References cont. (30) — Clergy Child Molesters

• Accused priest recounts abuse response. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  LOUISVILLE (Kentucky): A retired priest at the center of a sex-abuse scandal Thursday recounted decades-old conversations with a former archbishop who was responding to child-molestation allegations against the priest. The Rev. Louis E. Miller told lawyers at a deposition that former Louisville Archbishop John Floersh seemed to take the attitude that the problem would "take care of itself." Miller also said he was told by a psychiatrist upon his release from a psychiatric hospital in the 1960s that if he needed to have sex, "go out of town for it." Miller said the psychiatrist knew of his sexual past with children and was "probably" chosen by Floersh to assist in his treatment. Miller is accused of abusing children in dozens of the more than 250 lawsuits filed against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Louisville. -- The Henderson Gleaner, (AP), "Accused priest recounts abuse response," http://www.myinky.com/ecp/gleaner_ news/article/ 0,1626,ECP_4476_1982791,00 html , May 23 03
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References: www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethicscontents.htm
Most newsitems are from http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=46 e-mails
• Sex, God & Greed. UNITED STATES: Pedophile priests have sparked a litigation gold rush. The Boy Scouts, day care firms and Hollywood may be next. Asbestos, tobacco, guns, lead paint. What's the next jackpot for tort lawyers? It could be sex. The focal point of this tort battle is the Catholic Church. The Church's legal problems are worse even than most people realize: $1 billion in damages already paid out for the victims of pedophile priests, indications that the total will approach $5 billion before the crisis is over. But this wave of litigation does not end here. Is there any reason to think that the priesthood has a monopoly on child molestation? The lawyers who are winning settlements from Catholic dioceses are already casting about for the next targets: schools, government agencies, day care centers, police departments, Indian reservations, Hollywood. Plaintiff lawyer Roderick MacLeish Jr. and other litigators have parlayed the priest crisis into a billion-dollar money machine, fueled by lethal legal tactics, shrewd use of the media and public outrage so fierce that almost any claim, no matter how bizarre or dated, offers a shot at a windfall. The lawyers are lobbying states to lift the statute of limitations on sex abuse cases, letting them dredge up complaints that date back decades. Last year California, responding to the outcry over the rash of priest cases, suspended its statute of limitations on sex abuse crimes for one year, opening the way for a deluge of new claims. A dozen other states are being pushed to loosen their laws. -- Forbes, http://www.forbes.com/markets/forbes/2003/0609/ 066.html , Daniel Lyons, Jun 9 03
• Sex-abuse suit filed against ex-'Aiea priest. [CURRENT] HONOLULU (HI): An O'ahu man is claiming that a former pastor of St. Elizabeth Church in 'Aiea sexually abused him from 1997 or 1998 until December 2001. A lawsuit filed Tuesday by Honolulu attorney David Gierlach contends that Andrew Mannetta engaged in misconduct toward Elton Killion that included unwanted kissing, getting him drunk and sexually assaulting him. The complaint says Mannetta used his authority as a Roman Catholic priest to facilitate his conduct. Mannetta could not be reached for comment. Gierlach said much of the alleged misconduct took place while Killion was a minor. Killion is now 22, his lawyer said. -- Honolulu Advertiser, http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/ 2003/May/23/ln/ln15a.html , By David Waite, Advertiser Courts Writer, May 23 03
• Guest Preacher Named In Sex Abuse Lawsuit. HONOLULU (HI): A Catholic priest who served as a guest preacher at parish retreats and ecumenical events is being accused of sexual abuse. Hawaii resident Elton Killion claims in a Circuit Court lawsuit that the Rev. Andrew Mannetta made unwanted and unlawful sexual advances over a four-year period while Killion was a minor. Killion seeks monetary compensation to be determined at trial. Mannetta served as pastor of St. Elizabeth Church in Aiea from 1994 to 1997 and later lived at the parish residence for Our Lady of Good Counsel Church in Pearl City. His order, the Capuchin Franciscans, reassigned him to New York last October. Meanwhile, a priest from the Philippines who served in Hawaii churches from 1997 until last January has agreed to leave the ministry of the Catholic Church. -- TheHawaiiChannel.com, http://www.thehawaiichannel.com/news/2223044/detail.html
• Anglicans reject inquiry into alleged 40-year interstate pedophile CEBS network.
   News.com.au, "Church rejects sex inquiry," http://news.com.au/ common/story_page/0,4057,6479140%255E26462,00.html , May 23 03
   AUSTRALIA: The Anglican Church has rejected calls by two Adelaide priests for an independent investigation into a pedophile network which allegedly operated in South Australia and Tasmania for nearly 40 years.
   Archbishop Ian George said last night an inquiry was "not necessary" because the Adelaide Diocese had acted "promptly and appropriately" to accusations a former youth leader had sexually abused young boys and teenagers.
   He was responding to public allegations by Reverend Don Owers and Reverend Andrew King that former Church of England Boys Society chief commissioner Robert Brandenburg was part of a group of senior Anglicans in SA and Tasmania who had preyed on CEBS members since the 1960s.
   "There is no evidence of any network of pedophiles operating within the Diocese of Adelaide or, as has been suggested, linked with other dioceses," Archbishop George said.
• Appeal set in priest's abuse case. ST. CHARLES (IL): The Catholic Diocese of Rockford refused to turn over documents related to the conduct of a priest charged in a sex abuse case, instead asking a judge Thursday to hold it in contempt of court. The diocese told Kane County Judge Timothy Sheldon it would not turn over its internal documents on the conduct of the Rev. Mark Campobello, who is charged with sexual abuse of a minor girl. Sheldon then ruled that the diocese was in civil contempt, which enables the church to appeal to the Illinois Appellate Court. The diocese says it is protected by the First Amendment. "We had to be held in contempt. That is the only way we can get to a higher court," said Ellen Lynch of Hinshaw & Culbertson, which represents the diocese. -- Rockford Register Star, http://www.rrstar.com/localnews/your_community/regional/20030523-5243.shtml , By Geri Nikolai, May 23 03
• Woman sues Sioux Falls diocese claiming sexual abuse. SIOUX FALLS (SD): A Florida woman has filed a lawsuit against the Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls claiming she was sexually abused by a priest during her childhood. The lawsuit also names Bishop Robert Carlson, retired Bishop Paul Dudley, the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and its bishop and the Rev. Bruce MacArthur, a retired priest of the Sioux Falls diocese who now lives in Texas. The lawsuit was filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Sioux Falls. In the suit, Judith "Judy" Glassman DeLonga, 48, of Pensacola, Fla., claims MacArthur molested her from about 1965 to 1970 while she lived in Beaver Dam, Wis. The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, claims MacArthur committed sexual abuse and accuses the dioceses and bishops of fraud, concealment and negligence. Carlson said Wednesday afternoon that he had not seen the lawsuit but had been in contact with DeLonga. -- Aberdeen News, Associated Press, http://www.aberdeennews.com/mld/aberdeennews/news/5920482.htm
########## End of Poynteronline, Abuse Tracker, Saturday, May 24, 2003
• "Angry calls for head of state to roll," by Steve Lewis, Luke McIlveen and Scott Emerson; "There is no middle ground for a Pontius Pilate PM," by Dennis Shanahan, Political editor; and "Church a 'sitting duck'," by Richard Yallop. -- The Weekend Australian, May 24-25 03, p 7
• "Foolish" GG rape claim thrown out. By Gosia Kaszubska, May 24, 2003 MELBOURNE, Victoria, Australia: Lawyers for Rosemarie "Annie" Jarmyn's family were criticised yesterday by a Victorian Supreme Court justice for persisting with the civil rape suit when it was "obvious" the claims could not be proven. Allowing Jarmyn's children to abandon the case against Governor-General Peter Hollingworth yesterday, Justice Bernard Bongiorno said Jarmyn's death had made it "virtually impossible" to prove she had been raped by Dr Hollingworth in the mid-1960s. He reproached Brisbane law firm Shine Roche McGowan for declaring two weeks ago that the case would not be abandoned, describing its statements as "foolish". "As a matter of forensic reality, it would be virtually impossible to prove that allegation without the deceased," he said. -- The Weekend Australian, www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,6484058%255E2702,00.html , May 24-25 03
• Hollingworth considers resignation. AUSTRALIA: The future of Peter Hollingworth as Governor-General remains in doubt despite sensational rape claims against the former priest being dropped. Dr Hollingworth is considering his position as Governor-General amid a chorus of calls for his resignation or dismissal, and no vigorous support from the Howard Government. John Howard, who convinced Dr Hollingworth to stand aside this month, was leaving the Governor-General last night to make up his own mind about his future. The Anglican Church's sexual abuse report, which found Dr Hollingworth's position as a bishop was "untenable" after he had acted "inappropriately, unfairly and unreasonably" in allowing a pedophile priest to remain in the ministry, has already placed the Governor-General under enormous pressure to resign. Dr Hollingworth has admitted to a "serious error of judgment" but has obtained legal advice claiming he was denied natural justice by the inquiry. -- The Weekend Australian, http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,6484583%255E601,00.html By Dennis Shanahan, Steve Lewis and Gosia Kaszubska, May 24-25 03
• Anglican Church offers $60,000 to abuse victims. LAUNCESTON, Tasmania, Australia: The Tasmanian Anglican Church will offer up to $60,000 to victims of child sexual abuse within the diocese in the first compensation packagae offered by the church in the nation. Bishop of Tasmania John Harrower said yesterday the offer was not intended to make up for the past wrongs of clergy and church officials who had abused those in their care, but "it can help". "Can money fix this? No. We are not claiming that the amount we offer, nor indeed any amount of money, can ever make up for the past. It cannot, but it can help," he said in announcing the package at the Anglican Synod in Launceston. -- The Weekend Australian, "Church offers $60,000 to abuse victims," By Carol Altmann, May 24-25 03
• Book seen as record of an Anglican three-state pedophile ring through the CEBS.
