, and such as Rebekah Brooks’s copycat campaign in the News of the World for the ‘naming and shaming’ of such people in Britain. But neither had any perceptible effect on the amount of sex offending that went on, and even Brooks herself later admitted that her campaign ‘could have been done better’ and that it had ‘carried risks of vigilantism’.

In addition to all that, we all became aware in recent years of the many cases of the sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests and of the shock that this created within the Church (possibly, in my opinion, being a significant factor in the abdication of Pope Benedict XVI, who in his previous Vatican job as Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith had to read all the revolting dossiers on this scandal pouring in from around the world). Nevertheless, despite everything, I had continued to regard paedophilia as something that didn’t affect most people, a perversion confined to an unfortunate few, and an evil that was at least limited in its effects.

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Pope Francis holds first meeting with sex abuse victims

VATICAN CITY
BBC news

Pope Francis has met the victims of sexual abuse by priests for the first time since his election last year.

He received the six victims – two each from Ireland, Britain and Germany – at his residence after they attended a private morning Mass in the Vatican.

The Pope has vowed to punish clergy who have abused children, describing their actions as “satanic”.

The Church has been heavily criticised for failing to tackle abuse, following a series of scandals worldwide.

Some victims have also criticised Pope Francis for having failed to meet their representatives sooner.

The Pope’s predecessor, Pope Benedict, met abuse victims several times on trips outside Italy.

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Pope meeting abuse victims in Vatican

VATICAN CITY
RTE News

Pope Francis is, for the first time, meeting survivors of clerical child sexual abuse, including two Irish victims, in the Vatican today.

The meetings are taking place in the guest house inside the Vatican where the Pontiff lives.

They follow sharp exchanges earlier this year between UN panels and the Holy See over the Catholic Church’s cover-ups of many abuse scandals.

There has been no official confirmation of today’s encounters, but Pope Francis broke with protocol last May by revealing his plans to meet abuse survivors around now.

RTÉ News understands he is holding one-to-one meetings with six unnamed guests: a female and a male survivor each from Ireland, England and Germany.

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Few punishments for those who fail to report abuse

COLORADO
The Denver Post

By Jordan Steffen
The Denver Post
POSTED: 07/05/2014

Investigators would have found numerous inappropriate photos of a 13-year-old girl posted on the walls of her math teacher’s office, but administrators at her Douglas County school never called them.

At least two students and their parents warned school officials about an inappropriate relationship between the teacher and his student. But instead of calling law enforcement or child welfare services — as required under a state law to help prevent child abuse — two former administrators at Rocky Heights Middle School punished children who reported the abuse, and failed to trigger an investigation that could have stopped the 30-year-old from preying on the girl for months before he raped her for the first time, according to a lawsuit filed by the girl’s parents.

Mandatory reporters, like the school’s then-principal, Patricia Dierberger, and assistant principal, James McMurphy, are required by law to report suspected child abuse. Failing to do so can result in criminal charges and up to six months in jail. But Dierberger and McMurphy will likely never face that charge or punishment for their alleged inaction.

In fact, few mandatory reporters — such as teachers, nurses, coaches and clergy members — ever face punishment for failing to report suspected child abuse, a Denver Post review has found. And the punishment for failing to report can be as little as $50.

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Pope Francis has unfinished business on abuse

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Michael Kelly
Published 07/07/2014

When Pope Francis meets survivors of clerical sexual abuse today it will be the Pontiff’s first opportunity to hear of their suffering first-hand. The carefully planned encounter, which takes place in the Vatican guesthouse where the Pope has made his home, will be an opportunity for survivors to underline the fact that church mishandling of complaints against priests compounded their suffering.

Vatican officials see the meeting as a key moment in reassuring survivors that the Vatican and the Pope is determined to continue to act decisively on the issue of abuse. The Pontiff will surely be in listening mode, and survivors are likely to speak not only of their experiences of abuse but also to impress upon the Vatican what still needs to be done.

Everyone acknowledges that in places like Ireland, Britain and the US, the church now has first-rate policies in place to deal with abuse. But there is significant unfinished business that Pope Francis will have to tackle if his strong words on abuse are to be taken seriously.

For a start, the church’s ‘zero tolerance’ stance on abuse is undermined by the fact that, while abusive priests are immediately removed and reported to the civil authorities, there has been no meaningful sanction taken against bishops who have been shown to have covered up abuse.

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Timothy Cardinal Dolan deposed in the case of ex-Missouri priest on trial for allegedly molesting girl

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Dolan confirmed the deposition, but declined to comment. In June, he was grilled in the case of Joseph Ross, a former pastor. Ross was kicked out of the church in 2002 after Dolan began overseeing claims of abuse against the Archdiocese of St. Louis.

BY BILL HUTCHINSON NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Monday, July 7, 2014,

Timothy Cardinal Dolan has been deposed in the case of a defrocked Missouri priest facing a civil trial Monday for molesting a girl beginning when she was 5.

Dolan was grilled last month in the St. Louis case of Joseph Ross, the former pastor of St. Cronan Church. Ross pleaded guilty in 1986 to misdemeanor sexual abuse of a young boy. Despite his conviction, he was allowed to remain a priest for a decade.

He was kicked out of the church in 2002 after Dolan began overseeing claims of abuse against the Archdiocese of St. Louis. Dolan confirmed the deposition, but declined to comment.

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Michael Connolly: ‘I grew up in a republican area, I couldn’t go and tell the RUC’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

07 JULY 2014

The Clerical Abuse NI campaigner has vowed never to rest until the Stormont Executive takes responsibility for victims like himself failed by the state. He is demanding an overarching inquiry into clerical abuse, he tells Joanne Sweeney.

Q. What’s the current situation with the Clerical Abuse NI campaign?

A. The be-all and end-all of all of this is that we want a clerical abuse inquiry. I was abused by a parish priest in the village of Donagh in Co Fermanagh, where I grew up — Canon Peter Duffy. But I also have to join with all the other victims in Northern Ireland who have been left out of the Historical Abuse Inquiry that’s currently taking place in Banbridge, Co Down.

Q. What’s the current state of play?

A. I’m not hopeful. It’s very disappointing that the Northern Ireland government has refused, despite our best efforts, to even respond to the meeting that took place with Junior Ministers Jennifer McCann and Jonathan Bell well over a year ago now. I’ve recently written directly to the first and deputy first minister and the response has not been anything better than I’ve been receiving over the last year.

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July 6, 2014

Pope Francis to Meet Sex Abuse Victims of Paedophile Priests for the 1st Time; Compares Abuse to a Satanic Mass

VATICAN CITY
International Business Times

By Vittorio Hernandez | July 7, 2014

Pope Francis will make history again on Monday, July 7, by being the first head of the Roman Catholic Church to meet with sex victims of paedophile priests. The move represents a big leap forward for the church which had been accused in the past of covering up the sex abuse cases involving clergy by moving those accused to other parishes or dioceses and not cooperating with authorities.

The pontiff will meet with six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland at his private residence. Victim support groups, however, has criticised the pope for not acting earlier.

Along with the meeting, a Vatican commission created by Pope Francis is moving to address the problem, especially in developing countries. The commission is made up of experts from eight countries, including sex abuse victims Marie Collins from Ireland who was assaulted by a hospital chaplain when she was 13 years old, a German psychologist, an Italian cannon law professor, British and French psychiatrists and Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston where a sex abuse scandal broke in 2002.

The meeting could possibly open up the commission to experts from developing nations and the Southern Hemisphere where paedophilia is considered taboo and there is less openness in reporting sex abuse cases.

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Editorial: Judicial subcommittee should not mess with General Rule 15

WASHINGTON
Seattle Times

Seattle Times Editorial

THE Washington state Constitution is unequivocal about public access to courts. Section 10 reads, “Justice in all cases shall be administered openly, and without unnecessary delay.”

But in practice, it is not so simple. There is an obvious tension between institutional transparency and individual requests for privacy. Courts, for example, protect psychiatric-commitment records and allow plaintiffs in sensitive civil cases to proceed with initials only, yet they conduct child welfare hearings in the open.

That balancing act is now threatened by a disturbing proposal to throw the blanket of secrecy over a vastly larger set of court records. A judicial subcommittee has proposed a change to a court rule, General Rule 15, which was heard on Monday by the full Supreme Court. The court should reject the change.

The proposal lowers the legal threshold for sealing an array of records, particularly in civil cases, and it would grant near-total secrecy to criminal cases that don’t end in a conviction.

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Funeral plans for Father Robinson creating controversy

OHIO
NBC 24

TOLEDO — A plan to hold a traditional funeral reserved for Catholic priests for Father Gerald Robinson is raising controversy among parishioners. Robinson is the priest who was convicted in 2006 of murdering Sister Margaret Ann Pahl just before Easter in 1980.

Despite being found guilty of killing Sister Pahl, Father Gerald Robinson remained an ordained priest in the Roman Catholic Church until his death last Friday. In a statement released Saturday, the Catholic Diocese of Toledo said Robinson will receive the ceremony reserved for all priests at the time of their passing.

Full statement from the Catholic Diocese of Toledo:

Father Gerald Robinson, a priest of the Diocese of Toledo died July 4, 2014. He was ordained May 30, 1964 and served across the diocese during his ministry.

At the time of his death, Father Robinson was in the custody of the Ohio Department of Corrections following his conviction for murder in 2006.

Father Robinson’s funeral will follow the usual protocol for a diocesan priest’s funeral. Diocesan Administrator Father Charles Ritter said “Whether in the eyes of God Father Robinson was or was not guilty of this crime, I do not know. I do know that he is the work of God’s hands, as are we all. He was a sinner, as are we all. He was a baptized member of the body of Christ, and he was, and remains an ordained priest of the Roman Catholic Church. This is the context in which his funeral will take place. “

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Religious institutions a playground for abuse

UNITED STATES
Central Florida Future

By Kendra Semmen, Staff ColumnistOn July 6, 2014

Church is a place you should feel safe leaving your children at, but reports of child abuse go beyond the Catholic church to affect almost every religion.

People may want to think twice before sending their children to Sunday school, or any church activities, if parents aren’t in the vicinity to ensure protection.

In the U.S., 16,787 people have said that they were abused as children by priests between 1950 and 2012, according to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, as reported by PBS. However, child abuse within the church isn’t exclusive to the Catholic denomination.

A lawsuit was filed in May that stated that a missionary with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints abused a woman in the mid-1980s, according to The Desert Sun.

And although Jehovah’s Witnesses don’t have Sunday school, child abuse still goes on. A woman was awarded $28 million by a jury after reporting being abused by a congregant in the North Fremont Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Northern California in 2012, according to The New York Times.

