• Closing 81-pupil Church school, 30% non-Catholics;
Debts blamed at St. Ambrose.
DORCHESTER (MA): Citing financial problems that already have forced the closing of three Catholic schools this year, the Archdiocese of Boston announced yesterday that it would shut down yet another: St. Ambrose School in Dorchester.
The elementary school had suffered financial problems for two or more years and could not survive without an additional $200,000 to $500,000 in funding, according to archdiocesan officials and the Rev. Vincent P. Von Euw, the parish pastor. The 81-student school, with grades K-4, will close next month.
"It's like a death," Von Euw said. "The saddest thing is the uprooting of these children. It's terrible; it's still very painful."
He was proud that the school has welcomed children of different faiths and reflected the racial and ethnic diversity of the Fields Corner neighborhood where it is located, Von Euw said. Nearly 30 percent of the school's population is non-Catholic, he said.
-- Boston Globe, "A fourth church school to close;
Debts blamed at St. Ambrose," By Michael S. Rosenwald, Globe Staff, and Kalimah Redd, Globe Correspondent, May 6 03, page B2
########## Poynteronline, Abuse Tracker, Tuesday, May 6, 2003 edition follows:- • 'It was the worst thing I could imagine'.
SOUTH BEND (IND.): John Salveson grew up a faithful Catholic on Long Island, attending the parish school and serving as an altar boy at St. Dominic's in Oyster Bay.
The parish priest, the Rev. Robert D. Huneke, befriended the family. The priest doted on John, eventually inviting him on weekend trips.
The Salveson family was honored that the priest paid such attention to their son.
The first trip was to Virginia in 1969. That's when the boy's long nightmare apparently began.
"He got into my bed in the middle of the night and performed oral sex on me," said Salveson, who was 13 years old at the time.
According to Salveson, the sexual abuse continued for the next seven years, during weekend trips and in the church rectory, where the priest frequently served the boy alcoholic beverages.
-- South Bend Tribune,
http://www.southbendtribune.com/ stories/ 2003/05/04/ local. 20030504- sbt-MICH-A10- _It_was_the_ worst_th.sto ,
By Margaret Fosmoe, May 4 03.
(Posted by Kathy Shaw 10:29:32 AM)
• Dr Hollingworth had said 15% abusers was 'preposterous.'
AUSTRALIA: The refusal of the Governor-General, Peter Hollingworth, to resign is
exacerbating the pain and suffering of child sex abuse victims, says a leading sex abuse psychologist and Uniting Church minister, the Reverend Peter Powell.
Dr Powell, the director of the Pastoral Counselling Institute, said Dr Hollingworth, then Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane, had been highly critical of the makers of a 1992 documentary - which Dr Powell had been involved in - about child sex abuse by priests.
Dr Powell said Dr Hollingworth had demanded an apology from the documentary's producers for suggesting that up to 15 per cent of priests may have sexually abused children, a suggestion he described as "preposterous".
"It demonstrated then that he did not understand the issues involved and I do not believe he has changed," Dr Powell said. "His only concern then was whether this percentage or that percentage of priests might have been doing these things. There was no concern for the victims."
-- Sydney Morning Herald, "Victims hurt the longer G-G stays, says critic,"
http://www.smh.com.au/ articles/ 2003/05/06/ 1051987 705049.html ,
By Greg Roberts, May 6 2003.
• Hollingworth breaks his silence .
AUSTRALIA: Governor-General Peter Hollingworth has issued his first public denial
since the Anglican Church released a report on child sex abuse in its schools last week.
Dr Hollingworth told The Courier-Mail he could not remember a mother in 1993 telling him her son, 9, was raped by the boarding master at The Toowoomba Preparatory School.
The Anglican Church in Brisbane yesterday said the alleged victim's solicitors told the church in February Dr Hollingworth was told about the rape in 1993.
"The complainant's mother went to see a Roman Catholic priest in 1992 who telephoned the then Archbishop Hollingworth in the mother's presence and advised him of the complaint," a spokesman for Archbishop of Brisbane Phillip Aspinall said last night.
-- News.com.au ,
http://news.com.au/ common/story_page/0,4057,6395095 %255E421, 00.html ,
By Chris Griffith, May 07, 2003.
• Accused priest's case is 'straightforward', says solicitor [CURRENT].
NORTHERN IRELAND: A solicitor for a Catholic priest facing a sex assault charge complained in court today about delay in the police investigation.
Fr Frank McAllister, senior curate at St Mary`s on The Hill, Glengormley, outside Belfast, has denied indecently assaulting an 18 year-old youth at the Parochial House on February 10.
The 48 year-old priest appeared at Belfast Magistrates Court the following day when he was released on bail and ordered to stay out of the Glengormley area.
He was again without his clerical collar when he was back in the dock on remand today.
-- U TV,
http://u.tv/newsroom/indepth.asp?id=31924&pt=n
• Priest should serve two years for molestation [CURRENT].
LOUISIANA: A former Roman Catholic priest who pleaded guilty to molesting a 16-year-old boy should spend two years in jail and two years under house arrest for his crime, prosecutors said. John Wesley Andries, 48, who was pastor of St. Margaret Catholic Church in Boyce, was accused of molesting a 16-year-old boy while spending the night at the boy's Abbeville home.
Vermilion Parish prosecutor Ted Ayo said Monday that as part of the plea agreement, prosecutors have recommended that Andries receive a two-year jail term, followed by five years probation, two of which must be served under house arrest.
The sentence recommendation also requires that Andries have no unsupervised contact with juveniles, register as a sex offender and submit to counseling, Ayo said. The terms of the plea deal were crafted by the victim's family, Ayo said. Andries is scheduled to be sentenced May 19.
The charge of molestation of a juvenile carries a possible sentence of one to 10 years in prison in this case. Andries was accused of molesting the boy in June 2001 while sleeping in an extra bed in the boy's room, after the boy's family invited the priest to spend the night at their home.
The incident wasn't the first time Andries had been accused of inappropriate behavior with a juvenile. The Diocese of Alexandria has acknowledged removing Andries from service in a Natchitoches Parish four years ago after a previous allegation of sexual misconduct.
No charges were filed in connection with those allegations and Andries was allowed to
return after psychological testing and counseling, according to published reports.
-- KATC TV,
http://www.katc.tv/ global/story.asp?s=1265466 &ClientType =Printable
• Sex-abuse trial opens for Virginia minister [1997].
CARLISLE (Pa.): The attorney for a Virginia minister accused of molesting a relative when she was 10 told jurors as his trial opened that they would hear conflicting testimony from the girl and the doctors and therapists who examined her when she reported the alleged abuse five years later.
The Rev. Lane C. Hurley, 53, is accused of sexually assaulting the girl in 1997 while he was spending several months at her family's home. He has been charged with involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, aggravated indecent assault, indecent assault and corruption of minors.
Hurley's attorney, Joshua Lock, also told the jury of 10 men and two women Monday that he would present witnesses who would outline a motive for the girl to lie about the assault. At the time the girl made the accusations, she was being treated for depression, anorexia and hypothyroidism, he said.
-- PennLive.com (AP),
http://pennlive.com/ newsflash/pa/ index.ssf?/ newsflash/ get_story.ssf ?/cgi-
free/ getstory_ssf. cgi?d0253_ BC_PA--Minister-SexCharg&&news&newsflash-pennsylvania ,
May 6 03 9:23 AM.
• Vicar-general laments G-G debate.
AUSTRALIA: The vicar-general of the Bathurst diocese says ongoing debate about the
future of Australia's Governor-General, Dr Peter Hollingworth, is sad for everyone involved.
A woman from the region was involved in one of a number of sexual abuse cases recently investigated by the Anglican Church. The inquiry found Dr Hollingworth, who was the Archbishop of Brisbane, acted unfairly and insensitively in response to her claims and other claims.
Vicar-general Peter Danaher says it has painted the church in a very poor light.
"It's sad for those who suffered abuse as young people, it's sad for their families, it's very sad for the church and it gives a poor light to the church, but it's also very sad for Dr Hollingworth and his family," he said.
-- ABC News,
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s847741.htm
• Charge of sexual abuse linked to Stamford church parishioner [CURRENT, Parishioner].
