Clergy Child Molesters (108) — References/Chronology

• Call for crackdown on net porn - 'Operation Auxin.' Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   Australian IT, http://australianit.news. com.au/articles/0,7204, 11807265%5 E26199%5E%5Enbv%5 E15306-15319,00.html , by Kate Legge, December 30, 2004
   AUSTRALIA: Australians believe access to pornography is easier now, despite a crackdown on internet predators who exploit and abuse children.
   A recent Newspoll conducted for The Australian found 81 per cent of adults believe it is now easier to access pornography compared with five to 10 years ago, as internet take-up rates continue to multiply.
   These perceptions remain entrenched after a year of intense activity by police and governments to ban child pornography and penalise offenders.
   Federal legislation introduced in August banned internet sex crimes perpetrated online and a nationwide crackdown on pornography, code-named Operation Auxin, targeted electronic trade in sexually explicit images.
   Police, teachers, childcare workers, doctors and clergy were among those caught in Operation Auxin's net. By October, police had arrested 228 people, some possessing as many as 350,000 computer images of children, and involving a total of 2260 charges. Further warrants will be issued in the coming months. [Posted by Kathy Shaw kashaw@peoplepc.com at 09:59 AM] [Emphasis added] (This is the first of the Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse , for Sat January 01, 2005)
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INTENTION: A challenge to RELIGIONS to PROTECT CHILDREN
Series starts: www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethicscontents.htm   Visit http://www.ncrnews.org/abuse. These are digests of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. Get fuller details by trying the link.
• Program works to prevent abuse - Roman Catholic Church. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Ironwood Daily Globe, www.ironwood dailyglobe. com/1230dioc.htm , Thursday, December 30, 2004
   MARQUETTE (MI), USA -- Adding educational sessions for children and parents is the next step the Catholic Diocese of Marquette is taking to strengthen its child sexual abuse prevention program.
   The two new components of the diocese's three-pronged safe environment program will get under way early next year.
   The U.S. Bishops Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People mandated the establishment of safe environment programs. The charter requires dioceses to educate and train children, youth, parents, ministers, educators and others about ways to make and maintain a safe environment for children.
   This was the second year the diocese conducted mandatory awareness sessions on child sexual abuse prevention for diocesan, parish and Catholic school employees and volunteers who have regular contact with children. [...]
   Meanwhile, the Diocesan Department of Faith Formation and Education is busy preparing Catholic schools and parishes for the safe environment program for children. Called "Protecting God's Children - Touching Safety," the program includes two hour-long lessons for each of three age groups: kindergarten-grade 2, grades 3-5 and grades 6-8.
   It will be implemented in diocesan Catholic schools during March and April and then in the Parish Faith Formation programs next fall. School principals received training in the program in November.[...]
• Priest fights sex offender status [Kuhn] - RCC.
   Dayton Daily News, www.dayton dailynews.com/ localnews/con tent/localnews/ daily/ 1231 catholics.html , By Tom Beyerlein, ~ January 1, 2005
   DAYTON (OH) - The attorney for disgraced Catholic priest Thomas Kuhn said Thursday he'll seek to set aside a judge's order that the Rev. Kuhn, who was convicted of 11 misdemeanors in June, undergo sex offender treatment.
   Dayton attorney Roger Makley said he'll file court papers next week challenging a Dec. 16 order by Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge Mary Katherine Huffman that Kuhn, 63, complete sex offender treatment at an Atlanta facility.
   "There's no evidence in the record whatsoever that Father Kuhn was convicted of being a sex offender," Makley said.
   Huffman also ordered that Kuhn, former pastor of St. Henry and Incarnation churches and former freshman basketball coach at Alter High School, finish writing letters of apology to those institutions and to his minor victims by Jan. 31. Makley said the letters are "in process" and will be done on time.
   Huffman further ordered that Kuhn must not enter or be within 1,000 feet of a private or public school. The order came after Cincinnati's Elder High School reported that Kuhn showed up at the school in September. Classes were not in session that day because of teacher training, said Dan Andriacco, spokesman for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati.
   Under conditions of Kuhn's five-year probation set in July, he is to stay away from minors and liquor establishments, and get alcohol and gambling treatment.
   Kuhn is to appear before Huffman at 8:30 a.m. Jan. 13 for a probation status report. Huffman declined to comment on the case Thursday.
• Pastor in jail, Mass is canceled [? 2004 Elms] - "Traditional Catholic Church"
   Cincinnati Enquirer, http://news. enquirer.com/ apps/pbcs.dll/ article?AID=/ 20050101/ NEWS 01/5010103 69/1056 , By Janice Morse, ~ January 1, 2005
   ST. BERNARD (OH) - Sunday Mass is canceled at St. Mary's Traditional Catholic Church in the wake of a scandal involving a man who has led services there.
   The cancellation follows the arrest of Robert Elms, also known as Father Dominic Elms, on child-pornography charges this week.
   On Friday, Father Luke West, associate pastor at the church here, said the service would be canceled. He did not know when services would resume.
   West would not disclose who is making decisions regarding the church's future, and he hung up on a reporter who tried to ask other questions.
   An Internet site says the church generally holds Mass in Latin at 9:30 a.m. Sundays.
• Laity group scrutinizing church's finances - RCC. 3 dioceses under administration. Miami $US3.4m gone.
   Miami Herald, www.miami.com /mld/miamiherald/ living/religion/ 10536289.htm , BY DONNA GEHRKE-WHITE, dgehrke@herald.com , ~ January 1, 2005
   FLORIDA: One Catholic Voice for Action, a South Florida laity group, has recently begun poring over the books of the Archdiocese of Miami -- the financial ones.
   Almost three years after the sexual abuse scandal broke out in the Roman Catholic Church, laity groups such as One Catholic Voice have spread their concerns to the collection plate and management of parishioners' contributions.
   "We have serious concerns -- serious, serious concerns -- about the financial matters of the Archdiocese of Miami," said John-Campbell Barmmer, a businessman who is president of One Catholic Voice. The year-old group has 140 members in Miami-Dade, Broward and Monroe counties.
   Nationwide, church finances are becoming a huge issue as Catholic dioceses in Tucson, Ariz., Portland, Ore. and Spokane, Wash., have declared bankruptcy after paying out millions of dollars to settle sexual abuse lawsuits.
   So far, the Archdiocese of Miami has escaped such harsh times, though it has struggled with the stock market downtown and the challenges of serving community with pockets of poverty.
   In September, the Miami hierarchy announced it had settled for $3.4 million almost two dozen cases brought by former altar boys and other youths who accused Catholic priests of sexually abusing them decades ago.
   At Saturday and Sunday Masses next weekend, the Archdiocese expects to release a report on how much it has paid out in the last year in sexual abuse settlements and other cases, including worker's comp, spokeswoman Mary Ross Agosta said.
Faith helps shape the news, culture in 2004 - RCC. 4% clergy so far. $US 772m so far.
   Lancaster Eagle Gazette, By CATHY LYNN GROSSMAN, USA TODAY, ~ January 1, 2005
   UNITED STATES: If 2004 had one code word, it might be "values." But as Humpty Dumpty said, a word can mean whatever one chooses it to mean. Indeed, nuanced voices on values often were lost in the clash of extreme sound bites. Looking back: ...
   CHURCH SCANDAL AFTERSHOCKS
   U.S. bishops are still accounting for the spiritual, financial and emotional costs of the scandal of child sexual abuse by clergy. The first national audit of Catholic dioceses found overwhelming compliance with the church's policies on preventing and reporting abuse and caring for victims.
   But a second report by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, released in February, found that 4 percent of U.S. priests in the last half-century had been involved in abuse. By November, the cost of litigation, settlements and care for victims and abusers passed $772 million, a USA TODAY study showed. The dioceses of Portland, Ore.; Spokane, Wash.; and Tucson declared bankruptcy in the face of more lawsuits.
   In Boston, epicenter of the scandal, the bishop acknowledged that declining donations were among the many reasons for reconfiguring the entire diocese and closing 67 parishes. Primary reasons, he said, were demographic changes and a shortage of priests, which experts say will drive more parish closings. But the lesson of Boston in 2005 may be the church finally calling on the laity to participate more in church governance.
Diocese praised for sex abuse prevention - RCC.
   East Valley Tribune, By Lawn Griffiths, December 31, 2004
   PHOENIX (AZ): Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix procedures to protect youths from sexual abuse by clergy, staff and volunteers have earned high marks in an audit by a national Catholic oversight office.
   The diocese, which continues to be investigated for priest misconduct with children going back to the 1970s, is now well set up to prevent such future abuses, according to the review team sent by the Office of Child and Youth Protection, under the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
   "The responses to the many questions were thoughtful, informative and among the best that I have reviewed," said Kathleen McChesney, executive director for the Office of Child and Youth Protection. She called the Phoenix audit results "quite impressive" and said they reflect "an enormous amount of time, energy and dedication to addressing the problems that existed 18 months ago."
   The diocese uses a 14-member review board to receive and investigate complaints and advise the bishop.
City priest is removed over misconduct allegations [Freymuth] - RCC. Another allegation 2 years ago. Male.
   Post-Dispatch, BY GREG JONSSON AND PHILLIP O'CONNOR, Dec/31/2004
   ST. LOUIS (MO): The St. Louis Archdiocese has removed a priest from duties at a Catholic high school and city parish over allegations of inappropriate conduct.
   The Rev. Michael A. Freymuth, a chaplain at Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School in St. Louis and a part-time associate pastor at St. Elizabeth, Mother of John the Baptist Church, also in St. Louis, was removed about three weeks ago, said Jamie Allman, a spokesman for the archdiocese. Freymuth's removal was spurred by allegations made in a lawsuit against another priest, Allman said.
   Public announcement of the removal came Friday, the same day the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP] gathered to publicly present their concerns about Freymuth to the principal of the high school and to leaders of the archdiocese.
   At the news conference, members of SNAP also said that another man made allegations about Freymuth to the archdiocese more than two years ago. Freymuth continued his duties as a priest.
Partly Stormy Forecast for O.C. in 2005 [Orange Diocese] - RCC. Moved accused. Record, $US 100m settlement. 87 plaintiffs.
   Los Angeles Times, By Mike Anton, ~ January 1, 2005
   CALIFORNIA: In 2005, voters may approve plans for Orange County's tallest building to rise in the center of Santa Ana - or they may not. The sheriff's political career will continue to shine, or be muddied by the stain of controversy. A long-envisioned light-rail line may chug ahead, or be derailed. And Anaheim will either find itself in the running for an NFL team, or be thrown for a loss. ...
   After three years of revelations and a record $100-million settlement, the sex scandal roiling the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange won't fade away.
   As part of the agreement reached Dec. 2 with 87 plaintiffs, Bishop of Orange Tod D. Brown vowed not to fight the release of files that show how the church handled those allegations through the years. Attorneys who crafted the settlement say they expect the case files to be released this year.
   Those who have seen the files say they show that Orange County church leaders quietly moved molesting priests to new parishes and other dioceses, ignored or downplayed testimony by victims and their parents and rarely reported the crimes to police.
Monsignor cleared of abuse charges - RCC. Msgr. Patrick Reilly cleared; Harold DeJonghe deceased.
   Burbank Leader, ~ January 1, 2005
   LOS ANGELES (CA): The Archdiocese of Los Angeles dismissed sexual abuse charges filed against a San Gabriel Valley priest after an investigation determined that the charges were without merit.
   The lawsuit, filed Dec. 31, 2003 in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleged that Msgr. Patrick Reilly was one of two priests who sexually abused Michael Matthew Gallardo, now 31, between 1980 and 1984 while he was a student at Sacred Heart School in Covina. Reilly was a priest at the parish for 13 years before being transferred to St. Robert Bellarmine in Burbank.
   The other priest named in the lawsuit, Harold DeJonghe, accused of molesting Gallardo from 1980 until 1982, died in October 1998. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:47 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Sat January 01, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Sun January 02, 2005 edition follows:-
• Gaydos should do more than minimal penance - RCC. Seminary expose. 27 accused, none imprisoned. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Columbia Daily Tribune, www.columbia tribune.com/ 2005/Jan/2005 0102Comm 008.asp , By KIM DILLON (a member of Voice of the Faithful Mid-Missouri), Sunday, January 2, 2005
   MISSOURI: Members of Voice of the Faithful Mid-Missouri, a group of lay Catholics in the Diocese of Jefferson City concerned about the sexual abuse crisis in the church, read with outrage and sadness the recent St. Louis Post-Dispatch series about abuse at St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary in Hannibal called "Secrets, Sins and Silence." [November 14, 2004] [? "recent"]
   We offer our prayers and support to all abuse survivors and their families. Unfortunately, the history of abuse at the seminary is not news to us, nor is the inept handling of the situation by bishops and diocesan officials, past and present.
   Some have defended the diocese, claiming that a few "bad apple" priests are the only problem, or that the enemies of the church are on the attack again, or that sexual abuse happens elsewhere in society, or that not every seminarian was abused.
   We, however, believe the core issue is that sexual abuse occurred and the diocese failed to pursue justice.
   The unwillingness of the institutional church to accept responsibility, truly repent and meaningfully reform is sinful. Our frustrations can be summarized in one question: What will the Diocese of Jefferson City do to atone for its sins? [...]
   ... Instead, officials deflect criticism by pointing to the prevalence of nonclerical sexual abuse throughout Missouri while ignoring the fact that 6 percent of its priests have had credible accusations leveled against them - a rate 2 percent higher than the national average for priest abuse.[...]
   We encourage him [the bishop] to provide a full, public accounting of abuse allegations and subsequent investigations - without violating survivor confidentiality, of course. He should meet with his fellow Catholics so they can ask important questions. We need to know exactly what diocesan officials did in our names: the number of abusing priests he or previous bishops transferred, the number of survivors to whom the bishops have never spoken, the names of credibly accused clergy that have not been revealed, the reasons why 27 priests have been accused and none is in jail. Most of all, we need him to take full responsibility for what has happened, regardless of the consequences. True repentance demands nothing less.# [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 02:06 PM]
• Diocese asks forgiveness from abused - RCC.
   Columbia Daily Tribune, www.columbia tribune.com/2005/ Jan/20050102 Comm009.asp , By JOHN R. GAYDOS (bishop of the Catholic Church's Diocese of Jefferson City) , Sunday, January 2, 2005
   MISSOURI: Media coverage of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church has helped us understand the great pain and devastation of that sin. Stories of survivors have awakened us to the power that someone in authority has over another and the human destruction that occurs when that trust is violated.
   Understandably, this has stirred feelings of anger toward those who have perpetrated this wrong and compassion for those who have endured it.
   In the Diocese of Jefferson City, the compassion is pervasive. We have reached out to victims and offered assistance in counseling, education and employment. Most people accept that the church has not only a responsibility to provide assistance for healing of the harm done but also an opportunity to reach out to someone in need of the restorative grace our faith provides.
   We must acknowledge the anger as well. People feel hurt and betrayed by trusted people in trusted institutions. However, at least in the history of this diocese, the betrayal was by the sickness and selfish desire of individual priests and not by their bishops and other clergy. These men used the cover of their priesthood to violate the sacred innocence of children. No one understood the dreadful impact of those secret lives, but that fact does not acquit church leadership.
   We have failed. It pains me to know that abuse was being perpetrated by members of our clergy without the bishop of the diocese being aware. I sincerely apologize for it, but there is nothing I can do as a bishop to change the past. What I can and must do, with others' prayer and collaboration, is confront the truth, alleviate some of the pain and take steps to ensure this will never happen again.[...]
• Top 10 Arizona stories of 2004 [O'Brien] - RCC.
   Arizona Daily Sun, www.azdailysun. com/non_sec/nav_ includes/story.cfm? storyID= 101030 , ~ January 2, 2005
   ARIZONA: The top 10 stories in Arizona during 2004, according to a vote by members and staff of The Associated Press:
   3. BISHOP'S TRIAL: Thomas O'Brien, former head of the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix, is convicted of leaving the scene of a fatal accident, making him the first Catholic bishop in the country to be found guilty of a felony. O'Brien is sentenced to probation and community service.
Diocese lawyers will get paid first - RCC. < $US500,000 gone in 4 months.
   Arizona Daily Star, By Stephanie Innes, ~ January 2, 2005
   TUCSON (AZ): The first people to be paid under the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tucson's Chapter 11 reorganization plan are the diocese's lawyers, while plaintiffs with valid claims of sexual abuse by priests will be grouped together with "unsecured creditors" - the last to be paid.
   Priority payment to lawyers from the bankrupt entity - in this case the diocese - is not unique to the diocese's bankruptcy case, though it's one of the issues that could be raised in 2005 as the diocese seeks approval of creditors for its 71-page bankruptcy reorganization plan. The lead bankruptcy attorney for the diocese last week said she is hopeful the case will be resolved sometime this year and that plaintiffs with valid claims against the diocese will be paid as quickly as possible, though she could not put a time frame on when.
   According to financial records submitted to the Bankruptcy Court, the diocese so far has spent at least $255,000 in legal and other fees associated with the case, and lawyers representing the diocese's 75 parishes appear to have cost $213,000, though the diocese will not explain a payment that was made to the parish attorneys in the weeks leading up to the bankruptcy filing.
   The expenditures of nearly $500,000 for lawyers and other business fees associated with the bankruptcy less than four months into the case does not include the taxpayer costs of keeping the case in federal Bankruptcy Court.
• Bishop addresses concerns over alleged sexual abuse [1980s Layman, Fuschek] - RCC. Boy.
   Fox 11, www.fox11az. com/news/ state/stories/ 010105ccjrkt vkbishopabuse. 6afd4be4.html , By CLAUDIA RIVERO / Newchannel 3, 10:05 PM MST, Saturday, January 1, 2005
   PHOENIX (AZ): - Bishop Thomas Olmstead addressed parishioner's concerns at a Saturday mass in the wake of allegations that a St. Timothy's priest molested a 14-year-old 20 years ago.
   The alleged victim said that he recovered a repressed memory of sexual molestation by former priest John Layman. The accuser, who was 14 at the time, claims Monsignor Dale Fuschek knew about the abuse, but did nothing to stop it.
   "This was very unexpected. I can't imagine that it's true, but at the same time I don't want to prejudice the investigation moving forward," Olmstead said.
   Fuschek has been placed on administrative leave as church officials investigate the allegations.
   Parishioners were surprised by the allegations against Fuschek. "I was rather surprised," said parishioner Louis Besser. "[But] we can't make judgment yet."
Victims group complains about bishops' response [Emerson] - RCC.
   Indianapolis Star, January 2, 2005
   GARY (IN): -- A national group that defends victims of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests is questioning why it took the Diocese of Gary eight months to investigate a priest recently accused of abusing a youth during the 1980s.
   David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, sent a letter Thursday to Bishop Dale Melczek of the Diocese of Gary and to Bishop Thomas Wenski of the Diocese of Orlando in Florida.
   The letters asked why it took the two bishops eight months to respond to allegations made against the Rev. Richard Emerson.
   Two weeks ago, Melczek announced that Emerson, 52, would be placed on administrative leave from his position as pastor of Michigan City's Notre Dame parish because allegations of sexual abuse made against him were deemed credible. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 08:38 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Sun January 02, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Mon January 03, 2005 edition follows:-
• Former Minister Indicted On Ten Sex Counts [? 2000s Harmon] - Baptist. Boys. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   WCPO, www.wcpo.com/news/2005/local/01/03/harmon.html , Reported by 9News, Web produced by Mark Sickmiller, Photographed by 9News, 4:45:57 PM, Jan 3, 2005
   OHIO: A minister who police say confessed to inappropriately touching young boys has been indicted by a grand jury.
   Dr. Claude Stephen Harmon was the pastor of the Maineville Baptist Church for fifteen years. He was removed when the allegations surfaced.
   On Monday Dr. Harmon was indicted on one count of rape and nine counts of gross sexual imposition.
   The indictment claims Dr. Harmon had sexual contact with a child less than thirteen years old on nine separate occasions. It also claims he engaged in sexual conduct with a child less than thirteen years old on at least one occasion. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:11 PM]
• Coming Events - RCC.
   Catholic Herald, www.catholic herald.com/ events/05events/ evnt0106.htm , ~ January 03, 2005
   JANUARY 19, 2005
   VIRGINIA: Healing Mass, for victims of sexual abuse, will be held at St. Philip Church, 7506 St. Philip's Ct., Falls Church, at 7:30 p.m. For information call Patricia Mudd at 703/841-2530.
• Gag Order Lifted on $100M Church Settlement [Orange Diocese] - RCC. 90 complainants.
   ABC 7, http://abclocal .go.com/kabc/ news/010305_nw_ church_settle ment.html , ~ January 03, 2005
   LOS ANGELES (CA): - A judge today lifted a gag order on a now-confirmed $100 million settlement between the Diocese of Orange and plaintiffs in 90 cases of alleged childhood abuse by Catholic clergy.
   Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Owen Lee Kwong praised the "hard work and dedication" the parties showed in mediation of the settlement, which was announced on Dec. 2.
   Following the brief court hearing, dozens of attorneys, plaintiffs, representatives for the diocese, including Bishop Tod Brown, attended an at-times tearful news conference.
   "This settlement is about the victims," said Ray Boucher, lead counsel for the plaintiffs. "It's about those people that for so many years hid with the guilt and the fear."
   Boucher thanked Brown for reaching out to victims under what he called "tremendous pressure" from other bishops, and having the courage to "walk a different road."
Priest on leave after probe [? 2000s Witte] - RCC. Women.
   The Kentucky Post, By Stephenie Steitzer ~ January 03, 2005
   COVINGTON (KY): A Diocese of Covington priest who was being investigated for inappropriate relations with women told his parish during weekend Masses that Bishop Roger Foys has asked him to take a leave of absence.
   Rev. Mark Witte, pastor of St. Timothy Church in Union, told his parish he was going on a spiritual retreat and intended to return, parishioner Mike Vogt of Walton said.
   Witte, who was previously investigated for an inappropriate relationship with a woman, has been under investigation by the diocese since December 2003.
   Diocese spokesman Tim Fitzgerald confirmed Witte was asked by Foys and his advisers to take a leave of absence.
  The bishop will later decide whether Witte would return to St. Timothy or be assigned to another position within the diocese.
Trial of former city priest postponed until Feb. 10 [1989-92 Blackwell] - RCC. Boy.
   Baltimore Sun, By A Sun Staff Writer, January 3, 2005
   BALTIMORE (MD) - The trial of former priest Maurice Blackwell was postponed today because neither the prosecution nor defense attorneys were prepared to begin. It's the sixth time Blackwell's trial has been delayed.
   Circuit Judge Stuart R. Berger postponed the trial until Feb. 10. The trial is expected to last a week and a half.
   Blackwell, a Baltimore priest accused of sexually abusing a parishioner who shot the cleric years later, was recently defrocked in an irrevocable decree by Pope John Paul II.
   Blackwell, 58, is to go on trial on four counts of child sexual abuse against Dontee Stokes, 28, whom he baptized as a child and mentored as a teenager at St. Edward Catholic Church in West Baltimore. Stokes, who has accused Blackwell of sexually abusing him between 1989 and 1992, shot the older man in 2002.
• Prosecutors still considering bid to lock up pedophile priest [1970s +, Porter] - RCC.
   Grand Forks Herald, www.grandforks. com/mld/grand forks/news/ state/105 56772.htm , By DENISE LAVOIE, Associated Press, ~ January 03, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - Prosecutors are not prepared to immediately drop their bid to keep former priest James Porter locked up for the rest of his life, even though the notorious pedophile with a history of abuse allegations dating to the 1970s in Minnesota is hospitalized with incurable cancer.
   Bristol First Assistant District Attorney Renee Dupuis said Monday that prosecutors need to get an update from Porter's doctor before deciding whether he should still face trial on their petition to have him civilly committed as a sexually dangerous person.
   "There are plenty of people who are diagnosed with life-threatening illnesses that respond well to treatment, and we've prosecuted plenty of people who were 'terminally ill' and survived for years," Dupuis said Monday.
   "We are taking a very practical and thorough and conscientious approach to whether or not Mr. Porter is able to be tried," she said.
• Priest Accused Of An Affair Last Year Takes Leave [? 2000s Witte] - RCC. Woman.
   WCPO, www.wcpo.com /news/2005/local/ 01/02/priest_ accused.html , Reported by 9News, Web produced by Neil Relyea, Photographed by: 9News, 11:00:48 PM, Jan/2/2005
   KENTUCKY: A Northern Kentucky priest who once faced allegations that he had a sexual relationship with an adult woman in his parish has taken leave from his current parish.
   In December of 2003, a parishioner at Blessed Sacrament in Ft. Mitchell accused Father Marc Witte of having an affair with his ex-wife.
   Both denied the accusation and the Diocese of Covington Diocese said there was not enough evidence to support it.
   On Sunday the diocese confirmed that the bishop advised Witte to take a leave from his current parish, St. Timothy's in Union.
• Priest on leave after probe [? 2000s Witte] - RCC. Women.
   The Kentucky Post, www.kypost. com/2005/01/ 03/priest 010305.html , By Stephenie Steitzer, ~ January 3, 2005
   COVINGTON (KY): A Diocese of Covington priest who was being investigated for inappropriate relations with women told his parish during weekend Masses that Bishop Roger Foys has asked him to take a leave of absence.
   Rev. Mark Witte, pastor of St. Timothy Church in Union, told his parish he was going on a spiritual retreat and intended to return, parishioner Mike Vogt of Walton said.
   Witte, who was previously investigated for an inappropriate relationship with a woman, has been under investigation by the diocese since December 2003.
   Diocese spokesman Tim Fitzgerald confirmed Witte was asked by Foys and his advisers to take a leave of absence.
   The bishop will later decide whether Witte would return to St. Timothy or be assigned to another position within the diocese. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:01 PM]
• Trial of former city priest postponed until Feb. 10 [1989-92 Blackwell] - RCC. Boy.
   Baltimore Sun, www.baltimore sun.com/news/ local/crime/ bal-blackwell 0103,1,5713285. story?coll= bal-local- head lines ; By A Sun Staff Writer, January 3, 2005
   BALTIMORE (MD): The trial of former priest Maurice Blackwell was postponed today because neither the prosecution nor defense attorneys were prepared to begin. It's the sixth time Blackwell's trial has been delayed.
   Circuit Judge Stuart R. Berger postponed the trial until Feb. 10. The trial is expected to last a week and a half.
   Blackwell, a Baltimore priest accused of sexually abusing a parishioner who shot the cleric years later, was recently defrocked in an irrevocable decree by Pope John Paul II.
   Blackwell, 58, is to go on trial on four counts of child sexual abuse against Dontee Stokes, 28, whom he baptized as a child and mentored as a teenager at St. Edward Catholic Church in West Baltimore. Stokes, who has accused Blackwell of sexually abusing him between 1989 and 1992, shot the older man in 2002.
Prosecutors still considering bid to lock up pedophile priest [Porter] - RCC.
   Grand Forks Herald, By DENISE LAVOIE, Associated Press, ~ January 3, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - Prosecutors are not prepared to immediately drop their bid to keep former priest James Porter locked up for the rest of his life, even though the notorious pedophile with a history of abuse allegations dating to the 1970s in Minnesota is hospitalized with incurable cancer.
   Bristol First Assistant District Attorney Renee Dupuis said Monday that prosecutors need to get an update from Porter's doctor before deciding whether he should still face trial on their petition to have him civilly committed as a sexually dangerous person.
   "There are plenty of people who are diagnosed with life-threatening illnesses that respond well to treatment, and we've prosecuted plenty of people who were 'terminally ill' and survived for years," Dupuis said Monday.
   "We are taking a very practical and thorough and conscientious approach to whether or not Mr. Porter is able to be tried," she said.
• VATICAN REVISITS ABUSE CHARGES [Maciel Degollado] - RCC. Legionaries of Christ. Males. Vatican / Papal flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Spain flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Italy flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Hartford Courant, www.ctnow.com/ news/custom/ topnews/hc-maciel. artjan03,1,7178 321.story?coll=hc- head lines- topnews ; By GERALD RENNER, Special to The Courant, January 3, 2005
   The Vatican has reopened an investigation into charges first reported nearly eight years ago that a powerful Mexican priest close to the pope sexually abused seminarians.
   The allegations focus on the actions of the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, now 84 and based in Rome. He leads a religious order known as the Legionaries of Christ, which claims 600 priests in 18 countries. Its U.S. headquarters is in Orange and it has a seminary in Cheshire.
   The allegations surfaced in a Courant report in February 1997. Nine former members of the Legion said Maciel first abused them years ago when they were young boys or teenagers, ages 10 to 16, in seminaries in Spain and Italy.
   The accusers, all professional men - two Mexican-Americans, five Mexicans and two Spaniards, one now deceased - tried for years to call their accusations to the attention of Pope John Paul II, who nonetheless has remained effusive in his praise of Maciel. Just five weeks ago, on Nov. 27, the pope praised Maciel in a letter on the 60th anniversary of his priestly ordination, citing his "intense, generous and fruitful priestly ministry."
   A week later, the complainants against Maciel were told the Vatican was reopening a canon law investigation that had been squelched without explanation in 1999. [Emphasis added]
Cleveland Diocese awaits Vatican ruling [Cleveland Diocese 20 priests] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Beacon Journal, By Colette M. Jenkins, Beacon Journal religion writer, ~ January 3, 2005
   CLEVELAND (OH): During the past two years, 20 priests have been on paid leave in Cleveland's Catholic Diocese, local figures in a national scandal over how the church responds to allegations of priest abuse.
   To date, 17 are still waiting to hear whether they will be allowed to serve as priests again.
   For the majority of them, that decision rests with the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a department of the Vatican in Rome.
   The Rev. Lawrence Jurcak, diocesan secretary and vicar for clergy and religious, says Cleveland Bishop Anthony M. Pilla cannot make an official determination on any of the cases until a response comes from Rome.
   The congregation, headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, has several options when deciding on each case: laicization, or defrocking, from the priesthood; a canonical, or church, trial in Cleveland or in Rome; or an administrative penal process in Cleveland.
   According to the Vatican Web site, the congregation's duty is "to promote and safeguard the doctrine on the faith and morals throughout the Catholic world: For this reason everything which in any way touches such matter falls within its competence."
Reception set for former Bangor priest [Coughlin] - RCC.
   Bangor Daily News, ~ January 3, 2005
   BANGOR (ME) - A reception for the priest who shepherded St. Mary's Catholic Church through the 1978 fire that destroyed its Cedar Street home will be held Sunday, Jan. 9, in South Portland.
   At the request of Bishop Richard Malone, head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, the Rev. Paul Coughlin, 69, resigned in October.
   Coughlin's resignation followed a church investigation into his association with a man now serving a prison term for sexual abuse of a minor.
   Coughlin was appointed pastor of Holy Cross and St. the Evangelist churches in South Portland in 1996.
   In a letter to parishioners dated Oct. 20, Coughlin thanked them for their support. He wrote that he had received nearly 600 cards, notes and telephone messages of support since he was placed on administrative leave in August.
   "You, who know me, are aware of how much I love being a priest," he wrote. "I loved what I did, and I pray that this love was evident in my work with you. ... I thank you for allowing me to minister with you, as together we toiled to further God's Kingdom in the little acre that was given us to till."
   The reception will be held from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the VFW Hall in South Portland. Organizers said that parishioners from churches Coughlin served over the years are welcome to attend the event.
• Local Priest Removed From School Over Abuse Allegations [Freymuth] - RCC. Child.
   KMOX, www.kmox.com/ news/article. php?id=15174 , ~ January 3, 2005
   ST. LOUIS (MO) : A priest has been removed from his duties at a local high school over child abuse allegations. The St. Louis Archdiocese has taken the action against the Reverend Michael Freymuth. Freymuth served as a chaplain at Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School, and was an associate pastor at St. Elizabeth, Mother of John the Baptist Church.
• Alleging abuse, former Baptist Mission students sue - Baptist. Indigenous enforced students. Canada flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   CBC North, http://north. cbc.ca/regional/ servlet/View? filename=dec31 residential 12312004 , Dec 31, 2004
   WHITEHORSE, CANADA - Former students of a Whitehorse Indian residential school are joining forces to sue the government and the people they say abused them.
   A class-action suit is being brought by former students of the Whitehorse Baptist Mission school
   The class-action suit was filed in Yukon Supreme Court on Christmas Eve, just days after federal authorities revealed they were rejecting claims by Baptist Mission School students.
   Whitehorse lawyer Dan Shier says Ottawa's denial of responsibility for the Baptist institution has left him little choice but to sue.
   "I think it will put pressure on the federal government when they start looking at the materials we have uncovered through access-to-information requests," he says.
   "The students didn't know that they were in a specific class of school, whether it was an Indian day school or a residential school or a religious institution. It didn't matter to them. They were taken from their families, put in these schools under the Indian Act, and they were abused, so to be fair to everybody the process should be equal to all."
• Attorney: Bernardin lied, visited crime scene [Bernardin] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Renew America, www.renewamerica.us/columns/abbott/050102 , by Matt C. Abbott, January 2, 2005
   CHICAGO (IL): The late Joseph Cardinal Bernardin was a controversial figure. Beloved by some and scorned by others, the cardinal for many years exercised immense influence in the Catholic Church in the U.S. He died of pancreatic cancer in 1996.
   In 1993, Bernardin was accused of sexual abuse by a former seminarian, Steven Cook, who died of AIDS not long after "recanting" his allegation, saying his memories were "unreliable." [...]
   ... Bernardin visited the crime scene of Francis Pellegrini, a choir director and professor who was found stabbed to death on May 30, 1984 in his apartment on Chicago's South side.
   Attorney Sheila Parkhill, who for the past two years has been investigating the still-unsolved murder and its probable connection to a pedophile ring known as The Boys' Club, says this of Bernardin's denials: "He lied, pure and simple." [See more below]
Attorney: Bernardin lied, visited crime scene
   Renew America, www.renewamerica.us/columns/abbott/050102 , by Matt C. Abbott, January 2, 2005
   CHICAGO (IL): The late Joseph Cardinal Bernardin was a controversial figure. Beloved by some and scorned by others, the cardinal for many years exercised immense influence in the Catholic Church in the U.S. He died of pancreatic cancer in 1996.
   In 1993, Bernardin was accused of sexual abuse by a former seminarian, Steven Cook, who died of AIDS not long after "recanting" his allegation, saying his memories were "unreliable." Jason Berry and Gerald Renner devote a segment to the Bernardin-Cook matter in their 2004 book "Vows of Silence: The Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II." Bernardin was quoted at a press conference as saying:
   "'I've been a priest for forty-two years...and a bishop for twenty-eight years...And you know, it's inevitable that anyone who is in a public position and who takes stands that are controversial is vulnerable. But it's interesting, only three accusations have been made against me, all within the current year - (p. 115)
   "'What were the other two?' a journalist cut it [? in].
   "'One was from a lady outside the state trying to implicate me in a satanic rite that allegedly took place thirty-five, thirty-six years ago. The other allegation was from a young man in another state who accused me and several others of engaging in some kind of orgy with him. And those...are totally false.'" (p. 116)
   The "satanic rite" allegation to which Bernardin was referring had been made by a woman who reportedly is married to an FBI agent. The following 2002 article contains more detailed information on the allegation: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=28294
   The WorldNetDaily article also mentions that Bernardin visited the crime scene of Francis Pellegrini, a choir director and professor who was found stabbed to death on May 30, 1984 in his apartment on Chicago's South side.
   Attorney Sheila Parkhill, who for the past two years has been investigating the still-unsolved murder and its probable connection to a pedophile ring known as The Boys' Club, says this of Bernardin's denials: "He lied, pure and simple."
   Parkhill also confirms Bernardin did indeed visit the Pellegrini crime scene, and is asking anyone with information on The Boys' Club or the murder to contact her at stparkhill@yahoo.com.
Matt C. Abbott is the former executive director of the Illinois Right to Life Committee and the former director of public affairs for the Chicago-based Pro-Life Action League. He is a Catholic journalist and commentator. He can be reached at mattcabbott@hotmail.com.
   © Copyright 2005 by Matt C. Abbott
http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/abbott/050102
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• Church healing sought - RCC. Voice of the Faithful plans.
   Telegram & Gazette, www.telegram. com/apps/pbcs. dll/article?AID=/ 20050103/NEW S/50103001/1116/ NEWSLETTERS08 by Kathleen A. Shaw, kshaw@telegram.com , Telegram & Gazette staff, ~ January 3, 2005
   WORCESTER (MA) - Worcester Diocese Voice of the Faithful plans to pursue an aggressive agenda during 2005, in hopes of bringing healing and restoring trust in the church and its leaders, and to begin involving lay people in more decision-making for the diocese.
   A planning meeting has been scheduled for 7 p.m. Jan. 18 in the Hogan Conference Center at the College of the Holy Cross. David J. O'Brien, a professor at Holy Cross active in the organization, said in a letter to members and prospective members that the group plans to elect interim officers, set a meeting schedule and decide on short-term and long-term projects.
   Voice of the Faithful was founded in 2002 in the Boston area during the burgeoning sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic church; a chapter opened here that year. It is now a national organization.
   The organization's New England regional conference was recently held at the DCU Center and more than 40 people from the Worcester diocese attended a "breakout" meeting with Mr. O'Brien to discuss how they can become more active.
   The organization comprises Catholic lay people and priests whose goals are to support victims of abuse and to work for structural change in the church while remaining faithful to the church and the bishops. Not all bishops are happy with the organization, however, and some have barred the group from meeting on church property.
   Although the 2005 agenda has not been set, Daniel Dick of Worcester, VOTF's victim support coordinator, outlined some issues he believes need to be addressed.
   "There is a tremendous amount of healing that needs to be done," he said.
   Mr. Dick said he is trying to introduce a program of "restorative justice" in the diocese and is meeting with a victim and the diocesan Office for Healing and Prevention on this issue. "This discussion has the support of the bishop, but it remains to be seen if he will meet the requirement of a direct participation in the program," he said.
   Healing needs to extend to the parishes, he added.
   "There are too many people there who want to ignore the healing needs of those who are or were members of parishes, people who have little or no understanding of the role they played in abetting the climate that would allow for such abuse," Mr. Dick said.
   To regain trust, the diocese needs to open records and personnel files, he added. People need to know about the settlements with victims, what the settlement policy is and "of the power of the insurance companies and the lawyers," he said.
   People also need to know what the relationship is between the diocese and District Attorney John J. Conte, he said, and need to know "who knew what and when. All of this has got to be put on the table for concerned laity to see and evaluate."
   Mr. O'Brien said he intends to have Mr. Dick and one or two others meet, before Jan. 18, with Patricia O'Leary Engdahl of the Office for Healing and Prevention to get an update on what has been done and is planned by her office, to learn the results of the second-year audit by the National Review Board set up by the American Catholic bishops, and to get information on "the diocese's ongoing relationships with victims."
   He also suggested that VOTF request that a committee of some of its members meet with the diocesan committee that oversees "the local response to the sex abuse crisis."
   Mr. O'Brien said he intends to talk before the meeting with leaders of local clergy and diocesan and religious orders to offer support for "priests of integrity" as well as to open a dialogue about "shared responsibility for the well-being of the diocese and parishes."
   Bishop Daniel P. Reilly, before he retired in May, began work on developing a local Diocesan Pastoral Council, Mr. O'Brien said. "I will invite the interim chair to attend our meeting, perhaps with one or two other members, to update us on the status of that body."
   Mr. Dick has also said he believes there should be a "review of the health of our parishes."
   Mr. O'Brien said Bishop Reilly began an assessment of staffing problems, which led to a "clustering" of parishes. The Rev. Michael F. Rose, pastor of St. James parish in South Grafton, heads the planning committee, and Frank Kartheiser of Worcester Interfaith serves as a member. Mr. O'Brien said he will invite both to the meeting.
   Mr. O'Brien said he intended to get an update on the work and recommendations of the National Review Board, which oversees implementation of the bishops' Charter for the Protection of Children, which they adopted in 2002.
   "Supporting its work, and keeping the Catholic public informed about that work, seems to me an important function of a local VOTF affiliate," he said. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:46 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Mon January 03, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Tue January 04, 2005 edition follows:-
• Church needs €50m over next 10 years for sex abuse victims - RCC. Ireland, Republic of / Eire, flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   One in Four, http://oneinfour. org/news/news2004/ needs , ~ January 04, 2005
   IRELAND: THE Catholic hierarchy will have to find up to €50m over the next 10 years to compensate sex abuse victims, pay for their counselling services and fund a revamped and expanded child protection service, the Irish Independent has learned.
   The news comes as a €10m trust set up by the bishops using insurance funds is expected to run out within the next 12 months because of abuse payouts.
   The result is that each of the 26 dioceses in the country will have to draw increasingly on their own resources to maintain the fund. [Seems to be same wording as CSAT 008220 by Irish Independent, Dec 24, 2004] [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 09:02 PM]
O.C.'s Bishop Brown apologizes to victims of clergy sex abuse [Orange Diocese] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Duluth News Tribune, BY CHRIS KNAP, ANN PEPPER, RACHANEE SRISAVASDI AND ANDREW GALVIN The Orange County Register, ~ January 04, 2005
   LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - (KRT) - Bishop Tod D. Brown walked down a long hallway at the Los Angeles Superior Court Monday to apologize to victims of clerical sexual abuse and authorize the release of thousands of pages of personnel files that victims say will show that the church protected accused priests.
   The 23-page, $100 million settlement made public Monday with 90 victims alleging abuse by Catholic priests, nuns and lay teachers in Orange County is the largest payout of its kind in history.
   The documents do not detail the names or the payouts to victims, in order to protect their privacy. But plaintiffs' lawyers said payments ranged from $50,000 to a few victims who got nearly $4 million.
   "All of us are here today because terrible things have happened. The sexual abuse of minors took place in our midst," Brown said.
   He said changes in diocesan personnel policies will ensure, "as much as is humanly possible, that these things will never happen again. ... Nothing is more important than the protection of our children and our youth."
• Roman Catholic Diocese Settles Sexual Abuse Cases [Orange Diocese] - RCC.
   NPR, www.npr.org/ templates/story/ story.php?story Id=4257549 , Morning Edition, January 4, 2005
   CALIFORNIA: The Roman Catholic diocese of Orange County, Calif., has agreed to a record settlement in sexual abuse cases. Orange County Bishop Todd D. Brown is seen as the driving force behind a new, and perhaps more open, approach to dealing with the ongoing sex abuse scandals. Rob Schmitz of member Station KPCC reports. ...
• Church ad campaign in Oregon seeks abuse victims [Portland Archdiocese] - RCC.
   Stuff (New Zealand), www.stuff.co. nz/stuff/0,21 06,3147850a 12,00.html , 05 January 2005
   PORTLAND(OR): The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Portland, Oregon, will launch an advertising campaign this week to encourage people sexually abused by priests in Oregon to come forward, according to a church spokesman.
   "It is part of a normal bankruptcy procedure to notify" possible claimants, archdiocese spokesman Bud Bunce said.
   In July, Portland became the first US diocese to file for bankruptcy. The move halted two trials seeking US$155 million in damages for plaintiffs who claim they were abused by priests.
   A federal bankruptcy court has imposed an April 29, 2005, deadline for many abuse lawsuits to be filed. The advertising will let potential claimants know about the deadline, Bunce said.
   "You may have a claim against the archdiocese" the ads will read.
   Bunce said the archdiocese did not use an ad agency, but "we did put some effort into the ad itself. It will be eye-catching."
Case against ex-priest down to one alleged victim [1980s Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   Boston Herald, Associated Press, Tuesday, January 4, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Prosecutors are dropping more charges against a priest accused in one of the most lurid cases to come out of the clergy sex abuse sandal, leaving only one of four alleged victims to testify at his upcoming trial, a source close to the case told The Associated Press.