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Here’s What You Need To Know About Doe vs. Ross; Case Challenges Catholic Church On Abuse

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Public Radio

[with copy of the lawsuit]

By RACHEL LIPPMANN

It’s been more than a decade since the sexual abuse scandal roiling the Catholic Church became public. From the very beginning, the church hierarchy has faced one main criticism – that it was more committed to protecting abusive priests than protecting potential victims. That complaint was bolstered by revelations that church officials ignored credible accusations against priests, shuffling them from parish to parish, all the while failing to tell parishioners about accusations and even convictions.

Monday, in circuit court in downtown St. Louis, jury selection gets underway in Doe vs. Ross – a civil case that accuses the St. Louis Archdiocese of exactly that kind of negligence.

This is not the first time the Archdiocese of St. Louis has faced these allegations. Rebecca Randles, an attorney who has handled priest sexual assault cases throughout Missouri, said at least 80 cases have either been settled or otherwise disposed of in St. Louis. This rundown is meant to outline this particular case – Doe vs. Ross – which Randles said is only the second case in Missouri to go to trial.

WHO ARE THE PARTIES INVOLVED?

Joseph Ross – A defrocked priest now living in Little Rock, Ark., according to court records.

The Archdiocese of St. Louis – The non-profit corporation that serves as the seat of the Catholic Church in St. Louis.

Archbishop Robert Carlson – The man in charge of the day-to-day operations of the non-profit corporation known as the Archdiocese of St. Louis. Carlson was dismissed as a party to the suit in April 2014.

Jane Doe 92 ­– The pseudonym for a young Catholic woman who claims that Joseph Ross repeatedly raped and sodomized her between 1997 and 2001 while he was a priest at St. Cronan in the Botanical Heights neighborhood. Doe was 19 when she filed this suit in 2011.

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Pope Francis Just Took a Major Step Forward in Addressing Sexual Abuse by Priests

VATICAN CITY
Mic

By Eileen Shim

The news: Since Francis’s papacy began last February, he’s vowed to fix the Catholic Church’s ongoing issues with sexual abuse. And while critics argue he’s been relatively quiet on the issue, on Monday Pope Francis will be taking an important step towards addressing the issue: meeting with survivors of sexual abuse by Catholic priests.

Six survivors from Britain, Germany and Ireland will say mass with the pope at his personal chapel and enjoy a private audience with him afterwards. This will be Francis’ first meeting with sexual abuse victims. His predecessors, Benedict XVI and John Paul II, did so several times but failed to make any real progress on the problem. But with a progressive track record in his young papacy, Francis may have an easier time affecting real change on this terrible problem.

The pope is renewing efforts to address the scandal. Monday’s encounter will follow the meeting of the pope’s special international commission to advise him on the issue and develop plans to address the problems. In May, Francis also announced that three bishops were under investigation, although he didn’t clarify whether they were accused of abuse or for covering up other priests’ crimes.

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Pope Francis To Meet With Victims Of Clerical Sex Abuse

VATICAN CITY
NPR

[with audio]

The pontiff will meet with six survivors Monday. Correspondent Sylvia Poggioli tells NPR’s Linda Wertheimer the pope has been criticized for being slow to address the issue of sex abuse by priests.

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR News. I’m Linda Wertheimer. Tomorrow, Pope Francis will meet, for the first time, with survivors of clerical sex abuse. The meeting will be at his Vatican residence. His decision to meet with six European survivors comes after criticism that this pope has been slow to speak out on an issue that has severely damaged the credibility of the Catholic Church. NPR’s Sylvia Poggioli is with us now on the line from Rome. Sylvia, hello.

SYLVIA POGGIOLI, BYLINE: Hello, Linda.

WERTHEIMER: So this meeting with survivors is a private one. And I understand that the Vatican has not released any details about it. Do you know who’s going to be there?

POGGIOLI: There’ll be six people – two each from Britain, Germany and Ireland. The victims are in the 30’s age bracket, which suggests their abuse occurred 15, 20 years – maybe more. They will attend a mass in the chapel in the pope’s residence. And then they’ll have an opportunity to give Pope Francis a first-hand account of their suffering. Each group will be accompanied by a member of the pope’s commission on the protection of minors. One of the escorts will be Marie Collins, the Irish woman who was abused by a priest at the age of 13.

WERTHEIMER: Rachel Martin spoke with Marie Collins not very long ago on this program. Sylvia, the Vatican was criticized this year by two United Nations committees. What did the committees say?

POGGIOLI: Well, the U.N. committees on the rights of the child and against torture accused the Vatican of systematically following policies that allowed priests to rape and molest tens of thousands of children worldwide and blasted the practice of transferring suspects from one parish to another to cover up their crimes. In an interview, Pope Francis defended the church, saying it tackled the issue with the utmost transparency and responsibility. …

WERTHEIMER: Sylvia, what was Pope Francis’s record on the issue of sex abuse before he was pope when he was Bishop of Buenos Aries?

POGGIOLI: Little was known in English-speaking world until the Boston-based group bishopaccountability.org recently published a report showing that when Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio was president of the Argentine Bishops Conference, the future Pope Francis was silent on the issue. In the book he wrote together with his friend Rabbi Abraham Skorka, then-Cardinal Bergoglio says there were no cases in his diocese. And when a bishop called him for advice, he told him not to allow the suspect to exercise as a priest and to start a canonical trial. But according to this new report, Bergoglio was aware of at least four cases in Argentina. And his former spokesman says the cardinal declined to meet with the victims. The report says it would have been particularly appropriate for Argentine victims to be present at the meeting with the pope tomorrow.

WERTHEIMER: There also are not going to be any abuse survivors from the United States at that meeting. And that is, of course – the entire scandal first erupted here back in 2002.

POGGIOLI: Yeah. And that’s also surprising because the person who heads the pope’s commission on protection of minors is Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, who has worked hard to try to restore credibility to the archdiocese where the scandal first exploded. Now presumably, Cardinal O’Malley had a lot to do with selecting the participants in this meeting tomorrow. So the absence of American victims is striking.

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Child-porn priest retires but gets church accommodation

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 6 July 2014)

A senior priest at a prominent Australian Catholic school has admitted accessing and possessing child pornography. Now, in July 2014, a church spokesman has announced that this priest will retire from active ministry. However, the church will continue to give him regular financial support and accommodation.

Father Stanislaus John Hogan, 69, who has long been associated with Saint Ignatius College in Adelaide (plus prominent Catholic schools in Sydney and Melbourne), appeared in the Adelaide Magistrates Court on 6 March 2014.

He pleaded guilty to one count of using a carriage service to access child pornography and one aggravated count of possessing child pornography. He is still waiting to be sentenced.

The offences happened at Athelstone (the Adelaide suburb where the St Ignatius College is located) between April 2012 and August 2013.

St Ignatius College is a school of the Catholic religious order of Jesuit priests (officially called “the Society of Jesus”), and Father Stanislaus Hogan, SJ, is a member of that order.

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Former school priest to stand trial in August

AUSTRALIA
Western Advocate

July 7, 2014

A FORMER priest and St Stanislaus’ College form master has been committed to stand trial in the District Court on 10 counts of indecently assaulting a male.

The matter involving Peter John Ryan, now 71, of Newington, was before magistrate Michael Allen in Bathurst Local Court.

Ryan appeared in court in person.

Ryan was charged earlier this year by officers attached to Strike Force Belle, which was established in 2008 to investigate allegations of a paedophile ring at St Stanislaus’ College and All Saints’ College in the 1970s and 1980s.

On Monday, Mr Allen committed Ryan for trial to the District Court, with the matter now listed for callover on August 13 at 9:30am before the District Court at Sydney’s Downing Centre.

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Trial begins Monday in St. Louis priest sexual abuse case

MISSOURI
Fox 2

POSTED 11:04 AM, JULY 6, 2014, BY STAFF WRITER

ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI)- Trial is set to begin Monday in the civil case against a former Archdiocese of St. Louis priest accused of sexual abuse. According to the suit, Father Joseph Ross is accused of sexually molesting a female parishioner in the late 1990s and early 2000s when she was just five to six years old. Ross was assigned to St. Cronan Church in the city of St. Louis. The suit names both the priest and the archdiocese.

The Ross case is scheduled to go to trial July 7 at the Carnahan Courthouse in downtown St. Louis.

Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said in a statement, “We are grateful to the brave and persistent victim in this case. Her courage will inspire others to get help and expose Catholic officials who commit and conceal heinous crimes against children.”

According to our partners at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Ross case is only the second child sexual abuse case against the archdiocese to make it to trial.

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Father Robinson to be given priest’s funeral

OHIO
13 ABC

[with video]

Father Gerald Robinson will be given the usual funeral for a priest in the Toledo Diocese according to Diocesan Administrator Father Charles Ritter.

Robinson died on July 4. He was convicted of the 1980 murder of Sister Margaret Pahl in 2006 and was serving 15 years to life in prison at the time of his death.

Robinson was ordained as a priest in 1964 and served across the diocese until he was brought to trial for murder.

In a statement Father Ritter said said, “Whether in the eyes of God Father Robinson was or was not guilty of this crime, I do not know. I do know that he is the work of God’s hands, as are we all. He was a sinner, as are we all. He was a baptized member of the body of Christ, and he was, and remains an ordained priest of the Roman Catholic Church. This is the context in which his funeral will take place.”

Not everyone shared Father Ritter’s feeling. Georgiane Warren, a parishioner at Little Flower Catholic Church said, “I think it’s very unfair to the family of the woman he murdered. I wish he would’ve said I’m sorry and he did it. Then I would be fine if they gave him a priest’s funeral.”

Others said that it was between Robinson and the Lord now.

Claudia Vercelotti of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests takes issues with the decision saying that Robinson did not deserve the same treatment as other priests who have passed away. “I would hope that somebody in a position to make a better decision would strongly reconsider a funeral that we give priests in good standing in this community, being given to a convicted murderer who violently heinously struck down the life of an innocent elderly religious woman.”

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MO–Predator priest case starts tomorrow

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Sunday, July 6

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

A clergy child sexual abuse and cover up trial is set to begin tomorrow, only the second in St. Louis history and the first since 1999. We are grateful to the brave and persistent victim in this case. Her courage will inspire others to get help and expose Catholic officials who commit and conceal heinous crimes against children.

We suspect that dozens of local families have suffered and are suffering because Catholic officials hid and enabled Ross’ crimes.

[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]

This is the first such trial in the St. Louis area

–since 1999,
–in which the archbishop was punished for contempt and secrecy before the trial even begins, &
–in which a judge ordered Catholic officials to give thousands of pages of long secret church records to a victim.