STAMFORD (CT): A member of St. Leo's Church in Stamford with ties to the parish's youth group faces a fourth-degree sexual assault charge after police said he groped a 17-year-old boy during a church outing in Greenwich.
Frank J. Perna, 67, of 33 Edgewood Ave., Stamford, was arrested Sunday afternoon
by Greenwich police, who declined to comment on the case other than to say that the parishioner sexually groped the teen.
Perna was eating dinner with parishioners at a local restaurant when the alleged incident occurred. He is the husband of the church's former youth group leader, a Diocese
of Bridgeport spokesman confirmed.
-- Greenwich Time,
http://www.greenwichtime.com/ news/local/scn-gt- parishioner 5may06,0, 6340054.story ?coll=green-news- local-headlines ,
By Neil Vigdor, May 6, 2003.
• Diocese fights 'Republic' request for court documents.
TUCSON (AZ): A judge heard arguments for nearly an hour Monday on a request to protect public access to documents subpoenaed in a lawsuit filed against Phoenix Bishop Thomas J. O'Brien and other church officials.
The lawsuit accuses O'Brien and other church officials of failing to properly supervise a serial pedophile priest who worked in Phoenix in the 1960s when Phoenix parishes were part of the Tucson Diocese.
Attorneys for The Arizona Republic asked Judge Christopher C. Browning of Pima County
Superior Court to allow the newspaper to join in key legal proceedings, including disputes over the confidentiality of documents produced in the case.
Peter Kozinets argued the public has a strong interest in knowing how the Phoenix Diocese handled cases of alleged sexual molestation by priests. He said the diocese showed a pattern of trying to stifle the public's right to know by "creating a wall of secrecy."
Attorneys for O'Brien and the Phoenix and Tucson dioceses denied that allegation and said adequate standards already exist to protect both the public access and the privacy of sex abuse victims.
-- The Arizona Republic,
http://www.azcentral.com/ arizonarepublic/ local/articles/ 0506priest06.html ,
by Joseph A. Reaves, May 6, 2003 12:00 AM.
• More than a dozen sexually abused at Notre Dame want reform.
SOUTH BEND (Ind.): A group of University of Notre Dame graduates say they want the school to become a model for handling cases of sexual abuse by priests.
More than a dozen Notre Dame graduates from across the country, some of whom say they were abused by priests while at the school, have formed a group that is seeking details on how the university handles abuse reports.
"Notre Dame has a unique opportunity to demonstrate moral leadership for the benefit of the bishops, religious orders and Catholics across the country," said Mark Serrano, a 1986 graduate who now lives near Washington.
Serrano says he was sexually molested from the age of 9 by a parish priest in New Jersey and now works as an advocate for other former victims.
Notre Dame officials are aware of allegations of misconduct against four priests who worked at the school, said Carol Mooney, a university vice president and member of a panel appointed to receive such complaints.
Indianapolis Star, Associated Press,
"Policy on abuse cases sought at Notre Dame,"
-- http://www.indystar.com/print/articles/8/040925-5348-009.html ,
May 6, 2003.
• Australian PM defends Queen's envoy on sex-abuse claims.
AUSTRALIAN prime minister, John Howard, yesterday defended the Queen's official envoy [no, representative] in the country after renewed demands for his resignation over claims that he hushed up complaints of child sex abuse in the Anglican Church.
The renewed calls for governor-general Peter Hollingworth's scalp follow a Church inquiry published last week which found that, in his previous job as Anglican archbishop of Brisbane a decade ago, he had allowed a paedophile to stay on as a priest.
Mr Howard, a staunch monarchist, refused to say if he would discuss the matter with the Queen, who is Australia's head of state. The governor-general is her official representative in Australia.
But Mr Howard said there was nothing in the report which would force him to act against Mr Hollingworth, 68, whose alleged mishandling of complaints of sexual abuse within the Church first came to light early last year.
-- The Scotsman,
http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/international.cfm?id=515112003 ,
By Belinda Goldsmith in Canberra.
• Stokes to testify before grand jury on sex abuse allegations against priest.
BALTIMORE (MD): Dontee D. Stokes, the West Baltimore barber who became national news last year after shooting a priest he says molested him, will testify today before a grand jury that could bring charges of sexual abuse against the clergyman, the Rev. Maurice J. Blackwell, Stokes' lawyer said yesterday.
The city state's attorney's office declined to comment on the scheduled proceedings, but Warren A. Brown, Stokes' lawyer, said the grand jury could deliberate today after hearing Stokes' testimony.
"Dontee has been eager to see [an indictment] happen because he wants this man to admit what he did and apologize," said Brown, who in the summer stood on the steps of the Clarence M. Mitchell Jr. Courthouse with a bullhorn, shouting insults at prosecutors for not obtaining an indictment against Blackwell.
-- Baltimore Sun,
http://www.sunspot.net/ news/local/ crime/bal-md. stokes06may06, 0,5729427.story? coll=bal- local-headlines ,
By Johnathon E. Briggs, May 6, 2003.
• Bishop Reilly to retire.
WORCESTER (MA): Bishop Daniel P. Reilly, who has been bishop of the Worcester
Catholic Diocese since 1994, will officially tender his retirement Monday, his 75th birthday.
However, the bishop will not depart immediately.
Raymond L. Delisle, diocesan spokesman, said it would take six or more
months for Pope John Paul II to appoint a successor. …
Bishop Reilly, like many American bishops of his generation, has been embroiled in the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church.
While many of the incidents that have surfaced publicly in the last year happened before he came to Worcester, he was named in sexual abuse lawsuits in Rhode Island and Connecticut alleging that he failed as bishop or as a senior chancery official to act to remove certain abusive priests from their positions. A number of those suits were settled. Monday, May 5, 2003.
-- Telegram & Gazette,
http://www.telegram.com/ apps/pbcs. dll/article? Site=WT& Date=20030506& Category =NEWS& ArtNo=305060328& Ref=AR& Profile=1025 ,
by Kathleen A. Shaw
• Dioceses nationwide wait on Bend case.
BEND (OR): In a case with broad financial implications for the U.S. Roman Catholic Church, a judge in Bend will decide this week whether the local diocese will become the first in the nation to have its assets frozen because of pending sexual abuse cases.
Eighteen men who claim they were abused by a priest more than 30 years ago are asking a Deschutes County judge to forbid the Catholic Diocese of Baker from transferring money and property to its 34 parishes until a $60 million lawsuit is settled.
The plaintiffs maintain such transfers are fraudulent during litigation and could deplete diocesan coffers, preventing them from recovering civil damages for suffering and sexual battery if the church is found negligent.
Diocesan officials deny wrongdoing and have called the allegations outrageous.
A hearing is scheduled Wednesday.
-- The Oregonian,
http://www.oregonlive.com/ news/oregonian/ index.ssf?/base/ front_page/ 105213596 7111272.xml ,
by Carol McGraw, May 05 03.
• Friend says G-G considering his future.
AUSTRALIA: Governor-General Peter Hollingworth was weighing up whether to resign, a
friend of 40 years said today.
Dr Hollingworth was reading news reports and weighing up his future in order to protect the independence of the office of governor-general, confidant and former colleague Michael Challen, a retired bishop, said.
The governor-general is under increasing pressure to quit after a church inquiry found that when he was Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane he let a paedophile continue working as a priest.
"He would have to give some thought to that because he reads newspapers but he would, being the person he is, he would look at the bigger issues and deeper issues about resigning or not resigning," Bishop Challen told ABC Radio.
-- The Age,
http://www.theage.com.au/ articles/ 2003/05/06/ 1051987682459.html ,
May 6 2003.
• Archbishop asked priest to leave job in 1980s; Daniel Clark accused of molesting 19 children [CURRENT].
LOUISVILLE (KY): Roman Catholic officials talked with the Rev. Daniel C. Clark twice about voluntarily leaving the priesthood, years before he was accused of molesting children in a scandal now embroiling the church, a newspaper reported yesterday.
The Rev. Daniel C. Clark balked both times, and Archbishop Thomas C. Kelly declined to petition the Vatican to defrock him, The Courier-Journal reported, citing records surrendered by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Louisville.
