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November 30, 2015

EL PARAÍSO DE LOS LEGIONARIOS

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Corta Mortaja [Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico]

November 30, 2015

By Emiliano Ruiz Parra

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La Legión de Cristo goza de un poder desmedido en Cancún y varias poblaciones de Quintana Roo. La prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, a cargo de los legionarios desde 1970, ha servido a la congregación religiosa para refugiar a sacerdotes acusados de pederastia o para desterrar a algunas voces críticas dentro de su comunidad. También se han apropiado de terrenos públicos y proyectan construir una basílica que podría tener un fuerte impacto ecológico. Todo esto ocurre con la complicidad del Estado y bajo la siniestra presencia de su fundador, el fallecido Marcial Maciel. 

“Lo difícil es encontrar una iglesia en Cancún que no sea una invasión…” 

Los Legionarios de Cristo siempre cuentan dos historias: una versión oficial —cargada de designios divinos— y una verdad disidente. Durante sesenta años la Legión sostuvo, por ejemplo, que Marcial Maciel —su fundador— era un santo en vida. Pero después tuvo que reconocer lo irrefutable: que había sido un pederasta, drogadicto, mitómano y había abusado hasta de sus hijos.? 

En la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal, a cargo de los Legionarios de Cristo desde 1970, también se cuentan dos historias.[1] La versión oficial retrata la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal como la abnegada evangelización del pueblo maya y de los cientos de miles de inmigrantes que poblaron el Caribe mexicano con el auge del turismo. Llegaron cinco sacerdotes legionarios y, 45 años después, se multiplicaron a 75. Encontraron siete parroquias y en menos de cinco décadas construyeron más de cincuenta. Y se adaptaron a uno de los crecimientos demográficos más acelerados del país, pues Quintana Roo pasó de menos de 90 mil habitantes a un millón 600 mil entre 1970 y 2015. 

Sin duda, una parte de esa versión es cierta. Los números son reales y los legionarios gozan de influencia en la entidad. Algunos de sus sacerdotes se han entregado con convicción a sus labores religiosas, ya sea en comunidades indígenas o en barrios de trabajadores. Pero esa verdad oficial convive con la versión de los críticos de la Legión de Cristo, algunos de ellos, ex legionarios que conocieron las entrañas de la congregación y se han convertido en sus denunciantes más elocuentes. 

Según la versión de los críticos, la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal ha funcionado como una “Siberia tropical” para relegar a los elementos indeseables, ya fueran sacerdotes acusados de pederastia o elementos críticos con la línea oficial de la Legión de Cristo. Según ellos la prelatura se ha usado como un gran negocio, al ser explotada como un polo de bodas en hoteles de lujo.? 

En la historia oficial, el Vaticano les pidió a los legionarios encargarse de Quintana Roo en 1970 y “ni el profeta más santo […] se iba a imaginar la explosión demográfica”. Según la versión alternativa, que cuenta el ex legionario Pablo Pérez Guajardo, Maciel cabildeó la prelatura para los legionarios porque poseía información —debido a su cercanía con el secretario de Gobernación, y luego presidente, Luis Echeverría— de que el Estado mexicano invertiría grandes sumas de dinero para desarrollar un gran centro turístico en el Caribe.? 

La región ha vivido, según la versión oficial, “una frenética cruzada por dotar a la prelatura de templos dignos para el culto”.[2] La versión alternativa acepta este hecho, pero acusa a los legionarios de invadir áreas verdes y apropiarse de espacios públicos para construir iglesias. En su expansión, la prelatura contó con el apoyo de un empresario hotelero, Fernando García Zalvidea, que estuvo preso trece meses por lavado de dinero del Cártel de Juárez, y luego fue absuelto. 

Este 21 de noviembre, la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal cumple 45 años, todos ellos bajo el control de los Legionarios de Cristo, la congregación que fundara Marcial Maciel el 3 de enero de 1941 en un sótano de la colonia Juárez de la Ciudad de México. Los legionarios, ahora, emprenden dos obras monumentales: la construcción de la basílica de Santa María Guadalupe del Mar, un templo de 110 metros de altura que pretenden convertir en el ícono de Cancún, con un costo anunciado de unos doce millones de? dólares; y un seminario de 57 millones? de pesos con alberca olímpica y canchas de futbol y basquetbol y capacidad para cien seminaristas. 

Los pederastas 
Cuatro seminaristas se acercaron al sacerdote Juan José Vaca, director espiritual del seminario de Ontaneda, España. Le revelaron que el rector, el padre Jesús Martínez Penilla, se los había llevado a la cama y los había masturbado. Por las confesiones de los niños se deducía que los abusos llevaban ya dos o tres meses. Vaca de inmediato le informó a Marcial Maciel por teléfono. 
—No te preocupes, habla con los apostólicos [las víctimas] y procura tranquilizarlos. Pídeles que no les digan nada a sus papás—, le dijo Maciel. 

En tres horas, Martínez Penilla había tomado el tren a Madrid. De ahí abordó un avión a la ciudad de México y de inmediato salió a Chetumal, en donde se puso a las órdenes de Jorge Bernal, el legionario de Cristo que era administrador apostólico de la prelatura, designado por Maciel Degollado.[3] Corría el año de 1970 y el papa Pablo VI acababa de encargarles la prelatura de Chetumal a los Legionarios de Cristo. 

A miles de kilómetros de sus víctimas, Martínez Penilla apareció en la primera fila de las más importantes ceremonias de la prelatura. El 19 de marzo de 1974 flanqueó a Jorge Bernal por las calles de Chetumal durante la consagración de éste último como obispo prelado. En una fotografía se aprecia a cuatro mitrados que los siguen en procesión.[4] 

Martínez Penilla desarrolló una carrera como párroco en la prelatura. El directorio eclesiástico de 1991 lo registra al frente del templo de la Inmaculada Concepción, en Bacalar. En el mismo directorio, pero de 2007, aparece como responsable de la parroquia de Nuestra Señora del Perpetuo Socorro en el municipio de José María Morelos.? 

Para 2010 había cambiado nuevamente de adscripción. En la página 43 de Una Iglesia de corazón misionero hay dos imágenes del sacerdote: en una de ellas se le ve leyendo un libro, quizá los evangelios, en una banca; en la segunda fotografía lo flanquean 18 personas. Son parte de su comunidad en el templo de la Inmaculada Concepción de María de Isla Mujeres. 

Cuando Juan José Vaca estaba a punto de salir de la Legión de Cristo le escribió una extensa carta a Marcial Maciel fechada el 20 de octubre de 1976. En ella le reprochaba una década de abusos sexuales que habían empezado en 1949. Vaca revelaba los nombres de veinte legionarios que habían pasado por situaciones similares a la suya. Entre ellos había tres sacerdotes que trabajaban en la prelatura: Javier Orozco, Ángel de la Torre y Jesús Martínez Penilla. 

La prelatura, sin embargo, albergó un caso más grave que el de Martínez Penilla. En el capítulo “El caso del Instituto Cumbres, 1983” de?Marcial Maciel, el historiador Fernando M. González detalla la primera historia de abuso sexual de la Legión contenida en expedientes judiciales.? 

Una madre de familia (a quien González identifica como Elsa N) denunció los abusos sexuales sufridos por su hijo a manos del prefecto de disciplina, un laico de nombre Eduardo Enrique Villafuerte Casas Alatriste. La justicia mexicana atrapó a Villafuerte y lo condenó a 18 años de cárcel. El examen médico comprobó las violaciones sexuales. En ese entonces, el director del Instituto Cumbres (una preparatoria de los Legionarios de Cristo) era el sacerdote Eduardo Lucatero Álvarez.? 
En su declaración ministerial, consignada en la averiguación previa 163/83, del 7 de junio de 1985, Villafuerte acusa que Lucatero “tuvo conocimiento de los hechos, y se concretó únicamente a despedirlo de su empleo, y a avisarle a su familia, aconsejándole que abandonara el país porque iba a tener problemas”. Villafuerte relata que no era el único abusador de niños en el colegio. Identifica a Guillermo Romo, Francisco Rivas y Alfonso NJ como otros empleados del Cumbres que tocaban a los niños.? 

“Que también sabe y vio en ocasiones al subdirector [sic] confesando a los menores, y que dicho [sujeto] se llamaba Eduardo Lucatero (LC), el cual también se llevaba a las niñas, hermanas de los menores y les acariciaba sus partes nobles obscenamente”, continúa. Sin embargo, al sacerdote Lucatero sólo se le impuso una multa por encubrimiento. 

Antes de acudir a las autoridades ministeriales, una de las madres de las víctimas acudió a las del plantel. Fue un error. “Mi vida cambió totalmente. Perdí el trabajo por culpa de los legionarios, perdí mis amistades de toda la vida, mi dinero, mi condominio, y de la noche a la mañana haga de cuenta que se me abrió un hoyo. Son gente muy poderosa. Me amenazaron, me trataron de sacar del periférico varias veces con un auto Mustang para que no fuera a juicio”, le contó a González.? 

Lucatero Álvarez terminó en la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal, que nunca disimuló su presencia en el Caribe. En la tercera de forros de?Una Iglesia de corazón misionero?se le ve en segunda fila entre el clero de Quintana Roo, con ornamentos sacerdotales y en oración. El grupo lo encabeza el obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo.? 

El mismo volumen lo registra como sacerdote adscrito a la catedral de la Santísima Trinidad, en Cancún. En una fotografía (página 85) aparece en el extremo derecho de un grupo de veinte personas que posan delante de la fachada de la catedral. Alto, de lentes, guayabera y crucifijo al hombro, posa con una sonrisa.? 

En el?Directorio eclesiástico 2 014?de la prelatura se le consigna como sacerdote del clero religioso. El directorio lo identifica como titular de la Dimensión de la Doctrina de la Fe en la Pastoral Profética. Es decir, era el “guardián” de la disciplina y el cumplimiento de los dogmas en la Iglesia de Quintana Roo. 

El perro, el vino y el psiquiatra 
Pablo Pérez Guajardo se pasaba el día adormilado. Su depresión no desaparecía a pesar de la ingesta de pastillas. Hasta que decidió dejar de tomar su dosis de diazepam y dárselas al perro de raza pastor alemán, una de la mascotas en la casa de Vía Aurelia 677. Pablo poco a poco perdió la somnolencia. En cambio, el perro dormitaba todo el día ya sin ganas de jugar. “Los superiores se preocuparon por el perro que estaba muy mal. El perro sí les alarmaba y yo no”, recuerda con rabia. 

Pérez Guajardo se ha convertido en una de las voces más críticas de la Legión. Sin ser nunca un directivo de la orden, durante veinte años estuvo cerca de la cúpula legionaria y del propio fundador Marcial Maciel. Entre 1986 y 2006 perteneció a la comunidad de seminaristas y sacerdotes que residía en Vía Aurelia, Roma, en la sede de la dirección general de los Legionarios de Cristo. 
Lo encuentro en fotografías antiguas: la del 3 de enero de 1991 en la basílica de San Pedro. Para celebrar los 50 años de la Legión de Cristo, Marcial Maciel dispuso que sesenta legionarios fueran ordenados por el papa Juan Pablo II. Con las manos en oración, se le ve a escasas tres personas del pontífice. Ese día recibió la ordenación sacerdotal después de quince años en la congregación. 

Lo vuelvo a ver en?Una Iglesia de corazón misionero, libro de nuestra historia, el libro que los legionarios editaron para celebrar los cuarenta años de la prelatura. Aparece tres veces: en la tercera de forros (con el resto de los curas del estado) y en las páginas 132 y 133. Una fotografía en gran angular lo retrata en medio de un centenar de personas, la mayoría niños: su comunidad de la capilla San José en la colonia Guadalupana, un barrio proletario en la periferia de Playa del Carmen. En la página impar tiene un micrófono en la mano y se lo acerca a un niño.? 

En esas imágenes quedó su época de cercanía legionaria. Pero el 29 de septiembre de 2011 envió al entonces director general de los legionarios, Álvaro Corcuera, una “Carta de Fuego”, en donde exigía a la congregación un deslinde de su fundador Marcial Maciel.? 

“Fue amortajado con vestiduras sacerdotales un maricón, drogo, borracho y mujeriego […] No sólo él se rió de Dios, de la Iglesia y de nosotros, también usted y buen número de superiores mayores se han burlado de la autoridad del Papa al acompañar a nuestro pedófilo fundador en sus viajes con la concubina y la hija sacrílega […] Sus labios han besado el cadáver de un falso profeta que usted y los superiores mayores nos han presentado como Alter Christus siendo un ?Anti-Cristo”, le escribió.? 

A esa carta siguieron una decena de cartas más en donde denunciaba el lavado de dinero, el encubrimiento sistemático de pederastas, el culto a la memoria de Maciel, la explotación financiera de los colegios y otras presuntas desviaciones de la Legión de Cristo. 

Delgado, de ojos verdes, orejas puntiagudas y cabello escaso, Pablo Pérez Guajardo fue expulsado de la Legión de Cristo en mayo de 2015, pero desde septiembre de 2012 lo echaron de la capellanía de San José. Cuando lo entrevisté, en septiembre pasado, acondicionaba la cochera de una casa como capilla. Se dice vetado: “el obispo (Pedro Pablo Elizondo) me prohibió que entrara a las escuelas católicas y a los hospitales”.? 

Conversamos durante tres horas. De su vida, el capítulo más vivo, y el más desgarrador también transcurría en Roma: en 1986 fue asignado a la dirección general de los legionarios, el centro de mando de la congregación religiosa. Ahí convivió con Maciel y Luis Garza Medina, “número” dos de la orden religiosa y cerebro financiero de ésta. 

La vida legionaria afectó las emociones del padre Pérez Guajardo. Se deprimió. Garza Medina le pidió atenderse con Francisco López Ibor, hijo del célebre psiquiatra español Juan José López Ibor. Se negó. Pero después fue el propio Maciel quien le pidió consultar al psiquiatra. Las sugerencias de?Nuestro Padre?eran órdenes. Pérez Guajardo desconocía entonces que era una práctica de Maciel enviar a los sacerdotes problemáticos a la clínica madrileña. Cada cuatro meses viajaba a Madrid a surtirse de dosis de medicamentos psiquiátricos que lo mantenían dormido o sonámbulo, sin ganas de rechistar.? 
Su computadora tenía acceso a internet. Navegando, se dio cuenta de que su dosis de antidepresivos era mayor a la necesaria, y que su tristeza obedecía a su vida de religioso: soledad, alejamiento de su familia desde los 18 años, falta de estímulos. Empezó a darle sus medicamentos al perro pastor alemán que cuidaba con celo otro sacerdote legionario, Juan Manuel Dueñas Rojas. 

Al quitarse los medicamentos volvió a estar despierto, pero pagó un precio. Tenía estallidos de ira y simas de tristeza. Sus padres estaban enfermos y deseaba ir a pasar con ellos sus últimos años. Con su padre no lo logró: cuando aterrizó en México ya lo estaban velando.? 

Una escena retrata su furia: a los curas sólo les estaba permitido beber un vaso de vino con la cena. Los superiores se servían dos o tres “porque tenían permiso del padre Maciel”. Enojado y con ganas de venganza, Pablo se robaba las botellas aflojando el triplay detrás de la repisa. Las ocultaba en el baño o en los ductos de aire acondicionado. 

Una tarde, uno de los superiores lo llamó para regañarlo. Pablo Pérez Guajardo, que ya se la esperaba, traía una de las botellas de vino, ya descorchada. La sacó de entre sus ropas y la derramó sobre el escritorio. 

—¿Cómo se atreve? ¡Aquí hay cartas de Nuestro Padre! —le reprendió el sacerdote (¿Y qué que hubiera esas cartas?, se preguntaría años después Pablo: si la mayoría de las cartas de Maciel eran plagios o escritos de otros autores, todo lo que ofreció Maciel fue un fraude). 

Hartos de su indisciplina, le autorizaron que se trasladara a la Ciudad de México, a una casa de legionarios en la que pudiera estar más cerca de su madre, enferma de cáncer. 

Derramar el vino fue la primera de? sus indisciplinas. Ahora la recuerda como un acto calculado de rebeldía para conseguir su traslado. Vista a la distancia era una travesura. Su auténtico desafío vino después, con sus denuncias públicas escritas en cientos de cuartillas de cartas y en sus confesiones, la catarata de recuerdos que iban reconstruyendo el rompecabezas de una congregación en donde campeaban el fraude y el abuso. La tarde que conversamos, algunas de esas escenas vinieron a su cabeza: la noche anterior a la profesión de votos, Marcial Maciel llamó a uno de sus compañeros y pasó la noche con él. Ese cura fue enviado a la prelatura. Cuando se hizo público que Maciel había tenido una hija, el sacerdote abusado (ya de 50 años) contaba compulsivamente su historia; o de la vez que el cardenal Angelo Sodano, secretario de Estado del Vaticano, les dijo a él y otro grupo de legionarios: “Dichosos ustedes porque obispos y cardenales hay muchos, pero fundador [Marcial Maciel] uno solo”; o de cuando se enteró de que Luis Garza Medina —hermano de Dionisio Garza Medina, presidente de Grupo Alfa y uno de los hombres más ricos de México— había urdido un plan para controlar a la Legión de Cristo: hizo seguir a Maciel por detectives privados, recabó la información sobre su doble vida y le hizo un chantaje: su silencio a cambio del control financiero de la congregación religiosa. 

Tras cuarenta años en la Legión, Pablo Pérez Guajardo observó y escuchó cientos de historias, pero guardaba fidelidad a sus votos privados.[5] Después de su regreso, lo destinaron a una casa de religiosos en el Estado de México y, al final, la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal. Según su relato, estuvo asignado a la catedral de Chetumal en donde reactivó las misas matutinas y salió a las calles a ofrecer bautizos gratuitos a los niños. El obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo, al ver su energía, lo mandó a una encomienda más difícil: una colonia proletaria en Playa del Carmen.? 
De su paso por la colonia Guadalupana se puede contar su historia como cura de barrio marginal (él la llama?zona atolera?en contraste con la zona hotelera) pero resultan más pertinentes para este artículo sus impresiones sobre la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal, contenidas en una carta que le escribió a su obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo el 24 de septiembre de 2012. Allí le dice, por ejemplo, que la prelatura ha sido, desde su creación, el destino de los indeseables: aquellos que no cuadraban con la línea de Maciel, ya fuera porque se habían negado a trabajar en colegios para niños ricos, como un grupo de curas irlandeses que se sentían frustrados de hacer pastoral sólo para clases acomodadas.? 