Fr. Joseph D. Ross has a long history of abuse and sexual misconduct and for decades, Catholic officials hid his crimes. In 1988, Ross plead guilty to sexual assaulting an 11 year old boy. At that time he admitted he had molested one child in the 1970s.

Still, despite his admission and conviction, St. Louis Catholic officials quietly put him back on the job around unsuspecting parishioners at St. Cronan’s church in south St. Louis city where he sexually assaulted another child.

Here’s how BishopAccountability.org – a credible, independent, research-based website – summarizes Ross’ clerical career: “Pled guilty 1988 to sexual assault of 11 yr old boy 12/86. Sentenced to 2 yrs probation and treatment. Admitted then he had been accused of molesting one youth in 1970s & had also been arrested for propositioning a police officer & public indecency. Allowed to return to work. Removed 3/02. Civil suit filed 11/02 alleged abuse of 14 yr old boy in 1977. Laicization announced 8/02. Arrested 9/08 on new charges from 2000. Crim. charges dropped 8/10. Lives in AR. New suit filed 10/11 re abuse of girl.”

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NY–Cardinal Dolan is deposed, trial starts Monday

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Sunday, July 6

For more info: Mary Caplan of New York City ( 917 439 4187, mcaplan682@aol.com ), Barbara Dorris 314 503 0003, SNAPdorris@gmail.com or David Clohessy 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Cardinal Dolan is deposed, trial starts Monday
Priest abused was re-assigned & allegedly abused again

New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan was quietly deposed last month in a case that goes to trial on Monday in Missouri. It involves a priest who was put back into a parish after admitting abuse and allegedly molested again. The cleric was suspended while Dolan was in charge of pedophile priest cases in St. Louis in 2002.

The case is Jane Doe vs. Fr. Joseph Ross and the St. Louis Archdiocese. According to Missouri Lawyers Weekly and a St. Louis on-line columnist, the deposition took place in late June.

[Missouri Lawyers]

[Berger’s Beat]

“We’re glad Dolan faced tough questions under oath about this awful case and hope he’ll honor his promises to be ‘open’ and release his deposition,” said Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests . “He has rarely been forced to explain his reckless and callous handling of heinous child sex crimes here.”

“Dolan has escaped real scrutiny in this continuing abuse crisis, because he’s worked in three states where it very hard for victims to file lawsuits and depose bishops,” said Mary Caplan of SNAP’s New York Director. “He’s usually been able to exploit archaic laws to avoid being grilled by victims’ lawyers.”

“It’s not too late for others who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes to come forward, expose predators, protect kids, start healing, and help this brave victim who is exposing those clerics who commit and conceal these hideous crimes,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP. “It’s always tempting to keep quiet about child sex crimes – whether known or suspected. However, it’s also always irresponsible. Kids are only safe when adults are brave and caring enough to speak up.

Fr. Joseph D. Ross has a long history of abuse and sexual misconduct and for decades Catholic officials hid his crimes. In 1988, Ross plead guilty to sexual assault of an 11 year old boy. At that time he admitted he had molested another child the 1970s.

Barring a last minute settlement, that trial will start on Monday in St. Louis city before Judge Jimmie Edwards. It will be the first civil pedophile priest trial in St. Louis in 15 years, since a 1999 jury awarded $1.2 million to a victim man. That verdict was later overturned on appeal.

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OH–Priest convicted of murder dies

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by SNAP leader Claudia Vercellotti of Toledo ( 419 345 9291, SNAPtoledo@aol.com )

We hope Fr. Robinson’s passing brings some comfort to those he hurt and their loved ones and we hope now that others who he hurt will feel more comfortable coming forward and getting help.

It’s tragic for virtually everyone involved that the Catholic hierarchy in callously let a convicted murder go to his grave as a priest in good standing.

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Paraguay–Victims predict admitted predator priest won’t be charged

PARAGUAY/UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, July 1

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

A Vatican team is being sent to investigate a priest who allegedly molested several U.S. boys and is now second-in-command at a diocese in Paraguay.

[Washington Post]

[Pocono Record]

While we are very skeptical of internal church investigations, we are glad at least something is happening about this troubing case. But we also want bishops in both countries to reach out to others this priest has hurt.

Fr. Carlos Urrutigoity was accused of sexually abusing at least four boys at St. Gregory’s Academy in Moscow, Pennsylvania between 2002-2004. At least two civil suits were filed and one of them was settled for $380,000. Scranton diocesan officials sent Fr. Urrutigoity to a church treatment center which concluded that he “should be removed from active ministry and his (priestly) faculties should be revoked.”

We call on Catholic officials throughout Paraguay, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania to aggressively reach out to their flocks – using their bully pulpits, church bulletins, diocesan websites, and personal parish visits – and beg anyone who saw, suspects or suffered child sex crimes to come forward, report any crimes or misdeeds they may have seen, suspected or suffered by Fr. Carlos to police and prosecutors.

And we urge those with information or suspicions about him to seek independent sources of help, like law enforcement officials and groups like ours.

A Boston-based research group called BishopAccountability.org disclosed that Fr. Urrutigoity is now in the Diocese of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay and is its Vicar General. We are grateful for their painstaking and accurate research.

In the 1990s, Fr. Urrutigioity lived and taught at the St. Pius X Seminary in Winona. He belonged to a controversial and very conservative religious order known as the Society of St. Pius X.

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Child Molester Pastor Allowed to Preach to Kids

GEORGIA
Atlanta Daily World

Jul 5, 2014 By Terry Shropshire, National Correspondent

A Florida church had barred children from service because a sex offender convicted of child molestation became their pastor. He was prohibited from being in the vicinity of children, prompting the church ban on children.

Just the other day, the probation on the minster was changed to enable him to minister to children and the church leaders lifted the ban from kids attending service.

Darrell Gilyard, 52, is currently pastor at Christ Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., and began his tenure at the church right after being released from prison in December 2011 for sex crimes against two minor girls at his previous church.

According to WJXT, a judge modified Gilyard’s probation which now enables him to “minister to children under the age of 18 as long as the children are supervised by an adult other than the defendant.”

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Vincent Wijeysingha rejects Catholic Church request …

SINGAPORE
Yahoo! News

Vincent Wijeysingha rejects Catholic Church request to lodge complaint over molest allegation

By Jeanette Tan | Yahoo Newsroom

After raking up a three-decade-old incident where a priest allegedly tried to molest him when he was a teen, Singapore civil activist Vincent Wijeysingha said he has rejected a request from the Catholic Church to file an official report. The Church has asked him to either file a police report or a complaint with an internal church body which can investigate the case.

In a Facebook status on Saturday afternoon, the former Singapore Democratic Party member said he received a letter from a representative of the Catholic Church’s professional standards office on Thursday, 4 July. In the correspondence, the representative invited the 44-year-old to lodge a complaint with the police as well as the office so that both parties can investigate the accusation he made last month.

Wijeysingha, who said previously that he is Catholic, had in an earlier Facebook note written that he “came into unfortunate contact with a priest who would engage (him) in play wrestling and attempt to touch (his) crotch in the process”.

“He once brought me to his bedroom and took a stack of pornographic magazines from his wardrobe to show me,” he added, saying he was 15 years old at the time.

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Why do the ‘11,000’ babies buried in Belfast bog…

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Why do the ‘11,000’ babies buried in Belfast bog not get international media coverage, like Tuam?

BY PAUL CONNOLLY – 04 JULY 2014

I often wonder whether old inter-media rivalries in Belfast are seriously clouding editorial judgments. I have plenty of examples of compelling stories, many from the Belfast Telegraph but from other outlets too, not being followed up by other media. Usually I put my bewilderment down to a personal mixture of cynicism and prickliness.

However, the latest example really does give greater cause for concern. Consider, if you may, two stories from last month.

In the first, nuns are accused of presiding over an uncaring regime that featured unnaturally high death-rates and the ‘dumping’ of babies’ bodies in unmarked mass graves.

In the other, nuns are accused of presiding over an uncaring regime that featured unnaturally high death-rates and the ‘dumping’ of babies’ bodies in unmarked mass graves.

Yes, you read that correctly. The same issue. The first story is from Tuam, Co Galway. The second from Belfast.

The Tuam case made, and continues to make, international headlines and is the subject of a high-level Government inquiry.

The Belfast case? No fuss, virtually no follow-ups and certainly no inquiry.

The most disturbing allegations in both the Tuam and Belfast cases have yet to be proven, but in both, detailed and credible concerns have been raised.

In my opinion the reaction to the Belfast story speaks volumes about the state of the media, the health of our body politic and an apparent lack of interest from the public. The long shadow of the Troubles is allowed to overly dominate discourse.

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Pope Francis To Meet With Sex Abuse Victims

VATICAN CITY
NPR

July 06, 2014

Audio for this story from Weekend Edition Sunday will be available at approximately 12:00 p.m. ET.

Pope Francis will meet this week with victims of sexual abuse by priests. Correspondent Sylvia Poggioli tells NPR’s Linda Wertheimer the pope has been criticized for being slow to address the issue.

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Vatican investigating former Scranton priest

PENNSYLVANIA
The Times-Tribune

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican is sending officials to Paraguay to investigate activities of a priest accused of abusing children when he served the Diocese of Scranton.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests released a statement last week citing a Washington Post article about the Vatican investigation into Monsignor Carlos Urrutigoity. The priest was accused more than a decade ago of abusing children when he worked at the St. Gregory’s Academy in Elmhurst, a residential school.

In 2002, a former St. Gregory’s student filed a federal suit against Monsignor Urrutigoity and another priest, claiming abuse. That lawsuit was settled for a reported $380,000 in 2005.

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The Anti-Gay Archbishop Who Can’t Stay Out of Trouble

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

Olivia Nuzzi

Allegations that he had multiple sexual relationships with men are just the most recent in a long line of unseemly accusations against Minneapolis’s notoriously anti-gay archbishop.

There may be something to be said for the theory that anger and hate stem from an individual recognizing in others a quality that they themselves possess, but don’t want to. One of the Catholic church’s most vocal opponents of homosexuality is currently under investigation after allegations that he had multiple sexual relationships with priests, seminarians, and other men.

Minnesota archbishop John Nienstedt, 67, has spent years advocating against gay marriage. In 2013, speaking to a starry-eyed crowd at the Napa Institute, he said: “Today, many evil forces have set their sights on the dissolution of marriage and the debasing of family life. Sodomy, abortion, contraception, pornography, the redefinition of marriage, and the denial of objective truth are just some of the forces threatening the stability of our civilization.”