   The criminal case against defrocked priest Paul Shanley, which once had four young men set to testify that Shanley raped them as children, was long considered a slam-dunk for prosecutors. The men all claimed Shanley raped them repeatedly between 1979 and 1989 when they were altar boys at St. Jean the Evangelist Parish in Newton.
   But now, with only one alleged victim left, some legal observers say the case against the priest who came to symbolize the scandal appears to be substantially weakened.
   All four of the men said they did not remember Shanley raping them until years later when they recovered memories of the abuse after seeing news reports about the clergy sex abuse scandal that engulfed the Boston Archdiocese. Shanley's defense lawyer said he may call Elizabeth Loftus, a renowned psychologist who has challenged claims of repressed memories of sexual abuse, to testify at the trial.
Phoenix men in settlement [Orange Diocese] - RCC. $US50m each from insurers and Church.
   Tucson Citizen, By SHERYL KORNMAN, ~ January 04, 2005
   TUCSON (AZ) - Two Phoenix clients of Tucson lawyer Lynne Cadigan will share in the $100 million settlement awarded to 90 plaintiffs who sued the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange in Orange County, Calif.
   Cadigan said the clients were abused as boys by a priest from the diocese who was on loan to the Diocese of Los Angeles and had served the church in Phoenix.
   Cadigan would not disclose the amount her clients will receive, saying it is small compared with what some of the other 88 plaintiffs will receive.
   The amount of the settlement reached Dec. 2 was made public yesterday when a California judge lifted a gag order.
   Cadigan said the Orange County Diocese paid $50 million of the settlement from an investment account. She said insurers paid $50 million of the settlement.
   Cadigan has eight clients with pending sexual misconduct cases against the Diocese of Los Angeles.
• Priest Admits Affairs With Women [2003 Witte] - RCC. Women.
   Ohio News Network, www.onnnews. com/Global/ story.asp? S=2760135& nav=LUELM9Nu , ~ January 04, 2005
   KENTUCKY - A Diocese of Covington priest is stepping down from his job to get professional help for having sex with women.
   Bishop Roger Foys released a letter to FOX19 that will be read during mass this coming weekend. The letter spells out the status of Father Mark Witte.
   Witte, the now former pastor at St. Timothy's in Union, has admitted to more than one affair with female parishioners. Witte will be admitted into a residential treatment facility. His status after that is not being discussed publicly.
   The priest faced allegations of breaking up a family in 2003 before leaving his post at Blessed Sacrament in Ft. Mitchell. A spokeswoman for a Tri-State priest abuse survivors network says Witte should be removed permanently from the priesthood. Christy Miller says he's abused the trust of the church and the families of those he had sexual relations with.
• Behind the diocese deal [Orange Diocese] - RCC.
   MSNBC, www.msnbc.msn. com/id/6785248 By ANN PEPPER, The Orange County Register, ~ January 04, 2005
   CALIFORNIA USA - The fate of the $100 million settlement between the Catholic Diocese of Orange and alleged sexual-abuse victims balanced, in the end, atop a stack of personnel documents that plaintiffs demanded be made public.
   Plaintiffs say the records show how they were victimized as children, when the diocese knew about it and how local church leaders responded.
   For many, money meant little compared with securing the release of the documents and an apology from the church.
   The deal-breaker issue pushed negotiations into the late hours of Dec. 2 - that last of four days in which everything from tough judges to an inhospitable courthouse played roles.
   Other hurdles had been cleared earlier in the year.
St. Timothy's pastor agrees to treatment [2000s Witte] - RCC. Woman.
   Cincinnati Enquirer By Mike Rutledge, January 4, 2005
   UNION, KENTUCKY - A year-old allegation of inappropriate behavior with an adult woman was not substantiated, but Father Mark Witte, pastor of St. Timothy Church, has stepped down - at least temporarily - to undergo residential treatment in Virginia, Witte and Covington Bishop Roger J. Foys have announced.
   Witte delivered the news during his Sunday homily. The Diocese of Covington did not plan to elaborate until next Sunday, when a letter from Foys was to be read during Masses at St. Timothy. But diocese officials decided Monday that would be too long to wait, and released Foys' letter.
   "A year ago an allegation of inappropriate behavior with an adult woman was made public against your pastor, Father Mark Witte," the bishop's letter said. "At the time, we pledged that a thorough investigation would be undertaken. This has been done. Father Witte has also willingly undergone a thorough evaluation. The entire matter was submitted to our Diocesan Misconduct Review Board.
   "As you know, Father Witte has admitted to having violated boundaries with adult women in the past and has expressed his regret and apologies for the pain this has caused," Foys' letter continued. "He has undergone outpatient counseling in the past two years.
   "The recommendation of our Misconduct Review Board is that, while the allegation which was lodged last year was not substantiated, Father Witte undertake a period of residential treatment during which time he can deal with these matters," Foys' letter said. "I have accepted that recommendation and Father Witte has agreed to it."
• Former pastor faces more sex charges [Harmon] - Baptist . 2 victims.
   Cincinnati Enquirer, http://news. enquirer.com/ apps/pbcs. dll/article? AID=/2005 0104/NEWS 01/501040366 , By David Eck, Enquirer contributor, January 04, 2005
   MAINEVILLE (OH) - A former Maineville pastor accused of sexually abusing two young members of his church was indicted on additional charges, including rape, authorities said Monday.
   C. Steven Harmon, 57, was indicted on nine counts of gross sexual imposition and one count of rape. The charges relate to two victims.
   A Warren County grand jury issued the indictments Thursday, but officials made them public Monday.
   The additional charges do not involve more victims, Warren County Prosecutor Rachel Hutzel said.
   In the new charges, Harmon is accused of having sexual contact with a person under the age of 13 nine separate times as well as engaging in sexual conduct with a person under 13 at least once, according to the indictment.
   A Warren County grand jury first indicted Harmon in October on two counts of gross sexual imposition and one count of sexual imposition.
   "We found additional information in preparation for trial," Hutzel said, discussing the new charges.
   Harmon, jailed in Warren County in lieu of $500,000 bond, was minister of the Maineville Baptist church for about 15 years until allegations of misconduct with boys surfaced earlier in September. ...
Parishioners scrap party for ex-pastor [1985, 1999-2001 Coughlin] - RCC. Man, child.
   Portland Press Herald, By JOSHUA L. WEINSTEIN, ~ January 04, 2005
   PORTLAND (ME) - Roman Catholic parishioners organizing a reception to honor a priest who was forced to resign late last year canceled the event Monday, hours after advocates for sexual-abuse victims condemned their plans.
   The reception for the Rev. Paul Coughlin was not sponsored by the Diocese of Portland, which in October ordered Coughlin to resign as pastor of Holy Cross and St. John the Evangelist parishes in South Portland.
   Bishop Richard Malone's investigation determined that the 69-year-old cleric failed to report sexual misconduct by a church volunteer and allowed the man, who is now in prison, to live in the rectory at St. John from 1999 to 2001.
   The bishop's investigation also determined that in 1985, while Coughlin was pastor at St. Mary's Church in Bangor, the priest had inappropriate physical contact with a minor.
   [COMMENT: "Faith" and "loyalty" gone to seed? COMMENT ENDS.]
Alleged victims of Orange County clergy abuse sob as settlement unsealed [Orange Diocese] - RCC. $US100m going.
   State Hornet, by Gillian Flaccus, Associated Press, January 04, 2005
   LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - Details of a record $100 million settlement between alleged victims of priest sexual abuse and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange were unsealed, with church leaders saying it would make the diocese a "holier, humbler and healthier church."
   Alleged victims sobbed and hugged Monday as they spoke publicly about the deal that was nearly two years in the making. Some thanked Bishop Tod D. Brown, who as head of the diocese negotiated what has become the largest clergy abuse settlement in history.
   "Let this be what everyone remembers from today: that nothing is more important than the protection of our children and our youth," Brown said as he sat alongside plaintiffs and their attorneys. "I seek their forgiveness, I hope for reconciliation and I know that they have now begun their healing process."
   The settlement was reached Dec. 2, but was under a court seal for a month as the parties signed off on it. It surpasses the $85 million the Archdiocese of Boston agreed to pay 552 plaintiffs in 2002.
• No charges against priest [1987-93 Emerson] - RCC.
   Post-Tribune, www.post-trib.com/cgi-bin/pto-story/news/z1/01-04-05_z1_news_02.html , By Stan Maddux / Post-Tribune correspondent, Jan. 4, 2005
   GARY (IN) - It appears no criminal charges will be considered against the Rev. Richard Emerson, separated from his LaPorte County parish last month amid sexual misconduct allegations.
   At least for now anyway.
   A Florida man, now 29, accused Emerson, 52, of sexual misdeeds when he was a visiting priest in Florida from 1987 to 1991. The man, who was a minor at the time, says the sexual relations continued until 1993 and included trips to Indiana, Chicago and Colorado.
   His charges were filed in May with the Orlando Diocese, which turned the case over to area law enforcement.
   The case was investigated by police in Orlando, but never presented to prosecutors for possible filing of charges, said Randy Means, director of investigations for the Orange-Osceola State Attorney's Office.
Portland parishioners cancel event honoring priest ordered to resign [1985, 1999-2001 Coughlin] - RCC. Man, child.
   Foster's Daily Democrat, AP, January 04, 2005
   PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - Roman Catholic parishioners canceled an event honoring a priest who was forced to resign late last year after a Catholic reform organization criticized their plans.
   The event, which was not sponsored by the Diocese of Portland, was held to honor the Rev. Paul Coughlin. In October, Coughlin was ordered to resign as pastor of Holy Cross and St. John the Evangelist parishes in South Portland.
   An investigation of Coughlin determined the 69-year-old priest failed to report sexual misconduct by a church volunteer and allowed the man, who is now in prison, to live in the rectory at St. John.
   Bishop Richard Malone's investigation also determined that Coughlin had inappropriate contact with a minor in 1985 while at St. Mary's Church in Bangor.
   Parishioners insist the reception was not to focused on what Coughlin had done wrong, but rather celebrate what he had done right.
• Minister accused of abusing three brothers [Neathery] - Baptist. Boys.
   Denton Record-Chronicle, www.dentonrc. com/sharedcontent/ APStories/ stories/ D87D2VH80. html , Associated Press, Jan/04/2005
   TEXAS - The former pastor of Westside Victory Baptist Church surrendered to authorities Monday on charges accusing him of sexually abusing three young brothers.
   The Rev. Larry Nuell Neathery was being held in the Tarrant County Jail late Monday with bail set at $750,000. With the latest charges, Neathery is accused of sexual misconduct with six males.
   Neathery, who resigned as Westside Victory's pastor several weeks ago, was accused in April of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old male church member.
   "If there ever was an innocent person charged with this many offenses, it is him," defense attorney Don Carter said in a story in Monday's online edition of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "He told me when he was going into the jail, he said, 'Mr. Carter, I'm innocent. I have not done these things, but I'm turning myself in as the law requires me to.'
• Orange County clergy settlement finalized, unsealed [Orange Diocese] - RCC. 60 years of abuse.
   San Francisco Chronicle, www.sfgate.com/ cgi-bin/article. cgi?f=/news/archive/ 2005/01/04/state 0306EST0009.DTL ; By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press Writer, (01-04) 00:53 PST , Tuesday, January 4, 2005
   LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA (AP) -- People who said they were abused by Catholic priests over a period of 60 years fell into the arms of their attorneys and sobbed as details of a record $100 million settlement with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange were unsealed.
   Others tearfully hugged and thanked Bishop Tod D. Brown, who as head of the diocese negotiated the largest clergy abuse settlement in history.
   "Today, I sit with you next to my brother in Christ, who has practiced his faith -- not just with the money, but I see the compassion of Christ in this man," said Mark Curran, one of those whose lawsuits against the diocese led to the settlement.
   "Today, we can stand and we can say, I forgive you. And of course I do, of course we forgive you," Curran said Monday.
   The settlement was reached Dec. 2 after nearly two years of negotiations, but was under a court seal for a month as the parties signed off on it. It marks the single largest clergy abuse settlement to date, surpassing the $85 million the Archdiocese of Boston agreed to pay 552 plaintiffs in 2002.
Clergyman faces more accusations of sexual abuse [Neathery] - Baptist. 6 males.
   Star-Telegram, By Melody McDonald, ~ January 04, 2005
   FORT WORTH (TX) - The alleged victims just kept surfacing.
   First, the Rev. Larry Nuell Neathery was arrested in April on accusations that he sexually assaulted a 13-year-old male church member.
   Then, the district attorney's office uncovered more accusations and charged the pastor with sexually abusing two more boys, one of whom is now an adult.
   Now, Neathery is behind bars again - this time accused of sexually abusing three young brothers.
   Neathery, 55, who had been free on bail since his first arrest, turned himself in shortly after noon Monday. He remained in the Tarrant County Jail late Monday with bail set at $750,000.
   All told, Neathery, who resigned as pastor of the Westside Victory Baptist Church several weeks ago, is officially accused of sexual misconduct with six males.
Church's $100 million abuse abuse settlement made public [Orange Diocese] - RCC. Record $US 100m settlement. Files will be revealing.
   Monterey Herald, BY CHRIS KNAP, ANN PEPPER, RACHANEE SRISAVASDI AND ANDREW GALVIN, The Orange County Register, ~ January 04, 2005
   LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - (KRT) - Bishop Tod D. Brown walked down a long hallway at the Los Angeles Superior Court Monday to apologize to victims of clerical sexual abuse and authorize the release of thousands of pages of personnel files that victims say will show that the church protected accused priests.
   The 23-page, $100 million settlement made public Monday with 90 victims alleging abuse by Catholic priests, nuns and lay teachers in Orange County is the largest payout of its kind in history.
   The documents do not detail the names or the payouts to victims in order to protect their privacy. But plaintiffs' lawyers said payments ranged from $50,000 to a few victims who got nearly $4 million.
   "All of us are here today because terrible things have happened. The sexual abuse of minors took place in our midst," Brown said.
   He said that changes to diocesan personnel policies will ensure, "as much as is humanly possible, that these things will never happen again. . . . Nothing is more important than the protection of our children and our youth." [Bolding added]
   [COMMENT: "Changes to diocesan personnel policies" ought not have been necessary. COMMENT ENDS.]
   [DOCTRINE: "You have not chosen me ; but I have chosen you ; ... I have chosen you out of the world ..." John 15:16, 19 (Douay) DOCTRINE ENDS.]

• Judge's private meeting leads to censure - Witness withdrew after unauthorised talk.
   Troy Record, www.troyrecord. com/site/news. cfm?newsid=136 74603&BRD=1170 &PAG=461&dept_ id=7021&rfi=6 ; By Robert Cristo, Jan/04/2005
   ALBANY (NY) - State Supreme Court Judge Joseph C. Teresi was reprimanded by the state Commission on Judicial Conduct Monday for failing to disclose he spoke privately to a defense witness who then withdrew from testifying in a 2003 DWI case.
   It is the second time in three years the Commission on Judicial Conduct has censured Teresi. This time the censure was for having an ex-parte (or private contact without attorney knowledge) discussion in his chambers with a witness scheduled to appear before him later that day. [...]
   When the Grune trial resumed, attorneys for the defendant stated on record that Herbert had "abruptly withdrawn" from the case, and then Grune's representatives were denied by Teresi an opportunity to adjourn the case until they found another expert witness.
   As a result, the defense was never allowed to present expert testimony and the defendant was later convicted. [...]
   Also in 2003, he recused himself from a controversial, high-profile case of alleged sexual abuse of children by priests because he felt he was becoming a "public focus of these cases," and the "attention is not beneficial to the plaintiffs or defendants," he wrote in a public statement at the time.
   Teresi came under fire that time after the defense attorney in the case, John Aretakis, accused the judge of communicating with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany and its attorneys without his knowledge.
   Today, Aretakis contends that this latest reprimand of Teresi only confirms his criticisms of the judge, but he is still "disappointed" that the commission only gave him what amounts to a scolding for a second time in three years. [Emphasis added]
Orange County Diocese Settles Priest Abuse Cases [Orange Diocese] - RCC. Record $US100m. ~ 500 claim on Los Angeles Archdiocese
   Los Angeles Times, By Jean Guccione, ~ January 04, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - The Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange formally agreed today to pay a record $100 million in damages for the sexual abuse inflicted by its priests, ending two years of intense negotiations to reach an out-of-court settlement.
   Bishop Tod D. Brown knelt in prayer and asked for healing of the 87 victims in a public apology made hours after the settlement was announced. A preliminary agreement was unveiled in early December.
   Many observers said the agreement puts pressure on Los Angeles Cardinal Roger M. Mahony and other U.S. bishops to follow Brown's lead in putting the 3-year-old clergy sex scandal behind them. The Archdiocese of Los Angeles is negotiating with its insurers and plaintiffs' lawyers over roughly 500 sexual abuse claims.
   "The Diocese of Orange has entered into this settlement agreement in the hope that it can bring healing to those who have been abused," Brown told a room packed with lawyers, victims, their advocates and the media.
   Brown, who became bishop in 1998, has set himself apart from most other U.S. bishops by entering into the nation's largest financial settlement between the Catholic Church and alleged victims. He also agreed to accept disclosure of internal church documents. [Bolding added]
Ex-priest Porter may face commitment despite cancer [1960s-70s Porter] - RCC. 28 children.
   Star Tribune, by Denise Lavoie, Associated Press, January 4, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) -- Prosecutors are not prepared to immediately drop their bid to keep former priest James Porter locked up for the rest of his life, even though the notorious pedophile with a history of abuse allegations dating to the 1970s in Minnesota is hospitalized with incurable cancer.
   Assistant District Attorney Renee Dupuis said Monday in Boston that prosecutors need to get an update from Porter's doctor before deciding whether he should still face trial on their petition to have him civilly committed as a sexually dangerous person.
   "There are plenty of people who are diagnosed with life-threatening illnesses that respond well to treatment, and we've prosecuted plenty of people who were 'terminally ill' and survived for years," Dupuis said.
   Porter was at the center of a notorious child-molestation case a decade ago. He was convicted in 1993 of molesting 28 children during the 1960s and 1970s while he was a priest in the Fall River, Mass., Diocese.
   Porter completed 11 years in prison in January 2004, but has remained in custody while prosecutors seek to have him committed indefinitely. In April a judge found enough evidence to hold a trial on that question.
2 dioceses in Arizona pass anti-abuse audit - RCC.
   The Arizona Republic, Michael Clancy, Jan. 4, 2005
   ARIZONA - The Dioceses of Phoenix and Tucson have continued to comply with U.S. bishops' efforts to reduce the sexual abuse of children and teens by priests and other church employees and volunteers.
   The Phoenix Diocese received word that it had passed its annual compliance audit late last week. Tucson learned of its compliance before Christmas.
   Auditors hired by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops were in Arizona in early December. Their goal was to monitor compliance with the bishops' Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, put into place in June 2002.
   The charter requires that bishops nationwide institute a series of programs aimed at addressing the sexual abuse crisis that has afflicted the church, particularly in 2001 and 2002. Among the programs are widespread training for church employees and volunteers, background checks, and care for abuse victims and parishes. It also requires dioceses to report allegations to civil authorities.
   In Phoenix, auditors last year found the diocese needed to improve its training programs and background checks. A follow-up audit determined the diocese had made adequate progress in those areas.
   Kathleen McChesney, executive director of the bishops' Office of Child and Youth Protection, called the Phoenix results "quite impressive."
Orange Bishop to Apologize in Huge Abuse Settlement [Harris, Ramos, Widera, Delahunty, Ford] - RCC. Two accused still ministering. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Los Angeles Times, www.latimes. com/news/local/ la-me-priest4 jan04,1,22420 44.story?coll= la-headlines- california ; By Jean Guccione, Tuesday, January 04, 2005
   Times staff writer David Haldane contributed to this report.
   CALIFORNIA: Hours after agreeing to pay $100 million and make public secret files of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange, Bishop Tod D. Brown on Monday knelt in prayer for the victims of sexual abuse by priests.
   "We have done this in the larger hope of reconciliation and healing," Brown told about 100 worshipers at Holy Family Cathedral in Orange. "We hope that our actions can restore the trust that many have lost in the leaders of the church." Earlier in the day, Brown formally agreed to a deal that amounted to the nation's largest between the church and alleged sexual abuse victims since the scandal broke three years ago.
   Payments to the alleged victims will range from $500,000 to $1.6 million each, according to Raymond P. Boucher, lead counsel for those who were suing.
   The settlements to the 90 people who sued average $1.1 million each, with their attorneys keeping up to 40% of the payment as fees.
   Under the agreement, the diocese does not admit legal liability, though Brown has agreed to personally apologize to each of the alleged victims. Two priests whose actions are covered by the settlement remain in the ministry, one in Santa Barbara and one in Laguna Woods.
   Brown has been widely praised as the first bishop in California to resolve sex abuse claims against the Catholic Church.
   "I hope that what we have done -- the changes we have made in our policies and our personnel practices -- will guarantee that, as much as is humanly possible, these things will never happen again," Brown said in a courthouse news conference Monday in downtown Los Angeles.
   The deal ends two years of intense negotiations without a trial. Many observers say it also puts pressure on Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of the Los Angeles Archdiocese and other U.S. bishops to follow Brown's lead -- at roughly $1 million per claim -- though Boucher said Monday that it's unlikely.
   The Los Angeles Archdiocese faces 544 claims by people who sued in 2003 under a state law that allows all victims of childhood sexual abuse to sue no matter how old their allegations.
   Some who settled Monday will get the smallest amount -- $500,000 -- because they may also collect damages from the Los Angeles Archdiocese and other religious entities. Some of the alleged abuse took place before 1976, the year the Diocese of Orange, covering Orange County, was created out the Los Angeles Archdiocese.
   The parties agreed to the deal in principle last month. Negotiations over details continued, including public disclosure of diocesan personnel files, which would have been the basis of lawsuit claims that the church hierarchy was negligent in failing to protect parishioners from predatory priests.
   The dissemination of similar church files in Boston documented the transfer, rather than arrest, of accused priests to other parishes, where some continued to molest children, and led to Cardinal Bernard F. Law's resignation as archbishop.
   The settlement, negotiated by Los Angeles County Superior Court Judges Owen Lee Kwong and Peter D. Lichtman, and retired Judge Thomas F. Nuss, "is historic not only from the standpoint of the amount of money but, more importantly, from the release of the documents," Boucher said.
   Under the settlement, Brown, who became bishop in 1998, agreed to open his personnel files to the public. A judge will screen them to remove names of alleged abuse victims, and material protected by legal privileges, such as communications between lawyers and psychologists and their clients.
   Mahony's lawyers, by contrast, are preparing an appeal of a court order that the Los Angeles Archdiocese turn over the confidential files of two accused priests to a Los Angeles County grand jury investigating sex abuse by clergy.
   The Orange Diocese will contribute a little more than half of the $100-million settlement, according to church lawyers, who declined to be more specific. The rest will be paid by the diocese's eight insurers: Travelers Casualty & Surety Co., Industrial Underwriters Insurance Co., Centennial Insurance Co., Associated International Insurance Co., Stonewall Insurance Co., Allianz Global Risks US Insurance Co., CNA Insurance Co. and Ordinary Mutual.
   The settlement protects the church and its insurers from the risks of jury trials, in which multimillion-dollar verdicts could force the church into bankruptcy, as happened in three other U.S. dioceses. The alleged victims receive compensation more quickly, and they are protected because the funds are distributed equitably, rather than according to whoever reaches the courthouse first.
   With the settlement, the diocese also will not challenge the constitutionality of the law allowing victims to sue for alleged abuse committed long ago.
   A financial council of the Orange Diocese, which includes clergy and laity, is studying how to finance its portion of the settlement, said Maria Schinderle, general counsel for the diocese.
   Church officials have said their share would come from a combination of cash reserves, loans on property and investments, and perhaps the sale of their 17-acre headquarters in Orange. In anticipation of the settlement, the diocese had already cut some services and a dozen jobs last summer.
   The diocese had a $171-million investment portfolio and $23.4 million in cash reserves at the end of the 2003 fiscal year, according to its financial statement.
   Brown has previously vowed not to close parishes.
   Monday's settlement exceeds the $85-million deal the Boston Archdiocese made last year to end litigation with 552 people who said they were abused by priests.
   The agreement also ends claims against men who were some of the diocese's most notorious former priests, including Msgr. Michael A. Harris, Eleuterio Ramos and Siegfried Widera.
   Nine men sued the diocese in 2003, alleging that Harris, their former principal, sexually assaulted them while they attended Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana or Santa Margarita High School in Rancho Santa Margarita. Harris quit the priesthood in 2001 after the Los Angeles and Orange dioceses paid $5.2 million to one of his alleged victims. Harris has denied the charges.
   Ramos was accused in court of molesting 11 children while at St. Angela Merici Catholic Church in Brea, Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Santa Ana, Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in La Habra and St. Anthony Claret Catholic Church in Anaheim, from 1972 to 1989. He admitted to police in May 2003 that he molested at least 25 boys in Orange County. Criminal charges against him were dropped in 2003 after the U.S. Supreme Court barred the prosecution of decades-old criminal sex-abuse cases, though civil cases have not been barred. Ramos has since died.
   Nine men accused Widera of sexually assaulting them as children at St. Justin Martyr Catholic Church in Anaheim and St. Martin de Porres in Yorba Linda from 1975 to 1986.
   Widera was facing 42 felony counts of molestation in California and his home state of Wisconsin when he committed suicide in Mexico in 2003.
   One of the accused, Richard Delahunty, was returned to the ministry last month in Laguna Woods, after an internal church investigation found "no credible evidence" against him. He is pastor at St. Nicholas Church. Another priest covered by the settlement, James M. Ford, is pastor at San Roque Catholic Church in Santa Barbara. He has previously denied the allegations.
   Irvine attorney Katherine K. Freberg praised the courage of her 33 clients: "You will never know how many victims you have saved by coming forward," she said.
   John C. Manly, a Costa Mesa attorney with 30 clients, challenged Brown to continue to be a "beacon of hope for reform in my church."
   At the news conference, several alleged victims, many of them in tears, also thanked Brown.
   "Today I sit with you next to my brother in Christ, who has practiced his faith not just with the money, but I see the compassion of Christ in this man, and that means a lot to me," said Mark Curran, one of several men present who said they were sexually abused as boys.
   "Of course, we forgive you," Curran told the bishop. "You did not do this to us. A select few did." # [Bolding added]
   [COMMENT: The money promised is probably a world record. Sadly, the abuse level possibly is NOT. COMMENT ENDS.]
Blackwell's abuse trial postponed for 6th time [1989-92 Blackwell] - RCC. Boy.
   Baltimore Sun, By Julie Bykowicz, January 4, 2005
   BALTIMORE (MD) - The sexual child abuse trial of recently defrocked Baltimore priest Maurice Blackwell was postponed for the sixth time yesterday after his defense attorney and the prosecutor told the judge that they were not ready to begin.
   Blackwell, 58, is accused of molesting Dontee Stokes, a former parishioner who shot the older man in May 2002, more than a decade after the abuse allegedly occurred. The new trial date is Feb. 10.
   Stokes, a 28-year-old West Baltimore barber, was acquitted of attempted murder charges, and Blackwell was later indicted on four counts of sexual child abuse and four counts of assault. The assault charges were dropped, but the sexual child abuse charges have been pending since May 2003.
   Although the trial was set to begin yesterday morning, neither defense attorney Kenneth W. Ravenell nor Assistant State's Attorney Jo Anne Stanton had asked their witnesses to come to court. Both told the trial judge that they believed the administrative judge, John M. Glynn, had agreed to a postponement.
   But Ravenell, who requested the delay, did not obtain an advance postponement from Glynn, and yesterday the trial judge, Circuit Judge Stuart R. Berger, was visibly annoyed during the morning court proceeding that the attorneys were not prepared for trial. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 03:27 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Tue January 04, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Wed January 05, 2005 edition follows:-
• Bishop's refusal to release names of abusers is selfish [Jefferson City Diocese] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Columbia Daily Tribune, www.columbia tribune.com/ 2005/Jan/ 20050105 Comm006.asp , Published Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   MISSOURI: Editor, the Tribune: It's offensive when someone does something selfish but pretends his motives are, in fact, selfless. It's even more offensive when that person is a spiritual leader. That's exactly what is happening with Jefferson City Bishop John Gaydos. He recently wrote in the Tribune "a public accounting of" sexual abuse "allegations could not be done without violating the confidentiality of victims" - "Diocese asks forgiveness," Jan. 2.
   Try telling that to the two prominent Catholic cardinals - Los Angeles and Baltimore - who put the names of literally hundreds of abusive priests on their Web sites. Try telling that to the new president of the U.S. Bishops' Conference, William Skystad of Spokane, Wash., who also has done so. Try telling that to the bishops of other dioceses who have done the same.
   The least Gaydos can do is make public the names of the 27 Jefferson City-area priests removed because of credible allegations of sexually assaulting kids. To keep these names secret means deliberately putting more unsuspecting children at risk, as these molesters quietly begin new lives in new communities, baby-sitting kids, volunteering at the YMCA, tutoring at schools and devastating more lives. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:50 PM]
Priest to undergo treatment [Witte] - RCC. Women.
   Kentucky Post, By Kevin Eigelbach, January 05, 2005
   KENTUCKY: The pastor of one of Northern Kentucky's largest Roman Catholic churches will leave this week for out-of-state treatment to deal with problems involving women.
   Rev. Mark Witte, pastor of St. Timothy in Union, told his congregation Sunday that he planned to resume his duties after he completed his treatment, subject to the approval of Covington Bishop Roger Foys.
   "I am more committed to my vocation and to this work than I ever have been," he said.
   Witte plans to enroll in a program at the New Life Institute in Virginia. He did so at the recommendation of the diocese's Committee for Addressing Sexual Misconduct.
   The committee started investigating an allegation against Witte in November 2003.
   Don Zalla, a Lakeside Park attorney, lodged a formal complaint against Witte, saying that Witte's actions contributed to the breakup of Zalla's 19-year marriage.
Garcia spends his holidays in jail cell [Garcia] - Religion not named. Girl.
   The Daily Journal, By LAURA CLARK, ~ January 05, 2005
   CALIFORNIA: Daniel Aram Garcia spent Christmas and New Year's in jail, where he remains after violating the terms of his release.
   Garcia, 47, of Willits -- who awaits sentencing on a child molestation charge -- at his arraignment Dec. 16 pleaded guilty to one count of lewd and lascivious conduct with a child of 14 or 15 years old. He was released on his own recognizance at that time with orders not to try to contact his victim or be alone with anyone under the age of 18 without another adult present.
   On Dec. 23, Garcia attempted to write to the girl he molested and was rearrested and taken back to jail with bail set at $200,000. ...
   The case has attracted attention because Garcia was a well-known and well-liked figure at the courthouse, a former candidate for county clerk, and a pastor at a church in Redwood Valley.
• Catholic order faces new suit alleging abuse at orphanage [Sisters of Charity of Nazareth] - RCC.
   Lexington Herald-Leader, www.kentucky. com/mld/ken tucky/news/ local/ 10573257.htm , Associated Press ~ January 05, 2005
   LOUISVILLE, Ky. - A Catholic order was sued Wednesday by a man claiming he was sexually abused by nuns while living at a Jefferson County orphanage when he was a boy.
   Richard Lauersdorf accused the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth of concealing the alleged abuse by nuns at the now-closed St. Thomas-St. Vincent Orphanage.
   Lauersdorf seeks unspecified punitive and compensatory damages from the religious order based in Nelson County, along with a jury trial. Several dozen other former residents of the orphanage have filed suit claiming they were molested by a priest or nuns over several decades.
   Lauersdorf, now 49, claims that he was beaten and molested repeatedly and forced to eat his own vomit. The suit does not name his alleged abusers.
• Catholic Order Faces New Suit Alleging Abuse At Orphanage [1950s-60s Sisters of Charity of Nazareth] - RCC.
   WAVE 3, www.wave3.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2770122 , 5:30 p.m., January 5th, 2005
   LOUISVILLE (KY) - A Catholic order was sued Wednesday by a man claiming he was sexually abused by nuns while living at a Jefferson County orphanage when he was a boy.
   Richard Lauersdorf accused the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth of concealing the alleged abuse by nuns at the now-closed St. Thomas-St. Vincent Orphanage.
   Lauersdorf seeks unspecified punitive and compensatory damages from the religious order based in Nelson County, along with a jury trial. Several dozen other former residents of the orphanage have filed suit claiming they were molested by a priest or nuns over several decades.
   Lauersdorf, now 49, claims that he was beaten and molested repeatedly and forced to eat his own vomit. The suit does not name his alleged abusers.
   The suit said Lauersdorf lived at the orphanage in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
• Judge orders physical exam for ex-priest accused of rape, sodomy [Ewing] - RCC. Girl.
   WKYT, www.wkyt.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2770223 , ~ January 05, 2005
   LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- A judge on Wednesday ordered that a former Roman Catholic priest facing a retrial on rape and sodomy charges undergo a physical examination of his genitalia.
   Prosecutors requested the exam seeking to corroborate a description from the alleged victim who claims she was assaulted by Bruce Ewing decades ago when she was a teenager.
   Ewing's attorney, David Lambertus, declined comment on Jefferson County Circuit Judge Martin McDonald's order.
   Ewing's trial last year ended with a deadlocked jury after five hours of deliberations. If convicted, Ewing could have faced up to 15 years in prison on the one count of third-degree rape and two counts of third-degree sodomy.
Church sex scandals' heavy legacy [Orange Diocese] - RCC. £53m to pay. 544. 3 insolvent.
   BBC News, By Robert Pigott, BBC religious affairs correspondent, ~ January 05, 2005
   CALIFORNIA: The agreement of a Roman Catholic diocese to pay $100m (£53m) in compensation to victims of sex abuse takes the Church in America past another milestone in the settlement of its long drawn out scandal.
   Several US archdioceses had to file for bankruptcy over the scandals.
   The fact that the Diocese of Orange, in Los Angeles, is spending so much in meeting the claims of only 90 people, with another 544 cases outstanding there, gives an idea of the crippling financial burden on the Church.
   Lawyers working on the litigation say abuse could eventually cost $1bn.
   Other dioceses have found the price of abuse more than they can manage.
   The Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon filed for bankruptcy last July. Tucson in Arizona and Spokane in Washington chose to follow suit.
Hearing delayed again in bid to lock up pedophile ex-priest [Porter] - RCC.
   Boston Herald, Associated Press, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - Civil commitment hearings for former priest James Porter were delayed for another three months on Wednesday after his doctor said the convicted pedophile is too ill with cancer to appear in court.
   Porter is hospitalized in Boston with incurable cancer.
   On a conference call, his doctor told New Bedford Superior Court Judge Robert Kane, Porter's lawyer and prosecutors that Porter has lost 40 pounds while undergoing four chemotherapy treatments and is not able to leave the hospital.
   His cancer has not improved but has not shown signs of spreading, the doctor reported.
   The next hearing was set for April 7 in Fall River.
   Bristol First Assistant District Attorney Renee Dupuis said prosecutors are not ready to drop their bid to have Porter committed indefinitely as a sexually dangerous person.
   "We still view Mr. Porter as a risk to reoffend. Nothing has changed that," she said.
   "We have prosecuted many defendants who are ill and yet can lead fairly normal lives. By virtue of the fact that they're ill doesn't mean that they won't commit additional crimes. I can't see any circumstances under which we would agree to drop our petition."
• Vatican to reopen case against Maciel [Maciel (Legionaries of Christ] - RCC. Male seminarians. Vatican City / Papal flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Israel flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Palestine Authority flag; Palestine Authority website  Austria flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   National Catholic Reporter, http://ncronline. org/NCR_Online/ archives2/2005a/ 010705/010 705i.php , By JASON BERRY, ~ January 05, 2005
   VATICAN: A canon lawyer representing eight former members of the Legionaries of Christ who filed pedophilia charges in 1998 against the order's founder, Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, recently informed the men that a Vatican prosecutor has agreed to reopen the dormant case.
   Martha Wegan, a canonist who works at the Holy See, informed Arturo Jurado and JosÉ Barba of Mexico, and Juan Vaca, of Holbrook, N.Y., of the development in a Dec. 2 letter, barely a week after Pope John Paul II publicly praised Maciel and entrusted the Legion with the administration of Jerusalem's Notre Dame Center.
   "It seems to me that now the case is being taken seriously," Wegan wrote.
   Jurado, Barba and Vaca are three of the men who for years have tried to get the Vatican to take action against Maciel. Wegan, an Austrian national in Rome licensed to practice in church courts, told the three petitioners that Fr. Charles Scicluna, a canon lawyer working as promoter of justice at the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, had asked if the men wished "to pursue the suit or not."
   "After we received the letter, I telephoned Martha Wegan and said that of course, we wished the case to move forward," Barba, a professor of Latin American studies at Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de Mexico, told NCR in a telephone interview from Mexico City.
   "I also told her that we would not be bound by silence," added Barba -- referring to the congregation's insistence in 1998, when the case was filed, that the men not speak publicly about it. They abided by the agreement until late 1999, when Wegan informed them that Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, head of the congregation, had tabled the case. Ratzinger later told a Mexican bishop that the charges created a "delicate" situation because Maciel in his view had done much good for the church (NCR, Dec. 7, 2001). [Bolding added.]
• The need for dialogue in the church - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The Tidings, www.the- tidings.com/ 2005/0107/ essays.htm , By Father Richard P. McBrien, for January 7, 2005
   UNITED STATES: Nothing is more important to a healthy relationship and to a vibrant community than the capacity to dialogue. People have to be able to speak the truth to others without unnecessarily hurting them, and they must, in turn, be disposed to listen to others, even when the message they receive is unpleasant.
   Dialogue is especially important when personal relationships and communities are in a crisis of one kind or another. That is surely the case today with the Roman Catholic Church, which is still dealing with what is probably the worst crisis it has faced since the 16th century Reformation.
   The sexual-abuse scandal, which exploded with unprecedented fury just three years ago this week, pointed a dagger at the church's priesthood and, in the process, put at risk the spiritual health and vitality of the church's most precious asset, its sacramental life.
   At times like these effective leadership is of greatest urgency. The church needs men and women who have a theologically-informed vision, the ability to articulate it clearly and meaningfully to others, but always in a dialogical manner, and the capacity to motivate others to embrace that vision and to work together to realize it.
   Leadership is exercised at many levels in the church. To be sure, the Bishop of Rome is, by reason of his office, the most important leader in the Body of Christ. A healthy, vigorous, and visionary pope who truly listens to his people is one of the greatest gifts that God could bestow upon the church.
   Diocesan bishops and pastors are also crucially important church leaders. But leadership is not only exercised by the clergy. The church is the whole People of God. It is composed of all the baptized, laity as well as clergy and religious.
Lawsuit names former Catholic school superintendent [1977 Sullivan] - RCC.
   The Boston Globe, By Denise Lavoie, AP Legal Affairs Writer, January 5, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) -- Ten more clergy sex abuse lawsuits have been filed against the Boston Archdiocese, including one that accuses the archdiocese's former school superintendent of molesting a 15-year-old boy in the 1970s.
   Eugene Sullivan, who is now pastor of St. Francis Xavier church in Weymouth, is accused in the suit of molesting a boy in his car in 1977.
   Mark Martin, now 42, claims Sullivan fondled him as they rode in his car to Camp Fatima, a Catholic summer camp for children in New Hampshire.
   Sullivan said he had not seen the lawsuit and had no immediate comment.
   "I know nothing about that," Sullivan said when reached by phone at the church Wednesday. He told The Associated Press he couldn't remember Martin, saying "This is throwing me for a loop."
   Sullivan was superintendent of schools for the archdiocese and assistant director for education in 1977, when Martin claims the abuse took place. The exact time frame he served as superintendent couldn't immediately been determined.
   Kelly Lynch, a spokeswoman for the archdiocese, declined to comment on the lawsuit.
Sex Abuse Victims Urge Other Shanley Witnesses, Victims To Step Forward [1980s Shanley; Kuchar] - RCC. Boys.
   Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, ~ January 05, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - Leaders of a support group for clergy molestation victims are urging "anyone who experienced, witnessed or suspected abuse by Paul Shanley" to come forward to law enforcement.
   At the same time, they expressed confidence that Middlesex District Attorney Martha Coakley will prevail in the upcoming criminal trial against the former Boston cleric.
   In particular, the SNAP leaders believe that current and former priests and church employees "have a moral duty to share what they know of Shanley's crimes with police and prosecutors," according to the group's national director David Clohessy of St. Louis.
   "There's no reason the burden of protecting innocent kids and vulnerable adults from Shanley should fall solely on his victims," he said. "It's time for some archdiocesan priests and lay employees to find some backbone and break the clerical culture of secrecy so that others can be safeguarded."
   Clohessy pointed to the trial of a Missouri priest, Fr. Bryan Kuchar. who initially remained free when a jury deadlocked in a 2003 criminal molestation trial.
   St. Louis County prosecutors persisted, however, and found three new witnesses - a Catholic lay employee, a nun, and a priest - who testified against Kuchar in a second trial. The cleric was eventually convicted and is in jail serving a three year sentence.
SR Diocese sex-abuse suit upheld [1968-72 Gleeson] - RCC.
  The Press Democrat, By GUY KOVNER, January 05, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - An Oakland judge has rejected the Catholic Church's first legal attempt to eliminate one of 11 child sex-abuse lawsuits against the Santa Rosa Diocese.
   In refusing the diocese's bid to dismiss a suit against a priest who died 14 years ago, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Ronald Sabraw tentatively ruled that another priest may have known of the misconduct and the case consequently can go to trial.
   Lawyers for the diocese and the alleged victim, a former Calistoga altar boy, will argue the ruling today in Sabraw's courtroom and a final order will be issued.
   The plaintiff, a 48-year-old Amador County man, married and a father of six children, alleges he was repeatedly molested by the Rev. Patrick Gleeson from 1968 to 1972, when Gleeson was pastor at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church in Calistoga.
   Gleeson died in 1991 at 66, after serving the previous six years at St. Joseph's Church in Cotati and earlier at St. Apollinaris in Napa.
• Archbishop threatens to withhold sacraments [St. Louis Archdiocese] - RCC. Anti-paedophile man threatened.
   Post-Dispatch, www.stltoday. com/stltoday/ news/stories. nsf/stlouis citycounty/ story/5DC92F3 975617C328625 6F800019008B? OpenDocument& Headline=Arch bishop+threat ens+to+with hold+sacraments ; By Tim Townsend, Jan/04/2005
   ST. LOUIS (MO) - St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke has threatened to withhold the sacraments of the Roman Catholic church, including Communion, from board members of St. Stanislaus Kostka Parish in a dispute over control of the church.
   "I warn you that your refusal to comply with the legitimate directives of the Holy See and me, your Archbishop, carries with it, the punishment of 'interdict or other just penalties,'" wrote Burke in a letter to the board members. The archbishop set a date of Feb. 4 for the board to comply with his directives.
   Monsignor Thomas J. Green, professor of canon law at Catholic University, described interdict as a "mini excommunication." ...
   "I consider it a badge of honor," said board member Robert Zabielski. "I'm sticking up for what is right. Pedophiles in this church are transferred from diocese to diocese while good, faithful people are excommunicated." Zabielski said he was not surprised to receive the letter. "It was only a matter of time before something like this came," he said.
Family works to empower victims - Victim Power website.
