News Archive

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

January 14, 2015

Pope Francis Must Save the Caged Children of the Philippines

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

* A UK newspaper, with some help from Nobel Prize nominated Irish priest, Fr. Shay Cullen, an advocate for Manila’s many “street kids”, has shockingly reported, with graphic pictures, that hundreds of boys and girls have been rounded up from doorways and roadsides by officials and put behind bars in recent weeks to make the poverty-racked city more presentable when Pope Francis arrives. Please see the must read article at:

* [Daily Mail]

* The UK article’s “bulletin points” are quite shocking, see:

* “Street children in Manila are being rounded up before the Pope’s arrival”
* “Officials claim it is to stop gangs of beggars targeting the Pope”
* “But critics say it is a cynical move breaching the children’s human rights”
* “MailOnline investigation finds horrendous conditions at the centres”
* “Children forced to sleep on floors and kept with adults who beat them”
* “Some children have been starved and chained to pillars in the centres”
* “One child rounded up 59 times – yet he is still living on the streets”

* The UK article reports that: “Rosalinda Orobia, head of Social Welfare Department in Manila’s central Pasay district, confirmed her officials had for weeks been detaining street children in the areas the Pope will visit and had taken in children as young as five.”

* “Bizarrely, she claimed the operations were aimed at stopping begging syndicates targeting the Pope rather than tidying up the city. ‘They (the syndicates) know the Pope cares about poor kids, and they will take advantage of that,’ she told the Manila Standard newspaper”.

* In an editorial, the Manila newspaper reportedly slammed the official’s remarks, saying: “We should all be scandalized by the government’s artificial campaign to keep the streets free of poor children only for the duration of the papal visit.”

* This is outrageous. The ex-bouncer pope, who knows well the slums of Buenos Aires, does not need to be shielded from the sights of Manila’s “street kids”.

* Pope Francis must promptly demand (1) that officials release these children from jails immediately, (2) that Church, government and business leaders help these children more, and (3) that his bishops stop pumping the high Filipino birthrate by opposing access to affordable and effective contraception options from poor couples that seek it. Otherwise, Pope Francis’ preferential option for the poor is just another pious papal platitude, no?

* Pope Francis has considerable clout in the Philippines, which is over 80% Catholic, unlike the smaller minority Catholic populations in Sri Lanka and South Korea where he recently visited. The Philippines is both the main Vatican outpost in Asia, and a rising regional economic factor, according to colleagues of Francis’ key adviser, Peter Sutherland of Goldman Sachs.

* Asia appears to be Pope Francis’ new frontier and likely also where much of the world’s power and money are heading in the next few decades. Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, reportedly recently said, “Asia is one of Francis’ priorities.”

* The Philippine’s wealth, however, is increasingly very unevenly distributed. This is a growing political and social problem that has been exacerbated by the Philippines’ comparatively high birth rate, especially among Catholics, which helps explain the large population of “street kids”.

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

Bishop Sutton reports colleague’s comforting words …

MARYLAND
The Baltimore Brew

Bishop Sutton reports colleague’s comforting words about Cook’s fatal hit-and-run crash: “It’s not your fault”

Fern Shen January 13, 2015

With Bishop Heather Cook in a Baltimore jail cell on charges of manslaughter, drunk driving and leaving the scene of an accident, the man who presided during her hiring says he didn’t realize how burdened he was by the incident until “a bishop colleague” spoke with him.

Bishop Eugene Taylor Sutton – Cook’s Episcopal Diocese of Maryland boss, who has acknowledged diocesan officials knew about Cook’s 2010 drunk driving and drug arrest but did not disclose it to the people who elected her – recounted the colleague’s words of solace in a “pastoral letter” published today.

“Eugene, I am the child of an alcoholic and I’ve spent many years dealing with that and coming to understand the hold that alcohol has on someone who is addicted to it,” the colleague said, according to Sutton’s account.

“I want to tell you that the Diocese of Maryland is not responsible for the terrible accident that killed that bicyclist,” the colleague said, according to Sutton’s letter. “You are not responsible for that; Heather Cook is. It’s not your fault.”

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.

Md. Episcopal Bishop Speaks Out About Fatal Hit-and-Run

MARYLAND
CBS DC

BALTIMORE — The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland’s top bishop says the church is filled with anger, bitterness and pain after a fatal hit-and-run crash involving the diocese’s No. 2 leader.

In a letter posted online Tuesday, the Right Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton says “there are still too many questions for which there are no easy answers.”

Sutton says he and diocese leaders will explore what they could have done better and learn to accept what they couldn’t have done better. He says they’ll explore ways to address addiction in the church and how to support the cycling community.

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

Church to review how it elected jailed bishop

MARYLAND
The Baltimore Sun

By Jonathan Pitts
The Baltimore Sun

An inquiry by the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland into a fatal hit-and-run crash involving its second highest-ranking official, Bishop Suffragan Heather Elizabeth Cook, will include a reassessment of the process by which Cook was elected to the post last May, according to a letter the church’s No. 1 bishop posted online Tuesday.

The diocese is praying for the family of Thomas Palermo, the 41-year-old bicyclist killed in the Dec. 27 accident, Archbishop Eugene Taylor Sutton wrote, “and we continue to pray for our sister Heather in this time of her tremendous grief and sorrow.” He added that a “disciplinary process is underway to consider consequences for her actions as well as review the process that resulted in her election.”

Sutton wrote that the church is in such pain that “words barely express the depth of [its] shock and despair” and cited Scripture and theologians in an effort to encourage fellow Episcopalians.

Cook, 58, who became the Maryland archdiocese’s first female bishop last May 2, is in jail in lieu of $2.5 million bail. She faces charges of manslaughter, driving under the influence, leaving an accident scene and texting while driving.

A District Court judge, Nicole Pastore Klein, on Monday rejected a request from Cook’s attorneys to lower her bail to $500,000, saying she couldn’t trust Cook’s judgment.

The allegations against Cook show a “reckless and careless indifference to life,” Klein 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.

01/13/2015 – A Pastoral Letter to the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland

MARYLAND
The Episcopal Church of Maryland

The Rt. Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton
January 13, 2015

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

The Diocese of Maryland is in deep pain. Words barely express the depth of our shock and despair over the events and revelations of the past two weeks in the aftermath of the tragic collision involving Bishop Suffragan Heather Cook, which resulted in the death of a cyclist, Thomas Palermo, on Saturday, December 27. She is now in jail, facing charges of manslaughter, leaving the scene of an accident resulting in a death, driving under the influence of alcohol, and texting while driving.

There are still too many questions for which there are no easy answers, and we are filled with anger, bitterness, pain and tears. Our thoughts and prayers remain with the Palermo family in their bereavement and for ourselves as a diocese in mourning. And we continue to pray for our sister Heather in this time of her tremendous grief and sorrow, knowing the Episcopal Church’s “Title IV” disciplinary process is underway to consider consequences for her actions as well as review the process that resulted in her election.

But what now? What do we do with our grief?

I want to share with you five important learnings that are helping me through this time. They became clear to me after recently consulting a spiritual guide and trusted bishop colleagues:

1. We make wiser decisions after a dedicated time of prayer and solitude. Thoughts take time to develop. In a time of great upheaval, things said, decided upon, and done in haste are rarely the most helpful over the long run.

2. Being vulnerable is better than being defensive. In a supportive and eucharistically-grounded community, we can speak the truth in love to one another, confess that we don’t have all the answers, and hear what the Spirit is saying through all of us. We learn not to judge one another (in the sense of “condemnation”). The diocese is the Body of Christ in community and in action. As one spiritual writer has said “Divine closeness is the secret of human vulnerability. We are not vulnerable simply because we are childlike adults in an imperfect world. We are vulnerable because we carry in us a deep strain of God’s caring.”1

3. Trust that the Spirit will provide everything that we need. God has not abandoned us; we are not alone in this moment. The Holy Spirit is the Holy Comforter.

4. Spend some time with French Jesuit priest and philosopher Pierre Teilhard de Chardin’s meditation “Trust in the Slow Work of God” (see below). It reminds us to have patience and not feel that we can simply fix problems on our own.

5. After discussing this tragedy with some of my bishop colleagues for over an hour and being held up in prayer by them, one said, “Eugene, I am the child of an alcoholic and I’ve spent many years dealing with that and coming to understand the hold that alcohol has on someone who is addicted to it. I want to tell you that the Diocese of Maryland is not responsible for the terrible accident that killed that bicyclist. You are not responsible for that; Heather Cook is. It’s not your fault.” I burst into tears. I hadn’t realized how much I had internalized the weight of responsibility for the tragedy, the sense of shame, and the desperate need to make it all better. Later, praying before the Icon of Christ the Pantocrater, I gazed into those piercing eyes of our Lord, asking: What is Christ wanting to say to me? And what did I want to say to him? After what seemed like an eternity, I was finally able to gaze into his eyes and say: “Lord, it’s not your fault.”

My sisters and brothers, we will get through this. We will shed tears, suffer together, explore what we could have done better and learn to accept what we couldn’t have done better. We will pick ourselves up and go on with our ministries in our churches and our mission in the world, including finding ways to support the cycling community and address the problem of addiction in our culture and in our Church.

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

Read between the lines…

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

01/14/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

When I first started working as a canon lawyer for Catholic dioceses, a priest told me that for years bishops and religious superiors had sent letters of introduction (the precursor to Testimonials of Suitability) for offending priests that were typed using double spacing- an indication to the receiving bishop that he should ‘read between the lines’. I was never able to verify if this was true, but the idea has always intrigued me. Indeed, the ability to understand what is not contained in the documentation belonging to a particular priest is, at times, more important than identifying what is. This is an important fact to keep in mind as we anticipate the release of additional files of priests of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, and perhaps in particular with the release of the file of Father Joseph Gallatin.

In June of 2014, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis announced that it would be restricting Father Gallatin’s ministry so that he would not have ‘any role in a parish setting or any other setting in which he will have vocational responsibilities that involve minors’. This decision was the result, according to the Archdiocese, of a ‘1998 action and recent evaluations of Rev. Gallatin’ that the Review Board determined were ‘concerning enough’ to warrant such restrictions.

When and if the Gallatin file is released, we are unlikely to see any of the psychological evaluations of Father Gallatin, and we are also unlikely to see any firsthand reports of what occurred in 1998. The former is, perhaps, appropriate. Father Gallatin, who has not been convicted of any crime, has the same rights as anyone else, including the right to have his private medical information remain confidential. The latter is likely, once again, attributable to negligence on the part of the Archdiocese. I may be wrong about this but I honestly can’t remember seeing a firsthand account of what had transpired in 1998 from the point of view of the victim, or even his name.

If released, what the file will most likely contain are descriptions of what occurred, written in the form of memos, that change both over time and depending on the person writing the report. We may also see some summaries of psychological evaluations and reports, but these again will have been compiled by various individuals and reflect the authors’ interests and biases, rather than being an accurate summation of the conclusions of the person who conducted the evaluation. By now, I hope everyone can agree that such summaries, especially when written by Father Kevin McDonough, are basically worthless. The only value in reading them in this case, as I see it, is for amusement. The extent to which so many adults seem confused about basic human anatomy (shoulder? chest? abdomen?) should at least cause you to chuckle.

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.

Bischof lässt Übergriffe in Freiburger Waisenhaus aufarbeiten

SCHWEIZ
SRF

[One victim told Bishop Charles Morerod of sexual assault and abuse in a former orphanage and boarding school in the Fribourg Broye District. Morerod has ordered an investigation.]

Ein Opfer erzählte Bischof Charles Morerod von sexuellen Übergriffen und Misshandlungen in einem ehemaligen Waisenhaus und Pensionat im freiburgischen Broyebezirk. Morerod hat eine Untersuchung angeordnet.

Zwei externe Experten werden Opfer befragen und die Vorkommnisse historisch aufarbeiten. Es geht um die Zeit zwischen 1930 und 1950 und um das Waisenhaus und Pensionat Marini im Freiburger Broyebezirk. Das Institut ist seit 1979 geschlossen.

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

Sexueller Missbrauch in evangelischem Kinderheim: Zander strebt Millionen-Klage an

DEUTSCHLAND
idowa

[Detlev Zander is seeking damages for sexual abuse he suffered in a Protestant home.]

Die spektakuläre Klage auf 1,1 Millionen Euro Schmerzensgeld wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs in einem evangelischen Kinderheim wird weiter vorangetrieben. Dies hat Detlev Zander in einem Gespräch mit der Deutschen Presseagentur bestätigt.

Der 53-Jährige, der jetzt in Plattling lebt, ist nach seiner Darstellung als Kind in einem Heim der evangelischen Brüdergemeinde Korntal (Kreis Ludwigsburg) sexuell missbraucht, misshandelt und gedemütigt worden.

In den nächsten Tagen soll es ein Treffen mit Beauftragten der Brüdergemeinde geben. Diese hofft, dass die Klage noch zurückgezogen wird. “Das wäre ein Aderlass, der nicht zu verkraften wäre”, sagt der Sprecher der Brüdergemeinde, Manuel Liesenfeld, über die Summe. Die Vorwürfe Zanders weist er grundsätzlich nicht zurück.

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.

Empörung wegen mildem Urteil für pädophilen Pfarrer

SLOVAKIA
Heute

[Indignation because of mild sentence for pedophile priest]

Der Fall, der die römisch-katholische Kirche erschütterte, war 2013 aufgeflogen, nachdem die Mutter des Opfers ein Tagebuch gefunden hatte, in dem die Schülerin detailliert beschrieb, wie sie vom Pfarrer der Kleingemeinde Nevidzany missbraucht worden war. Demnach hatte der Geistliche die damals Elfjährige zwischen November 2011 und August 2012 mit verliebten SMS-Nachrichten wiederholt in die Kirche oder ins Pfarrhaus gelockt und dort geküsst und im Intimbereich gestreichelt. Vor Gericht versicherte der 49-Jährige wiederholt, er sei unschuldig, die Richterin sah aber anhand von Expertengutachten und Zeugenaussagen seine Schuld als eindeutig erwiesen.