In lawsuits filed against the archdiocese, Clark is accused of molesting 19 children ages 5 to 17. He was convicted in 1988 of sodomizing one boy and sexually abusing another.
Clark, 55, now faces 60 years to life in prison if found guilty of new criminal charges alleging he abused two other boys from 1998 until last May. He has pleaded not guilty and his trial is scheduled to begin June 24 in Bullitt County Circuit Court. Clark has been held in the Bullitt County jail since his arrest Aug. 7, unable to make his $500,000 bail.
-- Lexington Herald-Leader, Associated Press,
http://www.kentucky.com/ mld/heraldleader/ news/ local/ 5787706.htm .
• A role fit for Hollingworth.
AUSTRALIA: The G-G should stay in the job as a symbol of Australia's failure to
tackle the scourge of child abuse, writes Chris Goddard.
Last year, when I resigned from a national child welfare agency because Peter Hollingworth remained as its patron (later in the week he resigned his position), I passed no comment on his suitability as Governor-General.
I have now reconsidered my position. I propose that Hollingworth remain as Governor-General - but only because he is a symbol of successive government failures to address the problem of child abuse.
Hollingworth has repeatedly demonstrated he is perfectly qualified for this role. After all, the job of Queen's representative is, as he has said, "to reflect back to the people where they're at". Hollingworth is especially well placed to reflect back to children, above all children who have been abused, precisely "where they're at".
Child abuse is one of the most challenging problems facing our society. It is strongly associated with many of the serious social issues that have taxed our governments in recent years: youth suicide, homelessness, school failure, family violence and breakdown, drug addiction, and mental health problems. Many children, sadly, learn in their homes how to be violent.
Many others learn how to be victims. Most learn there are few effective services to help them. Many carry the anger and pain into adulthood.
-- The Age,
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/05/05/1051987654486.html ,
May 6 2003.
• Why Hollingworth should do the right thing.
AUSTRALIA: Peter Hollingworth should resign. That is what the public thinks. It is
what Simon Crean thinks. It is what senior ministers within the Howard Government think.
Not because he has done anything improper as Governor-General. He hasn't. And not because he has been guilty of any moral turpitude. He hasn't.
He should resign because the controversy over his handling of cases of child sex abuse as archbishop of Brisbane is damaging the office he now holds - and, more immediately, his ability to perform his duties.
This is a hard judgement against a decent man who has committed his life to the service of others and upheld high personal standards - but it is fair.
-- The Age,
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/05/05/1051987655031.html ,
By Michael Gordon, May 6 2003
• Verdict on G-G: it's time to quit.
AUSTRALIA: Almost four out of five Australians believe Peter Hollingworth should
resign as Governor-General.
As Dr Hollingworth last night vowed to stay on and stare down growing pressure from government ranks for him to weigh up his future, a special ACNielsen AgePoll found 76 per cent of Australians believed he should quit.
Only 18 per cent said Dr Hollingworth should stay on at Government House after he admitted making a serious error of judgement while Anglican archbishop of Brisbane by allowing a known pedophile to continue working as a priest.
An Anglican report cleared Dr Hollingworth of any concern about his handling of seven child sex abuse complaints but criticised him over two others.
-- The Age,
http://www.theage.com.au/ articles/ 2003/05/05/ 1051987655284.html ,
By Phillip Hudson, Political Correspondent, Canberra, May 6 2003
• Attorney wants trial date for church suit.
KENTUCKY: A Kenton County judge will be asked today to set a trial date for a lawsuit that alleges a long pattern of sexual harassment and abuse at the Diocese of Covington offices.
The lawsuit, filed last summer, is different from most claims against the church. Although it does allege instances of child-sexual abuse, it also alleges the diocese maintained a "sexually charged workplace."
It was filed by John DiMuzio and his son, Mark, who combined to work for the diocese for 68 years in the maintenance department.
"I don't think any of the other people who have brought actions were employees," said Barbara Bonar, a Covington attorney who filed the lawsuit and looked around the country for one that was similar.
-- Kentucky Post,
http://www.kypost.com/2003/05/05/trial050503.html ,
By Paul A. Long, May 5 03.
• Hollingworth refuses to budge.
CANBERRA, Australia: Governor-General Peter Hollingworth remained defiant yesterday in the face of increasing pressure upon him to resign his position.
As church leaders and politicians joined the chorus of public figures demanding his immediate resignation, Dr Hollingworth again refused to stand down.
A spokesman for Dr Hollingworth said yesterday that he has "no intention of standing down".
His comments followed attacks by federal Tourism Minister Joe Hockey and Brisbane Lord Mayor Jim Soorley who asked him to consider his future over his handling of child sex abuse allegations.
-- The Advertiser (Adelaide),
http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,6389987%255E911,00.html ,
By Chief Political Reporter Paul Starick in Canberra, May 06 03.
• James Scahill: Metuchen model against priest abuse.
EAST LONGMEADOW, Mass.: The Catholic Church must be challenged from within. The unhealthy paradigm that has put our children in harm's way must be confronted. Whither the institution that often values blind obedience above the basic tenets of moral right and wrong, while holding itself accountable to no one?
As many in the Catholic hierarchy strain to make the simple seem so complicated, the Diocese of Metuchen (N.J.) has stepped out of this unhealthy paradigm and dealt with the issue of sexual abuse of children without equivocation.
Led by Bishop Paul Bootkoski, the diocese's words and actions have not been dictated by legal strategy but, rather, by three guiding principles: morality, truth and justice.
Catholics nationwide react with incredulity as dioceses wage absurd and demeaning First Amendment battles, asking courts to immunize them from fundamental issues of accountability for bad acts.
By contrast, honoring the precept that the Catholic Church should at the very least be
accountable to laws protecting children, the Metuchen Diocese has settled 10 claims of sexual abuse, 8 of which fell outside the civil statute of limitations. And Bishop Bootkoski has met privately with each victim to offer his apologies.
Meanwhile, in an unprecedented move, Bishop Bootkoski has reorganized his leadership team, appointing a lay person to one of the diocese's three leadership positions and expanding the diocesan review board to include three victims of abuse.
-- Providence Journal,
http://www.projo.com/ opinion/ contributors/ content/projo_ 20030503_4ctpriest. d14d3.html ,
May 4 2003.
• Supporting victims remains group's focus.
ST. LOUIS (MO): He woke up at 4 in the morning and paced in the darkness for three hours, when he finally called his brother.
"Put your clothes on," he told his brother. "Tell your wife you'll be gone for about an hour."
A few minutes later they were at a St. Louis County parish, and everything looked the same. The air conditioner hanging in the window. The door he'd kept between himself and the priest after he was abused. The porch where he'd waited for his mother to come pick him up early one morning 30 years ago.
"It was a little shaky," the man said with an empty laugh. "I'm glad I did it. I'm glad I took my brother with me."
It was a simple story about a man facing a fear he had lived with for decades, but it had a powerful effect on the members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Some members of the support group cried, others passed around tissues. Some just sat in awe of the man's courage.
-- St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/News/420F579CA448AAFA8 6256D1D001BC379?OpenDocument&Headline=Supporting+victims+remains+group ,
By Greg Johnsson, updated: May 05 2003 12:22 AM.
(Posted by Kathy Shaw 7:33:59 AM)
########## End of Poynteronline, Abuse Tracker, Tuesday, May 6, 2003
• Cover-up left paedophile to prey on Vic altar boys.
[Years - Alan Sapsford] - Anglican Church. 30 - 100 altar boys.
Cover-up left paedophile to prey on Vic altar boys
7.30 Report, Australian Broadcasting Corporation,
http://www. abc.net.au/ 7.30/content/ 2003/s849496. htm ,
Reporter: Heather Ewart, May 7, 2003
AUSTRALIA –
As the Anglican Church in Queensland continues to weather a storm over its handling of allegations of sexual abuse and the Governor-General contemplates his future over his role in that saga, the 7:30 Report has unearthed details of another church scandal in Victoria.
It is a shocking story of abuse of boys by an Anglican priest in a small country town, a story that carries with it the now-familiar theme of denial that protected the perpetrator and enabled him to continue to prey on new victims.
It raises questions about obstruction of a police investigation that is now being probed by the Ethical Standards Division of the Victoria Police.