Nienstedt—he of the dramatic side-part and deer-in-the-headlights gaze—warned that “Satan knows all too well the value that the family contributes to the fabric of the good, solid society, as well as the future of God’s work on earth.”

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Pope Francis to meet abuse victims for first time

VATICAN CITY
The Nation (Pakistan)

July 06, 2014 AFP

VATICAN CITY : Pope Francis will meet victims of paedophile priests for the first time on Monday, as a Vatican commission moves to address the problem of clerical sex abuse in developing countries.

Six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland will talk with the head of the Roman Catholic Church at his private residence near Saint Peter’s Basilica in a gesture aimed at expressing his closeness to the tens of thousands of people abused by priests globally. The private meeting – the first with abuse victims since Francis was elected in February last year – is hotly awaited by victim support groups who have criticised the Argentinian for not acting earlier.

Francis has been slow to speak out on an issue which has hugely damaged the Catholic Church for over a decade, but in May he branded the sexual abuse of children by priests a crime comparable to a ‘satanic Mass’ and promised ‘zero tolerance’.

Monday’s encounter, which will follow a mass in the pope’s private chapel, will come a day after a meeting of the commission set up by Francis to advise him on the sexual abuse crisis and draw up protocols for the pope to consider. Composed of experts from eight countries, the body includes campaigner Marie Collins – who was assaulted as a 13-year-old by a hospital chaplain in her native Ireland – as well as British and French psychiatrists, a German psychologist and an Italian cannon law professor.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston – where the clerical sex abuse scandal erupted in the United States in 2002 – is also a member. The meeting is expected to open up the commission to experts from the Southern Hemisphere and the developing world, where paedophilia is largely a taboo subject and cases of abuse are much less likely to be reported.

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After Hobby Lobby, time to face the real war on religion

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF JULY 06, 2014

Last week’s big religion story in the States was Monday’s Supreme Court decision in the Hobby Lobby case, striking down the Affordable Care Act’s contraception mandates for some closely held firms. Predictably, America’s Catholic bishops applauded the ruling while expressing hope it will extend to nonprofits, such as the University of Notre Dame and the Little Sisters of the Poor, which also have legal challenges pending.

Wherever one stands on the merits of requiring employers to cover birth control, this seems a good time for the White House to find a political solution without putting everyone through litigation that now seems terribly redundant.

Among many faith-based groups, Monday’s ruling is being celebrated as a big win for religious freedom. And protecting religious expression was indeed a major focus of the decision. Yet Americans might do well to recall that in many other parts of the world, believers face threats far graver than lawsuits or fines. …

What to expect from pope’s meeting with abuse victims

Pope Francis will meet victims of clerical sexual abuse for the first time on Monday. The plan is for a small group to join the pontiff for his morning Mass, and then for the pope to sit down with each victim one-on-one. This time there won’t be any Americans in the group, though the pontiff may meet with victims from the United States when he travels to the country in September 2015.

Pope Benedict XVI met victims six times, and on each occasion the Vatican didn’t announce the encounter until it was over. In this case, Francis revealed plans for the meeting during the return flight from his May 24-26 trip to the Middle East. But even so, organizers are trying to keep things low key. Whatever information emerges is likely to come from the victims rather than Vatican channels.

Francis is famously unpredictable, making it hard to handicap how the meeting will play out. If things hold to form, however, there are three outcomes one can reasonably expect.

First, the meeting should strengthen the pontiff’s resolve.

Anyone who’s ever listened to abuse victims tell their stories knows the experience packs an emotional punch. What action might ensue is a different question, but it’s basically impossible to walk away thinking “no big deal.”

As proof, one may criticize the unfinished business of Benedict XVI, but there’s no denying he moved the ball on the church response to abuse scandals. As the Vatican’s doctrinal czar, he was critical in upholding the American bishops’ “zero tolerance” policy. As pope, he weeded hundreds of abuser priests out of the system, including almost 400 in 2011 and 2012 alone.

Aides say Benedict’s willingness to act was influenced by reading case files in which victims recounted their experiences and was strengthened by meeting them in the flesh. If anything the impact may be even stronger on Francis, who tends to wear his heart on his sleeve to a greater degree.

Second, victims in the room are likely to come away with positive vibes.

As a rule, victims who agree to take part in these sessions tend to be the kind still open to reconciliation with the church, or who at least believe it’s possible the church will do the right thing. Moreover, it’s not as if they’re walking in off the street — they’ve been invited by church officials precisely because they’re disposed to dialogue.

In the press, the victims’ voice tends to be carried by watchdog groups. That’s an entirely legitimate function, but it’s not in every victim’s interest. Some see making peace with the church as part of healing, and some are willing to give the church the benefit of the doubt, seeing a mix of light and shadows rather than a uniformly depressing landscape.

Generally, those victims don’t hold press conferences, but they’re part of the story, too.

In addition, many victims over the years have found it hard to get anyone in officialdom to listen. Being taken seriously by the pope, therefore, is in itself often a powerful balm.

Third, victims’ groups and reform movements are likely to strike a skeptical stance.

In the past, critics have warned that these meetings create an expectation of change, and if it doesn’t come, at least to the degree victims expected it would, the disappointment will be correspondingly greater.

Experience lends some credence to that concern. Bernie McDaid, for instance, was 11 years old when he was molested for the first time by Fr. Joseph Birmingham at St. James Parish in Salem, Mass. He was among the first five victims to meet a pope, taking part in an April 2008 encounter with Benedict XVI in Washington, D.C.

At the time, McDaid expressed optimism that the wheels were turning. He later changed his tune, helping to organize a protest at the Vatican in 2010.

Reached for comment on Thursday, McDaid said he’s not optimistic Francis’ encounter will be any different.

“Despite the media hype about what a nice guy this pope is, it’s taken more than 14 months for him to reach out, and that alone says a lot to me,” McDaid said. “[Church officials] talk about moving on, but when you see them doing the same old things it’s almost like getting abused all over again.”

In general, such critics tend to see three things as defining what counts as convincing action:

■ A uniform global “mandatory reporter” policy of turning over all accusations of abuse to the police and other civil authorities, and full cooperation with their investigations;

■ Full transparency, including releasing all records concerning abuse allegations;

■ Accountability, not just for clergy who abuse but also for bishops and other superiors who fail to make “zero tolerance” stick.

Whatever one makes of those demands, they’re likely to figure prominently in reactions to Monday’s meeting.

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Abuse survivors pan Vatican secrecy

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ANNETTE BLACKWELL
July 6, 2014

News that the Vatican will not hand over all documents about Australian priests who molested children has been greeted with derision at a major gathering of abuse survivors in Sydney.

Justice Peter McClellan, chair of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, told the 14th anniversary forum of Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) on Saturday the Holy See had provided two sets of documents about two priests.

However, the Vatican had informed the commission “that requests for all information regarding every case – which include requests for documents reflecting internal ‘deliberations’ – are not appropriate”.

The Holy See said it maintained the confidentiality of internal deliberations related to its judicial and administrative proceedings.

Justice McClellan’s comments were greeted with cries of derision and moans of despair from dozens of victims of Catholic Church abuse.

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Pope to meet Irish sex abuse survivors for first time tomorrow

IRELAND
The Journal

POPE FRANCIS WILL meet survivors of abuse by paedophile priests for the first time tomorrow, as a Vatican commission moves to address the problem of clerical sex abuse in developing countries.

Six abuse survivors from Ireland, Britain, and Germany will talk with the head of the Roman Catholic Church at his private residence near Saint Peter’s Basilica in a gesture aimed at expressing his closeness to the tens of thousands of people abused by priests globally.

The private meeting – the first with abuse survivors since Francis was elected in February last year – is hotly awaited by support groups who have criticised the Argentinian for not acting earlier.
Speaking out

Francis has been slow to speak out on an issue which has hugely damaged the Catholic Church for over a decade, but in May he branded the sexual abuse of children by priests a crime comparable to a “satanic Mass” and promised “zero tolerance”.

Tomorrow’s encounter, which will follow a mass in the pope’s private chapel, will come a day after a meeting of the commission set up by Francis to advise him on the sexual abuse crisis and draw up protocols for the pope to consider.

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The Protestant orphanage where children were whipped, beaten — and everyone had the same name

IRELAND
The Journal

Survivors are calling for the Westbank home, in Greystones, Co Wicklow, to be included in the wide-ranging inquiry tasked with investigating the State’s network of mother-and-baby homes.

The children allege that they were beaten with electric flexes and coathangers, that they were constantly hungry and starving and that Ms Mathers, who insisted on the name ‘Auntie’ ran a sort of a reign of terror.

ADELINE MATHERS RAN the Westbank (aka Mayil) orphanage in Co Wicklow for over 50 years.

Originally known as the Protestant Home for Orphan & Destitute Girls and based in Harold’s Cross, Dublin, the institution moved to Wicklow in the late 1940s, and began taking in boys as well as girls.

Over the following decades, Mathers presided over a regime whereby children were forced to carry out manual labour, deprived of food, whipped and beaten (so badly, at least on one occasion, that the authorities had be called).

Between 30 and 50 children, aged from just a few months old to their late teens, were resident in the home at any given time. Mathers, who began her career as a nurse, named all of the children after herself, residents recall — perhaps in an attempt to ‘Anglicise’ their names.

Residents were also trafficked illegally over the border and placed with unregistered foster carers — in some of these arrangements, the children also suffered from physical, emotional and/or sexual abuse.

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Pope Francis to meet with Irish abuse victims at Vatican on Monday

IRELAND
Irish Central

James O’Shea @irishcentral July 06,2014

Pope Francis will meet Irish survivors of abuse by pedophile priests, the first time he has met victims, tomorrow following a mass in the pope’s private chapel.

The six survivors drawn from Ireland, Britain and Germany will be hosted at the pope’s private residence and the meeting will be eagerly watched by survivor groups who have long called for such a meeting.

In May, Francis called the sexual abuse of children by priests a crime comparable to a “satanic Mass” and promised “zero tolerance.”

Two members of his abuse commission have close Irish ties. Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston and Irish campaigner Marie Collins who was assaulted as a 13-year-old by a hospital chaplain will meet with the pope today before the meeting with the abused survivors.

Other members of the commission are drawn from eight countries. British and French psychiatrists, a German psychologist and an Italian cannon law professor are also members. The membership is set to be expanded to include new members from southern hemisphere countries and developing countries including the pope’s native South America, where abuse is still a taboo subject.

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Mutare pastor arrested over sexual abuse

ZIMBABWE
Nehanda Radio

By Liberty Dube

MUTARE – A storm is brewing at a local church, Royal Family Life Fellowship, after its founder, Apostle Action Khomani, is allegedly involved in sex orgies with female church congregants and misappropriation of church funds, among other shocking shenanigans.