   AUSTRALIA: The book The Tasmanian CEBS story can be read as a reflection of 50 years of Church of England Boys Society (CEBS) activity in Tasmania. But to some it is a thinly-veiled record of a pedophile ring that operated for more than 30 years between Tasmania, South Australia and Queensland.
   The clergy's names are there: Convicted pedophile John Litton Elliott (transferred from Queensland to Tasmania in 1956), and Bob Brandenburg (revealed this week as having abused up to several hundred boys in his 37 years association with the group) and convicted pedophile Louis Victor Daniels who wrote the 1982 book.
   The present reformist Archbishop of Brisbane, Dr Phillip Aspinall, was commissioned as CEBS field officer in 1980 by the then Rev Garth Hawkins, who was defrocked last year for child sexual abuse. -- adapted from The Weekend Australian, "Book seen as record of a pedophile," By Carol Altmann, May 24-25 03, p 8
• Teen girl's parents "appalled". AUSTRALIA: Peter Hollingworth has again come under fire for suggesting a 14-year-old girl initiated an abusive relationship with a church official. The girl's family, who met Dr Hollingworth in February last year, have also accused the Governor-General of acting unsympathetically and dismissively to their concerns. Last week, Dr Hollingworth wrote to Brisbane Anglican Archbishop Phillip Aspinall, rebutting claims by Dr Aspinall that he had not talked to him about the case. In the letter, Dr Hollingworth referred to the girl as the person "who started the relationship". . . . Speaking on behalf of the victim's family, anti-child abuse advocate Hetty Johnston said yesterday Dr Hollingworth's comment was "appalling". -- The Weekend Australian, May 24-25 03, p 8 By Ashleigh Wilson
(other newsitems on the subject, on the same page: "Resignation decision hinges on one case" and "Give him time: monarchist." May 24-25 03
• GOVERNOR-GENERAL DR PETER HOLLINGWORTH ANNOUNCES HIS RESIGNATION. AUSTRALIA: The pressure for him to resign had increased around this weekend with the leaking of a letter he had written to the present Archbishop of Brisbane Phillip Aspinall. The letter seemed to state that a 14-year-old girl had started a sexual relationship with someone in authority in a Church situation. -- Various electronic news media, Sunday May 25 03
• Peter Hollingworth resigns as Governor-General. AUSTRALIA: Dr Peter Hollingworth has resigned from the office of Governor-General due to the controversy surrounding his handling of child sexual abuse cases in the Anglican Church when he was the archbishop of Brisbane. In a written statement issued at around 5pm AEST, Dr Hollingworth says it is with deep regret and after much thought that he advised Prime Minister John Howard he wished to resign. Dr Hollingworth has been under pressure to quit after the finding of a church report criticised his decision not to sack a paedophile priest. Dr Hollingworth himself acknowledged it was a serious error of judgement. In the statement, Dr Hollingworth described the allegations against him as unwarranted and misplaced. He says it is clear the continuing controversy has the potential to undermine and diminish his capacity to uphold the importance, dignity and integrity of the office, adding he cannot allow that to occur. This vice-regal crisis has been the biggest scandal involving the office since the dismissal in 1975, when then governor-general Sir John Kerr dismissed the Whitlam Labor government. A spokesperson for Buckingham Palace said the Queen was of course aware of Peter Hollingworth's decision to leave office and that Her Majesty had been informed before the announcement was made. -- Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV, http://www.abc.net.au/news/ , Sunday, May 25 2003. 10:37pm AEST
• Church of shame. SOUTH AFRICA: A Sudanese refugee's battle for justice has broken the conspiracy of silence over the handling of sexual abuse inside the Catholic Church in South Africa. An investigation by the Sunday Times can reveal today how the church held its own "investigation" into the man's rape claim behind closed doors - excluding police and largely ignoring the victim - and then declared the priest not guilty. The head of the Rustenburg diocese, Bishop Kevin Dowling, now admits that the alleged rapist was sent to centres in the US and Europe to "cure" his "sexuality problems" before the alleged rape took place at the Church of the Redeemer in North West. The Sunday Times has found that: * The Catholic Church in South Africa does not know how many clergymen have been found guilty of sexual misconduct because it keeps no records; * The church uses its own protocols to handle cases of sexual abuse and rape -- outside the South African justice system; and * The church failed to follow its own protocols while "investigating" the refugee's rape claim. -- Sunday Times, http://www.sundaytimes.co.za/2003/05/25/news/news01.asp , by Andre Jurgens and Jocelyn Maker. May 25 03
• Parents demand inquiry into Anglican school sex interference for 40 years.
   The Advertiser, www.theadvertiser.com.au , Adelaide, "Distraught parents demand inquiry," by Colin James, Wed May 28 03, p 6, and picture in same issue on p 1
   ADELAIDE, S. Australia: The parents of a St Peter's College pupil allegedly sexually assaulted by a former school chaplain have called for an independent inquiry into paedophilia within the Anglican Church.
   The son went into a psychiatric hospital in 1992 after undisclosed incidents involving Reverend John Mountford.
   The school's principal, Richard Burchnall, last night confirmed Mountford had been living with a young Indonesian man in the grounds at St Peter's before he was summarily dismissed for sexually interfering with a boarder.
   The Anglican Church faces pressure to hold an independent inquiry into allegations that a former Adelaide youth leader, Robert Brandenburg, abused young boys for almost 40 years.
   Adelaide Archbishop Ian George resisted holding the inquiry, but offered support for victims.
   The Advertiser reported in March last year (2002) that Mountford had flown out of Adelaide before he could be interviewed by police. . . .
   The school had notified the authorities. The boy and his family did not wish to press charges so the police inquiry was dropped.
• Son had "collapse" after sex abuse by Anglican minister Mountford; son slept sitting up.
   -- The Advertiser, www.theadvertiser.com.au , "Mum cannot forgive Church," by Colin James, p 6, Wed May 28 03
   ADELAIDE, S. Australia: A former St Peter's College pupil allegedly sexually abused by the school's chaplain had a "major collapse" in May 1992.
   The mother says she will never forgive the Anglican Church for the trauma inflicted on her son.
   His life had seemed to go into a downward spiral after the Rev John Mountford came to the school in 1991.
   "At home he would not sleep in his room but slept night after night in a chair in the television room with the light on," she said. . . .
   There had been no attempt by the school to find out what had caused her son's trauma.