Das milde Urteil sei ein äußerst schlechtes Signal an die Öffentlichkeit, zitierte die linksliberale Tageszeitung Pravda am Mittwoch die Rechtsexpertin Janka Debreceniova. Das Gericht habe trotz des minderjährigen Opfers zu einer absoluten Minimalstrafe gegriffen, obwohl es sich bei dem Täter um eine Person handelte, die ihre Macht ausnutzte und zudem eine Institution repräsentierte, die in der Gesellschaft als moralische Autorität gesehen werde. Das würde ein Gefühl der Kränkung des Opfers und seiner Familie nur noch stärken, erklärte die Rechtsexpertin.

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.

Sioux Falls Opening New Homeless Shelter

SOUTH DAKOTA
KDLT

by Associated Press
January 09, 2015

A new homeless shelter opens Monday in Sioux falls.

The Bishop Dudley Hospitality House will provide overnight emergency shelter for men, women and families and daytime services currently provided at the Good Shepherd Center. It will also offer other services from existing service providers using a hub of offices at the new facility.

More than $4.8 million has been raised for construction and the initial operating support for the ministry.

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.

SD–Victims blast Sioux Falls bishop for honoring accused predator

SOUTH DAKOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 14

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

Monday, in an act of stunning insensitivity, a South Dakota bishop dedicated a building to his predecessor who was accused of molesting three children.

Sioux Falls Bishop Paul J. Swain led a public ceremony to name dedicated a homeless shelter after the now-deceased Bishop Paul V. Dudley, who alleged sexually abused in the St. Paul archdiocese.

[KDLT]

[sfcatholic.org]

In 1999, a woman accused Dudley of having molested her in the 1970s. In 2002, a man accused Dudley of having fondled him as a boy in the 1950s. And later in 2002, a second woman charged Dudley with behaving inapropriately toward her in the 1960s.

Church officials claim a so-called church “investigation” could not substantiate any of the accusations

Because of archaic, predator-friendly statutes of limitations and deeply wounded, shame-filled victims, it’s likely no one will ever know the full truth of the allegations against Bishop Dudley. Even so, here’s what matters now:

It usually takes victims of childhood horror decades to find the courage and strength to speak up. So it’s very possible that in the months and years ahead, more who say they were assaulted by Bishop Dudley may speak up.

And often, so-called “church investigations” that purportedly “exonerate” accused clerics end up being reversed when other victims, witnesses or whistleblowers come forward later.

So why take the risk of hurting even more those who are already in pain, or of discouraging other child sex abuse victims from reporting child molesting clerics who may still be molesting kids now?

Adults have a simple choice: We can act in ways that make it harder or easier for victims to protect children by exposing predators. Sioux Falls Catholic officials are making it harder.

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.

NE–Victims want new Nebraska bishop to focus on kids’ safety

NEBRASKA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 14

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

Soon the Vatican will appoint a new bishop for the Grand Island diocese in Nebraska.

[Omaha.com]

Children’s safety should be his top priority. We urge him to disclose the names, whereabouts and work histories of any cleric who is a proven, admitted or credibly accused predator and to permanently and prominently post this information on his diocesan and parish websites.

In the past, Western Nebraska Catholic officials have claimed there have been no predator priests in their diocese. We find that extremely hard to believe. We strongly urge anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes or misdeeds – as an adult or a child – to get help, call police, expose wrongdoers, protect others, deter cover-ups and start healing.

Look at other dioceses in the area. There are three publicly accused Lincoln diocese predator priests (Fr. Robert C. Hrdlicka, Fr. Paul Margand and Fr. Jerome C. Murray) and 13 such clerics in the Omaha Archdiocese (Fr. Robert Allgaier, Fr. Richard Colbert, Fr. Franklin “Frank” A. Dvorak, Fr. John M. Fiala, Fr. Daniel P. Herek, Fr. Jay L. Kruse, Fr. Duane W. Lukes (Lucas), Fr. Anthony Palmese, Fr. Charles Potocki, Fr. Anthony Petrusic, Fr. Alfred J. Salanitro, Fr. Thomas P. Sellentin, and Fr. John C. Starostka). Two of them – Fr. Palmese and Fr. Potocki – were just “outed” for the first time in November. http://www.snapnetwork.org/ne_advisory

Neighboring dioceses include Denver (with 16 publicly accused priests), Cheyenne (with two) and Rapid City South Dakota (with eight).

We strongly suspect that at least a few of these clerics spent time in Grand Island diocese, even if just “filling in” briefly for a brother priest who was sick or on vacation. And if so, the new Grand Island bishop should use his resources – parish bulletins, church websites, pulpit announcements and personal visits – to beg anyone with information or suspicions about him or them to step forward. It takes just seconds for a child molester to shove his tongue in a girl’s mouth or down a boy’s pants. So why not err on the side of caution and aggressively seek out anyone who might have been sexually assaulted by a priest, nun, brother, seminarian or other church employee and who may still be suffering in shame, silence and self-blame?

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.

Women wait 18 years to see Portland pastor face child sex-abuse prosecution

OREGON
Oregonian

By Rick Bella | The Oregonian/OregonLive
on January 14, 2015

In February, a Happy Valley pastor goes to trial in a criminal case more than 18 years in the making.

That’s how long seven women have lived in frustration and anger that the pastor wasn’t charged after they told police that he sexually abused them in the 1990s.

But now, prosecutors have taken a second look at the complaints. And based on new allegations by one of the women, they are bringing felony sexual-abuse charges against Mike Sperou, charismatic pastor of a small, under-the-radar church community that lives and worships together in a network of rented homes in Portland and Happy Valley.

The seven women – who ranged in age from 11 to 16 at the time of the alleged abuse – and other former church members said Sperou claims deep emotional scars from childhood traumas and the Vietnam War. They said the church, originally called the Southeast Bible Church, seemed to start with good intentions. But they said the church evolved into a cult-like organization that dissolved family bonds as Sperou sank into heavy drinking, drug use, adultery and sexual abuse of children.

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.

On YU Sex Abuse Case, You Can’t Hide From God

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Wed, 01/14/2015
Rabbi Chaim Gruber
Special To The Jewish Week

On the third night of this past Chanukah, attorney Kevin Mulhearn sent a draft of a complaint against Yeshiva University High School for Boys to a group of plaintiffs who say they had been sexually abused as students.

The complaint will be filed in Manhattan Supreme Court. Mulhearn is attempting to find some legal remedy at the state level after legal action at the federal level did not succeed for these plaintiffs. (I am not one of the plaintiffs, although I left the school after one year due to alleged physical abuse.)

But, is it in the best interest of the Jewish world and all those personally involved in this case that more mass media reports come forward over the next number of years about this scandal? Wouldn’t the best remedy be an expedient out-of-court settlement so to finally lay this matter to rest? (That Yeshiva University should settle out of court was also the advice of Jewish Week editor Gary Rosenblatt, a graduate of YU, in his column “The YU Impasse,” Between The Lines, July 17, 2013.)

In the much publicized Twersky, et al., vs. Yeshiva University, et al. sexual abuse case that was in the federal courts for the past year and a half (also pleaded by Mulhearn), while YU has publicly admitted its guilt, the court ruled that the plaintiffs were past their maximum allowable time to file a legal suit according to the statute of limitations. However, it is important to recognize that according to the Jewish system of law that YU is meant to promote, the statute of limitations had not passed because there is no statute of limitations in Jewish law. One reason why there is no statute of limitations is because Jewish law is meant to reflect non-arbitrary divine law, which, as will be explained, has no statute of limitations.

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.

Rotherham MP leads tributes at Westminster to ‘forgotten victims’ of child abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Yorkshire Post

Flowers have been laid in Westminster to commemorate the victims of child abuse – described by one survivor as the “forgotten people”.

The WhiteFlowers Campaign is calling on the Home Office to declare a statutory inquiry focusing on organised and institutional child abuse from 1945, linking with other inquiries across the UK. Among those laying flowers at Old Palace Yard, next to the Houses of Parliament, were survivors and MPs.

The group of about 40 people laid a variety of flowers among pictures of victims before a meeting in Parliament to discuss the inquiry and to call for more to be done to help survivors achieve justice.

MPs John Mann, Simon Danczuk and Sarah Champion joined the victims, including 58-year-old Jenny Tomlin, mother of former Eastenders star Martine McCutcheon.

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.

Samantha Morton tells abuse survivors: we will not be forgotten

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sandra Laville
Wednesday 14 January 2015

Samantha Morton, the actor who has spoken of being abused, has sent a message of support to hundreds of abuse survivors meeting on Wednesday.

Morton said: “We will not forget, we will not be forgotten. The abuse we suffered is happening right now to a child desperately in need of rescuing.

“We come together to stop abuse so the perpetrators of this horrific crime can be brought to justice. I keep peace in my heart which I will share with you all.”

Hundreds of survivors of child abuse crowded into a Commons committee room to debate how the government’s child abuse inquiry should be conducted.

John Mann, MP for Bassetlaw, called on survivors of child abuse to speak with one voice as they demand changes to an inquiry set up by Theresa May, or risk the collapse of the whole process.

The home secretary has said three options are being considered for a new statutory inquiry, only one of which involves maintaining the original panel. Mann, a Labour MP, said that unless there was unity, there was a risk that the inquiry would not take place.

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.

DALENDE INKOMSTEN BIJ NEDERLANDSE PAROCHIES

NEDERLAND
KerkNet

[The total income of 895 parishes in the Netheralands fell in 2013 compared to the previous year. ]

HILVERSUM (KerkNet/RKK.nl) – De totale inkomsten van 895 rooms-katholieke parochies in Nederland daalden in 2013 ten opzichte van het jaar daarvoor met 3,2%. Dat is vandaag bekendgemaakt bij het begin van de jaarlijkse interkerkelijke geldinzamelingsactie ‘Kerkbalans’. Inkomsten van Nederlandse parochies bestaan voor 63% uit inkomsten ‘levend geld’, met een optelling van de bijdragen aan Kerkbalans, de collecten en vergoedingen voor kerkelijke diensten. De overige inkomsten (37 procent) zijn afkomstig uit bezittingen en beleggingen.

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.

FILES OF 6 ARCHDIOCESE OF SAINT PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS PRIESTS RELEASED

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

The files of six priests with allegations of sexually abusing minors or inappropriate behavior with minors in the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis were publicly released on January 14, 2015.

This disclosure of files was agreed upon as part of the settlement of the Doe 1 civil lawsuit in October 2014.

The list of files released today includes the following priests: Joseph Gallatin; James Murphy; Thaddeus Posey; Raymond Prybis; William Stolzman; and Mark Wehmann.

James Murphy File
James Murphy Timeline
James Murphy Key Documents

Joseph Gallatin File
Joseph Gallatin Timeline
Joseph Gallatin Key Documents

Mark Wehmann File
Mark Wehmann Timeline
Mark Wehmann Key Documents

Raymond Prybis File
Raymond Prybis Timeline

Thaddeus Posey File
Thaddeus Posey Timeline

William Stolzman File
William Stolzman Timeline

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.

Kincora witness amnesty is welcomed by ex-Army officer

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

BY LIAM CLARKE – 14 JANUARY 2015

Security witnesses who give evidence to the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry will not face prosecution, it can be revealed.

The inquiry said it had received a letter of assurance from the Attorney General in London after yesterday’s Belfast Telegraph revealed Sir Anthony Hart’s probe into abuse had not contacted three potentially key witnesses.

They include former Army officer Colin Wallace, who was involved in black propaganda during the Troubles.

But after he raised concerns with his superiors about the sexual abuse of boys at the notorious east Belfast home, Kincora, he was convicted of the manslaughter of a friend, before later being cleared and compensated.

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.

Doe 29 Lawsuit Names Boy Scouts of America…

News Release
January 13, 2015

Doe 29 Lawsuit Names Boy Scouts of America, Northern Star Council, River Hills United Methodist Church and Scoutmaster Peter Stibal

Systemic Failure of Boy Scouts, Council and Church to Act on Red Flags Regarding Stibal’s Danger to Boys; Perversion Files Demonstrate Their Knowledge of Risk

(St. Paul, MN) – A civil lawsuit was filed today in Ramsey County by a former Boy Scout who was sexually abused by his Scoutmaster, Peter Stibal. The lawsuit names Boy Scouts of America (BSA), Northern Star Council, River Hills United Methodist Church – the troop’s chartering organization – and Stibal.

BSA has a longstanding pattern of knowledge of the risk of sexual abuse by its scoutmasters, as BSA keeps ineligible volunteer files specific to sexual abuse, labeled as “perversion files” by BSA. An earlier case brought against the same defendants involving Stibal in Ramsey County was settled in May 2014 right before trial. Stibal’s dangerous tendencies around scouts were made known to the scout leaders up the line, including violations of existing rules and policies designed to keep scouts safe. “There is evidence of systemic failure by BSA to deny and minimize red flags that were received by those up the line at BSA regarding the danger Stibal posed to Scouts,” said Jeff Anderson, attorney for Doe 29. “For decades, BSA has kept its perversion files, which provide countless examples of sexual misconduct and red flags by adult leaders, yet they have continued to ignore these red flags. Doe 29 and many other Boy Scouts have been damaged as a result.”

The perversion files were released to the public for the first time in a landmark case in Oregon in October 2012. In that case, more than 1,200 perversion files from 1965-1985 were made public by order of the Oregon Supreme Court. In the case settled in Ramsey County in May 2014, the Court ordered the production of perversion files for the years 1998-2008. Most recently, in a case set for trial in Santa Barbara, California, the Court ordered production of BSA’s perversion files from 1991-2007: http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-boy-scouts-20150110-story.html “The existence of thousands of perversion files demonstrates BSA’s longstanding practice of shrouding sexual abuse by its adult leaders in secrecy,” Anderson said.

Doe 29 Amended Complaint

Contact: Jeff Anderson: Office/651.583.7633 Cell/612.817.8665
Sarah Odegaard: Office/651.583.7633 Cell/612.616.4218

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Rinuncia del Vescovo di Grand Island (U.S.A.) e nomina del successore

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Bolletino

Il Santo Padre Francesco ha accettato la rinuncia al governo pastorale della diocesi di Grand Island (U.S.A.), presentata da S.E. Mons. William J. Dendinger, in conformità al can. 401 § 1 del Codice di Diritto Canonico.

Il Papa ha nominato Vescovo di Grand Island (U.S.A.) Mons. Joseph G. Hanefeldt, del clero dell’arcidiocesi di Omaha, finora Parroco della “Christ the King Parish” ad Omaha.