And in its wake there is a trail of bitterness and broken lives, and once again a sense of betrayal by the church.
Heather Ewart has this exclusive report.
HEATHER EWART: This could be a quiet Sunday morning in any country town.
But Seymour, population 6,000 and about 100 kilometres north of Melbourne, is different.
For almost 40 years it's harboured a terrible secret that's wrecked lives and split the community.
MALE RESIDENT: Horrendous.
I've worked on many cases over the years, obviously.
This one is the only one that's actually made me physically sick.
FEMALE RESIDENT 1: I've got to live in this town.
Other families have to live in this town.
This wrong has to be righted.
FEMALE RESIDENT 2: It's caused a lot of bitterness, a lot of hurt, friendships being broken.
HEATHER EWART: It all began at the Anglican Church in Anzac Parade, with the arrival of Father Alan Sapsford in 1966.
For the next 30 years, he was the parish priest here and was widely regarded as a great family man who encouraged youth into the church.
But he was leading a double life, preying on young altar boys, making them his sexual victims.
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER, RETIRED ANGLICAN PRIEST: My gut reaction is there's at least 30, at least 30, but it could be any figure from there to 100.
I'm sure that there's a number of people who have committed suicide.
It's remarkable that there are a number of suicides or unexplained deaths amongst former servers from Christ Church, Seymour.
HEATHER EWART: Detectives at the local police station thought so too, and last year began asking questions.
Anger in the town was building and statutory declarations were collected from local priests, parishioners, and two of the victims who alleged repeated sexual abuse.
In late September, Father Alan Sapsford was arrested and charged.
You know, or knew, the mother of one of the victims --
DOT BROCK, PARISHIONER: Very well.
HEATHER EWART: … who is no longer alive.
What did she tell you?
DOT BROCK: She told me on a parish camp away that her son had been sexually abused by Alan Sapsford and that he was a paedophile, and I saw the dreadful hurt and the anguish in that lady for some time.
She told me that it had happened in the vestry, that it had happened in the parish office while his wife and children were actually watching television in the lounge room.
HEATHER EWART: Was that shocking to you?
DOT BROCK: I was horrified, absolutely horrified that this man that many, many people trusted, had read Gospel, stories to us, had been doing this to a young boy.
HEATHER EWART: That young boy went on to become an Anglican priest himself, and after years of secrecy named Alan Sapsford to the church hierarchy in 1996.
The local bishop was outraged.
He confronted Alan Sapsford and gained a written admission of guilt that sexual abuse took place more than once over a number of years.
REVEREND ALAN SAPSFORD, JULY 1996: "The tragedy is the past cannot be undone" --
HEATHER EWART: … Father Sapsford said, in his letter to Bishop Richardson of the Wangaratta diocese.
REVEREND ALAN SAPSFORD, JULY 1996: "I am deeply ashamed and revolted by my own filthy behaviour."
HEATHER EWART: Father Paul Walliker was asked to counsel the victim.
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER: Bishop Richardson had -- gave Alan notice that his licence was to be withdrawn, that he was sacked effectively.
HEATHER EWART: Then a compromise was cobbled together, that for the parish's purposes, Father Sapsford would be retiring for ill-health reasons, instead of the truth being disclosed.
Observers at the time say the bishop was unhappy about this.
Well, why did that happen?
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER: There was some intervention by the then Archbishop of Melbourne who would not believe the situation.
The Archbishop had been given copies of all the material.
He had spoken to Bishop Richardson and I can remember Bishop Richardson spending 10 minutes pacing up and down in his office, furious, saying, "What am I going to do?
"The Primate won't believe it."
The upshot of that was that Archbishop Raynor, the Archbishop of Melbourne, gave Alan Sapsford a limited licence to operate in one parish in Melbourne, but Alan subsequently used that as an entrance to be able to work all over the Australian church.
HEATHER EWART: Which meant he was still going to be a danger to other boys in various parishes?
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER: That's correct, yes.
HEATHER EWART: The Archbishop at the time, Keith Raynor, is now retired and living in Adelaide.
He's on holidays and could not be contacted for comment.
The then-Bishop of Wangaratta now lives in England.
But those left behind to pick up the pieces here in Seymour are furious the matter was never made public and that local parishioners were left in the dark.
This mother of a victim doesn't want to reveal her identity, and for this report is going by the name of Stella.
Her son was also an altar boy, molested by Alan Sapsford from the age of nine.
Do you feel betrayed by the church about this and the way it handled it?
STELLA: Yes.
I believe that had we known sooner in 1996 or before 1996 - and I am well aware that the church hierarchy were aware - as parents we could have taken the action on our own and gone to the police, and our children would have been spared.
THE RIGHT REVEREND DAVID FARRER, BISHOP OF WANGARATTA: With hindsight it might well have been handled differently.
I think my predecessor took the action he believed to be right at the time and was very decisive in that way.
But I think with our current knowledge, we might have done things differently, yes.
HEATHER EWART: Why on earth did the Archbishop at the time that all this surfaced do as he did?
Does that make you very angry?
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER: Um, no, because I've seen it happen far too often before.
I've seen the church deal with people on the basis of who they know and who their friends are in high places, and if you have the right friends, then you're safe, and if you're not, well, you get hung out to dry.
HEATHER EWART: Stella feels she and her son and many others were left to hang out to dry.
When her suspicions about Father Alan Sapsford began to surface last year, she asked her son if the priest had ever touched him.
STELLA: He was very quiet at first.
Then he became agitated and said, "Mum, never.
"Never, mum, never."
Then his eyes filled with tears and he started to get more agitated, became angry and started going around the house and calling him "a bastard".
"That bastard, they've got to get the bastard".
HEATHER EWART: By this time, a small group of parishioners had had enough and decided to take matters into their own hands, demanding that the current bishop call for a church inquiry at the highest level.
For several years now, Father Paul Walliker had known the truth about Alan Sapsford, since he'd counselled the first victim to come forward - the one that's now a priest.
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER: I guess the thing is the denial by the church to actually take action, the denial of the church to actually say, "Look, we have wronged.
"We've done things wrong.
We need to fix this up."
HEATHER EWART: But before a church inquiry could bring down its findings, the police had stepped in.
The parish of Christ Church had divided down the middle - half in support of Alan Sapsford and half against.
Intimidation began.
Tell me about the harassing phone calls?
DOT BROCK: Well, I know there's been several.
Some have been -- rather foul language used, threats.
STELLA: I can't describe to you how it feels, for instance, to be yelled at, called names, called a slut, that my children deserve it, he was a good man.
HEATHER EWART: Stella went to the police last year, not only to talk about her son, but to complain about intimidation and physical threats to her family.
There were two detectives she trusted, but she struck a hitch whenever she tried to contact them.
STELLA: When I was making telephone calls trying to leave messages, I was thrown off the scent.
HEATHER EWART: Who threw you off the scent?
STELLA: It was a man.
I believe his name is Lance Marke.
He would give me the run-around.
HEATHER EWART: Why would Lance Marke want to block this?
Do you have any reason now?
STELLA: I now know that he was friends with Alan Sapsford.
HEATHER EWART: Detective Sergeant Lance Marke is in the criminal investigation unit in Seymour.
Word spread around town among parishioners and the victims' families to be careful if they were going to ring with complaints and he answered the phone.
A police spokesman in Melbourne has confirmed there have been allegations about the way the investigation was conducted.
Those allegations are now being examined by the police Ethical Standards Department.
The trial of Alan Sapsford was set to start next month, but he died unexpectedly in March.
He's buried at Avenel, close to the parish where he spent most of his working life.
The funeral was held not in a church but in the local hall, and the bishop was denied entry by the family.
The police still hold a thick file on Alan Sapsford, with written evidence and confessions of his abuse.
Some of the parishioners, victims and their families feel they've been denied justice.
At least one victim has told me he wants compensation from the church and has written to the Bishop of Wangaratta seeking a meeting.
That hasn't happened yet because the Bishop says the victim concerned is working through lawyers, so the church too needs to follow legal channels.
THE RIGHT REVEREND DAVID FARRER: My preferred procedure is to find an independent person - we have access to independent people - to investigate any such situations and we will look at them with sympathy with the advice of somebody who is quite independent, both from the church and the individual.