   Eagle Tribune, By Dorian Block ~ January 05, 2005
   ANDOVER (MA) -- A local family is seeking to offer a new way for victims of crime in general -- and clergy abuse specifically -- to report the wrongdoing.
   A Web site they have created called Victimpower.org will give crime victims a chance to talk to law enforcement without giving their names.
   Diane Williams Galebach and her husband, attorney Stephen Galebach, have recruited the oldest of their 10 children to put Victimpower.org together over the past six months. Outside assistance came from other teenagers Diane Williams Galebach has advised through a group she started to promote Christian values among children called the It Works Foundation.
   "I've learned a lot about victims and the psychology that goes on," she said. "All I can say is that there are a whole lot of victims excited to use this site."
Alleged Shanley victim not found [1979-89 Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   Boston Herald, By Marie Szaniszlo, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - More charges may be dropped against a defrocked priest accused in one of the clergy sex abuse scandal's most lurid cases, potentially leaving only one of four alleged victims to testify at his upcoming trial.
   Frank Mondano, the attorney for Paul Shanley, yesterday said he expects the charges to be dropped because prosecutors may not be able to find one of the four men who claim Shanley repeatedly raped them between 1979 and 1989, when they were altar boys at St. John the Evangelist in Newton.
   Emily LaGrassa, a spokeswoman for Middlesex District Attorney Martha Coakley, yesterday said the office had not dropped more charges against Shanley and, "at this point, there are two victims involved in the case."
   In October, however, Mondano asked Judge Stephen Neel to dismiss the charges related to one of them, an unidentified homeless man in his 20s, after he failed to appear in court at least twice. Three months earlier, prosecutors had dropped charges brought by two other alleged victims.
Judge bars media from disclosing names of alleged Shanley victims [1980s Shanley ] - RCC. Boys.
   Daily News Tribune, Associated Press, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) -- A judge, acting at the request of prosecutors, issued an order Tuesday barring the news media from disseminating the names of the alleged victims in the upcoming child rape trial of defrocked priest Paul Shanley.
   Superior Court Judge Charles Spurlock issued his order after The Associated Press moved a story that included the names of two alleged victims, one of whom is expected to testify against Shanley at his trial on child rape charges later this month.
   The name of the alleged victim has been published repeatedly by the AP and other news organization since 2002, when he filed a civil lawsuit against Shanley and gave numerous newspaper and television interviews.
   Spurlock cited a state law dating back to the 1980s that says that court or police records containing the name of the victim in a criminal case involving rape or assault with intent to rape "shall be withheld from public inspection, except with the consent of a justice" of the court where the case is being prosecuted.
   The law says it is unlawful to "publish, disseminate or otherwise disclose the name of any individual identified as an alleged victim" of rape or attempted rape.
Party for ex-pastor canceled [1985, 1999-2001 Coughlin ] - RCC. Man, child.
   Bangor Daily News, ~ January 05, 2005
   SOUTH PORTLAND, MAINE - Roman Catholic parishioners canceled an event honoring a priest who was forced to resign late last year after a Catholic reform organization criticized their plans. The event, which was not sponsored by the Diocese of Portland, was held to honor the Rev. Paul Coughlin. In October, Coughlin was ordered to resign as pastor of Holy Cross and St. John the Evangelist parishes in South Portland.
   An investigation of Coughlin determined the 69-year-old priest failed to report sexual misconduct by a church volunteer and allowed the man, who is now in prison, to live in the rectory at St. John.
   Bishop Richard Malone's investigation also determined that Coughlin had inappropriate contact with a minor in 1985 while at St. Mary's Church in Bangor.
   Coughlin has never been accused of criminal activity, and the diocese has declined to provide specifics of the "inappropriate physical contact."
Mormon volunteer nabbed for alleged sexual abuse of boy [Curlew 2003] - Mormon. Boy.
   Boston Herald, By O'Ryan Johnson, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   METHUEN (MA) - A man who volunteered to watch youngsters at a Mormon church in Methuen was arrested yesterday for repeatedly sexually abusing a boy in his care, police Chief Joseph E. Solomon said.
   Kevin Curlew, 43, of Dracut volunteered at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on Hill Street in Methuen, where his job was to care for parishioners' children when they attended services and activities.
   But Solomon said since July, Curlew had singled out at least one of the boys in his care, abusing him on sacred ground. Solomon declined to release the boy's age or hometown.
   "We were involved because the abuse occurred at the church which is in Methuen," Solomon said.
   He said a tip to the Essex District Attorney's Office made under the state's mandatory reporting law led to the arrest.
• Deadline set in church abuse lawsuits [Portland Archdiocese] - RCC. $US 534m sought by 72 plaintiffs.
   KGW, www.kgw.com/ sharedcontent/ APStories/stories /D87DQP300.html , Associated Press, Jan/05/2005
   PORTLAND (OR) - Those intending to file a sexual abuse claim against the Archdiocese of Portland must do so by April 29.
   U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Elizabeth Perris approved the deadline in a court order issued Monday.
   Faced with a $135 million jury trial set to begin July 6, the archdiocese filed for bankruptcy, becoming the nation's first diocese to do so. The archdiocese faces $534 million in pending claims from 72 individual plaintiffs, according to a bankruptcy court filing.
   The archdiocese will conduct a $300,000 notification program to alert potential claimants to the deadline, said Bud Bunce, spokesman for the archdiocese.
   Those who want to pursue a claim, including the plaintiffs already suing the archdiocese, must file a proof-of-claim form. It requires those who had sexual contact with anyone working for the archdiocese to disclose certain details.
• California Diocese Settles Sexual Abuse Case for $100 Million [Orange Diocese] - RCC.
   The New York Times, www.nytimes. com/2005/01/ 05/national/ 05settle.html , By NICK MADIGAN, January 5, 2005
   LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, Jan. 4 - Twenty-six years after he was sexually abused by a priest, there is still a catch, almost imperceptible, in Max Fisher's voice when he talks about it.
   The man who assaulted him is dead, but Mr. Fisher said Tuesday that he only felt a measure of vindication now that he and 89 other plaintiffs who contended they were abused by Roman Catholic priests and other church employees in Orange County had received a public apology from a bishop.
   Mr. Fisher said that for him, the apology, from Bishop Tod D. Brown of the Diocese of Orange at a court hearing on Monday, trumped the announcement of a record $100 million settlement between the diocese and the 90 plaintiffs who came forward to say they were abused in the county's parishes, in some cases decades ago.
   "I'm more pleased with the fact that I got what I was after, which wasn't money, but an apology from the church," Mr. Fisher, 40, said by telephone. "The bishop pulled me aside and said, 'I'm deeply sorry that this happened.' That meant more to me than anything."
Shanley trial may hinge on 1 accuser [1980s Shanley] - RCC. Third accuser dropped. Boys.
   The Boston Globe, By Ralph Ranalli, January 5, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - The criminal case against defrocked priest Paul R. Shanley, perhaps the most notorious of all Catholic clergy involved in the sexual abuse scandal, will soon hinge only on the allegations of a single accuser, according to Shanley's lawyer, Frank Mondano.
   Mondano said he told a Middlesex Superior Court judge last week that prosecutors said they will drop charges stemming from the accusations of one of the four original alleged victims. The victim would be the third dropped from the case.
   Prosecutors said yesterday that charges from two accusers still stand and declined to comment further.
   The latest alleged victim expected to be dropped from the case is a former Newton man in his mid-30s, identified in court papers only as Male No. 4, who has battled substance abuse and homelessness, according to a lawyer familiar with the case. Although some of the victims' names have been published in the past, a judge ordered yesterday that those names not be released.
   The victim missed a recent court hearing in which he was scheduled to testify.
Indiana bishop defends handling of Florida misconduct case [1980s-90s Emerson] - RCC.
   The Ledger, The Associated Press January 5, 2005
   GARY, Ind. - A Roman Catholic bishop said he did not act sooner against a priest accused of sexual misconduct with a minor in Florida because police and church investigators had trouble contacting the alleged victim.
   Bishop Dale Melczek also said the Rev. Richard Emerson, suspended last month as pastor of Notre Dame Church in Long Beach, Ind., has denied any sexual misconduct with his accuser.
   A Florida man now 29 notified the Catholic Diocese of Orlando on May 25 that he had been abused by Emerson when the priest worked there from 1987 to 1991. The alleged victim said the sexual acts occurred in Florida when he was between the ages of 11 and 18. The Diocese of Gary and Melczek were notified on May 27.
   Melczek waited for Orlando police to complete their investigation before his diocesan emergency response team conducted its investigation, he told the Post-Tribune of Merrillville for a story published Wednesday. The Orlando Diocese had turned the case over to the police.
Biggest clergy abuse settlement announced [Orange Diocese] - RCC. < $US 900m nationwide. Files wanted.
   USA Today, By Cathy Lynn Grossman, January 4, 2005
   CALIFORNIA The Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange in California has announced details of the largest single settlement in the church's child sexual-abuse scandal.
   The diocese said Monday that it had agreed to a $100 million civil settlement with 90 victims of abuse. The largest previous settlement, $85 million, was made in Boston in 2003. The latest settlement pushes the total cost of abuse, including care and counseling for victims and priests, to nearly $900 million nationwide.
   But victims, who battled the Southern California diocese for two years, say their victory won't be complete until they see the church's files on alleged abusers, which will be made public as part of the settlement. They could document what church officials knew of abuse complaints and what they did - or failed to do - to protect children.
   "This is what we really want - to open up the truth of what happened and be believed," said Barbara Blaine, founder of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP].
Bishop defends diocese's system [1980s-90s Emerson] - RCC.
   Post-Tribune, By Frank Wiget, ~ January 5, 2005
   GARY (IN) - The Most Rev. Dale Melczek, bishop of the Diocese of Gary, on Tuesday defended last month's handling of the Rev. Richard Emerson's suspension as pastor of Notre Dame Church in Long Beach, near Michigan City.
   Emerson cannot be around children or conduct any ministerial duties, Melczek said. He was placed on administrative leave in December based on complaints made in May.
   The six-month period drew complaints from a national sex abuse group as well as from representatives of the victim.
   Melczek said Emerson has denied any sexual misconduct with the now 29-year-old Florida man who told the Orlando Diocese on May 25 he had been abused by Emerson when the priest worked there from 1987 to 1991. The alleged victim said the sexual acts occurred when he was between the ages of 11 and 18.
   The bishop said he was waiting for the Orlando police investigation to be completed before the Gary Diocese emergency response team conducts an investigation.
• Bishop Defends Handling Of Florida Sexual Misconduct Case [1980s-90s Emerson] - RCC.
   WFTV, www.wftv.com/ news/4048859/ detail.html , POSTED 6:44 am EST, January 5, 2005
   GARY, Ind. -- A Roman Catholic bishop said he did not act sooner against a priest accused of sexual misconduct with a minor in Florida because police and church investigators had trouble contacting the alleged victim.
   Bishop Dale Melczek also said the Rev. Richard Emerson, suspended last month as pastor of Notre Dame Church in Long Beach, Ind., has denied any sexual misconduct with his accuser.
   A Florida man now 29 notified the Catholic Diocese of Orlando on May 25 that he had been abused by Emerson when the priest worked there from 1987 to 1991. The alleged victim said the sexual acts occurred in Florida when he was between the ages of 11 and 18. The Diocese of Gary and Melczek were notified on May 27.
   Melczek waited for Orlando police to complete their investigation before his diocesan emergency response team conducted its investigation, he told the Post-Tribune of Merrillville for a story published Wednesday. The Orlando Diocese had turned the case over to the police.
   "Police said they were not successful in reaching the victim. He hadn't been returning their calls." Melczek said.
Jesuit priest relieved of duties [Years ago Boudreaux (Jesuit)] - RCC.
   Times-Picayune, By Bruce Nolan, Wednesday, January 05, 2005
   NEW ORLEANS (LA) - A priest and faculty member at Jesuit High School has been relieved of ministry on a credible charge that he sexually abused a minor years ago, his religious order said Tuesday.
   The Rev. Claude Boudreaux, 80, a Latin teacher at Jesuit, was relieved after his order received an allegation from an unnamed person about a month ago, said the Rev. Paul Deutsch, a spokesman for the New Orleans Province of the Society of Jesus -- the Jesuits. The incident did not involve a Jesuit High student, a school spokesman said.
   An internal investigation convinced the Rev. Fred Kammer, the order's provincial, or local superior, that the claim was credible, Deutsch said. An advisory board dominated by lay members also reviewed the allegation, Deutsch said.
   Boudreaux has been transferred out of New Orleans "for extended medical treatment" at an undisclosed location, Deutsch said. He would not disclose the reason for the treatment.
   Deutsch declined to say directly whether Boudreaux denied the allegation. "He is cooperating with the provincial in this matter. To answer more would move into his area of privacy," Deutsch said. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 06:45 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Wed January 05, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

• Mako Frontline. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   MAKO - Australia, November/December 2004, e-mail of Jan 5, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: The purpose of this website/ information is to promote public awareness/protection, prevent you and those close to you from the potential dangers posed by individuals who have committed sex offences in the past and to deter sex offenders from offending/re- offending. Any criminal actions taken by persons against the offenders named within this site, may result in arrest and prosecution of those persons.
   DRINK SPIKING.
Whenever you can, go out with people you "trust".
Try not to go out alone.
Designate a trusted person to stay sober.
Don't accept drinks from strangers. Only people you "trust" or get your own .
Watch bar staff while they make drinks. Sealed beverages are even better.
NEVER leave drinks unattended. WATCH your drinks at all times.
Watch out for friends .
Be suspicious if someone buys you a drink and it's not what you asked for.
If your out drinking and start feeling strange (dizzy, light-headed) or unwell for no apparent reason, or more affected than you think you should be, seek medical attention immediately drink plenty of water. Just get to a safe place, preferably with safe people .
Be aware that by going back to someone's house you are putting yourself in a vulnerable position .
Be aware of drink spike detector cards, buy them whenever you can afford to.
NEVER FORGET "it can happen to you"..
http://www.mako.org.au/safetyforwomen2.html
   "MAKO/Files" , 1128 Australian convicted sex offenders now listed at http://www.mako.org.au/list.html ; 88 Recent additions/updates to the MAKO/ Files; 15 Recent additions/updates to MAKO/Files "Within The Church";
   45 Recent Additions/ 43 Updates (convicted sex offenders) to the MAKO/ Files. Andrew Manners (new) , William Thomas Clare (new) , Simon Tate (vic)(new) , Andrew Peter Scott (new) (pic) , Neville Hilton (new) , Nathan Prowse (vic)(new) , Anthony Hutchins (vic) (new) , Shane Gilchrist (vic)(new) , Werner Holzinger (new) (pic) , Russell Shepherd (qld) (new) , Tristan Lee (vic) (new) , Paul Pick (vic) (new) , Stephen Bucton (vic) (new) , Robert O' Neill (vic) (new) (pic) , Phillip Briscoe (sa) (new) , Derrick Darnell Capers (vic) (new) , Neville Claude Harris (nsw)(pic)(new) , Andrew James Moore (nt)(new) , Joseph Saqu (qld)(new) , Daniel Sybenga (qld)(new) , Craig Pickworth (qld)(new) , Paul Harold Walker (vic)(new) , Peter Anthony Smith (qld)(new) , Raymond Belcher (wa)(new) , Michael Anthony Willis (wa)(new) , Andrew James Wilson-Brown (wa)(new) , Naomi Geia (qld)(new) , Andrew James Guiles (wa)(new) , Michael Craig Bullock (sa)(new) , Steven John Taylor (wa)(new) , Christopher James Arnold (wa)(new) , William Joseph fitzgerald (qld)(new) , Stojan Taseski (wa)(new) , Nicholas Sid Ball (tas)(new) , David Daniels (nt)(new) , Ernest Sydney Hulbert (wa)(new) , David Padgham (qld)(new) , Adam Bryan Marriner (qld)(new) , Dennis Edward Lester (nsw)(new) , Joseph Moldovan (nsw)(new) , Benjamin Craig Hirst (sa)(new) , Thomas John Armfield (sa)(new) , Bernard Keith Hergert (qld)(new) , (Dr) Thamir Al-Muhena (nsw) (new) , Kenneth William Selsby (nsw)(new) , John Siozios (update) , Karen Ellis (update) (pic) , Mr Baldy (update) (pic) Brian jones- http://www.mako.org.au/tempmrbaldy.html , Leslie West (update) (pic) , Craig Mattew Evans (update) , Gary Featherstone (update) , Lee Joyce Dunbar (update) (pic) , Clinton Kirkbride (update) (pic) , Timothy Trethewie (updated) (pic) , Dennis Broadwater (updated) (pic) , Nicolette Ann Leigh (update) (pic) , Sean Price (update) , Edward Perceval (update) , Brain Keith Jones (update) , Malcolm Clarke (update) , Vester Fernando (update) , Kevin and Jim Riley (update) , Robert "Dolly" Dunn (update) (pic) , Robert Arthur Selby Lowe (update) (pic) , David Edison Knight (update) , Peter Cooper (update) , Mark Oswell (update) , Stanley Satour (update) , Glynn Frank Harrod (update) , Christopher Burgess (update) , Colin James Burns (update) , Michael Alexander McGarry (update) , Matthew Webster (update) , Garth Hawkins (update) , Delville Stickland (update) , Frank Castillo (update) , Luigi Vivona (update) (pic) , Gregory Kench (update) , Sandy John Brown (update) , Peter Craig Randall (update) , Michael Alexander McGarry (update) , Shane Ronald Farmer (update) , Bradley Pendragon (update) , Derek Cambridge (update) , Bevan Von-Einem (update) , Alan Alvin Quinell (update) , Dennis Ferguson (update) , Shane Baker (update) , Christopher Thomson (update)
   1 deceased offender Brendan Fernando
   15 New/ Recent Updates for MAKO/Files-WITHIN THE CHURCH (father) David Perrett (nsw) (new) , George Arthur Jackson (new) , (reverend) John Elliott (update) , Robert John Nelson (nsw) (new) , Colgan Taylor (update) , Vincent Kiss (update) , Wilfred Baker (update) , Desmond Gannon (update) , John Alysious Littler (update) , Paul Anthony Connolly (update) , Geoffrey Sydney Veness (qld)(new) , Gregory Carter (update) , Terence Mulligan (update) , Terence Anthony Simpson (update) , Leslie West (update) , Ian Neville Brock (update)
   Not only the Public is making use of the MAKO/Files. In recent months we have heard from more than a few organisations who are using our list of convicted sex offenders to assist with prevention.Convicted paedophiles will infiltrate organisations if constant vigilance is not heeded.Will have more on this in coming months.
   YOU SHOULD BE NOTIFIED, http://www.mako.org.au/makoniti.html
   FOR SARAH-UK site striving for notification, http://www.forsarah.com/
   Every active MAKO member means another safer community ..
   Visit our sponsor Cyber Pack Web Hosting, http://www.cyberpack.com.au/
   AMBER ALERT, http://www.mako.org.au/childabduction.html
   REPORT CHILD PORNOGRAPHY, Australian High Tech Crime Centre = http://www.ahtcc.gov.au/home_main.htm ; ECPAT (Child Wise) = http://www.ecpat.org/how_you_can_help/index.html ; Counter Paedophilia Investigative Unit = http://www.cpiu.us/report.php?name= ; https://www.affiliatesuccess.net/cgi-bin/clickthru.cgi?sid=rmagick&pid=ND . [Jan 5, 05]
• Church puts $130m price on abuse; Catholic bishop prays for healing over the sexual sins of priests in record settlement with 90 claimants. [Orange, Los Angeles, Boston dioceses] United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The West Australian, Los Angeles Times, p 31, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   LOS ANGELES (California) USA: Hours after agreeing to pay $US100 million ($130 million) and make public the secret files of the Catholic Diocese of Orange, Bishop Tod Brown knelt in prayer and asked for healing and reconciliation for the victims of sexual abuse by priests.
   "We have done this in the larger hope of reconciliation and healing," the bishop told about 100 worshippers at the Holy Family Sepulchre in Los Angeles. "We hope our actions can restore the trust that many have lost in the leaders of the Church."
   Earlier on Monday, he formally agreed to a deal that amounted to the nation's biggest between the Church and sexual abuse victims since the scandal broke three years ago.
   Victims sobbed ... some cried ... others hugged Bishop Brown.
   Victims will receive between $500,000 and $1.6 million ... their lawyers keeping up to 40 per cent [...]
   ... The Los Angeles Archdiocese faces 544 claims ...
   ... public disclosure of diocesan personnel files -- which would have been the basis of claims that the Church hierarchy was negligent in failing to protect parishioners from predator priests.
   ... $US85m ... Boston Archdiocese ... last year ... 552 abuse claimants.# (3 pictures)
   [COMMENT: 2nd paragraph: 100 at the service. Hmm! Trust lost in the leaders of the Church. Evidently the churchgoers have not had enough faith to move leaders, let alone mountains! COMMENT ENDS.]
[DOCTRINE: By their fruits you will know them. DOCTRINE ENDS.] [Jan 5, 2005]

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Thu January 06, 2005 edition follows:-
• Halos & Horns - RCC.
   Valley Advocate, http://valleyadvocate.com/gbase/News/content?oid=oid:95286 , January 6, 2005
   MASSACHUSETTS: HALO - At a time when too many with the church hierarchy have sat on the sidelines -- or worse -- the Rev. James Scahill, pastor of East Longmeadow's St. Michael's Church, has been a staunch supporter of victims of abusive priests and of those faithful who are asking for meaningful reform. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 06:52 PM]
Diary of a Loud County [Orange Diocese] - RCC. Largest settlement in history of RCC.
   Orange County Weekly, Monday, Jan. 3, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - The Boston Red Sox might have walloped your Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in last fall's playoffs, but at least we beat Beantown in one contest. In an LA Superior Court courtroom today, attorneys for 90 victims of priestly and lay Catholic sex-abuse and the Diocese of Orange announced the terms of their settlement: $100 million (the largest settlement in the history of the Roman Catholic Church) and the release of all personnel files that victims claim will show church complicity in their molestations.
   Orange Bishop Tod D. Brown made an appearance to personally apologize to the victims of his priests and even officiated over vespers (that's an evening worship service, for you heathen Protestants) at Holy Family Cathedral in Orange later in the day held in honor of victims and their families.
   But still, the most arresting image of the day came when Brown - who last year spent at least $350,000 on a PR firm to spin his pedo-lies - entered the courtroom clasping a dark-blue folder against his chest. Emblazoned in silver on the folder? "IMAGE."
• Warren woman exposes Church cover-up on film - RCC. FILM.
   Barrington Times, www.eastbayri.com/story/283615996831321.php , ~ Jan 06, 2005
   WARREN (RI) - After refinancing her house to free up funds, and spending five years conducting research and interviews, Warren resident Mary Healey-Conlon has at long last completed her documentary, "Holy Water-Gate: Abuse Cover-Up in the Catholic Church." The hour-long film will debut for the general public at the Coolidge Corner Movie Theater in Brookline, Mass., on Monday, Jan. 10, at 7:30 p.m.
   Because she is a Roman Catholic, her work is not finished, said Ms. Healey-Conlon. She is only just beginning the painful process of reconciling her discoveries with past assumptions about faith and the Church.
   Years before investigative journalists at The Boston Globe propelled the problem of sexual abuse by priests into the national spotlight, Ms. Healey-Conlon was working with a team of Rhode Island attorneys who believed the Diocese of Providence had knowingly moved priests who had committed acts of sexual abuse against minors from parish to parish.
   As a legal assistant, she met abuse victims who had been pursuing cases against the Catholic church for years. She even learned she knew one of the accused priests whom her grandfather had served alongside as a deacon years before. Fearing lawyers for the church might stall forever, she resolved to document victims' stories. In 1999, she picked up a video camera and began filming.
   "It's not like I started out with a specific vision of what the film would be," said Ms. Healey-Conlon, who has a master's degree in television production from Emerson College. "I started out wanting to document the stories of some Rhode Island survivors."
   [COMMENT: "For what sharing do righteousness and lawlessness have? Or what fellowship does light have with darkness?" (2 Cor 6: 14). COMMENT ENDS.]
• Minister, wife charged in S.C. sex case [2001 Johnson, Johnson] - Methodist.
   Charlotte Observer, www.charlotte. com/mld/charl otte/10581306. htm , Associated Press, ~ Jan 06, 2005
   COLUMBIA, S.C. - A former Darlington church youth minister and his wife have been arrested in connection with a sexual abuse case in Horry County.
   Richard Johnson, 34, was arrested Wednesday and charged with committing a lewd act on a minor. His wife, Natalie Johnson, 27, was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
   The arrests stem from an incident involving a then-13-year-old girl, who was a member of Trinity United Methodist Church in Darlington and who accompanied the couple to Myrtle Beach on a vacation in November 2001.
• Charges Dropped Against Reverend - Religion not clear. Rev. Joseph Ellison.
   WRIC, www.wric.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2775102 , ~ Jan 06, 2005
   VIRGINIA - This morning Reverend Joseph Ellison appeared in court on charges of sexual battery and taking indecent liberties with a minor.
   It's been more than a year of legal wrangling for Rev. Joe Ellison. Today's hearing puts an end to the child abuse case filed against the pastor back in December of 2003.
   Ellison has played an active role with local young people and is the founder of the Essex Village Community Outreach.
   You'll remember Ellison was arrested after a teenage girl accused him of touching her inappropriately. Ellison spoke with us outside of court after charges were dropped. ...
• Beaumont Diocese Says They're in Compliance with USCCB Charter - RCC.
   KBTV, http://216.87. 159.39/news/ default.asp? mode=show news&id=7603 , ~ Jan 06, 2005
   BEAUMONT (TX) - The Diocese of Beaumont has once again received an "In Compliance" determination from Bill Gavin of The Gavin Group, Inc. The Office of Child and Youth Protection of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops contracted with the Gavin Group to carry out the audits again this year.
   Auditors conducted a second on-site audit from Dec. 6-9, 2004, to evaluate how the Diocese of Beaumont is complying with the provisions of the USCCB "Charter for the Protection of Children and Youth."
   They reviewed policies and records, inspected documentation confirming implementation on the diocesan and the parish/school levels, verified that the "Ethical and Responsible Conduct Policies" are being distributed to employees and volunteers, that background checks are being conducted, and that clergy, employees and volunteers are attending the sexual abuse awareness training sessions.
   The auditors also interviewed a variety of persons both inside and outside the Church.
   They made on-site visits to two parishes to meet with the pastors and some of their staff so as to verify implementation of the Charter provisions on the parish/school level.
Swift action restores trust at Daytop center [< 1994, 2004 Mieliwocki] - ? RCC. 4 males.
   Observer-Tribune, By MARIA VOGEL-SHORT MENDHAM, ~ Jan 06, 2005
   NEW JERSEY - Parents of students say they have full trust in the Daytop alcohol and drug rehabilitation center but no trust in the state's licensing board and the Newark Archdiocese which allowed a former priest and social worker with a history of abuse to work with juveniles.
   The former priest, Richard J. Mieliwocki, 58, of Madison, was arrested on Tuesday, Dec. 28, and faces five to 10 years in prison on charges of endangering the welfare of a child and 18 months for criminal sexual contact in events that allegedly took place in November and December 2004. The abuse allegedly occurred at Daytop, a drug rehabilitation facility off Route 24 in Mendham.
   The former South Orange priest was charged with molesting four male teenagers while working as a social worker at drug rehabilitation center Daytop-N.J. in November and December.
   He had been suspended in 1994 from his South Orange parish after church members came forward with allegations of sexual misconduct, according to a spokesman from the Newark archdiocese.
• News organizations challenge judge's ruling against using name of alleged victim in priest case [1980s Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   WPRI, www.wpri.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2776268 , ~ Jan 06, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE, Mass. The criminal case in Massachusetts against defrocked priest Paul Shanley may collapse because an alleged sexual abuse victim does not want to be publicly identified during the trial.
   The person has been identified in the past and given interviews to the media.
   The Associated Press and two Boston newspapers are challenging a judge's order that forbids identifying victims, claiming it violates the First Amendment. The judge is considering the challenge.
Alleged Victim of Priest May Not Testify [Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   Macon Telegraph, By KEN MAGUIRE, Associated Press, ~ Jan 06, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Prosecutors told a judge Thursday that an alleged victim of defrocked priest Paul Shanley might refuse to testify if he is publicly identified during the upcoming sexual abuse trial. That would mean the end of the criminal case against one of the most notorious figures in the Boston Archdiocese's sex scandal, Assistant District Attorney Lynn Rooney said.
   The disclosure came during a hearing in Superior Court on whether the media should be allowed to report the alleged victim's name during Shanley's trial.
   The Associated Press, the Boston Herald and The Boston Globe have challenged a judge's order issued earlier this week barring the media from identifying alleged victims in the case. The order was issued at prosecutors' request.
   In the three years since Shanley was arrested on child sex charges, two of the four alleged victims have spoken publicly about the case and were routinely identified in news reports. A third alleged victim has occasionally been identified. The fourth was never named.
   Over the past year, prosecutors dropped two alleged victims from the case, and plan to drop a third, leaving just one accuser when Shanley goes on trial Jan. 18.
   [COMMENT: Is this another trick by deluded prosecutors to let the offenders go? "Let justice be done though the heavens fall." COMMENT ENDS.]
Catholics cautioned about 'objectionable' magazine [Cipolla] - RCC. Been laicised. Thorns and Roses.
   Pittsburgh Catholic, by Chuck Moody, ~ Jan 06, 2005
   PITTSBURGH (PA): Diocesan officials are cautioning clergy and the faithful that a magazine that has been distributed in some area churches is published by a group that is not an official ecclesiastical organization and is associated with a former priest who has been declared "dismissed from the clerical state" by the pope.
   "In a number of our parishes, we have found that there has been the distribution of a quarterly magazine entitled 'Thorns and Roses'," said Father Lawrence DiNardo, diocesan vicar for canonical services and director of the Department for Canon and Civil Law Services. "This magazine is published by the Padre Pio Spiritual Refuge Inc. They are based in Pittsburgh. They are not an official ecclesiastical organization.
   "The primary organization that honors St. Padre Pio is operated by the Capuchin Franciscan fathers in (Pittsburgh's) Lawrenceville (neighborhood). The Padre Pio Spiritual Refuge Inc. is headed by a person known as Anthony Cipolla, a priest who has been declared 'dismissed from the clerical state' by our Holy Father, Pope John Paul II."
   Cipolla was banned from ministry in 1988 by Bishop Donald Wuerl following allegations of sexual abuse of a minor. Cipolla was laicized by Pope John Paul II in 2002.
Who Killed Sister Cathy? [1969] - ? RCC.
   Baltimore City Paper, By Tom Nugent, ~ Jan 06, 2005
   BALTIMORE (MD): The old man sat on a metal folding chair in his Essex garage. His big right hand reached out to a wooden table, to a faded police autopsy photo lying there.
   "Do you see that hole in the back of her skull?" asked Louis George "Bud" Roemer, a retired homicide detective formerly with the Baltimore County Police Department. Wrinkled and white-haired, he pointed to one side of the yellowing photograph he had dug out of a box of files. "That hole is perfectly round, and about the size of a quarter.
   "I've studied that photo over and over again, trying to imagine how she might have died," he said. "A hole like that-it looks to me like it could've been made with a ball-peen hammer."
   He paused for a moment, as he recalled the still unsolved murder of Sister Catherine Ann Cesnik, whose body was discovered 35 years ago this month.
   "It might have been a hammer," Roemer continued. "Or maybe a tire iron. Or maybe it was a priest's ring-one of those heavy gold rings a lot of Catholic priests wear. A priest's ring would make a hole like that, if he hit her hard enough."
   He fell silent, and leaned back in his chair. He was struggling with diabetes, he said, and talking about the Cesnik case always left him feeling fatigued, and frustrated.
   "Every homicide cop has one case that haunts him to the end of his career, and Sister Cathy is mine," Roemer said. "I sure do wish we could close this one out, before I kick the bucket."
   The body of the 26-year-old nun was found Jan. 3, 1970, in southwest Baltimore County. The circumstances surrounding the case were mysterious and disturbing at the time; in the wake of a City Paper investigation, those circumstances seem even more disturbing now. Years after Cesnik's murder, a lawsuit documented numerous findings of sexual abuse at the Catholic high school for girls where Cesnik taught shortly before her death. City Paper's investigation also reveals that a second young murder victim (killed only four days after Cesnik vanished, and only a few miles from where the nun died) attended the same Catholic church where the alleged sex-abuser had been serving as parish priest.
Church abuse payout a matter of perspective [Lenihan] - RCC. Common knowledge. Seminary permissiveness.
   Orange County Register, By FRANK MICKADEIT, fmickadeit@ocregister.com , Register columnist, Jan 06, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - The Diocese of Orange's $100 million priest-abuse settlement and the issues surrounding it are so overwhelming it's almost impossible to grasp and to write about.
   The magnitude of the deeds, the suffering, the coverups, the money, the future. Every person I talk to comes at it from a different angle. Any attempt to deal with it in my little corner here will fall short. But let me share with you three short takes from three O.C. Catholic men you may have heard of.
   Tom Fuentes used to work for the diocese (he could have been deposed if the lawsuits had gone forward) and has many personal ties to church hierarchy. Discussing the scandal one day, he told me, "Every time I think about it, I become almost physically ill." The way those words seemed to get caught in his throat and the fact that I literally could see his diaphragm convulse under his starched white shirt, for a second I thought he might actually vomit on me. No kidding. He's that emotional about it.
   Fuentes thinks back to the time, three decades ago, he was attending a seminary in the Bay Area, and remembers an aura of sexual permissiveness that offended his orthodoxy. Such permissiveness, which he believes was present in many seminaries of that era, is what led to this crisis, he believes.
   On the other end of the political spectrum is Gustavo Arellano, who has been covering the scandal for the OC Weekly, no friend of the diocese (or of Fuentes, come to think of it). Arellano grew up in Anaheim. Over lunch with me this week, he said that when he was a kid it was common knowledge among parishioners at St. Boniface that Father John Lenihan - the man who gave him First Communion - had raped a girl. Nobody did anything, he said.
Ruling soon in SR Diocese abuse case [1968-72 Gleeson] - RCC.
   The Press Democrat, By GUY KOVNER, Thursday, January 6, 2005
   OAKLAND (CA) - A judge is expected to rule within two weeks on whether one of the 11 sex abuse lawsuits against the Santa Rosa Catholic Diocese can proceed to trial.
   At a hearing Wednesday, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Ronald Sabraw seemed skeptical of the diocese's objection to evidence in the case against the Rev. Patrick Gleeson, a former Calistoga pastor who died in 1991.
   A former altar boy at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church in Calistoga, now a 48-year-old Amador County man, is suing the diocese for alleged sexual abuse by Gleeson from 1968-72.
   Diocese attorney Adrienne Moran challenged the plaintiff's sworn statement that a priest visiting the Calistoga rectory had, on two occasions, seen Gleeson and the plaintiff go into Gleeson's room and spend the night there.
New arguments and actions in church sex abuse cases [Gleeson] - RCC.
   San Francisco Chronicle, by Don Lattin, Chronicle Religion Writer, Thursday, January 6, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - Negligence lawsuits linked to the child sex abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church in Northern California inched closer to trial Wednesday in Alameda County Superior Court.
   Lawyers representing San Francisco Archbishop William Levada and attorneys for the adults claiming that as children they were molested by priests argued over what kind of instructions jurors will be given at civil trials scheduled to begin March 7.
   At the same hearing Wednesday morning in Oakland, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Ronald Sabraw turned down a request by church lawyers that he throw out a claim for damages against the Diocese of Santa Rosa for the alleged molestations of a Garberville priest.
   Church attorney Adrienne Moran of Santa Rosa argued that attorneys for one of the allegedly abused persons in Santa Rosa, identified in court records as "John Doe," has not presented "one shred of evidence" that church leaders had prior warning that the late Rev. Patrick Gleeson was a child molester.
Fitzpatrick: Porter is 'permanently' a priest [1960s-70s Porter; Fall River Diocese] - RCC.
   Herald News, by Kathleen Durand, Jan/06/2005
   FALL RIVER (MA) - A victim of convicted pedophile priest James Porter has charged that Porter was permitted to "permanently" remain a Roman Catholic priest even after he was found by church officials to have sexually molested children across the nation decades ago.
   According to published reports, in 1973 Porter petitioned to the Vatican to be released from the priesthood, citing incidents of sexual misconduct with children in several states and episodes of psychiatric counseling. Pope Paul VI granted the petition on Jan. 5, 1974, and Porter began pursuing a layman's life in Minnesota.
   But in a statement released to The Herald News Wednesday, Porter victim Frank L. Fitzpatrick wrote, "Differing from what everyone except the Diocese of Fall River knew and allowed us to believe, clear evidence shows that Father Porter was permitted to permanently remain a Roman Catholic priest even after being caught sexually assaulting children all over the country by church officials in the 1960s and '70s.
   It states, "With regard to future functions and ministry, and of association with religious education, I recognize in the first category that by my petition and this return to the lay state, I may exercise no specific function confined to Sacred Order, with the exception of absolution from church penalties and from sin, in a circumstance of danger of death."
Kuhn's defiance not part of bargain [Kuhn] - RCC.
   Dayton Daily News, ~ Jan 6, 2005
   OHIO - Montgomery County Common Pleas Court Judge Mary Katherine Huffman proved to be prescient in July at the sentencing of Thomas Kuhn, former pastor of St. Henry Catholic Church in Miami Twp.
   The priest had earlier served at Incarnation Church in Centerville, and as chaplain to the Alter High School freshman basketball team and varsity football team. He pleaded no contest to one misdemeanor charge of public indecency and 10 misdemeanor charges of providing alcohol to minors.
   When Judge Huffman told Rev. Kuhn his sentence, she worried aloud that "it is of great concern to me that you just don't get this." She characterized him as "absolutely remorseless."
   Not only was she right then, Rev. Kuhn still doesn't get it.
   He avoided jail time on the charges, but mainly because the maximum time he could be sentenced to was 18 months. Judge Huffman said she was putting him on probation for five years to make sure that he would remain subject to court supervision for a considerably longer period.
   The conditions she imposed on Rev. Kuhn's probation are basic: get treatment, stay away from kids, gambling and alcohol, and write letters of apology to the victims, including Alter High School and the parishes that he was associated with. Since then, Rev. Kuhn has decided to take a narrow, technical view of what his probation requires.
Lawsuit Names Former Catholic School Superintendent [1977 Sullivan, ? O'Sullivan] - RCC.
   TheBostonChannel.com , POSTED 7:22 am, UPDATED 7:26 am EST, January 6, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) -- Ten more clergy sex abuse lawsuits have been filed against the Boston Archdiocese, but a lawyer says one that accuses the archdiocese's former school superintendent of molesting a 15-year-old boy in the 1970s is a case of mistaken identity.
   Eugene P. Sullivan, who is now pastor of St. Francis Xavier church in Weymouth, is accused in the suit of molesting a boy in his car in 1977.
   Mark Martin, now 42, claims Sullivan fondled him as they rode in his car to Camp Fatima, a Catholic summer camp for children in New Hampshire.
   Sullivan said he had not seen the lawsuit and had no immediate comment.
   "I know nothing about that," Sullivan said when reached by phone at the church Wednesday. He told The Associated Press he couldn't remember Martin, saying "This is throwing me for a loop."
   However Paul Kelly, a Boston lawyer who is representing Sullivan, told The Boston Globe that Martin may have confused Sullivan with the Rev. Eugene O'Sullivan, a former priest at St. Agnes Church in Arlington, Mass.
Lawyer: Cancer chemo takes toll on pedophile Porter [1960s-70s Porter] - RCC. 28 children. Sarcoma.
   Boston Herald, By Laura Crimaldi, Thursday, January 6, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - James Porter, a convicted pedophile and former priest, is rapidly wasting away under the strain of aggressive treatment for an incurable cancer as his lawyer tries to snuff legal proceedings to have him locked up for good.
   Porter, 70, has lost 40 pounds since he began chemotherapy in October for an incurable soft-tissue sarcoma, his attorney Michael Farrington said yesterday.
   A Bristol Superior Court judge scheduled an April 7 hearing to determine whether Porter should be civilly committed as a sexually dangerous person.
   Porter was convicted in 1993 of molesting 28 children while he was a priest during the 1960s and 1970s.
• Congregant was jailed for 1980s sex assault [? 2000s Curlew] - Mormon. Boy.
   The Boston Globe, www.boston.com/ news/local/mass achusetts/articles/ 2005/01/06/ congregant_was_jailed_ for_1980s_sex_ assault ; By Caroline Louise Cole, Globe Correspondent, January 6, 2005
   LAWRENCE (MA) -- A Dracut man, arrested by Methuen police for allegedly sexually assaulting the 9-year-old son of a fellow church member, served time in prison for sexual assault on a child in the early 1980s in Maine, law enforcement officials said yesterday.
   But Kevin F. Curlew's conviction in Maine had been overturned on appeal, so he was not required to register as a sex offender upon his release from prison, Methuen Police Chief Joseph Solomon said yesterday in an interview. Curlew moved to Massachusetts in 1989.
   Curlew, 43, pleaded not guilty yesterday at his arraignment on three counts each of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, enticement of a child, and kidnapping. Lawrence District Court Judge Allen J. Jarasitis ordered him held without bail, pending a Jan. 12 dangerousness hearing.
   Curlew was arrested Tuesday at the Methuen police station where he had been invited for questioning, after officials at the Mormon Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on Hill Street reported the alleged abuse to the state Department of Social Services.
   The child told church officials that Curlew forced him to remove his pants and underwear on several occasions when his mother left him in Curlew's care, police said.
   Three of the occasions allegedly occurred in a church bathroom this past fall, while the child's mother was attending church meetings and while Curlew was watching her son along with several other children.
   On one occasion, Curlew allegedly kept the child from leaving a church bathroom and patted him on his buttocks, a police report on the case indicates.
• Former Youth Minister Charged With Sex Abuse [2001 Johnson, Johnson] - Methodist.
   WSOC, www.wsoctv.com/ news/4053861/ detail.html , POSTED 6:19 am EST January 6, 2005
   FLORENCE, S.C. -- Authorities say a former youth minister in Darlington has been charged with sexual abuse of a girl who was a member of his church.
   The Horry County Police Department charged 34-year-old Richard N. Johnson with lewd act on a minor and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
   His wife, 27-year-old Natalie Johnson, has been charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
   The couple was arrested Wednesday.
   Authorities say the incident occurred while the girl was on vacation with the couple in Myrtle Beach in November 2001.
Archdiocese of Portland Publishes Claims Notification [Portland Archdiocese] - RCC. Large expenditure.
   Business Wire, Jan. 5, 2005
   PORTLAND, Ore.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- This week the Archdiocese of Portland began an extensive effort to notify anyone who believes he or she has a claim against the Archdiocese to file the claim by April 29, 2005. The "bar date" of April 29, 2005 was set by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court as the last day to file claims. This notification process is a normal part of the bankruptcy proceedings.
   It will assist the Archdiocese and the Bankruptcy Court in establishing the total amount of outstanding debt the Archdiocese owes.
   The notice is directed to anyone who believes that the Archdiocese of Portland owes them money or to anyone who believes that the Archdiocese is responsible for causing them any injury or harm including child sexual abuse by a member of the clergy or an employee.
   The Archdiocese of Portland is placing a legal notice in major newspapers in Oregon, to the USA Today and the Wall Street Journal and to newspapers in Washington, Idaho, Montana, California and British Columbia.
   The notification will be placed in Catholic newspapers in Portland, Seattle, Spokane, Los Angeles and San Francisco.
   The notification will be sent by mail to creditors, to 81,070 registered Catholic households in western Oregon, to alumni in certain of the Catholic high schools, and to others.