Mons. Joseph G. Hanefeldt

Mons. Joseph G. Hanefeldt è nato il 25 aprile 1958 a Creighton (Nebraska), nell’arcidiocesi di Omaha. Dopo aver frequentato la scuola elementare “Saint Ludgar” e la “Creighton Community High School”, ha svolto gli studi filosofici presso il “Saint John Vianney Seminary” e la “University of Saint Thomas” a Saint Paul (Minnesota) (1976-1980). Successivamente, ha frequentato il Pontificio Collegio Americano del Nord a Roma (1980-1984), ottenendo il Baccalaureato in Teologia presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana (1983) e il Diploma in Teologia Sacramentale presso il Pontificio Ateneo di Sant’Anselmo (1984).

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Bishop to be named next week to replace Dendinger, who was ordained in Omaha

NEBRASKA
Omaha World-Herald

SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 2015

By Harold Reutter / World-Herald News Service

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. — A new bishop will be named next week to replace Bishop William J. Dendinger, 75, the seventh bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Island.

The bishop’s name will be announced during a press conference at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Mary’s Cathedral Square.

Dendinger has served as bishop of the Grand Island Diocese since Oct. 14, 2004. Church law requires bishops to submit a letter of retirement at age 75.

Dendinger, a native of Coleridge, was ordained a priest on May 29, 1965, for the Archdiocese of Omaha. He then taught at high schools in Petersburg and Elgin from 1965 to 1970.

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Press chief to Bishop of Truro charged with 15 child sex offences

UNITED KINGDOM
Western Morning News

A former press chief for the Bishop of Truro has been charged with sexual offences against children.

Jeremy Dowling, 76, of Church Path, Bude, is due to appear before Bodmin magistrates on January 22.

He faces 15 charges of sexual assault against children aged under 16.

Mr Dowling retired as communications officer for the Truro Diocese in 2009, having worked for several bishops over the previous 25 years.

He was also a governor at Budehaven School for 18 years, before stepping down in 2013.

The Diocese of Truro said it was “deeply concerned” about the charges, which are thought to predate Mr Dowling’s time working for the Church of England.

“Clearly this is now a matter for the courts and the diocese will not comment on the case until legal proceedings are concluded,” a spokesman said.

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Scottish archbishop credits God’s grace for healing process in diocese

SCOTLAND
Catholic News Agency

By Matt Hadro

Edinburgh, Scotland, Jan 13, 2015 / 05:18 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Following the 2013 resignation of Cardinal Keith O’Brien as Archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh, his successor acknowledges the healing process for the diocese is continuing by God’s grace, but will take time.

“Time is a great healer, and that is certainly helping us. But there is also the grace of God assisting us in moving on from any difficulties we might have had in the past,” Archbishop Leo Cushley of St. Andrews and Edinburgh told CNA in an interview on Monday.

His predecessor resigned shortly before the 2013 conclave that elected Pope Francis, amid allegations that he made inappropriate sexual advances toward three priests in the 1980s. The cardinal later admitted the allegations to be true.

The new archbishop had a heavy burden ahead of him but promised “reconciliation and healing” for the archdiocese, and acknowledged the healing process is a “delicate” one.

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Exposure alleged at Revere Catholic school

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Travis Andersen
GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 14, 2015

A worker at a Catholic school in Revere has been placed on leave, and the parish pastor and two school employees have resigned after failing to promptly report possible indecent exposure by the worker in a boys bathroom, the Archdiocese of Boston said.

The archdiocese said in a statement on Tuesday that three incidents of “potential indecent exposure” occurred in a bathroom intended for the exclusive use of students at the Immaculate Conception School over the last month and a half, during regular school hours.

The pastor, principal, and one teacher at the school, which serves students in prekindergarten through Grade 8, have resigned their positions for failing to “report these possible incidents in a timely manner,” church officials said.

Terrence C. Donilon, a spokesman for the archdiocese, declined to identify the suspended worker or the employees who resigned. He also would not say what job the suspended employee performs.

The pastor and principal are identified on the parish and school websites as the Rev. George Szal and Alison Kelly. They could not be reached for comment.

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Anger as ex-vicar convicted of child sex offences attends church in East Grinstead

UNITED KINGDOM
East Grinstead Courier

A WOMAN claiming to be a victim of an ex-vicar convicted of child sex offences says she is shocked he is still able to attend church in East Grinstead and use the title “Reverend”.

Guy Bennett was jailed in 1999 for indecently assaulting three young girls in his care.

The offences involved 11-year-old victims between 1976 and 1988 while he was a teacher at St Mary’s School in Oxted.

But the Archbishop of Canterbury has admitted in a letter he is powerless to prevent him from referring to himself as “Reverend” or wearing a clerical collar.

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Priest’s suspension by Vatican due to charge of `sexual abuse of minor’

INDIA
Daijiworld

From Our Special Correspondent
Daijiworld Media Network

Bengaluru, Jan 14: The suspension of the Bangalore Archdiocesan priest Simon Bartholomeo by Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) in barring the priest from exercising “the priestly ministry in public,’’ turns to be a far grave Canonical offence as the girl, whom he was accused of raping and impregnating and helped in her getting an abortion, was a minor when the alleged offence took place.

The priest was acquitted by Tumkur’s Second Additional District and Sessions Court, as all the seven prosecution witnesses including the victim, her parents and grandmother had turned“hostile’’ and the prosecution was unable to “prove beyond a reasonable doubt’’ that accused had “intercourse with (the victim) forcibly’’ and had “intercourse from time to time by (falsely) promising to marry her’’ and had “committed criminal intimidation of murdering (the victim) if she tells about him and asking her to put the blame on somebody else.’’

Thus, in the eyes of the civil court, which tried the case under Sections 376, 507 and 417 of Indian Penal Code and delivered the judgement on June 17, 2010, the accused was acquitted of the charge brought against him. The court held that the prosecution had failed to establish following the seven witnesses, including the victim and her parents, turning hostile that the “accused had committed rape forcibly and against her consent and continued to have intercourse with her, with a promise to marrying her and the consequent pregnancy and the prosecution has failed to prove even the criminal intimidation alleged.’’

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A Catholic Brother dies while facing child-abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article posted 14 January 2015)

A member of the Marist Brothers in Australia (Brother Donald Gabriel Brodie NEWTON) has died, in an apparent suicide, just after New South Wales police received child-sex allegations against him from a former schoolboy. Therefore, now that he is dead, Brother Newton will not have to face any police investigation (or any court case) arising from the ex-pupil’s allegations.

* In August 2014, a man from the Hunter region (around Maitland and Newcastle, north of Sydney) made a statement to detectives in the New South Wales police, alleging that while he was a student at Maitland Marist Brothers school in the late 1970s he was sexually abused by Marist Brother Don Newton during a camping trip. These allegations were also notified to Marist Brothers headquarters in Sydney and to the office of the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese. The allegations were also put to Brother Newton.

* On 5 October 2014, Brother Don Newton, 74, died suddenly in violent circumstances on a suburban railway track in Sydney.

The NSW Coroner’s Office confirmed Brother Newton’s death, but said that a formal cause of death would not be determined until investigations had been finalised.

Donald Newton had spent 56 years as a Marist Brother, working in various Marist schools in New South Wales, Queensland and Canberra.

He first met the Marist Brothers when he was a primary-school pupil. For secondary schooling, he was a boarder with the Marists at St Joseph’s College Hunteres Hill, Sydney. During his secondary schooling, he was recruited by the Marists as a future Brother. He officially became a Marist Brother at the age of 18.

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Support for push to investigate links between sex abuse and suicides

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By Joanne McCarthy Jan. 14, 2015

AUSTRALIA’S leading child abuse organisation has supported a Hunter group’s push for an investigation into possible links between convicted and alleged child sex offenders and the suicides of more than 30 Hunter boys, teenagers and men.

Adults Surviving Child Abuse (ASCA) president Dr Cathy Kezelman said it was vital because ‘‘when you’re looking at including the voices of people impacted by child sexual abuse the voices of those who have not survived are harder to hear, but they’re very significant voices’’.

‘‘What is a more profound repercussion of the crime than someone losing their life?’’ Dr Kezelman said.

ASCA supported the Hunter group’s submission to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, for the families of those who had already died, and to help prevent further suicides.

She agreed with Hunter group spokesman Bob O’Toole, who said many devastated families had been silenced in the past because of the sudden, shocking and unexplained deaths of family members, often after troubling behaviour.

‘‘The link between child sexual abuse and the risk of suicide is well established with a 2008 Australian study showing the rate of suicide for child sexual abuse survivors was 18 times higher than that of people who have not experienced child sexual assault,” Dr Kezelman said.

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3 families now suing Warner Christian Academy over child-molesting teacher

FLORIDA
News-Journal

By Frank Fernandez
frank.fernandez@news-jrnl.com
Published: Monday, January 12, 2015
.
A mother learned her son was being sexually molested and exploited by the former summer camp director at Warner Christian Academy when FBI agents visited her home with pictures of the abuse, according to a lawsuit filed in circuit court in Volusia County.

The lawsuit is the most recent of three filed so far by parents of boys against White Chapel Church of God, which runs Warner Christian Academy in South Daytona, following former teacher and summer camp director Matthew Graziotti’s guilty pleas to federal child- porn charges.

The sexual exploitation and molestation of the boy began in the summer of 2012 and continued through the summer of 2014, according to the lawsuit filed by attorney Kevin Bledsoe. Warner Christian failed to adequately check Graziotti’s background and failed “to investigate unusual and suspicious activities of Matthew Graziotti which were red flags that he was grooming children for potential sexual abuse,” according to the lawsuit. The suit does not detail the red flags and identifies the boy and his mother only by the pseudonyms of Richard Roe and Robin Roe.

The school had no indication there was a problem, Mark Tress, the superintendent of Warner Christian Academy, said in a phone interview. Tress said no parent ever complained of any inappropriate behavior on the part of Graziotti.

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How Religious Orders Contain Sexual Offenders in Their Ranks

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

by JOAN FRAWLEY DESMOND 01/13/2015

CHICAGO — Last November, a Boston Globe story examined the Society of Jesus’ past failure to restrict the activities of a high-profile Jesuit with a string of complaints about his contact with boys.

According to papers filed in legal proceedings and cited by the Globe, Jesuit Father Donald McGuire repeatedly violated his superior’s order that he avoid traveling with minors and was ultimately convicted in federal court of sexually abusing two boys. He is now serving a 25-year sentence.

Much has changed since McGuire was convicted and laicized almost a decade ago. In the wake of the 2002 clergy-abuse crisis and the U.S. bishops’ approval of the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” religious orders have also implemented zero-tolerance policies for members with substantiated accusations of child sexual abuse, and they have established safe-environment training and lay review boards.

But unlike U.S. dioceses, religious orders allow some members with substantiated allegations to remain in community, with restrictions — known as “safety plans” — based on the seriousness of the offense and on related evaluations.

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Jeff Rainford, Mayor Slay’s fierce chief, to resign

MISSOURI
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By Nicholas J.C. Pistor

ST. LOUIS • The man whose voice has thundered across City Hall from Room 200 for more than a decade soon will leave his post.

Operating out of an office next to Mayor Francis Slay, Jeff Rainford has battled adversaries, cajoled business leaders, debated reporters, enforced Slay’s agenda and fundamentally changed city government. Early next month, he will officially resign the chief of staff position he has held since 2001, he said.

Rainford, a former television reporter, leaves a legacy as one of the city’s most effective staff leaders. Along the way, he became known as a fierce, unflinching defender of Slay, always ready to go to the mat to keep the administration’s policies on track. His brash personality has drawn praise and criticism. …

In 1993, Rainford drew controversy when he and another reporter worked on a story that involved using a male prostitute to secretly record a Belleville-area priest with hopes of getting him to reveal details about sexual misconduct. At the time, the Belleville Diocese was rocked by a child sex abuse scandal.

The story never aired. Rainford left KMOV later that year when his contract with the station expired.

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January 13, 2015

Child abuse victim’s letter to Theresa May: Inquiry gave me hope but now I feel betrayed

UNITED KINGDOM
Mirror

Jan 13, 2015 By Becky, abuse survivor

Dear Home Secretary

I am one of the 70 survivors who met the panel for your inquiry into historic child sex abuse.

I was sceptical about whether they would be able to help victims like me, but after spending time with them, for the first time since I was abused more than 30 years ago, I started to feel real hope that our voices would be heard.

Now it seems certain that you will disband the panel, possibly as soon as this week – and the betrayal is devastating.

I was molested from the age of three or four by my biological father.

On my sixth birthday I became a “big girl” and was raped by him for the first time. By the end of that year I had been introduced to what I now am aware was a faith-related paedophile ring. On Christmas Eve, still at the age of six, I was subjected to the first of many multiple rapes.

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O’Malley must fire two staff & defrock one priest, SNAP says

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Jan. 13

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

Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley must do more than let a priest, principal and teacher resign. He must defrock the cleric and fire the other two.

[WHDH]

Because O’Malley is the pope’s point man on abuse, his actions in this case will be widely scrutinized. And because he postures as a “reformer” on abuse, O’Malley must act swiftly and severely.

Nothing will more effectively deter future recklessness and secrecy in child sex cases than to publicly and permanently remove all three of these wrongdoers from any future work with the church in any capacity.

If there’s an archdiocese on the planet where refusing to promptly call police about child sex allegations should be most harshly punished, it’s Boston.

Child predators are often sick and compulsive individuals who have little control over their actions. Their crimes often can’t be deterred. Supervisors and colleagues, however, have no excuse whatsoever. They merely need to overcome their cowardice and call 911. Catholic staffers will do this if they see that those who refuse lose their careers.

(SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is the world’s oldest and largest support group for clergy abuse victims. We were founded in 1988 and have more than 20,000 members. Despite the word “priest” in our title, we have members who were molested by religious figures of all denominations, including nuns, rabbis, bishops, and Protestant ministers. Our website is SNAPnetwork.org)

Contact – David Clohessy 314-566-9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com, Barbara Dorris 314-503-0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org, Barbara Blaine 312-399-4747, bblaine@SNAPnetwork.org

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Kansas City Catholics Divided Over Vatican Investigation Of Bishop

KANSAS CITY (MO)
WAMC

By FRANK MORRIS

A Catholic bishop normally governs pretty much unchecked in his diocese — only the Pope can dislodge a bishop. And each time Catholics celebrate Mass in Kansas City, Mo., they pray for Bishop Robert Finn, right after they pray for Pope Francis.