HEATHER EWART: As for those parishioners who have dared to speak out, they have one overriding hope - that the church hierarchy sits up and takes notice.
STELLA: It's a criminal act and it has to stop, and it has to stop in all churches, not only this one.
DOT BROCK: It needs a big broom and it needs to be swept clean so we can feel safe in a church.
FATHER PAUL WALLIKER: My motive is very simple - I don't want this ever to happen again.
Transcripts on this website are created by an independent transcription service. The ABC does not warrant the accuracy of the transcripts. #
[RECAPITULATION: I've seen the church deal with people on the basis of who they know and who their friends are in high places, and if you have the right friends, then you're safe, and if you're not, well, you get hung out to dry. [ … ]
harassing phone calls … there's been several … rather foul language used, threats.
ENDS.]
[COMMENT: And read where a deal was done, and he was supposedly restricted, but in reality released to seduce even more young people, just like a much larger Church does.
COMMENT ENDS.]
[May 7, 2003]
• Married Anglican minister had sex with altar boys in rural town.
AUSTRALIA: The Rev Alan Sacksford had sexually molested at least 30 altar boys in the mid-Victorian town of Seymour, starting about 40 years ago.
The Bishop of Wangaratta got an admission from him, and was going to dismiss him from the clergy, but the Archbishop of Melbourne intervened, and the compromise was to allow him to transfer to Melbourne diocese.
The police were finally approached by the families. People supporting the sex abuser had telephoned the mothers of two of the former altar boys with threats and foul language.
Someone in the police station "gave them the runaround," but he was charged and was to face trial; however, he died unexpectedly in March 2003. The minister's funeral was held, not in a church, but in a hall, and the bishop was denied entry by his family.
There had been suicides in the district of former Church boys. Division in the Seymour district still exists, arising out of these and surrounding incidents.
-- Australian Broadcasting Corporation television, "7.30 Report,"
with Heather Ewart, May 7 03
• Court expected to hear G-G suppression order.
MELBOURNE, Victoria, Australia: The Victorian Supreme Court is expected to be convened tomorrow to hear an application to lift a suppression order.
The ABC tonight tried to convene an urgent session of the court.
A number of judges were approached, but a hearing was not able to be convened.
It comes after Federal Labor frontbencher, Lindsay Tanner, placed questions on the notice paper of Parliament today.
He asked the Government to reveal whether the Governor- General, Peter Hollingworth, had initiated legal proceedings this year, or whether he had sought any suppression orders.
-- Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), News Online,
http://www.abc.net.au/news/justin/nat/newsnat-7may2003-79.htm ,
Wed, May 7 2003 23:48 AEST.
########## Poynteronline, Abuse Tracker, Wednesday, May 7, 2003 edition follows:- • Congregation Didn't Know about Convicted Sex Offender.
MISSISSIPPI: Members of a small church in Utica say they had no idea one of their own was a registered sex offender, not until he was arrested for another sex crime on Friday. You can find out if someone living near you is a sex offender because hundreds of Mississippi sex offenders are listed on the Internet.
Forty-three-year-old John Terrell attends the White Oak Church of Christ Holiness USA in Utica. His fellow members had no idea he was a registered sex offender until he was arrested Friday morning by Hinds County Sheriff's Deputies for two counts of Capital Rape.
Information on convicted sex offenders is readily available to you via the Internet thanks to Megan's Law. The Mississippi Department of Public Safety started putting out the information in 2000. And according to the department's public affairs director, the web site gets about 800 hits a day.
-- WLBT,
http://www.wlbt.com/ Global/story.asp?S=1262747 ,
By Joanna Gaitanoglou, joanna@wlbt.com .
(Posted by Kathy Shaw 10:30:15 AM)
• Church to use tighter screening.
MISSISSIPPI: The arrest of a man who occasionally preached at White Oak Church of Christ Holiness USA on capital rape charges has prompted the church to make plans to conduct background checks on church leaders in the future, a church official said.
Exactly how the church will conduct the background checks has not been determined, said Bishop Joseph Campbell of the South Central Diocese.
John B. Terrell, 43, a member of the church in Utica, is accused of raping an 11-year-old girl. He is being held without bond at the Hinds County Detention Center on two counts of capital rape.
-- The Clarion Ledger,
http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0305/06/m15.html
• Ex-priest charged with sex assault returned to New Jersey [1995].
CAMDEN (NJ): A former Roman Catholic priest alleged to have sexually assaulted a Pennsauken boy has been returned to New Jersey from Florida, where he had been living.
James Hopkins, 60, arrived at the Camden County Jail on Monday. He had been held in a jail in Martin County, Fla., since he was arrested there April 14.
Hopkins did not fight his extradition to New Jersey, where he is being held on $75,000 bail.
Hopkins was charged last month with aggravated sexual assault, sexual assault and endangering the welfare of a child. Authorities say he abused a boy, then 10, in 1995.
-- Newsday, http://www.newsday.com/ news/local/ wire/ny-bc-nj --churchabuse 0506may06, 0,2308865.story? coll=ny-ap-regional-wire
• Taoist priest suspected of killing old prostitutes [CURRENT].
TAIPEI, Taiwan: Kaohsiung police questioned a Taoist priest yesterday in connection with what is known as a serial killing of two old street walkers.
The priest, identified only by his family name of Huang, was released after he produced an alibi.
One of the victims, Huang Shu-ting, 70, was found dead at her apartment in suburban Kaohsiung Thursday.
Police found the other, Hsiao Hua-tan, 67, killed at her flat in the apartment building opposite Huang across a narrow lane Monday. She was naked.
Both were killed in the same manner, police investigators said.
-- The China Post,
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/ detail.asp?onNews =1&GRP =A&id =18933
• Italian priest arrested for prostitution, pornography [CURRENT].
GENOA, Italy: Police in the northern Italian city of Genoa say they have arrested four men, including a priest, on charges of sexual violence on minors, prostituting minors and pornography.
They say the priest and the three others had used gifts and foreign trips to entice boys aged between 11 and 17-years-old usually from poor families.
-- ABC (Australia),
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s848756.htm
• Sex with mature female, so DORMITORY PRIEST DISMISSED at Notre Dame Catholic University, U.S.A. [CURRENT]
SOUTH BEND (Indiana): Last week executive vice president at the University of Notre Dame, Father Tim Scully, stepped down (http://www.wndu.com/news/052003/news_19712.php) in the wake of controversy. Now, another Notre Dame priest is in the spotlight.
NewsCenter 16 has learned that a dormitory rector has been fired for an apparent inappropriate relationship. University officials say Father Samuel Peters was dismissed from his job as the rector of Sorin Hall.
Spokesman Matt Storin tells NewsCenter 16 that Peters admitted to a relationship with an "of age" female. Storin would not say if the woman was a student. Storin says any further discipline against Father Peters would be up to the Holy Cross Order, of which Father Peters is a member. [Picture of Fr Peters.]
-- NewsCenter16, WNDU 16,
"Notre Dame priest fired,"
http://www.wndu.com/news/052003/news_19763.php ,
May 6 03, (last updated May 7 03).
• Doctor's notes on girl draw debate .
CARLISLE (PA): The attorney for a Protestant minister accused of molesting his niece pointed to doctor's notes in an attempt to portray the girl as a troubled liar.
Joshua Lock, attorney for the Rev. Lane C. Hurley, told the jury hearing the case in Cumberland County Court that notes made by psychologists during their examinations of the girl used words such as "manipulative" to describe her demeanor leading up to her allegations of the abuse. The girl was being treated for depression and anorexia.
Chief Deputy District Attorney Jaime Keating told the jury the psychologists' notes were taken out of context by the defense and had a much different meaning.
Hurley, 53, pastor of the First Christian Church in Ghent, is accused of molesting his niece in 1997, when the girl was 10 years old. Hurley was staying with her family at their Dickinson Twp. home. She is now 15.
-- PennLive.com,
http://pennlive.com/ news/patriotnews/ index.ssf?/xml/ story.ssf/html_ standard.xsl?/base/ news/1052299802277610.xml ,
By Joe Elias, of our Carlisle Bureau.
• PM meets Queen and keeps quiet.
