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