But some Catholics here, like Deacon David Biersmith, refuse to go along.

“When the priest says that, you know, you’re supposed say it with him, but I just leave that out,” Biersmith says. “I just don’t say it. Because he’s not my bishop, as far as I’m concerned.”

Much of the discontent in Kansas City has to do with an incident four years ago. A computer technician found hundreds of lewd photos of young girls on a priest’s laptop. The priest was Shawn Ratigan, and it wasn’t the first sign that he was a pedophile.

But Finn didn’t tell authorities. Instead, he sent Ratigan to a therapist, switched Ratigan’s job and asked him to stay away from children. Ratigan didn’t, and months later a diocese official finally reported him.

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Ex seminarista: obispo Barros sería parte de círculo de protección de sacerdotes acusados de abuso

CHILE
Bio Bio

[A new question arose towards the newly appointed bishop of Osorno, Juan Barros, this time in the region of Valparaíso. A former seminarian Mauricio Pulgar says the new ecclesiastical authority is part of the circle of protection that priests accused of sexual abuse.]

Un nuevo cuestionamiento surgió hacia el recientemente nombrado obispo de Osorno, Juan Barros, esta vez en la región de Valparaíso, luego que el ex seminarista Mauricio Pulgar afirma que la nueva autoridad eclesiástica forma parte del circulo de protección que tienen los sacerdotes acusados de abusos sexuales.

Pulgar señaló que Barros estando en Valparaíso participó de este círculo y que aún mantiene una cercanía con otros obispos que encubrieron las denuncias en contra de varios religiosos.

Recordemos que el ex seminarista denunció abusos en su contra cuando era parte del seminario San Rafael en el santuario de Lo Vásquez y luego en la diócesis de Aconcagua, caso por el cual llego hasta la justicia donde a fines del año pasado se debía abrir el expediente según dijo Pulgar.

Lee también: Ex seminarista denuncia abusos sexuales por parte de párrocos y altos cargos de Iglesia Católica

Sin embargo, para que su defensa presente la causa ante la corte internacional de Derechos Humanos se requieren esos documentos, los que pese a las reiteradas peticiones, aún no serían entregados.

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Visiting priest accused of exposing a minor to porn is out on bail

FLORIDA
WFLX

By Rachel Leigh, Content Manager

WEST PALM BEACH, FL (WFLX) – A 48-year-old visiting priest from India, serving a two-year contract with Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in West Palm Beach, is out of jail.

Father Jose Palimattom posted bail over the weekend. He was arrested last week on charges of exposing a minor to pornography.

It is not known who posted Palimattom’s bail. Dianne Laubert, spokeswoman for the Diocese of Palm Beach County, said the diocese did not pay Palimattom’s bail.

Laubert said that the diocese removed his priestly faculties, which means that he is prohibited from exercising his priestly ministry. “Once his faculties are removed, he is not allowed in any diocesan property,” said Laubert.

According to a probable cause affidavit, Palimattom asked an adolescent boy to help him remove items off of his cell phone.

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School Worker Placed on Administrative Leave After Allegedly Exposing Self to Students

MASSACHUSETTS
NECN

By Kaitlin Flanigan

A top officials at a Massachusetts Catholic school have resigned after a worker accused of indecently exposing him or herself to students in a boy’s bathroom was placed on administrative leave.

The Archdiocese of Boston announced the news Tuesday afternoon, saying the worker at Immaculate Conception School in Revere allegedly exposed him or herself three times over the past month and a half while using the boy’s bathroom, which is for the students’ exclusive use.

The archdiocese says this has been reported to the authorities and the school worker, who has not been identified, will stay on administrative leave pending an investigation.

The pastor, principal and a teacher at Immaculate Conception have also resigned for failing to not report the incidents in a timely manner, the archdiocese added.

“By taking this action today, we believe it serves as teaching moment for our entire community to reinforce once again the importance of staying vigilant in the protection of our children,” the Archdiocese of Boston said in a statement.

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Revere School Leaders, Pastor Resign After Possible Indecent Exposure Incidents

MASSACHUSETTS
CBS Boston

REVERE (CBS) — A pastor, principal and teacher have resigned following three potential indecent exposure incidents by a worker at a Catholic schoolin Revere, the Boston Archdiocese said Tuesday.

The incidents occurred during the school day in a boy’s bathroom at the Immaculate Conception School over the past month and a half, the Archdiocese said in a statement. The worker was placed on administrative leave pending an investigation by the Archdiocese “upon first learning of this news during the past few days.”

“The pastor, principal and a teacher have resigned their positions due to their failure to report these possible incidents in a timely manner,” the Archdiocese said.

The boy’s bathroom is for the use of students only. The school is planning a private meeting with parents in the next few days.

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January 13, 2015 – STATEMENT OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF BOSTON REGARDING IMMACULATE CONCEPTION SCHOOL IN REVERE

MASSACHUSETTS
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston

Braintree, MA (January 13, 2015): Within the past week the Archdiocese of Boston has learned of the potential indecent exposure by a worker at Immaculate Conception School in Revere during the course of using the boy’s bathroom, which is intended for the exclusive use of the students. We have been informed of three potential incidents where this may have occurred during the course of the school day over the past month and one-half.

Upon first learning of this news during the past few days, the Archdiocese directed that the worker be placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation. Additionally, this matter has been reported to the proper authorities for their review.

Schools and parishes have strict guidelines and policies to follow when such matters are brought to their attention. As a parish school, the pastor is ultimately responsible for insuring that all staff adhere to these policies. With regards to Immaculate Conception in Revere, the pastor, principal and a teacher have resigned their positions due to their failure to report these possible incidents in a timely manner.

The Archdiocese will immediately appoint a Temporary Administrator of Immaculate Conception Parish. The Catholic Schools Office is appointing an interim principal to take over leadership of the school. A private meeting with parents will be scheduled by the school in the coming days.

When it comes to the safety of our children, there can be no breakdown in following well established and effective policies. When mistakes are made we must hold ourselves accountable. We are grateful that the pastor, principal and teacher have accepted responsibility. This is not a reflection of their entire professional and ministerial careers. It is the result of a failure regarding this specific issue. By taking this action today, we believe it serves as teaching moment for our entire community to reinforce once again the importance of staying vigilant in the protection of our children.

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3 school staff in Revere resign amid indecent exposure incidents

MASSACHUSETTS
WHDH

[with statement from the archdiocese]

REVERE, Mass. (WHDH) – A priest, principal and teacher at the Immaculate Conception School in Revere have all resigned following allegations of indecent exposure by a worker at the school.

In a statement, the Archdiocese of Boston said it got a report within the past week of three potential indecent exposure incidents involving a worker at the school. The boys bathroom where the alleged incidents happened is used exclusively by students.

The Archdiocese said the priest, principal and teacher all resigned because they failed to report the incidents in a “timely manner.”

The Archdiocese said the worker has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation. The incident was also reported to police.

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MO–Female KC priest excommunicated but no predators have been

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Jan. 13

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

Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn has excommunicated a woman who was recently ordained a priest.

[National Catholic Reporter]

No matter what one thinks of the notion of female Catholic priests, it’s worth noting that in the 25 years our group has been around, we don’t know of a single Catholic official who has ever been excommunicated for committing or concealing child sex crimes.

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HIA witness can have have legal professionals

NORTHERN IRELAND
Lauderdale Daily News

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry was improper to refuse a female’s bid for lawful illustration at community expense, the Significant Court docket has ruled.

The female, a upcoming inquiry witness, claims she was abused by a “high-profile community figure”.

The decide explained the inquiry chairman must stay away from unnecessary charge.

However, he stated this did not take out the “necessity for legal representation out of community cash if that is what fairness calls for”.

The inquiry is examining allegations of youngster abuse in small children’s homes and other household establishments in Northern Ireland from 1922 to 1995.

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Support for Royal Commission probe into Hunter clergy abuse suicides

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Almost three years after the suicide of a Newcastle man who was abused by a notorious paedophile priest, his former partner is relieved his and other suicides may be scrutinised by the Royal Commission into Child Abuse.

John Pirona was abused as a teenager by Father John Denham at Newcastle’s St Pius Catholic high school, and at the age of 45 took his own life.

An independent group has now been formed to compile a list of around 30 Hunter region suicides believed to be linked to clergy abuse, to be forwarded to the Royal Commission.

Tracey Pirona said it is the least that could be done for her late husband, and for the many other local families who have lost loved ones.

I don’t think these people understand what they have done to the victims, it’s something they never get over and yes, the Royal Commission needs to look at the effect of this.

Tracey Pirona, whose former partner John committed suicide in July 2012.

“I don’t think these people understand what they have done to the victims,” she said.

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Jose Palimattom: Visiting priest accused of exposing a minor to porn is out on bail

FLORIDA
WPTV

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – A 48-year-old visiting priest from India, serving a two-year contract with Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in West Palm Beach, is out of jail.

Father Jose Palimattom posted bail over the weekend. He was arrested last week on charges of exposing a minor to pornography.

It is not known who posted Palimattom’s bail. Dianne Laubert, spokeswoman for the Diocese of Palm Beach County, said the diocese did not pay Palimattom’s bail.

Laubert said that the diocese removed his priestly faculties, which means that he is prohibited from exercising his priestly ministry.

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HIA Inquiry: Woman unfairly denied legal representation…

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

HIA Inquiry: Woman unfairly denied legal representation, High Court judge rules

BY ALAN ERWIN – 13 JANUARY 2015

A child abuse victim was unfairly denied legal representation at a major inquiry into alleged historical offences at care homes, a High Court judge ruled today.

Mr Justice Treacy held that a bar had effectively been erected against her and others who claim they suffered sexual and physical assaults.

He is now set to quash the decision by a former judicial colleague to reject her request for publicly-funded lawyers.

His verdict could also have wider funding issues for the ongoing Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) as it examines evidence from up to 360 witnesses.

But the judge stressed: “The consequences in terms of costs do not remove the public law necessity for legal representation out of public funds if that is what fairness requires.”

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Editorial: Sisters deserve an apology for apostolic visitation

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

EDITORIAL

Now that the quaintly named apostolic visitation of U.S. women religious is over and the current leadership of the Vatican agency that oversees religious orders has decided that the women are worthy of praise, admiration and gratitude, it is quite appropriate to ask: “What was that all about?”

The investigation can now be seen for the sham it was, and we as a church should be ashamed of the abuse these faithful women suffered because of it. They deserve an apology.

In the final analysis, it is apparent that the investigation of U.S. women religious by the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life was far more about what’s wrong with the male clerical culture than anything worrisome about the sisters. The wrong group in the church was placed under scrutiny. Actually, that fact was apparent from the start.

The genesis of the investigation can be traced to worn-out memes from a relatively tiny corner of the church, where ultraconservatives are convinced that the decline in numbers of sisters and priests is, first, disastrous for religious life in general, and two, caused by the orders abandoning old modes of dress and practice, and if only those practices and garb were restored, the numbers would soar again.

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The Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests Responds to the Letter of Excommunication to Georgia Walker ARCWP from Bishop Robert W. Finn

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Bridget Mary’s Blog

In the letter below, Bishop Finn stated that

“As Bishop of Kansas City-Saint Joseph, I hereby declare that Georgia K. Walker has incurred the censure of excommunication latae sententiae reserved to the Apostolic See, and is subject to the restrictions and impediments indicated in canon 1331. ”

Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan’s Response from ARCWP:

The Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests are faithful members of the baptized who serve our beloved church in a renewed priestly ministry that welcomes all to celebrate the sacraments in inclusive, Christ-centered, Spirit-empowered communities wherever we are called.

We are leading the Church, not leaving it, in living Gospel equality now.

Our vision is to act as a community of equals in decision-making both as an organization and within our faith communities.

The ordinations of Roman Catholic Women Priests are valid because of our apostolic succession within the Roman Catholic Church.

The principal consecrating Roman Catholic male bishop who ordained our first women bishops is a bishop with apostolic succession within the Roman Catholic Church in communion with the pope.

Therefore, our bishops validly ordain deacons, priests and bishops.

Consequently, all qualified candidates, including baptized ministers and priests from other Christian traditions, who are presented to our bishops for ordination are ordained by the laying on of hands into apostolic succession in the Roman Catholic Church.

Bridget Mary Meehan, bishop serving
Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests
www.arcwp.org
sofiabmm@aol.com

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Kansas City’s first woman priest has been excommunicated

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Dawn Cherie Araujo | Jan. 13, 2015

KANSAS CITY, MO. Georgia Walker, the woman ordained earlier this month as Kansas City’s first female priest by the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests, has been excommunicated.

In a letter delivered to Walker’s home Monday afternoon by certified mail, Kansas City-St. Joseph Bishop Robert Finn said Walker had been advised of the “seriousness of her contemplated course of action to attempt to receive sacred ordination” and that her excommunication was effective immediately. He added, however, that the diocese remained ready to assist Walker “if or when she seeks such process in good faith.”

Walker says she plans to continue attending Mass at her parish church, St. James, though she will not be taking part in any liturgy.

“I’m not going to take Communion,” she told NCR. “I won’t in any way compromise the parish, but I attend to still be part of the community and go there for worship on Sunday.”

Bridget Mary Meehan, the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests bishop who presided over Walker’s Jan. 3 ordination, posted to her blog both Finn’s letter and a personal response, arguing that women ordained through the association are not leaving the church, but are leading it.

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Death of Brother facing child sex allegations

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE McCARTHY Jan. 13, 2015

A FORMER Marist Brother who taught at the order’s Maitland high school from 1977 has died in an apparent suicide only two months after child sex allegations were made against him.

A Hunter man made a statement to police in August alleging the Brother sexually abused him during a camping trip in the late 1970s while the man was a student at the school.

The Brother, 74, died on rail land at Oatley in October, on a night when ‘‘his judgment was dark and sense of hope disturbed’’, said Marist Provincial Brother Jeff Crowe in a eulogy at his funeral.

‘‘Something went very wrong for him that Sunday night. We will most likely never know exactly what. We have to let the question go,’’ Brother Crowe said.