Law firm readies sex-abuse suits - RCC. 20 complainants.
   The Washington Times, By Julia Duin, January 5, 2005
   WASHINGTON (DC) - A Washington law firm that demanded a year ago today the Catholic Archdiocese of Washington settle accounts relating to clergy sexual abuse hopes to file claims within the next few months on behalf of 20 victims.
   But Kevin Baine, a lawyer with Williams & Connolly, the D.C. firm representing the archdiocese, questions the claims of lawyers for Greenberg-Traurig, which is representing the potential plaintiffs.
   "So far, they've produced nothing relating to any priest of the archdiocese," he said. "If they come forward with a series of demands, we will address them."
   Plus, "there is no evidence that any active priest of the archdiocese has ever been involved in sexual abuse," he added, "and there are not at this point proceedings or negotiations relating to any claims of abuse" by archdiocesan priests.
Diocese will give DA abuse reports [Memphis Diocese] - RCC. All past and future to be reported.
   Commercial Appeal, By Bill Dries, January 6, 2005
   MEMPHIS (TN) - Memphis Catholic officials Wednesday agreed to report all past and future allegations of child sexual abuse by priests and other clergy or employees to authorities for possible criminal investigation.
   The agreement came after a 90-minute meeting Downtown between officials of the Catholic Diocese of Memphis and the District Attorney General's office.
   The closed-door session was arranged by Bishop J. Terry Steib, who did not attend, to talk about why the diocese hasn't reported abuse allegations it has known about for years.
   "Any case that is currently known by the diocese is going to be turned over to the district attorney's office," said Father John Geaney, communications adviser for the diocese. That doesn't necessarily mean there will be criminal charges or that the names of the accused priests will be made public if they aren't charged.
   Kevin Rardin, chief prosecutor of child sexual abuse cases for the DA's office, expressed optimism after the meeting.
   [DOCTRINE: How could there be past or future offending? Is this the same group that we are told wrote the following centuries ago? "But fornication and all uncleanness or covetousness, let it not so much as be named among you, as suits saints. ... Also, do not be getting drunk with wine. ... That he [Jesus] might present it [God's community] to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; ... " (Ephesians 5:3, 7, 18). DOCTRINE ENDS.]
Archdiocese faces new complaints of sexual abuse [McGreal, Linehan, Ashwell, Forrester ] - RCC. 10 more men.
   Seattle Post-Intelligencer, ~ Jan 6, 2005
   SEATTLE (WA) - The Seattle Archdiocese has been hit with four new legal complaints from 10 men charging that its priests sexually abused them during the 1970s and '80s.
   Two of the priests -- James McGreal and David Linehan -- already have been forbidden by Rome to minister and both have been the subjects of prior lawsuits.
   The status of one, the Rev. G. Barry Ashwell, is still pending. A popular pastor who served at St. Augustine's Church in Oak Harbor for more than two decades, Ashwell has been the subject of several prior complaints alleging sexual abuse, each of which he has denied.
   The other priest, the Rev. John Forrester -- described in the legal papers as "a compulsive pedophile" -- is deceased.
   Spokesman Greg Magnoni said the archdiocese was aware of all four complaints and hoped to settle them without going to trial.
Abuse suit targets former school leader [1970s Sullivan, ? O'Sullivan] - RCC. Boy.
   The Boston Globe, By Megan Tench, January 6, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - The former superintendent of schools for the Boston Archdiocese is accused of sexually abusing a 15-year-old boy in the 1970s, according to a new lawsuit, but a lawyer for the priest said Eugene P. Sullivan is being mistaken for a well-known pedophile with a similar name.
   Boston resident Mark Martin, now 42, alleges that Sullivan, 63, fondled him during a road trip to a New Hampshire summer camp in 1977. The suit, filed in Suffolk Superior Court, is one of 10 clergy sex-abuse lawsuits filed against Boston Archdiocese priests over the past week.
   "My life has been a nightmare ever since this happened," Martin said yesterday, referring to the alleged abuse. He also alleges in his lawsuit that two former priests at St. Columbkille's parish in Brighton molested him when he was 15.
   The Globe does not reveal the identities of victims of sexual abuse. The alleged victim in this case agreed to be interviewed and identified.
   But Boston lawyer Paul Kelly, who is representing Sullivan, said that Martin may have innocently confused Sullivan, now a pastor at Weymouth's St. Francis Xavier Church, with the Rev. Eugene O'Sullivan, a former priest at St. Agnes Church in Arlington.
• Tenn. Diocese to Report Sex Abuse Charges [Memphis Diocese] - RCC.
   Pennsylvania News (comprising Burlington County Times, Bucks County Courier Times, and The Intelligencer), ww.phillyburbs. com/pb-dyn/ news/1-01062 005-427616.html , The Associated Press, Jan 6, 2005
   MEMPHIS, Tenn. - The Roman Catholic Diocese of Memphis has agreed to report all past and future allegations of sexual abuse against priests and other clergy that involve minors, officials said.
   The agreement, which also applies to church employees, came after the diocese and District Attorney General's office met Wednesday to discuss why the diocese had not reported abuse allegations it has known about for years.
   "Any case that is currently known by the diocese is going to be turned over to the district attorney's office," said Father John Geaney, communications adviser for the diocese.
   In two cases of alleged abuse, church officials took actions against the priest but did not report the allegations to agencies that might launch a criminal investigation. Diocesan officials said in December they didn't believe they had to report the cases.
Proposal would aid victims of sex abuse [Orange Diocese] - RCC.
   Toledo Blade, By ROBIN ERB, Jan 6, 2005
   TOLEDO (OH) - A Democratic lawmaker from Toledo is hoping events in California - where earlier this week there was a reported record $100 million settlement between the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange County and dozens of victims of sexual abuse - may give alleged Ohio victims a better chance to have their day in court.
   State Rep. Teresa Fedor (D., Toledo) has been drawing up legislation that might make that situation easier.
   Under her proposal - it is not a bill yet - Ohio would temporarily suspend its current two-year statute of limitations on cases of past sexual abuse involving minors. It is something that California did in 2003, leading to filings of hundreds of cases, including many that were part of a recent settlement between nearly 90 victims and the Orange County diocese.
   Many of the California cases were decades old; the earliest allegation dated to 1936.
   "The children not only need to be protected, they need to see justice served," Ms. Fedor said. "If we in Ohio can't iron that out, then we need to re-evaluate what we're doing as legislators."
Priest's abuse trial underway in Detroit [de Alba Campos] - RCC. Prayers outside courtroom! United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Detroit Free Press, January 6, 2005
   DETROIT (MI) (AP) -- The trial of a visiting Mexican priest charged with sexually abusing a 7-year-old boy has begun.
   Just before opening arguments in his trial Wednesday, the Rev. Luis Javier de Alba Campos led a prayer service in front of jurors who were mingling in the hallway outside the courtroom.
   Dozens of his former parishioners from St. Gabriel Catholic Church in Detroit joined hands as the priest led them in prayers in Spanish, the Detroit Free Press reported in a Thursday story.
   The priest called down a blessing from Our Lady of Guadalupe, the Catholic Church's patron saint of Mexico. Then the circle broke up and, as jurors filed past him into the courtroom, the priest smiled broadly and said to one of his supporters, "Muy bien," which means, "Very good." [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:03 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Thu January 06, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

• Record sex abuse payout worrying. [Orange Diocese] - RCC. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn.  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Letter to The West Australian e-mailed on January 6, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: The record sex abuse settlement by the Orange RC Diocese in America of $130m for 90 victims (report 5/1) is quite worrying for people seeking moral guidance.
   In recent days we have had the RC Archbishop of Perth, the Most Rev. Barry Hickey, asking Christian Churches to reach common ground on moral issues, which in his listing were largely sexual and marital.
   The other Churches, and indeed other religions, presumably will not be joining in. Some are too polite to say "Physician, heal yourself. By their fruits you will know them."
   Some other Churches' leaders will be too ashamed of their own record regarding sex abuse of children and women to say anything publicly.
   Many other people are sorry that authoritarianism, centralism, and hypocrisy has led to such a huge revelation of sex abuse. [Jan 6, 05]
#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Fri January 07, 2005 edition follows:-
• 'Forgotten Australians' report welcomed. - RCC. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   The Tablet (Britain), www.thetablet. co.uk/cgi-bin/ citw.cgi/past- 00212#AUSTRALIA , for January 8, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: Australia's Catholic bishops and leaders of religious congregations have established a group to help them implement improvements to the treatment of children in care following inquiries into abuse by church workers.
   The bishops and leaders of religious institutes welcomed the 2004 report of the Senate inquiry into children in institutional care, Forgotten Australians.
   "We have been moved by the courage of those who have laid bare their experiences before the committee," said a statement by the bishops and congregational leaders last month. "An apology was first made in the 1996 document, Towards Healing, and we formally renew our apology to those whose abuse was perpetrated by Catholic church personnel.
   "The revelations contained in the report are the very opposite of all that we would wish to stand for. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 11:07 PM] [A fuller version appears in date order elsewhere.]
   [COMMENT:
The report itself was almost forgotten. For a Media Release of August 30, 2004, visit http://us.alt news.com.au/ drop/node/ view/591 . Some recommendations were:
* That the States consider amending legislation to abolish any statutory restrictions on the timing of legal proceedings by survivors of sexual or physical abuse, in the light of the SA experience.
* That the Commonwealth Government establish a national reparations fund for victims of institutional abuse, funded by contributions from Commonwealth and state governments, churches and relevant welfare agencies. COMMENT ENDS.]

Oregon diocese runs ads on claim deadline [Portland Diocese] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   OregonLive.com , By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI, The Associated Press, 8:06 p.m. PT, Jan/7/2005
   PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - The Archdiocese of Portland has begun running ads in major U.S. newspapers alerting alleged victims of clergy sex abuse to an April 29 deadline to make claims in most cases.
   The $250,000 worth of ads, required as part of the church's bankruptcy proceedings, will run in 21 newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal and USA Today, over the next three weeks.
   Advocates for victims have said the court-ordered April 29 deadline is unreasonable.
   "No one would tell a grieving widow to come forward within four months - and no one can tell a rape victim to come forward within four months," said Barbara Blaine, the president of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. "It's an arbitrary deadline that only meets the needs of church leaders and doesn't help victims."
   Archdiocese spokesman Bud Bunce said the church is doing everything it can to reach potential claimants. A letter about the deadline has been mailed to more than 81,000 registered Oregon parishioners and roughly 11,000 alumni of the Roman Catholic archdiocese's two high schools.
• Child abuse cases allege Jehovah's Witness cover-up [1980s+ Villegas] - Jehovah's Witnesses.
   Napa News, www.napanews. com/templates/ index.cfm? template=story_ full&id=9776D764- 987F-4FD2-9A5C- D7D3824ECA33 ; By DAVID RYAN Register Staff Writer, Friday, January 7, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - A bundle of child abuse cases may finally get off the ground at a key pre-trial hearing in Napa Superior Court this morning.
   As many as 11 lawsuits filed in six counties contend that Jehovah's Witnesses covered up acts of child molestation by church officials. Today's hearing is set to determine how the court should go forward with handling the cases and even whether an attorney's potential life-threatening illness could hold up progress.
   Two cases involve three alleged Napa victims who are suing Napa Jehovah's Witness Congregations and other Jehovah's Witness groups, claiming high-ranking elders and church policymakers were negligent in supervising one church leader and concealed records for more than 20 years.
   Charissa Welch, 35, and two women partially identified in court papers, Nicole D., 32, and Tabitha H., 30, claim Edward Bedoya Villegas, who was an elder in the congregation, forced them to perform oral sex on him starting more than 20 years ago. Welch and Tabitha H. said Villegas penetrated them with his fingers, while Tabitha H. also charges she was raped by Villegas.
• School name changed after diocese settles - ? RCC. Bishop Sullivan replaced by Archangel Michael.
   KATC, www.katc.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2780834 , ~ Jan 07, 2005
   BATON ROUGE, La. A school named for a deceased Roman Catholic bishop targeted by sexual abuse allegations was renamed today by the Diocese of Baton Rouge.
   In November, the diocese reached a settlement with a man who had what church officials called credible allegations of sexual abuse. The man, now in his 40s, said Bishop Joseph Sullivan sexually abused him in 1975, when the victim was 17. The victim's name was not released by the diocese.
   In a news release today, the diocese says Bishop Joseph V Sullivan Diocesan Regional High School will be renamed Saint Michael the Archangel Diocesan Regional High School, beginning next fall. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:32 PM]
• Ex-Priest Gets Additional Prison Time for Abuse [1980s Lovell] - RCC. Altar boy.
   KPHO, www.kpho.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2781560& nav=23KuUxoW , ~ Jan 7, 2005
   PHOENIX (AZ) (AP) -- A former Catholic priest already in prison was sentenced to an additional 12 years in prison Friday after he pleaded guilty to child molestation and sexual conduct with a minor.
   Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Ronald Reinstein also gave Lawrence Joseph Lovell, who pleaded in August, five years probation.
   The charges involve an altar boy at Saint Anthony in Phoenix about 20 years ago.
• Media challenge order not to publish names of priest sex-abuse victims [Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   Reporter's Committee for Freedom of the Press, www.rcfp.org/ news/2005/0107 common. html , Jan. 7, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE (MA) -- A Superior Court judge ordered Boston-area news media Tuesday not to publish the names of the accusers of defrocked priest Paul Shanley.
   One of the alleged victims, who prosecutors say might refuse to testify if he is publicly identified, waived his right to privacy when he consented to previous news photos and stories that disclosed his identity, an attorney for Boston media organizations reportedly told a judge Thursday during a hearing to challenge the do-not-publish order.
   Lawyers for The Boston Globe, the Boston Herald and the Associated Press challenged the order by Massachusetts Superior Court Judge Charles Spurlock during a hearing before Judge Stephen Neel, who is scheduled to preside over Shanley's trial later this month.
   "This individual in fact waived his privacy interest. His photograph appeared all over the place with his consent. He made a conscious decision to put his name out there," Robert A. Bertsche, representing the Globe and the AP, said during Thursday's hearing, according to AP.
   Neel had not ruled on the media's challenge as of Friday. He did, however, vacate a portion of Spurlock's order instructing the media to retract the already-published names as soon as possible.
• Lawyer says Vatican may review complaints against Legionaries' head [Maciel Degollado (Legionaries of Christ)] - RCC. Male seminarians.
   Catholic News Service, www.catholic news.com/data/ stories/cns/ 0500118.htm , By Jerry Filteau, ~ Jan 07, 2005
   WASHINGTON (DC) (CNS) -- A previously dormant case against Legionaries of Christ founder Father Marcial Maciel Degollado could be reopened at the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a Vatican lawyer said in a letter to three former Legionaries who accuse the priest of molesting them when they were minors.
   "It seems to me that now the case is being taken seriously," Martha Wegan said in a letter to the men who made the accusations. Wegan is a staff attorney for the Holy See who specializes in cases involving church law.
   Catholic News Service obtained a copy of her letter after Gerald Renner, who broke the original story of the accusations in the United States in 1997, reported on the possible reopening of the case Jan. 3 in The Hartford (Conn.) Courant.
   In a statement in response to a CNS inquiry, the Legionaries' U.S. spokesman, Jay Dunlap, said, "The Legion of Christ is not aware that the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith has taken in the past or is now taking any action regarding accusations against its founder."
Shanley Lawyer Accuses Victim Of Making Up Claim [Shanley] - RCC. One witness left. Boys.
   TheBostonChannel.com , POSTED 2:00 pm EST January 7, 2005, UPDATED 2:07 pm EST January 7, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- The attorney for Paul Shanley said Friday that the defrocked priest's last remaining accuser remembered being sexually abused only after he consulted with the Boston law firm  that represented hundreds of alleged victims of clergy sexual abuse.
   Frank Mondano said that documents turned over to the court showed that the man had been in contact with the law firm of Greenberg Traurig before he claimed on Feb. 11, 2002, to have remembered being sexually abused.
   "People are trying real hard to obfuscate the fact that the cart came before the horse," Mondano said during a hearing in Middlesex Superior Court, where he asked a judge to allow him to question the alleged victim before Shanley goes on trial Jan. 18.
   A lawyer representing the Greenberg Traurig firm denied Mondano's statements.
   The man is expected to be the prosecution's remaining key witness in the case against Shanley, a key figure in the clergy sex abuse crisis in the Boston Archdiocese.
   Prosecutor Katherine Folger asked Judge Stephen Neel to deny Mondano's request to question the man, saying the issues Mondano raised should be put before a jury. The judge did not immediately issue a ruling.
• Priest's status modified again [2004 Kuhn]- RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Dayton Daily News, www.dayton dailynews. com/localnews/ content/ localnews/ daily/ 0107 kuhn.html , January 7, 2005
   DAYTON (OH) - For the second time, a judge Thursday modified a probation requirement for a Catholic priest convicted of public indecency in June.
   Judge Mary Katherine Huffman of Montgomery County Common Pleas Court deleted a reference to "sex offender" in requiring the Rev. Thomas Kuhn, 63, to complete treatment at the Behavioral Medicine Institute of Atlanta or any other program deemed appropriate by the court's adult probation department.
   Kuhn's attorneys said in December they planned to object to Huffman's inclusion of the words "sex offender" preceding the phrase "program deemed appropriate" in a Dec. 16 order.
   Huffman's order Thursday does not explain why she made the modification and Kuhn's attorneys were not available for comment Thursday.
   Huffman also changed what had been a "status conference" set for Thursday to a "revocation hearing," which considers evidence of a probation violation.
   The violation was spelled out in a document filed Tuesday by assistant Montgomery County prosecutors Robert Deschler and Teresa Hiett.
   It charges that Kuhn offered "services to students and/or staff at Elder High School on or about Sept. 27, 2004." [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 06:46 AM]
Brookline resident sheds light on Church scandal with new documentary [Shanley] - RCC. FILM "Holy Water-Gate". Boys.
   Brookline Tab, By Ed Symkus / SENIOR Staff Writer, Thursday, January 6, 2005
   BROOKLINE (MA) In a time when headlines about defrocked priests who abused children still get regular play in newspapers - the Paul Shanley trial starts in two weeks - a new film by Mary Healey Conlon titled "Holy Water-Gate: Abuse Cover-Up in the Catholic Church" is shedding even more light on the subject.
   The film, which will be screened at the Coolidge Corner Theatre on Jan. 10, looks inside the long-hidden situation and offers reasons for its causes while explaining some of its numbing effects. Conlon got interviews with men and women at the center of the crisis, including victims, rights advocates, journalists and, in one shocking case, a perpetrator who speaks openly about his and other priests' behavior.
   The film was coproduced by Brookline resident Louise Rosen, an agent for independent producers who heads up Louise Rosen Ltd. While Rosen worked regularly as a distributor, selling films and television programs once they were completed, in recent years she decided to get involved in projects at an earlier stage.
   "I started pre-selling the rights that I would have sold at the end of the line," she explains. "So it's more of a concept sell, rather than the finished product, and that gives me an opportunity to have more of a role. I can comment on budget, the treatment, research. I can play more of a producerly role than just a sales role."
   Rosen's involvement with "Holy Water-Gate" began when Conlon, based in Rhode Island, approached her about 2 1/2 years ago, looking for someone to help her raise financing and to get some input on the project's potential.
Dad says son in priest sex abuse case fine [2003 de Alba Campos] - RCC. Boy.
   Detroit Free Press, BY DAVID CRUMM and PATRICIA MONTEMURRI, January 7, 2005
   DETROIT (MI) - The father of a Detroit boy who has accused a Catholic priest of abusing him testified Thursday that he thinks his son is fine now and that the family initially did not want to press charges against the Rev. Luis Javier de Alba Campos.
   The prosecution and the defense in the priest's trial asked the father why he gave permission for his son, then 7, and the family's priest at St. Gabriel parish to spend the night in an upstairs bedroom in their Detroit home last April.
   De Alba Campos' attorney, Juan Mateo, asked why the father did not remove his son from the priest's bed, even after his wife complained that the priest might misbehave with the boy.
   "At that moment, I thought she was exaggerating," the boy's father said.
   The Free Press is not naming the family members because the paper generally does not publish the names of alleged victims of sex abuse.
• Former priest pleads not guilty to sex charges [1970s Daniels] - Anglican. 8 complainants. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   ABC (Australia), www.abc.net. au/act/news/ 200501/s127 8460.htm , Friday, January 7, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: A former Tasmanian Anglican priest has pleaded not guilty to a series of sex charges.
   Louis Victor Daniels, 57, who is now living in the ACT, pleaded not guilty to a charge of having unlawful sexual intercourse with a person under 17.
   He also pleaded not guilty to 20 counts of indecent assault stemming from alleged incidents, mostly during the 1970s, relating to eight complainants.
   He made his plea via video link in the Hobart Magistrates Court.
   Daniels has been bailed to appear in the Supreme Court in Hobart in March.
Maine group wants to open dialogue with church about abuse [1985, 1999-2001 Coughlin ] - RCC. Man, child. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Foster's Daily Democrat, ~ Jan 7, 2005
   BANGOR, Maine (AP) - The people who complained that a party for a priest who was forced to resign was inappropriate have asked Bishop Richard Malone to hold a meeting as soon as next week to open a dialogue between parishioners and clergy.
   A letter was sent Thursday to Malone and the Rev. Michael Gendreau, a pastor at two churches in South Portland, asking them to hold a meeting soon.
   "We need to get together and talk about this issue," Catherine Morin Campbell, a parishioner in South Portland, said Thursday. "We can't claim to care about abuse victims while allowing possible predators to be publicly honored."
   Among those who signed the letter were David Clohessy and Ann Hagan Webb. Both head the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP], a support group.
   Organizers canceled a reception this week in honor of the Rev. Paul Coughlin, who was ordered to resign in October as pastor of parishes in South Portland.
California sex-abuse claims haunt Adrian College choir director [Hodgman] - RCC. Still choirmaster. Female.
   Toledo Blade, By ROBIN ERB ~ Jan 7, 2005
  ADRIAN (OH) - Thomas Hodgman's past, including sexual misconduct allegations he now insists are "bogus," has returned.
   A California woman, who accused Mr. Hodgman of raping her years ago while he was a choir director at her high school, wants to know why he is now choir director at Adrian College.
   Last month, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange County, California, agreed to pay out $100 million to settle sexual misconduct lawsuits filed against 44 priests, nuns, and lay personnel - including Mr. Hodgman.
   "Until I know that he is held fully accountable to the law, until I know that any child within any distance of him is safe, and until I know that any employer has a full accounting of what he did … Well, then perhaps I will stop," said Joelle Casteix, who accuses Mr. Hodgman of raping her at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, Calif. The diocese oversees the school.
• When trust is abused - Judaist. Females. Israel flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Haaretz, www.haaretz. com/hasen/ spages/524 120.html , By Eli Somer, ~ Jan 7, 2005
   ISRAEL: Part horrifying personal memoir, part research survey, this book reveals how rabbis violate the trust placed in them by female followers
   Sex, Lies and Rabbis: Breaking a Sacred Trust, by Charlotte Rolnick Schwab, Bloomington: 1st Books Library, 277 pages, $14.95
   The analogy between a religious leader and a shepherd (reflected in the double meaning of the English word "pastor"), and between his parishioners and a flock of sheep, illustrates the relations of power and authority that exist between the two sides. The rabbi, qadi, sheikh or minister are the leaders of a community of believers, who come to them for counseling and advice.
   But unlike as in the therapeutic professions, where the percentage of female practitioners is greater than the percentage of women in the general population, the religious doctrine of most faiths precludes women from holding sacred office.
   The right to mediate between God and his followers is usually the exclusive privilege of men. Thus, the relationship between rabbis and their female congregants becomes, potentially at least, another site for women's oppression by a dominant male class.
   The idea that a rabbi might sexually harm someone who believes in him, respects his authority and desires his blessing is almost as abhorrent as the notion that a father can molest a daughter. Unfortunately, just as incest is a fact of life (including within the religious community), so sexual exploitation by rabbis is a widespread phenomenon, one that the religious community seeks to keep out of the public eye.
   The world press has reported at length on the sexual exploitation of Catholic believers, especially altar boys and choir boys, by their priests, and courts in the United States have forced the Catholic Church to pay the victims hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation. ... [Thoughtful article, worth reading in full by Jews and others.]
• Contentious meeting held in bankruptcy case [Spokane Diocese] - RCC. 128 complainants. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   KGW, www.kgw.com/ sharedcontent/ APStories/stor ies/D87ESS U81.html , Associated Press, Jan/06/2005
   SPOKANE (WA) Alleged victims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests criticized Roman Catholic Bishop William Skylstad during a special creditors' meeting in the Spokane Diocese's bankruptcy case.
   Critics Wednesday complained about the makeup of the creditors' committee and also questioned Skylstad about the ownership and value of the parishes, schools and other entities in the diocese.
   The creditors' committee represents the nearly 130 people who say they were molested as children by clergy.
   Of the five members on the committee, two - Mike Shea and Rick Frizzell - have filed lawsuits and are among 58 alleged victims who have taken legal action against the diocese. Another 70 victims have come forward claiming abuse, but have chosen not to file lawsuits, according to the diocese.
   Since U.S. Trustee Ilene Lashinsky appointed the committee, victims and their attorneys have been critical of the panel's composition. Some have asserted that the diocese packed the committee with victims who are sympathetic to the diocese's interests.
Former military chaplain resigns from priestly ministry [? Sinclair] - RCC. ? boys.
   Tribune-Review,, By Mary Pickels, Friday, January 7, 2005
   GREENSBURG (PA) - More than two years ago the Diocese of Greensburg announced it had removed from the priesthood for life a priest then on leave because of allegations of sexual abuse of boys.
   At that time, citing diocesan policy, the Rev. Roger Statnick, vicar general of the diocese, refused to identify the priest. He did say, however, the priest most recently had served as a chaplain.
   The Rev. Maj. Roger A. Sinclair, 57, originally of the Pittsburgh area, was in April 2002 on a leave of absence for personal reasons. Associate pastor at four parishes between 1974 and 1983, Sinclair had for years served as an Air Force chaplain and later served in Veterans Administration hospitals.
   Along with two other priests, Sinclair began his leave as the diocese announced it would take action against a priest accused of decades-old sexual abuse.
   On Thursday, The Catholic Accent, the diocesan newspaper, announced Sinclair's retirement.
   Angela Burrows, executive director of infomedia services, said it is common policy that any time there is a change in status regarding a priest it is published as an official announcement.
   An announcement in yesterday's edition reads: "Effective Saturday, Jan. 1, 2005, the Rev. Roger A. Sinclair has resigned from priestly ministry in the Diocese of Greensburg."
   "He had not served (in the diocese) for years," Burrows said yesterday.
Alleged abuse victim may not testify if ID'd [Shanley] - RCC. Name suppressed. Boys.
   MetroWest Daily News, By Ken Maguire / Associated Press, Friday, January 7, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE (MA) -- Prosecutors told a judge yesterday that an alleged victim of defrocked priest Paul Shanley might refuse to testify if he's publicly identified during the upcoming sexual abuse trial.
   That would mean the end of the criminal case against one of the most notorious figures in the Boston Archdiocese's sex abuse scandal, Assistant District Attorney Lynn Rooney said.
   The disclosure came during a hearing in Middlesex Superior Court on whether the media should be allowed to report the alleged victim's name during Shanley's criminal trial. Several news organizations have challenged an order issued earlier this week barring the media from identifying alleged victims in the case.
   In the three years since Shanley was arrested on child rape and indecent assault and battery charges, two of the alleged victims who have spoken publicly about the case and were routinely identified in news reports. A third alleged victim has occasionally been identified, but a fourth was never named.
   Since bringing charges involving four alleged victims, prosecutors have since dropped charges so that just two victims remain as they prepare for a Jan. 18 start date to the trial.
   Rooney said yesterday that one of those two would also be dropped from the case, leaving just one alleged Shanley victim to testify against him.
   "If there's a paper later today that puts this person's name out there ... it is likely I will be back before the court telling you that we are unable to go forward," Rooney told Judge Stephen Neel during the hearing.
Church officials: Porter letter was misinterpreted [Porter] - RCC. 30 years layman, owns house, 2 cars.
   Herald News, by Deborah Allard-Bernardi, Jan/07/2005
   FALL RIVER (MA) -- The Diocese of Fall River refuted allegations that it has continued to provide financial support to convicted child molester James Porter even though he was laicized 30 years ago. A diocesan spokesman also said any argument over whether Porter is still a priest is an argument in semantics, since all ordained priests remain priests forever in the eyes of God. [???]
   Allegations that the diocese provided Porter with pension benefits and medical coverage were levied late Wednesday by Rhode Island resident Frank Fitzpatrick.
   Fitzpatrick, a former victim of Porter's abuse, said the notorious child abuser was "permanently a priest" and claimed that diocesan financial support over the years explained how Porter was able to own a house and two cars in Minnesota without loans, liens or a mortgage.
   To support his allegations, Fitzpatrick pointed to a 1974 document he claimed was part of the diocese's secret archives.
Priests accused in suits [? 1960s Leary, Lavelle] - RCC. Boy.
   Republican, By BILL ZAJAC, wzajac@repub.com , Friday, January 07, 2005
   SPRINGFIELD (MA) - One of the six clergy abuse suits filed this week in Hampden Superior Court makes the first accusation against a monsignor who died in 1991, saying he held out the promise of a Cathedral High School education to his alleged victim.
   Although the late Monsignor Timothy L. Leary was not named as a defendant, the suit filed by a 48-year-old Springfield man under the pseudonym "Frank Doe" alleges Leary abused him for five years beginning in the fourth grade.
   Mark E. Dupont, spokesman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, said the diocese has not previously received a complaint of abuse against Leary.
   The man who filed the suit said Leary held out the hope of entry and tuition to Cathedral. "The abuse stopped in eighth grade when I walked away from the church upon discovering they weren't going to help my education. I wanted a good education so badly," he said.
   His suit states Leary introduced the boy to the Rev. Francis P. Lavelle, who separately abused him and made the same promise of an education. Lavelle, who was permanently removed from ministry by the diocese more than a year ago because of credible allegations of sexual abuse, is named as the defendant in the suit.
   Lavelle's lawyer, C.J. Moriarty, was unavailable for comment yesterday.
   Leary, a Worcester native, died at age 81 in 1991. He served in many prestigious positions in the diocese, including overseeing the planning of Cathedral High School before its construction and serving as the school's director.
   Leary also served as rector of St. Michael's Cathedral and as diocesan director of cemeteries.
Police re-examine priest case [1980s-90s Emerson] - RCC. Boy.
   Post-Tribune, By Frank Wiget, ~ Jan 7, 2005
   GARY (IN): Florida officials are taking a stronger look at sex abuse allegations against a Diocese of Gary priest while he was on temporary assignment in Orlando between 1987 and 1991.
   The claims against the Rev. Richard Emerson, 52, will get a renewed criminal investigation, said Randy Means, director of investigations for the Orange-Osceola counties state attorney's office, because Orlando police never contacted the victim - leaving officials to believe the case had no merit.
   The alleged victim, now 29, told the Orlando Diocese in May he had been molested by Emerson when he was between 11 and about 16 years old. The victim alleges the abuse continued in the two years after Emerson returned to Indiana.
   Emerson was suspended from pastoral duties Dec. 16 at Notre Dame Church in Long Beach in LaPorte County.
   Although Emerson professed his innocence to Gary Diocese officials, church officials found enough credible evidence to forward the case to the Vatican for review. Officials there could at some point schedule a church trial on the charges. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:17 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Fri January 07, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

• Website devoted to exposing sex abuse in the Orthodox Church - Orthodox Churches.
   Pokrov, org (Protection of the Theotokos), http://www.pokrov.org , January 7, 2005
   Jan-7-04:
The California Sex Offender registry, www.megans law.ca.gov , is now on line.
Photograph of Sam Allen, http://www.pokrov.org/Abusers/pallen.html, added to his listing in our Perpetrators http://www.pokrov.org/Abusers/perpetrators.html section.
American Orthodox Church, http://www.pokrov.org/controversial/aoc.html , listed on our Controversial Groups section, http://www.pokrov.org/controversial/controversial.html
   Dec-16-04:
Fr. Andrew (Rayburn) has opened a retreat center and is selling calendars to support the center. See new updates on the Fr. Andrew (Rayburn) page http://www.pokrov.org/Abusers/prayburn.html
Bishop Tikhon publishes letter re: his auxiliary Bishop. November 11, 2004 http://www.pokrov.org/petition/OCA/0411ocadow.html
   Nov 19, 2004: Suspect Found among Monks, Tampa Tribune. Sporting a frizzy gray beard like those of the monks who gave him shelter, Gary Sabino emerged from Christ of the Hills Monastery in Texas on the arms of FBI agents. Two days shy of his 47th birthday, Sabino returned to Pasco County on Nov. 10 in the company of the sheriff's detective whose dogged persistence led to the former carpenter's capture on molestation charges. It was a day a mother and her three daughters had prayed would come. Read full article here http://www.pokrov.org/news/041119_tampatrib.html
   Nov-04-04:
New article re: Greek Church controversy in Australia, http://www.pokrov.org/news/aust11404.htm
Fr. John Liadis sighting in Florida, http://www.pokrov.org/Abusers/pliadis.html
Fr. Gabriel Barrow sighting in Houston, TX, http://www.pokrov.org/Abusers/pbarrowsnap404.htm leads to Cappy Larson of Pokrov speaking with Bishop Savas of Troas
Article added re: the GOA Clergy-Laity Seminar which focused on child molestation cases, http://www.pokrov.org/news/clergylaity2004.html
Coming soon: Bulgarian Orthodox Sexual Misconduct Policy
(Link to Prokov provided by Mako, www.mako.org.au of Australia.)
CONTACT: Pokrov.org , c/o Haight Mail Center, 1621 Haight Street #3, San Francisco, CA 94117, USA. greta@pokrov.org ENDS/] [Jan 7, 04]
#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Sat January 08, 2005 edition follows:-
Former Catholic school superintendent steps down from parish [1977 Sullivan] - RCC. Mistaken identity? Boy.
   Telegram & Gazette, The Associated Press, January 08, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - The former school superintendent for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, accused of sexual abuse in a lawsuit filed this week, has taken a leave of absence from his Weymouth parish.
   The Rev. Eugene Sullivan, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Parish, took the voluntary leave "for the good of the parish," the archdiocese announced Friday.
   On Tuesday, attorney Mitchell Garabedian filed 10 clergy sex abuse lawsuits against the archdiocese. In the suit, Sullivan is accused of molesting a boy in his car in 1977 as he and the boy, who is now 42, rode in his car to a Catholic summer camp in New Hampshire.
   Sullivan, reached at the parish on Wednesday, said he had not seen the lawsuit and had no immediate comment.
   His attorney said it could be a case of mistaken identity, as another Eugene Sullivan pleaded guilty to molesting a choir boy in 1984. Garabedian said the lawsuit names the correct Sullivan. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 12:53 PM]
More on Fr. Marcial Maciel - RCC. Legionaries of Christ. Male seminarians. Vatican City / Papal flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Italy flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Austria flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   National Catholic Reporter, http://www. nationalcatholic reporter.org/word , "The Word From Rome" regular feature, By JOHN L. ALLEN JR., jallen@natcath.org , January 7, 2005
   ROME - In the last column before my hiatus, I noted that Pope John Paul II had recently praised Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado and the order he founded, the Legionaries of Christ. With respect to the accusations of sexual abuse lodged against Maciel, I wrote: "I think the only honest answer is that the pope and his senior aides obviously do not believe the charges."
   That comment brought a response from Jason Berry, who along with fellow journalist Gerald Renner co-authored the book Vows of Silence: The Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II, which is in part about the Maciel case.
   Berry writes:
   I'm sorry, but there are more honest answers than that. It is just as likely that John Paul II and Cardinal Angelo Sodano don't care if the charges are true. They view the Legion as an asset to protect. The pope has a long record of refusing to punish powerful churchmen who abuse the young, which you fail to mention. John Paul's support of Maciel is consistent with his response to other men of flawed morals or compromised judgment.
   Cardinal Bernard Law resigned after a catalytic role in an epic scandal. John Paul rewarded him with a basilica in Rome. In 1995, he let Vienna's Cardinal Groër ease into a position at a shrine when he resigned in disgrace as a pederast. As the scandal escalated John Paul would not discuss it in public. When American bishops Symons, Ziemann, Sanchez, O'Connell, and Ryan resigned under similar clouds John Paul did not remove any from the priesthood. Each is a bishop, albeit sans diocese, today.
   Since your column appeared, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has reopened the case against Maciel. I would modestly suggest that Vows of Silence had something to do with that. Find me another priest, anywhere, in the world, against whom nine men gave detailed allegations of sexual assault, via church channels, and whose life has been as deeply probed in print. (You might have used the word 'irony' in quoting John Paul's praise of Maciel for 'the integral promotion of the person.')
   You wrote that "Vatican officials believe the evidence is old and ambiguous." You did not explain what they consider "ambiguous" in the graphic sexual acts, years, dates and places cited in documents from 1976, 1978, 1989 and 1998. I have read thousands of legal documents in reporting on the church's crisis in hundreds of articles and two books. Far from ambiguous, the evidence against Maciel is overwhelming. To call it "old" begs for clarity: John Paul ignored mounting accusations for decades. Is the pope "ambiguous"? I ask you.
   What does your phrase "absent a smoking gun" mean? Nine men stated they were [abused] and psychologically tyrannized as young seminarians.
   John, I must make a final point, with little joy, as you helped me during my 2002 research in Rome, and I hope still we are friends. Others in the Vatican press corps helped me too. Cultivating sources in that small, often cozy world with huge career implications should make a journalist doubly cautious. You have made glowing comments in columns and lectures about Maciel's prime defenders: Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, Mary Ann Glendon, George Weigel and Legion of Christ Fr. Tom Williams who lives in Rome. You have identified Williams in NCR as a friend. Williams was Maciel's spokesman in an ABC News report in which he denied the charges, though admitting he had never asked Maciel about them. When you single out Williams and others (who have been guests at the Legion college in Rome) for praise, you can't have it both ways. It is disingenuous to write: "It's not for me to say whether [Vatican officials'] conclusions are justified"' At some point, the facts demand one to take a stand, rather than be a cipher. Your tone and comments are those of an apologist for Maciel and the Legion. I encourage you to change that position."
   Normally I let readers' comments speak for themselves, but since Berry issues a challenge, I will say just a quick word. Jason Berry stood virtually alone in the 1980s in breaking the sexual abuse story in the United States, much of it in the pages of the National Catholic Reporter. He has earned his strong feelings, and I can appreciate why attempts to be dispassionate may seem to him like moral cowardice. Still, it doesn't ring true psychologically to say that Vatican officials, including the pope, "don't care" whether charges of sexual abuse against Maciel are justified. To believe that requires making them out to be monsters. The fact is, some Vatican officials believe the charges are a smear campaign, others that it's a case of "he-said, they-said," and others aren't sure what to think. In the background sometimes are prejudices about the scandalous nature of the press, and the way that accusations of sexual misconduct have been used over the centuries by enemies of the church. One can certainly argue that this isn't good enough, and that the accusers deserve a hearing. Perhaps the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith will bring some resolution. But I hope it's not an "apology" to realistically describe a climate of thought, and I also hope we're not going to go down the road of impugning someone's integrity on the basis of who their friends are.
   By the way, Jason, we're still friends. [Bolding added.]
Judge to decide priest's competency [1986-87 Szantyr (Marians of the Immaculate Conception)] - RCC. Boy/s. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Republican-American, Author Ben Conery, ~ January 08, 2005
   WATERBURY (CT) - A judge next month will determine whether a Waterbury priest, who once taught at Sacred Heart High School and served as the city's police chaplain, is competent to face charges he molested a boy in Massachusetts nearly 20 years ago.
   The Rev. John J. Szantyr, 73, of 55 Birch Place, faces charges of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14. The alleged abuse occurred between Jan. 1, 1986, and Dec. 12, 1987, according to court documents. During that time, Szantyr was a priest at Our Lady of Czestchowa Parish in Worcester, Mass.
   A competency hearing has been scheduled for Feb. 17 in Central District Court in Worcester. It is unclear what condition would make Szantyr unfit to stand trial, but he said Wednesday night that he has Parkinson's Disease.
   A spokesman for the Worcester Diocese said Szantyr was removed from the diocese in January 1988, but said he did not have any further information regarding Szantyr's removal.
   "He would not have had credentials, or what are called faculties, since January '88 to be in any public ministry," said Raymond Delisle, spokesman for the Worcester Diocese.
   The Worcester Telegram & Gazette newspaper reported Szantyr left the parish after Worcester police were notified he may have molested a boy in the church. A man claiming his son was victimized told the newspaper that Szantyr started an altar boy society shortly after arriving at the parish and that his son was in it.
   It was unclear why there was a 17-year lapse between the time of the alleged abuse and the charge filed against Szantyr in 2003. Court records, including the victim's name, are sealed and Worcester County District Attorney John J. Conte's office released little information about the case.
   Conte told the Telegram & Gazette in 2002 that when the alleged abuse was first reported, the parents of an alleged victim were divorcing. The parents disagreed over whether to press charges.
   The boy's father told the newspaper that church officials dissuaded him from pressing charges by saying his son might be shamed and stigmatized.
   Church officials, including the bishop of the diocese, said Szantyr was removed and would have no more contact with children, the father told police.
   The Worcester Diocese has been plagued in recent years with accusations of sexual misconduct by priests.
   The Rev. Joseph Looney, pastor at St. Margaret's Catholic Church in Waterbury, said Szantyr has been living in Waterbury since he came back from Worcester. The statute of limitations on the charges against Szantyr did not expire because he left Massachusetts.
   "He is absolutely crushed by this situation," Looney said. "This hit him like a ton of bricks and really sent him into a tail spin.
   "It's just hard for me to imagine they'd be true," Looney said of the accusations against Szantyr.
   Looney said Szantyr is a gifted musician who would play the piano at weekly fraternity of priest meetings. But since Szantyr was charged with child molestation, he's stopped attending the meetings, Looney said.
   Szantyr said Wednesday night his illness prevented him from speaking with a reporter. His lawyer, Edward P. Ryan Jr., could not be reached for comment.
   Born in Waterbury, Szantyr graduated from Sacred Heart High School and was ordained in 1957. He is a member of Marians of the Immaculate Conception order. He was first stationed in Stockbridge, Mass., and in 1972, he moved to Sacred Heart High School, where he became head of the department of religion.
   Former Mayor Edward D. Bergin named Szantyr, a close friend, police chaplain in 1976. A newspaper report from the time called Szantyr "a close friend of the Bergin family for many years" and the "unofficial chaplain of various Bergin campaign functions." Szantyr was at the center of a political controversy during the 1977 mayoral election because of a song he wrote for Bergin, a Democrat, that leaders of the Republican Party called demeaning to Italian-Americans.
   Bergin said Wednesday he didn't know Szantyr faced any accusations. "I haven't seen him," he said.
   Szantyr left Waterbury in 1980, but is not clear why.
   "To my knowledge there was never any problem," Bergin said. "If there was a problem, obviously, it would have been known by everybody."
   Delisle, the Worcester Diocese spokesman, said he didn't know why Szantyr came to the diocese. A spokesman from the Archdiocese of Hartford said there is no record of Szantyr having ever worked in the diocese, and suggested Szantyr may have been hired directly by Sacred Heart High School.
   Father John Blanchfield, the former principal of Sacred Heart High School, couldn't be reached for comment. A spokesperson from the Marian order could not be reached for comment.