Khomani, also known as AK-47 — who resides at House Number 19, Crispy Road, Palmerstone — was last weekend picked up by the police for allegedly sexually abusing a female congregant (name withheld) sometime in October.

Deputy Manicaland provincial police spokesman Assistant Inspector Luxson Chananda said Khomani (40) was arrested and was assisting them with investigations for allegedly raping a church congregant with the help of his maid after he had invited her for “counselling”.

“Sometime in October 2012, around 5pm, Khomani invited the woman to a prayer and counselling session. After the session, he went to his bedroom while the woman slept in his maid’s room.

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Former St. Peter’s priest admits abuse

MINNESOTA
Lowdown

Former St. Peter’s priest Jerome Kern of Edina, 73, admitted in an April 15 court deposition to sexually abusing three children during more than 30 years as a priest in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. He denied other claims of abuse lodged against him.

Kern was assigned to St. Peter’s Church in Forest Lake from 1996 to 2002, and 10 different people alleged sexual abuse from Kern between 1969 and 1993. Video clips, the deposition transcript, timeline and key documents are available at www.andersonadvocates.com and on YouTube under AndersonAdvocates.

Kern was deposed in April as part of a 2013 civil lawsuit file in Ramsey County. Last week attorneys for a sexual abuse survivor known as Doe 26 released Kern’s video deposition along with key documents demonstrating how top Archdiocesan officials failed to prevent Kern from abusing more children despite reports of inappropriate behavior with children dating back to 1969.

Kern testified no one from the Archdiocese questioned him about the abuse or reported him to police.

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We have to support those who speak out on child abuse

IRELAND
Sunday Independent

Carol Hunt
Published 06/07/2014

I recall, years ago, listening to some friends reminiscing about their not so pleasant school days. 
One mentioned an
infamous teacher who
had earned
the soubriquet “Feeler”.

“Why?” I asked rather naively. They rolled their eyes at me. “Why do you think?” The man in question had disappeared suddenly when a brave father had arrived at the principal’s office to complain; he was later discovered to have been sent to a so-called Third World country
where parents don’t 
have quick access to solicitors.

I was reminded of this conversation last week when I heard that Rolf Harris had earned himself the nickname “The Octopus”. Why? Well, as those boys said so many years ago, “Why do you think?”

As with so many other cases of child abuse, the evidence was there all along, in front of our eyes, hiding in broad daylight. Harris had a penchant for “playing” with young girls. We now know that he visited websites on his computer with names like “My little nieces” and “Tiny teen girlfriends”.

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Phyllis had third child after being raped by a priest

IRELAND
Sunday Independent

Niamh Horan
Published 06/07/2014

The latest chapter in the tragic life of Phyllis Hamilton has come to light – it has been revealed she had a third child, after being raped by a priest.

The woman, who took on the Catholic Church after 
living an extraordinary double life with Fr Michael Cleary, gave birth to a baby girl 
following the sexual assault.

The baby was born after the two boys she had with Fr Cleary and was given up for adoption to a family in America.

It is not known where the girl – who would be in her 20s now – is today, or whether she has tried to find her birth mother since.

The final sad instalment to the legacy of Phyllis Hamilton has become public 13 years after she died from cancer, having undergone DNA tests to categorically prove her son Ross Hamilton was fathered by Fr Cleary.

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July 5, 2014

Late Catholic priest who stabbed nun to death will get funeral Mass

OHIO
Hamilton Spectator

By Kantele Franko and John Seewer

COLUMBUS, Ohio A Roman Catholic priest convicted of stabbing and strangling a nun 34 years ago in a hospital chapel will receive a funeral Mass, a church official said Saturday.

The Rev. Gerald Robinson remained an ordained priest after his conviction and his services will follow the usual protocol for a diocesan priest’s funeral, the Rev. Charles Ritter, administrator for the Diocese of Toledo, said in a statement.

Robinson, 76, died Friday. He had been serving a prison sentence of 15 years to life in what church historians have characterized as the only documented case of a Catholic priest killing a nun. He was arrested 24 years after the nun’s death and found guilty in 2006 of stabbing and strangling Sister Margaret Ann Pahl at a Toledo hospital where they both worked.

Robinson had been in a hospice unit since the end of May after suffering a heart attack.

Robinson and Pahl, 71, had worked closely together at the hospital, where he was a chaplain and she was caretaker of the chapel. He presided at her funeral in Massachusetts.

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Priest Guilty of Killing a Nun Dies in Prison — But Church to Hold Mass for Him That May Rai

OHIO
The Blaze

COLUMBUS, Ohio (TheBlaze/AP) — A Catholic priest convicted of stabbing and strangling a nun 34 years ago in a hospital chapel will receive a funeral Mass, according to an Ohio diocesan official.

Rev. Gerald Robinson died Friday. The 76-year-old had been serving a prison sentence of 15 years to life in what church historians have characterized as the only documented case of a Catholic priest killing a nun.

But Robinson remains an ordained priest, the Toledo diocesan official said, and his services will follow the usual protocol for diocesan priests’ funerals. Robinson had been in a hospice unit since the end of May after suffering a heart attack.

He was found guilty in 2006 of killing Sister Margaret Ann Pahl in 1980 at a Toledo hospital where they both worked.

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Assignment Record – Rev. John Schwartz, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: John Schwartz was ordained a priest of the Jesuits’ Oregon Province in 1981. He was campus minister of Jesuit High in Beaverton through much of the 1980s, after which he left the Jesuits and spent a few years into the 1990s as a University chaplain and assistant at a Salem, OR parish. In 1997 Schwartz was accused of having sexually abused a Jesuit High student over a two-year period in the 1980s. Schwartz denied wrongdoing. The Official Catholic Directory does not index Schwartz between 1993-2003. It does show that he worked in parishes in the San Francisco archdiocese 2002-2005. His accuser sued in 2005 and Schwartz went on a leave of absence. Schwartz re-emerged as a nursing home chaplain in the archdiocese 2007-2011. His whereabouts beyond 2011 are unknown.

Ordained: 1981

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Vatican rebuffs Justice Peter McClellan on sex abuse files

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

July 6, 2014

Heath Gilmore
Reporter

The Vatican’s refusal to hand over documents about child sexual abuse committed by Catholic priests in Australia is poised to become a headache for the federal government.

The head of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Justice Peter McClellan, disclosed in a speech on Saturday to a victims’ group that he had personally written to the Vatican, seeking copies of all documents relating to complaints about abuse involving priests in Australia.

The Vatican has provided documents to the royal commission relating to two cases, but Justice McClellan wanted more information to find out how the church hierarchy in Australia, under the guidance or direction of the Vatican, responded to the allegations of abuse. In a written response, the Vatican said the Holy See maintained the confidentiality of internal church deliberations, adding that it would be inappropriate to provide such documents.

West Australian Liberal MP Steve Irons, who attended Justice McClellan’s address at the 14th anniversary of the Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) at the Bankstown Sports Club in south-western Sydney, said he would ask the government to become involved.

A key figure in the national apology to the Forgotten Australians, Mr Irons also said he would take up the issue of funding being guaranteed to extend the work of the commission for another two years until 2017.

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Father Gerald Robinson will be given normal funeral befitting a diocesan priest

OHIO
Toledo Blade

Despite his 2006 conviction for a nun’s murder, Father Gerald Robinson will be given a normal funeral befitting a diocesan priest, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Toledo announced today.

“Whether in the eyes of God, Father Robinson was or was not guilty of the crime, I do not know,” Father Charles Ritter, the diocesan administrator, said in the statement. “I do know that he is the work of God’s hands, as are we all. He was a sinner, as are we all. He was a baptized member of the body of Christ, and he was, and remains an ordained priest of the Roman Catholic Church. This is the context in which his funeral will take place.”

The arrangements themselves remain to be made.

Father Robinson, 76, died early Friday in Franklin Medical Center, a Columbus hospital run by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, where he had been admitted for heart problems.

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Vaticano pune padre chileno por descumprir pena por abusos sexuais

CHILE
Globo 1

[Summary: The Vatican has punished Chilean priest Fernando Karadima for celebrating Mass, which was forbidden by the Vatican. A victim of abuse by Karadima reported that the priest celebrated the Mass in violation of the church edict.]

O Vaticano puniu novamente o sacerdote chileno Fernando Karadima, declarado culpado de abuso sexual de menores e de abuso de poder pela Igreja Católica, por descumprir a condenação ditada contra ele.

Uma das vítimas de abusos por parte de Karadima denunciou que o sacerdote ministrou uma missa, apesar de estar proibido de celebrar atos religiosos em público, acusação que foi investigada pela Igreja.

A Congregação para a Doutrina da Fé, o órgão do Vaticano responsável pela investigação, afirmou que “a missa em questão não pode ser considerada uma celebração pública”.
No entanto, a Congregação “determinou que o presbítero Karadima fosse punido com uma advertência canônica por tentar frustradamente contactar membros da ex-União Sacerdotal’, afirmou um comunicado do arcebispado de Santiago.

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Napoli si suicida padre Dante Toia, prete barnabita preside dell’Istituto Denza, Rifiutava trasferimento. La lunghissima lista di preti, suore e seminaristi suicidi in Italia

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[A list of priests, seminarians and nuns who have committed suicide in Italy.]

Preti, suore e seminaristi suicidi

1) 14/08/1992 Bisaglia Mario, 75 anni, fratello del deputato DC Toni Bisaglia, trovato annegato nel lago di Centro Cadore
2) ……………/1997 Castronovo Antonio, gesuita, trovato morto nel porto di Palermo
3) 08/08/1997 I. U., 47 anni, sacerdote nigeriano suicida nella casa del Clero in via della Scrofa, 70, Romahttp://archiviostorico.corriere.it/1997/ag…708068785.shtml
4) 08/07/2000 ……. Suora 75enne si getta dal convento in via Vitellia, sotto le finestre del monastero di Santa Chiara, nel quartiere Monteverde di Roma. “non mi fanno uscire”.
5) 30/10/2000 D’Auria Alfredo, 66 anni da Tobbiana, frazione di Prato, sparatosi alla tempia in sacrestia. Nell’agonia aveva fatto suonare le campane elettriche per chiedere aiuto. Depressione.
6) 18/07/2003 Damiani Vittorio, 62 anni, di Villa di Serio, diocesi di Bergamo, prete pedofilo, impiccatosi dopo l’arresto
7) 01/03/2006 Betaxio Mullunesh Mariam Tebrz, 39 anni, suora etiope, suicida a Roma con una coltellata alla gola

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Soldi spariti a Santa Maria Maggiore a processo monsignore-economo

ROMA
La Repubblica

[Summary: In the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, which is dear to Pope Francis, there are allegations of embezzlement, misappropriation and theft of goods. Monsignor Bronislaw Morawiec, of Polish origin, treasurer of the basilica, goes onchurch trial tomorrow to see whether his actions were criminal offenses to be handled in the State of Vatican City court. The monsignor has already been convicted in the basilica chapter. The Vatican in tomorrow’s action will be promoter of justice and will be represented by Gian Piero Milano. Father Frederick Lombardi downplayed that Cardinal Bernard Law, former archpriest of the basilica, was present in a discrete manner in the chapter.]

di CARLO PICOZZA

Sono stati accertati ammanchi nella gestione di Santa Maria Maggiore e a finire sotto processo nella mattinata di domani sarà il canonico ed economo della basilica papale, monsignor Bronislaw Morawiec, di origine polacca. A giudicare se nel suo operato siano stati consumati illeciti penali sarà il tribunale dello Stato della Città del Vaticano, dove saranno presenti anche diversi testimoni.