The Hunter man from a respected Catholic family confirmed he had reported allegations to police in August. The Marist Brothers and Maitland-Newcastle diocese were also advised.

The Herald was told the allegations were put to the Brother in the period before he died.

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Pope Francis On The Pill, Poor, Papacy, Philippines & A New Council

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

* Pope Francis is now facing directly the need to make a crucial public choice, first in the Philippines. It involves papal infallibility, the cornerstone of the post-1870 “papal power myth” that is no longer credible to many Catholics, especially in light of the current scandals such as the priest child abuse cover-ups. Rethinking “infallibility” clearly is the essential key to curtailing the child abuse, sexual morality, financial and other scandals, namely, by Pope Francis’ accepting honestly that prior popes made mistakes that must be corrected. If he does not accept this, he cannot save the Catholic Church.

* This crucial choice arises most prominently with respect to the papal ban on contraception, a major matter among many traditional Catholic Filipinos, over 80 % of the population. The Church’s scandals are increasingly challenging the faith of many Filipino Catholics, especially younger ones as reported here:

* [Rappler]

* The Philippines present sharply for Pope Francis the need to reverse the contraception ban. This ban had been rejected overwhelmingly in 1966 by Pope Paul VI’s so-called papal birth control commission, including clear rejection by cardinals, bishops, top theologians and informed lay members, including women, scientists, psychologists and other experts. The commission studied the morality of the birth control “pill” and contraception thoroughly over a four year period

* The commission’s final report, however, was undercut secretively by conservative Cardinals with clout over Pope Paul VI. These Cardinals and the pope worried about undermining the case for papal infallibility, and thereby weakening papal power tied to infallibility If Paul VI approved the pill in 1968, less than four decades after an earlier pope in 1930 condemned birth control, apparently mainly for geo-political reasons, Paul VI would risk losing any future claim to papal infallibility. Paul VI was looking out for No. 1, it appears, so he rejected his own commission’s report.

* This 1966 commission’s still relevant story has been well described by Robert Blair Kaiser in his classic and superb book, “The Politics of Sex and Religion”. Kaiser is a former reporter for The New York Times, prize-winning foreign correspondent (for Time) and, later, for Newsweek in Rome. He has generously made this classic book available for free as an downloadable e-book at:

* [Smashwords]

* There was only one commission report. Please also note a recent effort by conservatives to undercut this papal commission’s final official report by resurrecting the last ditch ploy in 1966 by conservative Cardinals and the pope to create a misleadingly named “minority report” at:

* [National Catholic Reporter]

* For a defensible and responsible way that Pope Francis can readily resolve this matter now, if he really wants to, please see the important and compelling brief analysis by the world’s leading authority on Catholic sexual morality, Fr. Charles Curran, at:

* [National Catholic Reporter]

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How many died in Magdalene laundries? Survivors at odds with Government on the figures

IRELAND
Yahoo! News

By Aoife Barry | TheJournal.ie

The justice for Magdalenes Research (JFMR) group have said they “are not going to stop what [they’re] doing” as they prepare to release a critique of the McAleese Report.

The government-appointed report was released in November 2013 and was heavily criticised by the JFMR survivors group.

How many survivors?

The JFMR are currently preparing a full critique of Martin McAleese’s report, and intends on issuing the first tranche on 19 February, the anniversary of the Government’s apology to Magdalene survivors.
The group said it has identified 1,663 people who died in Magdalene laundries, which is almost twice the McAleese report’s figure of 879, the Irish Examiner reports.

“I suppose we’ve first of all realised that pretty much everything that we submitted [to the committee putting together the McAleese report], certainly on deaths, was ignored,” claimed a spokesperson for JFMR.

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OLD NORTH ST. LOUIS

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. . .One of the first to accuse a local priest for alleged child sex crimes, Kathy Woodard, has died. Kathy was outed by name by Catholic officials in the St. Louis Review. How cruel!. . . Last fall, another long time SNAP leader, Tom Mullen, passed away. He chaired SNAP’s support group here for many years. .

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Poland jails paedophile priest

POLAND
IOL (South Africa)

Warsaw – A Polish court has found a Roman Catholic priest guilty of sexually abusing underage boys and sentenced him to seven years in prison.

In its ruling Tuesday, the court in the western Polish city of Wroclaw also forbade the 44-year-old from working with young people for the rest of his life and ordered that he undergo psychological treatment.

The priest was only identified as Pawel K., in line with Polish privacy laws.

He was arrested in December 2012 in a Wroclaw hotel, where he had checked in with a teenage boy, which aroused the suspicion of hotel workers.

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Sex abuse victim campaigns for right to pursue justice

JAPAN
The Japan News

January 13, 2015

The Yomiuri Shimbun

A woman who was sexually abused as a child has started a petition calling for legal revisions that would toll, or pause, the statute of limitations in similar cases, allowing victims more time before they take legal action against their abusers.

The woman, now in her 40s, has continued to suffer from post-traumatic stress syndrome due to the abuse she suffered as a child. Many victims of child abuse do not speak out for many years because they have nobody to talk to about their ordeals, or because they do not fully understand what they went through.

“When I told my parents I was abused, they told me, ‘So long as you stay silent, it’ll all be swept under the carpet,’” the woman said. “I’m sure many victims who finally feel they could speak up eventually let the matter drop because of the statute of limitations.”

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MN–St. Thomas University staff should be fired

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Jan. 13

Statement by Frank Meuers of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 952-334-5180, frankameuers@gmail.com )

It’s time for students and staff at the University of St. Thomas to demand that wrongdoers are fired and a real investigation is launched into how much school officials knew about – and how little they did about – child sex abuse allegations against the popular, charismatic but predatory Fr. Michael Keating.

It’s time for St. Thomas alums to sit on their checkbooks until a real investigation happens

It’s time for parents of current students to demand real action. And it’s time for parents of prospective students to think long and hard about whether they want to send their teenagers to a university with a troubling track record on simple safety.

Finally, it’s time for every university staff who acted recklessly and deceitfully in the Fr. Keating matter to be fired.

Minnesota Public Radio reports that just-released archdiocese documents show that the university’s most recent ex-president, Dennis Dease, “knew of child sex abuse allegations against a Catholic Studies professor for several years” which contradicts the university’s claim last year that “Dease and other top administrators did not know about the allegations against the Rev. Michael Keating until late 2013.”

Then, the most alarming part: “The timing is important because Keating was allowed to work closely with students at St. Thomas.”

Some will now say that the university should release a full copy of the alleged investigation into this matter which essentially cleared any school officials of wrongdoing. That would be a tiny step forward. A new, truly independent investigation, however, would be better.

On the other hand, the evidence that has already surfaced showing the university’s deceit is already very clear and strong:

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Paedophile priest given seven years behind bars

POLAND
The News

A court in the south-western city of Wroclaw sentenced Pawel K. to seven years in prison, Tuesday, after he was accused of sexually molesting three underage men.

The court also banned the priest for life from working with children and ruled that the offender be treated for sexual deviancy. Prosecutors had earlier asked for nine years for the priest, who was accused of a number of cases of paedophilia between spring 2011 and the end of 2012, including one case in 2005.

The priest was taken into custody in December 2012 while staying at a hotel in Wroclaw where he had checked in with a teenage boy, raising the suspicion of the hotel staff.

According to the court files, 44-year-old Pawel K. (surname withheld in accordance with Polish privacy laws) had sexual contacts with a number of underage men, additionally recording his sexual acts on digital media.

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National–Seeds of Hope website launched, victims’ group voices concerns

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, January 13th

Statement by Melanie Jula Sakoda of Moraga, California, Orthodox Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 925-708-6175 , melanie.sakoda@gmail.com )

A website offering “Orthodox Christian healing and counseling” was launched earlier this month. According to the website, Seeds of Hope is a national, non-profit organization of licensed therapists who are also Orthodox. Also according to the site, these therapists will provide free, confidential counseling for Orthodox victims of clergy abuse.

[Seeds of Hope]

However, members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, while they applaud a lay initiated response to the problem of clergy sexual abuse in the Orthodox churches, worry that survivors may be re-victimized by participating in the program.

“Free therapy is a powerful lure for clergy abuse survivors,” Melanie Jula Sakoda of SNAP explained. “Very few victims have either insurance coverage for therapy or the resources to pay out of pocket. Unfortunately, Seeds of Hope appears to focus only on the culprit and to ignore the complicity of the hierarchy in allowing Orthodox predators to remain unchecked.”

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The five key challenges facing Pope Francis

VATICAN CITY
euronews

By Robert Hackwill

Almost as soon as the identity of the new Pope was known, the feeling was that Francis would represent a break with the Catholic Church’s euro-centric past.

The first supreme Pontiff to be chosen from another continent was always likely to represent a tectonic shift of some kind, and Francis made it clear in his early public statements that he would be whipping up a wind of change to blow through the dusty corridors of the Vatican.

As Francis, in the job for less than two years, embarks on his second Asian tour, he has already found that wrestling with the Curia and other vested interests within the church hierarchy will be no easy matter. What are his major concerns and priorities for the period ahead?

Cleaning up the temple

The Vatican is long overdue for serious reform, as it has allegedly become a viper’s nest of careerism over calling, a pit of backstabbing and financial opacity, corruption and cronyism. The last time any serious attempt was made to address this was in 1978 under John Paul I, who died suddenly after only 33 days in the job. Four years later one of the bosses of the Vatican bank, Roberto Calvi, was found hanged under a bridge in London. He had reportedly been on the brink of being sacked before the pope’s untimely death, as John Paul I had made Vatican bank reform a priority.

Confronting sexual abuse

American Catholics in particular are desperate for Francis to ride to the rescue of their Church, crippled in recent years by revelations about sexual and child abuse, and hammered by victims for damages in US courts that have bankrupted some dioceses. It appears to be a global problem for the church, and one that is driving some faithful into the arms of other churches like the Evangelists , who have been eating into the Catholic congregation in places like Brazil at a worrying speed.

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Lancashire MP reports paedophile site to Government officials

UNITED KINGDOM
Lancester Evening Post

MP Mark Hendrick has vowed to take immediate action over a paedophillic website featuring Preston children.

In today’s’s Evening Post we revealed that family pictures were being stolen off open Facebook profiles and uploaded onto a Russian filesharing site.

Local children as young as three have been spotted by tipped-off parents, as well as pupils from city schools wearing their uniforms.

Comments underneath pictures show that they are being used for sexual gratification by users from across the world.

Mr Hendrick said: “I’m going to get in touch with both the Home Office and the Foreign Office to see if anything can be done by existing police authorities in this country, with Russian counterparts, or with organisations such as Interpol.

“There is a great deal of concern to parents, it’s very distressing that these pictures are not being used for the purposes which they were intended.”

He added: “I will also get in touch with the Foreign Office to make representations to the Russian Embassy and make them aware that this practice is going on.”

The website was initially exposed in June by a national newspaper. Peter Saunders, from the National Association for People Abused in Childhood called for a special task force to be set up to deal with the situation, and crusading MP Simon Danczuk, who helped expose child abuse in his own Rochdale consituency, called it “every parent’s worst nightmare”.

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Brandon experiments exposed

CANADA
Brandon Sun

By: Alexandra Paul
Monday, Jan. 12, 2015

Children at the Brandon Indian Residential School were test subjects of extra-sensory-perception experiments during the Second World War, states a science journal recovered from a university archive.

The article, ESP Tests with American Indian Children published in the Journal of Parapsychology, is believed to be the first hard evidence science experiments were conducted on residential school children in Manitoba.

It was published in 1943 by a scientist named A.A. Foster, and its existence adds to a growing body of knowledge to show science experiments were regularly conducted in the 1940s and 1950s on children at residential schools, with the permission of federal officials.

Canada’s expert on such studies, McMaster University post-doctoral research fellow Ian Mosby, said by phone from Hamilton he’s reviewed the article. Maeengan Linklater, the Winnipegger who stumbled across a reference to the study in a footnote and got a copy, forwarded it to him, Mosby said Sunday.

It’s significant because it shows how vulnerable Indian residential school children were to administrators, teachers and scientists, Mosby said.

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Retired priest denied shock probation

KENTUCKY
Kentucky.com

The Associated Press
January 13, 2015

OWENSBORO, KY. — A judge has denied shock probation for a former western Kentucky priest who pleaded guilty last year to first-degree sexual abuse in the 1970s.

The Messenger-Inquirer (http://bit.ly/1yf0Ppj) reports Daviess Circuit Judge Jay Wethington denied the request last week from the Rev. Louis Francis Piskula, who is now 75. Shock probation allows inmates to be released after serving one to six months of their sentence.

The case involved a minor under the age of 12 while Piskula was serving at Blessed Mother Catholic Church in Owensboro.

Piskula was priest at several Catholic parishes in Owensboro, Murray, Paducah and Whitesville. He was ordained in 1975 and retired in 2002.

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Piskula is denied shock probation

KENTUCKY
Messenger-Inquirer

By James Mayse Messenger-Inquirer

Louis Francis Piskula, the former Owensboro priest who pleaded guilty last year to sexually abusing a juvenile in the 1970s, will not receive early release from prison.

Piskula, 75, had his motion for shock probation denied last week by Daviess Circuit Judge Jay Wethington.

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Retired priest denied shock probation

KENTUCKY
WLKY

OWENSBORO, Ky. —A judge has denied shock probation for a former western Kentucky priest who pleaded guilty last year to first-degree sexual abuse in the 1970s.

The Messenger-Inquirer reports Daviess Circuit Judge Jay Wethington denied the request last week from the Rev. Louis Francis Piskula, who is now 75. Shock probation allows inmates to be released after serving one to six months of their sentence.

The case involved a minor under the age of 12 while Piskula was serving at Blessed Mother Catholic Church in Owensboro.

Piskula was priest at several Catholic parishes in Owensboro, Murray, Paducah and Whitesville. He was ordained in 1975 and retired in 2002.

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Kincora and the secret service…

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Kincora and the secret service: Three men willing to tell all they know may never get the chance

BY LIAM CLARKE – 13 JANUARY 2015

Fears are growing that the truth about Kincora may never be revealed after it emerged that three people who offered information on intelligence service involvement have not been approached by Sir Anthony Hart’s inquiry into historical and institutional abuse.