   After arriving in the Worcester Diocese, Szantyr also served at Our Lady of Immaculate [? Conception] Parish in Athol, Mass.
• Ex-priest gets additional 12 years of prison time for abuse [1970s-80s Lovell] - RCC. Boys.
   Arizona Daily Sun, www.azdailysun. com/non_sec/ nav_includes/ story.cfm? storyID= 101349 , Jan/08/2005
   PHOENIX (AZ) (AP) -- A former Catholic priest already in prison was sentenced to an additional 12 years in prison Friday after he pleaded guilty to child molestation and sexual conduct with a minor.
   Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Ronald Reinstein also gave Lawrence Joseph Lovell, who pleaded in August, five years probation.
   The charges involve an altar boy at Saint Anthony in Phoenix about 20 years ago.
   In March, Lovell was sentenced to 14 years for charges stemming from another case of child molestation that involved a boy at Sacred Heart Parish in Prescott, where Lovell was a priest in the late 1970s.
Cheverus president will resign [1970s-80s Talbot; Malia] - RCC. Insurers pay $US 300,000 of $US 1.5m. Boy/s.
   Portland Press Herald, By JOSHUA L. WEINSTEIN, ~ January 8, 2005
   MAINE - The job description was unappealing: Fix a school that was a million dollars in debt, had tumbling enrollment and was in serious need of renovation.
   The Rev. John Keegan took the job.
   In the dozen years since the Jesuit priest became president of Cheverus High School for the second time, enrollment has more than doubled, the endowment has gone from $1.3 million to more than $2.5 million and, for the first time, the school has recorded a modest surplus.
   Keegan, who officials announced Wednesday will resign at the end of this academic year, also presided over Cheverus' transition from an all-boys school to a coeducational one and a capital campaign that acquired three acres. Keegan first served as the school's president from 1980 to 1983. ...
   The Rev. James Talbot, a teacher and soccer coach, was accused of sexually abusing several students at Boston College High School in the 1970s before his transfer to Cheverus and was removed from the priesthood in 1998 after being accused of sexually abusing a Cheverus student in the mid-1980s.
   Cheverus' insurance carrier paid less than $300,000 of a $1.5 million settlement in that case.
   Charles Malia, a former Cheverus teacher and track coach, acknowledged in 2000 that he had sexually abused students years earlier.
   Some Cheverus graduates said Keegan did not handle the scandal appropriately.
   Paul Kendrick, a Cheverus graduate and founder of Maine's Voice of the Faithful, a Catholic reform organization, said Keegan did not fully answer questions about the abuse.
• SNAP Calls for Ouster of Monsignor [Stika] - RCC.
   KWMU, http://public broadcasting. net/kwmu/news. newsmain? action=article& ARTICLE_ID= 725106 , by Maria Hickey, January 6, 2005
   ST. LOUIS (MO) The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, is calling for the removal of a top official with the Archdiocese of St. Louis.
   The group has sent a letter to Archbishop Raymond Burke asking him to remove Monsignor Richard Stika, the point person on sex abuse cases. The group says Stika has erred on the side of protecting priests.
   SNAP national director David Clohessy says while Stika is not responsible for abuse problems within the archdiocese, he's part of the problem.
   "And ultimately the buck does stop at Archbishop Burke's doorstep," Clohessy said. "But if the person who on a daily basis is receiving calls and returning calls to victims; if that person is not doing his job well, then no one else in the Archdiocese can do their job well."
   Clohessy said a priest suspended last week by the archdiocese had been accused of abuse two years ago. He says Stika failed to disclose the earlier charges of abuse and acted too late.
Former altar boys call priest abusive [1975-80 Larkin] - RCC. Altar boys.
   Mercury News, By Robin Evans, ~ January 8, 2005
   SAN JOSE (CA) - A respected priest who once held one of the highest positions in the San Jose Diocese has been put on administrative leave following allegations of sexual abuse of minors.
   Monsignor Alexander Larkin was removed as pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Saratoga last month, when the diocese was served notice of a lawsuit by two men who say he molested them between 1975 and 1980. They were altar boys at Our Lady of the Rosary in Palo Alto at the time.
   Larkin is the first diocese priest to be removed since 2002, when three priests were suspended after the Roman Catholic church's adoption of a zero tolerance policy on sexual abuse. Larkin was not available for comment.
   Diocese spokeswoman Roberta Ward said Larkin was an excellent administrator who, in 1992, was named director of pastoral ministry, one of the diocese's largest offices.
   "Al's one of our great pastors and priests. He's really respected, so it's a great tragedy," Ward said. Larkin has also been pastor at St. John Vianney in San Jose, St. Thomas Aquinas in Palo Alto and St. William in Los Altos.
   One of the plaintiffs, a 40-year-old Bay Area man, told The Mercury News that Larkin was not just a pastor but an intimate friend of the family. Larkin visited three to four times a week and joined the large family at their vacation house in the North Bay, he said. Larkin was his mother's confidant when his parents divorced and his father left.
Priest party objectors ask to meet with bishop - RCC.
   Portland Press Herald, Associated Press, January 8, 2005
   MAINE - Advocates who complained that a party for a priest who was forced to resign in South Portland sent the wrong message to sexual abuse victims have asked Bishop Richard Malone to hold a meeting for parishioners and clergy.
   A Catholic parishioner and leaders of a support group for sexual abuse victims sent a letter Thursday to Malone and the Rev. Michael Gendreau, the new pastor at two churches in South Portland, asking them to hold a meeting to open up dialogue between clergy and parishioners as soon as next week.
   "We need to get together and talk about this issue," said Catherine Morin Campbell, a parishioner in South Portland. "We can't claim to care about abuse victims while allowing possible predators to be publicly honored."
   Among those who signed the letter were David Clohessy and Ann Hagan Webb. Both head the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP], a support group.
Bishop's administrative role hit in old sexual abuse allegations [Carlson, Krautkremer] - RCC.
   The Saginaw News, By DENISE FORD-MITCHELL, Saturday, January 08, 2005
   MINNESOTA - Time and the legal system have not healed the wounds of a Minnesota family grappling with 28-year-old allegations of child sexual abuse by a Catholic priest.
   Newly appointed Catholic Diocese of Saginaw Bishop Robert J. Carlson helped investigate their claims. Victim advocates say that Carlson's recommendations, as well as broken promises by other church leaders, prevented justice for the family.
   Earlier this week, a three-judge panel of the Minnesota Court of Appeals ruled -- for the second time -- that Theodore J. Krammer Jr., 38, of Stillwater, Minn., came forward too late with his civil child molestation suit against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and former priest Lee D. Krautkremer.
   Krammer sued in 2002 when he learned that the priest he accused of molesting him was not named in an archdiocese list of sexually abusive priests.
   Carlson served as a priest/chancellor for the Minnesota diocese in 1983, when the allegations surfaced from the then-16-year-old Krammer's parents. Krammer said the incident occurred when he was 10.
   Members of the Minnesota chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP] said that Carlson's reaction to the situation, which he was investigating with the Rev. Michael Korf, hindered justice for the family.
Compromise sought to honor priest - RCC.
   Bangor Daily News, ~ January 8, 2005
   BANGOR (ME) - The people who complained that a party for a former Bangor priest was inappropriate have asked Bishop Richard Malone and a South Portland priest to use the cancellation of the reception for a former pastor as "a chance for open dialogue, better understanding and true healing."
   In addition to Malone, head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, a letter was sent Thursday to the Rev. Michael Gendreau, pastor of Holy Cross and St. John the Evangelist Catholic churches in South Portland. The letter asked Gendreau to hold "an open forum and discussion at St. John's parish as early as next week."
   The letters were signed by Catherine Morin Campbell, a parishioner in South Portland, Paul Kendrick of Cumberland, David Clohessy of St. Louis and Ann Hagan Webb of Boston. Clohessy and Webb head the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP. Campbell and Kendrick are members of Voice of the Faithful, a group that advocates for church reform.
   "We need to get together and talk about this issue," Campbell said Thursday in a press release that included both letters. "We can't claim to care about abuse victims, while allowing possible predators to be publicly honored. We can't ask victims to come forward for help, while bestowing praise and recognition on someone who covered up for a child molester."
   Earlier this week, organizers canceled a reception scheduled to be held Sunday at a South Portland VFW Hall in honor of the Rev. Paul Coughlin. In October, Coughlin was ordered to resign as pastor of the South Portland parishes.
Diocese cuts its fiscal losses. - RCC.
   Telegram & Gazette, By Kathleen A. Shaw, kshaw@telegram.com , ~ January 8, 2005
   WORCESTER (MA) - The Diocese of Worcester ended the 2004 fiscal year with a loss of $271,300.
   Although the diocese finished in the red, the losses were significantly less than the previous year, when the diocese had a loss of nearly $800,000.
   Bishop Robert J. McManus, in releasing the financial report, said most services operated within their budgets, "and I offer my thanks to our diocesan directors for their commitment to fiscal responsibility."
   "Numbers, however, cannot relate the impact we have had through our various agencies and ministries upon the tens of thousands of people we serve throughout our diocese and Central Massachusetts," the bishop said.
   The diocese received income from parishioners through what is called the cathedraticum for a total of nearly $2 million. The insurance program yielded $729,595, and investments brought in $640,120. Bequests to the diocese brought $127,725 in income.
   The report, also to be available online at www.worcesterdiocese.org and printed in yesterday's edition of The Catholic Free Press, was issued after a complete audit by O'Connor Maloney & Co. P.C. of Worcester. The fiscal year ended Aug. 31.
   The largest losses came from the St. John Cemetery system, which continued to invest in capital improvements at many former parish cemeteries that joined the system in the past few years. The cemetery deficit was nearly half of the previous year's deficit. The cemetery system ended up $377,528 in the red this past year.
   The Catholic school system took in $15.7 million in revenue and ended the year with a surplus of $111,529. This included income of nearly $13 million from tuition, $1.7 million from fund-raising, $658,275 from the bookstore, $158,550 in parish assessments, and $118,345 in other income.
   The Diocesan Expansion Fund, which functions like a bank, ended the year with a surplus of $154,512. The fund received $1.9 million in investment income and another $1.8 million in interest on loans it made. The fund paid out $3.2 million in interest on its savings accounts, spent $237,986 on loan forgiveness, and administration of the fund cost $196,300.
   The Priests Retirement Fund also operated at a loss of $289,862 because of costs involved in assisted living and medical services for older priests being cared for in rectories. The diocese managed to cut the loss from the $577,288 deficit the previous year.
   The retirement fund received $519,000 from the Bishop's Fund, $939,004 in parish assessments, $268,755 in investment income, and $246,071 in donations. It cost the diocese $148,000 to maintain priests at the Vianney House for retired priests, which is operated by the diocese, and it cost more than $1.4 million to support retired priests. The diocese paid out another $660,633 for priests in nursing homes or assisted living care.
   Diocesan central administration took in more than $3.4 million, but expenses also exceeded its budget, and it finished with a loss of $41,754.
   The diocese continued to pay for services related to the clergy sexual abuse scandal. A number of the pending civil lawsuits related to alleged incidents of sexual abuse were settled in the past year. Several are still pending, and six new suits were recently filed. The diocese said it paid out $131,875 for all legal services it incurred during 2004. The Office of Healing and Prevention received a total of $170,845.
   A total of $82,100 was paid out in therapeutic assistance. The fiscal affairs office operated with a budget of $386,999. Interest on debts was $624,540.
   The Priests' Financial Assistance Fund, which retired Bishop Daniel P. Reilly testified in a deposition is where priests can be paid when they are removed from ministry because of misconduct allegations, was set at $349,457. The diocese has said, however, that not all this money goes for removed priests, but it also goes for priests on leave for medical reasons.
   The financial report also shows that the diocese created a "bad debt" reserve of $115,000 and had a "loan receivable write-off" entry totaling $210,000.
   Also in central administration, the bishop's office spent $209,047. The bishop's residence cost $107,066. Donations and memberships cost $233,813. The Moderator of the Curia cost $120,479. The Tribunal, the church court, cost $249,696 to operate. The chancellor's office spent $74,928. The Vicar for Priests was budgeted at $19,121, and the Vicar for Religious had a $50,471 budget.
   The Bishop's Fund took in more than $3.8 million and spent it all on the programs that the fund supports. The Catholic Free Press, the diocesan newspaper, took in $821,475 in revenue, but expenses exceeded that amount and the paper ended with a loss of $25,240. The communications office spent about $124,000. [Bolding added]
• Charges dropped against pastor - Sect not named. Girl's "best interests". Joseph F. Ellison Jr. freed.
   Daily Press, www.dailypress. com/news/local/ virginia/dp-va-- pastor-chargesdro 0107jan 07, 0,7895637. story?coll=dp-head lines-virginia ; By the Associated Press, Information from: Richmond Times-Dispatch, Published January 7, 2005
   RICHMOND, Va. -- Prosecutors have dropped five sexual misconduct charges against a minister accused of an improper relationship with his 16-year-old goddaughter.
   The Rev. Joseph F. Ellison Jr. was scheduled for trial Thursday in Henrico County Circuit Court on one count of sexual battery and four counts of taking indecent liberties. But the charges were dropped "following consultation with the complaining witness and considering what's in her best interest," special prosecutor Duncan Minton said. Minton declined to elaborate.
   Ellison, an eastern Henrico clergyman and community leader, has maintained his innocence since the charges were filed in December 2003. The girl alleged that the misconduct happened over four years.
   "I didn't really know what to expect," Ellison said after Thursday's hearing. "I was praying for this thing to be over. It's been a year. Then I had the charges dropped, and I walked out a free man. I'm just so glad it's over."
   Ellison, 43, was the 16-year-old's godfather and a foster parent. He said the girl's grandmother had asked him to take the teen into his family upon her death.
   He voluntarily surrendered custody of the girl in early 2004 even though he was cleared of misconduct alleged in a civil complaint made by the county Social Services Department.#
Personal turmoil erupts into battle over pastor at church in Cleveland [2001-04 Maxwell] - Baptist. Woman.
   Plain Dealer, by Kaye Spector, Thursday, January 06, 2005
   CLEVELAND (OH) - Cynthia Hudson had a terrible secret: Her boss, the pastor of Affinity Missionary Baptist Church, was having an affair with a church member he had been counseling.
   For four years, Hudson, an associate pastor, stayed silent. She and the pastor, the Rev. Ronald E. Maxwell, often talked about the romance. She hoped and prayed it would end.
   Eventually, Hudson realized Maxwell's wife suspected he was having an affair. But to her horror, the wife's suspicion fell on her.
   In the church parking lot in February, Hudson tried to talk to the pastor's wife, according to an affidavit Hudson submitted to the church that detailed the affair and mounting pressure she felt about keeping it secret.
   The wife's response was to summon her husband from inside the church. In front of them both, Hudson's secret came tumbling out.
   "You have been mistreating me for years because you think that I am the one. I am not the one! . . ." Hudson told the pastor's wife, according to her affidavit. "Your husband is going to bring our church down."
   In the months that followed, the 38-year-old congregation, which worships in a sparkling-new church at the corner of East 175th Street and Miles Avenue in Cleveland, erupted in conflict.
   The pastor and some members of the church's executive board and congregation are locked in a struggle over whether to keep Maxwell as pastor. Tonight, the executive board is expected to vote on launching impeachment proceedings against Maxwell.
• Leaders of embattled church vote to fire pastor [2001-04 Maxwell] - Baptist. Woman.
   Plain Dealer, www.cleveland. com/news/plaindealer/ index.ssf?/base/ cuyahoga/110509381 4143460.xml ; by Kaye Spector, Friday, January 07, 2005
   CLEVELAND (OH) - The Affinity Missionary Baptist Church executive board voted Thursday to fire its pastor, Ronald E. Maxwell.
   The recommendation will be brought to the congregation for a vote Feb. 2.
   Maxwell and some members of the executive board have been locked in a struggle for control of the church for months following revelations that the pastor had an affair with a congregation member he had been counseling.
   The relationship between Maxwell and the board had so deteriorated that after voting to fire Maxwell, the board agreed to bar him from the church building, change the church locks, seize church records, its copier and computer codes and suspend the office staff.
   When executive board members arrived for the 7:30 p.m. meeting, they were greeted by Maxwell and two sheriff's deputies, who had been summoned to keep out the media.
   The board quickly voted 16-7 to allow the media into the meeting, said board member Pauline Tarver, a Cleveland Municipal Court judge.
• Former priest to stand trial [Daniels] - Anglican. Child. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   Ninemsn, http://news. ninemsn.com.au/ article.asp x?id=16316 , 11:46 AEDT, Sat Jan 8 2005
   HOBART (Tas) AUSTRALIA: A former Anglican priest has been committed to stand trial in the Hobart Supreme Court over a string of child sex charges dating back to the 1970s.
   Louis Victor Daniels, 57, of the Canberra suburb of Charnwood, appeared in Hobart Magistrates Court via videolink on Friday.
   He pleaded not guilty to 21 counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual intercourse with a young person under the age of 17.
Judge lifts ban on media naming alleged Shanley victims [Shanley] - RCC. Boys. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Milford Daily News, Associated Press, Saturday, January 8, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE (MA) -- A state judge yesterday overturned a ruling that had barred media from naming alleged victims in the child rape case against defrocked priest Paul Shanley, but gave prosecutors until Monday to file an appeal.
   Middlesex Superior Court Judge Stephen Neel's ruling is stayed until 1 p.m. Monday to allow prosecutors or others to appeal it. In the meantime, the media will continue to be banned from naming any alleged witnesses in the case.
   Neel's ruling came several days after another judge, acting on a request by prosecutors who feared continuing to name the alleged victims would make them unwilling to testify, ordered media to stop identifying the men -- even those who had previously spoken out publicly about their allegations and had been identified in numerous articles for several years.
   The Associated Press, The Boston Globe and The Boston Herald appealed the ruling, contending it was an unconstitutional "prior restraint."
   In the three years since Shanley was arrested on child rape and indecent assault and battery charges, two of the alleged victims have spoken publicly about the case and were routinely identified in news reports. A third alleged victim has been identified occasionally, but a fourth was never named.
   The Associated Press has a policy of not identifying rape victims without their consent.
• ACCUSED PRIEST FILES SUIT AGAINST N.O. ARCHBISHOP; PASTOR SAYS HUGHES ACTED TOO QUICKLY [Fraser] - RCC. Boy.
   The Times-Picayune, www.nola.com/ news/t-p/capital/ index.ssf?/base/ news-2/1105167 352205880.xml , By Bruce Nolan, Saturday, January 08, 2005
   NEW ORLEANS (LA) - A Catholic priest took the extraordinary step of suing his archbishop Friday, charging that Archbishop Alfred Hughes defamed him by ordering him out of his Marrero pulpit on a charge that he molested a child.
   The Rev. Michael Fraser also charged that Hughes violated the church's own procedures when he relieved Fraser from ministry as pastor of Visitation of Our Lady Parish.
   He said Hughes acted before the completion of a preliminary investigation, as church policy requires.
   Hughes relieved Fraser of all priestly duties and ordered him to leave Visitation last January. That was a day after the Archdiocese of New Orleans received a complaint from a man who said Fraser had sexually molested him as a child at Sts. Peter and Paul Parish in Pearl River in the mid-1980s.
   A letter from Hughes dated Jan. 14 told the pastor of Hughes' decision. Hughes told Fraser the church would pursue an investigation to "acquire a clear and specific understanding" of the facts underlying the allegation, according to the lawsuit.
   Ten days later, the archdiocese called a news conference to announce its action -- a novel, aggressive move compared with its earlier handling of such cases.
Dioceses pass new audits on sex abuse - RCC.
   Philadelphia Inquirer, By David O'Reilly, ~ January 8, 2005
   PHILADELPHIA (PA) - New audits of the Camden Diocese and Archdiocese of Philadelphia found that both meet national bishops' standards for protecting youngsters from sexual abuse, the dioceses said yesterday.
   Outside investigators based their findings on visits in the fall to both dioceses as part of a second round of annual audits of the nation's 195 dioceses.
   The auditors concluded that Camden and Philadelphia had begun or implemented all the measures required of dioceses by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).
   Both got similar reports a year ago, although Philadelphia first had to address three concerns that the auditors had raised.
   The audits were commissioned by the USCCB's Office for the Protection of Children and Young People and conducted by the Gavin Group of suburban Boston.
   Kathleen McChesney, director of the office, cautioned yesterday that a grade of "compliant" did not necessarily mean a diocese had completed all that is required under the charter the bishops adopted at Dallas in 2002.
   "A diocese can be 'in compliance' if it's selected and developed certain programs, even if it hasn't yet implemented them," she said.
Sexual abuse civil trial against two priests may be set for spring [Ensey, Urrutigoity (Society of St. John)] - RCC. Priest went bankrupt.
   Scranton Times Tribune, BY CHRIS BIRK, Jan/08/2005
   SCRANTON (PA) - After two months in limbo, the sexual abuse lawsuit against two Society of St. John priests can now move forward, with the accuser's lead attorney eyeing a possible spring trial date.
   In early August, the Rev. Eric Ensey filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection, which, under federal law, triggers an automatic stay of a debtor's judicial proceedings. Father Ensey and the Rev. Carlos Urrutigoity, along with the Diocese of Scranton, the SSJ and a few other entities, are named as defendants in a John Doe civil suit filed in March 2002 in U.S. District Court.
   In October, civil trial judge John E. Jones III cited the statute in ordering the case stayed until bankruptcy proceedings cleared or the automatic stay was removed. On Tuesday, the latter occurred, as federal bankruptcy Judge John J. Thomas issued an order lifting the automatic stay.
   "Once the stay is lifted, the court will set a pretrial conference for us to select a trial date," said James Bendell, an attorney for Mr. Doe. "I think it should be able to go to trial by March or April."
   Despite the stay's dissolution, both sides continue to wait on the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Attorneys for the two priests are hoping to block Mr. Doe's attempt to obtain psychological records of the pair.
   In March, Judge Jones gave Mr. Bendell the go-ahead to review the records, but allowed the priests to immediately appeal his decision to the 3rd Circuit.
• Shanley's lawyer questions timing of accusation [Shanley] - RCC. Boy.
   South Coast Today, www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/01-05/01-08-05/a03sr270.htm , By THEO EMERY, Associated Press writer, ~ January 8, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE (MA) -- Paul Shanley's lawyer said yesterday that the defrocked priest's last remaining accuser remembered being molested only after he consulted with the Boston law firm that represented hundreds of alleged victims of clergy sexual abuse.
   In related news, Middlesex Superior Court Judge Stephen Neel yesterday afternoon overturned an order from earlier in the week that had barred news organizations from identifying alleged victims in the case. Prosecutors contended in court this week that the remaining victim might refuse to testify if he is publicly identified.
   The ruling is stayed until 1 p.m. Monday to allow prosecutors or others to appeal it. In the meantime, the media will continue to be banned from naming any alleged witnesses in the case.
   Shanley lawyer Frank Mondano said court documents show one of his client's accusers contacted the law firm of Greenberg Traurig before he claims to have remembered bring molested by Shanley, a key figure in the clergy sex abuse scandal. The man says he recalled being abused by Shanley after the scandal broke in the Boston archdiocese in early 2002.
   "I submit that the reason it looks like a textbook case (of recovered memory) is because it came right out of a textbook," Mondano said during a pretrial hearing. "People are trying real hard to obfuscate the fact that the cart came before the horse."
• R.I. filmmaker had to put aside 'Catholic girl mindset' - RCC. FILM "Holy Water-Gate". Golden Eagle award.
   Providence Journal, www.projo.com/ religion/content/ projo_20050108_ holy8.a386e. html , BY JENNIFER LEVITZ, 01:04 AM EST, Saturday, January 8, 2005
   RHODE ISLAND - As a filmmaker documenting the far-reaching sexual-abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church, Mary Healey-Conlon had scored a coveted interview. She and her camera were inside the Chicago mansion of Cardinal Francis George, archbishop of the third-largest diocese in the nation. After numerous requests from Healey-Conlon in 2002, Cardinal George had agreed to an interview.
   But as the Warren filmmaker met with the church dignitary in his lakeside residence, where nuns served tea and cookies, she had two instincts: one, as a journalist who believed in hard questions; the other as a Catholic who had grown up believing in the church.
   "It was utterly intimidating," recalled Healey-Conlon, 37, a lecturer in film studies at the University of Rhode Island. "I had to keep reminding myself not to fall into the sort of Catholic girl mindset, and continue to ask the questions I had prepared."
   These questions are part of "Holy Water-Gate: Abuse Cover-Up in the Catholic Church," a 56-minute documentary directed by Healey-Conlon and premiering Monday at the Coolidge Corner Movie Theater, in Brookline, Mass.
   Last month, the documentary won a CINE Golden Eagle Award, which recognizes excellence in professional filmmaking; past recipients include Steven Spielberg and Ken Burns.
   Filming the documentary took Healey-Conlon from vigils outside the Diocese of Providence through the snowy plains of the Midwest and to Rome to interview victims, clergy and even a perpetrator.
Shanley attorney sees bid for gain [Shanley] - RCC. Boy.
   The Boston Globe, By Ralph Ranalli, Globe Staff, January 8, 2005
   MASSACHUSETTS - The lawyer for Paul R. Shanley alleged in court yesterday that the man expected to be the lone accuser in the criminal case against the defrocked priest was in contact with a law firm suing the Boston Archdiocese before the date he says he recovered long-suppressed memories of sexual abuse.
   The child rape case against Shanley, one of the few priests in the clergy sex abuse scandal to face criminal charges, once relied on allegations brought by four alleged victims, who were represented by the law firm Greenberg Traurig when they reached a multimillion-dollar settlement with the archdiocese last year.
   But two of four men have been dropped from the case by prosecutors, another is expected to be dropped, and Shanley's lawyer, Frank Mondano, is suggesting that the fourth accuser made up his allegations in a bid for financial gain.
   "So your allegation is that Male No. 3 cooked up his recovered memories for private gain through the civil justice system?" Middlesex Superior Court Judge Stephen E. Neel asked.
   "Correct," Mondano said.
   Middlesex County prosecutors and lawyers for Greenberg Trauring disputed Mondano's allegations, saying that the fourth accuser did not sign on as a Greenberg Traurig client until more than a week after he allegedly recovered his memories of abuse.
4 deceased priests accused - RCC.
   Republican, By BILL ZAJAC, wzajac@repub.com , Saturday, January 08, 2005
   GREENFIELD (MA) - In addition to six priests being accused in lawsuits of sexual abuse this week, four additional claims against now deceased priests were made directly to the diocese recently, according to a Greenfield lawyer.
   Three of the four deceased priests never had public accusations made against them before this week, lawyer John J. Stobierski said at a press conference yesterday in his Greenfield office.
   Stobierski said the complaints by his clients against the priests, who were not identified, will be settled through an agreement with the diocese. The same agreement will be used for the claims made in the six lawsuits filed Wednesday in Hampden Superior Court. The suits named individuals as defendants, but not the diocese.
   A diocesan official confirmed the claims against the deceased priests and the existence of an agreement that allows the diocese and the accusers to try to reach a financial settlement without the diocese being named as a defendant in suits. The agreement stands even if the statute of limitations has been exceeded in any of the 10 complaints. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 04:23 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Sat January 08, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

• 'Forgotten Australians' report welcomed. - RCC. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   The Tablet (UK RC independent paper), www.thetablet. co.uk/cgi-bin/ citw.cgi/past- 00212#AUSTRALIA , "World Church News," for January 8, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: Australia's Catholic bishops and leaders of religious congregations have established a group to help them implement improvements to the treatment of children in care following inquiries into abuse by church workers.
   The bishops and leaders of religious institutes welcomed the 2004 report of the Senate inquiry into children in institutional care, Forgotten Australians.
   "We have been moved by the courage of those who have laid bare their experiences before the committee," said a statement by the bishops and congregational leaders last month. "An apology was first made in the 1996 document, Towards Healing, and we formally renew our apology to those whose abuse was perpetrated by Catholic church personnel.
   "The revelations contained in the report are the very opposite of all that we would wish to stand for.
   "We are also deeply regretful for the hurt caused whenever the Church's response has denied or minimised the pain that victims have experienced.  And we regret the hurt and distress caused to the many good people who have worked in this area."
   The Senate report found that there had been "wide-scale, unsafe, improper and unlawful care of children, a failure of duty of care, and serious and repeated breaches of statutory obligations" in institutions run by state governments and Churches.
   It said internal church processes for dealing with allegations of abuse and the commitment of Churches to address past grievances needed to be open, rigorous and accountable.
   The members of the Church's Senate Inquiry Action Group will analyse the recommendations of the Senate inquiry, particularly how they apply to the structures, institutions and personnel of the Church, and provide the bishops and religious leaders with advice about implementing the recommendations.
   It will present a preliminary report to the bishops' conference in May and to the June meeting of the Australian Conference of Leaders of Religious Institutes.#
   [COMMENTS: "Bishops established a group" -- if the bishops are the successors of the Apostles, aren't they supposed to be the divinely-founded group for such tasks? So, what went wrong?
   "Welcomed the report" !? I'd like to see that!
   Bishops: "... we formally renew our apology ..." -- BUT, they are still transferring offending clergy away from accusers to mission countries like Samoa and Fiji !! Recent Australian and overseas reports had targeted the Salesian Order, one of many. Where is the "firm purpose of amendment" required by Confession / Penance /Reconciliation?
   Report: "wide-scale, unsafe, improper and unlawful care of children, a failure of duty of care, and serious and repeated breaches of statutory obligations" -- Unsafe in the case of the Roman Catholic Church, largely because children were placed under the control of people who had spurned normal sexual relations and commitment ! And the supervising bishops were similar people. COMMENT ENDS.] [January 8, 05]

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Sun January 09, 2005 edition follows:-
• Records: Dracut man used games to molest boy, 9 [2003 Curlew] Mormon (LDS). Boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Lowell Sun, www.lowellsun. com/Stories/0, 1413,105~4746~ 2638328,00. html , By JACK MINCH, Thursday, January 06, 2005
   LAWRENCE (MA) - Accused child molester Kevin F. Curlew told investigators of a twisted bet, bizarre warnings, a desire to be caught, as well as threats from his victim, according to court records.
   The Dracut man, who is accused of sexually abusing a 9-year-old boy, allegedly said the abuse began in Curlew's home after the two spent a day together at the Lowell Folk Festival last July.
   Curlew allegedly made the boy do the "wiggle dance" dropping his pants and wiggling to make his genitalia move after he lost three video games to Curlew.
   Curlew told the boy he shouldn't have made the bet if he didn't want to follow through, and offered "to be fair" to take his own pants down, according to Lawrence District Court records.
   The abuse continued at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints on Hill Street in Methuen on the second Tuesdays of September, October and November, while the boy's mother was at church meetings, the records state.[...]
   Curlew served jail time in Maine for sex crimes, but that state's Sex Offender Registry Board said the charges were dropped after he served his sentence, according to court records.[...]
   No one was at the church yesterday afternoon to comment. But Brian Palmer, spokesman for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, stressed that church leaders notified police of the alleged abuse.[...]
   (Staff writers Dennis Shaughnessey, Matt Murphy and Robert Mills contributed to this report.)# [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:08 PM]
• Priest removed from ministry, new lawsuits filed before legal deadline [Devlin] - RCC. Total of 9 Church people accused.
   The Catholic Observer (run for RC Diocese of Springfield, Mass.), www.iobserve.org/rn0105a.html , By Father Bill Pomerleau, Observer staff, Friday, January 7, 2005
   SPRINGFIELD (MA)- As a legal deadline for effectively filing lawsuits alleging sexual misconduct by priests approached this week, a Boston attorney filed lawsuits alleging that three priests, a woman religious and a Boy Scout leader had abused five men decades ago.
   A Greenfield attorney also filed six lawsuits alleging that five diocesan priests had abused minors.
   Meanwhile, the Diocese of Springfield announced the removal from ministry of a priest named in one of the lawsuits.
   Father Michael Devlin, 62, has been placed under the constraints of the Dallas Norms, the diocese announced Dec. 29, alluding to the requirement in U.S. church law that any priest credibly judged to have abused a minor cannot function as a priest.
   In October the diocesan review board began its investigation of an allegation that Father Devlin, until then chaplain at Holyoke's Providence Place, had abused a minor while he was a parochial vicar at St. Thomas the Apostle Parish in West Springfield.
An attorney indicts the church; Sex-abuse cases kill an ex-altar boy's faith in a hierarchy he now calls 'completely corrupt.' [1991 Harris] - RCC. $US5.2m in 2001 = Biggest so far.
   The Orange County Register, www.ocregister. com/ocr/2005/01/ 09/sections/ news/news/ article_ 371835. php , By ANDREW GALVIN, January 09, 2005
   COSTA MESA (MA) - John Manly used to think he had life figured out.
   As a bright kid growing up in Orange County in the 1970s and 1980s, he developed a confident, comprehensive worldview based on his orthodox Roman Catholic beliefs.
   "I was very, very conservative," he remembers. He served as an altar boy at St. Catherine's Military School in Anaheim, then graduated from Santa Ana's Mater Dei High School and USC. He considered whether he had a vocation for the priesthood, but determined that the law was his true calling.
   He proudly proclaimed his political leanings from an early age. As a teenager, he volunteered on Ronald Reagan's presidential campaign. Twenty years later, in an act of deep loyalty to the Republican Party, he flew to Florida after the disputed 2000 election to offer free legal help to the Bush campaign.
   But by then, his life had begun to take an unforeseeable turn.
   It began in 1997, when Ryan DiMaria sued the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange and former priest Michael Harris. DiMaria alleged that he had been sexually abused by Harris while a student at Santa Margarita High School in 1991, when Harris was the school's principal. Manly helped represent DiMaria, who won a $5.2 million settlement from the diocese, still the largest individual amount paid in a clergy-abuse case.
   After the DiMaria settlement in 2001, Manly thought he could turn his attention back to his main practice of real-estate law. But events overtook him.
   In 2003, a state law went into effect that temporarily lifted the statute of limitations on sexual-abuse lawsuits, allowing hundreds of cases to be filed by people who alleged that they were victimized by priests and other Catholic clergy as long ago as the 1930s. Manly's phone started ringing as victims sought his legal representation.
   On Monday, the Diocese of Orange disclosed the terms of its record $100 million settlement of all the pending sex- abuse lawsuits against it. Manly represented 30 of the 90 accusers in the settlement.
   The two years of intense work on those cases took its toll on Manly's 40-year-old body - he gained 35 pounds and now weighs 270.
   Listening to his clients' stories took a toll on Manly's lifelong religious commitment. He no longer attends Mass and is trying to piece together what's left of his faith. His only certainty is that his faith in the Catholic Church is gone.
   "I think the institutional Catholic Church - from Rome all the way to Orange County - is absolutely and completely corrupt," he says.
   It's not so much the sexual abuse of years past that has wrecked his faith in the church. It's the way that church leaders have until recently treated those who complained, subjecting them to multiple days of questioning under oath by church lawyers and refusing to admit abuse even where there was ample evidence that it likely occurred, he said.
   It's also the way diocesan officials moved accused priests from parish to parish, and in many cases, Manly believes, covered for them.
   "The people who really screwed up here are the men who put (the accused priests) in a position where they could do it again."
   A key clause of the settlement requires the church to release decades worth of personnel files on the accused priests so that the public can see "what (church leaders) knew and when," Manly said. That concession by the church was critical to winning consent to settle the cases, he said.
   "You have to hold the hierarchy publicly accountable. I view that as an integral part of our job," he said.
   A diocesan spokesman, the Rev. Joe Fenton, declined to comment for this article.
   Family and friends have watched as Manly's work has changed him.
   His wife, Jill, whom he married in 1999, converted to Catholicism at his behest. Then came his work on the sexual-abuse cases. Manly would come home and share the harrowing details with her.
   "I couldn't shake it for a week sometimes, it was so horrible," she said. "You couldn't get it out of your head."
   Jill Manly said her husband today is "a deeper person, and his faith is something he (isn't) afraid to question." He felt "a lot of bitterness and anger and a lot of betrayal because it was such a big part of who he was."
   Manly's clients say his compassion was critical in helping them stand up and talk about being abused.
   "Without him, I don't know where I'd be today," Joelle Casteix, one of the plaintiffs in the Diocese of Orange settlement, said at Monday's press conference where the settlement details were disclosed. "Nobody has believed in me as much in my entire life."
   "In a sense, he's a victim also," said DiMaria, now an attorney with Manly's firm. "He put his faith in the church. Through my case and seeing all these others, it's kind of spiritual robbery."
   The undermining of Manly's faith spread to his political convictions as well.
   He voted for the Libertarian presidential candidate in November's election, and said his views on social issues, once "black and white," have moderated.
   Having represented Casteix, who accused a Mater Dei choirmaster of impregnating her while she was a student there, Manly is more accepting of abortion, which he once saw as unarguably wrong.
   Seeing the courage of gay clients led him to an about- face on the issue of homosexuality, he said. He now believes gays should be allowed to marry.
   Manly represents an additional 80 clients in California and Alaska who have alleged abuse by clergy. While he hopes someday to return his focus to real-estate law, he knows that could be a long way off.
   As for the church, Manly says "the verdict is still out" on Bishop Tod Brown of Orange.
   Manly credits Brown with willingness to forge a settlement but wonders why it took so long.
   Brown "has the opportunity to be a beacon for hope and renewal and reform in the church, or just be like a majority of the other bishops and be basically an administrator who plays the game," Manly said.
   "The faithful want and need and are craving a leader who takes the reins and does the right thing. He has that opportunity. I hope he takes it.
   CONTACT US: (714) 796-6045 or agalvin@ocregister.com #
Updating the church sex-abuse scandal [Wempe] - RCC. $US 100m. 544 more clamants. 51 Boston parishes close
   Ventura County Star, January 9, 2005
   CALIFORNIA: Catholic leaders in Orange County on Monday announced details of a $100 million sexual-abuse settlement.
   An Archdiocese of Los Angeles lawyer says a settlement offer could come within a month for 544 alleged victims, though lawyers and a judge will discuss civil court trials in a private meeting this week.
   51 parishes closed in the Archdiocese of Boston in July 2004 with 29 more closings expected by this summer. Church officials say the closings are indirectly related to a 2003 sexual abuse settlement of $85 million.
   Former Ventura County priest Michael Wempe, facing criminal charges of molestation in Los Angeles County, will appear in a pretrial hearing on Jan. 26.
Vt. diocese faces historic changes [Paquette, Paulin, Willis] - RCC. 55 to staff 130.
   Times Argus, By KEVIN O'CONNOR, January 9, 2005
   VERMONT - How do you staff 130 parishes with 55 priests, settle yet another round of clergy misconduct lawsuits and replace a retiring bishop?
   For Vermont's 148,000 Catholics, the new year promises historic challenges and change.
   Members of the state's largest religious group will start work Saturday on their chief concern when as many as 300 priests and parishioners meet privately to discuss how to consolidate churches to deal with a clergy shortage.
   The Roman Catholic Diocese of Vermont projects the number of priests will drop by half in 10 years, leaving about 55 clergymen to minister to more than twice as many parishes. As a result, Bishop Kenneth Angell is inviting all priests, deacons and two lay representatives from each local church to suggest possible solutions at a by-invitation-only meeting at St. Monica School in Barre.
   The session will be closed to the press and public, as will subsequent meetings of a smaller planning advisory committee. As a result, most Vermonters won't know the outcome until the bishop shapes the recommendations into a consolidation plan this spring - just before he'll submit his resignation on his 75th birthday, Aug. 3, as required by church law. ...
   Angell has served as Vermont Catholic bishop since November 1992. In his 13 years he has led church opposition to abortion and same-sex civil unions. His brother, "Frasier" sitcom creator David Angell, and sister-in-law died in one of the planes that hit the World Trade Center in New York on Sept. 11, 2001. Shortly afterward, the diocese faced a string of lawsuits charging priests with child sexual abuse.
   The diocese, having spent almost $400,000 to settle such cases in the past two years, hoped the scandal was over. But it currently faces at least a half dozen new lawsuits.
   Lawyer Jerome O'Neill of Burlington sparked the diocese to settle one case for $150,000 - the largest such payment in state history - and another lawsuit for $120,000. He since has filed six more cases in Chittenden Superior Court against four one-time Vermont priests, including the Rev. Edward Paquette, the Rev. George Paulin and the Rev. Alfred Willis. All the new cases are awaiting court hearings.
Diocese looks to defrock ex-priest [Feeney] - RCC.
   Post-Crescent, By Dan Wilson, ~ January 09, 2005
   GREEN BAY (WI) - Green Bay Bishop David Zubik has filed a request with the Vatican to defrock a former Catholic priest convicted of sexually assaulting two boys.
   Last April, John Patrick Feeney, 78, was sentenced in Outagamie County Circuit Court to 15 years in prison on three counts of attempted sexual assault of a child and one count of sexual assault of a child.
   At the time of Feeney's conviction after a February jury trial, Zubik issued a statement expressing his sympathies for the victims and said "we have begun taking the steps necessary to remove him from the clerical state."
   Last week, Renae Bauer, public relations coordinator for the diocese, confirmed that request was forwarded to the Vatican last month.
• Faith strengthened by stone; Award-winning project restores exterior of historic Albany cathedral that has served both poor and affluent for decades. - RCC.
   Times Union, http://times union.com/Asp Stories/story. asp?storyID=321 609&category= REGIONOTHER&BC Code=HOME&news date=1/9/2005 ; By PAUL GRONDAHL, Sunday, January 9, 2005
   ALBANY --The Rev. William Pape, rector of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, likes to tell the story of Walter, a homeless man, as a metaphor for the spirit behind the neo-Gothic landmark. Walter comes daily to the cathedral to pray.
   One day, Pape overheard Walter speaking outside to another street person. "Come on in and see my church," Walter said.
   "That's what the cathedral is all about," Pape said. "It's the church for Walter, as much as for governors and bishops and the wealthy." ...
   Earlier this month, Gov. George Pataki -- a neighbor when he is at the Executive Mansion next door -- signed a New York state historic preservation not-for-profit achievement award for the cathedral.
   The award-winning restoration has also been a financial drain on a diocese beleaguered by the cost of the priest sexual abuse scandal.
Sex abuse claims could cost diocese $1.6 billion [Los Angeles Archdiocese] - RCC.
   Ventura County Star, By Tom Kisken, tkisken@VenturaCountyStar.com , January 9, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - More than 540 child molestation claims against the Catholic diocese that includes Ventura County could be settled before summer at a cost as high as $1.6 billion. If negotiations fail, the church could be put on trial in a civil court marathon that takes three decades to complete.
   The contrasting extremes only increase Ann Sargent's desire for what alleged molestation victims in Orange County received Monday when a judge announced details of a record-setting $100 million settlement with the Diocese of Orange:
An ending.
   "There was closure," said Sargent, who alleges she was molested by an Oxnard priest when she was about 15. "They wouldn't be required to rehash it for some stranger again."
   Three years after a trickle of child molestation allegations against priests in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles swelled into a flood that includes at least 11 former Ventura County priests accused of abusing 136 people, the scandal's path to a final chapter is obstructed by caveats and contradictions.
   A Los Angeles church official says a settlement offer could come within a month, but lawyers are scheduled to meet with a judge this week to plan the first wave of trials. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:24 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Sun January 09, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Mon January 10, 2005 edition follows:-
• Poll finds 'growing uneasiness' among Catholics over church finances - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   USA Today, www.usatoday. com/news/religion/ 2005-01-10- catholics-poll_x. htm , By Cathy Lynn Grossman, January 10, 2005
   UNITED STATES - In the wake of the clergy sexual abuse scandal, a growing number of Catholic churchgoers worry that the financial fallout will impede the work of the church, according to a survey to be released today.