   When the Rev Mr Mountford was later abruptly moved from the school, there had been no attempt by the school to find out whether there were other boys who had been abused.
***: Out of action, more or less, from May 28 03 for about four weeks due to Melbourne meetings and influenza, so many sex-abuse newsitems have been omitted.
• Sexual abuse: Patriarchal power structures and protecting in-group. AUSTRALIA: The sexual abuse crisis in the Church "reflects an extensive pattern and tolerance of abusive uses of resource and symbolic power that has roots deeply enmeshed in the patriarchal culture of Christianity in the past and today," the Revd Dr Peter Horsfield said last month.
   The Uniting Church minister and former Dean of the Uniting Church Theological Hall, was speaking at the launch of Sex, Power and the Clergy by Melbourne Anglican lay woman Dr Muriel Porter.
   "This abusive behaviour by some has continued," he said, "because other church leaders who have known about it have been more concerned to protect the public fact of the institution, to protect their own interests and the interests of their in-group, than they have been in doing the right thing in terms of social requirements and their own professed religious principles."
   He added: "While the book is balanced, it is far from innocuous. It does not hold back from offering scathing criticism at times of the underlying factors, the confused attitudes in Christianity towards sex and the body, and the patriarchal diminishment of women and children that have allowed this abuse to occur and continue."
   He said that people who have been subject to sexual abuse by clergy in the more recent past "have tried for decades to have the crime and injustice dealt with, but church leaders have actively used their substantial power to keep it quiet: church finances have been used to buy legal defence for clergy and to intimidate anybody who tries to challenge them; religious leaders have used their extensive social and political connections to intimidate victims; and they have used their superior knowledge and control of church systems. Church leaders have also used their religious status and position of social respect to subvert complaints -- one of the biggest barriers that has had to be broken in bringing this issue into the light was the cultivated perception of clergy as well-meaning, kind-hearted and self-sacrificial people...
   "... The consequences of sexual abuse are quite profound at any time and a person who has been sexually abused commonly spends decades, if not the whole of their life, trying to rebuild what has been shattered and taken away.
   When the abuse is perpetrated by someone who represents the fundamental religious order and trustworthiness of life, those consequences are multiplied -- one writer in the early 1990s referred to is as having your soul stolen.
   "I think most church leaders still don't get this. Most church leaders still do not see victims of abuse as the experts in understanding the issue and do not involve victims in identifying what action needs to be taken to address and rectify it."
   Sex, Power and the Clergy is available from Anglican Media Bookshop. Tel: 9653 4221.
For information about the Melbourne Diocese's sexual abuse protocols, Trust and Power in the Church Report and interview with Dr Jane Hendtlass, Acting Director of Professional Standards, see www.melbourne.anglican.com.au/episcopate/harassment.html
   [Picture: Dr Muriel Porter and the Revd Dr Peter Horsfield launch Sex, Power and the Clergy]
   -- The Melbourne Anglican (including The Bendigo Anglican), "Sexual abuse: a question of power," by Roland Ashby, pp 1 and 3, June 2003.
   The Melbourne Anglican, Published by Anglcian Media, 209 Flinders Lane, Melbourne 3000, Tel 03 9653 4221, fax 03 9650 5237, editor@melbourne.anglican.com.au
• Clergy to have police check. -- The Melbourne Anglican, p 1, June 2003. [Article omitted to save time and space.]
• G-G controversy highlights 'monumental challenges' facing Anglicans. -- The Melbourne Anglican, p 3, June 2003. AUSTRALIA: The controversy that has lashed the Governor-General has implications for the Anglican Church that are likely to outlast the impact on the office itself.
   It has excited greater community response about the church than any event in the last decade, with The Melbourne Anglican fielding record numbers of phone calls, e-mails and other communications.
   This is viewed by some within the church as unfair, since the focus of the reaction -- Bishop Peter Hollingworth -- is retired from ecclesiastical office. But the cv [curriculum vitae] on which he was appointed comprised his working life as a priest, a bishop, and a renowned church social worker as executive director of the Brotherhood of St Laurence.
   Bishop Hollingworth's successor as Archbishop of Brisbane, Phillip Aspinall, not only commissioned a far-reaching report on the issue within his new diocese, but urged a national inquiry, rejected by the Federal Government. The report's tabling in the Queensland Parliament by Labor Premier Peter Beattie accorded it the privileged protection it required if it was to be cited widely in the media.
   The Archbishop of Melbourne, Peter Watson, commended Archbishop Aspinall for the report, for his apology to the victims, and for his determination to create "an arena of safety and a climate of care throughout the church." He later went on to urge Australians to pray for Bishop Hollingworth and for the victims of sexual abuse cases he handled as Archbishop of Brisbane. "His decision whether or not to resign is a difficult one, and must be made on the basis of how best to further the cause of healing in the community."
   The Archbishop asked: "Can the trauma and hurt of victims of sexual abuse cases he handled be healed if he remains as Governor-General, and can he, by staying in the position, retain the confidence of the majority of Australians and preserve the integrity and dignity of that office? These are the questions that he and his advisers must consider."
   A rape charge, relating to an alleged incident in Bendigo 40 years ago, initiated in civil proceedings in the Victorian Supreme Court -- that Bishop Hollingworth has vigorously denied -- is viewed even by his severest critics as unrelated to the core finding of negligence that emerged from the Brisbane inquiry: that he allowed a paedophile to remain working as a priest, and that he was unsympathetic to a woman sexually abused, when a minor, by another priest.
   Churchgoers in Melbourne are painfully split, some -- especially among those who admired his work with the Brotherhood -- believing that Bishop Hollingworth has been unfairly vilified for errors of judgement that veered towards pastoral generosity, the illness of his wife Ann adding a further burden at an already intolerable time. Others have said they feel let down by him, that he failed in the central requirement of a shepherd -- protecting the weakest members of his flock.
   Whether he decides, ultimately, to stay in Yarralumla or to leave, the controversy has acted as a prism magnifying monumental challenges the church was already facing.
   They include:
   Questions about whether church leaders are equipped for roles in wider society -- although New Zealand's Anglican primate Bishop Paul Reeves enjoyed a successful term as Governor-General there (his only ugly moment came when he arrived in Vanuatu, where it was expected that visiting "big men" demonstrate their status by dispatching a pig with a club. As a vigorous Maori, Bishop Reeves did not flinch. But the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals back home was incensed; he was their patron.)
   Questions about the extent to which bishops should democratise and systematise traditionally autonomous patterns of decision making, focusing instead on transparency, accountability and "due process."
   Questions about the qualifications for, and appointment and training, of priests.
   And questions about whether the church the eschew the making of pastoral judgements based on the contending claims of individuals -- in the face of a growing desire of broader society to determine issues through legal channels. It is no coincidence that increasing numbers of people in synods and other church bodies are lawyers.
   The national context is important. It is that of a divided people. The Prime Ministership of Paul Keating led many Australians in public life to anticipate what they viewed as crucial breakthroughs in areas including Aboriginal reconciliation and becoming a republic.
   Their distaste for John Howard has been amplified by the disappointment he wrought in defeating Keating, and then Kim Beazley twice, and by the agenda for which he obtained a mandate. They were equivocal at best about Bishop Hollingworth, a Howard appointee.
   But the underlying moral and social issues subsume even such strong political feelings.
   Many former sexual crimes have become not merely decriminalised but socially embraced; Melbournians flocked to buy shares, in April, in newly listed brother the Daily Planet.
   However, child sex abuse, the issue that brought Bishop Hollingworth undone, has become better understood as a particularly cruel imposition of power, and today attracts widespread public revulsion. There could be no more damning association for the church in the minds of most Australians.
   Chris McGillion, the Sydney Morning Herald's well-informed religious affairs commentator, wrote on May 13 that the question of a national Anglican Church approach had yet to be addressed: "There are still issues of accountability, leadership, the clerical culture, ministry selection and training and periodic review to be dealt with. There is still further the Anglican Church must travel... The days of churches being worlds unto themselves are gone for ever."
Rowan Callick is a journalist, a lay reader at St James Thornbury and a member of the Public Affairs Commission of general synod.