The prospect of a light being shone on what the security services knew about the abuse of boys at the east Belfast home is under doubt after the inquiry confirmed to one of the men – former Army Captain Colin Wallace – that the British Government has not so far cleared him to give evidence.

Mr Wallace was involved in black propaganda and Press liaison when he was here and, after he raised his concerns about Kincora, was convicted of the manslaughter of a friend, before being later cleared and compensated.

After offering to the help the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry, Mr Wallace’s solicitor James Nichol received a letter raising a question over whether he would ever be able to give evidence.

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Rechtsanwalt Paprotta: „Niemand geht gegen Missbrauchsopfer vor.“

DEUTSCHLAND
Regensberg-Digital

[Geedo Paprotta, lawyer for the Regensburg diocese has disputed some information included in a documentary on the Regensburg cathedral boys choir.]

Nach der ARD-Dokumentation über sexuellen Missbrauch bei den Regensburger Domspatzen (hier in der Mediathek) und unserem Kommentar dazu, hat Rechtsanwalt Geedo Paprotta, der Fälle im Auftrag des Bistums Regensburg prüft, gegenüber unserer Redaktion eine Stellungnahme abgegeben. Er fühlt sich sowohl durch unseren Text wie auch die Dokumentation falsch dargestellt.Wir veröffentlichen seinen Text unkommentiert im kompletten Wortlaut. Unseren Kommentar haben wir als Reaktion darauf an zwei Stellen geringfügig abgeändert.

Der ehemalige Domspatz Udo Kaiser, auf den Paprotta in seiner Stellungnahme Bezug nimmt, hat der Darstellung des Rechtsanwalts in einer ersten Reaktion bereits massiv widersprochen. Wir werden dazu in den nächsten Tagen ein Interview mit Herrn Kaiser führen und uns auch darüber hinaus weiter mit der Angelegenheit beschäftigen.”>hier in der Mediathek) und unserem Kommentar dazu, hat Rechtsanwalt Geedo Paprotta, der Fälle im Auftrag des Bistums Regensburg prüft, gegenüber unserer Redaktion eine Stellungnahme abgegeben. Er fühlt sich sowohl durch unseren Text wie auch die Dokumentation falsch dargestellt.Wir veröffentlichen seinen Text unkommentiert im kompletten Wortlaut. Unseren Kommentar haben wir als Reaktion darauf an zwei Stellen geringfügig abgeändert.

Der ehemalige Domspatz Udo Kaiser, auf den Paprotta in seiner Stellungnahme Bezug nimmt, hat der Darstellung des Rechtsanwalts in einer ersten Reaktion bereits massiv widersprochen. Wir werden dazu in den nächsten Tagen ein Interview mit Herrn Kaiser führen und uns auch darüber hinaus weiter mit der Angelegenheit beschäftigen.

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Fünf Jahre Missbrauchsaufarbeitung : Debatte löste Reinigungsprozess aus

DEUTSCHLAND
Radio Vatican

[After Jesuit priest Klaus Mertes opened the issue of sexual abuse by German clergy, Bishop Stephan Ackermann said the bishops have taken stock of the problem but the process is not yet over.]

Nach der vor fünf Jahren ausgelösten Missbrauchsdebatte ziehen der Jesuit Klaus Mertes und der Trierer Bischof Stephan Ackermann Bilanz. Laut Ackermann ist dieser Prozess noch lange nicht zu Ende, habe jedoch für einen Reinigungsprozess gesorgt. Wie der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz außerdem betonte, werden 2018 die Leitlinien und Rahmenordnungen erneut überprüft und gegebenenfalls überarbeitet. Schließlich gelte es in Sachen Vorbeugung, nach vorn zu blicken und sich neuen Themen zu stellen, wie etwas Missbrauch und Mobbing im Internet.

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Mit dem Rücken zur Wand

DEUTSCHLAND
Domradio

[It was probably one of the darkest years in the recent history of the Catholic Church in Germany. Five years ago, late January 2010, the abuse scandal began to roll and crashed bishops, priests and lay in a deep crisis of confidence. The scandal also opened the way for a new culture of dialogue within the church and came to a reform debate.]

Ein Brief des damaligen Leiters des Canisius-Kollegs der Jesuiten in Berlin bringt Ungeheuerliches ans Licht: Vor fünf Jahren wird der Missbrauchsskandal in der Kirche öffentlich.

Es war wohl eines der schwärzesten Jahre in der jüngeren Geschichte der katholischen Kirche in Deutschland. Vor fünf Jahren, Ende Januar 2010, kam der Missbrauchsskandal ins Rollen und stürzte Bischöfe, Priester und Laien in eine tiefe Vertrauenskrise. Der Skandal öffnete zugleich den Weg für eine neue innerkirchliche Dialogkultur und stieß eine Reformdebatte an.

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Angeblicher Freispruch: Sex-Pfarrer (56) hat gelogen!

DEUTSCHLAND
Express

[Alleged acquittal: Sex-priest (56) has lied!]

Von GÜNTHER CLASSEN

KREFELD/JOHANNESBURG –
Das achte Gebot wird Niederrhein-Pfarrer Georg K. (56) wohl kennen: „Du sollst nicht lügen“. K., jetzt wegen 26-fachen Kindes-Vergewaltigung vor Gericht, über seinem Missbrauchs-Prozess in Südafrika: „Ich wurde freigesprochen.“ Gelogen!

Nach den nun angeklagten 26 Missbrauchsfällen im Raum Willich (2001 bis 2006) war K. 2007 nach Südafrika verschwunden. Dort soll er sich mehrfach an mehreren Kinder deutscher Familien vergangen haben.

Chef-Ermittler Colin Morris aus Johannesburg bestätigte EXPRESS: „K. wurde niemals freigesprochen. Das weiß er auch genau. Das Verfahren wurde wegen seiner Auslieferung nach Deutschland und weil er dort eine höhere Strafe bekommen könnte, vorläufig eingestellt.“

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Episcopal bishop charged in crash admits to alcohol problem in court

MARYLAND
WBAL

[with video]

BALTIMORE —The Episcopal bishop charged in the death of bicyclist Thomas Palermo admitted in court Monday that she has an alcohol problem.

Bishop Heather Cook was charged Friday with manslaughter and drunken driving in the Dec. 27 crash on Roland Avenue in north Baltimore. Prosecutors said Cook blew a .22 in a breath test after the crash, was texting while driving and left the scene, failing to return for 30 minutes.

Cook is apparently being held in protective custody at the Women’s Detention Center. She appeared for her bail hearing Monday via video wearing a pink jumpsuit.

In arguing for a judge to lower Cook’s bail, attorney Jose Molina disclosed she has been in alcohol treatment since the crash. Molina cited Cook’s position as the second-highest ranking official in the Episcopal Church to argue she is no risk to flee.

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Bail Set For $2.5M For Bishop Charged In Cyclist’s Death

MARYLAND
CBS Baltimore

Derek Valcourt

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — Bail remains the same—$2.5 million—for the Episcopal church bishop charged in the December drinking and driving death of a Baltimore bicyclist.

Derek Valcourt has new information learned during Monday’s court hearing.

Prosecutors asked the judge to revoke bail. That didn’t happen, but for now, the bishop remains locked up. Her attorney says she’s unlikely to be able to come up with the $2.5 million needed to post bail.

Fifty-eight-year-old Episcopal church Bishop Heather Cook does have an alcohol problem, her attorney told a district court judge at her Monday bail review hearing. Cook’s attorney said after the fatal accident that killed bicyclist and father of two Thomas Palermo, Cook spent 12 days at Father Martin’s Ashley: a posh, non-denominational rehab facility in Havre de Grace, which boasts online of its treatment programs for alcoholism and drug addiction.

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Bishop charged in fatal crash to remain in jail

MARYLAND
The Blatimore Sun

By Justin Fenton
The Baltimore Sun

Episcopal Bishop Heather Cook, who has been accused of killing a bicyclist while driving drunk and texting, is expected to remain jailed after a judge on Monday upheld her $2.5 million bail — an amount her attorney says she cannot post.

District Court Judge Nicole Pastore Klein rejected a request from prosecutors to deny bail, but also disagreed with Cook’s attorney that her bail should be lowered. Klein said the allegations against Cook show a “reckless and careless indifference to life.”

“I can’t trust her judgment if released,” Klein said.

Cook, 58, was arrested Friday and charged with manslaughter and other offenses related to the crash that killed bicyclist Thomas Palermo, 41, in North Baltimore last month. Her initial bail was set by a District Court commissioner that night.

Cook, who is being held at Central Booking, appeared in court Monday afternoon via a video link. She wore a pink jumpsuit and was brought in separately from other defendants, while most defendants are escorted in groups. Her attorney, Jose A. Molina, said he didn’t know why she was treated differently.

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New bishop to help Vatican sex scandal diocese clean up its act

ITALY
Times LIVE (South Africa)

An Italian bishop who has come under fire for failing to check on the sexual misconduct of his priests has been given an “assistant,” the Vatican said Saturday.

Pope Francis’s decision to dispatch Bishop Guglielmo Borghetti to the diocese of Albenga-Imperia was widely seen as an attempt to help resident bishop Mario Oliveri, 70, get a better grip on local church affairs.

In a statement, Oliveri said he voluntarily asked for assistance, admitting that he had neglected certain duties due to old age and the need to look after a sick brother.

He said Borghetti would specifically help him with the training of priests.

In November, the Corriere della Sera newspaper had reported that some priests from the Albenga-Imperia diocese had criminal records for paedophilia, some had posed naked on Facebook, one doubled up as a barman in nightclubs, while another was caught stealing church money.

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Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby admits…

UNITED KINGDOM
The Independent

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby admits Church cannot stop banned paedophile ex-vicar from using ‘Reverend’ title

The Archbishop of Canterbury has admitted that the Church is powerless to stop banned members of the clergy from using the “Reverend” title, after a convicted paedophile allegedly used the honorific and wore a clerical collar.

In 1999, Guy Bennett, the former vicar at St Mary’s parish church in Oxted, admitted to indecently assaulting three 11-year-old girls between 1976 and 1988, according to BBC News.

He was jailed for nine months and placed on the sex offenders register for 10 years. During the proceedings, he denied four further offences which were left on file.

Following his suspension by the Church of England, Bennett retired from the post as he awaited the outcome of his trial.

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Call for Royal Commission to launch in-depth probe into suicides linked to clergy abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Giselle Wakatama

Dozens of suicides, allegedly linked to abuse by several Hunter Valley priests, has prompted the formation of a group that is calling for an in-depth probe by the Royal Commission.

Scores of Hunter Valley men and women suffered abuse at the hands of the region’s priests, and more than a dozen clergy and lay people have been charged with around 500 offences.

It has resulted in several convictions and hefty jail sentences.

The abuse prompted a Special Commission of Inquiry into two dead paedophile Catholic priests from the Hunter Valley, with it recommending one senior church official be prosecuted.

The toll it has taken on families is not lost on child abuse advocates, who have repeatedly raised concerns about a mass number of suicides of people who allegedly suffered abuse.

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Management of top girls’ school charged with ‘sexual assault’

INDIA
Pune Mirror

By Prakruti PK | Jan 13, 2015

YET ANOTHER OCCASION FOR POCSO ACT ENFORCEMENT IN B’LORE

Three members of the school management allegedly manhandled, sexually assaulted students staging a protest against installation of new principal.

In what may be described as an appalling first for a prestigious all-girls’ private school located in the heart of Bangalore, the Central division police have registered a complaint under various sections of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act along with Section 354 (a) of the Indian Penal Code against three members of the school management for allegedly manhandling and sexually assaulting students, who were staging a protest on the school’s premises, on Thursday morning. The protest was against the installation of a new principal.

Highly placed police sources confirmed that a former teacher and member of the Church of South India, Karnataka Central Diocese, approached the Cubbon Park police on Saturday and filed an FIR against three members of the school management claiming they used foul language to abuse the girls, reportedly threatened to hurt them, and allegedly sexually assaulted them in a bid to get the protesters to disperse and return to their classrooms.

A senior police officer told Mirror, “We received a letter from the school on Wednesday saying they were anticipating some sort of trouble due to the announcement that the temporary principal was being replaced by a new one. They requested us to be present near the school the next morning, and accordingly, we reached the premises by 7.30 am on Thursday, but were asked to stay outside.”

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Father Cuenin departs due to health reasons

MASSACHUSETTS
The Justice

By Tate Herbert

After almost nine years as the Catholic chaplain and coordinator of the Multifaith Chaplaincy at Brandeis, the Rev. Walter Cuenin has left the University for unspecified health reasons, according to a campus-wide email from Dean of Students Jamele Adams.

Cuenin previously left Brandeis temporarily in 2012 to undergo treatment for cancer at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. It is unclear whether this year’s permanent departure is related.

According to Adams’ announcement, the University is working with the Archdiocese of Boston to identify a new Catholic chaplain to serve on campus. In the interim, the University will provide transportation to and from Our Lady, Help of Christians church in Newton for the 6 p.m. Sunday services in place of the regular Sunday evening services at Bethlehem Chapel. …

Cuenin joined Brandeis as the Catholic chaplain in 2006, according to a Justice article from February of that year. He came to the University from Our Lady, Help of Christians, where the archdiocese accused him of mishandling funds and forced his resignation, according to the article.

However, many viewed it as punishment for his outspoken criticism of the Boston Archdiocese’s and Cardinal Bernard Law’s handling of the clergy sexual abuse scandals in the early 2000s. In 2002, Cuenin successfully led a cohort of local priests in calling for Law’s resignation.

By that time, he had also established a reputation as an advocate for controversial issues within the Church, such as gay and lesbian rights and the role of women in Catholic leadership.

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Crisis in faith due to Church scandals

PHILIPPINES
Rappler

Aries Rufo

Published 4:00 PM, Jan 13, 2015

AT A GLANCE:

* Sex scandals in the Church have affected the youth’s desire to enter religious life
* 13% of youth respondents said they entertained thoughts of leaving the Church
* A Church protocol on erring priests allowed ‘one-child policy’
* In recent times, two high-ranking bishops resigned due to sexual misconduct
* More priests are seeking clerical dispensation than face dismissal

MANILA, Philippines – Will the rock star Pope be able to reignite the waning attraction of the Filipino youth to religious life? Is there hope in Pope Francis?