   The survey of 803 Roman Catholics who attend Mass at least twice a month finds "a growing uneasiness" with the way the church handles money, says Frank Butler, director of Foundations and Donors Interested in Catholic Activities, sponsor of the survey. That group's philanthropies give more than $200 million annually to Catholic concerns. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 09:28 PM]
Sex abuse victims seek disclosure of abusers' names [5 bishops] - RCC.
   Telegram & Gazette, By BEVERLEY WANG, Associated Press Writer, January 10, 2005
   MANCHESTER, N.H.- A national support group for victims of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy is demanding that church leaders post the names of known and suspected molesters on the Internet.
   The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, also want bishops to encourage more victims to come forward by visiting communities where abusive priests served.
   On Monday, the group presented its demands - including that bishops also lobby to eliminate the statute of limitations on reporting abuse - to the Rev. Edward Arsenault, a Diocese of Manchester spokesman.
   The group is focused on New Hampshire Bishop John McCormack and four other former deputies of Boston Cardinal Bernard Law, who resigned two years ago.
   The national abuse crisis exploded in Boston in early 2002 and quickly spread to dioceses around the country. Boston's Catholic church was rocked by allegations that church leaders ignored reports that clergymen for years had preyed on children. The archdiocese spent $85 million settling accusations brought forward by 552 people.
• Priest to plead guilty to molesting teens [Talbot (Jesuit)] - RCC. Boys.
   Telegram & Gazette, www.telegram. com/apps/pbcs. dll/article?AID=/ 20050110/APN/ 501101083 , The Associated Press, January 10, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - A Catholic priest has agreed to plead guilty Tuesday to charges he sexually assaulted teenagers while he was a teacher and wrestling coach at Boston College High School, prosecutors said.
   The Rev. James F. Talbot, 67, faces up to seven years in state prison under a plea agreement between his attorney and prosecutors, said David Procopio, a spokesman for Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley.
   Talbot is expected to plead guilty to one count of rape, one count of assault with intent to rape, and three counts of assault and battery.
   He allegedly assaulted two students during wrestling drills between December 1977 and the spring of 1979.
   Talbot is believed to be the first member of the Society of Jesus of New England, known as Jesuits, to be prosecuted on sex abuse charges.
   The Jesuits, one of the Catholic Church's largest religious orders, are noted educators who operate many colleges and secondary schools, including Boston College and BC High.
   Talbot went to the state Supreme Judicial Court in an effort to shield prosecutors from his personnel files, which included communications between Talbot and his superiors. The high court last year rejected that request.
• Austrian Woman Who Insulted Pope Fined - RCC. $325 fine. Austria flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Vatican City / Papal flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   ABC, www.wjla.com /news/stories/0105/ 199474.html , AP, 4:24pm, Monday January 10, 2005
   VIENNA, Austria (AP) - An Austrian woman who shouted insulting remarks about Pope John Paul II outside Vienna's main cathedral was fined $325 after a court convicted her Monday of disturbing the peace.
   The 46-year-old Viennese woman, whose name was not released by authorities, repeatedly and loudly denounced the pope and other Roman Catholic leaders as "child molesters" while standing in front of St. Stephen's Cathedral in 2003.
   On Monday, a Vienna court convicted her of disturbing the peace and being a public nuisance. The popular square outside the downtown cathedral was packed with visitors when she stood on the steps with a megaphone to ridicule John Paul and accuse the church of trying to cover up the sexual abuse of children.
• Sex Abuse Victims Seek Disclosure Of Abusers' Names [5 bishops] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   TheWMURChannel.com ; www.thewmur channel.com/news/ 4068996/detail.html , POSTED 5:48 pm EST, January 10, 2005
   MANCHESTER, N.H. -- A national support group for victims of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy is demanding that New Hampshire church leaders post the names of known and suspected molesters on the Internet.
   The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, also want bishops to encourage more victims to come forward by visiting communities where abusive priests served.
   The group on Monday presented its demands in Manchester -- including that bishops also lobby to eliminate the statute of limitations on reporting abuse -- to the Rev. Edward Arsenault, spokesman for the Diocese of Manchester.
   The group is focused on New Hampshire Bishop John McCormack and four other former deputies of Boston Cardinal Bernard Law, who resigned in 2002.
Wetumpka pastor jailed for sexual abuse [Dykes] - Baptist. Girls.
   Montgomery Advertiser, ~ January 10, 2005
   WETUMPKA (AL) - Garett Albert Dykes, the pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Wetumpka, was charged Monday with three counts of sexual abuse involving two girls below the age of 10.
   Dykes, 38, of 909 Oak Crest Court in Wetumpka, is in the Elmore County Jail under $1.5 million in bonds, and in addition to the sexual abuse counts, is facing three counts of production of obscene matter of someone under 17, and one count of sodomy, Elmore County Sheriff Bill Franklin confirmed Monday.
   Investigators say Dykes videotaped his crimes.
   "In my 25 years in law enforcement, I have never met someone who was so calm, cool and collected about a situation like this," Franklin said of Dykes. "Mr. Dykes admitted his involvement and was very forthcoming. What he told me and my chief deputy was almost a mirrored image of what the victims told us, down to the days, times and activities."
• Priest's Plea to Sex Assault Charges Delayed [1988 Buzankowski] - Sect not named. Child.
   WBAY, www.wbay.com/ Global/story.asp? S=2789252& nav=51s7V1aa , ~ January 10, 2005
   WISCONSIN - There's been a delay in court proceedings for a priest charged with two counts of first-degree sexual assault of a child back in 1988.
   Father Donald Buzankowski was expected to enter a plea to the charges Monday, but Buzanowski's lawyers have asked for a change of the judge in the case and that paperwork hasn't gone through yet. Until the paperwork is worked out, the case is on hold.
   Buzanowski is accused of assaulting a fifth-grader at Ss. Peter & Paul School in Green Bay three times.
Survey: Mass attendance steady amid crisis. - RCC.
   The Boston Globe, January 10, 2005
   NEW YORK -- The clergy sex abuse crisis that has battered the U.S. Roman Catholic Church for three years has had little impact on Mass attendance, according a study released Monday.
   In each of the 10 separate polls conducted between September 2000, before the scandal began, and September 2004, about one-third of Catholics said they attend Mass at least once a week, according the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.
   Regular attendance spiked to 39 percent in February 2002, one month into the scandal, then hovered between 31 percent and 35 percent over the next two years. The margin of error for each poll ranged from plus or minus 2.2 percentage points to plus or minus 4.4 percentage points.
   "These surveys indicate little if any change in the percentage of adult Catholics who say they attend Mass every week," said Mark Gray, a center researcher.
DA Won't Fight Media ID of Abuse Victims [Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   Wichita Eagle, Associated Press ~ January 10, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Prosecutors said Monday they will not appeal a judge's ruling that freed the media to identify alleged victims in the child rape case against defrocked priest Paul Shanley.
   District Attorney Martha Coakley said she and the alleged victim at the center of the case "agree that our time is better spent preparing for trial" on Jan. 18.
   Acting on a request from prosecutors, a judge last week issued an order barring the media from identifying Shanley's accusers. Prosecutors said they feared continuing to name the alleged victims would make them unwilling to testify.
   The Associated Press, the Boston Herald and The Boston Globe challenged the order, and on Friday Judge Stephen Neel overturned it, agreeing it was unconstitutional.
   But Neel stayed the order until Monday afternoon to give the district attorney time to decide whether to appeal.
Vatican probe involves area religious order [Maciel Degollado (Legionaries of Christ)] - RCC. Male seminarians. Vatican City / Papal flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   New Haven Register, Associated Press, Jan/10/2005
   HARTFORD (CT) - The Vatican has reopened an investigation into charges that a powerful Mexican priest close to the pope sexually abused seminarians.
   The allegations focus on the actions of the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, now 84 and based in Rome.
   He leads a religious order known as the Legionaries of Christ, which claims 600 priests in 18 countries. Its U.S. headquarters is in Orange, and it has a seminary in Cheshire.
   The allegations surfaced in February 1997. Nine former members of the legion said Maciel first abused them years ago when they were young boys or teenagers, ages 10 to 16, in seminaries in Spain and Italy.
   In 1997, the Rev. Felix Alarcon, one of the accusers, said, "Nothing ever came of it (the accusation). It's amazing … there are big people in Rome who are avoiding this." Alarcon had opened the legion's first U.S. base in Connecticut.
   Maciel and the legionaries of Christ have vigorously denied the allegations of abuse. Maciel has accused the nine men of a conspiracy to defame him.
• Tucson's Catholic Diocese passes audit on sex abuse prevention - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   KOLD, www.kold.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2787209 , ~ January 10, 2005
   TUCSON, Ariz. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Tucson reports successfully passing an audit on compliance with policies to prevent sexual abuse.
   In a memo sent to parishioners, Bishop Gerald Kicanas said the December audit found the diocese followed the norms established by the U-S Conference of Catholic Bishops.
   The audit examined record-keeping on programs and protocol for victim outreach, how allegations of abuse were reported and the creation of safe environments at schools and parishes for children.
Defense lawyers blamed in church crisis - Various sects.
   Dayton Daily News, By Tom Beyerlein, January 10, 2005
   DAYTON (OH) - An attorney who represented the Catholic church in 500 clergy sexual abuse cases from 1987-95 says many fellow defense lawyers have fanned the flames of the priest child sex-abuse crisis by playing hardball with victims and advising bishops to remain silent in the face of victims' pain.
   "I think lawyers contributed significantly in turning the problem into a crisis, making something that could have been handled by the church into something that is now going to haunt the church for decades to come," Minneapolis law professor Patrick Schiltz said.
   Schiltz is to discuss lawyer mishandling of the scandal at the University of Dayton tonight as part of UD's Wounded Body of Christ lecture series. The free program begins at 7 p.m. in the Sears Recital Hall in Jesse Philips Humanities Center. It's open to the public.
  Too Much Law, Too Little Justice is the theme of Schiltz's discussion. He is a professor at St. Thomas More School of Law.
   UD announced Friday that the Rev. Robert Schreiter, an expert on reconciliation from Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, will explore Is Reconciliation Possible? at the next installment of the series, set for 7 p.m. Feb. 1 at the Kennedy Union ballroom.
• Cops seek link in Methuen molest case [2005 Curlew; Paquette] - Mormon.
   Boston Herald, http://news.boston herald.com/local Regional/view.bg? articleid=62713 , By O'Ryan Johnson, Monday, January 10, 2005
   METHUEN (MA) - Methuen police said two volunteers at the town's Mormon church arrested last week for sex crimes may have shared more than their love of God.
   Chief Joseph E. Solomon said investigators are tracking leads that indicate Kevin F. Curlew, 43, of Dracut and Peter A. Paquette, 59, of Andover worked as a team, possibly targeting young victims for sexual abuse.
   "We're looking to see if they were working together," he said. "That doesn't mean they were molesting kids together, but they (investigators) are looking to see if they worked together to identify kids or were doing something together. We have leads that point in that direction."
   Curlew was charged with several counts of sexual abuse for pulling down the pants of a 9-year-old boy in the bathroom of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, while the boy's mother attended church functions.
   Paquette, the church librarian, was arrested Friday for failing to register as a sex offender for two convictions for indecent assault and battery in 1970 and 1980.
   He said he and Curlew were "absolutely not" working together, and called that part of the investigation "absurd."
Second church volunteer arrested in child abuse probe [1970s-80s Paquette, 2005 Curlew] - Mormon. Boy.
   The Boston Globe, January 10, 2005
   METHUEN, Mass. -- A second person faced charges in connection with a child abuse investigation at a Mormon church in Methuen, police said.
   Police said Peter A. Paquette, 59, of Andover, was arrested at his home on Friday. He pleaded innocent in Lawrence District Court to a charge of failing to register as a sex offender.
   Paquette is a volunteer librarian at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Methuen.
   Last Tuesday, Kevin Curlew, 43, of Dracut, also a church volunteer, was arrested and charged with sexually assaulting the 9-year-old son of a church member.
   Police said Curlew and Paquette are friends, and both were placed in charge of monitoring children while adults attended church meetings.
   Police said they received a tip last week that Paquette had not registered with the state Sex Offender Registry Board, a felony with a penalty of up to five years in prison.
   In two separate cases in the 1970s and 1980s, Paquette was convicted in Somerville and Chelsea district courts of indecent assault and battery on a child, according to Methuen police Lt. Michael Wnek.
Editorial 01/10: A moral obligation - RCC. Boy.
   Commercial Appeal, January 10, 2005
   MEMPHIS (TN) - The Catholic Diocese of Memphis is patching up its credibility with a common-sense agreement to report all past and future allegations of child sexual abuse by priests, other clergy members and employees to the proper authorities.
   The plan to begin reporting every allegation in the diocese, announced after a meeting involving diocese officials and the District Attorney General's office, usefully puts the force of official policy behind the church's stated aim of protecting children entrusted to its care and guidance.
   The talks arose from the case of a 14-year-old boy who leveled abuse accusations in 2000 against a priest who later was shipped out of the diocese for treatment, and a report two years later by a man who said he had been sexually abused by a priest who has been suspended.
   "Any case that is currently known by the diocese is going to be turned over to the district attorney's office," said Father John Geaney, communications adviser for the diocese.
Worcester Bishop Robert McManus lives the life of luxury while clergy abuse victims are thrown a few meager crumbs. [McManus] - RCC.
   Worcester Voice, ~ January 10, 2005
   WORCESTER (MA) - A review of the financial report recently issued by the Diocese of Worcester for the 2004 fiscal year reveals a budget of $33,771,673. The bishop appears to live very well at a time when the amount of money budgeted for victims of clergy sexual abuse is only pennies on the dollar.
   The Worcester diocese, unlike any other diocese in the United States, has refused to settle clergy abuse allegations in group settlements. Legal representation of Goulka and Reardon continue to advocate for dismissal of the remaining civil lawsuits, which would leave the victims with nothing.
   The pledge of Bishop Robert J. McManus at his installation last May to heal the wounded has proven to be without merit. Bishop McManus lives the lifestyle that resembles a king with a budget for his residence of $107,000 for one person to live on. His office obtained an additional $209,047 in funds. With one-third of a million dollars in expenditures, it hardly seems like the bishops live a life of poverty. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:22 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Mon January 10, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

• Police ready system for tracking sex criminals. Universal application. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   The West Australian, http://www.thewest.com.au , by Torrance Mendez, p 27, Monday, January 10, 2005
   PERTH (WA) Australia: Training will begin today for a new register that will log the whereabouts of everyone con­victed of sex crimes against adults or children.
   Twenty-eight police will be trained on a $3 million computer system that will become the Sex Offender Register, part of the Australian National Child Offender Register.
   WA's system will match that in Victoria by recording details of those who have committed crimes against other adults, not only offenders against children.
   Sex offenders will be required to register at a police station within seven days of conviction or release from jail.
   Adult offenders must expect to remain registered for up to 15 years for crimes involving inde­cent assault, child pornography and child prostitution.
   People convicted of murder, infanticide, attempted murder or sexual assault can expect to remain registered for the rest of their lives. [...]
   Acting Insp. Martin Voyez, WA's first State registrar, says the measures allow police to monitor the activities of sex offenders. But victims cannot expect to be notified if their attacker moves into their area.
   ... WA will not follow the United States example in which members of the public can check details of suspected offenders on the internet. [...]
   WA's register, due to open on February 1, came about after NSW started one in 2000. Pae­dophiles avoided it by moving interstate, forcing the rest of the country to impose similar laws.#
   [COMMENT: We don't think the New South Wales action forced other States to comply. After all, sometimes common sense wins. Why 28 police are being trained, when the shortage of police means that some areas of Australia are unpatrolled and lawless, can only be put down to greed and stupidity. A WA politician who recently said that a conviction for bestiality ought not to prevent a person working in child care must surely have left his common sense at home that day. COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 10, 05]
#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Tue January 11, 2005 edition follows:-
• Priesthood not meant for drunkards and womanisers- Archbishop Dery - RCC. Ghana flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Ghana Web, GNA, www.ghanaweb. com/GhanaHome Page/NewsArchive/ artikel.php? ID=73219 , Jan. 11, 2005
   TAMALE, GHANA - - Most Reverend Peter Porekuu Dery, Archbishop Emeritus of the Catholic Church in Tamale, has observed that priesthood was not a vocation for drunkards, womanisers or people wishing to make quick money.
   He said the profession was divine and special and meant for people dedicated to serve God.
   Archbishop Dery who made the observation when he ordained three deacons for the Damongo Diocese of the Church in Tamale, asked priests to salvage the image of the priesthood by eschewing all social vices and remain humble, respectful and honest in the performance [of] their duties. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:52 PM] [Bolding added]
Rev James D. Campbell, a former Catholic priest in Warwick, R.I. to serve 90 days in House of Correction. [1980s Campbell] - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Worcester Voice, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   WORCESTER (MA) - James D. Campbell, a former Catholic priest in Warwick, R.I., who pleaded guilty to rape, on December 22, 2004 in Worcester Superior court case WOCR2003-01575 had his sentence of 90 days in the house of correction imposed today by Worcester Superior Court Judge Peter W Agnes Jr.
   Previously assistant district attorney Jeffrey T. Travers and Mr. Campbell's lawyer James T. McCormick recommended a 90-day jail term. During the victim impact statement the victim also agreed to the sentencing.
   Mr. Campbell admitted he took J.H. and another teenager to a restaurant in Uxbridge nearly 30 years ago and molested them on different occasions.
   Rev Campbell while an ordained Catholic priest was never assigned to the Worcester Diocese, his only association to Worcester was the location of his crime.
• Chancellor of the Diocese of Springfield resigns [2004 Costa] - RCC
   Herald & Review www.herald-review.com/ articles/ 2005/01/11/ news/coming_up/ 1005112.txt , By MIKE FRAZIER, Jan 11, 2005
   SPRINGFIELD (IL): Monsignor Eugene Costa has resigned as chancellor of the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois and as pastor of parishes in Sherman and Athens, the diocese announced Tuesday.
   Costa formerly served as pastor of Holy Family Parish in Decatur.
   The Roman Catholic priest was found beaten and unconscious in a Springfield park last month. He since has regained consciousness.
   Two teenagers recently were charged with aggravated battery in connection with the case.
   A news release from the diocese stated Costa's resignation will allow him to deal with "previous instances of inappropriate and risky behavior that have come to light during this difficult period."
   The diocese is unaware of any inappropriate contact with minors, or behavior that would involve the principles of U.S. Catholic Bishops' Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People or of the diocese's own Policy on Sexual Abuse of Minors by Church Personnel, the release stated.
   If additional information becomes available that indicates otherwise, diocesan policy would be enforced immediately, the release stated.
• PM intervenes to stop costs against abuse victims - Anglican. Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   ABC (Australia), www.abc.net.au/ news/newsitems/ 200501/s1280532. htm , Wednesday, January 12, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: Tasmanian Premier Paul Lennon says Prime Minister John Howard has intervened to prevent abuse victims from repaying medical costs.
   At the end of last year 169 people abused while in state care were offered compensation payments.
   Steve Fisher from Survivors Investigating Child Sexual Abuse says after the majority accepted the payment they received a letter from the commission saying they would have to repay Medicare costs relating to the abuse.
   "It could go as high as in to the tens of thousands of dollars," Mr Fisher said.
   Mr Howard's letter says he has suspended any recovery action by the Health Insurance Commission while the matter is examined further.
   The letter also suggests the suspension will also apply to abuse victims who have received compensation from the Anglican church.
   The Prime Minister did not return the ABC's call.
Priest Pleads Guilty To Sexual Assault [1970s Talbot] - RCC. Boys. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   TheBostonChannel.com , January 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) -- A Catholic priest pleaded guilty Tuesday to sexually abusing two students in the late 70s while he was a coach at Boston College High School.
   NewsCenter 5's Amalia Barreda reported that the Rev. James Talbot pleaded guilty to five charges, including rape assault with intent to rape and assault and battery. The victims were two of his students more than 30 years ago.
   Prosecutor Audrey Mark told the judge that Talbot used to hold what he called aggression drills to toughen the boys up.
Cardinal will give deposition in sex abuse case [1990s Castaldo] - RCC. Altar boy.
   Newsday, By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN, Associated Press Writer, 6:25 PM EST, January 11, 2005,
   STAMFORD, Conn. -- New York Cardinal Edward Egan will testify later this month in the civil trial of a Roman Catholic priest accused of molesting an altar boy, a church spokesman said Tuesday.
   Egan will give a deposition on Jan. 27, said Joseph Zwilling, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York. The deposition will take place at a law office in Manhattan.
   Stamford Superior Court Judge Chase Rogers last month asked New York officials to enforce a subpoena ordering Egan to testify. Attorney Paul Slager, who represents the alleged victim, said in court documents that he had repeatedly asked the Archdiocese of New York to make Egan available for a deposition.
   Slager's client claims he was molested in the early 1990s by the Rev. John Castaldo while Castaldo was a priest at St. Teresa Church in Trumbull.
   At the time, Egan oversaw the Bridgeport diocese.
   "During the cardinal's years in the Bridgeport diocese, there was never any indication of any sort of sexual misbehavior on the part of the priest in question," Zwilling said last month.
• Finding empathy for Shanley [Shanley ] - RCC. Boys.
   National Catholic Reporter, http://ncronline. org/NCR_Online/ archives2/2005a/ 011405/011405n. php , By JEANNINE GRAMICK, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - I was anxious as I boarded the plane to Boston to see Paul Shanley, a priest accused of pedophilia, made notorious by The Boston Globe and the national media. What would we talk about after all these years? I didn't want to quiz him about the lurid stories I had read. I didn't want to ask, "Paul, did you do these terrible things?" I was hoping he would sense that I just wanted to offer him the comfort of friendship.
   I met Paul, who is scheduled for trial Jan. 24, in the early 1970s at a conference in Dayton, Ohio, about ministry to homosexual persons. Over the years, we would minister together in various ways. We marched to the Detroit chancery to protest the diocesan newspaper's firing of Brian McNaught, a gay man and youth columnist. We demonstrated for gay and lesbian civil rights legislation in Wichita, Kan., at the height of Anita Bryant's anti-homosexual campaign. We spoke at meetings for lesbian and gay Catholics, presented workshops to sensitize heterosexual Catholics about homosexuality, and prayed publicly that our society and church would acknowledge that lesbian and gay persons need make no apology for their sexual orientation.
   I knew Paul to the extent that one knows most colleagues in ministry. I understood him as a person who shared my vision of justice for the oppressed. I experienced him as an iconoclast who publicly denounced social, medical or ecclesial institutions that kept the underdog continually underneath. I admired this man who reminded the establishment what it was established for -- service to individuals, not self-preservation. I was proud to be acquainted with him and call him a friend.
   But for many months following the public revelations of his alleged abusive actions, I felt uneasy acknowledging I knew Paul, as if my association with him would imply I had little sympathy for victims of sexual abuse. Of course, I was appalled and horrified by the sexual violations against our young or not so young by persons in positions of trust. At the same time, my heart grieved for this man I had not seen in almost 20 years, but whose principles and whose advocacy for the downtrodden I had applauded for three decades. [Bolding added]
Gramick's charity to Shanley is more than he deserves [1960s + Shanley; Law] - RCC. Boys.
   National Catholic Reporter, By MAUREEN ORTH ~ Jan 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) -Sr. Jeannine Gramick obviously has never read the 1,600-plus pages of the Boston archdiocese's file on Paul Shanley. I have. Had she done so before taking up his cause, she would have seen that there were complaints about Shanley's inappropriate behavior toward minor boys going back nearly 40 years and that the diocesan-appointed psychiatrist who finally examined him in 1994 concluded, "Fr. Shanley is so personally damaged that his pathology is beyond repair."
   It is hard even to imagine, let alone understand, the callous disregard for these children, their parents and for Shanley's many parishioners displayed by the Boston hierarchy when confronted with his behavior through the years. Even more difficult to fathom is why Shanley's chief protector in the hierarchy, Bishop John B. McCormack, currently in Manchester, N.H., and others of his ilk still enjoy the perquisites of high church office.
   While the archdiocese was trying to negotiate with one accuser in 1994, for example, and two other allegations of abuse surfaced at the same time, Shanley, upon his retirement from the Boston archdiocese, received a pension and a letter of commendation from Cardinal Bernard Law. Law wrote: "For 30 years in assigned ministry you brought God's word and his love to his people and I know that continues to be your goal despite some difficult limitations." Shanley was eventually farmed out to California where he helped run a gay motel. The diocese to which he was sent was never told of his reputation, thus allowing him to strike again with impunity.
   What a slap in the face to the victims. This constant protection and charity displayed by one member of the religious to another, this reaching out to the black sheep, trying to bring him back into the fold at the cost of ignoring those who have suffered the abuse. This blasé attitude toward the "others" not of the old-boy and old-girl network has been a hallmark of the church's current sex abuse scandal. It is as if Sr. Jeannine, clinging to her warm memories of the fight for gay rights waged with Paul Shanley at the barricades, obscures the facts of his case. Why hasn't the church displayed the same charity toward those whose lives have been ruined by predator priests like Shanley? [Emphasis added]
The jury should still be out on Paul Shanley [Law, Geoghan, Blackwell, Shanley] - RCC. Minors.
   National Catholic Reporter, By DAVID FRANCE, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - From the beginning of the Catholic abuse crisis in America, a handful of names have come to symbolize the awful narrative: Cardinal Bernard Law, who covered up; the elfin Fr. John Geoghan, with upward of 200 victims; Fr. Maurice Blackwell of Baltimore, whose apparent immunity drove his victim to shoot him in rage. Other stories included a priest who pleaded guilty to rape and another who lured youngsters to his bed -- even after he was committed to a secluded treatment facility nicknamed Pedophile Palace. Their cruel and twisted stories fill my book, Our Fathers, with a heavy pathos.
   But in the popular pantheon of priestly criminality, one name stands out as especially atrocious -- Paul Shanley, graduate of the notoriously tainted Class of 1960 from St. John's Seminary in Boston, a man whose lengthy personnel files at the chancery bulged with thousands of complaints and admonitions. The Boston Globe called him "a depraved priest who knew few limits to his sexual cravings." The church settled many civil suits against him for perhaps several million dollars, and the Vatican laicized him summarily last year.
   I never got a chance to interview Shanley for Newsweek, where I covered the crisis, or for my book. Indeed, Shanley has yet to explain himself publicly. But as I pored over the evidence against him, a strangely nuanced and sensitive portrait of the man began to emerge. Shanley was an early gay-rights activist in his church, making him a hero to many in the 1960s and '70s. He also, it turns out, routinely violated his celibacy vows with young men he met through counseling situations -- many of whom seriously regret the encounters. This was professional misconduct at its most base.
   But is he a pedophile? Did he violate age-of-consent laws? Is Shanley a child molester? More than two years later, no jury has had a chance to draw a conclusion. The court settlements were done without a trial. Even his laicization was undertaken without a hearing, and more recently two of the most serious criminal charges against him have been thrown out before trial. [Bolding added]
From the Editor's Desk [1980s Shanley ] - RCC. Boys.
   National Catholic Reporter, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - I must start with a confession. Had anyone other than Sr. Jeannine Gramick come to me with the piece about Paul Shanley, I would have long ago dumped it in the circular file (see story). ["Circular file" is newspaper slang for Wastepaper Basket.]
   Shanley, a defrocked priest, has become notorious as an accused child molester, one of the better-known names in that pantheon of Catholic disgrace. To this date the file on him seems convincing -- if his activities weren't criminal, at least some of them described in profiles and newspaper accounts quoting church documentation show at the least a betrayal of trust and of office and an abuse of power.
   So why even go there?
   Frankly, because Gramick pursued the issue. I would be hard-pressed to name someone else so thoroughly infused with integrity and goodwill. In all the years that I have known her and that I and reporters who have worked for me have written about her, I have never heard her speak ill of anyone.
   Not bishops or figures in the Vatican, not even during the long, painful process that would most charitably be described as a trial and, I think more accurately, as high-level harassment. She ultimately was prohibited by church officials from continuing her ministry with gays and lesbians in the church.
• Pastor Sentenced For Sexually Abusing Daughter; Man Denies Allegations. [Sullivan] - Liberty Christian Center. Girl.
   KOIN, www.koin.com/ news.asp?RECORD_ KEY%5Bnews%5D= ID&ID%5Bnews% 5D=765 , Jan 11, 2005
   ALBANY, Ore. -- A former Albany pastor has been sentenced to nearly nine years in prison for sexually abusing his 11-year-old daughter.
   Timothy Sullivan was found guilty last month of two counts of first-degree sexual assault. He has repeatedly denied the allegations.
   Several members of his family and supporters from his congregation attended the six-day trial, in which he took the stand in his own defense.
   The 36-year-old was pastor of Liberty Christian Center. Once released from prison, he will be required to register as a sex offender.
• Priest resigns after beating in Springfield [2004 Costa] - RCC
   WQAD, www.wqad.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2795905 , ~ Jan 11, 2005
   SPRINGFIELD, Ill. A Catholic priest who was found badly beaten in a Springfield park last month has resigned.
   A statement from the Springfield Diocese today says Monsignor Eugene Costa will no longer serve as pastor of parishes in the central Illinois communities of Sherman and Athens. His resignation was effective Friday.
   The diocese says Costa is resigning to focus on his physical recovery and to deal with what the diocese calls instances of "inappropriate" behavior. Springfield diocese spokeswoman Kathy Sass declined to provide any details about the situation.
   Police in Springfield say two teenagers have been charged with aggravated battery in Costa's beating. (Thanks Ben Yount, WTAX Radio, Springfield) #
Victim advocate, diocese split [2003-04 O'Connor] - RCC. Non-RC wedding.
   The Arizona Republic, by Michael Clancy, Jan. 11, 2005
   PHOENIX (AZ) - One of the nation's leading advocates for the victims of clergy abuse says she was fired Saturday when officials in the Diocese of Phoenix learned that she had been married outside the church.
   Jenny O'Connor, who has led the diocese's Office of Child and Youth Protection since its founding in April 2003, was the key person in charge of working with victims of abuse by Catholic priests and preventing further abuse. She has been praised for her work by the executive director of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' youth protection office and by several of the diocese's abuse victims.
   Diocesan officials, citing the confidentiality of personnel matters, declined to answer any questions about O'Connor's departure. They were not available late Monday to explain their position on marriage.
   The office will be filled by current staff until a replacement can be found.
   O'Connor, in an interview late Monday afternoon, said she was let go for getting married in a civil ceremony that the Catholic Church does not recognize as legitimate. Catholic teaching specifies that marriages involving Catholics must be performed in the church.
   O'Connor said her husband is dying of cancer, so their wedding had to take place more quickly than a church wedding could be arranged.
   It took place during the Christmas break.
   [COMMENT: But, what about the clergy and religious who had been sinning and performing sex acts not just outside the RC Church's marriage rules, but outside the order of nature, for 20, 30 or 40 years, and were retained on the Church's payroll? The attitude of dismissing non-clergy, but conniving at and condoning clergy, has been practised in most ages and in most countries, and by many religions. COMMENT ENDS.]
[DOCTRINE: Purge out therefore the old yeast, that you may become new dough. (Bible, 1 Corinthians 5:7)
   In my letter I [Paul] wrote to you to stop mixing in company with fornicators. I was not including everyone in this world who is a fornicator, or everybody who is greedy, or dishonest, or worships false gods -- that would mean that you would have to cut yourselves off completely from the world. In fact what I meant was that you were not to keep company, not even eating with such a person, if any person who is called a brother be a person who has unmarried sex, or is covetous, or an idolater or a reviler or a drunkard or an extortioner. ... Remove the wicked from among yourselves. (1 Corinthians 5:9-13) DOCTRINE ENDS.]

Survivors seek abusers' names on diocese Web sites - RCC.
   Newsday, BY CAROL EISENBERG, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   LONG ISLAND (NY) - A national victims' group has asked Bishop William Murphy of Rockville Centre and four other bishops who worked under disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law in Boston to post the names of known and suspected abusers on their diocesan Web sites as a way to protect children.
   "Given your role in Boston, the epicenter of this catastrophic episode in the church, we believe you can and should do more," said the letter from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, which includes thousands of victims of priest sex abuse across the country. The letter from Chicago-based SNAP, which has chapters nationwide, was e-mailed to Murphy and other bishops who were top aides to Law on the third anniversary of The Boston Globe series about the cover-up of priest sex abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston. That series sparked revelations of cover-ups around the country leading to the suspension of more than 700 accused priests nationwide.
   It asks the bishops to implement what SNAP called "common-sense safety precautions" -- most importantly, to disclose and publicly post the names of accused priests. Although every U.S. bishop is required to remove priests found guilty of sex abuse under a national policy, they have considerable latitude about how to handle the cases. Hence, Murphy does not routinely disclose the names, while bishops in Baltimore, Milwaukee, Los Angeles and Toledo publish that information to varying degrees on their diocesan Web sites.
• Inquiry to focus on Sisters of Mercy residences - RCC. Minors. Ireland, Republic of / Eire, flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   One in Four, http://onein four.org/news/ news2004/nuns , by Patsy McGarry, Religious Affairs Correspondent - Irish Times, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   IRELAND: - The Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse resumes it public hearings this morning when its investigation committee begins an inquiry into residential institutions run by the Sisters of Mercy.
   Today and tomorrow it will hear evidence from representatives of the congregation on the Our Lady of Succour industrial school, at Newtownforbes, Co Longford.
   In March, the committee will begin its inquiry into the Goldenbridge orphanage, also run by the Sisters of Mercy and which was the subject of the ground breaking Dear Daughter programme broadcast on RTÉ television in 1996.
   The Newtownforbes industrial school was at the centre of controversy in February 2003 when an advertisement was placed in newspapers asking people to come forward who had knowledge of the institution through professional, social or other contact, including those "who consider that their experience of life in the institution was positive".
Sex Ritual To Cast Out Demons [? 2000s] - "High priest". Woman. Barbados flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Daily Nation, by Roy R. Morris, Tuesday, January 11, 2005
   BARBADOS - There's an old saying: Don't judge a man 'til you've walked a mile in his shoes. Keep this in mind as you read this article.
   Early last week I received a call from a woman who asked me to help her with a problem. I have to admit that while speaking to her I kept asking myself "how silly can a person get?"
   But as I replayed the conversation in my mind over the week, it occurred to me that my judgement was particularly harsh. When I did a full interview, my disposition changed dramatically.
   Andrea is 27 years old, but her level of reasoning suggests she is much younger. Her mother died when she was a baby. She attended secondary school until she was just 13 years old. She has not been to school anywhere since then. At the age of 14 she was raped. ...
   That was when, she said, a girlfriend of her brother drew her attention to an ad in The Nation, with someone identifying himself as a high priest offering assistance with situations such as hers. For $1 000 he offered to cast out her evil spirits and "cleanse the house".
   Andrea said she begged and borrowed to come up with the money, after the "high priest" shuffled some cards at her introductory visit to his home near the Ministry of Public Works, invited her to pull three and they all pointed to her imminent death.
   The problem was that none of the "cures" worked. He then determined that the demons had inherited her jewellery and they too had to be brought to him for cleansing. As time passed and neither relief nor her jewellery returned, Andrea said, she was told the four rings, three bracelets, two chains, earrings and anklet were so deeply possessed they had to be buried to "get rid of the spirits".
   Still she believed in the man.
   With nothing changing, he apparently determined it was time for the heavy stuff. According to her, she was told a ritual would have to be performed on her body and it would involve intercourse. For the first time, she said, she questioned his course of action, and was told she should not see it as sex, but the casting out of demons. ...
Vatican reopens sex abuse investigation [Maciel Degollado (Legionaries of Christ)] - RCC. Male seminarians. Vatican City / Papal flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The Journal News, By THE JOURNAL NEWS STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS, January 11, 2005
   NEW YORK - The Vatican has reopened an investigation into charges that a powerful Mexican priest close to the pope sexually abused seminarians.
   The allegations focus on the actions of the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, now 84 and based in Rome. He leads the Legionaries of Christ, a conservative religious order that claims 600 priests in 18 countries. Its U.S. headquarters is in Orange, Conn., but the order has a growing presence in Westchester County.
   The allegations surfaced in February 1997. Nine former members of the group said Maciel first abused them years ago when they were young boys or teenagers, ages 10 to 16, in seminaries in Spain and Italy.
   Maciel and the Legionaries of Christ have vigorously denied the allegations of abuse. Maciel has accused the nine men of a conspiracy to defame him.
   A spokesman for the religious order said Friday that the Legionaries of Christ had not been informed that the investigation was being reopened. Jay Dunlap said the Vatican investigated Maciel in the late 1950s and cleared him of any wrongdoing.
   "The Vatican investigated, moved in, questioned the Legionaries individually and in depth, and found absolutely no wrongdoing of any kind," Dunlap said.
Boothbay Harbor mother files suit against priest [? 1990s-2000s Lee] - RCC. Boys. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Portland Press-Herald, By JOSHUA L. WEINSTEIN, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   BOOTHBAY HARBOR (ME) - A Boothbay Harbor woman has filed a lawsuit against a Roman Catholic priest who she says molested her son from the time the boy was 3 years old until he was 5.
   The priest, the Rev. Thomas Lee, has denied the accusation to Our Lady Queen of Peace parish in Boothbay Harbor and to the Diocese of Portland.
   Lee voluntarily stepped down in 2002 while the diocese conducted an investigation into allegations he sexually abused the boy. He returned to a church in Lyman after the investigation was unable to substantiate the claim but stepped down again in 2003 after new allegations of misconduct with minors arose.
   Lee, who now lives in Portland, declined to comment on the lawsuit Monday.
• French ex-priest faces six months jail for abusing boy [1999 Alderson / aka Mon. Paul] - Orthodox Church. Boy. France flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Britain and Northern Ireland, United Kingdom flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Expatica, www.expatica. com/source/ site_article. asp?subchannel_ id=58&story_ id=15614&name= French+ex- priest+faces+ six+months+ jail+for+ abusing+boy ; AFP, Jan 10, 2005
   NICE, France (AFP) - French prosecutors on Monday demanded a six-month prison term for a former Orthodox priest charged with fondling a British boy who spent Christmas with him in 1999.
   Monsignor [?] Paul, born Peter Alderson, denied accusations he abused the British boy, then 11, saying he only "helped him undress" and "rubbed his back a little" when the boy was bathing.
   The boy, who lost his parents and was under the care of his grandmother who had made the acquaintance of Paul, was not present at the trial and was "on the run" according to his lawyer Marie-Pierre Lazard.
   Incriminating parts of a diary of the priest, who retired in 2000, were read out in court, including passages where he mentioned "losing control of himself" and "frantically searching for physical pleasures".
   Prosecutors requested an 18-month jail term for Paul, with 12 months suspended.
   A verdict is expected February 7. # [Emphasis added]
Jury selection starts in priest abuse trial [1990-91 Castaldo] - RCC. Altar boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Connecticut Post, By DANIEL TEPFER, dtepfer@ctpost.com , ~ Jan 11, 2005
   STAMFORD (CT) - Jury selection is scheduled to begin this morning in the civil trial of a Roman Catholic priest accused of molesting a Trumbull altar boy in the early 1990s.
   The Superior Court lawsuit, filed against the Diocese of Bridgeport, charges that the church hierarchy failed to protect children from the Rev. John Castaldo.
   Ernest Teitell, who with Paul Slager, represents the former altar boy, confirmed jury selection is scheduled to begin this morning, but Monday declined further comment on the case.
   Diocesan spokesman Joseph McAleer said the diocese does not comment on pending cases.
   The lawsuit claims Castaldo kissed the then-13-year-old altar boy on the mouth at least five times in the sacristy at St. Theresa Church in Trumbull in 1990.
   It states the priest took the plaintiff and two other altar boys on a trip to Disney World in Florida in August 1991 and sexually assaulted the plaintiff during that trip.
• Uneasy about the church, not about faith - RCC. Magnitude hits her.
   Orange County Register, www.ocregister. com/ocr/2005/ 01/11/sections/ local/local_ columns/article_ 373430.php , By MINERVA CANTO, Register columnist, mcanto@ocregister.com , Jan 11, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - The envelopes arrive every month, a gentle reminder for my husband and me to attend weekly church service and make a donation to our Catholic parish.
[Picture - click Minerva Canto]
   Each time, I put the envelope in a handy place, thinking this just may be the week that we go. But we don't go and months pass.
   Finally, last week, we heeded the call, resolving to take advantage of a new year and a fresh start. Maybe to atone for our failure to go on a regular basis, I tuck a few more dollars than I usually would in the envelope.
   At the end of Mass, I'm wondering what took me so long to return to church when an announcement is made about an upcoming Mass of reconciliation for the victims who were sexually abused by priests, nuns and other church leaders.
   I don't give it much thought until later in the week, when I read newspaper reports detailing the $100 million settlement along with a long list of the people accused in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange.
   And this is when it hits me. The magnitude of the abuse alleged by dozens of victims at churches.
   Not only is the sheer number of accused astounding at 45, but the timeframe - decades during which the abuse continued - is incredible.
   How could such abuse of power have taken place for so long? Certainly not without some complicit failures on the part of higher church figures.
   This is what many of us Catholics believe.
   Gertrude Bailey, a resident of Orange who describes herself as an "octogenarian raised on the Catholic Bible," thinks it's about time that the Catholic Church faces such scrutiny.
   "This kind of thing has gone on for too long," Bailey said.
   Linda Jones, 45, a parishioner at St. Cecilia church in Tustin, says she reconsidered her devotion to Catholicism when she first heard about the sex-abuse charges years ago. Until then, she had "blindly trusted" that church leaders rarely abused their powers.
   "I remember how disgusted I felt. ... Over time, I came to realize that there is no way all that (abuse) could have occurred in a vacuum," Jones said.
   What Jones and others of us have done, as details of the abuse have been revealed, is try to determine whether we've come in contact with any of the people accused even though this may not have been the kind of talk encouraged by priests and other Catholic leaders.
   I scan the newspaper list of accused for familiar names of churches I've attended through my years of living in Orange County. I see the names of the church where my sister got married, the church I attended as a young girl and the priest who officiated at my dad's funeral.
   It makes me angry to think of all the people betrayed by these sexual deviants, from those who suffered their abuse to parishioners who rely on church leaders to impart God's teachings.
   The truth is that mine has been an uneasy relationship with the Catholic Church. At times, I've been repelled by the hypocrisy of religious leaders and churchgoers who don't practice what they preach. Age and experience, however, have taught me that faith is what will carry me forth during the difficult times and what will enrich the good ones.
   But do I really have a right to be so angry and disappointed in the Catholic Church when my own allegiance to the church has been sporadic? I decide to seek out other, more devout Catholics, those who go to church not only on Sundays, when it's required, but also on other days.
   I talk to Jerry Murray after a weekday Mass at St. John Neumann in Irvine.
   "All of that is rubbish, nothing but rubbish. I don't believe a word of it," Murray says as he waves me away. "Don't buy into it."
   A fellow parishioner at St. John's is more forthcoming about his feelings.
   "Sure, I believe some of the allegations are true, but my faith in the Catholic Church stands firm," says John Shanahan, 58.
   Even with a $100 million settlement, there are no winners in this case. I think the Catholic Church as a whole has a long way to go in promoting healing and regaining the trust of parishioners disillusioned in the church's leadership, but the settlement was a good first step.
   After attending Mass for the first time this year, I wondered whether the money solicited for tsunami victims would indeed end up in Asia, as intended, or maybe end up elsewhere in the coffers of the diocese given the settlement. I instantly felt guilty for thinking this, but I couldn't help it.