[Picture: Dr Peter Hollingworth when he was Archbishop of Melbourne.]
   -- The Melbourne Anglican, "G-G controversy highlights 'monumental challenges' facing Church," by Rowan Callick, p 1, June 2003.
   [COMMENT: Most major Churches have failed to copy the methods used by the Apostles to handle what used to be called "sin." Forgiveness was offered to non-members, but once they were baptised they were expected to be "brothers" and "saints," or they were ostracised as a foreigner or a tax-collector (see Matthew 18:17). See also the Letter to the Hebrews 6:4-6: "For it is impossible as regards those who, having been enlightened ... and having fallen away, to revive them again to repentance ..." For an article giving other New Testament verses on this, click Non-marital. No child abuser would have remained as an ordinary member of the Church in apostolic times, let alone be allowed to lead a congregation! -- Faith Purification Programme, 18 Nov 03. COMMENT ENDS.]
   [FOOTNOTE: The newspaper had presumably been printed before Dr Hollinworth's resignation, which occurred on May 25, 2003. FOOTNOTE ENDS.] June 2003.

• New leader of newish Anglican structure to combat sex sin. MELBOURNE, Victoria, AUSTRALIA: Ms Angela Were has been appointed Chair of the Melbourne Anglican Professional Standards Committee . .. to ... advise ... in the handling of sexual abuse and harassment complaints within the Diocese. -- The Melbourne Anglican, "New Chair of Diocesan Professional Standards Committee," p 3, June 2003.
• [Mistakes were made by Catholics before adequate processes were put into place! separation good.] AUSTRALIA: Catholic Archbishop John Bathersby of Brisbane in an ABC Radio interview said he would like Australians to remember Dr Hollingworth as a kind and compassionate man. "I think that mistakes were made for sure, but again 10 years ago they were mistakes that were probably being made by a number of people before adequate processes were put in place." He had had concerns about the appointment of a Church leader as Governor-General from the beginning. There was always a tension between the Church and secular roles. Archbishop Bathersby said Dr Hollingworth had done the right thing in resigning.
Catholic Archbishop George Pell, of Sydney, told ABC Radio that Dr Peter Hollingworth had done the right thing by resigning from the Governor-Generalship. No Church leader should ever be appointed Governor-General because it would muddy the waters between Church and state. "I think even in a just war, it's not appropriate, for example, for an archbishop to be farewelling our troops," Dr Pell said. "The separation of Church and state in Australia is a blessing and we should preserve it." -- The Catholic Leader, Brisbane, www.catholicleader.com.au , "Resignation is right move," Jun 1 03, p 3
[COMMENT: Archbishop Bathersby repeats the hoary old chestnut along the lines that the Church made mistakes 10 years ago because it didn't know any better, and didn't have "adequate processes". This website is quoting documents back to the 1980s and earlier that told leaders what to do with clergy sexually abusing their flock. Anyway, I wonder what the original Apostles would have thought of his excuse!
The early Church leaders removed bad examples from their flocks:- The 1st Epistle to the Corinthians, 5:7-13, 1 Cor 15:33, 2 Cor. 13:9-10, Ephesians 5:3, 7, 18, 27, Hebrews 6:4-6, and 2 Peter 3:14. Then read how these exclusion practices are rooted in Jesus's words in Matthew 10:14, Matt. 18:6, 7, 10; Mark 9:42; Luke 17:2. Jesus didn't seem to be "turning the other cheek" to the Scribes and Pharisees, nor forgiving them seven times 70 times!
On the contrary, Jesus publicly exposed and rebuked hypocritical spiritual leaders (Matt. 23:13-35, Luke 11:39-52) who were really sinners (just like the child-abusers are), and took a little whip to the sacrilegous traders and moneychangers in the Temple (Matthew 21:12, Mark 11:15, Luke 19:45, John 2:15-16). Furthermore, publicly rebuking sinners is also advised in 1 Timothy 5:20. Couldn't the bishops have done something similar to the hypocritical sacrilegous sex-abusing clergy, without needing "adequate processes" to be put in place? Apostle Peter on one occasion struck people dead for sin (Acts of the Apostles 5:3-10), and Paul caused temporary blindness to afflict an opponent of his preaching (Acts 13:6-11). No "adequate processes" there!
Jesus said he came to cause division -- Matthew 10:34, 35 -- and surely a Church trying to lead people to decency must "divide" seducers from the children! To clear up any muddled thinking going the other way, check the original recommendations for healthy married sex at 1 Cor 7:2, 5, 9, and Hebrews 13:4. -- Faith Purification Programme. COMMENT ENDS] [article date Jun 1, 03]
   [COMMENT ON DR PELL: "Separation of Church and State! I thought that for centuries the Papacy had the doctrine of the universal overlorship of clergy over princes, with the Pope over the Emperor and other civil rulers! COMMENT ENDS.] [Jun 1 03]

• Tackling sexual abuse in Catholic schools. BRISBANE, Queensland, Australia: I was disturbed to read the article entitled "Start dealing with abuse in schools" (CL 18/5/03) as the comments made conveyed the impression that nothing was happening in Catholic schools in relation to responding to sexual abuse matters. [...] In the Archdiocese of Brisbane we have employed child protection officers since the late 1980s . . . vast majority . . . home environments. . . . Any allegation against a current or past staff members . . . is dealt with under the Towards Healing protocol of the Australian bishops and religious leaders [??]. Police are involved where any criminal offence is alleged. -- The Catholic Leader, Brisbane, www.catholicleader.com.au , "Tackling sexual abuse in schools," by David J. Hutton, Executive director of Catholic Education, Archdiocese of Brisbane, Qld, Jun 1, 03, p 8
   [COMMENT: Another attempt to cover up the fact that the HOLY clergy lead children into sins of the flesh, and their leaders enable this to keep on occurring. END.]

• [USA refused to ordain him, so a Uganda Church obliged; later to Presbyterians]

  [2001, Valencia] - Independent Episcopalian. 2001 pornography not reported, 2001 sex with girl. United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Uganda flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Post Gazette (Pittsburgh, Penn.), "Pastor charged with rape faces ouster; Bishop says sex guilt would cost credentials;" www.post- gazette.com/ localnews/ 20030605 valenciar 4.asp , By Ann Rodgers-Melnick, arodgersmelnick @post-gazette.com , 412-263-1416, Thursday, June 05, 2003
   PITTSBURGH, Penn. -- If the sexual assault charges against the Rev. David Valencia hold up, the former assistant pastor of Christ Church at Grove Farm in Ohio Township will be stripped of his credentials as a priest of the Anglican Diocese of Bunyoro-Kitara, Uganda, his bishop said.
   "I would like everyone to know that in the Diocese of Bunyoro-Kitara, in the Church of Uganda, we do not tolerate such behavior among our clergy; and whenever such behavior turns out to be true, then we are left with no option but defrocking," Bishop Nathan Kyamanywa wrote to the Post-Gazette.
   "I am personally extremely concerned about this issue and I will offer whatever help is needed."
   Valencia, 47, was arraigned Monday on charges of rape, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, indecent assault, unlawful contact or communication with a minor, endangering the welfare of children and corruption of minors. He is free on $2,000 bond and a preliminary hearing is scheduled for Tuesday before Bellevue District Justice Donald H. Presutti.
   The Ugandan diocese ordained Valencia in 1998 after Bishop Robert Duncan of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh refused because Valencia was no longer a practicing Episcopalian.
   The ordination raised eyebrows in the worldwide Anglican Communion, to which the Episcopal Church belongs, because it was seen as part of a larger effort to keep unhappy conservative Episcopalians in the Anglican fold by placing them under the jurisdiction of conservative African bishops. [...]

Pastor charged with rape faces ouster.
Bishop says sex guilt would cost credentials.

   Post Gazette, By Ann Rodgers-Melnick, arodgersmelnick @post-gazette.com , 412-263-1416, Thursday, June 05, 2003
   If the sexual assault charges against the Rev. David Valencia hold up, the former assistant pastor of Christ Church at Grove Farm in Ohio Township will be stripped of his credentials as a priest of the Anglican Diocese of Bunyoro-Kitara, Uganda, his bishop said.