La prelatura se había hecho de tres buenos negocios, acusaba Pablo Pérez: las bodasglamour?celebradas en las capillas de los hoteles de lujo. Los curas legionarios habían sido reducidos a un servicio de?escort: un apuesto sacerdote impecable, bien vestido, con la raya del cabello perfecta, para adornar las ceremonias de los ricos. A esas bodas, por cierto, se les negaba el acceso a los trabajadores de los hoteles.? 

El segundo negocio, la Ciudad de la Alegría: un complejo de casas-hogar para niños, ancianos y enfermos terminales “es, en buena medida, la confeccionadora de recibos deducibles de impuestos para los hoteles y empresas (Best Day) de Fernando García Zalvidea”.? 

Y una tercera fuente de ingresos: los donativos que los legionarios recababan en Estados Unidos y Europa con el argumento de destinarlos a la evangelización de los pueblos mayas, a los cuales “nunca [les] ha llegado dinero: la inmensa mayoría de las regiones o colonias pobres carecen de dispensarios católicos, escuelas parroquiales, templos y servicios sociales”. 

Pérez Guajardo se fue de la prelatura. Buscó lugar en Saltillo, con el obispo Raúl Vera López, promotor de derechos humanos, y antagónico a los legionarios. Apenas estuvo unos ocho meses e hicieron cortocircuito. Pérez Guajardo lo acusó de usar a los pobres para su beneficio, y Vera respondió calificándolo de espía.? 

“¿A dónde voy a mis casi 60 años?”, se preguntó el sacerdote. Y regresó a Playa del Carmen, a la zona obrera, a instalar una capilla en el garaje de una vivienda en obra negra. Cuando lo visité, se movía en un automóvil Chevy viejo y sucio, sin asientos, y vivía con una familia, rodeado de costales de cemento y cortinas de polvo. En 2015 la Legión lo había expulsado de sus filas: “En términos canónicos no tengo licencias ministeriales, quedando firme que no hay ninguna sanción o pena canónica ya que no existe ningún delito (ni pederastia, pareja sexual, fraude, problemas doctrinales o enseñanzas morales erróneas)”, me dijo. 

Cuando conversamos se le notaba el cansancio tras cuatro años de denuncia sin que nada hubiera cambiado. Estaba irascible y resignado a su trabajo pastoral: dar catecismo, celebrar bautizos, avanzar en la construcción de su capilla. Le pregunté por qué había invertido tanta energía en las cientos de cuartillas de denuncia. Tenía esperanza: su esperanza era que lo escucharan en el Vaticano y le retiraran la prelatura a los legionarios. A Quintana Roo, me dijo, le faltaba un obispo franciscano, jesuita o diocesano que usara morral, huaraches y mezclilla, y se mezclara con los obreros y los indígenas de tierra adentro, y ya no con los magnates de la zona hotelera.? 

La leyenda del santo lavador 
Fernando García Zalvidea fue uno de los miles de inmigrantes que atrajo el auge turístico de Cancún. A bordo de una limusina, ofrecía excursiones a los gringos fascinados por el paraíso caribeño. Uno de ellos le dijo un día:?This is my best day. Le gustó la frase y la hizo suya. Cancún estaba en permanente expansión y era territorio fértil para los emprendedores como García Zalvidea que, al paso de su fulgurante ascenso como hotelero, tejió una red de relaciones políticas, religiosas y empresariales con la élite de Quintana Roo. Sus negocios fructificaron hasta que llegó a ser dueño de una cadena de hoteles a la que llamó Real Caribe y de la empresa Best Day, que fue pionera en ofrecer viajes todo pagado por internet.? 

Pero su emporio se tambaleó en 1998. La Procuraduría General de la República (PGR) lo relacionó con el “maxiproceso”: una investigación sobre narcotráfico y lavado de dinero del Cártel de Juárez en Quintana Roo. Se acusaba al gobernador Mario Villanueva Madrid,?El Chueco, de haber puesto la Procuraduría de Justicia local al servicio del capo Ramón Alcides Magaña,?El Metro. Fernando García Zalvidea fue acusado de lavar dinero del cártel en la compra del hotel Gran Caribe Real. Lo detuvieron y lo internaron en el Reclusorio Sur de la Ciudad de México. 
Los resultados del maxiproceso fueron ambiguos. El ex gobernador Villanueva Madrid fue detenido, encarcelado y extraditado a los Estados Unidos (en donde sigue preso) pero su caso fue excepcional. La mayoría de los indiciados fueron absueltos, entre ellos el propio García Zalvidea, que obtuvo su libertad el 4 de marzo de 2000 tras catorce meses preso en el Reclusorio Sur de la Ciudad de México.? 

Tres años después, en marzo de 2004, la revista?Contralínea?publicó diversas conversaciones telefónicas entre el ex procurador Antonio Lozano Gracia, el ex candidato presidencial del PAN, Diego Fernández de Cevallos y el abogado de García Zalvidea, Germán Rangel. Lozano y Fernández de Cevallos, ambos panistas, hablan de las “gestiones políticas” para liberar al hotelero y luego para que la PGR cerrara el caso. 

Fernando García Zalvidea se convirtió en el benefactor más visible de los Legionarios de Cristo en Quintana Roo. En el año 2000 auspició la construcción de la Ciudad de la Alegría, la mayor obra social de la prelatura en Quintana Roo: un centro que concentra escuelas, casas de ancianos, niños y enfermos terminales, y tratamiento de adicciones.? 

Pero Fernando García Zalvidea extendió sus redes a la política a través de su hermano Juan Ignacio,?El Chacho, quien fue diputado federal del PAN en el 2000 y luego brincó al Partido Verde. Con las siglas ecologistas ganó la alcaldía de Benito Juárez (Cancún está adentro de Benito Juárez) en febrero de 2002. Fue el primer alcalde de oposición en la ciudad. En 2004?El Chacho?se acercó a quien encabezaba las encuestas para la elección presidencial, el izquierdista Andrés Manuel López Obrador.? 

Juan Ignacio hizo saber que quería ser candidato de un frente opositor a la gubernatura de Quintana Roo. Y meses después de hacer públicas sus aspiraciones, fue destituido por el congreso y, ya fuera del cargo, encarcelado por quebranto del erario municipal. Estuvo preso más de un año, hasta que su hermano Fernando garantizó una fianza de 71 millones de pesos.? 

Los García Zalvidea eran de las familias más poderosas del estado.?El Chacho?ya había mandado señales de disciplina con el PRI al apersonarse, en 2010, a los actos de campaña del ahora gobernador Roberto Borge. Y en otra pista, Fernando se congraciaba con el PAN: en 2012 le organizaba actos a su candidata presidencial Josefina Vázquez Mota con hoteleros. A uno de esos encuentros invitó también al obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo.? 

Los invasores? 
En la Supermanzana 30, los Legionarios de Cristo se quedaron con un pedazo del parque. Se metieron poco a poco. Los vecinos tenían siete mil metros cuadrados para espacios públicos. Lo partieron en cuatro: un pedazo para el kínder, otro para la primaria, otro para el kiosco y uno más para área verde. En ese pedazo levantaron una capilla pequeña. Cuando el padre —legionario de Cristo— iba a celebrar la misa, uno de los vecinos le abría y le cerraba la puerta.? 

Un día, ese vecino, Mario Cortés, salió de viaje y le dejó las llaves al cura. Estaba claro que estaban prestadas hasta su regreso. Pero nunca las volvió a ver. A partir de entonces la prelatura se quedó con la capilla y, años después, con mil metros cuadrados del parque.? 
La céntrica ubicación de la capilla atrajo a cientos de vecinos de otras supermanzanas. Rodeada de parque, se convirtió en un espacio ideal para bodas y bautizos. Cuando Juan Ignacio El Chacho García Zalvidea era alcalde de Cancún, trató de legalizar la invasión de la Supermanzana 30. Le dio a la prelatura una “orden de ocupación” del parque.? 

A partir de entonces empezó una larga batalla. Dos de sus protagonistas me cuentan su historia, Herminia Peña y Luz María Elguero, que residen en el perímetro del parque. Con el aval del?Chacho?García Zalvidea, la prelatura levantaba bardas alrededor del terreno; los vecinos acudían a derribar los castillos. La prelatura metía maquinaria para hacer socavones; los vecinos boqueaban el paso de los camiones con sus vehículos. 

No fue una lucha fácil. La prelatura actuaba de noche y daba sabadazo: las obras siempre empezaban en Semana Santa para pillar a los vecinos de vacaciones y tenían de su lado a la fuerza pública. Un miércoles de Semana Santa dos vecinos hacían guardia para impedir la instalación de castillos: llegó la policía y se los llevó a declarar (salieron libres unas horas después). Y había una presencia frecuente en torno de la Supermanzana: Fernando García Zalvidea. Los vecinos se acostumbraron a ver su camioneta Porsche blanca recorriendo las obras.? 

Durante el gobierno del?Chacho?García Zalvidea la prelatura quiso comerse cuatro mil metros cuadrados del parque. Presumieron una maqueta que tenía templo, guardería, recámaras y criptas. El entonces presidente de la colonia estampó su firma en los planos y, con ese aval, la prelatura empezó las obras de bardeado y cimentación.? 

Pero cayó?El Chacho?cuando amenazó con irse a la filas de Obrador, y los alcaldes que lo sucedieron ya no estaban tan entregados a la causa de los legionarios. Un perredista, Gregorio Sánchez, buscó una solución intermedia. Canceló la orden de ocupación que había regalado?El Chacho?pero le dejó a la prelatura mil metros cuadrados del parque.? 

Estos años de historia se cuentan en unas líneas. Para las vecinas —en su mayoría mujeres— de la Supermanzana 30, representó cientos de horas de tocar puertas, acudir a ventanillas, redactar quejas, hacer antesalas, revisar pilas de documentos, aprender leyes y reglamentos, cruzar llamadas, hacer reuniones, con su dosis desagradable de soportar las caras de los curas que, desde el púlpito, las acusaban de tener el corazón endemoniado y de conspirar para quemar la iglesia.? 

El ayuntamiento cedió de nuevo. El 17 de mayo de 2013, el director de obras arquitectónicas y civiles, Humberto Aguilera, expidió la licencia de construcción de obra nueva 66 231 para la parroquia de la Sagrada Familia. Le daba a la prelatura del 16 de mayo hasta el 16 de noviembre para terminar la obra en una superficie de mil 12 metros cuadrados.? 

Desesperados, los vecinos inconformes fueron a levantar una denuncia penal. Acusaron al obispo Elizondo, al empresario Fernando García Zalvidea y al sacerdote Luis Alberto Chavarría LC (representante legal de la prelatura) de despojo y delitos contra el desarrollo urbano. La procuraduría admitió la denuncia y abrió la averiguación previa 4819/13 el 17 de septiembre de 2013. A partir de entonces la demanda durmió el sueño de los justos (o de los injustos) y no pasó nada.? 
Pero la prelatura se impuso. Ahora se aprecia una iglesia a todo lujo: dos niveles, altar en mosaico dorado, dos pantallas planas y doce ventiladores. Las banquetas se ampliaron (a costa de derribar árboles) para convertirlas en estacionamientos. Una de ellas ostenta un letrero: “exclusivo sacerdote”. 

La Supermanzana 30 no es la única que fue invadida por la prelatura. El 22 de septiembre pasado estuve en la colonia Hacienda Real del Caribe de la Región 200. Los vecinos me enseñaron un predio que era una de las áreas verdes de su barrio: un predio con árboles de donde colgaron llantas para que se columpiaran los niños.? 

Primero apareció una cruz. Después vino la barda y un letrero que anunciaba la capilla del Señor de la Divina Misericordia. “Si los niños se cuelan a jugar, al rato llega a sacarlos la gente de la iglesia”, me contó una chilanga que se mudó a esa colonia popular de Cancún. 

No lejos de ahí, en la Supermanzana 117, la prelatura también consumó un acto de invasión. El mismo método: primero una cruz, luego cuatro palos y un techo de nylon, y al final ladrillos: la capilla de Santiago Apóstol se comía el jardín que estaba frente a la primaria La Raza de Bronce. 

La invasión provocó reacciones encontradas en la comunidad. Lourdes Ibarra y Alicia Vázquez encabezaron el bando que se oponía al agandalle. Otras vecinas apoyaban a los legionarios. Las primeras eran cristianas evangélicas y las segundas, católicas. Lo cierto es que ambas estaban de acuerdo en una cosa: había sido una invasión de un área pública. Si acaso la justificaban porque ahora el parque estaba desmontado y limpio.? 

En estas páginas cuento tres ejemplos. Acaso sean muchos más. Cuando el perredista Julián Ricalde era alcalde de Cancún se contabilizaron trece invasiones. Y, según Tulio Arroyo, lo difícil es encontrar una iglesia en Cancún que no sea una invasión. Los legionarios lo han adoptado como?modus operandi: identificar un lote vacío y apropiárselo a golpe de misas y bardas.? 

Tulio Arroyo transpira una obsesión: defender las áreas verdes de Cancún. Y ese propósito lo ha puesto en el punto de colisión con los legionarios, acostumbrados a hacer su voluntad en Quintana Roo. Tulio Arroyo es un ingeniero especializado en energías alternativas. Chilango con estudios en Nueva York, se convirtió en defensor del medio ambiente cuando el ayuntamiento pretendió deforestar la última reserva ambiental del centro de Cancún, un parque conocido como el Ombligo Verde. La alcaldesa priista Magali Achach pretendía entregarle un lote a la prelatura para que hiciera una catedral. 

Arroyo Marroquín y su esposa Bettina Cetto, encabezaron el movimiento?En defensa del Ombligo Verde. Se convirtieron en expertos en derecho administrativo y acompañaron los brotes de protesta que surgían aquí y allá a las invasiones de la Iglesia. Arroyo les ayudaba a convocar ruedas de prensa, redactar comunicados y orientar los intrincados caminos de los tribunales; y consiguió salvar el Ombligo Verde de su deforestación total. Pero no pudo impedir que los legionarios construyeran ahí la catedral de Cancún. Arroyo y Cetto vivían enfrente del parque. Justo frente a su ventana se levantó la catedral.? 

Notre Dame del Sureste 
Los Legionarios de Cristo apuestan a la monumentalidad. Su red de colegios se llama Semper Altius (siempre más alto) y sus escuelas aluden a las alturas: Cumbres, Himalaya, Everest, Alpes, Highlands. En la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal se han propuesto erigir el mayor símbolo religioso del sureste: la basílica de Santa María de Guadalupe del Mar, un edificio con una cruz de 110 metros de altura, con capacidad para mil 500 personas y con un costo estimado de 12 millones de dólares. 

Pero los planes de la prelatura se han topado con la resistencia de ecologistas. Se asentaría frente a la laguna Nichupté, una zona de manglares y especies protegidas. Uno de ellos es Pedro Canché. Indígena maya, Canché pasó nueve meses en la cárcel acusado de sabotaje. Su encarcelamiento era, en realidad, una manera de callarlo. El gobierno de Quintana Roo tuvo que soltarlo tras la presión internacional y ahora se le ve como un emblema de la libertad de expresión. 

Según Canché —en un escrito dirigido al ayuntamiento— el proyecto Tajamar (del que la basílica es una parte), representará un “inminente ecocidio que devastará la flora, fauna y humedales […]. De llevarse a cabo la construcción, se devastaría totalmente uno de los ‘pulmones’ naturales que posee Cancún y que son invaluables”.? 

Como en otras historias de legionarios, de la megabasílica de Cancún se cuentan dos historias. La historia oficial dice que Fonatur le regaló los 10 mil metros a la prelatura. Y surge la pregunta: ¿Por qué un órgano del Estado mexicano tendría que donar un terreno público a la Iglesia católica?, ¿por qué no cederle también un predio a los cristianos, adventistas, mormones, Testigos de Jehová o a los ateos de Cancún?? 

La historia extraoficial la ofrece el padre Pablo Pérez Guajardo: esos 10 mil metros fueron el pago del presidente Vicente Fox a Marcial Maciel por facilitar su divorcio religioso ante el Vaticano. Por su calidad de jefe de Estado, su solicitud de nulidad debía pasar por la Rota Romana, un tribunal de la curia pontificia. Ya divorciado de Lilian de la Concha, el sacerdote Alejandro Latapí, legionario de Cristo, celebró su boda religiosa con Marta Sahagún.? 

Encuentro con el obispo 
Detrás de su escritorio colgaba el cuadro?Head of Christ?del pintor estadounidense Warner Sallman, que se conoce también como “El Cristo legionario” porque el fundador de la congregación, Marcial Maciel Degollado, la introdujo como la imagen oficial en seminarios, casas y escuelas de la Legión de Cristo. En tres cuartos de perfil, representa a Cristo de rasgos afilados, cabello ondulado y túnica blanca.? 

Entrevisté al obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo el 23 de septiembre de 2015 en las oficinas de la curia, a un lado de la catedral de Cancún, en el Ombligo Verde. En 40 minutos, surgieron en la conversación algunos rasgos que han hecho célebres a los Legionarios de Cristo: el éxito como insignia; el énfasis en el carácter emprendedor de la Legión y la abundancia de sus frutos materiales; la molestia ante las preguntas incómodas (pederastas, la doble vida de Marcial Maciel) y, al final, la advertencia de llevarme a tribunales si no era fiel a sus palabras. Acá una versión resumida de nuestra conversación:? 

—¿Cómo ha sido en términos de complejidad, de reto, atender una población que creció diez veces en 45 años? 
—El crecimiento explosivo que trae grandísimos retos para la evangelización. Como destino turístico y belleza ambiental es sumamente atractivo y agradable vivir aquí, como el paraíso. La gente viene de paseo y se queda. Son muy atractivas la playas, la arena, [el mar] turquesa, el sol, la brisa que sopla. 
—¿Cuál era el?manpower?cuando se fundó la prelatura? 
—Llegamos cinco sacerdotes y había cinco parroquias. Ahora son 115 sacerdotes y 53 parroquias. Ha habido dos periodos, el obispo anterior, monseñor [Jorge] Bernal. Cuando me hicieron obispo, en 2004, recibí 52 sacerdotes y ahora son lo doble y lo mismo las parroquias, se han duplicado. ¿Cómo le haces para doblar las parroquias, cuando no hay nada, cuando es selva, cuando es monte? Llegar a chapear, a desmontar, a hacer iglesita de palitos. Así fue la zona hotelera, cuando yo llegué así estaba. Y poco a poco llegar a hacer una iglesia digna, grande, sagrada, acogedora y ése es el carisma que han traído los Legionarios de Cristo: el espíritu emprendedor y misionero que logró construir muchas iglesias. Todavía están en construcción la catedral, la basílica, nuestro seminario.? 