AUSTRALIA: Labor demanded Prime Minister John Howard detail his private talks with the Queen over the future of Governor-General Peter Hollingworth.
Mr Howard met the Queen at Buckingham Palace and is refusing to comment further on the talks.
But Mr Howard is likely to have briefed the Queen on the controversy surrounding Dr Hollingworth, who is under pressure to resign for his handling of sex abuse cases when he was Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane.
Asked in London if he fully supported the Governor-General, Mr Howard refused to answer.
-- Ninemsn,
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/National/story_38013.asp
• More allegations filed against priest.
WATERBURY (CT): A Wolcott man is the latest person to file a sex abuse lawsuit against the Reverend Stephen Foley, a former state police and fire chaplain.
The lawsuit, filed Tuesday by a man identified only as Anthony Doe, is the eighth filed in the past year against Foley.
The man claims that Foley molested him at a private home in Fairfield County in 1976.
At the time, Foley was a priest at Christ the King Church in Bloomfield. The church and the Hartford Archdiocese are also name in the lawsuit.
-- WFSB (AP),
http://www.wfsb.com/ global/story.asp ?s=1267402 &ClientType =Printable
• Anglican schools chief goes over concerns he mishandled complaints .
AUSTRALIA: An Anglican schools chief appointed by Peter Hollingworth amid concerns he had mishandled child abuse complaints resigned from the job.
Dr Hollingworth, now the Governor-General, was Archbishop of Brisbane when he appointed Gilbert Case executive director of Queensland's Anglican Schools Office in 2001.
Archbishop of Brisbane Dr Phillip Aspinall said a separation agreement had been negotiated and Mr Case had left his position immediately.
Dr Aspinall said the decision was made because Mr Case had been appointed despite the diocese being aware of allegations he did not properly handle abuse complaints.
-- Ninemsn, "Child abuse probe claims first scalp,"
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/ National/story_48360.asp
• PM fails to fully back G-G.
AUSTRALIA: Prime Minister John Howard has failed to offer full support for embattled Governor-General Peter Hollingworth.
Mr Howard earlier visited the Queen and is likely to have briefed her on the furore surrounding Dr Hollingworth, who is under pressure to resign for his handling of sex abuse cases when he was Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane.
Mr Howard refused to say whether the issue was raised with the Queen and later, at a press conference with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, was asked if he fully supported the Governor-General.
-- News.com.au ,
http://news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,6396889%255E2,00.html ,
By Shane Wright, May 7, 2003.
• Bishop Reilly gets set to retire.
WORCESTER, Mass.: Bishop Daniel Reilly will offer his retirement Monday, his 75th birthday, after nine years as head of the Catholic Diocese of Worcester.
Reilly, bishop of Norwich from 1975 to 1994, will stay on until Pope John Paul II appoints a successor, which could take six months or more, Raymond Delisle, a spokesman for the diocese, told the Telegram & Gazette of Worcester.
Bill Stanley of Norwich, who helped create St. Jude Common, an assisted living home, spoke warmly of Reilly's years in Norwich. He said Reilly was instrumental in securing $4.3 million to establish the center.
"His fingerprints are everywhere," Stanley said. "He started the first bishop's appeal, he had ecumenical moves in the community with rabbi and ministers. He was an active bishop who did monumental things."
Under church law, all bishops must tender their retirement at age 75. The pope can act immediately or defer retirement.
-- Norwich Bulletin,
http://www.norwichbulletin.com/ news/stories/ 20030507/ localnews/ 253360.html ,
May 7 03.
• Helping the church heal.
FALL RIVER (MA): The bishop-elect of the Catholic Diocese of Fall River believes it will take a recommitment of everyone in the church, along with an adherence to training and criminal background checks, to repair the damage done by the clergy abuse scandal.
Monsignor George W. Coleman, 64, in one of his first interviews since the pope announced his appointment last week, elaborated yesterday on his thoughts about healing the emotional wounds within the Catholic Church caused by allegations of widespread abuse within the Boston archdiocese and in others around the country.
The allegations rocked the Boston archdiocese and nearly a year later led to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard F. Law, who said he hoped his departure would aid the healing process.
Last year, two priests from the Fall River diocese, the Rev. Francis McManus, chaplain at St. Luke's Hospital, New Bedford, and the Rev. Robert Kaszynski, pastor of St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, were removed from their posts after allegations of sexual misconduct 20 years ago surfaced against them.
-- South Coast Today,
http://www.s-t.com/ daily/05-03/05-07-03/a01lo003.htm ,
By Curt Brown, Standard-Times staff writer, May 7 03.
• Archdiocese to fight sex-abuse case in federal court .
PHILADELPHIA (PA): The Archdiocese of Philadelphia apparently would prefer to fight its only current priest-abuse case in federal court rather than in state court, where jury verdicts in general tend to be substantially higher.
Louis Aquilino, a Turnersville, N.J., man who claims to have been abused by a priest at a South Philadelphia parish 20 years ago, when he was a teenager, sued the archdiocese in April in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court.
Late Monday, lawyers for the archdiocese transferred the case to federal court, asserting that federal court was the proper venue since the opposing parties are from different states.
C. Clark Hodgson Jr., the archdiocese's lawyer, yesterday refused to comment on the move or the strategy behind it.
Aquilino's lawyer, George M. Vinci Jr., said he needed some time to study the move before he could comment.
-- Philadelphia Daily News,
http://www.philly.com/ mld/dailynews/ news/local/ 5802902.htm ,
By Jim Smith, smithjm@phillynews.com .
• Decision to sue troubles bishop.
CALIFORNIA: Bishop Gerald Barnes, leader of the Diocese of San Bernardino, remains troubled by his decision to sue the Archdiocese of Boston for transferring a priest accused of molestation to the Inland area 13 years ago.
"It's like a family member taking another family member to court, but I felt it was necessary," Barnes said Tuesday. "I have a responsibility to protect the finances of the diocese."
The lawsuit filed last month is believed to be the first a diocese has filed against another diocese in the United States, a milestone that Barnes said led four other bishops to call him and voice their support for his decision.
Barnes talked about the lawsuit Tuesday during a wide-ranging conversation with The Press-Enterprise editorial board. He also discussed efforts in the million-member diocese to connect with the Latino community, and he talked about the state of the Catholic Church in Inland Southern California.
-- The Press-Enterprise,
http://www.pe.com/ localnews/ stories/ PE_NEWS_ nabish07.a1365.html ,
By Michael Fisher.
• Australian Bishops Say Governor-General Should Quit, BBC Says.
SYDNEY, Australia: Three Australian Anglican bishops called for Governor-General Peter Hollingworth to step down over a report he mishandled cases of child sexual abuse while he was an archbishop, the British Broadcasting Corp. said.
"If I was in his shoes, I'd feel the time has come to move on," the BBC cited Newcastle Bishop Roger Herft as saying. Peter Jensen, archbishop of Sydney, and Peter Brain, bishop of Armidale, also advised the 68-year-old representative of the U.K.'s Queen Elizabeth II to quit.
A report last week said that when he was archbishop of Brisbane Hollingworth committed "a grave error of judgment" in allowing a pedophile priest to remain in office, the BBC said.
-- Bloomberg.com ,
http://quote.bloomberg.com/ apps/news?pid =10000080&sid =ahTCWmGlna8g &refer=asia ,
By Friederike Truemper, May 7 03.
• Worcester bishop to step down.
WORCESTER (MA): The leader of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester -- whose church has been rocked by clergy sexual abuse troubles mirroring those of the Archdiocese of Boston -- is resigning in compliance with the Vatican's mandatory retirement age but not over the scandal, a spokesman said yesterday.
Bishop Daniel P. Reilly, who turns 75 Monday, will submit his resignation to the pope's representative in Washington, D.C., though the Vatican may take months to name his replacement, spokesman Ray Delisle said.
"He'll be here until the next bishop comes in," Delisle said. "Even after that, he'll still continue his liturgical ministry."
The leader of the Worcester church since 1994, Reilly previously headed the Diocese of Norwich, Conn., for nearly 20 years and spent the previous two decades as a priest and rising star in his home Diocese of Providence.