   And then, just like that, I banished my doubt. I've decided to return to church with a different attitude, one not so mired in negative thoughts.
   After all, I figure that the ultimate authority on all the negligence and abuse within the Catholic Church is God, not man. #
   [COMMENT: Yes, the sheer MAGNITUDE of the criminality and sinfulness amazes observers. This writer quoted 45 as an astounding number. Overall, 4,392 priests or 4 percent of U.S. RC clergy have been accused of abusing children in 50 years (Reuters news service, Feb 27, 2004), mostly without being dismissed by the Church. A trickle more is coming to light each month. How this and other religions' leaders thought they could go on INDEFINITELY "winking" at child seduction is also amazing. A study of the various COURT STRATAGEMS, sometimes contradictory, is a real lesson in how NOT to manage faith. - jcm 13 Jan 05. COMMENT ENDS.]
Diocese, state head to court [2002-05 Manchester Diocese] - RCC not doing audits as promised.
   The Union Leader, By KATHRYN MARCHOCKI, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   MANCHESTER (NH) - The state and Roman Catholic Diocese of Manchester yesterday said the agreement they reached in 2002 is valid and should be enforced, although they remain at odds over how the diocese's child protection policies and procedures should be evaluated.
   In dispute is a provision requiring annual audits to determine if the diocese is in compliance with the agreement's terms and diocesan policies.
   To date, no audits have been done as both sides wrangled over what the scope of the audit should be. The matter went to court last September. Judge Carol A. Conboy questioned whether the agreement is void if both sides never reached a "meeting of the minds" required for a contract to be effective.
   In briefs filed in Hillsborough County Superior Court, both sides said the language clearly shows the agreement is valid; they detailed positions they will make during oral arguments set for Jan. 20.
Judge to rule on validity of church abuse agreement [2004 Manchester Diocese] - RCC. Prosecutor: "Policies and procedures do not protect children."
   Nashua Telegraph, By ALBERT McKEON, mckeona@telegraph-nh.com , Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005
   NEW HAMPSHIRE - Two years ago, on a cold and sunny December morning, the national and local media swept through Concord to record a historic agreement between church and state.
   The attorney general's office had agreed not to prosecute leaders of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Manchester for keeping sexually abusive priests in ministry. No charges would come as long as the diocese created a transparent system to protect children from abuse, and annually submitted to state audits to measure compliance.
   But the process hasn't left the ground; an audit has not been performed. What was once considered historic may become history. A Hillsborough County Superior Court judge will soon determine if the accord is valid - if there was a true meeting of the minds. On Monday, exactly 25 months after the agreement was signed, the diocese and state filed court motions previewing their arguments for a hearing Jan. 20 at the Manchester court.
   Both sides essentially differ on what an audit should entail, and who should pay for it.
   The attorney general's office contends the diocese has tied prosecutors' hands by parsing the contract's meaning. According to prosecutors, church leaders want to limit the audit to nothing more than a cursory review, thus preventing the state from determining whether children are safe.
   "The diocese now seeks to continue the environment of secrecy and avoidance . . . with the state only allowed to measure compliance by looking at written policies and procedures but no opportunity to look into whether they work or are effective," prosecutors wrote in their brief. "Policies and procedures do not protect children."
• Former teacher to plead guilty [1977-79 Talbot (Jesuit)] - RCC. Boys.
   The Boston Globe, www.boston.com/ news/local/mass achusetts/articles/ 2005/01/11/ former_teacher_ to_plead_guilty , By David Abel, January 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - A 67-year-old priest who worked as a teacher and wrestling coach at Boston College High School will plead guilty today in Suffolk Superior Court to raping one teenage student and assaulting another during wrestling practice in the 1970s, prosecutors said yesterday.
   The Rev. James F. Talbot, a Jesuit priest who taught at BC High between 1972 and 1980, agreed to serve five to seven years in state prison for three counts of assault and battery, one count of rape, and one count of assault with intent to rape, Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said in a telephone interview.
   "This is a fair result to the victims and one that they approve of," Conley said. "We hope this helps them find closure. Given the offenses, his age, and input of the victims, the Commonwealth is satisfied that this is a substantial penalty." Talbot, of Weston, could not be reached yesterday, and his lawyer did not return calls.
   Prosecutors would not identify the victims, except to say that they were between 15 and 17 years old when Talbot allegedly assaulted them. Conley described one or more of the assault counts as involving "improper touching."
   At BC High, where the abuse allegedly took place between December 1977 and the spring of 1979, officials said they hope the priest's imprisonment consoles the victims.
Sex abuse case assigned to different judge [1988 Buzanowski] - RCC.
   News-Chronicle, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   GREEN BAY (WI) - A new judge has been assigned to a case involving the alleged sexual assault of a boy by a former counselor and priest of a Green Bay Catholic school.
   Donald Buzanowski is charged with two counts of first-degree sexual assault of a child. The alleged victim, 10 years old at the time, was a student at Ss. Peter and Paul School in Green Bay. The abuse is alleged to have taken place in the fall of 1988.
   Buzanowski's lawyer, Owen Monfils, filed a request that a new judge be assigned. Buzanowski was scheduled to enter a plea in Judge Kendall M. Kelley's court room on Monday, but upon the court's receipt of the request for a different judge, the case was assigned to Judge J.D. McKay and a new date for an arraignment will be scheduled.
Priest's lawyer seeks new judge [1988 Buzanowski] - RCC.
   Press-Gazette, By Andy Nelesen, anelesen@greenbaypressgazette.com , ~ Jan 11, 2005
   GREEN BAY (WI) - A court appearance for Donald Buzanowski was scuttled Monday as his lawyer asked to have a different judge hear the case.
   Buzanowski, a priest, is accused of molesting a fourth-grade boy during counseling sessions at SS. Peter & Paul School in 1988.
   The Catholic Diocese of Green Bay suspended Buzanowski from his duties as a priest in 1990 and has filed paperwork with Rome to have him laicized. However, the Vatican has not yet taken action. Buzanowski resigned from the priesthood in 1992.
   Buzanowski's lawyer, Owen Monfils, filed paperwork on Jan. 5, requesting a substitution for Brown County Circuit Court Judge Kendall Kelley. A new judge has not yet been appointed.
   Buzanowski, 61, faces two counts of first-degree sexual assault of a child under 13 years of age. At a preliminary hearing last month, Buzanowski's accuser testified that he was molested on several occasions while in private meetings with Buzanowski.
Priest will admit to molesting boys [1970s Talbot (Jesuit)] - RCC. Boys.
   Portland Press Herald, By JOSHUA L. WEINSTEIN, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   PORTLAND (ME) - A Jesuit priest who coached soccer at Cheverus High School in Portland will plead guilty today to five counts of sexually abusing boys he coached while at Boston College High School in the 1970s.
   The Suffolk County District Attorney's Office in Massachusetts confirmed Monday that the Rev. James F. Talbot will change his "not guilty" plea to "guilty" at 2 p.m. today.
   He is scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 24 on one count of rape, one count of assault with intent to rape, and three counts of indecent assault and battery.
   In 2002, Talbot was indicted on one count of rape, one count of assault with intent to rape and five counts of indecent assault and battery.
Abuse victims seek reform - RCC. SNAP recommends lobbying.
   Portsmouth Herald, by Beverley Wang, Associated Press, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   MANCHESTER (NH) - A national support group for victims of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy is demanding that church leaders post the names of known and suspected molesters on the Internet.
   The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, also want bishops to encourage more victims to come forward by visiting communities where abusive priests served.
   On Monday, the group presented its demands - including that bishops also lobby to eliminate the statute of limitations on reporting abuse - to the Rev. Edward Arsenault, a Diocese of Manchester spokesman.
   The group is focused on New Hampshire Bishop John McCormack and four other former deputies of Boston Cardinal Bernard Law, who resigned two years ago
SEX-ABUSE TRIAL: Siblings testify priest's behavior worried them [2004 de Alba Campos] - RCC. Boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Detroit Free Press, BY DAVID CRUMM, January 11, 2005
   DETROIT (MI) - The older brother and sister of a Detroit boy who has accused a Catholic priest of sexual abuse testified in the priest's trial Monday that they were more concerned about the priest's behavior than their parents were.
   National attention is focused on the Wayne County Circuit Court trial of the Rev. Luis Javier de Alba Campos, a visiting priest from Mexico who was pastor of St. Gabriel Catholic Church in Detroit in early 2004.
   In court, his attorneys have admitted that the priest got drunk during a pastoral visit with the family and spent the night sleeping it off in a bedroom in their southwest Detroit home.
   At issue is whether the priest also sexually abused one of the children, a boy who was then 7 years old, in the bedroom they shared one night last April.
   David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said people across the country are following this case. Most accusations that surfaced during the Catholic sex-abuse scandal over the last three years involve incidents that occurred years ago.
   "Bishops desperately want us to believe that this is ancient history," Clohessy said. "Of course, this proves that it's not." [Bolding added]
Clergyman faces more accusations of sexual abuse [? 2000s Neathery] - Baptist. Boys. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Star-Telegram, By Melody McDonald, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   FORT WORTH (TX) - The alleged victims just kept surfacing.
   First, the Rev. Larry Nuell Neathery was arrested in April on accusations that he sexually assaulted a 13-year-old male church member.
   Then, the district attorney's office uncovered more accusations and charged the pastor with sexually abusing two more boys, one of whom is now an adult.
   Now, Neathery is behind bars again - this time accused of sexually abusing three young brothers.
   Neathery, 55, who had been free on bail since his first arrest, turned himself in shortly after noon Monday.
   He remained in the Tarrant County Jail late Monday with bail set at $750,000.
   All told, Neathery, who resigned as pastor of the Westside Victory Baptist Church several weeks ago, is officially accused of sexual misconduct with six males.
   "If there ever was an innocent person charged with this many offenses, it is him," defense attorney Don Carter said. "He told me when he was going into the jail, he said, 'Mr. Carter, I'm innocent. I have not done these things, but I'm turning myself in as the law requires me to.'
• Ex-BC High coach to admit sexual abuse [1977-79 Talbot (Jesuit)] - RCC. Boys at school.
   Boston Herald, http://news. bostonherald. com/localReg ional/view.bg? articleid= 62892 , By David Weber, Tuesday, January 11, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - A former Boston College High School teacher and wrestling coach is slated to plead guilty today to sexually abusing two of his students at the Dorchester school during the 1970s.
   The Rev. James Talbot, 66, is scheduled to appear at 2 p.m. in Suffolk Superior Court for a change of plea in the multicount sexual abuse case. Talbot reportedly has agreed to a prison term between five and seven years.
   "That's a significant amount of time for a 66-year-old man," said Michael S. Doherty, 36, an Auburn, Maine, man who said he was abused by Talbot when Talbot taught at Cheverus High School in Portland, Maine, after leaving BC High. "By his pleading guilty, it would be the first time he has taken responsibility for his actions."
   Doherty is among a group of people who sued Talbot, who could not be charged criminally in Maine since the statute of limitations had run out.
   "I'm not sure he's getting enough prison time, but it's better than nothing," said Doherty, who planned to attend today's hearing in Post Office Square.
   Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley confirmed Talbot is expected to plead guilty to one count each of rape and assault with intent to rape and three counts of assault and battery. The crimes involve two teenagers who allegedly were victimized during wrestling practice between 1977 and 1979.
New approach to curb abuse and aid victims - All sorts of abuse.
   Catholic News, ~ Jan 11, 2005
   UNITED STATES - An American non-profit group, It Works, has unveiled a new web site, VictimPower, which will open a confidential channel of communication between abuse victims and authorities. The group has harnessed the power of modern technology in a radical new effort to curb child abuse.
   The VictimPower initiative is designed to encourage victims to report abuse, by protecting their anonymity unless or until they are ready to come forward. At the same time, the web site will provide a way to hold authorities accountable for their response to complaints, and construct a thorough database that could guide investigators in tracing abusers.
   According to Catholic World News, the VictimPower site was designed and will be operated by a team of students from universities scattered across the US. Although the site was originally conceived as a response to the sex-abuse crisis within the Catholic Church, the technology can be used to respond to any sort of abuse.
   The VictimPower web site assists an abuse victim in registering his complaint, guiding him through a series of questions that help to identify the authorities in the Church, in law-enforcement, or elsewhere who should take an interest in his report. The web site allows the victim to check back and see what response these authorities have made; it also allows the authorities to ask him further questions, without compromising his anonymity.
Diocese facing new abuse suit [1986-87 Szantyr (Marian Order)] - RCC. Previous incident. Altar boy.
   Telegram & Gazette, By Kathleen A. Shaw, kshaw@telegram.com , Jan 11, 2005
   WORCESTER (MA) - Richard Chesnis, of 90 Canterbury St., has filed a civil suit in Worcester Superior Court in connection with the alleged sexual abuse of his son during the 1980s by the Rev. John J. Szantyr of Waterbury, Conn.
   He named as defendants Bishops Bernard J. Flanagan, Timothy J. Harrington and Daniel P. Reilly of the Diocese of Worcester; Cardinal Bernard Law, former archbishop of Boston; District Attorney John J. Conte, Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish and St. Mary School of Worcester.
   "We categorically deny the allegations in the lawsuit," James Gavin Reardon Jr., lawyer for the Diocese of Worcester, said, adding that the allegations are not based in "reality." Mr. Chesnis has a "deep anger" toward the Catholic Church in general because of the alleged abuse, Mr. Reardon said, and the Worcester diocese took action 15 years ago when it removed Rev. Szantyr's ability to function as a priest. He noted that Mr. Conte is prosecuting Rev. Szantyr on criminal charges.
   Mr. Conte brought four criminal charges of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14 against Rev. Szantyr in connection with the alleged abuse, and the case is pending before Worcester Central District Court. A mental competency hearing on Rev. Szantyr is scheduled here Feb. 17. Rev. Szantyr told the Waterbury Republican-American last week that he has Parkinson's disease.
   Mr. Chesnis was able to attest to indigency when he filed the suit on Jan. 3, and the court waived the customary filing fee. Mr. Chesnis is proceeding without a lawyer. The alleged victim has asked that his name not be used publicly.
   Mr. Chesnis said in his lawsuit that his son was sexually abused by Rev. Szantyr when he was an altar boy at Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish. He alleges that the priest threatened to "kill both parents if my son told us about Rev. Szantyr's attacks." He said his son had loss of self-esteem and loss of attention in school that resulted in poor grades. The alleged abuse occurred in 1986 and 1987, according to court records.
   Mr. Chesnis alleged that the defendants failed to properly act in this case and in other cases of alleged clergy sexual abuse that gave the priests a chance to abuse more children. He said their failure to act also caused problems for the victims and family members, including himself.
   According to court documents, Rev. Szantyr was assigned to St. Mary School and was accepted as a priest at Our Lady of Czechochowa, which operates the school, under condition "that he would be watched." Mr. Chesnis said in the suit there was a prior incident with children at his previous placement, and he was "given a second chance" in Worcester. Rev. Szantyr, 73, was never incardinated into the Catholic Diocese of Worcester, and was a member of the Marian Order of the Immaculate Conception. He previously was assigned to Our Lady Immaculate Parish in Athol.
   This is the seventh new civil suit alleging clergy sexual abuse filed with the court in the last two weeks. Boston lawyer Carmen L. Durso filed six civil suits, naming six priests of the Worcester diocese, during the last week of December. Mr. Chesnis was recently cleared in Central District Court of a charge that he violated a city ordinance by blasting a bullhorn too loudly outside St. Paul Cathedral during the installation ceremony for Bishop Robert J. McManus last May. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:19 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Tue January 11, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

• Death linked to paedophile inquiry. [White] - No religion link reported. Images. Gibraltar flag; Gibraltar Government  Britain / United Kingdom flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The West Australian, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE p 27, Tuesday, January 11, 2005
   LONDON - The commander of British forces on Gibraltar - found dead in his swimming pool on Saturday - appeared to have committed suicide after being recalled pending an investigation into paedophilia offences. The Sun newspaper reported yesterday.
   Commodore David White was the subject of a Ministry of Defence police investigation and had been relieved of his duties on Friday, the newspaper said. [...]
   The Sun reported that Commo­dore White, 50, had been under investigation for several months for allegedly having hundreds of indecent images of children.
   An anonymous navy source told the paper: "... with more information from the police last week, his position was no longer tenable." [...]
   Commodore White was born in London in 1954. He was brought up in Kent, educated at Eton, and travelled ... before joining the Royal Navy as a Seaman Officer in 1973. [...]
   In 1985, he took command of HMS Onslaught, in which he circumnavigated South America.
   He served on the military staff at NATO headquarters in Brussels and was assistant director for naval operations in the Ministry of Defence during the Kosovo crisis. [40 column-centimetres newsitem.] [Jan 11, 05]
#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Wed January 12, 2005 edition follows:-
Church needs to protect kids at risk - RCC. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Seattle Post-Intelligencer, By DAVID CLOHESSY AND JIM BITEMAN, GUEST COLUMNISTS, for Thursday, January 13, 2005
   David Clohessy is national director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests in St. Louis. Jim Biteman is SNAP Seattle area director.
   SEATTLE (WA) - The letter last month from a majority of the members of the Seattle Archdiocese's Case Review Board on sex abuse should have served as a vigorous wake-up call to Archbishop Alex Brunett and his staff. We share their concerns.
   Specifically, we urged Brunett against disbanding this hard-working, well-intentioned and experienced panel of abuse experts. We also urged the archbishop to immediately name and discipline the suspended priest who violated church policy by participating in a public service and quickly release the names of the other known and suspected pedophile priests who have been suspended due to credible abuse allegations.
   For a group of largely devout Catholics and other caring professionals, the language the review board members used in the letter and subsequent media interviews was clear and direct and Brunett fought the board at every turn.
   More specific, [sic] we maintain that making known the names of all admitted and suspected abusive clerics is common sense. It's the least that can be done to protect children still at risk. As the review board pointed out, bishops in Milwaukee, Los Angeles, Tucson, Toledo, Spokane and other dioceses have taken this long-overdue step to safeguard kids.
   Trying to keep the identities of potentially dangerous men hidden by blaming arcane and irrelevant church policies is simply reckless. It's time that the archbishop put the real safety of innocent kids first -- not the alleged privacy of likely child molesters -- by making known the names of the likely abusers.
   It's also time the archbishop prioritized the healing of the entire church community instead of his own well-orchestrated public relations campaign. These potentially dangerous men might be sodomizing or raping kids today because trusting parents don't know about their histories.
   Second, we are especially concerned about the accused priest who, according to the archbishop's review board, is guilty of egregious misbehavior, yet actively participated in a liturgy, which is against church policy. The archbishop has a simple choice. He can publicly and sternly discipline him, which sends the message that he's serious about sexual abuse. Or he can do nothing or act quietly, which sends the message that his much-touted policies and procedures are only for show. We strongly urge Brunett to take prompt action against this wrongdoer, irrespective of what happens with the abuse allegation against him.
   Finally, we implore the archbishop to keep the highly qualified board that exists, if he genuinely wants to help victims heal, prevent future abuse and restore trust in the church's hierarchy. Replacing it with another body, especially at this juncture, only undermines the archbishop's credibility and may hamper the willingness and effectiveness of other lay volunteers.
   So far, the archbishop has offered no logical reason why the review board members should not continue their valuable work. In a sensitive field like this one, having an experienced functioning team is important. Having an apparently truly independent group in an archdiocese is rare and encouraging. It should be preserved.# [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:34 PM]
• Orlando Man Sues Priest, Dioceses Over Alleged Molestation [1986-91 Emerson] - 2 RCC dioceses sued. Boy.
   WFTV, www.wftv.com /news/4076334/ detail.html , POSTED 3:41 pm EST, January 12, 2005
   ORLANDO, Fla. -- A man who says a Roman Catholic priest sexually abused him as a child sued him and the Dioceses of Orlando and Gary, Ind., Wednesday.
   The Rev. Richard Emerson is accused of repeatedly molesting the boy, now 29, from 1986 through 1991. He allegedly plied the victim with alcohol and pornography before the abuse, then used threats to keep him quiet.
   The alleged victim, identified only as "John Doe," claims the dioceses covered up the crimes and protected Emerson.
   Emerson, suspended last month as pastor of Notre Dame Church in Long Beach, Ind., has denied any sexual misconduct with his accuser. The two allegedly met at St. Charles Borromeo School in Orlando.
   The lawsuit, filed in Orange County Circuit Court, asks for more than $15,000 in damages.
   "We hope that this lawsuit will protect children and will bring out the truth surrounding the facts about the ministry of Father Emerson," said the plaintiff's attorney, Joe Saunders of Pinellas Park. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 03:28 PM]
Cardinal's deposition in sex abuse case closely watched - RCC. Lawyer: "secret culture for decades and centuries". Altar boy.
   Newsday, By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN, Associated Press Writer, 3:48 PM EST, January 12, 2005
   STAMFORD, Conn. -- New York Cardinal Edward Egan typically answers to the pope, but will soon face questions from a lawyer who says the prominent prelate ignored disturbing psychological reports on a priest later accused of molesting an altar boy.
   Egan's deposition on Jan. 27 in a civil lawsuit is a groundbreaking development in the sex scandal that has rocked the Roman Catholic Church, activists say. Egan, facing his first deposition as a cardinal, joins the other two major cardinals in Boston and Los Angeles as he faces questions under oath for his handling of priest abuse cases.
   Egan has long been criticized for his handling of abuse allegations when he was bishop of the Bridgeport diocese. The cases led to multimillion dollar settlements, including one reached just as Egan was promoted to cardinal.
   "It's long overdue," said Jeff Anderson, a lawyer who has represented church abuse victims around the country. "It is something that has been a secret culture for decades and centuries. It really is a peek inside that."
Pastor Says Ordeal Is Over [2001-04] - Community Church. Rev. Joe Ellison Jr. case dropped. Girl.
   Style Weekly, January 12, 2005
   VIRGINIA - After more than a year spent in limbo, the Rev. Joe Ellison Jr.'s battle in the courts as the result of sexual abuse allegations against him is finally over.
   "They've officially dropped criminal charges," Ellison says of the Chesterfield County Commonwealth's Attorney's Office, which had prosecuted him.
   Henrico County police initially charged Ellison Dec. 17, 2003, with four counts of taking indecent liberties with a minor and one count of aggravated sexual battery, based on information from the county's Department of Social Services.
   The alleged victim was a 16-year-old girl who had been in the Ellisons' custody for four years, police said. She alleged the incidents occurred during that time.
   Because of Ellison's ties to the Henrico County community, where he is pastor of Essex Village Community Church and founder of its community-outreach and child-care centers,  Chesterfield County prosecutor Duncan Minton took over the case.
State and diocese argue over audit [Manchester Diocese] - RCC.
   Portsmouth Herald, Associated Press, Jan 12, 2005
   MANCHESTER (NH) - Ten days before they are scheduled to argue in court, the state and its Roman Catholic diocese remain at odds over how the diocese's child protection policies and procedures should be evaluated.
   The Diocese of Manchester agreed to annual audits two years ago in a deal in which the state agreed not to seek criminal indictments for failure to protect children from molesting priests. But disputes about scope and methods mean no audits have been conducted.
   The dispute went to court in September. Hillsborough County Superior Court Judge Carol Conboy questioned whether the sides ever reached the "meeting of the minds" required for their contract to be effective. In briefs filed for oral arguments on Jan. 20, both sides say the agreement is valid. But they continue to disagree on terms.
   In the December 2002 agreement, Bishop John B. McCormack acknowledged the diocese had failed to protect children and that its handling of sexually abusive priests during the prior 40 years could have resulted in a criminal conviction.
   In its brief, the diocese argues that instead of the agreed-to "compliance" audit, the state wants a "performance" audit that would assess the effectiveness of child protection policies and procedures.
   The state says assessing the effectiveness of the diocese's programs is necessary.
Tupper Files Suit Against Priest [1977-79 Lee] - RCC.
   Lincoln County News, ~ Jan 12, 2005
   BOOTHBAY HARBOR (ME) - Marie Tupper of Boothbay Harbor said Tuesday that she wants her name to appear in the story about her filing a lawsuit Monday in Cumberland County Superior Court against Father Thomas Lee, former priest at Our Lady Queen of Peace Church, Boothbay Harbor. She claims the priest molested her son for two years, 1977-79.
   "I want my name out there. I don't want them to think I'm hiding," Tupper said.
   The Diocese of Portland began an investigation of the alleged sexual abuse in 2002 and at that time Lee resigned his ministry voluntarily. The investigation did not substantiate the allegations and Lee served a church in Lyman where he again left voluntarily in 2003 after new allegations were aired. Lee now lives in Portland.
• Arc Angel Publishing Selects National Distributor [Birmingham] - RCC. BOOK Don't Call Me A Victim
   ArriveNet ; http://press. arrivenet.com/ ent/article. php/558843. html , Jan 12, 2005
   BOSTON, MA -- (Market Wire - Jan 12, 2005) -- Arc Angel Publishing of Lowell, Massachusetts, has selected Koen Book Distributors to distribute its premier title Don't Call Me A Victim, Faith, Hope & Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church.
   Prior to this agreement, distribution was handled by Arc Angel Publishing.
   "We got to the point that the demand was such that we needed a national distributor. The subject matter of this story continues to be international news and there has been a greater demand for the book than we anticipated.
   "Koen Distributors has a history of meeting the demand of larger retailers with a broader customer base. We continue to feel that this book shares an important story and by selecting Koen distributors, this book will be available to a wider range of readers across the U.S.," said a spokesperson for Arc Angel Publishing.
   Don't Call Me A Victim, Faith, Hope & Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church is a first hand account of its author, Gary Bergeron, who was abused as a young boy by Boston's most notorious priest, Rev Joseph Birmingham. It chronicles the true story of the Catholic Sexual Abuse Scandal which began erupting in Boston in 2002 and made headlines around the world.
• Beaten priest resigns positions; 'Inappropriate and risky behavior' cited by diocese. [2004 Monsignor Costa; 2004 Gibson + youth] - RCC Chancellor resigns.
   The State Journal-Register (Springfield, Ill.), www.sj-r.com/ sections /news/stories/ 44989.asp , By JASON PISCIA, 788-1525 or jason.piscia@sj-r.com , ~ Jan 12, 2005
   SPRINGFIELD (IL) - The priest found severely beaten in a park last month has quit as a pastor and diocesan official to deal with revelations of "immoral" and "risky" behavior and to focus on his recovery, the Springfield Catholic Diocese says.
   The resignation of Monsignor Eugene Costa as chancellor of the diocese and pastor of parishes in Sherman and Athens took effect Friday, according to a news release issued by the diocese Tuesday.
   The announcement came three weeks after Costa, 54, was found unconscious near the band shell in Douglas Park, 400 N. MacArthur Blvd., the night of Dec. 21. His car was parked nearby.
   Two Springfield teenagers, Jamie E. Gibson, 17, and a 15-year-old boy, were arrested Jan. 3 and charged with aggravated battery in connection with the beating.
   Costa, who remains a priest, is still hospitalized at Memorial Medical Center, where he is undergoing therapy.
   Neither the diocese nor law enforcement officials have said why Costa was in Douglas Park that night, although the park has a longstanding reputation as a meeting spot for gay men.[...]
Diocese worker fired over marriage - RCC. Non-RC wedding.
   East Valley Tribune, By Lawn Griffiths, ~ Jan 12, 2005
   PHOENIX (AZ) - A marriage ceremony over the holidays, performed outside of the Catholic Church and without a priest, violated church law and has led to the firing of the diocese's Child and Youth Protection Advocate - the person responsible for ensuring sexual misconduct by church personnel doesn't occur again in the diocese.
   Jenny O'Connor, 47, said she was dismissed Saturday after acknowledging to the Rev. Fred Adamson, a vicargeneral, that she and her boyfriend married without the sanctity of a Catholic wedding because he is dying from cancer and they did not believe there was time to plan for and hold a church wedding.
   "They asked me to come in and just asked me why I got married, and I told them," O'Connor said Tuesday from her Tempe home. "They said it was outside the boundaries of being a good Catholic, and I explained all the reasons why."
   "They didn't seem to think that any of that is important, and that was it," O'Connor said. She said she was first asked to resign, but when she declined, she was terminated.
   While the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix's judicial vicar, the Rev. Tim Davern, said he could not directly comment on a personnel matter, he said that a person with comparable circumstances should discuss the matter with one's parish priest.
2 Belarusians extradited in child-porn case [2000s Zalatarou, Buchnev] - Religions and others. International dissemination alleged. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Belarus flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The Washington Times, By Jerry Seper Jan 11, 2005
   UNITED STATES - The president and the marketing director of a Belarus-based Internet billing company linked to more than 1,000 child-pornography arrests worldwide have been extradited from France to the United States to face conspiracy, money-laundering and child-pornography charges, federal authorities said yesterday.
   U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) spokesman Dean Boyd said Yahor Zalatarou, 26, and Alexei Buchnev, 27, both of Minsk, Belarus, were arraigned Thursday in U.S. District Court in Newark, N.J., after their arrival from France.
   Mr. Boyd said Mr. Zalatarou, president of Regpay Co. Ltd., and Mr. Buchnev, the firm's marketing director, were ordered held pending trial, tentatively scheduled for March 1. ...
   ICE agents have arrested 190 persons in the United States in connection with the case, he said. The agency also has provided leads to foreign law-enforcement members that have resulted in approximately 860 arrests in Australia, Denmark, Finland, France, China, Norway, Scotland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, he said.
   Mr. Boyd said some of the subscribers arrested included a California seventh-grade teacher, the chief of pediatric medicine at a New York hospital, a minister at a girls school in New Jersey, a Louisiana Catholic priest and a Nevada camp counselor.
   Most recently, an award-winning firefighter in California was charged with 56 counts of possessing child pornography purchased from Regpay-affiliated sites, he said.
City author writes on priest scandal - RCC. BOOK Coming Out & Covering Up United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The Register Citizen, By JAMIE PRESTON OLMSTEAD, Jan 12, 2005
   TORRINGTON (CT) -- While she has yet to find a specific niche among the fiction, non-fiction and self-help books she's written, Lisa Rene Reynolds puts a great deal of her personal experiences as a therapist into all of her subject matter.
   On the heels of a fiction novel and currently in the middle of a manuscript dedicated to the field of psychiatry, Reynolds, who lives in New Milford and works in Torrington, has been caught up in the whirlwind of attention over her latest release, "Coming Out & Covering Up," a commentary by local priests on the pedophilia scandal that has rocked the Catholic faith.
   "The book has been doing fairly well, holding its own. It's certainly something that is in the news," Reynolds, 35, said Tuesday. "I've been in a frenzy for a while, doing a ton of appearances and signings."
   Reynolds, who interviewed countless Connecticut priests as part of her three-month research and writing process, drew primarily on her work experience with Danbury Catholic Family Services for background information.
   Under the arm of Danbury Catholic Family Services, Reynolds was responsible for helping remove offending priests from office, and providing therapy to the endless number of related rape or molestation victims. It came as some surprise to Reynolds, then, that local Catholic priests met her research with open arms.
Priest pleads guilty to abuse [1970s Talbot] - RCC. Boys.
   Nashua Telegraph, By DENISE LAVOIE, The Associated Press, Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - A Jesuit priest who taught and coached at Boston College High School pleaded guilty Tuesday to molesting two teenage boys during wrestling drills.
   Prosecutors said the Rev. James Talbot, 67, sexually assaulted the two students in the late 1970s, when he was teaching history and coaching soccer and hockey at the all-male parochial school.
   Talbot, 67, is the first member of the Jesuit order prosecuted in the Boston Archdiocese since the clergy sex abuse scandal erupted here in 2002.
   He pleaded guilty to one count each of rape and assault with intent to rape, and three counts of assault and battery. Under a plea deal with prosecutors, he faces five to seven years in prison when he is sentenced on Jan. 24.
• L.D.S. Church Missionary Accused Of Sexual Abuse [2000s Baysden] - Mormon. Girls.
   KSL, http://tv.ksl. com/index.php? nid=39&sid= 143871 , Jan. 11, 2005
   UTAH - A missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is accused of sexually abusing two teenage girls, and videotaping the acts. Sandra Yi is live in our newsroom with details of the investigation.
   Police say the suspect videotaped himself fondling the 2 teenage girls as they slept. 21-year old John Baysden was arrested Saturday.
   Court documents say he was staying at a home in this Roy neighborhood. One of the victims awoke to find him standing over her with his hand on her breast. She noticed his video camera.
   Police say, when the family confronted him, he gave them the camera and videotapes. Police say, the tapes also show Baysden fondling the teen's 17-year old cousin, on a different occasion.
   He told police, he also inappropriately touched the same girl once before while she slept and didn't tape it. He also admitted trying to tape the bedroom of his neighbor's 16-year old daughter.
• LDS missionary is charged with sexual abuse of teens [2000s Baysden] - Mormon. Girls.
   Salt Lake Tribune, www.sltrib. com/utah/ci_ 2522431 , by Justin Hill, Jan 12, 2005
   UTAH - An LDS Church missionary serving in the Ogden Mission was being held Tuesday on $30,000 bail after police say he sexually abused two teenage girls while they were sleeping and videotaped it. John Baysden, 21, of North Carolina, was 17 months into his mission and had been in Roy for five weeks, said Roy police Chief Greg Whinham.
   The alleged abuse occurred at the home of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Roy, where the missionary spent the night on more than one occasion, Whinham said.
   The church members "placed their trust in him," he said. "Obviously, that trust was violated."
More abuse victims possible [? 2000s Dykes] - Baptist. Girls.
   Montgomery Advertiser, By Marty Roney, ~ Jan 12, 2005
   WETUMPKA (AL) -- Investigators with the Elmore County Sheriff's Office are checking to see if a Wetumpka minister arrested on sex abuse charges could have more victims.
   Garett Albert Dykes, 38, of 909 Oak Crest Court, faces three counts of sexual abuse, three counts of production of obscene matter of someone under 17 and one count of sodomy, said Sheriff Bill Franklin. He is the minister of Calvary Baptist Church in downtown Wetumpka.
   The victims are girls under age 10, the sheriff said.
   Dykes was arrested Sunday night. He admitted to the sheriff his involvement in the crimes and that he videotaped the abuse. Tuesday, parents of a third young girl came forward to authorities.
   "This young girl told a similar story that the two victims told us," Franklin said. "We are looking into what she has told us. We haven't filed any more charges against Mr. Dykes, but more may be coming. It's important to know that the abuse occurred at the Dykes' home. So far we have no evidence of activity outside the periphery of the home."
Priest will receive up to 7 years for abuse [1977-79, 1984-85 Talbot (Jesuit)] - RCC.
   Portland Press Herald, By JEN FISH, Jan 12, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - A Jesuit priest who taught and coached at Cheverus High School in Portland faces as much as seven years in prison after pleading guilty to sexually abusing boys he coached at Boston College High School in the 1970s. The Rev. James F. Talbot, 67, pleaded guilty Tuesday to rape, assault with intent to rape, and three counts of assault and battery. He will be sentenced Jan. 24.
   The plea agreement says Talbot will spend five to seven years in a state prison and three years on probation, and will be required to register as a sexual offender and give the state of Massachusetts a DNA sample.
   Tuesday's hearing marked the first time Talbot has publicly acknowledged his crimes. He was sued in 1998 by a former Cheverus student, Michael S. Doherty, who accused the priest of molesting him in 1984 and 1985.
   The lawsuit was settled in 2001 for an undisclosed amount of money. Talbot, who had been fired from Cheverus in 1998, avoided criminal prosecution in Maine because the statue of limitations had expired.
• Update On Wetumpka Pastor Arrested Case [? 2000s Dykes] - Baptist. Girls.
   WSFA, www.wsfa.com/ Global/story. asp?S=2797244& nav=0RdEV5dN , ~ Jan 12, 2005
   WETUMPKA (AL) - The Elmore County Sheriff is now investigating a third accusation of sexual abuse against the pastor of Wetumpka's Calvary Baptist Church. He was arrested Sunday afternoon at his church after the families of two eight year old girls filed charges against him.
   Garret Dykes made his first court appearance Tuesday morning. About a half dozen other inmates also made their first appearance in court Tuesday morning and Dykes got there early before the others, sat in court calmly, chatting with the sheriff and the Assistant District Attorney.
   He didn't seem nervous or disturbed at all. When it was his time to go before the judge, Dykes said he understood the seven charges against him for sexual abuse and sodomy as well as production charges for making a video tape of the incidents. He could face up to life in prison, if convicted.
   Dykes' church members say they are still in shock. They describe him as articulate and personable with an out going personality and they don't know what they should have done differently. John Pritchett is the Church Administrator.
   He says, "We did a background check on this man. We did a credit check on this man. Checked his references. Our search committee interviewed him, talked with church members of his former church and I don't know what else you can do to check someone out."
Pastor of St. Francis accused [1977 Sullivan / O'Sullivan] - RCC.
   Weymouth News, By Michael Verseckes, mverseck@cnc.com , Wednesday, January 12, 2005
   WEYMOUTH (MA) - The Rev. Eugene Sullivan, pastor of Saint Francis Xavier Church in Weymouth, has accepted voluntary leave due to a civil lawsuit which has been filed against him alleging that he abused a minor in 1977.
   According to published reports, Sullivan's attorney, Paul Kelly, said that the plaintiff has the Rev. Sullivan confused with another Catholic priest with an almost identical name who was convicted of molestation. In 1984, that priest, the Rev. Eugene O'Sullivan, pleaded guilty to raping an altar boy in Arlington.
   The Rev. Sullivan's lawyer insists that the plaintiff has accused the wrong man.
   The lawsuit, filed by attorney Mitchell Garabedian, names the Rev. Sullivan as one of the defendants who allegedly molested the plaintiff when he was 15 years old.
Accused priest has moral support [2004 de Alba Campos] - RCC. Boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Detroit Free Press, BY PATRICIA MONTEMURRI, January 12, 2005
   DETROIT (MI) - Supporters flew in from Mexico to testify Tuesday that the Rev. Luis Javier de Alba Campos was a selfless priest, an outstanding teacher and a moral man.
   Employees and parishioners from St. Gabriel Catholic Church said he revitalized the southwest Detroit parish in just a few months, drawing standing-room crowds for Spanish masses and working even on his days off.
   But an 8-year-old boy -- who wasn't quite sure when his birthday is and thinks he'd like to learn ice skating -- testified in Wayne County Circuit Court that the priest fondled him in bed and asked the youngster, "Did it feel good?"
   The boy was the last person in his six-member family to testify about an evening last spring when de Alba Campos, recruited from Mexico early in 2004 to lead St. Gabriel, was invited over to bless the family's home.
   The boy's father and the priest acknowledged splitting a bottle of tequila that night, and the drunken priest slept an upstairs bedroom with the boy, who was then 7.
   Once in bed, the boy said the priest pulled down his underwear and touched his penis.
Former priest is accused of sexual abuse [1980-81 McGrath] - RCC. Altar boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Post-Dispatch, ~ Jan 12, 2005
   ST. LOUIS (MO) - Former Roman Catholic priest Michael S. McGrath was sued Tuesday over allegations that he sexually abused a teenage altar boy at All Souls Church in Overland in 1980 and 1981.
   John Doe GM, as he is known in the lawsuit, also sued the Archdiocese of St. Louis and Archbishop Raymond Burke.
   The suit, filed in St. Louis circuit court, says church officials knew that McGrath took trips with young children, invited them home and spent "unusual amounts of time alone" with them, but didn't tell parishioners or parents.
   Church officials also didn't properly supervise McGrath and remove him when allegations surfaced, the suit says.
   McGrath and the archdiocese have been sued 17 other times since 2003, according to court records. The church has settled many of those suits and settled another Monday, says Bernard Huger, one of the lawyers representing the church.
One man's burden [Shanley] - RCC. Boys.
   The Boston Globe, By Eileen McNamara, Globe Columnist, January 12, 2005
   BOSTON (MA) - Even though Paul Shanley would walk, his accuser should feel free to walk away.
   It is a terrible burden to expect one man to do what so many other, more powerful men would not do, but that is just what the criminal justice system is asking of the last man standing in the criminal case against the notorious former Roman Catholic priest.
   All of those PowerPoint presentations of Shanley's career trajectory, those 800 pages of secret church files enumerating the long-ignored complaints against him, even the money paid by the church to settle the civil claims against him, will not yield a criminal conviction against the defrocked priest.
   For that, prosecutors need one young man to testify about his memories of the popular and charismatic priest allegedy pulling him out of religious education classes years ago in order to rape him.
   Yesterday, he was willing to go forward with the trial that is scheduled to begin next week. Tomorrow? No one is placing any bets.
   It was never going to be easy to convict Shanley of crimes said to have occurred between 1979 and 1989. Only a quirk of Massachusetts law made it possible to prosecute him at all; the statute of limitations that normally would have applied was suspended because Shanley had moved out of state.
Town church gets permanent pastor [McGoldrick] - RCC.
   Greenwich Time, By Ivan H. Golden, January 12, 2005
   FAIRFIELD (CT) - -- Parishioners at St. Paul Church in Greenwich have waited more than two years for the Rev. Frank A. Winn.
   The Catholic parish has been without a permanent pastor since December 2002, when the Rev. Albert McGoldrick was replaced in response to an allegation of child sexual abuse from 20 years ago.
   Since then, a series of interim priests has filled in at the 1,000-member parish on Sherwood Avenue in backcountry Greenwich. But when Winn moves into the parish rectory on Saturday, he hopes it will be the start of a long relationship.
   "I think the first thing on my agenda is to be a real presence there for the parishioners," Winn said yesterday in the rectory of Our Lady of the Assumption Church in Fairfield, where he is associate pastor. "And to satisfy their concern that I'm not just going to be there for a few months and then leave. I'm going to be there for a long time."
   [COMMENT: "Permanent"? "long time"? COMMENT ENDS.]
Egan to give deposition in sex abuse case [1990s Castaldo] - RCC. Court order to be enforced. Altar boy.
   Record-Journal, ~ Jan 12, 2005
   STAMFORD (CT) - New York Cardinal Edward Egan will testify later this month in the civil trial of a Roman Catholic priest accused of molesting an altar boy, a church spokesman said Tuesday.
   Egan will give a deposition on Jan. 27, said Joseph Zwilling, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York. The deposition will take place at a law office in Manhattan.
   Stamford Superior Court Judge Chase Rogers last month asked New York officials to enforce a subpoena ordering Egan to testify. Attorney Paul Slager, who represents the alleged victim, said in court documents that he had repeatedly asked the Archdiocese of New York to make Egan available for a deposition.
   Slager's client claims he was molested in the early 1990s by the Rev. John Castaldo while Castaldo was a priest at St. Teresa Church in Trumbull.
   At the time, Egan oversaw the Bridgeport diocese.
   "During the cardinal's years in the Bridgeport diocese, there was never any indication of any sort of sexual misbehavior on the part of the priest in question," Zwilling said last month.
Ex-priest gets jail time for molesting teens [1975-78 Campbell] - RCC. ? Missionaries of the Sacred Heart. Males.
   Telegram & Gazette, By Gary V. Murray, gmurray@telegram.com , Jan 12, 2005
   WORCESTER (MA) - A former priest was sentenced to jail yesterday after pleading guilty last month to charges of rape, assault and battery, furnishing alcohol to a minor and committing an unnatural and lascivious act.
   James D. Campbell, 59, a former Catholic priest in West Warwick, R.I., was sentenced to 90 days in the House of Correction with 10 years of probation to follow after admitting Dec. 22 in Worcester Superior Court that he molested two male teenagers in the 1970s in Uxbridge. Mr. Campbell was assigned to St. Joseph Parish in West Warwick at the time of the assaults, which occurred from 1975 to 1978.