—De estos 115 de ahora, ¿cuántos son diocesanos?, ¿cuántos legionarios? 
—Setenta legionarios, 35 diocesanos, y el resto de otras congregaciones. Tenemos una gran necesidad [de sacerdotes].? 

—Llama mucho la atención la basílica, por los 110 metros. Supongo que será la construcción más alta de Cancún, ¿por qué tan monumental? 
—Inicialmente se tuvo un encuentro con el presidente Vicente Fox y con los presidentes de la república después. Y hay un lugar que se llama Malecón Tajamar que se ha convertido en el centro social más importante de Cancún. Y providencialmente ese terreno se ha donado por Fonatur a la Iglesia católica. Este proyecto sale de la ubicación tan preciosa para ser el centro religioso de Cancún y que al mismo tiempo se convierta en un ícono y atractivo turístico para todos los turistas. Que sea un lugar como la [catedral] de Colonia o la Sagrada Familia de Barcelona o Notre Dame de París donde la gente va, reza y los turistas se encuentran con una ventana al evento guadalupano. Y podemos hacerlo con la máxima tecnología audiovisual e interactiva para presentar Guadalupe a los 14 millones de turistas. Es un proyecto de turismo religioso. Es un proyecto turístico. 

—Tiempos y presupuestos para la basílica… 
—Primero los permisos. Llevamos años y años gestionando. El día de mañana voy a tener una entrevista con el secretario de turismo para ver si ya sale.? 

—Quisiera tener la versión institucional del obispo, de la prelatura, el caso ya muy publicado en la prensa de dos sacerdotes, Eduardo Lucatero y Jesús Martínez, que han estado aquí y que fueron en algún momento señalados o acusados en algún abuso. Se dijo que la prelatura servía como para encubrir o proteger o resguardar.? 
—Son casos de 20, 30 o 40 años. Casos sobreseídos que podían estar aquí o en cualquier otra parte. Son sacerdotes que ya están retirados. Uno de ellos está enfermo, en silla de ruedas, atendido muy caritativamente, que no tiene nada pendiente, que tiene un ministerio muy reducido o nulo, que es Lucatero, de 75, 76 años. Y el otro [Martínez Penilla] es de 80 años, ya pasó la edad, no está en ningún ejercicio de su ministerio y [se le trata] con toda la caridad cristiana que se merecen personas que han trabajado por la Iglesia, y la Legión tiene la obligación de no tirarlos como trapos sucios, inútiles, sino hacer que se les dé un trato digno y respetuoso como seres humanos y servidores. Eso es todo, ¿qué más? 

—¿Cómo se vivió la etapa crítica, la revelación de que el fundador de la congregación, Marcial Maciel, tenía una hija? 
—Desde luego que lo vivimos con mucha pena, con mucha tristeza y con mucho respeto para no juzgar, condenar lo que solamente le toca a Dios. Nosotros creemos que Jesucristo es el único juez de todos, también de los que juzgamos a los otros, superficial y ligeramente, sin estar enterados. Respeto porque es un misterio, misterio cómo una persona con una vida desordenada crea una congregación tan ordenada. Es lo que dijo Benedicto XVI. Dijo: Es un misterio para mí. Frente al misterio lo menos que puedes hacer es ser respetuoso si es que estás ubicado, si no estás ubicado dices todo lo que puedas decir para sacar provecho, pa vender el periódico. Pues sí, cada uno tiene derecho a hacer su luchita, ¿no?, pues qué bueno. Aquí [en Quintana Roo] la confianza no se perdió.? 

—De la invasión en la Supermanzana 30, [y] de una escuela primaria en donde se construyen iglesias que son terrenos públicos, son parques… 
—La última es en Playa del Carmen, se llama Villas del Sol. Está metido en el monte. Los fieles católicos insisten que les den un espacio como en todas partes del mundo, que es terreno de equipamiento. Este terreno de equipamiento está señalado que es el 15 por ciento del desarrollo para que hicieran escuela, iglesia, hospital, mercado, bomberos, policía, servicios públicos. En el municipio el encargado de Asuntos Religiosos les dice: ‘si quieren la Semana Santa ahí, limpien su terrenito y celebren las ceremonias religiosas de la Semana Santa’. Limpiaron, pusieron la cruz y pues llegaron los periódicos: ‘Que el obispo está invadiendo, que es el más rico del mundo’. Yo ni sabía, yo no tenía ni idea. Aquí [en Cancún] es enormemente mucho más grande y ha habido lugares sin que se entere nadie. Los fieles han dicho: ‘Aquí vamos a hacer nuestra iglesita’. ¿Y por qué no? Y comienzan, y ponen su tingladito, y al rato llaman a un padre, y al rato están rezando el rosario debajo de un árbol, y se juntan. Digo, ¿no tienen derecho a tener un espacio donde puedan alabar a Dios, crecer en las virtudes, en fin, ser hermanos, construir comunidad, que están solos, que vienen uno de Tabasco, otro de Campeche, otro de Veracruz y quieren los vecinos juntarse para tener un ratito de convivencia…? 

—Con este crecimiento de Quintana Roo, demográfico y de infraestructura, ¿todavía se justifica una prelatura? 
—Esa es la gran pregunta que me hacen todos los obispos. La razón por la que todavía tenga que ser prelatura, es el crecimiento exagerado de la población, que no ha dado tiempo para que vayan creciendo los sacerdotes nativos. 

El paraíso intocable 
La Legión de Cristo no es sólo una congregación religiosa, sino un?holdingreligioso, empresarial y financiero: una hiedra que se extiende en asociaciones de miles de laicos agrupados en el Regnum Christi —algunas de sus integrantes, sobre todo mujeres, trabajan de tiempo completo para la Legión—, un emporio educativo con colegios y universidades en más de veinte países; el banco Compartamos; sociedades para la recaudación de recursos como Kilo de ayuda y Teletón, además de una red de alianzas con los empresarios más ricos de México, como Carlos Slim —a quien casó Maciel— y Emilio Azcárraga Jean —Maciel celebró las exequias de su padre, a pesar de que ya se le había señalado como abusador de niños.? 

Benedicto XVI dimitió al gobierno de la Iglesia en febrero de 2013. Su sucesor, el jesuita argentino Jorge Mario Bergoglio, llamado Francisco, labró una pastoral popular y progresista, en las antípodas de la Legión de Cristo, pero no se atrevió a tocar el imperio que había fundado Maciel. Incluso permitió que la congregación regresara a la normalidad, ya sin interventores pontificios encima.? 

El Vaticano tampoco ha castigado uno de los desempeños más ineficientes en México. En Quintana Roo, según el censo de 2010, los católicos representan 63 por ciento de la población. Esa cifra está muy por debajo del 82 por ciento nacional. Mientras los legionarios construyen iglesias con fervor, 14 por ciento de los quintanarroenses se declara cristiano no católico, y otro 13 por ciento se dice sin religión. 

En Quintana Roo, la Legión ha gozado de un ambiente propicio para hacer lo que ha querido: albergar a pederastas —y a encubridores de pederastas— y apropiarse de terrenos públicos sin que existan consecuencias. Desde 1970 el estado de Quintana Roo ha sido un paraíso para los Legionarios de Cristo. 

NOTAS 
1. De manera habitual, la Iglesia católica se divide en diócesis: porciones territoriales bajo el mando de un obispo. Sólo en casos excepcionales se crean “prelaturas”: zonas en donde la Iglesia tiene una estructura tan débil que es incapaz de atender a la población local y, por lo tanto, la delega a una congregación religiosa. Suelen ser zonas indígenas con pobreza extrema y de difícil acceso. En México, a los franciscanos se les han cedido las prelaturas de El Nayar (Nayarit) y El Salto (Durango), y a los salesianos, la prelatura de Mixes, en Oaxaca. Entre 1958 y 1992, los jesuitas se encargaron de la Tarahumara, en Chihuahua. La prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal comprende el estado de Quintana Roo. 
2. Hasta aquí, las citas textuales provienen de?Una Iglesia de corazón misionero, libro de nuestra historia, que la prelatura editó en 2010 para celebrar su 40 aniversario, páginas 34 y 39, respectivamente.? 
3. La historia del abuso y la fuga de Martínez Penilla la cuenta el historiador Fernando M. González en Marcial Maciel, los legionarios de Cristo: testimonios y documentos inéditos, pp. 365-366.? 
4.?Una Iglesia de corazón misionero, p. 28. 
5. En diversas congregaciones religiosas se toman tres votos: castidad, pobreza y obediencia. Maciel inventó dos votos más: el de caridad y el de humildad. El voto de caridad prohibía a los legionarios criticar a sus superiores, y el de humildad les impedía buscar puestos directivos en la organización. A través de ambos votos, el fundador consiguió que, durante décadas, ningún legionario denunciara sus crímenes. 
Con información de Gatopardo

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NEW YORK TIMES DOET OPROEP TOT VATICAANSTAD

BELGIE
KerkNet

[The New York Times has called on the Vatican prosecutor to drop all charges against two Italian journalists – Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fattipaldi.]

BRUSSEL (KerkNet/Catholic Herald) – De bekende Amerikaanse krant ‘New York Times’ heeft de openbare aanklager van het Vaticaan opgeroepen om alle klachten tegen de twee Italiaanse journalisten Gianluigi Nuzzi en Emiliano Fittipaldi, die allebei recent een boek publiceerden over de weerstand van sommige leden van de Romeinse Curie tegen de financiële hervormingen van paus Franciscus.

De krant benadrukt dat beiden worden vervolgd op basis van een wet uit 2013, die werd goedgekeurd om seksueel misbruik van minderjarigen en kinderporno te bestrijden. Emiliano Fittipaldi noemde het proces kafkaiaans. De Organisatie voor Veiligheid en Samenwerking in Europa (OVSE), evenals beroepsorganisaties van journalisten vroegen het Vaticaan om het proces tegen de journalisten stop te zetten.

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Accuser of sex abuse at Aurora church drops anonymity

ILLINOIS
Daily Herald

Susan Sarkauskas

Members of two groups critical of the Catholic Church’s handling of sexual abuse by priests are calling for parishioners to withhold financial donations to an Aurora church.

And the man who sued that church, St. Rita of Cascia, under the name “John Doe” has revealed his identity. He is John Plaschke, who now lives in Maryland, and said he revealed himself to encourage other possible victims to come forward.

Plaschke’s suit, filed in September in Winnebago County, names the church, the Rockford Diocese and John Holdren, a priest at St. Rita of Cascia in the early 1970s.

In a phone interview, Plaschke said the recent news about sexual assault allegations against comedian Bill Cosby prompted him to investigate his own abuse. The shame and the fear of not being believed expressed by Cosby’s accusers resonated with Plaschke and brought out suppressed memories, he said. Plaschke said he filed the suit after being unsatisfied with the responses of the parish and the diocese to his questions.

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Prestigious MN prep school/Uni in violation of Title IX for housing sex offending monks

MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 30, 2015

Newly released documents show how St. John’s Prep in Collegeville, MN is in direct violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 and created a hostile environment where students can reasonably believe they are risk of sexual assault.

At least 10 sex-offending monks—who have only been publicly exposed due to child sex abuse civil lawsuits and criminal complaints— live at the monastic residence (noted in the photo of the school above) mere yards from the dorms of St. John’s Prep.

Students must pass the home where the offenders live to go to the cafeteria or attend church services. Because of the real risk these monks pose, students are unable to study, work, or perform in sport activities because out of genuine and real fear of sexual assault.

According to Campus Safety Magazine:

Sexual violence is viewed under the law as an extreme form of hostile environment/sexual harassment and must be addressed. When an institution “knows or reasonably should know” about a hostile environment, they are required “to take immediate action to eliminate the harassment, prevent its recurrence and address its effects.”

We aren’t talking about frat parties. We are talking about men who engaged in child sex trafficking in South East Asia, men who evaded charges of child sex abuse, men who took numerous children to cabins in order to sexually abuse them, men who sexually abused the high school and college students they counseled, and men who abused altar boys in their care.

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Spotlight & Philippines Jesuit sex crimes. Jesuit abused young man “a few hundred times” starting when he was 15 in Ateneo de Zamboanga, Arvisu House, Loyola House of Studies

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

The Jesuits are among the most notorious sexual predators on earth.

Jesuits are infamous members of the JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army.

END Statute of Limitation for pedophilia

This “Jesuit sex crimes” from the Philippines prove that the statute of limitation must be removed for pedophilia and pederast sex crimes because it takes about three decades before victims can speak about their shameful past. Lucas, (not his real name) comes out only now at the age of 46 and he was sexually assaulted “hundreds of times” starting at the age of 15. It took him three decades to reveal his shameful past and in the Philippines, that shame belongs not to him alone – but to his entire family as well. Read our article, — New York Catholic bishops fight new Statute of Limitation bill for it would cause the church “catastrophic financial harm”.

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Case Study 35, November 2015, Melbourne – Live hearing

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

[live stream]

The Royal Commission will hold a public hearing in Melbourne from Tuesday 24 November 2015 commencing at 10:00am AEDT.

The public hearing will inquire into the response of the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne to allegations of child sexual abuse.

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Priest accused of stealing told bishop he was playing ‘hardball’ with unauthorized fees

CANADA
Windsor Star

TREVOR WILHELM, WINDSOR STAR

The bishop of the London diocese testified Monday that a priest charged with stealing claimed he was charging unauthorized wedding fees to play “hardball” with people wanting to use the church.

Bishop Ronald Fabbro took the witness stand as week two of the trial against Robert Couture began.

“He should not be including a fee for himself,” said Fabbro.

“This idea of playing hardball I thought was not a good pastoral approach.”

Robert Couture, the former pastor of Ste. Anne Parish in Tecumseh, is charged with theft over $5,000. A forensic accountant told court last week Couture stole between $170,000 and $234,000 from 2002 to 2010.

Fabbro said Monday he received a complaint in 2004 from the parents of a couple who got married at Ste. Anne. He said the complaint from the family, referred to in court as the Majors, was about fees that Couture required.

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Obispo Barros asegura que “se enteró por la prensa” de abusos de Karadima

CHILE
El Dinamo

[Bishop Barros said he learned of the abuses by Karadima from the press.]

Barros mostró su molestia por ser relacionado con los abusos de Karadima, recalcando que “he señalado en más de una ocasión que en este proceso se ha faltado gravemente a la verdad, y he visto en algunos medios de comunicación algunas alusiones al respecto, las que niego rotundamente”.

En el marco de la demanda civil que interpusieron tres de las víctimas de los abusos cometidos por Fernando Karadima en contra del Arzobispado de Santiago, el pasado 20 de noviembre prestó declaración el cuestionado obispo Juan Barros.

Es que Barros es sindicado por parte de los querellantes y de la comunidad de Osorno de ser uno de los encubridores de los delitos realizados por el ex párroco de El Bosque, lo cual ha sido negado en innumerables ocasiones por el prelado.

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‘VatiLeaks’ trial rescheduled for Dec. 7

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Junno Arocho Esteves Catholic News Service | Nov. 30, 2015

VATICAN CITY
A Vatican trial against two Italian journalists, a Spanish monsignor and two others was postponed for one week after the court allowed one of the defendants to change lawyers.

On what was to be the criminal trial’s first day of testimonies by the defendants Monday, the Vatican court granted a request by one of the accused to have a new lawyer and receive more time to prepare for the case.

The proceedings began with the presiding judge, Giuseppe Dalla Torre, stating the request by Francesca Chaouqui, a member of the former Pontifical Commission for Reference on the Organization of the Economic-Administrative Structure of the Holy See.

Dalla Torre, along with three other Vatican judges, deliberated for 10 minutes before granting her request and announcing the trial would resume Dec. 7.

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Pope acknowledges criticism over speed of leaks trial, admits ‘error’ in naming commission

PAPAL PLANE
Star Tribune

By NICOLE WINFIELD and FRANCES D’EMILIO Associated Press NOVEMBER 30, 2015 —

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE — Pope Francis has acknowledged criticism that the Vatican’s trial over leaked documents has been rushed, saying the defendants and their lawyers must have time to mount a proper defense.

Francis spoke to reporters en route home from Africa after a Vatican judge on Tuesday adjourned the trial until Dec. 7 to give one of the defendants time to prepare after she engaged a new attorney late last week. Several of the suspects had complained that they hadn’t had time to find lawyers, much less study the case file before the trial began Nov. 24.

In a startling acknowlegment of his involvement in the process, Francis said he had wanted the trial to be finished before the Dec. 8 start of his Jubilee Year of Mercy.

“But I think this can’t be done now, because I want all the defense lawyers to have time to defend, that there is the freedom of defense,” he said.

Three members of a papal reform commission are accused of leaking documents to two reporters who published blockbuster books detailing Vatican waste, mismanagement and greed among some cardinals and bishops. The two reporters are also on trial for having published the material — accusations that have drawn scorn from media rights groups around the world.

The groups have urged the Vatican to drop the charges against reporters Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, who face eight years in prison if convicted.

Francis acknowledged that journalists have an important role to play in uncovering injustice and corruption.

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Caught on video – priest in cake fetish sex romp with married goddaughter

NEW YORK
The Sun (UK)

A KINKY priest has been kicked out of the church after he was caught on video engaging in a ‘cake-crushing’ fetish with his married goddaughter.

Footage shows The Rev. George Passias, 67, looking on as Ethel Bouzalas, 45, sat and stomped on pieces of banana bread – while wearing sexy lingerie.

Passias has been relieved of his priestly duties at St. Spyridon Church in New York after a unanimous vote, church officials tell the New York Post.

Bouzalas, 45, who was principal of the St. Spyridon Parochial School, is now five months’ pregnant — and she claims the horny holy man is the father, according to The National Herald, a Greek-American daily newspaper.

Bouzalas has alleged that Passias urged her to get an abortion, despite that being against the teachings of the Greek Orthodox church.

The priest has denied that claim.

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Vatican leaks trial postponed after defendant changes lawyer

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

A Vatican trial into the theft of confidential Holy See documents was postponed on Monday until December 7th, dashing church hopes of wrapping up the case before the start of the Roman Catholic Holy Year.

The trial of five defendants, including a senior Spanish priest and two Italian reporters, was due to hear the first testimony on Monday, with the court looking to reach verdicts before December 8th, when the Holy Year starts.