   "I would like everyone to know that in the Diocese of Bunyoro-Kitara, in the Church of Uganda, we do not tolerate such behavior among our clergy; and whenever such behavior turns out to be true, then we are left with no option but defrocking," Bishop Nathan Kyamanywa wrote to the Post-Gazette.
   "I am personally extremely concerned about this issue and I will offer whatever help is needed."
   Valencia, 47, was arraigned Monday on charges of rape, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, indecent assault, unlawful contact or communication with a minor, endangering the welfare of children and corruption of minors. He is free on $2,000 bond and a preliminary hearing is scheduled for Tuesday before Bellevue District Justice Donald H. Presutti.
   The Ugandan diocese ordained Valencia in 1998 after Bishop Robert Duncan of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh refused because Valencia was no longer a practicing Episcopalian.
   The ordination raised eyebrows in the worldwide Anglican Communion, to which the Episcopal Church belongs, because it was seen as part of a larger effort to keep unhappy conservative Episcopalians in the Anglican fold by placing them under the jurisdiction of conservative African bishops.
   Christ Church at Grove Farm, where Valencia worked from 1998 until May 2002, is an unaffiliated congregation that split in the mid-1990s from St. Stephen Episcopal Church in Sewickley. The senior pastor of Christ Church, the Rev. John Guest, is a former rector of St. Stephen and is still a priest of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh.
   Although Duncan refused to ordain Valencia in 1998, he gave his blessing to Bishop Wilson Turumanya of Bunyoro-Kitara to do so, saying at the time he believed it would bring Christ Church into the Anglican fold and perhaps later into the Diocese of Pittsburgh. But Christ Church remains independent.
   Duncan, who returned Tuesday from a sabbatical in France, said he heard just yesterday of problems regarding Valencia.
   "I did not know the circumstances under which David Valencia had left [Christ Church]," he said. "John Guest is under me but the congregation isn't."
   "We have really moved to make our congregations [in the diocese] safe. I'm very sorry to hear that this has happened to a young girl and to her family, but secondly to a congregation."
   According to Guest, an employee discovered in June 2001 that Valencia was viewing sexually explicit Internet sites on a computer in his office. Guest said he ordered Valencia to get counseling and stop viewing such material, but told no one else.
   The 17-year-old girl later told police that Valencia pressured her to engage in "sexual therapy" during counseling sessions between May and August 2001. But she spoke to no one until she blurted it out to her sister earlier this year, her father told the Post-Gazette.
   In December 2001, an employee told the parish council about Valencia's inappropriate Internet use, according to both Guest and the girl's father, who was on the parish council. Guest then barred Valencia from public ministry and directed him to find a new job. In May 2002 he left for a Presbyterian church in Tucson.
   The bishop who ordained Valencia retired in 2002. Kyamanywa, his successor, said he was unable to reach Valencia even before the molestation accusation surfaced.
   "I want very much to get in touch with David Valencia, but his contact has eluded me for a long time, even before the current saga came to light," he wrote.
   He is awaiting more information from the girl's family, he said.
   "Normally when a serious situation such as this arises, we suspend the accused and await further investigations, which will determine either dismissal/defrocking or reinstatement in the event the accused is proved innocent," he wrote.
   The girl's father expressed confidence in Kyamanywa.
   His daughter is struggling emotionally, but has great courage, he said.
   "This is a credit to my daughter. It would be easy for her to say, 'Hey Dad, I want this to go away. I don't want to testify and relive this thing three or four times.' It would be easy for me and my wife to say let's just forget it," he said.
   "But what my daughter has said, and what we believe as a family, is that if we don't do this, somebody else could get hurt." #
   [COMMENT: See later newsitems from Dec 12, 05, Ethics / Ethcont 119 . COMMENT ENDS.] [June 05, 03]
• Criminal organisation, not my Church.
   "Because of the great harm done by some priests and religious, the church herself is viewed with distrust, and many are offended at the way in which the church's leaders have acted in this matter. The abuse which has caused this crisis is by every standard wrong and rightly considered a crime by society; it is also an appalling sin in the eyes of God." -- Pope John Paul II, April 23, 2002
   Frank Keating shared the pope's disgust. Last June, when he was named to head a sexual abuse oversight panel for the Roman Catholic Church, the former federal prosecutor and then-governor of Oklahoma startled many of the U.S. bishops. He said he would call for the dismissal of any bishop found to have covered up molestation by clerics: "If someone obscures, absolves, obstructs, hides that criminal act, arguably they are obstructing justice or arguably they are also accessories to the crime."
   Over the past year, relations between Keating and some bishops have only deteriorated. Last week the Los Angeles Times quoted him as saying that some bishops "act like La Cosa Nostra" and hide information from his national review board. Being compared to mobsters offended several bishops, as well as some members of the board, whose job is to monitor the bishops' compliance on sexual abuse issues.
   Monday afternoon, Keating sent his resignation to Bishop Wilton Gregory of Belleville, Ill., president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. In the letter Keating called his comments "deadly accurate . . . To resist grand jury subpoenas, to suppress the names of offending clerics . . . that is the model of a criminal organization, not my church." -- Chicago Tribune, "The bishops lose a critic," http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0306170334jun17,1,6981078story?coll= chi- newsopinion- hed , Jun 17 2003
• 100 parishes withholding payments to Boston R.C.C. BOSTON (MA), June 17: Underscoring the financial difficulty facing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston as a result of the sexual abuse scandal in the clergy and a sagging economy, Bishop Richard G. Lennon warned his parish priests today that because almost 100 churches were withholding money from the archdiocese, he would order them to start laying off employees or cut their health benefits. Bishop Lennon, who took over as the interim administrator of the archdiocese after Cardinal Bernard F. Law resigned in December, told the priests that "this may well be painful for some," but that the archdiocese had to bring its costs and resources into balance. The shortfall averages about $15,000 a parish, the Rev. Christopher Coyne, a spokesman for the archdiocese, said. It now amounts to a $9.4 million budget gap. The money is supposed to be paid by Boston's 360 parishes into a central trust fund and then returned by the archdiocese to help individual churches pay for the pension benefits and health insurance of its lay employees and the insurance costs for its buildings, Father Coyne said. "We just don't have the available funds to make these payments," he said. -- The New York Times, "Boston Archdiocese, Hurting Financially, Warns of Layoffs," http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/18/national/18BOST.html? pagewanted=print&position= , By Fox Butterfield, Jun 17 03
Arrest, resignation intensify scrutiny of bishops conference. ST. LOUIS (MO): The Catholic bishops gathering in St. Louis this week had planned a quiet spring meeting. They had hoped they could work hard without drawing the kind of attention their Dallas meeting brought last year during the worst of the sexual abuse scandal. But as some of the bishops began to arrive Tuesday at the Hyatt Regency hotel at Union Station for pre-meeting sessions, their faces wore expressions of gloom and sorrow. On Monday night, Bishop Thomas O'Brien, of the Phoenix diocese, was arrested in connection with a fatal hit-and-run accident after police traced a license plate number to his car. Earlier Monday, former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating resigned as head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' national review board. Keating had compared some bishops to the Mafia in what he saw as their attempts to cover up criminal activity, and he made it known he was not sorry about the comments. "It's likely to be a pretty tense meeting," said Philip Lawler, 52, editor of the conservative monthly publication, Catholic World Report, based in Lancaster, Mass. "There may be more disagreements than I would have predicted a month ago." -- St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "Arrest, resignation intensify scrutiny of bishops conference," http://www.post-dispatch.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/News/ 3511F3949997EC1F86256D49001 57B2F?OpenDocument&Headline=Arrest,+resignation +intensify+scrutiny+of+bishops+conference+++ , By Patricia Rice and Ron Harris, Jun 17 03