-- Boston Herald,
http://www2.bostonherald.com/ news/local_regional/ chur05072003.htm ,
by Robin Washington, Wednesday, May 7, 2003.
• Priest group official pans abuse policy.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.: The president of a nationwide federation of Roman Catholic priests called on US bishops yesterday to rethink the part of the church's sexual abuse prevention policy that allows the expulsion of
offending priests.
Guilty priests should never be allowed to return to public ministry, but neither should they be removed from the priesthood, the Rev. Bob Silva of Stockton, Calif., said in a speech in Kansas City to the National
Federation of Priests' Councils.
"We are not and cannot experience ourselves as a corporation or business institution; we are [a] church," Silva said. His remarks drew applause from the several hundred in attendance.
Silva also spoke out in favor of the efforts by Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of Los Angeles to withhold some documents from prosecutors.
-- Boston Globe,
http://www.boston.com/ dailyglobe2/127/ nation/Priest_group _official_pans_ abuse_policyP.shtml ,
By Larry B. Stammer, Los Angeles Times, May 7 2003.
• Church to post details of its budget.
BOSTON (MA): The Archdiocese of Boston, saying local Catholics remain skeptical of how the church is spending their money, has decided to post its detailed budget on the Internet, the archdiocesan chancellor said yesterday.
The archdiocese will post line items from its $20.5 million budget for fiscal 2003, which ends June 30, within the next two weeks and will post the details of its $16.2 million budget for fiscal 2004, which begins July
1, within 45 days, Chancellor David W. Smith said. The details will also be released to the news media and published in the archdiocesan newspaper, The Pilot, he said.
"There have been people uncertain -- or unconvinced -- about where we're spending the money that's sent in," Smith said. "It's fair to say that we don't enjoy the same level of trust with the community that we did years ago. That needs to be rebuilt."
Smith said he also plans to disclose the identities of real estate sold by the archdiocese as it is purchased, and said he is open to divulging how much money the church has spent on sex abuse cases. Tuesday, May 6, 2003
-- Boston Globe,
http://www.boston.com/ dailyglobe2/ 127/nation/ Church_to_post_ details_of_ its_budgetP.shtml ,
By Michael Paulson, Globe Staff, May 7 2003.
• Abbott backs Hollingworth.
AUSTRALIA: The Governor-General has finally won the strong backing of a senior member of government, Tony Abbott saying last night that Peter Hollingworth should not be "hounded out of office" for a "simple error of judgment".
"The Governor-General has done nothing that would justify his dismissal from office," the Workplace Relations Minister said.
The report by the Anglican Church, tabled in the Queensland parliament last week, had found Dr Hollingworth had acted "in good faith".
"Should a man be hounded out of office, should the office of the Governor-General be cheapened by hounding someone from office on the basis of a simple error of judgment made in good faith?" Mr Abbott asked.
Public figures should not be punished indefinitely for past mistakes in their private lives.
-- News.com.au ,
http://www.news.com.au/ common/story_ page/0,4057, 6395122 %255 E13780,00.html ,
By Michelle Gilchrist, Jamie Walker, Scott Emerson and Patricia Karvelas, May 07, 2003.
• Hollingworth 'can't recall' rape.
AUSTRALIA: Governor-General Peter Hollingworth has issued his first public denial since the Anglican Church released a report on child sex abuse in its schools last week.
Dr Hollingworth told The Courier-Mail he could not remember a mother in 1993 telling him her son, 9, was raped by the boarding master at The Toowoomba Preparatory School.
The Anglican Church in Brisbane yesterday said the alleged victim's solicitors told the church in February Dr Hollingworth was told about the rape in 1993.
"The complainant's mother went to see a Roman Catholic priest in 1992 who telephoned the then Archbishop Hollingworth in the mother's presence and advised him of the complaint," a spokesman for Archbishop of Brisbane Phillip Aspinall said last night.
-- News.com.au ,
http://www.news.com.au/ common/story_page/0,4057,6395095 %255 E421,00.html ,
By Chris Griffith, May 07, 2003.
• Hollingworth: the true scandal.
AUSTRALIA: The Governor-General did not only fail in his duty to victims, he supported the perpetrator, writes Muriel Porter.
American scholar of Scripture Luke Timothy Johnson has denounced the churches' tendency to cover up cases of sexual abuse to protect their reputations. The true scandal is not public shame or bad publicity, he writes in a recent edition of the English Catholic magazine Priests and People. Rather, it is the churches' willingness to "protect the predators who destroy the lives of children".
Johnson reminds his readers that, for Jesus, those who harmed the vulnerable were "scandalous", and deserving of God's condemnation.
The inquiry into sexual abuse in the Anglican diocese of Brisbane has exposed a deeply disturbing case of the church seeking to protect a pedophile priest and the church's good name, despite the protestations of his victims.
-- The Age,
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/05/02/1051382093269.html ,
May 2 &/or 3 2003.
• Quit now: pressure steps up.
AUSTRALIA: Governor-General Peter Hollingworth faced growing political and public pressure to resign yesterday.
National Party elder statesman Ian Sinclair, a staunch monarchist, and Greens leader Bob Brown both demanded he quit for allowing a child sex abuser to continue as a priest.
They joined Labor and the Democrats, who have called for his resignation since the early days of the scandal.
The president of the Baptist Union, the Reverend Tim Costello, also repeated his call for Dr Hollingworth to resign.
The attack intensified with the national psychiatrists' body again considering dumping Dr Hollingworth as its patron.
-- Herald Sun,
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5478,6373411%5E662,00.html ,
By Rick Wallace, 03 May 03.
• Baptist paedophile in the Philippines was 'sincere Christian' [1999-2001] .
AUSTRALIA: A Baptist church missionary who sexually interfered with young boys in the Philippines was a sincere Christian dedicated to helping the less fortunate, a court was told today.
David John Gillard, 57, pleaded guilty in the NSW District Court to 12 counts of indecency against four boys during four trips to the Philippines from May 1999 to July 2001.
As a missionary, Gillard visited the Philippines working at under-privileged children's camps run by the Evangelical Fellowship Philippines Incorporated.
In police facts tendered to the court, Gillard gained the trust of the boys - all aged under 16 - by offering them food, money and clothing, setting himself up as their benefactor and guardian.
Once that was established, he would sleep in their camp area, kissing and caressing them, telling them he loved them and asking them to masturbate him to ejaculation.
-- Herald Sun, "Pedophile was 'sincere Christian',"
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/ common/story_page/ 0,5478,6371765 %5E1702,00.html ,
02 May 03.
• Appointment insignificant, say leaders of child sex abuse victims.
IRELAND: Clerical abuse victims insisted yesterday that it will take more than a change of personnel to restore credibility to the Catholic Church.
Responding to the announcement of a successor to Cardinal Connell at the weekend, Marie Collins and Colm O'Gorman broadly welcomed the appointment of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin but played down its significance for victims of child sexual abuse.
A prominent campaigner on behalf of victims, Mr O'Gorman said he "certainly did not envy him the job" as the new Archbishop was coming to the role at a particularly difficult time.
Mr O'Gorman stressed that a single new appointment in one Irish diocese was "not really that relevant" and would not address what was an institutional problem.
The focus of Mr O'Gorman's victims' support group, One in Four has shifted to civil investigation into child sexual abuse, he said.
-- One in Four,
http://www.oneinfour.org/archives/000351.html ,
by Grainne Cunningham in The Irish Independent, http://www.unison.ie .
• Bishop Of Worcester Will Retire.
WORCESTER, Mass.: The head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester will retire Monday, according to a published report.
Bishop Daniel Reilly is expected to stay on until the pope appoints a successor.
The Worcester Telegram & Gazette reports Reilly won high marks during his early years and put the diocese on good financial footing.
But like many American bishops of his generation, Reilly also became entangled in the clergy sex abuse controversy.
-- News Channel 10,
http://www.turnto10.com/ news/2184192/detail.html
• Fallout continues from church child abuse inquiry.
AUSTRALIA: The fallout from the report into child abuse within the Brisbane Anglican
Church looks likely to continue today.
It is expected a private settlement will be announced to terminate the position held by Gilbert Case as head of the Anglican Schools office, an appointment made by Dr Peter Hollingworth when he was archbishop of Brisbane.