However, the panel of three judges agreed to adjourn the hearing because one of the accused, lay consultant Francesca Chaouqui, had changed her lawyer, who requested more time to prepare the defence.

Two defendants, journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, had books based on leaked documents published this month that depict a Vatican plagued by greed and graft and where Pope Francis faces stiff resistance to his reform agenda.

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Missbrauch in der Katholischen Kirche: Geheime Paralleljustiz

DEUTSCHLAND
Spiegel

[Father R., considered a major abuser in the instances of sexual abuse at Caniusiu College in Berlin, but he never faced charged in criminal and civil law because the actions were said to be time-barred. It turns out that a girl raised in the church has made serious allegations against the priest which are not time-barred. It remains to be seen whether the priest will be charged.]

Von Peter Wensierski

Ein Mädchen meldet einen nicht verjährten Missbrauch, der in Verbindung mit dem Berliner Canisius-Kolleg steht. Doch die Kirche informiert erst zehn Monate später die Staatsanwaltschaft.

Pater R. gilt als ein Haupttäter im Fall des jahrelangen sexuellen Missbrauchs am Canisius-Kolleg in Berlin. Vor Gericht musste sich der katholische Geistliche jedoch nie verantworten, straf- und zivilrechtlich waren die Taten verjährt. Nun stellt sich heraus: Ein Mädchen erhob bei der Kirche auch schwere Vorwürfe gegen den Pater, die nicht verjährt waren. Doch das Bistum Hildesheim, bei dem sich die Jugendliche gemeldet hatte, verschleppte die Aufklärung, wie die WDR-Dokumentation “Richter Gottes” zeigt.

Das Mädchen hatte sich in Begleitung seiner Religionslehrerin im März 2010 an das Bistum gewandt und von einem Besuch bei dem Pater vier Jahre zuvor in Berlin erzählt. Erst habe der Geistliche mit ihr ein Straßenfest besucht und ihr eine Panflöte geschenkt. Dann gingen sie in seine kleine Wohnung und aßen gemeinsam Abendbrot. Später habe sie sich im selben Raum schlafen gelegt, schließlich sei der Pater mit ihrer Familie in Hildesheim befreundet gewesen. Sie war ihren Angaben zufolge noch nicht ganz eingeschlafen, da sei Pater R. wieder aufgestanden, habe sich auf sie gelegt und begonnen, sie zu küssen und zu befummeln.

Als das Mädchen dies berichtete, kannte die Bistumsleitung Pater R. schon bestens, nicht nur als mutmaßlichen Serientäter vom Berliner Canisius-Kolleg. Auch auf einer eigenen Pressekonferenz, nur vier Wochen zuvor, hatte das Bistum zwei andere Missbrauchsfälle von Pater R. im Bereich des eigenen Bistums zugegeben, denen man “leider nicht nachgegangen sei”.

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Sexueller Missbrauch Canisius Kolleg – Katholische Kirche behinderte Ermittlungsbehörden

DEUTSCHLAND
Hannover Zeitung

Die katholische Kirche hat die Aufklärung der Straftaten des Haupttäters Pfarrer Peter R. im Missbrauchsskandal am Berliner Gymnasium Canisius Kolleg 2010 aktiv behindert. Das zeigt erstmals die ARD/WDR-Dokumentation “Richter Gottes” von Eva Müller aus der Sendereihe “Die Story im Ersten” am Montag, 30. November um 22.45 Uhr. Darin äußert sich der Täter zum ersten Mal öffentlich. Die Staatsanwaltschaft Berlin prüft nun die Aufnahme neuer Ermittlungen.

Anfang 2010 berichteten ehemalige Schüler von Pfarrer Peter R. am Berliner Gymnasium Canisius Kolleg, dass er sie nackt fotografiert, angefasst und zur Selbstbefriedigung genötigt habe. Sie lösten damit den Missbrauchsskandal der katholischen Kirche in Deutschland aus. Die Rede ist von mehr als 100 Opfern. Bereits im Februar 2010 meldete die Staatsanwaltschaft Berlin, dass Peter R.’s Taten verjährt seien und deshalb keine strafrechtlichen Konsequenzen hätten.

Vier Wochen später, Anfang März 2010, meldete sich jedoch im Bistum Hildesheim ein 14-jähriges Mädchen, das dort angibt, Peter R. habe auch sie bedrängt. Die Kirche veröffentlicht diese Meldung nicht, informiert die Familie der 14-Jährigen und die Behörden nicht, vernimmt aber den Täter selbst dazu und leitet durch den Hildesheimer Bischof Norbert Trelle eine interne, kirchenrechtliche Voruntersuchung zu diesem Fall ein. Zur selben Zeit sagt der damalige Vorsitzende der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz, Erzbischof Zollitsch, öffentlich eine umfassende, “ehrliche Aufklärung” und bessere Zusammenarbeit mit den staatlichen Behörden zu.

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Church’s ‘terrible failure’ on abuse

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart insists he has not tried to blame dead church figures for the archdiocese’s “terrible failure” to act on abuse complaints.

Archbishop Hart says his predecessors failed to act, but excluded 1996-2001 Melbourne archbishop Cardinal George Pell from his criticism.

Archbishop Hart says former archbishop Frank Little put children in danger by not acting on complaints about Fr Peter Searson, one of a succession of pedophile priests in the Doveton parish.

“It’s just a horror story,” Archbishop Hart said of Doveton.

“These things were being presented again and again and again, and nothing was happening.”

During his evidence to the child abuse royal commission, senior counsel Gail Furness SC said some of the criticisms were levelled primarily at Archbishop Little and one of his vicar-generals, Monsignor Gerald Cudmore.

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Pokin Around: Cardinal Law, portrayed as protector of pedophile priests, once worked here

MISSOURI
Springfield News-Leader

Steve Pokin, spokin@news-leader.com November 30, 2015

On Thanksgiving I went to the Moxie Cinema and watched “Spotlight,” the best movie I’ve ever seen on journalism, including “All the President’s Men.”

The film, based on real events, has a strong local connection: Cardinal Bernard Francis Law, who is the villain.

The film chronicles the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer-Prize winning coverage of how the Boston Diocese protected pedophile priests and moved them from parish to parish. The man behind these decisions was Law, who became a Cardinal while archbishop of the Boston Diocese, the third largest in the nation.

Before going to Boston, Law, now 84, was bishop of the Springfield-Cape Girardeau Diocese from October 1973 to January 1984.

As a result of the Globe’s dogged reporting, Law became a sort of poster boy, representing how the Catholic Church initially covered up of the misdeeds of pedophile priests.

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“Spotlight” shows journalism at its best, Catholic Church at its worst

UNITED STATES
Saint Peters Blog

By Tom Ohara – Nov 30, 2015

If you want to be simultaneously appalled and inspired, go see the movie “Spotlight.”

It’s about the Boston Globe’s 2001-2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation into the Boston archdiocese’s decades-long cover-up of child sex abuse by its priests and brothers.

The film is unusual because it portrays people doing actual journalism. There are no gaggles of goofballs with microphones shouting stupid questions in a hallway.

“Spotlight,” the name of the newspaper’s investigative team, shows that quality journalism is usually the result of a dogged slog.

One of the heroes is Marty Baron, a Tampa-born guy who as the Globe’s new editor in 2001 asked some unpleasant questions about the paper’s coverage of the scandal.

The investigative team found the disturbing answers: that the archdiocese knew about the extent of the abuse for decades and used its considerable money and power to cover it up.

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Archdiocese shows ownership title for former hotel

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

The group Concerned Catholics of Guam has argued that Archbishop Anthony Apuron gave control of the Yona seminary to the Neocatechumenal Way, but the church has released land documents to dispute that claim.

The archbishop of the Archdiocese of Agana, as the “corporation sole,” holds the title to the former Accion Hotel, which is currently being used as a seminary, according to a document released by the Archdiocese of Agana last weekend.

“The archbishop of Agana is the legal and sole owner of the Redemptoris Mater Seminary of Guam in Yona — (formerly) Hotel Accion property,” a statement from the archdiocese, approved by Msgr. David Quitugua, the archdiocesan vicar general, states. The statement was released in the Nov. 29 edition of the Umatuna Si Yu’os, the archdiocese’s newspaper.

The archdiocese released the property’s certificate of title, which was issued by the Department of Land Management on Oct. 30, 2015, following publicly expressed concerns from Concerned Catholics of Guam that Apuron may have signed a document that might have placed the property under the control of the leaders of the Neocatechumenal Way.

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Vatileaks 2 trial continues

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Vatican City, November 30 – The second hearing in the so-called Vatileaks 2 trial against five people for allegedly leaking confidential Holy See documents ended after less than 15 minutes on Monday after the court decided to grant five days to the new lawyer representing defendant Francesca Chaouqui to prepare her defence. “I don’t understand a thing, there’s no proof against me,” Chaouqui said after the hearing.

“In the next five days we must discover why I’m here,” the PR expert added. Chaouqui’s co-defendants, investigative journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, Monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda and his former assistant Nicola Maio, all attended Monday’s hearing. Chaouqui, Balda and Maio are charged with leaking the confidential material and Nuzzi and Fittipaldi of using it in books published recently documenting Vatican waste and mismanagement and lavish spending by clergymen.

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Vatileaks: “Sesso, bugie e padrini politici, io e la Chaouqui amanti e nemici”

ROME
La Repubblica

di MARCO ANSALDO e CORRADO ZUNINO

ROMA – Nel memoriale che monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda ha consegnato al primo avvocato (poi sostituito) l’8 novembre scorso c’è la confessione dei suoi rapporti, anche carnali, con Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui. Ci sono le sue convinzioni preoccupate: “Lei era dei servizi segreti, aveva dietro Bisignani”. E c’è il racconto di tutti gli amici importanti della pierre assurta a commissario delle finanze del Vaticano per volontà di Papa Bergoglio.

I GIORNI DELLA TENTAZIONE
“Io non potevo cedere… Avevo sempre il Papa davanti agli occhi che parlava della sacralità delle donne sposate e del matrimonio “, si tormenta monsignore. È il momento più drammatico della confessione a proposito del suo rapporto con la Chaouqui, uno dei commissari alle finanze della Santa Sede.

Sono trascorsi sei giorni dal suo arresto e monsignore detta il suo memoriale sulla diffusione delle carte segrete della Prefettura economica di cui era il segretario. “Repubblica” presenta questo documento mentre oggi, al processo sul caso Vatileaks, sia il monsignore spagnolo sia la pierre cosentina saranno interrogati dalla Corte. Sul tavolo, una prima importante decisione presa nei giorni scorsi: il rifiuto da parte della corte della richiesta avanzata dal legale d’ufficio di Balda (tutti gli imputati di questo processo presso la Santa Sede non hanno avvocati di fiducia) di sottoporre il suo assistito a una perizia psichiatrica.

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VatiLeaks trial postponed, main suspects exchange low blows

VATICAN CITY
Wichita Eagle

dpa

VATICAN CITY
A key hearing in the VatiLeaks 2 trial over leaks related to alleged financial scandals in the Vatican was Monday postponed by a week to give a new defense lawyer time to study the case.

Main suspects Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda and Francesca Chaouqui were to be questioned, but presiding judge Giuseppe Dalla Torre at the Vatican court rescheduled the hearing for Dec. 7 after Chaouqui showed up with a new counsel.

Laura Sgro replaced Agnese Camilli, who was a court-appointed lawyer, the Vatican said in a statement.

Vallejo Balda, a Spanish member of the conservative Catholic movement Opus Dei, and Chaouqui, an Italian public relations consultant, were members of a now-disbanded committee that advised Pope Francis on financial and administrative reforms.

They are accused, along with an aide of the monsignor, of passing on information to journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi.

Former friends Vallejo Balda and Chaouqui are now in the midst of a fierce spat.

In a written statement to the court, leaked to Italian newspaper La Repubblica on Monday, Vallejo Balda confesses to having had sex with Chaouqui.

He describes her as a dangerous social climber with friends in high places, including former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi.

Several Italian newspapers last week quoted confidential prosecution papers containing lewd and foul text messages between the two. Chaouqui claims they were edited to tarnish her reputation.

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Men in court over 1960’s abuse allegations at Shefford children’s home

UNITED KINGDOM
Bedford Today

Monday 30 November 2015

Two elderly men appeared at court this morning to answer historical allegations of abuse against boys while working at St Francis’ Children’s Home in Shefford.

James McCann, 79, and John Christopher Cahill, 73, appeared at Luton Magistrates Court where the allegations of abuse were put to them.

The court heard how both Mr McCann and Mr Cahill were lay members of staff at the home, which was run primarily by nuns and religious clerics.

Mr McCann was involved in the day-to-day care of boys at the home between 1966 and 1974. He has pleaded not guilty to 66 charges, 17 of them sexually-related, from 25 complainants.

The court was told much of the abuse claims related to physical harm, with Mr McCann accused of striking boys with sticks and leather belts, and clapping against both sides of their ears – causing intense pain.

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Behandeling klachten slachtoffers misbruik R. K.- Kerk in 2016 afgerond

NEDERLAND
Meldpunt Seksueel Misbruik RKK

[The complaints committee for abuse victims in the Dutch Catholic Church expects to have all issues resolved by Sept. 1. A total of 211 cases are still pending and hearings were held this year for 31 alleged victims.]

De Klachtencommissie voor slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik in de R. K.- Kerk verwacht dat 1 september 2016 alle zaken zijn afgehandeld. Er zijn nog 211 zaken in behandeling. Voor 31 slachtoffers wordt nog dit jaar een zitting gehouden. Er zijn in de regel 6 zittingen per week.

Bij gegrond verklaring kunnen slachtoffers een beroep doen op compensatie. De Compensatiecommissie verwacht dat ongeveer 150 slachtoffers dat ook zullen doen. Eind 2016 zullen allen een uitspraak hebben ontvangen. Het werk van beide commissies zit er dan op. De hulpverlening aan slachtoffers gaat echter door. Die kunnen een beroep blijven doen op het aanbod van gespecialiseerde hulp van het Platform Hulpverlening voor slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik in de R. K.- Kerk.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 30 November 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– Msgr. Jure Bogdan as military ordinary for Croatia. The bishop-elect was born in Donji Dolac, Croatia in 1955 and was ordained a priest in 1980. He holds a doctorate in theology from the Pontifical Lateran University and has served in a number of pastoral roles in the archdiocese of Split-Makarska, Croatia, including parish vicar and spiritual father of the archdiocesan minor seminary. He is currently rector of the Pontifical Croatian College of St. Jerome in Rome. He succeeds Bishop Juraj Jezerinac, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same military ordinariate upon reaching the age limit was accepted by the Holy Father.

– Fr. Vincent Kirabo as bishop of Hoima (area 17,200, population 2,084214, Catholics 1,075,812, priests 131, religious 130), Uganda. The bishop-elect was born in Kyanaisoke, Uganda in 1955 and was ordained a priest in 1979. He holds a master’s degree in education from the University of Portland, United States of America, and a licentiate in biblical theology from the Pontifical Urbanian University, Rome. He has served in a number of roles in the diocese of Hoima, including teacher and rector of the minor seminary, director of the diocesan commission for vocations, parish vicar, diocesan administrator for finance, parish priest, and teacher and bursar at the Uganda Martyrs National Minor Seminary Alokolum, Gulu. He is currently a teacher at the St. Mary’s National Major Seminary Ggaba, Kampala.

– Bishop Luis Albeiro Cortes Rendon of Velez, Colombia, as auxiliary of the diocese of Pereira (area 6,126, population 1,380,000, Catholics 1,041,000, priests 210, permanent deacons 36, religious 266), Colombia.

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Two ex-principals charged with abusing pupils

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DECEMBER 1, 2015

Dan Box
Crime reporter
Sydney

A second former principal at a ­remote Catholic boarding school in northern Queensland has been charged with sexual crimes ­involving young boys.

Terry Kingston, a member of the Christian Brothers religious order, will face court this week charged with the indecent treatment of seven boys in 1976-77 while he was the principal of St Teresa’s College in Abergowrie.

It comes after another former principal at the boarding school, many of whose pupils are from ­indigenous families living across the Northern Territory, Cape York and Torres Strait, was charged with sexual crimes against children and will face trial next year.

James Sampson Doran, who took over the leadership of St ­Teresa’s in 1989, has indicated in court that he will plead not guilty to more than 40 charges relating to the alleged abuse of 11 boys in NSW between 1973 to 1986.

The Australian previously ­revealed that at least seven former pupils at a second Catholic boarding school, St John’s College in Woodlawn near Lismore, northern NSW, have committed suicide amid allegations of historical sexual abuse by staff.

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The Heron’s Nest: Putting the ‘Spotlight’ on journalism biz

UNITED STATES
Daily Times

By Phil Heron, Delaware County Daily Times
POSTED: 11/30/15

I saw the movie ‘Spotlight’ Saturday night.

If you’re not familiar with it, it’s a journalism movie. More specifically, a newspaper movie. It tells the story of how a team of reporters at the Boston Globe tackled the massive issue of abuse by priests in the Boston Archdiocese.

The movie made me proud of what I do. It also made me incredibly sad.

This is not a easy movie to watch, especially if you are Catholic. That would include me, a former altar boy. It does not paint the church – in particular the leaders of the Boston Archdiocese, in an especially good light.

I know a little bit about that. I have written at length about the same situation here in the Philadelphia archdiocese. In fact, Monsignor William Lynn, the highest church official ever charged and convicted in the church handling (some would say blatant cover-up) of church abuse. He was my pastor at St. Joe’s in Downingtown. Suffice it to say much of what I wrote was not especially well-received by my fellow parishioners.

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Protests over beloved Marysville priest’s departure

WASHINGTON
Q13 Fox

MARYSVILLE, Wash.—Members of St. Mary’s Catholic church in Marysville hit the pavement in protest outside of St. James Cathedral in Seattle on Sunday after learning their beloved priest was asked to leave their parish.

The Archdiocese of Seattle asked Father Dwight Lewis to leave St. Mary’s after finding financial and personnel practices that they called “significantly at odds” with church policies.

Some church members said they were kept in the dark and did not think Father Dwight did anything wrong.

“The diocese won’t meet with us and tell us why Father Dwight is gone. Why? What did he do?” said parishioner Scott Jenkins.

“They just do what they can do, without explaining to us. That’s so unfair. That’s number one. Number two, we want Father Dwight back. If they can’t really prove that he did something wrong, then why whisk him away?” said another parishioner.

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Fitzgerald: Where’s the spotlight on innocent priests?