A national youth survey has confirmed what Church leaders have known all along: there’s a yawning gap between the youth and the Church, and it’s validated by how the young are shying away from entertaining thoughts of entering religious life.

In particular, financial and sex scandals in the Philippine Catholic Church have created a dent on the faith of young Filipino Catholics, a national survey on the youth showed.

While the gravity of the situation has not reached the scale of the West, Asia’s largest Catholic country has shown symptoms of crisis in faith, inflicted by the very people supposed to safeguard the faith.

The national youth survey commissioned by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines-Episcopal Commission on the Youth showed that young Catholics are not as attracted to joining a religious vocation as in the past, which is attributed to the scandals faced by the Church in recent years.

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Spain set to raise age of consent from 13 to 15

SPAIN
The Local

The Spanish government is considering raising the age of sexual consent from 13 to 15 in a reform of the country’s penal code, in a bid to limit child sexual abuse.

Adults embarking on sexual relationships with those under 15 would be liable to be arrested for the crime of child abuse, under the new proposal.

Sources close to the ruling Popular Party were quoted in Spain’s Huffington Post as saying that the introduction of the proposed measure depends on the approval of the ministries of health and justice.

The issue will be debated in the Spanish parliament in the next few days.

The debate over the age of consent and age of marriage has been raging in Spain for some time.

Spain remains one of Europe’s most permissive countries regarding teenage matrimony and consensual sex. The country’s age of consent, 13, is the lowest in Europe after the Vatican’s 12.

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January 12, 2015

AFP: No threat to Pope’s safety

PHILIPPINES
The Freeman

By Miriam Garcia Desacada and Jessa J. Agua (The Freeman) | Updated January 13, 2015

PALO, LEYTE — A top official of the Armed Forces of the Philippines yesterday morning dismissed reports that a nephew of a “bomber” from Mindanao is now in Palo and has been here for the past several months, renting a P40,000-per-month house.

Colonel Mario Dimaesep, commander of the AFP’s Civil Military Relations Service, said the reports were baseless and merely intended by a group to frighten people who will be coming to Leyte to welcome Pope Francis.

Dimaesep said the military, which will be joining the security detail of the Pope during the entirety of his visit to Leyte, are fully equipped in all aspects and can give the Pope the best security.

“We are ready and people who have criminal desires have no place in this occasion. People must remain calm, as we are here for peace and not for war,” Demaesep added.

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“Jane Doe 20” Speaks Out About Clergy Abuse

MINNESOTA
KSTP

[with video]

By: Ellen Galles

Up until now, she has been known as “Jane Doe 20.” But for the first time, 29-year-old Marie Mielke shared her name and her story of clergy abuse. She has pending lawsuits against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and two of its priests.

Monday the file on her accused abuser, Fr. Michael Keating, was made public as part of the 2014 settlement agreement in the John Doe case.

Mielke says Keating started abusing her when she was a teenager. When she finally had the courage to report it several years later in 2006, she says the archdiocese failed to believe her, treated her like she was unbalanced and helped cover up for Fr. Keating.

She says sharing her story is part of the healing process.

“Hiding something that isn’t your fault is exhausting. Being told something didn’t happen when it really did… being told you’re crazy. After a while, the burden isn’t worth carrying anymore,” Mielke said.

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Documents: Ex-UST leader knew of abuse claim; untrue, school says

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran
Jan 12, 2015

Internal archdiocese documents released Monday by a clergy sex abuse attorney claim former University of St. Thomas president Dennis Dease knew of child sex abuse allegations against a Catholic Studies professor for several years.

The newly released documents contradict the university’s public statement last year that Dease and other top administrators did not know about the allegations against the Rev. Michael Keating until late 2013.

The timing is important because Keating was allowed to work closely with students at St. Thomas. In October 2013, MPR News reported a clergy review board had recommended Keating not mentor young people. But it wasn’t clear then if the archdiocese had passed along that recommendation to the University of St. Thomas. Last October, St. Thomas officials concluded that Dease and those who reported directly to him did not know of the accusations.

Documents released Monday, however, indicate that was not the case and that some St. Thomas leaders were told about the claims against Keating.

In one 2010 memo, Archbishop John Nienstedt rebuked Donald Briel, then head of St. Thomas’ Catholic Studies program and Keating’s boss, for letting Keating work a semester at the university’s Catholic Studies program in Rome. Nienstedt also tightened Keating’s monitoring plan to require him to receive approval for additional assignments.

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Former priest charged for alleged sexual assault in 1980s

MICHIGAN
ClickonDetroit

LANSING, Mich. –
James Francis Rapp, 74, has been charged with multiple felonies for the alleged sexual assault of several Michigan boys in the 1980s.

Rapp was a priest, teacher, maintenance supervisor and wrestling coach at Jackson Lumen Christi High School in Jackson Michigan from Sept. 1980 to Feb. 1986. The charges against him come after an investigation by Jackson police.

“People who abuse their authority by preying on children must be brought to justice, no matter when the crime was committed,” said Attorney General Bill Schuette. “Our aggressive, victim-centered approach has brought us one step closer to securing justice for these brave men who stepped forward to tell of the abuse they endured many years ago.”

“I would like to praise the work of Sgt. Tim Schlundt in this investigation,” said Jackson County Sheriff Steven Rand. “Many hours were spent in an attempt to gather facts about this case. Despite the age of this case, the lives of the victims continue to be impacted. It is my hope that the opportunity for victims to have their day in court will bring some degree of comfort.”

Two of Rapp’s alleged victims reported being sexually abused by Rapp in the spring of 2013, more than 30 years after the alleged crimes happened. The claims led to police launching an extensive investigation, which revealed several more people who claimed to be victims.

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Jane Doe 20 has a name and voice in lawsuit against Father Michael Keating

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

by Fox 9 staff

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
A woman who says she was sexually abused by former St. Thomas professor and priest Michael Keating spoke publicly for the first time Monday. The law firm handling the case also released once-secret files on Keating, who has denied any wrongdoing.

Marie Mielke had previously been identified as Jane Doe 20 in legal documents. Monday, the 29-year-old mother of two said that hiding something that isn’t your fault is exhausting. As a young teen, she says a man on his way to becoming a priest befriended her family and ultimately took advantage of her.

“It was not my fault and it was never my fault,” Mielke said. “The shame that I carried was not mine to carry — it was his.”

She says Father Michael Keating sexually touched her many times from the time she was 12 to 15. St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson says new documents from a clergy sex abuse settlement help Mielke prove her case.

“This file reflects the way the archdiocese and top officials chose to handle Marie’s report,” Anderson said.

The file shows a clergy review board didn’t find sufficient evidence when Mielke brought the case to them in her 20s, but it did order monitoring in 2007 for Keating that three years later the archdiocese realized wasn’t happening at all. Anderson also says the documents show Keating had a history of physical contact with young women — a history he feels was ignored.

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Woman Speaks Out About Alleged Abuse At Priest’s Hand

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – A woman who says she was sexually abused as a child by a Catholic Priest told her story openly and shared her name for the first time on Monday.

Marie Mielke said Father Michael Keating sexually abused her beginning when she was 12 years old back in the late 1990s.

She says she didn’t recall or understand what had happened until years later, and when tried to tell the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul what happened, they covered it up.

After years of therapy she got an attorney and decided to sue the Archdiocese and Keating.

Keating’s attorney said he denies the claims. The Archdiocese said he is on a leave pending an internal investigation.

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Woman in priest sex abuse case says former vicar general covered up accusations

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Katie Kather
kkather@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 01/12/2015

A Chisago County woman previously identified as Doe 20 in a clergy sexual abuse case against the Rev. Michael Keating has come forward.

Marie Mielke, 29, filed a lawsuit against Keating, the archdiocese and former Vicar General Kevin McDonough in Oct. 2013.

Mielke told reporters Monday that her goal in telling her story is to help other victims of abuse step forward and hold alleged abusers like Keating accountable.

“Hiding something that isn’t your fault gets exhausting,” Mielke said.

She said she first reported to archdiocese officials in 2006 that she had been molested, between 1997 and 2000 by Keating, who joined the University of St. Thomas faculty in 2005.

The abuse began when she was about 12, Mielke said. Keating was 30 years her senior and in the seminary at the time.

Keating, now 58, had been a frequent guest at her family’s Chisago County home. He was placed on leave after Mielke filed her suit in October 2013. He resigned Sept. 16.

Mielke called Keating’s alleged abuse the greatest betrayal of her life.

“It almost killed me. I felt so ashamed I wanted to die,” she said.

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The mullah’s double standards

PAKISTAN
Nation

Wishal Raheel

It is one thing to be criticized for doing something by individuals who do not indulge in similar things themselves. It is a completely different thing to get criticized for doing something by people who do the same things in private.The former can be productive and beneficial; productive criticism allows an individual to see things with a new perspective. The latter, however, is an open act of hypocrisy; something that can be found in abundance in the Pakistani society.

Hypocrisy is something that can be found at all levels within our society. However, it seems as if certain religious groups have managed to remain ahead of all other groups with regard to this fundamental flaw that flourishes in our society. Sad as it is, the ‘maulvis’ that are supposed to be the representatives of Islam have managed to bring immense disgrace to the religion merely because of the great extents to which they practice hypocrisy. From giving interviews while being intoxicated to promoting bigotry to indulging in child molestation, the mullah community has managed to indulge in pretty much everything that it ‘strongly condemns’. As a result of this, these ‘guardians’ of religion have managed to make a joke not only out of themselves but have also managed to attract extremely negative criticism towards their religion.

A mullah who openly condemns the usage of alcohol, promotes violence towards the ‘kafirs’ who drink and makes the masses aware of the terrible punishments that wait in hell for people who drink is naturally expected to stay away from alcohol himself. That, however, isn’t always the case. While many mullahs probably do abstain from drinking, cases of drunkmullahs aren’t unheard of. A mullah on vacation might conveniently forget the beliefs that he promotes for a while. A maulvisahab on an international flight might find himself free from the restrictions imposed by the religion that he himself preaches as he enjoys a glass of wine.

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Statement Regarding Rev. Michael Keating

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Monday, January 12, 2015
Source: Anne Steffens, Interim Director of Communications

From Bishop Lee Piche, Auxiliary Bishop

“Rev. Michael Keating has been on a leave of absence from the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis since October 2013, which means he is not exercising any priestly ministry. His leave of absence came after he was named in a lawsuit regarding claims that he had sexually abused a minor before he was a priest. Father Keating will remain on leave until the archdiocesan Clergy Review Board can complete an internal review of this matter, which is still ongoing.

The assessment by the Clergy Review Board will be comprehensive and include a revisit of decisions made in the past, in light of any new information that is produced as a result of the civil lawsuit and the archdiocese’s prevailing commitment of placing victims first.”

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Former Catholic priest facing new sexual assault charges

MICHIGAN
Michigan Radio

By STEVE CARMODY

James Francis Rapp spent six years as a teacher and wrestling coach at Lumen Christi High School in Jackson during the 1980’s.

It was during that time that prosecutors allege the former Catholic priest sexually assaulted several young boys.

Prosecutors filed 13 charges against Rapp Monday, including three counts of first degree criminal sexual conduct. Each of the first-degree felony counts is punishable with a sentence of up to life in prison. Rapp faces up to 15 years in prison on each of the 10 lesser counts.

Law enforcement started investigating Rapp in 2013, after several alleged victims came forward with stories of abuse dating back to the early 1980s.

Jackson County Sheriff Steven Rand says the investigation lead to more alleged victims coming forward.

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Called flight risk, Bishop Heather Cook denied bail reduction

MARYLAND
The Baltimore Brew

Fern Shen and Mark Reutter January 12, 2015

Calling her a danger to the community and potential flight risk, a Baltimore District Court judge refused to lower Bishop Heather E. Cook’s $2.5 million bail this afternoon.

“To me she represents a grave danger to the community,” said Judge Nicole Pastore Klein at a bailing hearing at the John R. Hargrove Sr. District Court Building on Patapsco Avenue.

“I cannot trust her judgement. . . She showed a reckless and careless indifference to life.”

The judge rejected a request by defense attorney Jose A. Molina to reduce Cook’s bail to $500,000 and allow her to return to an alcohol treatment program she had entered on December 28, the day after she hit bicyclist Tom Palermo, then fled the scene as he lay dying of massive head trauma.

As The Brew previously reported, Bishop Cook was staying at Father Martin’s Ashley, a drug and alcohol treatment center near Havre de Grace, following the public uproar after she was identified as the hit-and-run driver.

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Pope considers adding cardinal-electors for next conclave

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Vatican City, January 9 – Pope Francis is considering the feasibility of expanding the number of cardinal electors who will chose the next pontiff to 140 from the current 120.

The proposal is contained in a document recently presented to Francis by Cardinal Antonio Canizares Llovera.

The issue is to be discussed in the consistory, or meeting of college of cardinals, next month.

During the March 2013 conclave that elected Pope Francis, only cardinals who were under the age of 80 at the time of the resignation of the previous Pope Benedict XVI were eligible to vote.

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MI–Serial predator priest faces new Michigan charges

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 12

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

We’re thrilled that an already convicted and imprisoned serial predator priest faces more charges. This should happen more often.

[MLive]

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette is filing more child sex charges against James Francis Rapp who allegedly molested kids at Jackson Lumen Christi Catholic High School in Jackson in the 1980s.

Once a child molester is convicted, many people who could be helpful get complacent. They assume his sentence will stand, his appeals will fail, and he’ll be kept away from kids for many years. But often, child molesters – especially clerics – get top notch defense lawyers, exploit legal technicalities, and escape with little or no jail time. Then, when other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers find this out, it’s too late for them to really make a difference.

So we’re glad Michigan’s attorney general is being prudent and pro-active here.

There are two important lessons. First, these days, police and prosecutors are often more aggressive and creative about pursing child predators, even in older cases. (The old adage “where there’s a will, there’s a way,” fits here.) More law enforcement officials should follow Schuette’s example and consider going after even elderly child molesting clerics.

Second, no victim, witness or whistleblower should ever assume ‘it’s too late’ to seek justice. It’s our job to share what we know and suspect about possible child sex crimes. It’s the job of law enforcement to determine whether anything can be done. If we stay silent, we’re helping those who commit and conceal child sex crimes.