• Let off charge of commanding sex-abuse concealment, bishop later arrested for hit-and-run death. PHOENIX (Arizona): The Catholic bishop of Phoenix has been arrested and charged with leaving the scene of a fatal car accident, two weeks after he avoided being charged over the Church's sex abuse scandal. Police believe Bishop Thomas O'Brien, 67, was at the wheel of his car which hit a middle-aged man in north-west Phoenix on Saturday night [June 14]. The police pieced together details from witnesses and found the car with a damaged front and a broken windscreen. Police say that after arrest he admitted driving the car. Two weeks ago, Bishop O'Brien avoided charges after agreeing that he would no longer play a direct role in handling child sex abuse allegations in the Phoenix diocese. He had been accused of ordering a priest to persuade a Catholic family not to report another priest's abuse of a child. (With picture of bishop behind wire-mesh door. Caption -- Charged: Bishop Thomas O'Brien in police custody after being charged over the hit-and-run death. -- AP) -- The West Australian, "Bishop in car kill case," Washington Post, Wednesday Jun 18 03, p 23
• By the Windows: A crisis of faith. [CURRENT] MALAYBALAY CITY (Philippines): The Philippine Catholic Church is facing tough times. Never in recent memory has it been confronted with a crisis of such magnitude as happened in the wake of allegations of sexual harassment hurled against Bishop Teodoro Bacani. The issue could not have generated so much controversy if the accused were just an obscure priest. But Bacani is a prominent church figure whose stand on certain social and political issues has presumably influenced policy-making. The accusation is definitely disturbing to members of the church especially the laity. Their reaction is either one of disbelief or denial, or worse, irrational indignation toward the victim of Bacani's alleged misconduct. Faith in an institution, after all, tends to breed dogma and bigotry, which betrays its dark side whenever something appears to undermine that faith. It does not help that Bacani went abroad after the issue became public. His reaction could be misconstrued as an act of cowardice, an attempt to evade the responsibility of facing the accusation, even if Msgr. Romy Ranada, his spokesperson, is trying to carry the cudgel for him. Yet the efforts of his spokesperson and of the church for damage control might become futile. For one thing, Ranada virtually admitted the incident although he interjected that the bishop acted with no malice aforethought. At best, it could reassure some of the faithful. But the incident will still leave behind an ugly scar on the image of the church. -- Minda News, http://www.mindanews.com/2003/06/18vws-boymords.html , By H. Marcos C. Mordeno, Jun 18 03
• Some bishops act like Mafia leaders -- Keating. Catholic sex abuse victims want Frank Keating to name names. UNITED STATES: The former Oklahoma governor, who resigned Monday as head of the lay review board set up to scrutinize the church's handling of sex abuse cases, wasn't shy about saying some bishops act like Mafia leaders, stonewalling and subverting the law. However, he has refused to identify the bishops he says are resistant. Victims don't understand why, saying that Mr. Keating now has nothing to lose and that public pressure could force those bishops to comply, if only out of embarrassment. American bishops will meet this week in St. Louis. "It makes no sense for him to shield these bishops," said David Clohessy, head of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests [SNAP]. "He would serve his church well and himself, not to mention victims, if he were to candidly expose the most recalcitrant bishops." -- The Dallas Morning News, "Catholic sex abuse victims demand names", http://www.dallasnews.com/ latestnews/stories/ 061803dnrelbishops. 11831.html , By Susan Hogan/Albach. Jun 18 03
Also see http://www.sunspot.net/news/opinion/bal-ed.church18jun18,0,5812113.story?coll=bal-opinion-headlines) , Jun 18 03
• Catholic Lay Board Finds Limits to Power Over Bishops. UNITED STATES: At the height of the priest sexual abuse scandal a year ago, as the nation's Roman Catholic bishops fought to restore faith in their church, the most radical step they took was to appoint a board of lay Catholics to monitor the bishops' compliance with their own new policies. As radical as it was, the bishops put their stamp on it. The bishops' president selected the chairman of the board, Frank Keating, then governor of Oklahoma. The bishops approved the members and paid for their meetings around the country. The bishops hired a former F.B.I. official to keep them accountable and gave her office space in their headquarters in Washington. And as the recent dispute over Mr. Keating's provocative remarks likening the bishops to the Mafia makes clear, the bishops still have all the power -- to reassign or remove priests, to ignore or carry out the new policies, to withhold or release information about abusers. The only power the board has is to make the recalcitrant bishops look bad. "This board works for the bishops, it's in the employ of the bishops and to some degree beholden to the bishops," said R. Scott Appleby, a professor at the University of Notre Dame and director of the university's Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism. "The only recourse it has to influence the bishops who don't choose to comply is to go to the media, in effect to go to the Catholic laity and report who is not complying." -- The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/18/national/18BISH.html?pagewanted=print&position= , By Laurie Goodstein, Jun 18 03
• Fondled altar boy in rectory in 2002, had abruptly left previous parish. [CURRENT] NEW YORK, June 18: A Catholic priest admitted Thursday that he fondled a 16-year-old altar boy in a Washington Heights church last year. The Rev. Jorge Patricio Pintado, 39, made the admission in pleading guilty to endangering the welfare of a child. As part of a plea deal, he was promised a conditional discharge and five days of community service. He also cannot contact the boy. Pintado, who is from Ecuador, was arrested in September after the teenager told his parents the priest fondled him while they were in the rectory of the Church of Good Shepherd in upper Manhattan. The boy also said Pintado inappropriately embraced him on a number of other occasions. Pintado was attached to the Archdiocese of New York from October 1999 to January 2000, when he abruptly left St. Joan of Arc in the Bronx. -- Newsday, Priest Enters Guilty Plea, http://www.nynewsday.com/ news/local/brooklyn/ nyc-abus0619, 0,6035153.story ?coll=nyc- topheadlines-left , By Karen Freifeld, Jun 18 03
• Detroit cardinal: Keep zero tolerance of sex abuse. DETROIT (MI): The Roman Catholic Church in the United States should stick to its policy of zero tolerance of child sexual abuse by priests, Cardinal Adam Maida said. -- MLive.com, The Associated Press, http://www.mlive.com/ newsflash/michigan/index.ssf?/ newsflash/get_story.ssf?/ cgi-free/getstory_ssf.cgi? g7799_BC_MI-- ChurchAbuse-Maida&&news &newsflash-michigan , Jun 18 03
• Survivors group leader critical of Darling bill. WAUKESHA (WI): Legislation being proposed as a compromise on sexual abuse charges against Catholic priests is instead a measure that will offer those priests cover and deny justice to victims. So says Peter Isley, Milwaukee coordinator of the Survivor's Network of those Abused by Priests - SNAP - and a member of its national board. -- GM Today, Survivors group leader critical of Darling bill, http://www.gmtoday.com/news/local_stories/June_03/06182003_03.asp , By Dennis A. Shook, Jun 18, 2003
• Bacani camp attacks Newsbreak's Cover Story about sexual harassment. MANILLA, Philippines: June 18, 2003: By Ann Corvera (Star) The spokesman for Novaliches Bishop Teodoro Bacani accused the Newsbreak magazine editor in chief the other night of "trial by publicity" and of "trying to sell (the) magazine." But defending Newsbreak's June 23 cover story "A Bishop's Fall" as factually correct, Marites Vitug said, "It is a classic case of shooting the messenger." Monsignor Jesus Romulo Rañada and Vitug were joined by Msgr. Nico Bautista, head of the Catholic organization Mass Media Ministry, in the ANC's "Talkback" program aired Monday night. In between the lively exchange mostly between Rañada and Vitug, Bautista urged the local Catholic Church to have a more open and thorough discussion of the alleged sexual harassment by Bacani of his 35-year-old secretary. Bacani, who hurriedly left for the US on the heels of the scandal, had denied the allegations but apologized for any "inappropriate" show of affection. -- Star, "Bacani Camp In War Of Words Vs Newsbreak's Cover Story," http://www.newsflash.org/2003/05/hl/hl018200.htm , By Ann Corvera, (Poynteronline Jun 21 03 No. 1, Posted by Kathy Shaw 9:55:35 AM) Jun 18 03 [COMMENT: Presumably Newsbreak's cover date is later than its real date of issue. COMMENT ENDS]