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

Joe Fitzgerald Monday, November 30, 2015

If you’ve been following the brouhaha over the way some characters were portrayed in “Spotlight,” Hollywood’s version of how the Globe covered the priestly scandal that rocked the Catholic Church here, it’s tempting to feel sympathetic to someone who feels he was made to look like a jerk in order to juice up the script.

But lost in all of this bickering over what was said years ago is the disservice that was done to faithful priests whose unwarranted disgrace was the collateral damage of a rush to judgment.

They knew what it was to see themselves unfairly wrapped in a blanket indictment that turned a basic American tenet upside down; if you wore a Roman collar you were presumed guilty, not innocent.

But how do you prove something didn’t happen?

“When I go into a CVS or supermarket now,” a parochial vicar still in his 30s confided here at the time, “people either look through me as if I don’t exist or I get a contemptuous stare. When that happens, I feel like telling them, ‘Look, I didn’t do it!’ It’s as if they want to take it out on you personally.

“It wouldn’t surprise me if these are the same people who say, ‘Now let’s not profile all Middle Eastern men because a few blew up the World Trade Center.’ Yet they look at every one of us and wonder what we’re all about.”

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‘Cake porn’ priest defrocked amid kinky affair

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Chris Perez November 30, 2015

The kinky Washington Heights priest who was caught on video engaging in a “cake-crushing’’ fetish with a married church- school administrator has been defrocked, The Post has learned.

The Rev. George Passias, 67, was relieved of his priestly duties at St. Spyridon Church after a unanimous vote on Nov. 28 by the Greek Orthodox Holy and Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate during its monthly meeting in Istanbul, church officials said.

In addition, the entire executive board of St. Spyridon was ordered to step down Friday following the fallout over Passias’ pastry love affair with his goddaughter, Ethel Bouzalas, 45, who was principal of the St. Spyridon Parochial School.

Bishop Andonios Paropoulos, chancellor of the Greek Orthodox church in the United States, said the board was asked to step down “not because of any indication of any unethical or illegal actions on their part, but rather as part of an effort to appoint a new board, which will bring healing and reconciliation to a fragmented community, and to restore confidence in the leadership of the parish.”

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Priest alerted fellow paedophile priest after victim came to him in confession, inquiry told

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Monday 30 November 2015

A priest “had no hesitation” in breaking the seal of confession to warn a fellow paedophile priest about an altar boy’s abuse complaint, the child abuse inquiry heard on Monday.

Victim BTU told Father Wilfred “Bill” Baker in a neighbouring Melbourne parish that Father Ronald Pickering was sexually abusing him in 1968. However, Baker was also a paedophile.

Baker spoke to the boy after the 13-year-old used confession to reveal what Pickering was doing to him.

BTU said: “The conversation was not about the abuse that I disclosed to him; instead what Fr Baker wanted to know was where I lived … I thought this was odd.”

It got back to Pickering. “By mentioning it to Fr Pickering, Fr Baker clearly had no hesitation in breaking the seal of my confession to him and also Fr Pickering appeared to be agitated and was clearly concerned about this.”

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Sex, lies and spies: Vatileaks plot thickens

VATICAN CITY
The Express Tribune

AFP

VATICAN CITY: The Vatican’s controversial trial of journalists and whistleblowers was put on hold on Monday as new claims about sex, lies and spies gave the scandal an intriguing twist.

The trial, in which three Vatican insiders and two Italian reporters face potential prison terms of up to eight years, was adjourned until next week after one of the accused asked for more time to prepare her defence.

Francesca Chaouqui, a PR expert accused of leaking classified documents to journalists, asked for five days to study the prosecution case against her and possibly introduce new evidence after replacing her court-appointed lawyer with her own defence counsel.

The prosecution did not object and the presiding judge said proceedings would resume on December 7, dashing the hopes of Vatican officials that the high-profile case might be wrapped up before the official start of a Catholic Jubilee year the following day.

It emerged Monday that Chaouqui’s co-accused, Spanish Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda, 54, wrote a statement six days after his arrest in which he admitted to having been sorely tempted to have an affair with Chaouqui, 33, and that he believed she was working for Italy’s secret services.

According to Italian daily La Repubblica, the statement was made on November 8 to a lawyer no longer working for Vallejo Balda.

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Vatican leaks trial postponed after defendant changes lawyer

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

VATICAN CITY | BY ROBERTO MIGNUCCI

A Vatican trial into the theft of confidential Holy See documents was postponed on Monday until Dec. 7, dashing Church hopes of wrapping up the case before the start of the Roman Catholic Holy Year.

The trial of five defendants, including a senior Spanish priest and two Italian reporters, was due to hear the first testimony on Monday, with the court looking to reach verdicts before Dec. 8, when the Holy Year starts.

However, the panel of three judges agreed to adjourn the hearing because one of the accused, lay consultant Francesca Chaouqui, had changed her lawyer, who requested more time to prepare the defence.

Two defendants, journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, had books based on leaked documents published this month that depict a Vatican plagued by greed and graft and where Pope Francis faces stiff resistance to his reform agenda.

Vatican officials say the documents were handed to them by Chaouqui, Spanish Monsignor Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda and his assistant, Nicola Maio.

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OCA Responds to SNAP re: Monk Seraphim Storheim

UNITED STATES/CANADA
Pokrov

Author: Melanie Jula Sakoda
Date Published: 11/28/2015
Publication: Pokrov.org

Jillions Email

SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, received a response to their November 13th letter to the Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA). SNAP had written to the Church officials asking them to make sure that the former head of the Archdiocese of Canada, Seraphim Storheim, was well supervised and kept off church payrolls.

Storheim was convicted of sexually abusing an 11 year old boy and served time for that offense. He was subsequently defrocked by his Synod and reduced to the rank of lay monk. However, the former archbishop continues to reside at an OCA monastery in Canada.

Archpriest John Jillions, the OCA Chancellor, informed SNAP that the new archbishop of Canada, Irenee Rochon, had developed a supervision plan for his predecessor. The chancellor also assured the victims’ group that the former archbishop would not visit any other parishes unless a supervision plan was in place.

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Antiochian Priest Defrocked for Inappropriate Conduct

UNITED STATES
Pokrov

Author: Melanie Jula Sakoda
Date Published: 11/28/2015
Publication: Pokrov.org

McFeeters Letters

Archpriest Justin McFeeters, a priest in the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America, was accused of inappropriate conduct toward a parishioner at Holy Ascension Church in Norman, Oklahoma. He was suspended from his priestly duties on October 21, 2015, pending an investigation into the written complaint. The allegations were found to be credible and McFeeters, who voluntarily waived his right to a spiritual court, was removed from the priesthood on October 23, 2015.

Copies of the letters informing the priest of his suspension and deposition are linked above.

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Protopresbyter George Passias Defrocked by Holy and Sacred Synod

UNITED STATES
Pokrov

Author: Theodore Kalmoukos
Date Published: 11/28/2015
Publication: The National Herald

CONSTANTINOPLE – The Holy and Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate voted unanimously to defrock Protopresbyter George Passias at its regular monthly meeting in Constantinople on November 28.

Passias was returned to the status of layman due to the sexual scandal involving his close associate and god daughter Ethel Bouzalas.

The Holy and Sacred Synod validated the unanimous decision made by the Holy and Eparchial Synod of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America in early October.

The National Herald broke the Passias news on the website of its parent publication, the Greek language Ethnikos Kirix on Friday, October 2. The story was then picked up by the mainstream media, especially the New York Post.

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Continuation of Brisbane Grammar and St Paul’s School public hearing

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

30 November, 2015

The Royal Commission’s public hearing into Brisbane Grammar and St Paul’s School (Case Study 34) will recommence in Melbourne on Monday 30 November 2015 at 4:30pm AEDT.

It is anticipated that the hearing will hear from one witness, Bernard Yorke, Former General Manager, Anglican Diocese of Brisbane.

The Royal Commission will be sitting in the Ceremonial Courtroom at the County Court of Victoria and will also video conference with Courtroom 36 on level 7 of the Brisbane Magistrates Court.

Please be advised that Mr Yorke will give evidence via video link from Queensland.

For more information on Case Study 34 please visit the Royal Commission’s website.

Date: Monday 30 November 2015
Hearing times: 4:30pm AEDT start

Location: Ceremonial Courtroom, County Court of Victoria, 250 William Street, Melbourne, Victoria.

The public hearing will be streamed live to the public on the Royal Commission’s website www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au

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Stolen generations’ compensation vital

AUSTRALIA
The Border Mail

By George Williams
Nov. 30, 2015

NSW and Victoria recently announced their support for compensation for the victims of child sexual abuse. If a national scheme is established, these states will contribute millions of dollars to cover the shortfall from the institutions responsible for the harm.

This support is welcome, and follows the recommendation of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that such a scheme is needed. Victims should not be left to pursue compensation through the courts.

In many cases, time limits will have expired, and abuse will be impossible to prove, because of the death or absence of witnesses. Court processes are also likely to increase the trauma suffered by victims.

They were treated as outsiders and second-class citizens in their own lands.

However, the terms of reference of the royal commission mean any compensation scheme will be limited. Many people hurt by other forms of state-sanctioned abuse will be left out in the cold. Indeed, the debate has exposed the reluctance of governments to provide redress to others deserving of compensation.

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Stalking the stalkers: the heroes of Task Force Argos

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

November 27, 2015

Madonna King

A crack team of Brisbane-based investigators is leading a global charge against child-sex criminals. Madonna King reports on how Task Force Argos is turning online predators into prey.

Inside Task Force Argos, Australia’s crack paedophile squad, Detective Sergeant Kath Ford, 37, is a seasoned investigator, charged with tracking down online predators preying on children. But inside the terminals of those she targets, she’s a 14-year-old schoolgirl – let’s call her Helen – skipping around the net, while her mother is working late. “I’d like to think it’s not me,” Ford says.

“I’m not engaging that person. It’s Helen. We take on that role, that persona.”

To make it real, Helen needs a whole back-story. She’s a Brisbane schoolgirl, living with her single mother, completing year 10, with loads of friends. Sometimes, Ford will be required to play a schoolboy, too, but always, to escape suspicion, her story needs to be iron-clad. “Are you a cop?” they invariably ask, before the talk turns sexual. That means Ford has to know Helen as well as herself, being able to nominate quickly everything from her marks in maths, to the names of her cousins, to what time her mother will be home. In a high-stakes game where children’s futures are at risk, the mother of two children aged five and eight needs to be a canny actor, where teenage music lyrics roll off the keyboard, along with sentences peppered by “amazeballs”, “LOL” and “OMG”.

“We don’t engage; we always wait to engage,” says Ford, who has also worked as an undercover officer in the Queensland Police Service’s prostitution taskforce. “We don’t throw ourselves out there.” But sooner, rather than later, the talk will turn to sex, and a request to meet from the other side of the screen.

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Pedophiles Down Under

AUSTRALIA
Pedophiles Down Under

Fiona Barnett

Exposing Australia’s VIP Child Abuse Network

Welcome to this site which aims to give a voice to the many Australian victims of VIP child trafficking, ritual abuse and mind control. This site provides access to Fiona Barnett’s Candy Girl memoirs that will be gradually uploaded. It will offer links to the coming documentary of the same name. It also features testimonies by other Australian victims, relevant articles, and further resources.

An important function of this site is to share a rare wealth of information about the availability of support for Australians, and to expose the dangers hidden within the Australian mental health, counselling and so-called ‘christian’ ministry scenes. The first step to healing is to beware that perpetrators aren’t stupid – they place themselves in optimal positions for accessing and silencing desperate victims.

This site is hosted at great personal risk and expense. VIP pedophile rings are an incomparable force of social and legal influence. They are highly organised with access to seemingly limitless financial and human resources. Like any successful organisation, they employ public relations experts to protect their image and keep their criminal activities secret. They employ experts in human psychology who appreciate that people think in a pack mentally, and that the majority will shun an individual who is discredited, even on the basis of false information. The VIP pedophile rings also pay professionals to sit on computers, troll sites like this, and post comments that distract, influence, misinform and deter the public from belief and action.

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Catholic church failed to act on paedophile priests, says Melbourne archbishop

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Monday 30 November 2015

The Catholic church failed to act on the “horror story” of paedophiles in its midst, Melbourne archbishop Denis Hart has told the royal commission.

“What is now apparent to me is that there was knowledge and a failure to act,” Hart told the child abuse royal commission.

“Reading the victims’ statements that I have in preparation for the commission, I have just been totally appalled by the extent and the depravity of the offenders and the suffering and ruination of lives of the survivors.”

Hart said there had been a terrible failure by the church resulting from the passivity or inactivity of his predecessors.

But he excluded Cardinal George Pell, the Melbourne archbishop from 1996 to 2001, from the criticism.

“As archbishop he instituted the Melbourne Response and really made big changes,” Hart said.

Hart criticised Frank Little, the Melbourne archbishop from 1974 to 1996, for his handling of abuse complaints. Hart said there was a complete failure of process in the Melbourne archdiocese’s handling of complaints in the Doveton parish, where a succession of paedophile priests were sent. He said that was down to Little and the vicar general at the time.

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Archbishop Denis Hart says criticism of church handling of paedophiles is valid

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

November 30, 2015
Padraic Murphy
Herald Sun

CARDINAL George Pell was briefed about concerns a priest had shown a dead body to children but the pervert was not removed from the school, the Royal Commission in to child abuse has heard.

Inaction over that priest — who it later emerged was a pedophile — emerged as Archbishop Denis Hart gave evidence about an horrific period at Doveton Parish in the 1980s that saw a succession of pedophile priests in charge.

Archbishop Hart said he expected Cardinal George Pell – who at the time was the parish’s Auxiliary Bishop – to have been to act on the priest’s morbid behaviour.

“I would have expected he would have taken up the matter……I don’t know what he knew and I don’t know what he did,” Archbishop Hart said.

At one point in 1989, Cardinal Pell discussed a list of grievances about pedophile priest Peter Searson lodged by parentswhich said he had shown children a body in a casket and tortured animals in front of them.

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Women in church issue has ‘glacial pace’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Getting women into senior positions in the Catholic Church may move at a glacial pace, but it is movement, Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart says.

Critics say the abuse crisis faced by the Catholic Church would never have been allowed to happen had it involved women in its management, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

Commission chair Justice Peter McClellan said people from both within and outside the church note the decision-making process is driven by men in the archdiocese.

Archbishop Hart said one or two dioceses in Australia had women as chancellor, who would go to a conservative group with the bishop.

“The advice of women is being made to come into play in the work of the church, and I would expect that that would go on,” Archbishop Hart told the commission’s Melbourne inquiry on Monday.

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Sex abuse commission: Melbourne Archdiocese failed to respond to paedophile priests

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 30, 2015

Beau Donelly
Reporter

Vulnerable children were in danger of being targeted by paedophile priests because a “paralysis” plagued the Catholic Church’s response to abuse allegations for decades, the royal commission has heard.

Appearing before the child abuse royal commission on Monday, Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart laid the blame at the feet of top church officials, including former Archbishop Frank Little, but did not criticise his predecessor Cardinal George Pell over his role in the abuse scandal.

Archbishop Hart said there was a “complete failure” of processes within the Melbourne Archdiocese when dealing with child sex abuse complaints, and described allegations referred to Catholic education officials about the Doveton parish as “just a horror story”.

“What is now apparent to me is that there was knowledge and a failure to act,” he said. “I have just been totally appalled by the extent and the depravity of the offenders and the suffering and ruination of lives of the survivors.”

According to Archbishop Hart, the failure stemmed from the office of former Archbishop Frank Little, who headed the Melbourne diocese from 1974 to 1996, and other top church officials including vicars-general Gerald Cudmore, Hilton Deakin and Peter Connors.

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Church ‘failed to recognise pedophiles’

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A paralysis extending from the Melbourne archbishop led to the Catholic Church failing to recognise the pedophiles in its midst, the current archbishop says.

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart lays the blame firmly on former archbishop Frank Little but not on his immediate predecessor Cardinal George Pell.

‘What is now apparent to me is that there was knowledge and a failure to act,’ Archbishop Hart told the child abuse royal commission.

‘I have just been totally appalled by the extent and the depravity of the offenders and the suffering and ruination of lives of the survivors.’

Archbishop Hart said a paralysis in the office of the archbishop was partly to blame.

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Sex abuse commission: School warned about predator priest

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 30, 2015

Beau Donelly
Reporter

Senior Catholic education officials warned a Melbourne principal that children were not safe to be left alone with the school’s new priest, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

But when former St James Primary School principal Patricia Taylor took her concerns about incoming priest Wilfred “Billy” Baker to her regional bishop Peter Connors, she claimed he told her “once a paedophile always a paedophile”. She said she did not hear from the bishop again and that Baker was appointed to the parish a short time later.

On day five of the royal commission’s probe into the church’s handling of historic child abuse cases, Ms Taylor said the Catholic Education Office informed her about allegations against Baker before he was sent to the Richmond North parish adjoining her school in mid-1992.

She said she was warned never to leave children unsupervised with Baker or allow them to attend confession with him behind closed doors, and that she should also avoid being alone with him.

Ms Taylor said she received a phone call from someone she knew who revealed they had been abused by Baker. She also had a conversation with another Melbourne principal who warned her about allegations against the priest and told her to be “very, very wary and very careful”.

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Royal commission: Archbishop Hart agrees terrible failure in handling abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

TIM PALMER: The Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne has acknowledged his archdiocese failed to act on complaints of clerical abuse of children in the past.

Denis Hart told the child sex abuse royal commission there’d been a complete failure of process in many cases. He says his predecessors had been guilty of “passivity”, although he excluded his immediate predecessor, George Pell, from that criticism.

Samantha Donovan reports.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: The royal commission is examining the Melbourne’s Archdiocese’s handling of child sex abuse complaints against eight priests from the mid-80s to 1996.

The Archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart, told the commission today there had been a terrible failure to handle abuse in his archdiocese.

DENIS HART: There was such a respect that only the Archbishop could act, that this introduced a paralysis.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: Some witnesses have told the commission the church’s complex processes for removing priests from their duties are partly to blame for the inaction.

Senior counsel assisting the royal commission Gail Furness put that to Archbishop Hart.

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Vatileaks II trial delayed

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

AFP

The controversial trial of five people involved in the latest Vatican leaks scandal was adjourned Monday until next week after one of the accused asked for more time to prepare her defence.

Francesca Chaouqui, a PR expert who faces up to eight years in prison for leaking classified documents to journalists, asked for five days to study the prosecution case against her and possibly introduce new evidence after replacing her court-appointed lawyer with her own defence counsel.