Al porporato, amministratore del patrimonio di Santa Maria Maggiore, la basilica cui è particolarmente legato Papa Francesco, vengono contestate gravi appropriazioni indebite, distrazioni e sottrazioni di beni. Ad accusare monsignor Bronislaw, già riconosciuto colpevole in via preliminare dal capitolo della basilica, sarà il promotore vaticano di giustizia Gian Piero Milano.

La vicenda del prelato polacco segue quella di Bernard Law, già arciprete della basilica romana, il quale a Boston, pur a conoscenza di preti pedofili, avrebbe solo spostato questi in altre parrocchie dove sarebbero rimasti in contatto con altri minori. Le misure adottate dal cardinale non sono piaciute a Papa Bergoglio.

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Child sexual abuse royal commission: Vatican declines request to provide all documents relating to Australian priests

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Lindy Kerin

The Vatican has declined a royal commission request to hand over documents about child sexual abuse committed by Catholic priests in Australia.

The head of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Justice Peter McClellan, revealed last month that he had personally written to the Vatican, seeking copies of all documents relating to complaints about abuse involving priests in Australia.

The Vatican has provided documents to the royal commission relating to two cases, but Justice McClellan wanted more information to find out how church authorities in Australia, under the guidance or direction of the Vatican, responded to allegations of abuse.

In a written response, the Vatican says the Holy See maintains the confidentiality of internal deliberations, adding that it would be inappropriate to provide such documents.

Leonie Sheedy, founder and chief executive of Care Leavers Australia Network, a support group for victims of child sexual abuse says the Catholic Church is treating the Australian public with contempt.

“I’m not surprised … I feel like the Catholic Church believes it is above the laws of Australia and probably the world,” she said.

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Pope Francis To Meet Priest Sex Abuse Victims For The First Time

VATICAN CITY
International Business Times

By Aaron Akinyemi
July 5, 2014

Pope Francis will meet victims who suffered sexual abuse at the hands of priests for the first time on Monday.

Six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland will meet with the pontiff at his private residence, near St Peter’s Basilica, in the first such direct dialogue since the pope was elected last March.

The meeting will follow a mass at the pope’s private chapel, where he will to express his sympathy with tens of thousands of people abused by priests around the world.

In May, Pope Francis told journalists priests who molested children had performed the equivalent of a ‘satanic mass’, and said there must be ‘zero tolerance’ of paedophilia within the church.

Victims’ groups have long called on the Vatican to hold abusers to account, as well as bishops who shielded paedophiles or were negligent in protecting children.

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PAPA BERGOGLIO IN MOLISE, IL NOSTRO APPELLO: CHE NE SARÀ DEI PRETI PEDOFILI?

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Summary: Pope Francis today is visiting Molise, Campobasso, Castelpetroso and Isernia. With the goodness that he is doing he call on him to tell us how they are going to handle cases of pedophila priests who have worked in this region.]

Sabato cinque luglio Papa Francesco viene in visita in Molise. In mattinata sarà a Campobasso, nel pomeriggio si sposterà a Castelpetroso e Isernia. Noi di unavoceperledonne , convinte della bontà dell’opera pastorale di Papa Bergoglio, nell’occasione lanciamo un appello per chiedere come andranno a finire i casi dei preti pedofili che hanno operato proprio in questa regione. E nel farlo ricordiamo i tre casi principali seguiti da Rete l’Abuso.

Cominciamo da quello di Giada Vitale. La 19enne di Portocannone che ha denunciato Don Marino Genova per presunte violenze subite da quando aveva 13 anni fino ai 16. Storia finita alla ribalta nazionale grazie alle Iene e a Repubblica e finita anche su France 24. Il processo secolare è nelle mani del Tribunale di Larino e siamo ancora alle indagini preliminari. E’ stato avviato un processo canonico dopo la sospensione a divinis del parroco. Ma di esso non si sa ancora nulla. Nonostante Giada abbia scritto più volte al Santo Padre senza avere risposte.

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When will Watchtower learn? – Karen Morgan speaks out on her abuser’s 14 year sentence

WALES
JWsurvey

Mark Sewell, the disgraced former elder convicted of a string of sex abuse offenses, including 5 counts of indecent assault against two young girls and the rape of a woman, has now been sentenced to 14 years having shown “not a thread of remorse.”

His crimes were committed during the time he was serving as an elder between the years of 1987 and 1995. Like most Jehovah’s Witness elders he was respected in his congregation, and he used this respect to inflict great damage on people’s lives.

News of the sentencing has prompted the Charity Commission to open an operational compliance case on Sewell’s congregation. The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) has also weighed in by issuing a press release expressing gratitude for the “brave victims who worked courageously to get Sewell behind bars.”

One such victim has bravely stepped forward and waived her anonymity by giving a series of media interviews.

Karen Morgan is the perpetrator’s niece who he took advantage of sexually, bribing her with alcohol. She has recounted how, tragically, her congregation did nothing simply because Sewell refused to confess.

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Pope to meet sex abuse victims

VATICAN CITY
IOL

July 5 2014
By Jean-Louis De La Vaissiere

REUTERS

Vatican City –

Pope Francis will meet victims of paedophile priests for the first time on Monday, as a Vatican commission moves to address the problem of clerical sex abuse in developing countries.

Six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland will talk with the head of the Roman Catholic Church at his private residence near Saint Peter’s Basilica in a gesture aimed at expressing his closeness to the tens of thousands of people abused by priests globally.

The private meeting – the first with abuse victims since Francis was elected in February last year – is hotly awaited by victim support groups who have criticised the Argentinian for not acting earlier.

Francis has been slow to speak out on an issue which has hugely damaged the Catholic Church for over a decade, but in May he branded the sexual abuse of children by priests a crime comparable to a “satanic Mass” and promised “zero tolerance”.

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Pontiff to meet Irish sex abuse survivors

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew

Sat, Jul 5, 2014

Although the Holy See has offered no official confirmation, it seems likely that a much anticipated meeting between clerical sex abuse survivors, including Irish survivors, and Pope Francis will take place in the Vatican on Monday morning.

For much of this week, different media sources have claimed that the pope will meet a small group of survivors in his Vatican residence, the Domus Santa Marta.

It was the pope himself who announced this meeting when speaking to reporters on the papal flight on the way back to Rome, following his recent pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

On that occasion, he did not say when the meeting would take place but he did indicate that it would be sometime in early July.

Given that the pope’s morning Mass in Santa Marta, the Vatican residential hall that he uses in preference to the pomposity of the Apostolic Palace, has become a key aspect of his pontifical teaching, it seems only logical that the survivors of abuse will be invited to attend Mass there.

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Vatican refuses to hand over documents to royal commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

ASHLEY HALL: The Vatican has declined a request from a royal commission to hand over documents about child sex abuse committed by Catholic priests in Australia.

At a conference in Sydney later today, the head of the royal commission, Justice Peter McClellan will detail the Vatican’s written response.

It says the Holy See maintains the confidentiality of internal deliberations and it would be inappropriate to provide such documents.

Lindy Kerin reports

LINDY KERIN: The head of the toyal commission Justice Peter McClellan revealed last month that he’d personally written to the Vatican.

He was seeking copies of all documents that relate to complaints about abuse involving priests here in Australia.

But the Vatican has declined. In a written response, it’s said it;

(Excerpt from Vatican response)

VATICAN (voiceover): Respectfully suggests that requests for all information regarding every case which includes requests for documents reflecting internal ‘deliberations’ are not appropriate.

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Gerald Robinson, Priest Convicted of Killing Ohio Nun, Dies at 76

OHIO
The New York Times

By JOHN SCHWARTZ
JULY 4, 2014

The Rev. Gerald Robinson, a Catholic priest who was convicted in 2006 of murdering a nun more than 20 years earlier, died on Friday in Columbus, Ohio. He was 76.

Father Robinson had a heart attack in May, and since then, he had been in a hospice at Franklin Medical Center, which is run by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. His lawyer, Richard Kerger, confirmed his death.

Father Robinson had worked at Mercy Hospital in Toledo with Sister Margaret Ann Pahl, 71, when she was killed the day before Easter in 1980. She was found in the hospital chapel, where she had been preparing for Easter services. She had been strangled, draped with an altar cloth and stabbed 31 times, including nine wounds in the shape of an upside-down cross. There was a smear of blood across her forehead, as if she had been anointed in last rites.

Father Robinson was questioned, and he would later admit to making up a story that someone else had confessed to the murder. But the case was soon dropped for lack of evidence.

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New Allegations Against Monsignor Reported

TEXAS
KRIS

CORPUS CHRISTI- Another alleged victim has come forward, accusing Monsignor Michael Heras of inappropriate behavior.

6 News has learned this latest person walked into the Gregory Police Department last night, to file a criminal complaint against the Monsignor.

Gregory Police Chief Robert Meager couldn’t provide any details, but did say the allegations will be turned over to the San Patricio county district attorney’s office.

The first person who made accusations against the Monsignor, says it happened nearly 30 years ago when Heras was a pastor at Immaculate Conception church in Gregory.

The diocese is now investigating that claim.

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Toledo priest Gerald Robinson, convicted in nun’s 1980 murder, dies while incarcerated

OHIO
Toledo Blade

BY ALEXANDRA MESTER AND RONEISHA MULLEN
BLADE STAFF WRITERS

A Toledo priest convicted of murder in 2006 for the 1980 slaying of a nun died early Friday in a prison hospital.

Father Gerald Robinson, 76, was in hospice at Franklin Medical Center, a Columbus hospital run by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, when he died at 4:15 a.m.