• Catholics swept sex-abuse and victims under a rug. ORANGE COUNTY (CA): For years, victims of sexual abuse at the hands of priests and their lawyers maintained that taking on the Catholic Church was like staring at the high walls of a powerful, exclusive club. Priests and their superiors closed ranks, investigated themselves and swept problems -- and victims -- under the rug, survivors said. On Tuesday, Diocese of Orange Bishop Tod Brown said there is some truth to such accusations. -- The Orange County Register "An act of contrition," http://www2.ocregister.com , By Jim Hinch, Jun 18 03
• Worldwide, 21 Roman Catholic bishops have resigned amid church sex scandals since 1990. UNITED STATES: Twenty-one Roman Catholic bishops, 10 of them Americans, have resigned since 1990 in the context of sex scandals. -- Times-Picayune, http://www.nola.com/ newsflash/national/index.ssf?/newsflash/get_story.ssf?/cgi-free/getstory_ssf.cgi?a0532_BC_ChurchAbuse-Resignati&&news&newsflash- national , The Associated Press, Jun 18 03
• 1613 alleged abuser priests, according to "Survivors First." BOSTON (MA): The Boston-based clergy sexual abuse victims advocacy group Survivors First will issue a report in St. Louis today listing 1,613 alleged abuser priests on the eve of the nation's Catholic bishops meeting. The advocacy group - which says the number represents a 33 percent increase since January - will also unveil a Web site, www.Bishop-Accountability.org . The Web site will display secret e-mails of Roger Cardinal Mahony of Los Angeles and other internal communications of church leaders. -- Boston Herald, "Watchdog increases pressure on bishops," http://www2.bostonherald.com/news/local_ regional/vic06182003.htm , by Robin Washington, Wednesday, Jun 18, 2003
• Long crime spree brings "Red Mass" into doubt. UNITED STATES: The US Conference of Catholic Bishops ought to nominate Frank Keating to fill the soon-to-be-vacant post of bishop of Phoenix. Has the hapless hierarchy of the American Catholic Church ever needed a straight talker more than now, the week it drove away the former Oklahoma governor for having the temerity to say the obvious out loud? Barely had the bishops finished huffing and puffing about Keating's apt, if indelicate, comparison of them to a bunch of Mafia dons than one of their own got pinched for a felony that could prove tougher to shake than their long crime spree against children. This time a bishop left a body in the road. Phoenix Bishop Thomas J. O'Brien concedes he was behind the wheel Saturday night when his tan Buick slammed into Jim Reed, a 43-year-old carpenter and father of two. O'Brien kept driving. When police tracked him down Monday, the bishop said he thought the 235-pound victim who shattered his windshield might have been a cat. Some cat. Of course, straining credibility is second nature to O'Brien and many of his terminally disingenuous colleagues. O'Brien is the bishop who declared "my conscience is clear" last January at the annual Red Mass, an increasingly questionable tradition at which politicians, judges, and lawyers kneel alongside guys who could have taught John Gotti a thing or two about evading the RICO statute. -- Boston Globe, "A tough rap to shake," http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/169/metro/ A_tough_rap_ to_shakeP.shtml , By Eileen McNamara, Globe Columnist, Jun 18 2003
• "Unraveled" by Sex Abuse Crisis in Diocese, Phoenix Bishop Quits PHOENIX (AZ) June 18: Bishop Thomas J. O'Brien of the Phoenix Diocese resigned today, succumbing to a year of turmoil over the sexual abuse crisis in the church and the more personal disgrace of being arrested in a fatal hit-and-run accident. For decades, Bishop O'Brien was known as a self-effacing builder of schools and an advocate for the poor. But he also recently acknowledged having protected priests from numerous complaints of sexual abuse. Friends and associates described the 67-year-old Roman Catholic bishop as a fairly timid and spiritual man who fell into deep despair under the strain of the disclosures of repeated cases of sexually predatory priests under his supervision and relentless pressure of a prosecutor who this month won an extraordinary admission of misconduct from the bishop. "He has been unraveled by all of this," said Michael C. Manning, a lawyer who represented Bishop O'Brien for several months last year. "He is just basically a meek, shy, utterly nonsecular man, a guy who went right from the high school into the seminary with no real-world experiences." -- The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/19/national/ 19PHOE.html?ex =1056600000&en=adebdd693f811b1a&ei=5062&partner=GOOGLE , By John M. Broder with Nick Madigan, Jun 18 / 19 03
• Rogue bishops won't obey clean-up board; leader resigns. WASHINGTON (DC): On Monday, I resigned my volunteer position as chairman of the national review board of lay Catholics charged with enforcing the zero-tolerance charter against child sexual abuse adopted last year by America's Roman Catholic Bishops. I left, after almost exactly a year of service, for two reasons: the need to devote full time to my job, and frustration over the efforts of a small minority of church leaders to obstruct the workings of the board. Still, I remain optimistic that the church — my church — will ultimately protect the innocent and hold the guilty accountable. The national review board, no matter who leads it, is an expression of the hopes of millions of American Catholics. As such, it can and must continue its work. My optimism is based on my meetings with Catholic clergy and lay members over the past year. They understand the challenge the church faces, and they will not stand for a retreat from the truth. These are people who have come together not just to address a crisis, but to rescue their shared faith. Theirs is a mission and a movement that will not be denied. Likewise, the bishops, as they gather for their annual meeting today in St. Louis, must make the abuse issue a central part of their agenda, as they did last year when they crafted a no-tolerance policy and created the lay board. This is a problem that took decades to emerge; it was not solved in the last 12 months, nor will it be in the next 12. If the bishops act as if it is settled and move on to other issues, they will face some very harsh questions from many of their parishioners when they return home. -- The New York Times, "Finding Hope in My Faith," http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/19/opinion/19KEAT.html , By Frank Keating, Jun 19 03
• Catholic promises not kept in places: former Governor says some clerics make the Church like the "model of a criminal organization". UNITED STATES: A year after US Catholic bishops committed themselves to a program to protect children against clergy sexual abuse, supporters and critics agree that genuine progress has been made in making the church a safer place. Yet, as the top church leaders convene in St. Louis Thursday for their semiannual conference, many Catholics lament that key promises made last year by the bishops - for greater openness, accountability, and cooperation with law enforcement - are often not being kept. These, they say, lie at the heart of restoring trust in a church still struggling legally, financially, and politically with one of the worst scandals in its history. For the bishops, the very public resignation this week of the head of a national lay board that is monitoring their response to the crisis certainly hasn't helped matters. Church officials were hoping to convene their conference behind closed doors, with an agenda that included only a report on the crisis. But the tart exit of former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating on Monday once again turns the spotlight on issues dogging the church hierarchy and deals, at least temporarily, a blow to its credibility. In his letter of resignation, Mr. Keating, a former law-enforcement official with a tell-it-like-it-is style, stood behind his comments that some clerics were resisting cooperating with authorities in ways that resembled the "model of a criminal organization." -- The Christian Science Monitor, "As bishops meet, uneven progress," http://www.csmonitor.com/ 2003/0619/p01s03-ussc.html , By Jane Lampman, Jun 19 03
• A crime-free shield for members of the clergy? PHILIPPINES: So the judgment of what is right and proper will now depend on the popular vote or mass demonstrations. Which is why El Shaddai Maestro Miguel Velarde wants to show support for the sexual shenanigans of Bishop Bacani. So what he wants now is to have the Vatican absolve the sinner so Bishop Bacani and Mike Velarde can go back their merry way of collecting millions from innocent, gullible believers of the El Shaddai program. The Maestro wants to offer all kinds of encouragement to Bishop Bacani, telling him there is nothing wrong with hugging and laying hands on women employees who cannot resist for fear of losing their jobs. So it has come to this. What nonsense is Mike Velarde peddling, saying that an attack on Bishop Bacani is an attack on the Holy Mother the Church. In effect he is saying that members of the clergy should now be immune from any criminal charges. It is not enough that the Church is tax-free, Brother Mike will now endow members of the clergy, a crime-free shield. Instead of praying for Bishop Bacani, who already has everything a man could wish for, fame, fortune, power and even his very own spokesman, why not pray for Bot Ventura, the woman whose life and future have already been compromised. -- The Manila Times, "A crime-free shield for members of the clergy?" http://www.manilatimes. net/national/2003/jun/19/opinion/20030619opi4.html , by Syke Garcia, Jun 19 03