The prosecution did not object and the presiding judge said the case would resume on December 7, effectively dashing the hopes of Vatican officials that the high-profile case might be wrapped up before the official start of a Catholic Jubilee year the following day.

Chaouqui said she still had no idea of what she was supposed to have done.

“I don’t understand anything,” she told reporters after Monday’s brief hearing. “There is no proof against me. I need this extra time to understand why I am here.”

The Vatican has been widely criticised for pursuing the prosecution of two Italian journalists, Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, over leaks which they used as the basis for books depicting irregularities and extravagance in the Holy See’s spending.

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Vatican leaks trial postponed until Dec. 7 after defendant changes lawyer

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

Nov 30 A high profile Vatican trial into the theft of confidential Holy See documents was postponed on Monday until Dec. 7 after one of the five defendants changed their lawyers, a court official said.

The trial of a senior Spanish priest, his aide, an Italian consultant and two reporters opened last week and the court had hoped to reach a verdict before the start of the Roman Catholic Holy Year, which kicks off on Dec. 8.

However, PR consultant Francesca Chaouqui has hired a new lawyer, who asked the court for more time to prepare her defence. The panel of three non-clerical judges hearing the case agreed to the request.

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Vatican leaks trial delayed for a week at defense request

VATICAN CITY
Houston Chronicle

Frances D’emilio, Associated Press Monday, November 30, 2015

VATICAN CITY (AP) — A Vatican judge on Monday granted more time for the defense to prepare for a trial over the leak of confidential documents that has put a Spanish monsignor, a pair of Italian journalists and two others in the dock.

The documents detailed alleged greed, wasteful spending and poor management inside the Vatican.

The details of the leaked documents were published earlier this month in fast-selling books by the journalists who also exposed power struggles over Pope Francis’ efforts to reform finances and bureaucracy and to eradicate careerism and intrigue at the world headquarters of the Roman Catholic church.

After barely 15 minutes, Judge Giuseppe Della Torre adjourned Monday’s session to Dec. 7 to allow more time to prepare the defense of Francesca Chaouqui, a PR specialist who had served on a panel advising Francis about economic reform and who has boasted of close ties with top prelates. The delay was granted because she engaged a different lawyer late last week.

“I don’t understand anything. There is not one bit of evidence against me,” Chaouqui told a small pool of reporters allowed to attend the trial. “We have to discover in these five days why I am here” as a defendant. The judge said Chaouqui’s lawyer would have five days to formally lodge any observations or potential objections after studying the case.

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Vatican leaks trial delayed as plot thickens

VATICAN CITY
Channel News Asia

VATICAN CITY: The Vatican’s controversial trial of journalists and whistleblowers was put on hold on Monday (Nov 30) as new claims about sex, lies and spies gave the scandal an intriguing twist.

The trial, in which three Vatican insiders and two Italian reporters face potential prison terms of up to eight years, was adjourned until next week after one of the accused asked for more time to prepare her defence.

Francesca Chaouqui, a PR expert accused of leaking classified documents to journalists, asked for five days to study the prosecution case against her and possibly introduce new evidence after replacing her court-appointed lawyer with her own defence counsel.

The prosecution did not object and the presiding judge said proceedings would resume on Dec 7, dashing the hopes of Vatican officials that the high-profile case might be wrapped up before the official start of a Catholic Jubilee year the following day.

It emerged Monday that Chaouqui’s co-accused, Spanish Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda, 54, wrote a statement six days after his arrest in which he admitted to having been sorely tempted to have an affair with Chaouqui, 33, and that he believed she was working for Italy’s secret services.

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A Thomas Doyle Cyber-Anthology

UNITED STATES
Ruth Krall

The church cannot credibly exert moral authority in any area where the public perceives it is incapable of maintaining moral authority internally.

–Attorney and Author F. Ray Mouton

Introductory Comment

In late November, 2015, Roman Catholic theologian, William Lindsey s ugges ted on hi s N ov ember 24, 2015 bl og Bilgrimage [http://bilgrimage.blogspot.com/2015/11/father-tom-doyle-on-catholicbishops.html] that someone needed to collect Father Thomas Doyle’s published writings in one place. Dr. Lindsey suggested that Doyle needed his own webpage. Because many of Doyle’s books, book chapters, and professional periodical chapters are already in print, I personally doubt that this will happen in the near future. What needs to happen for their use in an academic market is for them to be collected into a series of anthologies.

Thus, this cyber-anthology came about. It is a very small contribution toward making Dr. Lindsey’s hopes for a comprehensive bibliography a reality.

Eventually, someone will need to create an anthology, or more likely a series of anthologies, of Father Doyle’s work in much the same manner that the executors of Father Thomas Merton’s literary estate have done with Merton’s journals. This work is needed so that the Catholic Church, as the people of God, will not need to reinvent the wheels represented by Thomas Doyle’s years of work in the twentieth-century and twenty-first-century. Instead, future scholars and activists will be able to build upon a significant body of intellectual and advocacy work in the field of clergy sexual abuse inside the Roman Catholic Church by an ordained priest who, as a whistleblower for more than thirty years, has straddled the border between insider and outsider.

Because the world-wide-web is such a transient place, I hope that this cyber-anthology will spur one of Father Doyle’s Roman Catholic academic colleagues to begin the negotiations with him to bring his work into an orderly printed academic format.

Personal Interest

Since my retirement I’ve been keeping a computerized, cumulative bibliography of all books and journal articles I read. Thus, pulling together this cyber-anthology was simply a matter of collecting this information and ordering it in some manner.

As I worked, I literally re-opened every file in order to ascertain that each URL address was functional.

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Date set for George Pell to front commission

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

Nov. 30, 2015

A date for Cardinal George Pell to give evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses into Child Sex Abuse has been released.

Cardinal Pell is expected to appear on December 16 during the second week of the public hearing regarding Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat at the County Court of Victoria.

Survivors have previously told the commission that it was inconceivable, given the widespread nature of child abuse in Ballarat, that Cardinal Pell and former Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns did not know about it at the time.

Victims of child sexual abuse also look set to be grilled by lawyers for Cardinal Pell in a bid to quash claims of wrongdoing, including attempted bribery.

The Courier understands Bishop Mulkearns is gravely ill with cancer and a shadow remains over his anticipated appearance.

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Cult leader Barnard attempts suicide

MINNESOTA
Kanabec County Times

Monday, November 30, 2015

by Mike Gainor editor@pinecitymn.com

Self-proclaimed pastor and alleged sex offender Victor Barnard, charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse of young girls in Pine County, has reportedly attempted suicide in his cell in Brazil.

According to Brazilian news reports, Barnard was placed in the intensive care unit of a regional hospital on Nov. 13 after his suicide attempt. Physicians did not give more information about his health status.

Barnard allegedly sexually abused teen and preteen girls in his care while leading a cult called the “River Road Fellowship” in rural Finlayson between 2000-2009.

Barnard was charged in Pine County Court in April 2014 with 59 felony counts of criminal sexual conduct, but attempts to find and arrest him in Washington state, where he and his followers moved in 2009, came up empty.

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Child Sexual Abuse Inquiry investigates Anglican Churches in England and Wales

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Communion News Service

[ACNS] The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, set up by the British government to examine “whether public bodies and other non-state institutions have taken seriously their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse in England and Wales”, will investigate the Anglican Church as one of its first 12 investigations.

The Inquiry was announced by British Home Secretary Theresa May in July 2014; but is only now fully getting underway. It was beset by a series of delays after a number of failed attempts to appoint an inquiry chair from the UK fell through amid claims that the proposed chairmen were “too close to the British establishment”.

It is now being headed by New Zealand Judge, Justice Lowell Goddard. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, had asked Justice Goddard to investigate the Church of England first, saying that he would order his own inquiry if there was a lengthy delay.

On Friday, Justice Goddard announced that “the Anglican Church” would be the focus of one of 12 opening investigations of her inquiry. “I welcomed the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury for the Inquiry to investigate, as a matter of priority, the sexual abuse of children within the Church of England,” she said.

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Child abuse royal commission: Former Brisbane Anglican diocese general manager told victim of abuse to keep complaint to himself

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Allyson Horn

A former senior church official told a Brisbane victim of sexual abuse to “get on with his life”, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutionalised Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has been examining the conduct of two men, former music teacher and convicted paedophile Gregory Robert Knight and former school counsellor Kevin John Lynch.

Knight worked at St Paul’s School between 1981 and 1984, while Lynch worked there between 1989 and 1997.

The inquiry is also looking into Lynch’s times at Brisbane Grammar School (BGS) between 1973 and 1988.

Today in Melbourne it heard from Bernard Yorke, the general manager of the Anglican diocese in Brisbane during the 1990s.

He told the commission via video link that he met with an abused student and told him to keep the complaint to himself.

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Child abuse royal commission: Melbourne Archbishop defends George Pell, but admits bishops ‘did not do enough’ to remove abusive priests

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Danny Morgan

The Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne has defended his predecessor, Cardinal George Pell, against allegations he did not properly follow up child sexual abuse complaints against priests.

Denis Hart has told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that during the 1980s and early 1990s senior bishops did not do enough to convince Archbishop Frank Little to remove priests who were molesting children.

Archbishop Hart said it was a complete failure of process on the part of the bishops.

“So that includes Archbishop, now Cardinal, Pell?” he was asked by counsel assisting, Gail Furness SC.

Archbishop Hart replied: “I would exclude him.”

The commission had earlier heard Cardinal Pell, as an auxiliary bishop based in Melbourne in 1989, received complaints about paedophile priest Peter Searson.

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When a Kid Kills His Longtime Abuser, Who’s the Victim?

PENNSYLVANIA
Mother Jones

—By Marc Bookman | Mon Nov. 30, 2015

You could hardly open a Pennsylvania newspaper in 2012 without running into a story about the prosecution of sexual predators or their enablers. The case of Jerry Sandusky, the Penn State football coach convicted of abusing 10 boys, was all over the headlines. Two Philadelphia grand juries, in 2003 and 2011, had documented a massive cover-up of sexual abuse by the Catholic Church that would end up with two priests and a Monsignor going to prison—the latter was the first senior church official in the United States convicted of endangering children by covering up abuses by priests under his supervision.

In July 2012, after yet another priest was arrested, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams lauded the alleged victim for speaking out after years of silence: “As we have learned,” Williams said, “it is extremely difficult for sexual abuse victims to admit that the assault happened, and then to actually report the abuse to authorities can be even harder for them.”

The grand juries had made similar points. The most recent version of Pennsylvania’s statutes of limitation, noted the 2003 grand jury report, required prosecutors to initiate sexual abuse cases by the child victim’s 30th birthday, but “the experts have told us that this statute is still too short. We ourselves have seen that many victims do not come forward until deep into their thirties, forties and even later.”

The 2011 grand jury was even more forceful, noting that most victims don’t come forward “for many years, or even decades.” Seven of Sandusky’s victims took a combined 73 years to report their ordeals. The Pennsylvania legislature responded by passing a law allowing the use of experts at trial to help juries understand how sexual violence affects its victims, and how they typically behave.

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November 29, 2015

Vic principal warned about parish priest

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

November 30, 2015

A Melbourne bishop told a principal who raised concerns about the new parish priest “once a pedophile always a pedophile”, an inquiry has heard.

Former St James Primary School principal Patricia Taylor went to her regional bishop Peter Connors after being warned about North Richmond parish priest Fr Wilfred “Bill” Baker.

“He said to me: ‘research shows that once a pedophile, always a pedophile’,” Ms Taylor told the child abuse royal commission.

While Bishop Connors was very concerned about what he was told, Ms Taylor said that comment was of no help to her and took away any hope the priest had changed.

She did not hear from Bishop Connors again and Baker still arrived at the parish in 1992.

Ms Taylor said she had been warned about Baker at an off-the-record meeting with a representative of the Catholic Education Office.

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How the church helped this criminal priest, Father Ron Pickering

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 29 November 2015)

This Broken Rites article is the most comprehensive account available about how the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese harboured a paedophile priest, Father Ronald Pickering, for many years while he committed sexual crimes against children. When Pickering realised that his crimes were becoming public, he fled to England. The Melbourne archdiocese began paying retirement benefits to Pickering. When George Pell became the archbishop, he continued making the payments.

When Broken Rites established its Australia-wide telephone hotline in late 1993, one of the first calls received was about Father Pickering. Broken Rites advised this caller (and also some subsequent callers) about strategies to obtain justice regarding Pickering’s abuse.

Some victims consulted the Sexual Offences and Child Abuse Investigation Team (SOCIT) of the Victoria Police about Pickering.

Meanwhile, at least one other victim contacted the church authorities, instead of the police. Church sources then alerted Pickering about this. Therefore, in late 1993, Pickering suddenly vanished from his parish and fled to England, out of reach of the Australian police.

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Did Missouri’s taxpayers foot the bill for an out-of-state sex offending priest?

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 29, 2015

You bet they did.

A wealthy Minnesota Catholic religious order and a Catholic-owned rehabilitation hospital engaged in potential Missouri Medicaid insurance fraud to get free health care for a sex-offending priest, a newly released document shows.

The 2014 document, released as a part of a legal settlement against the Benedictines of Minnesota and sex-offending priests, show that the order withheld money from a priest in their employ—so that he would seem indigent and his health care would be paid for by the State of Missouri.

The document is stamped OSB McDONALD-OO861. It is page 420 of the pdf at the link.

The priest, Fr. Finian McDonald, admitted to having more than 200 sex “partners,” including his college-age counseling clients, high schoolers, sex trafficked children in South East Asia, and other adults.

He was sent to a church-operated center for sex-offending clerics in Dittmer, Missouri in 2012. He became ill in 2014 and was sent to Price Memorial, a nursing home run by Franciscan Missionary Brothers in Eureka, MO.

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A Real Inquiry Or Another Cover-Up?

UNITED KINGDOM
Morning Star

The child sexual abuse investigation has been beset by errors from the off. STEVEN WALKER smells a rat

JUDGE Lowell Goddard, the head of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), has finally confirmed that there will be a separate inquiry into allegations that Westminster MPs were involved in the abuse of vulnerable children.

Her announcement on Friday revealed that another 11 inquiries would be undertaken as part of her work, but the news came after more evidence emerged of the way the Establishment is intent on sabotaging the inquiry.

Peter McKelvie, a former child protection manager whose allegations about child abuse led to a police inquiry in 2012, has resigned as an adviser to the inquiry.

McKelvie helped in the investigation which led to the prosecution of notorious paedophile Peter Righton in 1992.

Righton had links to the Establishment as a member of the Paedophile Information Exchange.

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Case Study 35, November 2015, Melbourne – Live hearing

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

[live stream]

The Royal Commission will hold a public hearing in Melbourne from Tuesday 24 November 2015 commencing at 10:00am AEDT.

The public hearing will inquire into the response of the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne to allegations of child sexual abuse.

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Fred Nile welcomes Anglican Diocese paedophile probe

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Christian Democrat MP Fred Nile has applauded probes into Newcastle’s Anglican Diocese, amid allegations of several paedophile networks.

Earlier this month, the ABC aired allegations about widespread paedophile networks involving politicians, senior businessmen, doctors, lawyers and teachers.

Christian Democrats MP Fred Nile said abuse by clergy in the Hunter has been on his radar for many years.

“I think these paedophiles have infiltrated into every area where they have access to children, and that obviously applies to the church,” he said.

He previously used parliamentary privilege to raise concerns about Anglican paedophiles preying on boys at children’s homes, alleging they were involved in a wider paedophile ring.

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Suspenden a otro sacerdote por abuso sexual contra menor

EL SALVADOR
ElSalvador.com

[Archbishop Jose Luis Escobar of San Salvador said a case of sexual abuse is being investigated involving priest Juan Francisco Galez. Catholic leaders apologized to the victims and said such abuse will not be tolerated in the Salvadoran church. He has asked the Assembly to abolish the statute of limitations on these crimes and said there is zero tolerance for abuse within the church. Galvaz was suspended from his priestly duties on Oct. 15. He was in charge of Our Lady of the Rosaryparish in Rosario de Mora, which is south of San Salvador.]

Por Eugenia Velásquez – Liseth Alas
29.nov.2015

El arzobispo de San Salvador, José Luis Escobar, anunció un segundo caso sobre abuso sexual contra menor en el que estaría involucrado el párroco Juan Francisco Gálvez. Tiene 5 denuncias, dijo Escobar Alas.

El jerarca católico pidió perdón a las víctimas, pero aseguró que no será tolerante con este tipo de casos dentro de la Iglesia salvadoreña.

Gálvez fue suspendido de sus funciones sacerdotales desde el 15 de octubre de este año. Era el encargado de la parroquia Nuestra Señora del Rosario, en Rosario de Mora, al sur de San Salvador.

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‘Spotlight’ on the 26 million men who will experience sexual violence in their lifetime

UNITED STATES
SF Gate

Christopher M. Anderson, Executive Director of MaleSurvivor
Friday, November 27, 2015

COMMENTARY

With the release of the feature film Spotlight, attention is once again being focused on the Catholic Church’s flawed response to sexual abuse. However it’s important to use the attention the film is generating to shine some light on male victims of sexual abuse.. In virtually every community (both religious and secular) the sexual victimization of boys and men remains vastly under-reported and poorly addressed.

Research indicates that male sexual victimization occurs at staggeringly high rates. Data from the most recent National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS) from the CDC estimates that more than 26 million males will experience some form of sexual violence in their lifetime. A recent study from 2014 reported that 43% of high school and college aged males reported submitting to unwanted sexual activity. It also is widely accepted among child advocates that at least 1 in 6 boys is sexually abused in childhood.

However, because of a technical distinction in how sexual assaults are categorized, a significant number of men’s experiences of sexual abuse are minimized and, in reality, ignored. NISVS excludes from the category of rape incidents where a victim is “made to penetrate” someone (or something) else.

Why does this matter? First, many mental health professionals recognize that any instance of coerced penetration can cause significant physical and emotional harm to the victim. In addition, while NISVS data reported no instances of male “rape” in the 12 months prior to data collection, it reported over 1.9 million males suffered a “made to penetrate” victimization over that same time period. This number is almost equal to the estimated number of female victims of rape.

Excluding these male victims of a serious sexual crime from the category of rape changes public perception of the severity of male victimization, and contributes to an environment where male survivors’ disclosures are routinely minimized, mocked, and routinely rejected. This bias has helped to foster an environment where male survivors delay disclosing abuse for more than 20 years on average. Often these are decades filled with pain, isolation, and self-harm.