His attorney, Rick Kerger, said an official cause of death had not yet been disclosed.

Robinson had been in the facility for heart problems.

The priest was serving 15 years to life in prison for the slaying of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl, who was killed on April 5, 1980 — a day before Easter and a day before she would have turned 72.

Sister Margaret Ann’s body was found on the floor of the sacristy of the former Mercy Hospital on Holy Saturday. Evidence showed that she had been choked to the edge of death and stabbed 32 times in the chest, the neck, and the face.

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Church to provide financial support for priest caught with child pornography

AUSTRALIA
Courier-Mail

STEVE RICE SUNDAY MAIL (SA) JULY 05, 2014

A CATHOLIC school priest caught with more than 1500 child pornography images will receive financial support so he is not made homeless, despite quitting the ministry.

John Hogan will be paid accommodation and cost-of-living expenses regardless of whether he is jailed, the Jesuit Provincial Society has confirmed.

Hogan, 69, has pleaded guilty to one count of using a carriage service to access child pornography and one aggravated count of possessing child pornography.

The District Court has heardpolice seized 1555 images and videos of children and teenagers aged between three and 16 years old in his bedroom at Saint Ignatius College in 2012.

In a letter to parents and guardians of students at the Athelstone college, Father Stephen Curtin of the Jesuit Provincial Society said Hogan had asked to be released from his priestly ministry.

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Pope and ‘C9’ reform group talks ‘free, frank, friendly’

VATICAN CITY
Gazzetta del Sud

(ANSA) Vatican City, July 4 – Pope Francis has had “free, frank and friendly” discussions with the C9 group of cardinals charged with examining reforms, Vatican Spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said Friday. The focus of the meetings this week, the fifth session since the start of the Argentinian’s pontificate, has been threefold: a presentation on the situation in the Governorate and the Secretariat of State, an in-depth look at the re-shuffle of the Vatican departments and the Institute of Religious Works (IOR) or Vatican Bank, Fr. Lombardi said. The cardinals expressed their esteem Thursday for IOR President Ernst Von Freyberg, amid speculation that he plans to resign from the bank, which is trying to make the white list of credit institutions with top transparency credentials “An English-language cardinal spoke of the ‘3Fs’ to describe the atmosphere in which the cardinals work with the pope,” Lombardi said.

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Pope Francis to Meet Sex Abuse Victims for First Time

VATICAN CITY
Naharnet (Lebanon)

Pope Francis will meet victims of pedophile priests for the first time on Monday, as a Vatican commission moves to address the problem of clerical sex abuse in developing countries.

Six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland will talk with the head of the Roman Catholic Church at his private residence near Saint Peter’s Basilica in a gesture aimed at expressing his closeness to the tens of thousands of people abused by priests globally.

The private meeting — the first with abuse victims since Francis was elected in February last year — is hotly awaited by victim support groups who have criticized the Argentinian for not acting earlier.

Francis has been slow to speak out on an issue which has hugely damaged the Catholic Church for over a decade, but in May he branded the sexual abuse of children by priests a crime comparable to a “satanic Mass” and promised “zero tolerance”.

Monday’s encounter, which will follow a mass in the pope’s private chapel, will come a day after a meeting of the commission set up by Francis to advise him on the sexual abuse crisis and draw up protocols for the pope to consider.

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Pope Francis to meet victims of sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
Press TV (Iran)

[with video]

Pope Francis is to meet with victims of pedophile priests for the first time in a gesture to express his closeness to the tens of thousands of people abused by priests globally.

Six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland will have face-to-face talks with the head of the Roman Catholic Church at his private residence in the Vatican on Monday, July 7.

The private meeting with abuse victims is the first since the Argentinian Pope was elected last year.

Francis has come under increasing fire for perceived inaction on the part of the Vatican in addressing the problem. Earlier in April, he issued an unprecedented apology for the child sexual abuse scandals that have rocked the Catholic Church.

The Vatican has been rocked by major inquiries into claims of abuse in Ireland, the United States, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland and several other countries.

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Child sexual abuse royal commission: Vatican declines request …

AUSTRALIA
Radio Australia

Child sexual abuse royal commission: Vatican declines request to provide all documents relating to Australian priests

Updated 5 July 2014

Lindy Kerin

The Vatican has declined a royal commission request to hand over documents about child sexual abuse committed by Catholic priests in Australia.

The head of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Justice Peter McClellan, revealed last month that he had personally written to the Vatican, seeking copies of all documents relating to complaints about abuse involving priests in Australia.

The Vatican has provided documents to the royal commission relating to two cases, but Justice McClellan wanted more information to find out how church authorities in Australia, under the guidance or direction of the Vatican, responded to allegations of abuse.

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Nyack Man Convicted for Molesting 4-year-old Begins Sentence

NEW YORK
Patch

Posted by Wendy Mitchell (Editor), July 04, 2014

A South Nyack man convicted for the sexual abuse of a 4-year-old child, began his 3 year prison term after the New York Court of Appeals refused to hear his case, the Rockland County Times reports.

Todd Retallack, 51, of 32 Terrace Drive, South Nyack, was arrested in May of 2011 and charged with first-degree sexual abuse, a felony, and endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor, Patch reported.

According to reports, Retallack, a former church youth leader, was babysitting a friend’s daughter in 2009 when he molested the child.

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The horror of Tuam’s missing babies is not diminished by misreported details

IRELAND
The Guardian

Tanya Gold
The Guardian, Friday 4 July 2014

There was a vigil outside the Irish embassy in London on Thursday. It was for the 796 children who died in a former mother and baby home in Tuam, County Galway, which was operated by the Sisters of Bon Secours between 1925 and 1961. There are death records but no burial records for these children. The location of their graves is a mystery, although it is probable that they are near the home, and that some of them, according to testimony from two local boys, who found skeletons in 1975 after disturbing a concrete slab, may be in what was once a septic tank in the grounds. When the story broke a month ago there was fury, and misreporting. All the missing children, it was said, were in the tank. This is supposition. No one knows precisely where they are. The site has not been searched.

I do not praise misreporting. It should not have happened. The New York Times and the Washington Post carried corrections. So did the Guardian. But the scandal – and here scandal blooms upon scandal – is how an initial error has allowed the fate of the mothers and babies of Tuam to be diminished and then normalised. It is similar to watching fabric fray. Tug at a thread and hope the whole collapses.

In a piece for Spiked Online, Brendan O’Neill railed against the false headlines. He was right to abhor them, but then he lost his balance. He presented those furious at the needless deaths as a “Twittermob constantly on the hunt for things it might feel ostentatiously outraged by”. He was, it seems, more interested in what was misreported than what actually happened; the conditions in the homes, the stigma that took the women there and the question of how many similar graves there might be across Ireland were less important. What began as a polemic seeking fact swiftly became the opposite. In fact, he said, the “unhealthy obsession over the past 10 years with raking over Ireland’s past … has become a kind of grotesque moral sport, providing kicks to the anti-Catholic brigade and fuel to the historical self-flagellation that now passes for public life in Ireland”. Is that what the survivors of the Magdalene laundries, the industrial schools, and the sexual abuse by priests think is the result of their testimony? Hysteria? Kicks? Or, at last, an acknowledgement of what happened?

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Abuse survivors vow to fight on

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

The redress obligations of cash-poor but asset-rich institutions where children were abused will be covered in a report to be delivered next year, the chairman of the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse says.

Justice Peter McClellan told a forum organised by victims’ support organisation Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) that redress was a priority and a report would be handed down by mid-2015.

Following Saturday’s 30-minute keynote address, Justice McClellan was asked questions by abuse survivors, many of whom had travelled interstate for a forum marking the 14th anniversary of CLAN.

One woman asked why assets “built on the backs of children” could not be taken back.

Justice McClellan said the issue had been raised especially at a Christian Brothers hearing in Perth.

Boys who were placed in now infamous homes such the Bindoon farm had to build their own institution.

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Report: Vatican launching investigation of Urrutigoity

PENNSYLVANIA
The Abington Journal

July 04. 2014

By Mark Guydish – mguydish@civitasmedia.com

The Vatican is sending a cardinal and a bishop to Paraguay to investigate activities of a priest previously accused of sex abuse while residing in the Diocese of Scranton, according to a report in the Washington Post.

The Post reported that Monsignor Eliseo Ariotti, the papal nuncio, or pope’s ambassador, in Paraguay confirmed the team will visit the Diocese of Ciudad del Este in late July.

The team “will likely look into the activities of the Rev. Carlos Urrutigoity, an Argentinian-born priest accused of sexually molesting minors when he served as a priest in Scranton more than a decade ago,” the Post story contends, though the sentence simplifies Urrutigoity’s saga here.

Urrutigoity was one of the founding members of the “Society of St. John” set up in Pike County, part of the Diocese of Scranton. While the diocese sanctioned his request to set up the conservative Catholic enclave, he and co-founder Eric Ensey were not, strictly speaking, diocesan priests.

Urrutigoity and Ensey were initially two unnamed priests accused of sexual misconduct with boys in 2002. Then-Bishop James Timlin revoked their rights to publicly practice as priests in any capacity, and had them evaluated at a facility in Canada.

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July 4, 2014

Assignment Record – Rev. William J. Ryan, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Ryan was a Jesuit of the Oregon Province, ordained in or around 1935. His career was spent on Indian reservations in Montana, Idaho and Washington state. He died in 1967. Ryan’s name was on the Spokane diocese’s list in 2007 of “Admitted, Proven or Credibly Accused Perpetrators of Sexual Abuse.”

Ordained: circa 1933
Died: Feb. 6, 1967

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Catholic groups lose residential school argument

CANADA
APTN

04. JUL, 2014

By Kathleen Martens
APTN Investigates

WINNIPEG – Priests, nuns and oblates have lost a small court battle related to residential school documents.

More than 30 Catholic organizations across Canada tried to stop the new National Research Centre (NRC) from participating in a hearing on the future of survivor testimony.

But Justice Paul Perell of the Ontario Superior Court decided otherwise. On June 14th, he granted intervenor status to the centre which will be located at the University of Manitoba.

Groups including the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and the Indian Residential School Adjudication Secretariat are at odds over whether to archive or destroy documents collected through the Independent Assessment Process (IAP). So Perell will hear arguments from the centre and other groups seeking his direction on what to do with the documents. The hearing will happen July 14-16 in Toronto.

The IAP is a confidential, legal process where former students disclose the abuse they suffered to be eligible for financial compensation. It was created to help resolve claims of sexual abuse, serious physical abuse and other wrongful acts perpetrated by school staff and students.