Mr Case was criticised in the report for dismissing student complaints against paedophile teacher Kevin Lynch at Brisbane's St Paul's private school.
At the time the report was released, Brisbane Archbishop Phillip Aspinall said Mr Case's situation would be considered.
"The situation is made more complex because Mr Case was appointed to his current position by the diocese when there was more or less full knowledge of the matters associated with Lynch at St Paul's school," he said.
-- ABC News (Australia),
http://www.abc.net.au/ news/justin/ nat/newsnat- 7may2003-21.htm ,
May 7 03
• Hollingworth weighs it up.
AUSTRALIA: Governor-General Peter Hollingworth appears to be responding to public concern over his past handling of child sexual abuse allegations as Brisbane head of the Anglican Church.
After the publication of an AC Nielsen poll yesterday which showed 76 per cent of Australians wanted Dr Hollingworth to resign, friend and fellow retired bishop Michael Challen indicated Dr Hollingworth was "considering these matters very, very seriously".
"I'm sure Dr Hollingworth, being the man he is, is seriously considering his situation," Mr Challen told ABC TV.
-- The West Australian,
http://www.thewest.com.au/20030507/news/latest/tw-news-latest-home-sto97152.html ,
By Karen Middleton, May 7 03.
• Judge holds off on setting date for diocese trial.
KENTUCKY: A Kenton County judge on Monday held off setting a trial date for a lawsuit that alleges the Diocese of Covington created a hostile work environment.
Circuit Judge Steve Jaeger said he first wants to decide on a number of outstanding motions, including some the church filed Monday morning seeking dismissal of the case.
John DiMuzio and his son, Mark, who combined to work for the diocese for 68 years in the maintenance department, filed the lawsuit last year. They said that complaints made about incidents of sexual abuse and harassment over the years fell on deaf ears.
The diocese has denied the claims.
-- Kentucky Post,
http://www.kypost.com/2003/05/06/dioc050603.html ,
By Paul A. Long, May 6 03.
• Grand jury questions Stokes on alleged abuse.
BALTIMORE (MD): Dontee Stokes, the Baltimore man who shot a priest he accused of sexually abusing him, appeared for about 40 minutes today before a grand jury investigating the allegations against the clergyman.
Stokes answered questions from grand jury members about why he reported in 1993 that the Rev. Maurice Blackwell had touched him but did not allege until last year that the priest raped him, said Stokes' attorney, Warren Brown.
Brown said Stokes explained he had hoped his lesser accusation against Blackwell would be enough to prosecute the priest and he would not have to tell authorities he had been raped, Brown said.
Brown said he believes "the truth will give rise" to an indictment against Blackwell.
-- Baltimore Sun,
http://www.sunspot.net/ news/local/bal-stokes 0506,0,2171.story ?coll=bal-local-headlines ,
The Associated Press, May 6, 2003
• Accused priest led a public life; Father Mario Blanco did not attempt to hide.
TACOMA (WA): The priest accused of sexually molesting a dozen young boys in the Catholic Diocese of Sacramento more than 30 years ago has not only led traditionalist congregations in the Tacoma area since the mid-1980s, but he is so well-known that actor Mel Gibson has flown Blanco to Southern California to celebrate Mass for his family.
Yet, after allegations surfaced last summer, Sacramento diocese officials said that they believed the priest had died. When they learned eight months ago Blanco was serving in the Pacific Northwest, they contacted
officials with the Archdiocese of Seattle to inform them that he was in their area.
Blanco, 74, served in the Sacramento diocese from 1969 to 1973. He was dismissed from the diocese following a church investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct. Later, Sacramento church officials
settled two cases in which the priest was accused of sexual assault. Since April 2002, 10 men have sued the diocese claiming they were abused by Blanco.
-- The News Tribune,
http://www.tribnet.com/news/ local/story/3072544p-3095837c.html ,
Jennifer Garza, The Sacramento Bee.
(Poynteronline, Posted by Ann Brentwood 1:10:21 PM)
• Law and Order; Priest's abuse trial may start.
CLEVELAND (OH): The Rev. Daniel McBride could go on trial today if his defense lawyer agrees to waive his right to a trial separate from two co-defendants linked to Marshall McCarron's Tavern in Ohio City.
Two other co-defendants from the bar pleaded guilty yesterday, removing an obstacle to McBride going to trial. Robert Shoup and John McKenzie each pleaded guilty to multiple prostitution charges, and agreed to testify for the prosecution if called in the trials of McBride and two others from the bar.
McBride, 76, is charged with racketeering, compelling prostitution and promoting prostitution in connection with his relationship with a 17-year-old boy. He was the only priest indicted in a seven-month investigation of child-sex abuse in the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland.
-- The Cleveland Plain-Dealer,
http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1052213605167030.xml
• News briefs from California's Central Coast.
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.: A Catholic priest pleaded innocent to two counts of child molestation that allegedly occurred 30 years ago when he was assigned to a Pismo Beach parish.
The attorney for Gregory Kareta said Monday he will ask to have the charges dismissed.
Kareta, 79, who recently lived in Avenal, remained free on $50,000 bond.
Prosecutors said Kareta repeatedly molested an 11-year-old altar boy during the summers of 1973 and 1974 when Kareta was the pastor at St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church.
The alleged victim now lives in Southern California. He reported the alleged abuse to the bishop at the Montgomery Church in Torrance in 1985, but said he was encouraged not to report Kareta to authorities, investigators said. Instead, the victim and Kareta were offered counseling by church officials.
-- The Mercury News,
http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/5797463.htm ,
Associated Press.
• It may not be fair, but Hollingworth should stand down.
AUSTRALIA: A head of state who has so little public support compromises the office of
governor-general, writes George Williams.
There are now grounds for the Governor-General, Dr Peter Hollingworth, to resign. He should do so in recognition of the fact that he is no longer able to fulfil his constitutional duties. This assessment is separate from the ongoing media debate about morality and ethics that goes to the heart of what Australians expect of the office.
Hollingworth's decision to allow a priest to remain in the ministry after an admission of sexual abuse may make him unfit to be Governor-General. Certainly, many Australians have formed a judgement against him on this basis.
Others believe that he may have committed no more than a serious error of judgment. In the words of the Prime Minister, he may not have been guilty of any moral turpitude.
Without the Constitution setting down criteria or a just and open procedure for dismissal, it is difficult to determine whether Hollingworth should resign or have his commission terminated on the basis of these issues.
-- Sydney Morning Herald,
http://www.smh.com.au/ articles/ 2003/05/06/ 1051987705037.html ,
May 7 2003
• Diocese defends rejection of ad.
SPRINGFIELD (IL): The conservative group Roman Catholic Faithful [RCF] has accused Springfield's Catholic Diocese of hypocrisy for banning advertisements from a Catholic-oriented tour company while allowing one of its priests to serve on the company's board.
But the diocese maintains that it cannot dictate how priests spend their private time.
The Catholic Times diocesan newspaper will not take advertisements from Golden Frontier Tours of Swansea because of the company's ties to the Rev. Robert Vonnahmen. Vonnahmen resigned from the Belleville diocese in 1993 amid allegations of sexual misconduct.
Monsignor Virgil Mank of the Springfield diocese is chairman of Golden Frontier's board of directors. Mank, dean of the Alton deanery in Godfrey, served as administrator of the Springfield diocese after the retirement of
Bishop Daniel Ryan and before the arrival of Bishop George Lucas.
"How can the diocese be so offended that they won't run their ads," said Roman Catholic Faithful president Stephen Brady, "but behind the scenes, Mank ran the company?
"The hypocrisy is so glaring."
-- State Journal-Register,
http://www.sj-r.com/printfiles/N05052003,b.htm ,
By Lisa Kernek, May 5 03
(Posted by Kathy Shaw 10:34:51 AM)
########## End of Poynteronline, Abuse Tracker, Wednesday, May 7, 2003
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• Cover-up left paedophile to prey on Vic altar boys. VICTORIA, Australia. Years, Alan Sapsford, Anglican Church, 30-100 altar boys.
May 7, 2003
FOR GOOD TEACHINGS TO BE HEEDED, A BIG CLEAN-UP IS NEEDED
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