   The sentence imposed yesterday by Judge Peter W. Agnes Jr. was recommended by Assistant District Attorney Jeffrey T. Travers and Mr. Campbell's lawyer, James McCormick.
   As conditions of probation, Mr. Campbell was ordered to register as a sex offender, provide a DNA sample to law enforcement authorities and undergo drug, alcohol, sex offender and psychological evaluations and any related treatment recommended by the Probation Department. Mr. Campbell was further ordered to have no contact with the victims and no unsupervised contact with anyone under the age of 16.
   Mr. Campbell, last known to be living with the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in Pennsylvania, pleaded guilty last month to single counts of rape and committing an unnatural and lascivious act, and two counts each of assault and battery and furnishing alcohol to a minor. Judge Agnes postponed sentencing until yesterday.
   Prosecutors said Mr. Campbell molested the victims after taking them to a restaurant and plying them with alcohol.
   Judge Agnes made reference yesterday to what he described as the "extraordinary" impact statement made by one of the victims at the time of Mr. Campbell's plea and said the man's agreement with the proposed sentence weighed heavily in his sentencing deliberations.
   Judge Agnes cautioned Mr. Campbell that he could be sentenced to up to life imprisonment if he were to violate the terms of his probation after his release from custody.
Site safe place to report sex abuse - 800 signed on within days. Various religions linked.
   Telegram & Gazette, By Kathleen A. Shaw, kshaw@telegram.com , Jan 12, 2005
   MASSACHUSETTS - A new Web site went online last week as a safe place for sexual abuse victims to report anonymously to police what happened to them.
   VictimPower.org is the work of an Andover family, a technological adviser from Washington state and a group of college and university students who assisted as part of a college project.
   A dozen students from Georgetown University, Harvard University, Boston University, Azusa Pacific of Los Angeles, John Carroll College of Maryland, St. Anselm College of Vermont, Montgomery College of Maryland and Duquesne University of Pittsburgh did the legwork to assemble contact information of all police departments, prosecutors and other agencies in 50 states.
   Two leaders in development of the site are lawyer Stephen H. Galebach and his wife, Diane Galebach, of Andover. Devout Catholics and the parents of 10 children, they became concerned about victims after discovering the full extent of the clergy sexual abuse scandal.
   Mr. Galebach, who has a law practice in Andover, was a legal policy adviser for five years in the Reagan White House and was senior special assistant to U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese during the Reagan administration. He is legal adviser for the site, which is operated by a nonprofit organization called It Works.
   The site in its first week - it was launched Thursday - has been a success, he said. About 800 people have signed on as users and some of the reports being made to police and prosecutors are "of a serious nature." The VictimPower site has the capacity for two-way anonymous communication and the program blocks the e-mail address of the person making the report. Police and prosecutors can go back to the informant to get additional information without knowing the identity of the person with whom they are communicating, he said.
   A user signing on from Worcester can communicate anonymously with the office of District Attorney John J. Conte, the Worcester Police Department and the Catholic Diocese of Worcester or the headquarters of many Protestant denominations. They can also make reports involving non-church-related abuse or harassment.
   Mr. Galebach said the students found all the contact information for the 50 states but they could expand the service to include foreign countries if they can find students or other people to work on locating the contact information.
   The new site was praised by David Clohessy, national director of Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. "I'm confident that some victims now trapped in silence, shame and self-blame will use this new vehicle to unburden themselves of the horrific secrets they carry and hopefully achieve some measure of justice and prevention," he said.
   Sgt. Gary J. Quitadamo, spokesman for the Worcester Police Department, said it is not opposed to the Web site, but said police need a victim before they can prosecute. The Web site could prove valuable to law enforcement if it gives people a place to communicate until they are ready to come forward and identify themselves to police or the district attorney. He acknowledged that abuse victims sometimes have a difficult time beginning to make themselves known to law enforcement.
   Anonymous information can prove valuable, Sgt. Quitadamo said, if police are able to take that information and build a case against an alleged perpetrator. "We take it on a case-by-case basis," he said.
   The Worcester Police Department accepts information at wpd@ci. Worcester. ma.us and has an anonymous tip line at (508) 799-8655. Police would also work with the office of Mr. Conte on these cases, he said.
   The Web site designers said that although empowering victims is their first aim, they believe the site will benefit prosecutors and church and school authorities. They believe law enforcement and district attorneys will hear from people they would not hear from if victims had to identify themselves.
   "During my time in the Reagan administration, I worked closely with key players in the law enforcement community on crimes involving sexual abuse and exploitation," Mr. Galebach said. He was the White House "lead" in working for passage of the Child Protection Act of 1984, a bill that toughened federal laws dealing with the production and distribution of pornographic materials involving children. "VictimPower has tremendous potential to help law enforcement and victims. Two-way communication with an anonymous victim or witness is a powerful tool, possible today with technology that none of us could have imagined in the 1980s," he said. Hot lines can offer confidentiality, he said, but the "total anonymity" of the Web site is different.
   "Courts can order that a whistleblower's identity be disclosed. But VictimPower does not know the identity of the users," he said.
   Mrs. Galebach said the Web site is "new hope for victims."
   "Wouldn't it be wonderful to separate the shame of what happened to me, from me, my person?" she said. She conceived the idea for the Web site and assembled the team to produce it.
   Much of the technical help came from David Ross, founder of RAF Technology of Redmond, Wash. He invented the software that reads and routes U.S. first class mail and designed the authentication system now used by the U.S. Treasury Department for its online e-commerce Web site www.pay.gov .
   "With VictimPower.org victims can easily find out the proper legal, church, school and other authorities for them to communicate with. Once they have determined the best authorities, the victims can report anonymously what has happened to them and what they have witnessed," Mr. Ross said.
   "This anonymity cannot be broken by an overzealous prosecutor or unscrupulous hacker, because any identifying information linking the victim to his report is destroyed at the conclusion of his session," he said. "What does not exist cannot be hacked and cannot be subpoenaed." [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 05:44 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Wed January 12, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Thu January 13, 2005 edition follows:-
• Former altar boy accuses church officials of recklessness [1990s Castaldo] - RCC. Had admitted spreading porn. Altar boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Newsday, www.newsday. com/news/local/ state/ny-bc-ct-- churchabuse01 13jan13,0,571 9064.story?coll=ny- region- apconnecticut ; By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN, Associated Press Writer, January 13, 2005
   STAMFORD, Conn. -- A former altar boy who says he was molested by a priest is accusing the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport of recklessness, citing new evidence obtained as his lawsuit heads to trial.
   New York Cardinal Edward Egan, who will testify in a deposition in the case later this month, is likely to provide further support for the new reckless claim, according to the attorney for the former altar boy. Egan is scheduled testify on Jan. 27, just days before the trial starts.
   "Plaintiff has just learned of critical evidence that now supports a recklessness claim against the diocese," lawyer Paul Slager wrote in court documents.
   The plaintiff, known in court documents as John Doe, claims he was molested by the Rev. John Castaldo in the early 1990s when Castaldo was a priest at St. Teresa Church in Trumbull.
   The recklessness accusation, which is in addition to allegations of negligence, does not provide details of the new evidence but said it comes from recent depositions of three priests and a new witness. One of the priests dismissed Castaldo from the seminary.
   The evidence shows the diocese knew the risk of sexual abuse posed by some priests, including Castaldo, Slager argues.
   Joseph McAleer, spokesman for the diocese, declined to comment.
   Slager says Egan, when he was the Bridgeport bishop, ignored disturbing psychological reports on Castaldo. Egan also knew that Castaldo had been dismissed from the seminary "for erratic and rebellious behavior," according to court papers.
   Castaldo gave a deposition in which he said he was dismissed from the seminary because of his complaints that as many as 15 seminarians engaged in "sordid behavior," including homosexual acts, court papers state.
   Attorneys for the diocese have said the psychological reports should not be admitted as evidence during the trial, arguing the information is not related to potential sexual abuse of minors.
   "There was no indication whatsoever that this priest was engaging in any kind of inappropriate behavior," Joseph Zwilling, spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York, said earlier this week.
   Castaldo was a spiritual adviser to Trinity Catholic High School in Stamford and a priest at St. Maurice Parish in Stamford in the late 1990s. He was removed from both posts in May 2001 after he was arrested on charges of engaging in a sexually explicit online chat with someone he believed was a 14-year-old boy.
   Castaldo pleaded guilty in 2001 to a felony charge of attempted dissemination of indecent material to a minor and was sentenced to one weekend in jail and five years of probation.
   Subscribe to Newsday home delivery www.newsday. com/about/ny- subscribe. htmlstory . Copyright © 2005, The Associated Press. # [Bolding added] [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 06:52 PM]
• The All-Spin Zone; Confidential memo reveals real reason Orange diocese settled sex-abuse suits [Orange Diocese] - RCC. $US 100m avoided devastating jury verdicts.
   Orange County Weekly, www.ocweekly. com/ink/05/19/ ex-arellano.php , by Gustavo Arellano, ~ Jan 13, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - Now that the Diocese of Orange has agreed to pay $100 million to victims of its pedo-priests, Bishop Tod D. Brown is busy cobbling a new persona for himself. Goodbye, bumbling protector of molesters; welcome, O valiant reformer!
   The national media bought this false idol immediately at a Jan. 3 press conference held in Los Angeles Superior Court announcing the settlement, the largest in the history of the Roman Catholic Church.
   Fawning reporters didn't bother to ask Brown any probing questions - they found their answers instead in the form of a cardinal-red folder eagerly distributed by diocesan spokesman Father Joseph Fenton that contained an official statement, a FAQ sheet and a full-color glossy of the bishop.
   Photographers and cameramen quickly clicked and filmed Brown accepting the tearful, grateful hugs of victims, images they splashed across TV screens that night and front pages the following day.
   As always, The Orange County Register - the once-critical paper that nowadays reads like the Orange diocese's official newsletter, the Orange County Catholic - spun it the Church way.
   "Some hailed Brown as a hero" was religion reporter Ann Pepper's summation of the man. His Excellency, obviously reveling in his newly scrubbed celebrity, solemnly told Pepper, "If I've been able to be of any assistance in bringing [the sex-abuse cases] to a conclusion, I am most grateful for that."
   In a statement published in many parish bulletins last Sunday, Brown wrote to Orange County's 1.2 million Catholics, "We can stand tall having kept all our pledges to the victim survivors and having reformed our way of dealing with this horror in our Church. Let's be the Church that is known for keeping its promises and being trustworthy, the Church where what you see is what you get, no spin or excuses."
   But that period of clarity is over. An internal church document obtained by the Weekly shows the Orange diocese accepted the $100 million settlement not to, as Brown told the faithful, spare victims from "years of emotionally difficult litigation," but because Church officials knew just a minute before a civil court would "return devastating jury verdicts against the diocese."
• Detroit priest acquitted of sexual abuse charges - RCC. Father de Alba Campos acquitted. Boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Mexico flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Detroit Free Press, www.freep.com/ news/statewire/ sw110008_2005 0113.htm , 12:12 PM, January 13, 2005,
   DETROIT (MI) (AP) -- A jury on Thursday returned a not-guilty verdict in the trial of a Mexican priest accused of sexually abusing a 7-year-old boy.
   Rev. Luis Javier de Alba Campos, 50, was accused of fondling the boy while he slept in the same bed with him at his parents' house.
   De Alba became pastor at St. Gabriel Parish in southwest Detroit in February. The Archdiocese of Detroit asked him to leave in June after learning of the investigation against him. In July, he was banned from serving as a priest in the archdiocese.
   The archdiocese said it had no immediate comment but was preparing a statement. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 01:56 PM]
Plaintiff in abuse case speaks out [1968-72 Gleeson] - RCC. Altar boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The Press Democrat, By GUY KOVNER, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   CALIFORNIA - A former Calistoga altar boy said he lived with a painful secret for years before acknowledging his past and filing a sex abuse lawsuit against his alleged molester.
   "I'm tired of secrets and living in a lie," Greg Sloan, 48, said in a telephone interview from his home in the Sierra foothills town of Sonora.
   Sloan's lawsuit, filed more than two years ago, is the first of 11 claims against the Santa Rosa Diocese heading for trial, after a judge this week issued a final ruling refusing the Catholic Church's request to throw out the case.
   Sloan accuses the Rev. Patrick Gleeson of repeatedly molesting him in a Calistoga rectory from 1968 to 1972. Gleeson, a North Coast priest for 38 years, died in 1991.
   In going to court and now casting off his anonymity, Sloan, who works as a contractor, said he is fighting off years of bottled-up shame, anger and depression.
Investigators stonewalled [2004] - RCC. Priest Ryan Erickson found hanged. O'Connell murder case.
   Ironwood Daily Globe, January 10, 2005
   HUDSON, Wis. -- Hudson Police Chief Dick Trende told the Hudson Star Observer this week some people are refusing to talk with his investigators about Father Ryan Erickson and the O'Connell murder case.
   Trende said most of the people contacted have been cooperative and eager to help police in any way possible, but a few have been reluctant to speak with investigators.
   Erickson, 31, was found hanged outside the hallway between the rectory and St. Mary's Catholic Church in Hurley on Dec. 19.
Search warrant explained [2002] - RCC. 2 murders at funeral home.
   Ironwood Daily Globe, 11:26:34 AM Central Time, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   HUDSON, Wis. -- Inconsistencies in statements made by a Hurley priest to police investigating the February 2002 murders of two men at a Hudson Funeral Home prompted authorities to seek a search warrant for the rectory at St. Mary's parish in Hurley where the priest resided.
   Hudson Police Chief Dick Trende told the Hudson Star Observer this week that the priest, Father Ryan Erickson, had been interviewed on Nov. 11 and Dec. 7 of 2004.
   Trende previously told the Daily Globe that Erickson was one of 1,800 people interviewed in connection with the murders of funeral director Daniel O'Connell and James O'Ellison, an intern at the O'Connell Funeral Home in Hudson.
Police asked priest hard questions in Hudson's murders [2002] - RCC. 2 murders at funeral home.
   Star Tribune, ~ Jan 13, 2005
   HUDSON, WIS. -- Not long before he killed himself, the Rev. Ryan Erickson told close friends that police investigators had questioned him aggressively about the double homicide at a Hudson funeral home in 2002.
   Investigators asked him whether he had had affairs, both heterosexual and gay, and they named names as they interrogated the man people in the western Wisconsin border town knew as "Father Ryan." They suggested that he wanted to have sex with a woman he had counseled at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Hudson.
   Friends, clergymen and others who provided information for this article said Erickson's denials were strong and passionate. But one of those sources with knowledge of the homicide case said Erickson was also being investigated in connection with other possible criminal cases.
   On Dec. 16, 2004, Hudson police searched the church, school, convent and rectory at St. Mary of the Seven Dolors Church in Hurley, Wis., confiscating 22 items -- including Erickson's computer, his secretary's computer, six pairs of shoes and his Bible.
   Three days later, Erickson, 31, hanged himself.
• Rough Waters; Mary Healey-Conlon talks about her documentary "Holy Water-Gate," which delves into the Catholic Church scandal. - RCC. FILM.
   NEFilm, www.newengland film.com/news/ archives/05jan uary/conlon.htm , By Andrea Maxwell, ~ Jan 13, 2005
   UNITED STATES: In 1999, Mary Healey-Conlon began research on a scandal in the Catholic Church. Five years later, Conlon has completed a documentary on one of the most important events in the history of the Church. "Holy Water-Gate" examines the victims and cover-up of the Church's sexual abuse charges.
   [To see a "still shot" from the film, click Still from "Holy Water-Gate."]
   "I think many documentary filmmakers realize that as they immerse themselves in a story they are changed by the events and people they encounter," Conlon says. "This is certainly true for me, and I am really proud of the work. The effect that the film has had on me as an individual is an extremely positive one."
   Mary Healey-Conlon graduated from Rhode Island College. She pursued her masters at Emerson College shooting and editing projects through 1994. The next few years were focused on corporate clients with artists' work in the mix, finally allowing her to become an Associate Producer and Producer at Olive Jar Animation in Boston. Continuing to build her corporate and multimedia clientele through documentaries, commercials, and music videos, Conlon now teaches documentary courses at the University of Rhode Island as a professor of communications and film studies. ...
   As much as I wanted or had to do a lot of shooting on my own, nothing can compare to the footage by a DP like Ned Miller who films all the time in varied situations all over the world. He always will shoot with the edit in mind and he also functioned as key collaborator for the visual ideas of the story.
   "Holy Water-Gate" is [? has] been sold to television networks in Spain, Australia, Switzerland, Canada, and Denmark.
   French, German, and a number of US stations are also considering broadcast. Tickets to the Coolidge Theatre showing may be purchased online at www.coolidge.org . More about the film can be found at www.holywater-gate.com . #
• Trial of 180 sex charges commences [1968-77 Cosgrove (Marist)] - RCC. 6 boys. Ireland, Republic of / Eire, flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   One in Four, http://one infour.org/ news/news 2004/sligo , ~ Jan 13, 2005
   IRELAND: THE trial of a former religious brother, who is charged with 180 counts of indecent assault involving six boys between the years of 1968 and 1977, opened at Sligo Circuit Court yesterday.
   Christopher Cosgrove, Ballyhaunis Road, Claremorris, Co Mayo is pleading not guilty to the offences, which are alleged to have taken place in St John's Boys' National School on Temple Street, Sligo.
   One alleged victim told the court at yesterday's hearing that he became a "fully fledged" alcoholic at the age of 16 and remained so until aged 29, as a result of the abuse.
• Orlando man sues priest, bishops, charging negligence, sex abuse [1980s-90s Emerson] - RCC. Boy. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Orlando Sentinel, www.orlando sentinel.com/ news/orl-loc priest13011305 jan13,1,4726558. story?coll= orl-news- headlines ; By Christopher Sherman, Posted January 13, 2005
   ORLANDO (FL) - An attorney for the Orlando man accusing a Catholic priest of years of sexual abuse filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the priest and two bishops, including the leader of the Diocese of Orlando.
   The suit says the Rev. Richard Emerson sexually abused the man during a seven-year period in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
   It also names Orlando Bishop Thomas Wenski and Gary, Ind., Bishop Dale Melczek as defendants, saying the dioceses took no action when earlier complaints were made against Emerson.
   Attorney Joe Saunders described his client as a 29-year-old Orlando man who works in a local hotel. Saunders said the man chose not to attend the news conference in front of the Orange County Courthouse because of his anxiety about suing a priest and two bishops.
Diocese's dismissal of youth advocate raises critics' ire - RCC. Married outside the Church.
   The Arizona Republic, by Michael Clancy, Jan. 13, 2005
   PHOENIX (AZ) - National advocates for those who have been abused by priests criticized the removal of the Phoenix Diocese's youth protection advocate.
   But the Rev. Fred Adamson, the diocese's vicar general and second-in-command to Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted, said the move doesn't lessen the diocese's commitment to youth protection, and a new advocate will be hired.
   Jenny O'Connor held the position from 2003 when it was created until Saturday. O'Connor said the reason she was given for her firing was that her marriage was not performed by a priest. The diocese will not say why O'Connor was fired.
   Generally, Adamson said Catholics consider marriage a sacrament. Catholic couples must be married in a Catholic church by a priest. The individuals must go through standard preparation for a minimum of six months, he said.
   "We pastorally encourage marriage in the church so the couple can seek Christ's love in the sacraments," Adamson said. "Otherwise, it is not binding by God for a lifetime."
   If the marriage is the reason for the firing, "It is hard to imagine that a church leader could be so cold," said David Clohessy, national executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP].
   He said the firing fits a pattern of backpedaling on the part of bishops regarding protection of children.
• Bishop talks with Costa's parishioners [2004 Costa] - RCC. People knew but supported him. Males.
   SJ-R.com ; www.sj-r.com/sections/news/stories/45053.asp , By CHRIS WETTERICH, ~ Jan 13, 2005
   SHERMAN (IL) - It is unlikely that Monsignor Eugene Costa will ever return to his ministry at St. John Vianney Church in Sherman and Holy Family Church in Athens, Bishop George Lucas told parishioners Wednesday night.
   Costa, whom the diocese says was engaged in inappropriate and immoral behavior, resigned last week after being attacked Dec. 21 and found critically injured near the band shell in Douglas Park, 400 N. MacArthur Blvd., which has a longstanding reputation as a meeting spot for gay men.
   Two teenagers, ages 15 and 17, were arrested Jan. 3 in the attack.
   Nevertheless, church members expressed support and sympathy for the priest as they questioned Lucas after the regularly scheduled 5:30 p.m. Mass.
   One man stood up and told Lucas that parishioners had known about Costa's behavior for years but still supported him. Costa was ordained in the diocese in 1976 and has worked here ever since.
Priest admits 'sexual sickness' in suit [1990s Castaldo] - RCC. Altar boy + internet solicitation.
   Connecticut Post, By DANIEL TEPFER, dtepfer@ctpost.com , ~ Jan 13, 2005
   STAMFORD (CT) - A Roman Catholic priest, accused in a lawsuit of molesting a 14-year-old altar boy at a Trumbull church in the early 1990s, admits in a deposition that he suffers from a "sexual sickness."
   According to court papers released Wednesday, the Rev. John Castaldo said he had the sickness at the time he slept in a bed with the boy, although he denied molesting him.
   He also said the sickness later drove him to try to solicit sex over the Internet from someone he thought was a 14-year-old boy.
   Superior Court jury selection began Tuesday in the lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport brought by the former altar boy. Two jurors were selected by late Wednesday.
   The trial is expected to begin Feb. 1 and last three weeks.
• A Cover-Up Is a Cover-Up - RCC. Some still resist accountability.
   The Daily Standard, www.weekly standard.com/ Content/Public/ Articles/000/ 000/005/12 5amjyt.asp , by Hugh Hewitt, Jan/13/2005
   UNITED STATES - LARGE AND POWERFUL INSTITUTIONS do not react well to internal scandal, especially when that scandal threatens to erode a central pillar of the institution's authority. The first reaction will almost inevitably be denial, followed by various efforts to isolate and minimize the scandal, to protect leadership, and then to adopt only such "reforms" as are forced upon it. Genuine accountability and reform typically only accompany a crash so spectacular that no one can persist in the cover-up.
   Thus did the Roman Catholic Church in America deal with the sexual abuse scandal which developed over 30 years and broke with such fury in recent times. The capitulation of Bernard Francis Cardinal Law was the result of a years-long erosion of his and his Diocese's credibility which was prolonged and embarrassing and which was accompanied by a series of half-measures and stalls that in retrospect defy understanding. There are even now still some corners of the American Church, like the Diocese of Los Angeles, that continue to resist accountability, even while neighboring bishops, like the Bishop of Orange County California sign off on $100 million plus settlements.
   A similar pattern of denial followed by painful reform is unfolding at the oil-for-food-for-dictators scandal plagued United Nations, within a CIA that failed to see 9/11 coming and which has yet to account for the missing WMD in Iraq, and even within Major League Baseball as it struggles to persuade the fans that every homerun record of recent years shouldn't have a steroid-induced asterisk next to it. In each case, a large and powerful institution fought, through various ruses and tricks, to preserve a crucial reputation. For the Church, it was the character of the priesthood. For the United Nations, it is the claim to high-minded purpose. For the CIA, it is the agency's over-the-horizon powers of anticipation and analysis. And for baseball, the myth of the athlete-champion.
• Lawsuit filed in priest's alleged abuse [1986-87 Szantyr] - RCC. Altar boy.
   Republican-American, www.rep-am. com/story. php?id= 15449 , By Ben Conery, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   WATERBURY (CT) -- A Massachusetts man who claims his son was raped by a Waterbury Catholic priest is suing church spiritual leaders, institutions and the Worcester County district attorney, alleging they allowed the abuse to occur and failed to do anything about it afterwards.
   The man claims the Rev. John J. Szantyr, 73, of 55 Birch Place, raped his son, who was an altar boy. Szantyr threatened to kill the boy's parents if he told them about the attacks, the lawsuit claims. The man's son is not involved in the lawsuit.
   Szantyr's attorney and Worcester County District Attorney John J. Conte could not be reached for comment. A lawyer for the Diocese of Worcester said the diocese denies the man's claims.
   "His allegations just don't agree with reality," said James Gavin Reardon Jr.
   Szantyr already faces three criminal counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14. The alleged abuse occurred between Jan. 1, 1986, and Dec. 12, 1987, according to court documents. During that time, Szantyr was a priest at Our Lady of Czestchowa Parish in Worcester, Mass.
   Szantyr is scheduled to appear in a Massachusetts court on Feb. 17 so a judge can determine if he's competent to stand trial. Last week Szantyr said he has Parkinson's Disease.
Victim files suit against priest [1986-91 Emerson] - RCC. Boy.
   Post-Tribune, By Frank Wiget, Jan. 13, 2005
   GARY (IN) - A Florida man filed a lawsuit Wednesday claiming he was the victim of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest from the Gary Diocese.
   The suit lists the plaintiff as "John Doe," a now 29-year-old man who alleges he was sexually assaulted between 1986 and 1991 by the Rev. Richard Emerson, now 52. The alleged sexual abuse occurred when the victim was between ages 11 and 18.
   Emerson, a Hammond native, was a visiting priest in Orlando at the time, before returning to Northwest Indiana in 1991.
   In addition to Emerson, the lawsuit names and seeks damages from Bishop Dale J. Melczek of the Catholic Diocese of Gary and Bishop Thomas G. Wenski of the Diocese of Orlando.
   The alleged victim was a resident of Orlando, Fla., in Orange County when the alleged abuse occurred.
Priest paces as jury gets sex case [de Alba Campos] - RCC. Boy.
   Detroit Free Press, BY SUZETTE HACKNEY, January 13, 2005
   DETROIT (MI) - The Rev. Luis Javier de Alba Campos paced the eighth floor of the Frank Murphy Hall of Justice in downtown Detroit for an hour and a half Wednesday.
   He appeared deep in thought, sometimes mumbling to himself. His eyes would shut and then open when he sensed he had to turn a corner to make another loop around the courthouse.
   While a Wayne County jury of 12 people deliberated -- trying to decide whether the priest sexually abused a then 7-year-old boy from southwest Detroit last spring -- de Alba Campos made it clear he wanted to be alone with his thoughts.
   His supporters did not interrupt him, though the priest occasionally stopped for a hug.
   Only a few hours earlier, de Alba Campos, a visiting priest from Mexico working at St. Gabriel Catholic Church in Detroit, had taken the witness stand in his own defense.
   He testified with the help of an interpreter that he was devastated when he learned he was accused of two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct.
   "I think I died for a moment," de Alba Campos said. "At that moment, I felt that somebody was throwing my whole life into the trash. ...
   Everything was going down the drain as if it were dirty water. ... Somebody was trying to take away my life."
• Orlando Man Says He Was Sexually Abused, Sues Dioceses, Priest [1986-91 Emerson] - RCC. Boy.
   The Ledger, www.theledger. com/apps/pbcs. dll/article? AID=/20050113/ NEWS/50113 0411/1004 , By MIKE BRANOM, The Associated Press, Jan 13, 2005
   ORLANDO (FL) -- A man who says a Roman Catholic priest sexually abused him as a child sued him and the Dioceses of Orlando and Gary, Ind., on Wednesday.
   The Rev. Richard Emerson is accused of repeatedly molesting the boy, now 29, from 1986 through 1991. He allegedly plied the victim with alcohol and pornography before the abuse, then used threats to keep him quiet.
   The accuser, identified only as "John Doe," claims the dioceses covered up the crimes and protected Emerson.
   Emerson, suspended last month as pastor of Notre Dame Church in Long Beach, Ind., has denied any sexual misconduct with his accuser. The two allegedly met at St. Charles Borromeo School in Orlando.
   The lawsuit, filed in Orange County Circuit Court, asks for more than $15,000 in damages.
Woman: Church unsympathetic to abuse claims [Poole] - RCC. Girls.
   News-Miner, By CHRIS TALBOTT, ~ Jan 13, 2005
   FAIRBANKS (AK) - The first woman to file a sexual abuse lawsuit against Rev. James Poole broke her silence Wednesday after lawyers representing the four defendants filed motions in Superior Court to have the case dismissed.
   Jane Doe 1, who asked that her identity and specific details of her life be withheld, told reporters from the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner and Anchorage Daily News that the motion was just the latest example of unsympathetic treatment by the Catholic Church hierarchy since she came forward with allegations of nearly a decade of sexual abuse.
   "They're petitioning to dismiss my case," Jane Doe said from the office of her Anchorage attorney, Ken Roosa. "That's appalling to me because they know the truth."
   Jane Doe accused Poole of kissing, touching and fondling her from the age of 10 to 19, mostly in Nome where Poole ministered and ran radio station KNOM. Since she filed suit in March 2004, two other women have come forward with allegations of abuse against Poole.
• Father Erickson's actions, statements make him suspect [2002 Erickson] - RCC. O'Connell & Ellison murders. Also actions with minors.
   Hudson Star-Observer, www.river towns.net , By Meg Heaton, ~ Jan 13, 2005
   WISCONSIN - The Hudson Police Department appears to have had good reason to investigate the late Father Ryan Erickson as a suspect in the February 2002 murders of Dan O'Connell and James Ellison as well as other crimes.
   From information obtained at the Hudson Police Department, the Star-Observer has learned that Erickson was interviewed twice last year -- Nov. 11 and Dec. 7 -- prior to the early December search of his residence in Hurley.
   Hudson Police Chief Dick Trende confirmed Tuesday that Erickson was the subject of an investigation into possible improper and criminal activity with minors before he was ever considered a "person of interest" in the O'Connell/Ellison murder investigation. It was through facts gathered in that investigation that police began to look at him in connection with the murders.
   Trende said inconsistencies in Erickson's statements to police during their interviews with him raised suspicions that ultimately led them to seek the search warrant. St. Croix County Judge Scott Needham sealed the search warrant shortly after Erickson's death to protect the ongoing investigation. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:01 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Thu January 13, 2005
Abuse Chronology: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont108.htm
For good teachings to be heeded, a big clean-up is needed.

#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Fri January 14, 2005 edition follows:-
• Ex-Fort Lewis priest sued for sex abuse [1980s Beaver] - RCC. Boy +.
   Seattle Post-Intelligencer, http://seattlepi. nwsource.com/ local/aplocal_ story.asp? category=6420& slug=WA%20Priest% 20Sued , THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, ~ Jan 14, 2005
   TACOMA, Wash. -- A Thurston County man is suing a priest and several Catholic organizations over sexual abuse he says occurred at Fort Lewis in the 1980s while he was a teenager.
   The plaintiff, who is anonymous in the Pierce County Superior Court lawsuit, has filed suit against the Rev. Reinard Beaver, the Archdiocese for the Military Services, the archbishop of Seattle and the bishop of Spokane.
   Beaver, who lives in Steilacoom and was a chaplain at Fort Lewis from 1960 to 1986, has been sued by at least three other men who say he abused them. He was removed from public ministry in 1988 after complaints surfaced.
   The plaintiff said he regularly attended mass at Fort Lewis in 1982 with his family and that Beaver used his status as the family's chaplain to exploit and abuse him. His attorney, Mike Pfau, said the abuse began when the plaintiff was 12 or 13 and happened at the family's house and during a trip to Walla Walla for a church service. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 07:10 PM]
Judge: Media Can't Show Priest's Accuser [1980s Shanley ] - RCC. Boys.
   The Mercury News, Associated Press, ~ Jan 14, 2005
   CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - A judge on Friday barred the media from using photos or televised images of an alleged victim of Paul Shanley during the defrocked priest's upcoming child rape trial.
   Superior Court Judge Stephen Neel agreed with prosecutors that allowing the alleged victim to be filmed or photographed may place undue stress on the man, the last remaining accuser in the case. The order also extends to his family.
   The man, now in his 20s, says Shanley raped him at St. Jean's parish in Newton while he was a young boy in the 1980s. He said he did not recall the abuse until three years ago, when the clergy sex abuse scandal first erupted in Boston.
   "It will be extremely difficult to ask him to testify to those details with a camera right there," prosecutor Lynn Rooney said during a hearing Thursday on the request.
   Two other men who accused Shanley of raping them as children were dropped from the case, and prosecutors have said they expect to drop a third accuser.
• Judge denies priest's request to throw out assault convictions [1978 Feeney] - RCC. Boys.
   Duluth News Tribune, www.duluth superior.com/mld/duluth superior/news/ politics/1064 8098.htm , Associated Press, Posted on Fri, Jan. 14, 2005
   APPLETON, Wis. - A judge refused to set aside some felony convictions Friday that landed a 77-year-old Roman Catholic priest in prison for 15 years.
   A jury convicted John Patrick Feeney in February of three counts of sexual assault of a child and one count of attempted sexual assault of a child for incidents that involved two brothers, ages 12 and 14, in 1978.
   Feeney, who was parish priest at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in Freedom at the time, was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
   During a 30-minute hearing Friday, Outagamie County Circuit Judge Dennis Luebke rejected arguments from Feeney's attorney that the six-year statute of limitations to be charged had expired. The priest's attorney said although Feeney left Wisconsin in 1983, he was still employed by the Green Bay Diocese and technically remained a Wisconsin resident. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 04:24 PM]
• Unresolved: Bernardin, Greeley, and a dead professor [Bernardin] - RCC. Male seminarian.
   The Conservative Voice, www.theconserv ativevoice.com/ modules/news/ article.php? storyid=1988 , By Matt C. Abbott, ~ Jan 14, 2005
   CHICAGO (IL) - The late Joseph Cardinal Bernardin was a controversial figure. Beloved by some and scorned by others, the cardinal for many years exercised immense influence in the Catholic Church in the U.S. He died in 1996 of pancreatic cancer.
   In 1993, Bernardin was accused of sexual abuse by a former seminarian, Steven Cook, who died of AIDS not long after "recanting" his allegation, saying his memories were "unreliable." Jason Berry and Gerald Renner devote a segment to the Bernardin-Cook matter in their 2004 book Vows of Silence: The Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II. Bernardin was quoted at a press conference as saying:
   "'I've been a priest for forty-two years...and a bishop for twenty-eight years...And you know, it's inevitable that anyone who is in a public position and who takes stands that are controversial is vulnerable. But it's interesting, only three accusations have been made against me, all within the current year - (p. 115)
   "'What were the other two?' a journalist cut it. [? in]
• Mother Sues Priest [1977-79 Lee] - RCC. Boy.
   Boothbay Register, http://boothbay register.maine. com/2005-01-13/ mother_sues_ priest.html , by Kristoffer Roveillo, Jan 13, 2005
   MAINE - It's been nearly two decades since Rev. Thomas Lee left his post at Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Church.
   Apparently, though, time has yet to quell the storm of controversy surrounding his departure.
   On Tuesday, a mother who claims her son was molested by Lee between 1977 and 1979 filed a lawsuit against him in Cumberland County Superior Court.
   The suit alleges breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, vicarious liability, fraud, and seeks punitive damages, to be determined by a jury.
   Lee served as pastor at the Boothbay Harbor church from 1971-1985.
   An initial investigation into the molestation charges surrounding the boy went unsubstantiated in 2002, and Lee briefly returned to his post as pastor of Lyman's St. Philip's parish. He voluntarily stepped down for a second time in September 2003, when new allegations of misconduct arose.
   Lee will not face criminal prosecution, as the statute of limitations has expired, explained the mother's attorney, Mark Randall, in a phone interview Tuesday.
• Archdiocese hears case of priest accused of abuse [? 1990s Dowd] - RCC. Minors.
   NorthJersey.com ; www.northjersey. com/page.php? qstr=eXJpcnk3 ZjczN2Y3dnFlZU VFeXk2MDYmZmdi ZWw3Zjd2cWVlRU V5eTY2Mzk0OTYme XJpcnk3ZjcxN2 Y3dnFlZUVFeXkz ; By JOHN CHADWICK, Friday, January 14, 2005
   NEWARK (NJ) - The Newark Archdiocese is conducting a closed-door hearing this week for a former Ho-Ho-Kus priest accused of misconduct with minors.
   The Rev. William J. Dowd, who has been on leave from St. Luke Church since April 2002, faces removal from public ministry or the priesthood if found guilty.
   The hearing, which began Tuesday, is taking place in the chancery offices in Newark before three priests from outside the archdiocese. Witnesses are expected to finish testifying today. The priests will then begin deliberations, said Jim Goodness, a spokesman for the archdiocese.
   Dowd was one of about a dozen North Jersey priests implicated during the 2002 church crisis. The scandal, which began with a case in Boston, emboldened waves of accusers nationwide to come forward after years of silence.
   Dowd has never been charged with a crime by law enforcement officials, and the accusation falls beyond the statute of limitations.
   The church, however, is conducting its own judicial proceeding, one that is routinely used in handling annulments. Authorities in Rome have reviewed the accusation and determined a hearing is warranted, Goodness said.
• Late Priest's E-Mails Reveal Anger, Sorrow [2002 Erickson] - RCC. Murders, suicide.
   MichNews.com ; www.michnews. com/artman/ publish/artic le_6438.shtml , By Matt C. Abbott, Jan 14, 2005
   UNITED STATES: E-mails from Rev. Ryan Erickson, the Hurley, Wis. Catholic priest who committed suicide last month after being questioned in the investigation of a still-unsolved 2002 double homicide in Hudson, Wis., illustrate the dissension that is not uncommon in many parishes and dioceses.
   The e-mails were provided to me by Darla Meyers, a friend and supporter of Erickson. They were sent in 2002,  when Erickson was associate pastor of St. Patrick Church in Hudson.
   In an e-mail dated Feb. 16, 2002, Erickson wrote:
My friends,
   I would like you to remember me in your prayers tomorrow (February 27th) as I am on my way to see Bishop Raphael M. Fliss. ...
   Never have I experienced such disrespect and hate as I have in Hudson, Wisconsin! Granted, it is by a minority (I think), but what a minority it is! The lukewarm … attitudes are so deeply rooted in some of these people that conversion is almost not a possibility.
[...]
   In an e-mail dated May 17, 2002, Erickson lamented:
   I must admit my disappointment and my sadness with some (thank God not a majority) in this parish, who continue to be a festering sore on the Mystical Body of Christ! I do not know who you are or what your agenda is, but I am aware that you are out there. Your continual gossip and backbiting is far from the 'What Would Jesus Do' or from simple polite human respect.[...]
   Spreading the nasty rumor that Father Peter and Father Ryan are fighting, don't get along with one another, or worse, hate one another. This is absolutely false! If you don't believe me, than ask Father Peter. He and I are friends and brothers in the priesthood. [...]
   ... I cannot believe that some have resorted to childish and immature tactics to bring controversy, division, and a spirit of unrest and mistrust into our community. If this e-mail isn't about you, than simply delete it and don't worry about it. If it is about you, please change your life and repent of your sins.
[...]
   Meanwhile, the investigation into the 2002 double homicide continues. According to a Jan. 13 story in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, by reporter Randy Furst ( http://star tribune.com/ stories/462/5 183573.html ):
   Not long before he killed himself, the Rev. Ryan Erickson told close friends that police investigators had questioned him aggressively about the double homicide at a Hudson funeral home in 2002. [...]
   (Matt C. Abbott is the former executive director of the Illinois Right to Life Committee and the former director of public affairs for the Chicago-based Pro-Life Action League. He is a Catholic journalist and commentator. He can be reached at mattcabbott@ hotmail.com .) #
• Gary priest won't be charged [1960s Grass] - RCC. Admitted, but not charged. Girl.
   WAVE, www.indystar. com/articles/ 0/209384-79 10-093.html , Associated Press, January 14, 2005
   CROWN POINT, Ind. -- Lake County prosecutors will not charge a Roman Catholic priest who authorities say admitted engaging in sexual activity with a child decades ago.
   Lake County Prosecutor Bernard Carter said Thursday that Monsignor Don Grass' accuser has not cooperated with investigators since making the allegations in 2003.
   Grass, who had been pastor at St. Mary Parish in Crown Point since 1983, was removed by the Diocese of Gary in December 2003 after church officials said he admitted the accusation that he molested a preteen girl was true.
   The diocese said the molestation occurred while Grass was assigned to the Cathedral of Holy Angels in Gary during the 1960s. Carter said Thursday the diocese contacted Grass about the accusation in late 2003 and an investigation was started by Gary police.
• Teen to be tried as adult in Costa case [2004 Boyle, Gibson, Costa] - RCC. Boys allegedly beat Mons. Costa.
   SJ-R.com ; www.sj-r.com/sections/ news/stories/ 45162.asp , By CHRIS DETTRO, ~ Jan 14, 2005
   SPRINGFIELD (IL) - A 15-year-old boy will be tried in adult court on charges he and another teen beat Monsignor Eugene Costa in Douglas Park four days before Christmas.
   Associate Judge George Ray found probable cause that Ryan Boyle committed aggravated battery and said it would not serve the public interest to keep the charges against him in juvenile court.
   Boyle and Jamie E. Gibson, 17, of the 1100 block of Spring Street are accused of beating Costa, who was severely injured. He was found by a Springfield Park District officer near the Douglas Park band shell about 10:30 p.m. Dec. 21. ...
   According to a news release issued by the diocese Tuesday, Costa resigned to deal with "inappropriate," "risky" and "immoral" behavior that has come to light since the beating and to concentrate on his recovery.
Heapin' dose of Breslin - RCC. 160 new cases after > 500 settled.
   Westborough News, Friday, January 14, 2005
   MASSACHUSETTS - Ms. Plunkitt does not want to shame anybody, but while you were mesmerized by the tsunami, Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian served the autocratic Boston Archdiocese with 10 new clergy sex abuse lawsuits.
   Those lawsuits are on top of 150 suits filed since the diocese settled more than 500 cases for $85 million in September 2003. After lawyers take their cut, the left-over money is divvied up amongst victims wronged by Catholic priests who abandon vows of celibacy to kneel before Eros, the unaborted product of the mating of Aphrodite, the Greek god of love and passion, and Ares, the Greek god of war.
   Whether it was this latest spate of clergy sex abuse lawsuits or mere coincidence, Ms. Plunkitt had been reading Jimmy Breslin's, "The Church That Forgot Christ." Breslin, a Pulitzer prize- winning New York-based journalist, interviews victims of clergy sexual abuse and leans on Catholic church hierarchy who allege that top brass cover up for hooligan priests known to have engaged in unholy bedlock.
   "Give Jimmy credit," Ms. Plunkitt says to Buck Malachi over martinis at the hilltop saloon a few days ago, "Jimmy pulls no punches. He's hot under the collar. His choice of words may seem irreverent, but he's lookin' for accountability when he says Pope John Paul II 'has four subjects on his mind: abortion, abortion, abortion and Poland' and: 'Teachings and discussion of all parts of life must be put aside, thrown to the winds, if necessary, in order to have full Catholic concentration on abortions.'
Crucifixion relics heading this way - RCC.
   Tucson Citizen, By BLAKE MORLOCK, Jan 14, 2005
   TUCSON (AZ) - Wood said to be from the cross (yes, The Cross), bits of nails from the Crucifixion and splinters from the table where Jesus and the apostles broke bread are heading to Tucson next month to be venerated by Catholics in Arizona and Mexico, church leaders announced yesterday.
   The "Relics of the Passion Tour" is coming here just in time for Lent, and will be at various Catholic churches in Tucson, Nogales and Green Valley on Feb. 12 and 13.
   These relics are now kept by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles, under the authority of the Apostolate for Holy Relics.
   The Arizona Knights of Columbus is sponsoring the relics tour in southern Arizona for the