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Brick woman files civil suit against priest

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Susanne Cervenka, @scervenka July 4, 2014

A Brick woman has filed a civil lawsuit against a Catholic priest awaiting trial on criminal charges accusing him of sexually assaulting the woman and her two children.

Dawn Corvino of Brick, as well as her two children, who are listed in the lawsuit as John and Jane Doe, are accusing Marukudiyil Velan of sexually assaulting them in their home in July 2012, causing emotional distress.

A criminal case related to the incident is pending with a trial scheduled for September, said Al Della Fave, spokesman for the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office. Velan faces charges of criminal sexual contact and endangering the welfare of a child, sexual assault, according to the February 2013 indictment.

The civil lawsuit, filed Tuesday, also names the Catholic Diocese of Trenton and Church of the Visitation on Mantoloking Road in Brick, accusing both of causing emotional distress as well as failing to supervise Velan, who previously was a priest at the church.

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Vatican will not reveal all: McClellan

AUSTRALIA
7 News

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL
July 5, 2014

The Vatican has told the child sex abuse royal commission that it will not hand over all information about members of its clergy who abused children in Australia.

Commission chairman Justice Peter McClellan on Saturday will address a 14th anniversary gathering of one of the main victims’ support groups.

Justice McClellan will tell Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) the Holy See has provided two sets of documents and says it may provide others where copies are not available in Australia.

But it has told the commission “that requests for all information regarding every case – which include requests for documents reflecting internal `deliberations’ – are not appropriate.”

It said the Holy See maintained the confidentiality of internal deliberations related to its judicial and administrative proceedings.

The reason was it “depends upon deliberative confidentiality to ensure the integrity and efficacy of its judicial and administrative processes.”

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Marists blame themselves for child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The national head of the Marist Brothers says the failings of its leadership are to blame for the crimes of two pedophile brothers across three decades.

In a public letter to all members of the Catholic order, provincial head in Australia, Jeffrey Crowe, has again apologised to child abuse victims.

Br Crowe says after listening to recent royal commission hearings into how the crimes of brothers John Kosta Chute and Gregory Sutton were dealt with in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, it is clear leadership inaction at the time was responsible.

Both men were jailed for abusing children in schools in NSW, Queensland and the ACT.

“On behalf of all Marist Brothers I acknowledge and apologise to their victims for the abuse and very real damage done to young people by their criminal actions,” he said on Friday.

He said it was clear some were victims of the men because of “ineffective responses” and “inaction” by leaders.

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Abbott must fund longer child abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Editorial

Australians have been disgusted – and many have felt guilt-ridden – that a public figure as trusted and seemingly innocuous as Rolf Harris was allowed to get away with sexual abuse of vulnerable children over decades.

Harris is not the first and certainly not the last high-profile Australian to hide his crimes behind the veil of celebrity. Nor is Harris alone in exploiting institutional and public blindness to behaviour that ruins lives. For every Harris, thousands of people linked to trusted institutions get away with similar crimes.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse has heard shocking details of more than 3300 such cases in its first year. Brave victims have come forward in person and in writing, knowing it will cause them great anguish, but proceeding nonetheless in the hope fellow Australians will recognise that future generations must not be forced to endure similar pain.

“We do not yet know how prevalent abuse has been or continues to be within institutions,” the royal commission says in its interim report out this week.

That statement alone should be enough for the Abbott government and taxpayers to agree immediately to the commission’s request for a two-year extension to December 2017 and a further $104 million on top of the $281 million for 2012-13 to 2015-16.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/smh-editorial/abbott-must-fund-longer-child-abuse-royal-commission-20140704-zsvk9.html#ixzz36X2wgx6K

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The Rev. Gerald Robinson, Convicted Of Killing Nun, Dies In Prison Hospital

OHIO
International Business Times

By Marcy Kreiter
on July 04 2014

A former Toledo, Ohio, priest convicted of killing a nun in a hospital chapel before Easter 1980 died early Friday in a prison hospital.

The Rev. Gerald Robinson, 76, who was sentenced to 15 years to life for the killing of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl, 71, died at Franklin Medical Center in Columbus. He had been given last rites a month ago after he suffered a heart attack.

Robinson was convicted in 2006 for the murder in the sacristy of the former Mercy Hospital chapel where he and the victim both worked. The nun had been strangled and stabbed 31 times.

Pahl’s stab wounds formed an upside-down cross. There was a smudge of blood on her forehead.

The death came after a federal judge Thursday refused a petition for compassionate release. Gov. John Kasich had earlier denied a similar plea, the Toledo Blade reported.

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Ex-priest convicted for 1980 murder of nun dies in prison after plea rejected

OHIO
The Raw Story

By Reuters
Friday, July 4, 2014

(Reuters) – An ex-priest convicted of murdering a nun died behind bars on Friday, a day after a federal judge rejected his plea for compassionate release for his final days, a spokesman for Ohio’s governor said.

Retired Roman Catholic priest Gerald Robinson, 76, who was serving a life sentence for the 1980 stabbing, died early on Friday, the spokesman for Governor John Kasich said in an email.

Robinson, who had suffered a heart attack in May and was not expected to live more than two months, had asked to be released from a prison hospice into the care of his brother and sister-in-law for his last days.

But on Thursday, U.S. District Judge James Gwin said the federal courts had no jurisdiction over the request.

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Cardinals’ council focused on Pontifical Councils for laity, family

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

Vatican City, Jul 4, 2014 / 09:46 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Friday, the final day of the meeting of the Council of Cardinals, the group set their sights on the Pontifical Councils for the laity and the family, with a special mention of the potential inclusion of laity in those councils’ tasks.

According to Fr. Lombardi, director of the Holy See press office, the council of cardinals on July 4 “resumed its reflections on the dicasteries of the curia. The Pontifical Councils for laity and family were studied in particular depth, especially in terms of the contributions and role that should be assumed by laypeople, married couples, and women.”

A possible merger of those two councils into a congregation for the laity is expected, but Fr. Lombardi stressed that “decisions were not made, though more detailed proposals were offered that will subsequently be inserted into the overall framework of the new configuration of the curia.”

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Vatican rejects calls for abuse papers

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JULY 05, 2014

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

THE Vatican has declined a ­request from a royal commission to hand over every document it holds relating to child-sex abuse committed by Catholic priests in Australia.

Speaking at a western Sydney meeting of the Care Leavers Australia Network today, commission chairman Peter McClellan will say that the Vatican has to date provided several documents, relating to two individual priests.

Justice McClellan quotes a letter sent by the Vatican to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, that ­“respectfully suggests that ­requests for all information regarding every case — which ­includes requests for documents reflecting internal ­‘delib­erations’ — are not appropriate”.

“The Holy See maintains the confidentiality of internal deliberations … and indeed depends upon deliberative confidentiality to ­ensure the integrity and efficacy of its judicial and administrative processes,” the letter states.

To date, half of the royal commission’s 14 public hearings have investigated the response of Catholic institutions or orders to instances of child-sex abuse.

The commission’s first interim report, released this week, found that more than two-thirds of the Australian faith-based institutions at which child abuse allegedly took place were Catholic.

Last month, the commission publicly examined the Vatican’s own response to one such case, where the Australian church’s ­attempts to discipline an abusive priest were held up for years by ­appeals to the Holy See.

“We have been told in evidence on more than one occasion that there was a view in the Roman Catholic Church, at least in the 20th century, that the sexual assault of children … was a ‘moral failure’ but not a crime,” Justice McClellan says today. “Why did such a view, which is out of step with community values reflected in the criminal law, emerge?

“Furthermore, if, as appears likely, that view was common in the Roman Catholic Church, was it a view held more generally in the community?” he says. “If it was, why was it not challenged in previous generations?”

In recent years, Justice McClellan says, the modern Catholic Church within Australia has done much to reform its handling of child-sex claims, including reviewing compensation agreements previously made with the victims of such abuse.

Giving evidence to the commission in March, the then-­archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, publicly accepted the church should reconsider its use of legal defences against such claims.

“He acknowledged that there must be an effective institutional response to the damage done to an individual who is abused within that institution,” Justice McClellan says.

Many Australian dioceses and orders have provided documents in relation to requests by the royal commission. The Vatican has also indicated that other documents may be provided from copies held in Rome, he says.

In his speech, the commission chairman repeats the case made in this week’s interim report for the federal government to grant a two-year extension to its work ­beyond the current 2015 deadline.

Having received more than 3000 accounts of child abuse at over 1000 institutions, “the commissioners have been able to define the ‘project’ which we believe must be completed if the issues are to be adequately addressed”.

Originally published as Vatican rejects calls for abuse papers

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Convicted nun killer Father Robinson dies in prison

OHIO
NBC 24

by Amulya Raghuveer

The Toledo priest convicted in 2006 of killing a nun in a hospital chapel two decades ago has died. The Rev. Gerald Robinson was 76.

Robinson was eight years in to his 15 years to life prison sentence for the 1980 killing of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl. His attorney, Richard Kerger, says the family told him Robinson died Friday morning at a Columbus prison hospice unit.

Robinson suffered a massive heart attack in early June and had since been transferred from general prison population to a prison hospice in Columbus.

His attorney asked the court to release Robinson to the care of relatives in Toledo, where the priest had wanted to die. Just Thursday, a federal court refused that request.

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Pope sends delegation to Paraguay to investigate Pa. priest accused of molesting boys

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Register

BY JOSEPHINE MCKENNA, RELIGION NEWS SERVICE
July 4, 2014

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis is sending a cardinal and a bishop to Paraguay to investigate the activities of a priest previously accused of sex abuse in Pennsylvania, the Vatican’s diplomatic envoy to the Latin American country said.

The cardinal and the bishop will visit the Diocese of Ciudad del Este, in the country’s east in late July, said papal nuncio Monsignor Eliseo Ariotti.

They will likely look into the activities of the Rev. Carlos Urrutigoity, an Argentinian-born priest accused of sexually molesting minors when he served as a priest in Scranton more than a decade ago.

Urrutigoity is now second in command in Ciudad del Este and his career advance has provoked widespread debate among local bishops as well as opposition from the victims’ support group SNAP.

Urrutigoity was accused of sexual abuse in a highly publicized lawsuit in Scranton in 2002. At the time he and another priest, Eric Ensey, were suspended by now-retired Bishop James Timlin, amid allegations they had sexually molested students at St. Gregory’s Academy in Elmhurst, now closed.

Urrutigoity was transferred to Canada before settling in Paraguay but his Pennsylvania diocese has described him as a “serious threat to young people” on its website and reiterated the concern of Timlin’s successor, Bishop Joseph Martino, who resigned in 2009.

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