• State still has not taken up €76m Church property deal. IRELAND: The State has not obtained ownership of any site offered by religious institutions as part of the controversial deal that exposed taxpayers to unlimited compensation claims from abuse victims. The Congregation of Religious Institutions (CORI) offered €76m worth of property in return for the unlimited indemnity provided by the Government. But not one piece of property has transferred into state legal ownership, it was learned last night. And it could take years before this happens as negotiations are continually bogged down, it was learned. It is understood the State saw little value in some of those properties offered. The deal, signed by the last government just before it left office, has been subject to repeated controversy. -- Irish Independent, http://www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=9&si=993869&issueid=9351 , (Poynteronline, Jun 21 03 No. 1)
• Science teacher at Jesuit school corrupted boy. AUSTRALIA: A science teacher at a Sydney Jesuit school had sexually abused a boy, but the school forced him out when the teacher Colin Fearon denied it. The victim had breakdowns following these "murders of the soul," but he now has a fulltime job. When the victim, Mr Lucien Leech-Larkin, discovered years later that the teacher had been investigated in the 1960s in New Zealand, he told the police, but the court ruled Fearon was too ill to be tried. Mr Leech-Larkin found that the Jesuits were not covered by the national "Towards Healing" programme. They would not reconcile with him, replying instead through lawyers. The head of the Society of Jesus, Father Mark Raper, failed to honour a promise to appear on the programme. -- Australian Broadcasting Corporation, "7.30 Report," "Horror past of sexual abuses continues to plague churches," www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2003/s886452.htm , by David Hardaker, Mon Jun 23 03
• U.S. SUPREME COURT REFUSES RIGHTS OF VICTIMS. WASHINGTON (DC): A deeply divided Supreme Court, ruling in a case with potential impact on child abuse cases across the nation, decided that after the time for prosecuting a crime has run out, it is unconstitutional to pass a new law reviving the power to prosecute. -- Boston Globe, "Court upholds statute of limitations on prosecution," http://www.boston.com/ dailyglobe2/178/nation/ Court_upholds_ statute_of_ limitations_on_prosecution+.shtml , By Lyle Denniston, Globe Correspondent (Posted by Poynter Institute, Friday, Jun 27 2003)
• Anglicans ought to stop criminal clergy first. CANBERRA, Australia: Federal Treasurer Peter Costello has criticised the Anglican Church for moralising against governments but failing to deal properly with the actions of some of its own priests. He was addressing a corporate fundraiser for the Church's chief welfare agency, Anglicare, in Sydney yesterday. He suggested that Anglican Church leaders had been hypocritical. The Church had not got "worked up" about the moral failure and in some cases criminal activity of its own priests. The Church may have been easier on itself than it was on others. Yet there had been an outcry ahead of the introduction of the goods and services tax (GST). He had been amazed how many Church leaders had become "tax experts". Religious and other charities need to rebuild community trust. -- adapted from The West Australian, "Church gets a lesson," by Karen Middleton, Sat Jun 28 03 p 9
• U.S. Supreme Court 5-4 decision means 800 abusers will go free! OROVILLE (CA): Local prosecutors said Friday child molestation charges against a former Gridley priest will now have to be dismissed as a result of a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling. A warrant had been issued for the arrest of Costellano Jose Pinal, 51, charging him with sodomizing a then-14-year-old boy in 1983 when he was a pastor at Sacred Heart Church in Gridley. Pinal, who is now believed to be residing in Mexico, wrote a letter to church officials several years ago, largely admitting to the sexual offenses, according to local prosecutors. However, the nation's high court on Thursday struck down prosecutions of cases like Pinal's where the legal time period for bringing them to trial had passed. The narrow 5-4 decision could overturn as many as 800 child molestation convictions in California, some of them involving Catholic priests. -- Chico Enterprise-Record, "Sex charges against ex-Gridley priest void under ruling," http://www.chicoer.com/ Stories/0,1413,135~25088~1483128,00.html , By Terry Vau Dell, (Poynteronline, Posted by Kathy Shaw 7:01:51 AM, Jun 28 03)
• Haverhill priest sentenced; Gets 12-14 years for raping girl. [CURRENT] LAWRENCE, USA: The Rev. Kelvin Iguabita, the Catholic priest found guilty of raping a 15-year-old girl working as a secretary in a Haverhill church rectory, was sentenced to 12 to 14 years in state prison after the judge ignored pleas for leniency from both the defense attorney and the prosecutor. "I have taken into account that you have helped many people," Essex Superior Court Judge Richard Welch said in announcing his sentence, "But I cannot ignore that you committed a very serious crime. She came to you with her problems and you responded with calculated sexual advances. You plainly abused your position." A jury convicted Iguabita June 20 of four of five sexual assault charges: one count of rape of a child; two counts of indecent assault and battery on a person over age 14; and one count of unnatural acts with a child. Iguabita was acquitted of a fifth charge of assault with intent to rape. The charges stemmed from a series of attacks in the All Saints Catholic Church rectory which spanned a five-month period beginning in July 2000. The victim, Faith Johnston, now 18, who went public with her identity following the trial, had just started to work part-time Saturday afternoons when Iguabita befriended her. -- The Boston Globe, www.boston.com , by Caroline Louise Cole, Jun 28 03, page B5
• Choirmaster saw sex abuse, sobbing witness tells inquiry. SYDNEY (NSW), Australia: The key witness in the unfair dismissal case brought by sacked choirmaster David Russell broke down in tears when revealing that as a young boy he kept details of his sexual abuse from his mother for several days because she was already under pressure from working two jobs. Mr X, a policeman, was giving evidence against Mr Russell, who was sacked in January as music director at St Mary's Cathedral after 28 years. Mr Russell, 65, was removed by Monsignor Tony Doherty after getting a report that found the choirmaster had seen convicted pedophile David O'Grady sexually assault 12-year-old Dan Buckley in the lounge room of Mr Russell's Sydney home in March 1983. Mr Russell denies he saw anything and has taken his case to the NSW Industrial Relations Commission. Mr X was allegedly present during the abuse. At the time he was an 11-year-old boy from a single-parent home attending the Catholic school on a singing scholarship. Shen the church's barrister, John Murphy, yesterday asked why he didn't give his mother details about the abuse the day after it happened, Mr X broke down, sobbing. "I was embarrassed about the incident, my mother was working two jobs," he said. Mr X alleged Mr Russell had opened the door while Buckley and Mr X were fondling O'Grady on the floor. All were allegedly naked. "He was looking directly at us on the floor." Mr X told the commission that on seeing tha abuse, Mr Russell had simply closed the door. -- The Weekend Australian, "Choirmaster saw sex abuse, sobbing witness tells inquiry," http://www.theaustralian.com.au , by Vanessa Walker, Religious affairs writer, Jun 28-29 03, p 4. [See also The Weekend Australian, "Choirboy sues church for $2m over sexual abuse," by Vanessa Walker and Natalie O'Brien, Mar 1-2 03, p 3.] Jun 28-29 03
• "Crimes against nature" law used for old case. ST. LOUIS (MO): A judge in St. Louis has ruled that it's not too late to prosecute the Rev. Thomas Graham, a decision that may open the way for charges on long-delayed accusations against other Roman Catholic priests. But Graham's lawyer says he expects that an appeals court will feel otherwise in the dispute over a statute of limitations. Graham was accused in November of sodomizing a boy 25 years ago. Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce declined to comment Monday. In April, she said a favorable pretrial ruling in Graham's case was a key to bringing more such cases to a grand jury. Circuit Judge Patricia Cohen, who heard arguments on the matter June 5, gave no reason for her one-sentence ruling Friday. Prosecutors charged Graham under an old law that set no limit on bringing charges for "abominable and detestable crimes against nature." -- St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "Abuse case against priest can proceed," www.stltoday.com/ stltoday/news/ stories.nsf/news/ 7C6702CB9 201B900862 56D5600194 1E3?Open Document&highlight= 2%2Cpriest&headline= Abuse+case+against+ priest+can+proceed By Peter Shinkle, (Posted by Kathy Shaw 9:50:22 AM , Poynter Jul 1 03), Jun 30 03
FOR GOOD TEACHINGS TO BE HEEDED, A BIG CLEAN-UP IS NEEDED
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