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Glick, Waks to share stage

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

FORMER Yeshivah College principal Rabbi Avrohom Glick and child sexual abuse victim Manny Waks will speak at the same Yeshivah function, “Silent No More”, next month.

A senior leader at Yeshivah told The AJN this week that the event will be a key moment for the community to try and move forward following the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Rabbi Glick was principal of Yeshivah College from 1986-2007, during which time there were a number of incidents of child sexual abuse that were not reported to the police.

During the Commission, he offered his personal apology to all victims and after the hearings in February he resigned from all of his positions at Yeshivah.

He also privately apologised to Waks.

“I view this event as an opportunity for Rabbi Glick to publicly accept responsibility and apologise for his role in the events which led to the Royal Commission, for his failure to protect the children who were entrusted to him and to call on members of his family and other to end their ongoing attacks against victims,” Waks said.

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Juan Carlos Cruz calificó a Karadima como el Marcial Maciel chileno

CHILE
Bio Bio

[con audio]

[Priest Fernando Karadima is the Chilean Maciel Marcial, according to Juan Carlos Cruz, an alleged sexual abuse victim of Karadima. He used this reference because of the accusations against Karadima and the power he accumulated during more than 40 years in which he could abuse people and also build the image that he was a saint, he said.

Cruz is in Osorno to support a laymovement that opposes Bishop Juan Barros, who they believe knew Karadima was abusing youngsters but did nothing. Barros denies this allegation. Maciel, founder of the Legionaries of Christ, was convicted in a church trial.]

Como el ‘Marcial Maciel chileno’ calificó a Fernando Karadima Juan Carlos Cruz, uno de los denunciantes contra el sacerdote, debido a las acusaciones en su contra y por el poder que acumuló durante más de cuarenta años, el cual usaba para abusar de las personas, pero también para construir una imagen de santo.

Cruz se encuentra en Osorno apoyando al movimiento de Laicos que se opone al obispo Juan Barros, fue en este contexto que en conversación con Radio Bío Bío no dudó en afirmar la comparación del ex párroco de El Bosque con el sacerdote mexicano y fundador de Los Legionarios de Cristo, Marcial Maciel, que también fue condenado canónicamente por abusos sexuales.

Según relató, Karadima vendría cometiendo abusos sexuales desde finales de la década de los 50, construyendo al mismo tiempo una red de protección a nivel económico y político que persiste, pese a todo lo denunciado, hasta el día de hoy.

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Vanishing Catholic Church seeks salvation – can it reinvigorate itself?

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Kim Bielenberg

PUBLISHED
29/11/2015

It was a dignified and moving retreat that is being replicated in towns, cities and country areas right across Ireland. Last Sunday, the Dominican friars moved out of their church in Athy in solemn procession for the last time, ending an ancient association with the Kildare town that goes back to the 13th century.

They closed up their church, St Dominick’s, for good, and the priest Fr John Harris remarked ruefully: “We can’t blame Henry VIII or Cromwell this time.”

That was an historic reference to forced closures in times of persecution centuries ago.

In the past, Protestant kings may have suppressed monasteries, but just a year short of their 800th anniversary, the Dominicans are now being engulfed by the surging tide of secularism.

Father Harris said as the church closed for the last time: “This is a day no one ever wanted to see dawn, but it is here.”

The problem for the Dominicans, as well as the members of other orders, religious sisters and diocesan clergy is that the Catholic Church is literally dying out in many places.

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All victims of abuse sanctioned by the state deserve the same right to compensation

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 29, 2015

George Williams
Professor of Law at the University of NSW

NSW and Victoria recently announced their support for compensation for the victims of child sexual abuse. If a national scheme is established, these states will contribute millions of dollars to cover the shortfall from the institutions responsible for the harm. NSW Attorney-General Gabrielle Upton has said this is “the best way to ensure consistent, accessible justice for survivors” and that governments have a “moral commitment to assist” people who have “suffered at the hands of Commonwealth and state institutions”.

This support is welcome, and follows the recommendation of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that such a scheme is needed. Victims should not be left to pursue compensation through the courts. In many cases, time limits will have expired, and abuse will be impossible to prove, because of the death or absence of witnesses. Court processes are also likely to increase the trauma suffered by victims.

However, the terms of reference of the royal commission mean any compensation scheme will be limited. Many people hurt by other forms of state-sanctioned abuse will be left out in the cold. Indeed, the debate has exposed the reluctance of governments to provide redress to others deserving of compensation.

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Australia: Royal Commissions – a brief background

AUSTRALIA
Carroll & O’Dea Lawyers

Published 23 Nov 2015
Mathisha Panagoda

Former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam famously described Royal Commissions as a channel of communication between Parliament and the people. We currently have two ongoing Royal Commissions at the federal level: the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and the Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption. Both these Royal Commissions have tackled controversial and complex issues, had political implications and provided forums for members of the public to tell their story.

This article will provide a brief summary of some of the key features that give Royal Commissions their unique and important place in contemporary Australian society.

What is a Royal Commission?

Royal Commissions are independent public inquiries created as instruments of the executive government.

The “Royal” part of it is more a historical reference that we have retained today to reflect the prestige and seriousness associated with this form of inquiry. Technically speaking, a “Royal Commission” is actually the document signed by the Queen or her representative appointing a person to a position, in this case, the position of a Royal Commissioner. A judge, for example, is also appointed by way of a “Royal Commission”. Nonetheless we use the term Royal Commission to identify this form of public inquiry that is created for a specific purpose, with a limited life span and that aims to investigate and report on pre-determined issues.

History

The Royal Commission’s origins can be found in the United Kingdom as early as the 11th century when William the Conqueror appointed Royal Commissioners to investigate land titles for publication in the Domesday Book. Since Federation in Australia there have been over 130 federal Royal Commissions (the full list can be found here) into an extraordinarily vast range of issues including crime (Royal Commission of Inquiry into Drug Trafficking, 1983), indigenous affairs (Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, 1991), employment (Royal Commission into the building and Construction Industry, 2003) and even technology (Royal Commission on Television, 1954).

While the States and Territories each possess legislation to establish their own various forms of public inquiries, the statutory mechanism for a federal Royal Commission is the Royal Commissions Act 1902 (Cth). The process of establishment usually involves the Prime Minister recommending to the Governor-General (as the Queen’s representative) that a Royal Commission be established. Letters Patent are then issued by the Governor General that formally appoint the Royal Commissioner and outline the terms of reference for the inquiry. Those terms of reference outline the scope and specific issues to be addressed.

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No resolutions when it comes to clergy abuse

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Peter Keough GLOBE CORRESPONDENT NOVEMBER 28, 2015

“Spotlight” sheds new light on a scandal that made headlines in 2002, when a team of Boston Globe reporters revealed the extent of child abuse by local priests and the Archdiocese’s attempts to cover it up. The film elicits outrage, but how many viewers do anything about it? It’s only a movie, and like most Hollywood movies, things seem resolved in the end.

But in the real world, things are not resolved. As is pointed out in “Who Takes Away the Sins . . . : Witnesses to Clergy Abuse” (2013) and “A Matter of Conscience: Confronting Clergy Abuse” (2014), documentaries by the husband and wife team of John and Susan Michalczyk, the abuse goes on and lives are still shattered. And when you watch these films, in which victims tell their stories and talk of a violation that will never heal, you can’t walk away and pretend they are only actors on a screen.

The Michalczyks, both professors at Boston College, talked about their films on the phone from their home in Wayland. They’ll be on hand for a panel discussion when “A Matter of Conscience” shows Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Devlin 101 at Boston College. For more information go to www.etoileproductionsusa.com.

Q. When did you become interested in this story and why?

Susan Michalczyk: In 2011 I was listening to NPR and I heard Bob Hoatson [a survivor and executive director of Road to Recover, who is in both films] talking of his work with recovery and survivors from the abuse scandal. I told John, we have to call this guy. So we did and he brought documents and photos and we talked about ways to make a documentary that would highlight the survivors, those who’d been victimized, and tell their story.

John Michalczyk: That was “Who Takes Away the Sins.” We heard about the “whistleblowers” — we prefer to call them “advocates” — between the two films. These are clergy who tried to alert the church hierarchy about the abuse, but were ignored or disciplined. Hoatson brought all these people from around the country to participate in the second film.

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SPEAK OUT: SILENCE IS CONSPIRACY

AUSTRALIA
Westender

“Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak: but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law.”

I Corinthians 34

The misogyny of the christian churches is yet another reason that governments should not keep pouring money into these corrupt institutions, strengthening their grip at the core of society. We must speak out.

The Cross was cranky last week that the Qld Government released a tender for a domestic violence shelter designed so that only the major Catholic organisation on the very short list of those invited to respond could conceivably win it.

Last week’ essay revolved on the theme that Governments should not support an organisation that has been proven time and time again to abuse the defenceless individuals supposedly in its care.

Governments resist this simple logic because large institutions can meet government reporting requirements. In the same way that small businesses buy from small businesses and large corporations buy from each other, governments prefer large organisations with similar reporting regimes and economies of scale. …

Cardinal Pell, who is yet to appear before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Sexual Abuse, told 9,000 young Christians gathered in Sydney in 2002 that they should defend the church against criticism for its institutional protection of the paedophiles in its hierarchy by noting that “Abortion is a greater crime than sexual abuse.”

Asked to justify this statement in a number of subsequent interviews he argues that abortion results in death where as sexual abuse does not. Death may be the greater sin in the eyes of the church but the victims of abuse who chose suicide over a life of shame and pain, were obviously driven by different priorities.

Pell’s logic runs on the same well-worn road to abuse of women as infamous atheist John Dawkins and the disgraced catholic PM of Australia, Tony Abbott who compounded his abuse of privilege by appointing himself Minister for Women. You, Dear Reader can match the quotes to the misogynist.

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More Than a Great Story

UNITED STATES
The News & Advance

Posted: Sunday, November 29, 2015

By MARSHA MERCER

One of the best movies of the year portrays an unlikely hero, a newspaper.

“Spotlight” is based on the true story of The Boston Globe’s painstaking investigation, starting in 2001, into child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Boston covered up for decades by local church leaders.

While not a documentary, the movie uses real names and works for verisimilitude. It keeps its focus on journalism and on how three hard-working reporters — Sacha Pfeiffer, Mike Rezendes and Matt Caroll — and editor Walter “Robby” Robinson doggedly pursued the truth and a story that was bigger than anyone imagined.

It’s being compared to “All the President’s Men.” That 1976 movie about dashing young reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s uncovering the truth behind the Watergate break-in for The Washington Post was nominated for eight Academy Awards and won four. It inspired a generation of reporters.

Those still working at newspapers have seen their newsrooms shrink around them like melting ice floes as newspapers struggle to survive in the digital age. Many papers have shut down their investigative staffs to cut costs. Surveys, though, show readers want in-depth reporting.

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Frank Bruni: The high cost of sacred cows

UNITED STATES
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

November 29, 2015

By Frank Bruni

It’s fashionable among some conservatives to rail that there’s insufficient respect for religion in America and that religious people are marginalized, even vilified.

That’s bunk. In more places and instances than not, they get special accommodation and the benefit of the doubt. Because they talk of God, they’re assumed to be good. There’s a reluctance to besmirch them, an unwillingness to cross them.

The new movie “Spotlight,” based on real events, illuminates this brilliantly.

“Spotlight” — which opened last weekend in Pittsburgh — chronicles the painstaking manner in which editors and writers at The Boston Globe documented a pattern of child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests and the concealment of these crimes by Catholic leaders.

Because of the movie’s focus on the digging and dot-connecting that go into investigative reporting, it has invited comparisons to “All the President’s Men.”

But it isn’t about journalism. Or, for that matter, Catholicism.

It’s about the damage done when we genuflect too readily before society’s temples, be they religious or governmental. It’s about the danger of faith that’s truly blind.

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Graves: ‘Spotlight’ shines, reminds of abuse victims

UNITED STATES
Cincinnati Enquirer

Chris Graves, cgraves@enquirer.com November 28, 2015

I sat in the darkened theater as the credits rolled for Spotlight, tears streaming down my face.

Frankly, I was surprised by my reaction. I did not anticipate being emotional.

The much-acclaimed movie, which unwinds the story of how a team of Boston Globe reporters uncovered and exposed the coverup of widespread pedophilia in that city’s Catholic Church, is indeed riveting. It is also painfully accurate in the often mundaneness and tedium of reporting, in how hard the truth is not only to find but to verify and in the small victories that when knitted together can sometimes take down powerful and revered institutions.

Many have said the film is a love story to journalism and a call for American news outlets to recommit to the mission of tough-as-nails, feet-on-the-ground investigative local reporting. Agreed. No argument here.

But that is not why I cried.

I wept for the countless victims of the abuse. I cried not out of sadness, but rather I was moved by their bravery to come forward and recount how the men in whom they had put their faith, stole that and their childhood and their innocence. I was moved by the power of the truth.

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Archdiocese polls Catholics on views of church, leaders

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Lisa Wangsness GLOBE STAFF NOVEMBER 28, 2015

The Archdiocese of Boston has hired a top Democratic consultant to poll Catholics in Eastern Massachusetts — most of whom no longer attend weekly Mass — to find out what they think about the church and its leaders.

John Marttila, who served as a strategist for Joe Biden, John F. Kerry, and Deval Patrick, has overseen a phone survey this month on behalf of the church, asking active and inactive Catholics a wide-ranging series of 90 questions.

They include: How often do you go to Mass? Should women have a larger leadership role in the church? Is your opinion of Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley very favorable, favorable, unfavorable, or very unfavorable?

And: Have you seen the movie “Spotlight?” How well do you think the church has responded to the abuse crisis in recent years?

Church spokesman Terrence C. Donilon said the poll is part of a “research study on strategic direction” designed to help the church do a better job serving the estimated 1.8 million baptized Catholics in the archdiocese. Only about 16 percent attend Mass every week, down from 70 percent in 1970, according to church figures.

“We want to be good listeners, and we want to be good learners,” Donilon said. “If you are not in conversation with the people, you’re not listening.”

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Jesuits on sex abuse case: ‘Invitation to examine ourselves’

PHILIPPINES
Rappler

Paterno Esmaquel II

MANILA, Philippines – The Society of Jesus, which runs a network of prominent Ateneo schools in the Philippines, sees a recently publicized sex abuse case as a call to examine itself, especially its work of caring for minors.

The sex abuse case involves a former Jesuit, now dead, who allegedly abused a Jesuit high school student named Lucas (not his real name) from 1984 to 1987. At the time, the alleged abuser was a Jesuit seminarian.

Citing “institutional culpability,” Lucas wants the Society of Jesus, better known as the Jesuits, to pay him $16 million in damages. He also wants justice, making those in positions of power, who were allegedly complicit in the abuse, accountable.

In an interview with Rappler on November 22, Fr Jose Quilongquilong SJ said, “On the part of the Society, we see this as an invitation to examine ourselves, because in terms of the mind of the Church – with all the cases which happened since 2000 in other places, and with Pope Francis now – there is no place for this sexual abuse in the Church.”

Quilongquilong is the priest assigned by Fr Antonio Moreno SJ, the head or provincial superior of the Society of Jesus in the Philippines, to investigate Lucas’ case. The president of the Loyola School of Theology, he also represented Moreno in at least two meetings with the alleged victim’s lawyer.

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Sex-abuse survivor steps from the shadows: Nearly four decades after a priest raped him, former R.I. man depicted in ‘Spotlight’ tells his story

RHODE ISLAND
Providence Journal

By Karen Lee Ziner
Journal Staff Writer

Posted Nov. 28, 2015

PROVIDENCE — You won’t hear Jim Scanlan’s name in the film “Spotlight.” But you will see him portrayed as “Kevin from Providence,” who suffered sexual abuse by a Boston College High School priest in the late 1970s.

The film is a fact-based drama about the Boston Globe Spotlight Team’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 2002 investigation of the Catholic Church’s cover-up of clergy sexual abuse.

The former Rhode Island resident wants to help other survivors. For the first time, he agreed to identify himself and speak publicly about the events that changed the course of his life nearly four decades ago.

“The reason I’m using my name is to make sure people understand it’s nothing to be ashamed of — that the bad guys are the ones, they’re the criminals … they should be shamed by it all.”

Recognizing that sexual abuse destroys many of its victims, Scanlan wants to “give some hope to people who have been through it, that you can come out of it and be OK. You can have a really, really good life, a good family. I happen to be on that fortunate side.”

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November 28, 2015

Sex offending monks have no contact with students … or do they?

MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 28, 2015

From the statement by St. John’s (MN) Abbey regarding the recent release of of the personnel files of five sex-offending monks:

“The files provided include those of monks currently living on the Saint John’s campus under safety plans. Their actions are limited and they are closely supervised.”

Hmmm … if the 6th though 12th graders at the prep school want to get something to eat or attend Mass, how do they avoid all of those pesky sex-offending monks in the Monastic Residence?

And unless those pesky monks have ankle monitoring bracelets (which they don’t), how the St. John’s management able to keep the offenders away from the kids? Do they show the 6th graders photos of Finian McDonald and say, “If you see this man, run away!”?

If your child’s school has had a sex abuse scandal or houses numerous sex-offending priests, think about other education options. The school will always lie and minimize (just like in this case) so that they can take your tuition money and run.

Speaking of money, tomorrow I’ll discuss how the monks engaged in Medicare/insurance fraud in the state of Missouri.

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Juan Carlos Cruz llega a Osorno para hablar con Movimiento Laico y buscar a obispo Barros

CHILE
Bio Bio

[Justst after 14.00 hours on Saturday, Juan Carlos Cruz , one of the victims of Fernando Karadima, reached Osorno to meet with members of the movement of lay people who oppose Bishop Juan Barros, who they believe helped cover up abuses by Karadima. Cruz has a varied program of activities throughout the weekend which will focus on what has happened in recent times throughout the worldwide Catholic Church.]

Pasadas las 14.00 horas de este sábado, Juan Carlos Cruz, una de las víctimas de Fernando Karadima, llegó hasta Osorno para reunirse con integrantes del Movimiento de Laicos y Laicas, además de buscar al obispo Juan Barros, al que sindica como encubridor de los abusos de Karadima.

Cruz tiene un variado programa de actividades durante el fin de semana, que tendrá como temática central todo lo que ha ocurrido en el último tiempo en la Iglesia Católica a nivel mundial y donde Osorno ha tomado amplia resonancia.