So if you saw, suspected or suffered any crimes or cover ups related to Fr. Rapp, it’s time to find the courage to speak up, so that the vulnerable can be protected, the wounded can be healed and the truth can be exposed and so that cover ups are deterred.

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‘O what a tangled web we weave…’

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

Jennifer Haselberger

01/12/2015

‘…when first we practice to deceive’. Or at least so said Sir Walter Scott, writing in ‘Marmion’. The quote is a particularly apt choice to introduce my reflections on today’s release of the personnel file of Father Michael Keating, a priest of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis ‘on leave’ as a result of accusations of sexual misconduct with a minor. Although much of what the file contains was known to me before today, this most recent review of its contents has left me with seven questions that I believe require a response from the Archdiocese. They are as follows:

1). Where is the rest of the file?

Those of you who have read my affidavit in the Doe 1 case know that I testified about the situation of Father Keating, and also listed several documents that demonstrate the extent of the Archdiocese’s knowledge of the accusations of sexual misconduct against him and other clergy prior to my going public in September of 2013. Some of those documents became public with today’s release, including the list of priests identified as requiring monitoring under the POMS [Promotor of Ministerial Standards] program (Keating File, Part 2, pp. 276-277). So, I ask, where are the other documents that named Keating, including John Selvig’s April 2013 list of POMs participants and their offences, and the ‘Assignment List’ created by Judy Delaney? Also, where is the memo from Andy Eisenzimmer to Archbishop Nienstedt regarding Father Keating’s participating in the ‘Rediscover’ initiative, the Archbishop’s response, as well as all the other emails and memos exchanged during the planning for such major events? I would also ask why the file contains some emails and documents regarding Father Keating’s 2011 appointment to the Presbyteral Council, but none whatsoever regarding the 2009-2010 decision not to allow him to serve the remainder of Father Laird’s term as Academic Dean following Laird’s appointment as Vicar General. Finally, where is the preliminary investigative report of Father Talbot, as well as the subsequent weekly reports required by the decree opening the investigation (more on this below)?

2). What punishment has been administered to Father Kevin McDonough?

This question is not the result of self-interest, as I have long believed that the only way that Father McDonough and I will resolve our quarrel is by meeting with pistols at dawn. Rather, I would like to know what punishment has been inflicted upon the former Vicar General and Delegate for Safe Environment for repeatedly undermining the efforts of his Archbishop(s).

The Keating file demonstrates McDonough working against the will of his bishop beginning in 2006, when the Clergy Review Board recommended that Father Keating be enrolled in the POMS monitoring program (Keating File, Part 1, p. 128). Emails between [Bishop] Lee Piche, Father McDonough, and Tim Rourke show that McDonough deliberately delayed taking action until May of 2010, when it could no longer be avoided (Keating File, Part 2, pp. 1-3).

A similar undermining is evident in McDonough’s exchange with Father James Shea of the University of Mary in August of 2012. Although Father Keating was instructed by Archbishop Nienstedt to disclose his history to the University, Father McDonough intervened and presented Father Shea with a significantly rosier account of what had transpired (along with plenty of his own opinions) in contravention of the Archbishop’s order (Keating File, Part 2, pp. 156, 158, 159-161).

Obviously, the University of Saint Thomas took conclusive steps by removing Father McDonough from its Board of Trustees. But has the Archdiocese taken any action against him? His resignation as Delegate was in the works long before I resigned, and at his request. The website for Saint Peter Claver parish in Saint Paul still lists him as pastor, as does this weekend’s bulletin from Incarnation/Sagrado Corazon. Perhaps rumors of an investigation into Father McDonough’s conduct are true, and the Archdiocese is preparing to impose some sort of penalty. Still, it would seem that leaving him in parishes in the meantime (especially given investigations by law enforcement and the questions that have been asked about Father McDonough’s participation) calls into question the Archdiocese’s commitment to its own disciplinary program.

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MN–High ranking church official lies to colleagues

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 12

Statement by Frank Meuers of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 952-334-5180 , frankameuers@gmail.com )

Can proof of deceit possibly be clearer? The newly disclosed email from Fr. Kevin McDonough is conclusive evidence that he endangered kids and lied to a colleague. He should be defrocked.

[Star Tribune]

McDonough is a long time, high-ranking archdiocesan official who dealt with dozens – perhaps hundreds – of clergy sex cases. He deliberately deceived Atlanta Catholic priest who asked a simple question: Has Fr. Thomas Keating been accused of child sex crimes?

McDonough said no when he knew the honest answer was yes. And as a result, Fr. Keating, who was supposedly being “monitored” was able to travel to Atlanta and perform a wedding among completely unsuspecting families.

It takes just seconds for a child predator to shove his tongue down a girl’s throat or his hands down a boy’s pants. How will Fr. McDonough feel if it turns out that Fr. Keating sexually assaulted an Atlanta child during his trip there, a trip that should never have happened and likely would never have happened if not for Fr. McDonough’s decision to lie to his Georgia colleagues?

Every single week, we read of Catholic officials who claim that they are “monitoring” admitted, arrested, paroled, or credibly accused child molesting clerics. Only a fool would believe these claims. Few Catholic officials have had more experience in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases than Fr. McDonough. But his own writings prove he does not take the safety of children seriously and that the alleged “monitoring” of credibly accused predator priests is a dangerous joke. This is a pattern, we strongly suspect, that is repeated almost daily across this country and the globe: Catholic officials misleading police, prosecutors, parishioners, parents and the public about predator priests.

Finally, we applaud Marie Mielke, who is speaking publicly today for the first time about the pain cause by a Fr. Keating, and his callous, selfish archdiocesan supervisors and colleagues. She should be praised and thanked for her courage and compassion. By her bravery, she is exposing wrongdoers and protecting children. We are deeply grateful to her. Every St. Paul parent and parishioner should be too.

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West Orange ex-priest assists victims of sexual abuse

NEW JERSEY
Essex News Daily

By: Sean Quinn – Staff Writer

WEST ORANGE — Speak with Bob Hoatson for just a few minutes and it becomes immediately apparent that he is a genuinely nice man. Immensely friendly and down-to-earth, Hoatson just seems like the type of guy who would shovel your porch without being asked or check your house while you were away on vacation — selfless. It is easy to imagine him working for the Catholic Church, which he did for more than 30 years.

What is not evident is the fact that Hoatson has experienced many personal tragedies throughout his life. He said he was sexually abused by more than one clergyman as an Irish Christian Brother and later as a seminarian for the Archdiocese of Newark, and is now recalling repressed memories of being molested by a school custodian as a young boy. In 2011, he was dispensed from his priestly vows by the Vatican upon his request after facing years of resistance from the church over his work as a clergy-abuse victims’ advocate.

But Hoatson did not succumb to his hardships. Instead, he co-founded the Road to Recovery nonprofit organization to support victims of sexual abuse like himself. And though his past experiences being molested were undoubtedly horrific, he said they have proven to be an asset in helping those dealing with similar circumstances.

“It is immeasurable, the assistance that it provides,” Hoatson told the West Orange Chronicle in a Dec. 29 phone interview. “When I talk to somebody who has been through it, I can say ‘I know what you are going through, I think. I have an idea of what you are going through because I have had similar experiences.’ So when they talk about nightmares and flashbacks and depression and anxiety and all kinds of other symptoms about having been sexually abused, I know what they are talking about.”

Road to Recovery’s mission is to help victims of sexual abuse in any way possible, including providing financial assistance and getting addicts into drug rehabilitation programs. Yet perhaps the most vital component of its work is simply providing the empathy and emotional support necessary to help abuse victims recover from their trauma.

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MEDIA STATEMENT FROM ROAD TO RECOVERY, INC. REGARDING CRIMINAL CHARGES FILED BY THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL AGAINST JAMES FRANCIS RAPP, AN OBLATE OF ST. FRANCIS DE SALES

MICHIGAN
Road to Recovery

January 12, 2015

Road to Recovery, Inc., a 501 (c) 3 non-profit charity based in New Jersey, applauds Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette for criminally charging James Francis Rapp, a priest of the Oblates of the St. Francis de Sales religious order, who is currently incarcerated.

In addition to congratulating all victims, Road to Recovery, Inc. particularly congratulates Victim #1, a graduate of Jackson Lumen Christi High School in Jackson, Michigan, whom Road to Recovery has been advocating on behalf of since he came forward a few years ago. It was the courage, perseverance, and determination of Victim #1 that prompted other victims to come forward, especially young men who attended Jackson Lumen Christi High School in Jackson, Michigan.

Victim #1, by going forward and pursuing criminal charges against Fr. James Rapp, made it possible for other victims of Fr. Rapp to report their abuse and begin their healing. Road to Recovery offers its assistance and advocacy services to any and all victims of Fr. Rapp and any other abuser, and all information will be held in strictest confidence, as in the case of Victim #1.

Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D.
Co-founder and President

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“I don’t want to live in the shadows anymore,” says plaintiff in priest abuse case

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

[Replay: News conference on alleged archdiocese coverup]

Article by: TONY KENNEDY , Star Tribune Updated: January 12, 2015

New documents released in a clergy sexual abuse lawsuit show that former Vicar General Kevin McDonough intervened to help a prominent University of St. Thomas priest cover up child sexual abuse allegations so he could perform a wedding out of state.

The Rev. Michael Keating was rejected in his first attempt to have officials in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis verify that he had “never been accused of any act of sexual abuse or sexual misconduct involving a minor.”

But McDonough stepped in and agreed to push the paperwork, in what attorneys for the alleged sexual abuse victim describe as a lie. By then, McDonough had spent years dealing with various sexual allegations involving Keating, who was supposed to be monitored at St. Thomas on the advice of a special church panel that reviewed him in 2007.

McDonough, still a pastor in St. Paul, was the archdiocese’s point person on clergy sex abuse allegations for many years.

The 2011 verification check came from a Catholic parish in Peachtree, Ga., to conform with the Archdiocese of Atlanta’s normal vetting process to determine if an outside priest has the qualifications and moral standing to perform sacraments. Keating needed the approval to preside at the wedding of his godson.

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Former priest charged in sexual abuse case

MICHIGAN
WWMT

LANSING, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette has announced charges against a former priest accused of sexually abusing boys.

74-year-old James Francis Rapp served as a priest, teacher, maintenance supervisor and wrestling coach at Jackson Lumen Christi High School in Jackson from Sept. 1980-February 1986. The charges follow an extensive investigation by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Dept.

Rapp is currently in prison in Oklahoma.

“People who abuse their authority by preying on children must be brought to justice, no matter when the crime was committed,” said Schuette. “Our aggressive, victim-centered approach has brought us one step closer to securing justice for these brave men who stepped forward to tell of the abuse they endured many years ago.”

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Former priest and teacher at Jackson Lumen Christi charged in 1980s sexual abuse cases

MICHIGAN
WTVB

LANSING, MI (WTVB) – Attorney General Bill Schuette today announced his Criminal Division has charged James Francis Rapp, 74, currently incarcerated in another state, with multiple felonies for his alleged sexual assault of several Michigan boys in the 1980s. Rapp served as a priest, teacher, maintenance supervisor, and wrestling coach at Jackson Lumen Christi High School in Jackson, Michigan from September 1980 through February 1986.

The charges follow an extensive investigation by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department with support from Schuette’s Criminal Division.

“People who abuse their authority by preying on children must be brought to justice, no matter when the crime was committed,” said Schuette. “Our aggressive, victim-centered approach has brought us one step closer to securing justice for these brave men who stepped forward to tell of the abuse they endured many years ago.”

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Schuette Charges Former Michigan Priest in 1980s Sexual Abuse Cases

MICHIGAN
Attorney General Bill Schuette

Contact: John Sellek 517-373-8060

January 12, 2015

LANSING – Attorney General Bill Schuette today announced his Criminal Division has charged James Francis Rapp, 74, currently incarcerated in another state, with multiple felonies for his alleged sexual assault of several Michigan boys in the 1980s. Rapp served as a priest, teacher, maintenance supervisor, and wrestling coach at Jackson Lumen Christi (JLC) High School in Jackson, Michigan from September 1980 through February 1986.

The charges follow an extensive investigation by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department with support from Schuette’s Criminal Division.

“People who abuse their authority by preying on children must be brought to justice, no matter when the crime was committed,” said Schuette. “Our aggressive, victim-centered approach has brought us one step closer to securing justice for these brave men who stepped forward to tell of the abuse they endured many years ago.”

“I would like to praise the work of Sergeant Tim Schlundt in this investigation. Many hours were spent in an attempt to gather facts about this case,” said Jackson County Sheriff Steven Rand. “Despite the age of this case, the lives of the victims continue to be impacted. It is my hope that the opportunity for victims to have their day in court will bring some degree of comfort.”

Case Background

In spring of 2013, more than 30 years after the alleged crimes occurred, two of Rapp’s victims reported the alleged sexual abuse to the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department, who then launched an extensive investigation revealing several more victims.

JLC was not Rapp’s first church or school assignment. Rapp was ordained in 1959 and held teaching assignments in Philadelphia (1959 – 1961), Salt Lake City (1968 – 1973), and in Lockport, New York (1979 – 1980). Following Rapp’s resignation at JLC, Rapp served as a priest and teacher in Naperville, Illinois (1987 – 1990) and Duncan, Oklahoma (1990 – 1998).

On January 12, 2015, Schuette filed the following charges against James Francis Rapp in Jackson’s 12th District Court:

Three counts of First Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct, a felony punishable by up to life in prison; and,

10 counts of Second Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct, a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

If convicted of the first degree sexual assault counts, Rapp must also register as a sex offender for life in Michigan.

Rapp is currently incarcerated in another state. He is eligible for discharge in summer 2016. Attorney General Schuette will immediately begin the extradition process to bring Rapp to Michigan to face charges.

Citizens who believe they may have information about Rapp’s alleged sexual abuse are encouraged to contact the Attorney General’s Criminal Division at 313-456-0180.

Cold Case Sexual Assault Project and Role in Investigation

This case will be prosecuted by Attorney General Schuette’s Cold Case Sexual Assault Project (AGCCSA). Created in 2012, AGCCSA is funded by a United States Department of Justice-Office of Violence Against Women grant to combat sexual assault and sexual violence.

A criminal charge is merely an accusation and the defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

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