Según el concejal Carlos Vargas, desde la última visita de Cruz a Osorno, en el mes de septiembre, muchos hechos han ocurrido, sobre todo a nivel país, con el juicio a la Iglesia chilena por encubrimiento, proceso donde el prelado local ha tenido participación como declarante.

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Abuse victim finds healing in prayer, art

CANADA
Catholic Register

BY RON STANG, CATHOLIC REGISTER SPECIAL
November 28, 2015

WINDSOR, ONT. – Deborah Kloos believes that healing can come not just through prayer but art.

More than three decades ago the Windsor woman experienced abuse by a parish priest in southwestern Ontario, a man who is now deceased and whose name she doesn’t want to disclose so as not to embarrass his family.

“I didn’t put his name out there because he was elderly. He’s passed away now. I don’t want to have his family hurt,” she said.

Kloos has been seeking, first through the Diocese of London, and eventually all the way to the Vatican, a worldwide day of prayer to be established for victims of abuse.

“There’s a lot of negativity with abuse and I just wanted to bring something positive, like to promote the Church to pray together for people wounded by abuse,” said Kloos.

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‘Child sex victims’ to sue former Labour MP Lord Janner for £2.5million

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sun

By JACK ROYSTON and DAVE McMILLAN

LORD Janner is being sued for £2.5million by six men who claim he abused them years ago.

Details of the High Court civil action are to be served on the 87-year-old ex-Labour MP next week.

The compensation claim emerged as Justice Lowell Goddard separately confirmed her £18million VIP child abuse inquiry will target politicians, celebrities and the church.

Lord Janner’s legal team this week demanded details of the allegations in the six men’s case against him, insisting it was an “injustice” that they had not yet been told what they were.

It will be decided next month if the ex-QC, who was an MP for 27 years, can stand trial in the New Year over 22 charges of sex abuse, which he denies.

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Child sexual abuse inquiry: Serving MPs, spies along with Catholic and Anglican churches to be investigated

UNITED KINGDOM
Belfast Telegraph

MPs and the Catholic and Anglican churches will be investigated over historical child sex abuse claims in England and Wales, it has been announced.

Former politicians, spies, councils, schools and youth offender institutions are also being scrutinised by the independent inquiry led by Justice Lowell Goddard.

Speaking in central London the judge set out 12 different lines of inquiry that will each hold public hearings with victims, witnesses and experts. Both churches as well as Lambeth, Nottinghamshire and Rochdale councils will be among the first areas of focus.

Justice Goddard said: “The investigation will focus on high-profile allegations of child sexual abuse involving current or former members of parliament, senior civil servants, government advisers and members of intelligence and security agencies. It will consider allegations of cover up and conspiracy and review the adequacy of law enforcement responses to these allegations.”

The investigation was set up last year following claims of a high-level cover up of abuse and has been beset by delays following the resignations of two previous chairs, Baroness Butler-Sloss and Fiona Woolf. It will be Britain’s largest-ever public inquiry and is expected to take up to five years and cost tens of millions of pounds.

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Juan Carlos Cruz regresa hoy a Osorno para reunirse con opositores de Obispo Barros

CHILE
El Vaca Nudo

[Juan Carlos Cruz returns to Osorno today to meet with opponents of Bishop Barros.]

La visita del periodista radicado en Estados Unidos se produce cuando aún resuena la polémica tras la declaración de Barros por la demanda civil al Arzobispado de Santiago, oportunidad en la que volvió a negar tener conocimiento de los actos de Karadima.

Tras haber visitado la ciudad en agosto pasado, Juan Carlos Cruz, uno de los demandantes en el caso Karadima, regresa a Osorno para reunirse con los laicos y laicas que están en contra de Juan Barros como obispo de la ciudad.

El periodista, que arribará cerca de las 14 horas de este sábado, llega cuando aún se encuentra vigente la polémica tras la declaración que prestó el Obispo el pasado viernes 20 ante el magistrado Marcelo Vásquez, en la cual tras 4 horas de entrevista, volvió a negar que tuviese conocimiento de los actos que realizó Fernando Karadima cuando era párroco de El Bosque.

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Religious cult took our sister from us, says family of Bridget Crosbie

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Graham Clifford
PUBLISHED
28/11/2015

It’s the Swinging Sixties and a young, carefree, woman from rural Wexford takes the boat to England to start a new life.

Bridget Crosbie, a beautiful, smart and popular figure, finds work in hotels in London and even in the Channel Island of Guernsey.

“She loved life,” said a family member this week, adding “she was great fun, loved her family, she had boyfriends like every other young girl, was very artistic and was really a typical, everyday Irish girl.”

She qualified as a midwife and worked in various London hospitals.

But by the end of the Seventies Bridget had changed.

Her family say it was around then that she joined the Palmarian Catholic Church – a secretive Spanish sect that broke away from the Catholic Church and has declared a series of its own ‘popes’.

When Bridget returned home to Wexford, she became more indoctrinated she also became more reclusive in keeping with the sects’ strict set of rules.

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Parishioners ask leniency for embezzling Rev. Belczak

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free Press

Patricia Montemurri, Detroit Free Press November 27, 2015

The Rev. Edward Belczak drank “heavily” to cope with running a large Catholic parish and was “a compulsive gambler” in stocks when he embezzled $573,000 from Troy St. Thomas More church, his attorney wrote in asking for probation or home detention when the priest is sentenced Tuesday.

Some 50 parishioners, prominent business owners, friends and fellow priests wrote letters on Belczak’s behalf, asking U.S. District Judge Arthur Tarnow for leniency. They describe the 70-year-old priest as a compassionate, inspiring force. His humiliation — and how the Archdiocese of Detroit has banned him from performing public church services — is punishment enough, some suggest.

Belczak pleaded guilty Sept. 1 to one count of mail fraud in connection with the embezzlement and has paid restitution. The priest deserves a 37-month prison sentence rather than the “gentle wrist-slap of probation that defendant Belczak requests,” government prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum.

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Royals and MPs may give evidence in Westminster abuse probe over claims they had connections to paedophile gangs

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By Martin Robinson for MailOnline and Ian Drury Home Affairs Correspondent For The Daily Mail

MPs and royals could be ordered to give evidence over claims they had connections to paedophile gangs, it has been revealed.

Justice Lowell Goddard, the chairman of the landmark inquiry into historical child sex abuse, said politicians still serving at Parliament could be made to testify.

Child abuse allegations against VIPs, the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches, schools, local councils and ‘certain people of public prominence associated with Westminster’ will be among 12 areas for initial scrutiny, she announced.

The probe, set to cost up to £100million, will even look at claims the Royal Household was embroiled in the scandal. Members of the Royal Family could be called to give evidence.

Last month, Prince Charles was forced to deny he interfered in the case against paedophile priest Peter Ball, who was eventually jailed for sexual abuse.

Justice Goddard, a New Zeland High Court judge, said the investigation – to begin immediately – would look at allegations involving current and former MPs, plus government officials.

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Child abuse inquiry to probe claims involving politicians and churches

UNITED KINGDOM
Slough and South Bucks Observer

Allegations involving current or former MPs, the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches and members of the intelligence agencies will be examined by the child abuse inquiry, it has been announced.

It also emerged that the royal family could be drawn into the probe as it considers whether there were “inappropriate attempts” by prominent figures to interfere in the case of a pervert bishop.

Last month Clarence House was forced to deny that Prince Charles made an intervention in the judicial process on behalf of Peter Ball, who was jailed for sexually abusing aspiring priests – 22 years after the claims first came to light.

There have been accusations of an establishment cover-up with Ball, the former bishop of Lewes and Gloucester, counting a member of the royal family among those who wrote letters of support before he was let off with a caution in 1993.

Chairwoman Justice Lowell Goddard confirmed the case will be considered by the inquiry, adding that it will “investigate whether there were inappropriate attempts by people of prominence to interfere in the criminal justice process after he was first accused of child sexual offences the case would be considered”.

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Public sex abuse inquiry to focus first on Anglican and Catholic churches

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian TodayI

Ruth Gledhill CHRISTIAN TODAY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR 27 November 2015

An unprecedented public inquiry into child sex abuse in Britain is to focus first on the Anglican and Catholic churches, its chairman said.

Justice Lowell Goddard said the five-year inquiry is the most wide-ranging ever of its kind in England and Wales and will consist of 12 separate investigations that will also focus early on local authorities such as Lambeth, Nottinghamshire and Rochdale.

It will also look into public institutions and people of “public prominence”.

She said: “To run 12 investigations in parallel represents an organisational challenge that is unprecedented in a public inquiry in the United Kingdom. We are determined to succeed.” She said she was confident her inquiry will “give a voice to victims and survivors.”

She and her team will investigate Medomsley Youth Detention Centre in County Durham, Cambridge House boys’ home and Knowl View in Rochdale and examine allegations made against the late Liberal MP Cyril Smith. Goddard added that the inquiry would investigate high-profile allegations of a child sex abuse ring operating in Westminster, and abuse cover-ups.

Regional truth centres for victims will be set up next year.

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Sex abuse inquiry to focus on Sussex

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Joel Adams, Reporter Saturday 28 November 2015

THE judge leading a national enquiry into child sexual abuse has said the activities of the former Bishop of Lewes will be the subject of a special investigation.

Historic sex offences in the Diocese of Chichester, including Peter Ball’s, will be examined as a case study by Lady Justice Goddard’s inquiry, which also promised to look into any influence “people of prominence” brought to bear in his case.

Nine churchmen from the diocese have been found guilty of historic offences, or have been named as child abusers by the church, in the course of the last two years.

David Greenwood, a solicitor who represented some of Ball’s victims, said: “It’s right to focus on Chichester because things have gone wrong on a number of levels.”

Ball was jailed in October for taking sexual advantage of young men who came to him for guidance in the 1970s and 80s..

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Editorial: Film ‘Spotlight’ Film story of betrayal that should not be forgotten

UNITED STATES
Daily Hampshire Gazette

One of the biggest stories of 2002 is news again to millions thanks to Hollywood. While movie studios usually aim to distract viewers, sometimes their films contain uncomfortable truths.

The new movie “Spotlight” recounts one of them: the Catholic church’s long cover-up of clergy sexual abuse. It tells the story of the Boston Globe investigation that revealed how the Archdiocese of Boston protected priests who molested children, valuing its reputation over their safety.

Thanks to the newspaper’s commitment to telling this story, it is far less likely today that a parish priest, or any religious leader, could victimize a child and expect church officials to conceal his conduct. Hard as it is to believe, that’s what went on within the Catholic church for decades — and not just in Boston or Massachusetts.

Far more people will see “Spotlight” than read the Globe series. That is a blessing, because this story’s fundamental message — that power corrupts — should be heard by all.

The movie presents the awful facts the newspaper unearthed. Viewers learn of an institution that coddled priests to the detriment of children. They witness the ruinous impact this had on families who believed in the church and its priests, only to see that faith violated. The Globe had documented the case of a mother who invited a priest into her home, where he secretly molested her three sons in their beds. The paper’s coverage was full of heart-breaking accounts of trust betrayed.

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Mercer: ‘Spotlight’ – more than a great newspaper story

UNITED STATES
Richmond Times-Dispatch

By Marsha Mercer

One of the best movies of the year portrays an unlikely hero, a newspaper.

“Spotlight” is based on the true story of The Boston Globe’s painstaking investigation, starting in 2001, into child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Boston that was covered up for decades by local church leaders.

While not a documentary, the movie uses real names and works for verisimilitude. It keeps its focus on journalism and on how three hard-working reporters — Sacha Pfeiffer, Mike Rezendes and Matt Carroll — and editor Walter “Robby” Robinson doggedly pursued the truth and a story that was bigger than anyone imagined.

While it does not show abuse, “Spotlight” is rated R and contains what The New York Times review called “graphic descriptions of despicable acts; language not fit for print.”

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Behind Victoria’s series of mystery church fires

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

November 28, 2015
Patrick Carlyon
Sunday Herald Sun

ANDREW Collins had handled many odd requests when a man came to the door one night and asked for petrol.

Mr Collins, a prominent victim of paedophile priests, recognised a visitor in distress, a fellow traveller in a haze of hurt and anger.

He asked the man in for a coffee. They talked about the St Alipius boys’ school at Ballarat. There, monsters had long masqueraded as men of faith, preying on boys uninterrupted.

The boy, like so many of his peers, had grown up to be broken. He always recoiled from that building in Victoria St.

He wondered how the red bricks and the slate roofs of the old school had remained as a monument to cruelty. He wanted it erased. That’s what the petrol was for, to burn it to the ground.

Mr Collins talked his guest out of his plan.

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November 27, 2015

Forensic auditor testifies former priest stole as much as $234,000 from his own church

CANADA
Windsor Star

TREVOR WILHELM, WINDSOR STAR

A forensic accounting expert testified Friday that a former local priest stole as much as $234,000 from his own church.

The chartered accountant said Robert Couture opened and single-handedly controlled a bank account in the name of Ste. Anne’s Parish that wasn’t authorized by the London diocese. KPMG’s Karen Grogan said Couture deposited more than $168,000 into the account, most of which was then funnelled to his personal Visa and bank accounts.

“Mr. Couture confirmed there was not approval to open the account,” said Grogan, who interviewed Couture during a forensic audit ordered by the diocese.

Couture, the former pastor of Ste. Anne in Tecumseh, is charged with theft over $5,000. He is accused of stealing large sums of money from the church between 2002 and 2010.

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Response to Lord Justice Goddard announcement

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

27 November 2015

We welcome the statement of Lord Justice Goddard.

In June 2014 the Rt. Revd. Paul Butler Bishop of Durham, spoke in the House of Lords calling on the Government to establish an independent public inquiry.

In his speech Bishop Paul said: “I know it will take time and will be costly to undertake, and I know that for both those reasons it will be argued against. However, I firmly believe that the true cost of child abuse and the abuse of adults at risk is far higher than any of us have ever been prepared to acknowledge in terms of the mental, emotional, social and physical health and well-being of very large numbers of our population.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury has requested that the church be one of the first institutions to be considered in the work of the inquiry. We await further details as to specific dates and welcome today’s announcement that the work of the inquiry is to begin in the New Year.

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Catholic Church sets up Council to assist Goddard Inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Catholic News

Friday, November 27, 2015

The Catholic Church in England and Wales has welcomed the setting up of an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse, led by Justice Lowell Goddard, and has set up a council to assist the inquiry in its deliberations.

Baroness Nuala O’Loan will chair this council, which has representatives from both the Bishops’ Conference and the Conference of Religious (for full membership of the council see below). This Council will support the numerous organisations that make up the Catholic Church in England and Wales and will speak with and for the Church. It will ensure that the evidence required by the Inquiry is collated appropriately.

The Church is committed to the safeguarding of all children and vulnerable adults and following two independent enquiries both Dioceses and Religious Orders are committed to following nationally agreed guidelines and robust policies to promote safeguarding. All allegations of abuse are immediately reported to the police and the Church co-operates fully with any subsequent investigation by the statutory authorities.

Baroness O’Loan said: “The role of the council is to facilitate and ensure the proper response to the Enquiry, which has the Church’s full support. We look forward to hearing their specific requests and will ensure full co-operation with their deliberations.”

The full membership of the Catholic Church’s Inquiry Council is:

Chair Baroness Nuala O’Loan
Bishop Marcus Stock – Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
Fr Chris Thomas – Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
Abbot Richard Yeo – Conference of Religious
Sister Lyndsey Spendalow – Conference of Religious
Brother James Boner – Conference of Religious
Colette Limbrick – Catholic Safeguarding Advisory Service
Dr Helen Costigan – Canon lawyer
Msgr Gordon Reed – Canon lawyer

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Simon Danczuk says Goddard Inquiry will be “uncomfortable” but “necessary”

UNITED KINGDOM
Rochdale Online

Rochdale MP Simon Danczuk has said a planned inquiry into allegations of historic child abuse in the town will be “uncomfortable” but “necessary”.

His comments come after Justice Lowell Goddard, chairwoman of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, confirmed that two institutions in Rochdale will be included as part of the wide-ranging investigation.

In a statement released yesterday, Justice Goddard said: “The investigation will be focused, in part, on allegations that boys who attended or resided at Cambridge House Boys’ Hostel and Knowl View School were subject to sexual abuse by specific individuals, including by former Liberal Party MP Cyril Smith.”

Mr Danczuk played a key role in campaigning for the inquiry to be set up.

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Links Probe: Prince And The Groper

UNITED KINGDOM
Morning Star

by Lamiat Sabin in Britain

Charles’s ‘supportive letters’ to be scrutinised

THE royals are set be dragged into an investigation as to whether Prince Charles made “inappropriate attempts” to interfere in the case of a pervert bishop, it was was revealed yesterday.

Prince Charles is alleged to have written letters of support to former bishop Peter Ball, 83, before the religious leader was “cautioned” for gross indecency in 1993 after sex abuse claims were exposed.

Ball was jailed for 32 months in October after admitting to sexually abusing 18 young aspiring priests who he let stay in his home as part of his “Give a Year to Christ Foundation” 22 years ago.

Clarence House was forced then to deny that Charles got involved in the judicial process on behalf of Ball, former bishop of Lewes and Gloucester, who had described the prince as his “loyal friend.”

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Royal commission to recommend Catholic Church change processes for removing parish priests

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

TIM PALMER: The child sex abuse royal commission has indicated it will recommend that the Catholic Church change its processes to ensure priests can be easily removed from their parishes if they commit any sort of offence.

This week the commission has heard senior Catholic clergy and church bureaucrats failed to remove a paedophile priest from a Melbourne parish in the 1980s.

Samantha Donovan reports.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: The royal commission has heard that in the mid 1980s the staff and principal of a Melbourne Catholic primary school were under pressure.

They were trying to protect their students from paedophile priest Peter Searson.

The Catholic Education Office and Frank Little, then Archbishop of Melbourne, refused to act without concrete evidence the priest was offending.

The education office’s regional consultant at the time was Allan Dooley.

He told the royal commission today that by 1984 he had formed the view the children of the Doveton’s Holy Family Primary School shouldn’t be left alone with Father Searson.

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Abuse inquiry to tackle Church and MPs

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Richard Ford
Home Correspondent

Child sex abuse allegations against politicians, living and dead, and within the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches and members of the security services are to be at the centre of the £17.9 million sexual abuse investigation.

Councils in Lambeth, Nottinghamshire and Rochdale will also be investigated as part of a five-year inquiry, Justice Lowell Goddard, the chairman, announced yesterday.

Twelve areas will be examined in the first stage of an inquiry set up to look into alleged abuse, cover-ups and the failure of institutions to act to protect children.

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