|  | Abuse Cover-Up in Schools Seen As Church's Deep Pockets Targeted
 By Wayne Laugesen
 National Catholic Register
 July 6, 2006
 
 http://www.catholic.org/national/national_story.php?id=20437
 [See also Abuse Crackdown Gives Some Religious Institutions 
        a Pass, by Wayne Laugesen, National Catholic Register (7/6/06).]
 Los Angeles (National Catholic Register) – In the minds of parents, abuse 
        of children is always a crime, no matter who does it and where. But some 
        lawmakers – and the media – seem determined to ignore some abuse.
 
 When a federal report, ordered by Congress and chartered by the U.S. Department 
        of Education, exposed rampant sexual abuse in public schools throughout 
        the country, politicians and the mainstream secular press corps all but 
        ignored it. Though the media ran daily stories about old allegations involving 
        Catholics, the federal report estimated that 422,000 California public 
        school students would be victims of sexual misconduct by educators before 
        graduation – a number dwarfing the state's entire Catholic school enrollment 
        of 143,000.
 
 By contrast, during the first half of 2002, the 61 largest newspapers 
        in California ran 1,744 stories about sexual abuse in Catholic institutions, 
        referring almost entirely to decades-old allegations. During the same 
        period, those newspapers ran four stories about federally exposed sexual 
        abuse in public schools.
 
 Plaintiffs' attorneys have introduced legislation to remove statutes of 
        limitations in at least 17 states. Connecticut, Illinois, Ohio and Kansas 
        have already extended their statutes of limitation to facilitate suits 
        against the church. Martin Nussbaum, a Colorado attorney who defends churches, 
        said it's unclear whether Colorado's defeat of such bills will catch on 
        in other states.
 
 "If sexual abuse of minors is so grievous – and it most certainly 
        is – why should its punishment be harsh for Catholic and other private 
        institutions, but soft for public schools where it occurs more frequently?" 
        asked Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput, in an article for First Things 
        magazine. "Ironically, most current state laws hold public schools 
        and institutions less accountable – precisely because citizens pay taxes 
        for them. That makes no sense."
 
 Downplaying Abuse
 
 The scant media attention given to the federal report included 
        stories and commentary geared to dismiss the report's findings. "No 
        Panic Over School Child Abuse" was the headline of one article, which 
        instructed parents to rest easy.
 
 The author, Wendy McElroy, said the report, authored by Hofstra University 
        Professor Carol Shakeshaft, defines sexual abuse in "an extremely 
        broad manner" that includes "physical, verbal, or visual" 
        behavior by an educator ranging from sexual intercourse to inappropriate 
        jokes.
 
 McElroy is a researcher for the Independent Institute in California and 
        for feminists.com – and an atheist.
 
 Her essay fails to mention, however, that the study clearly delineates 
        those numbers pertaining to "physical" misconduct from other 
        forms of misconduct, and concludes that 7 percent of public-school students 
        nationwide report "physical" sexual abuse.
 
 The article shows the extent to which abuse of children is accepted in 
        the secular world when it quotes University of Connecticut professor of 
        English and feminist theory Gina Barreca, author of The Erotics of Instruction, 
        a collection of essays about the role of desire and attraction in education.
 
 "I want to know why all of a sudden we are so hysterical about this. 
        What does this new concern reflect?" Barreca asked in the article. 
        "Because these impulses have been there since Socrates! So this sudden 
        focus on it really seems to be a deflection of a larger series of fears."
 
 Speaking with the National Catholic Register, Barreca declined to dismiss 
        as hysteria the publicity and legislation inspired by sexual abuse allegations 
        involving Catholics. She did point out that the problem of abuse of children 
        is pervasive.
 
 "Society has sexualized children – so entirely, that the culture 
        has decided 13-year-old girls are the essential beauty in the universe," 
        Barreca said. "That's why so many adults are having sex with children."
 
 Attorney Nussbaum said recent data show the church as arguably the safest 
        institution for children. A John Jay College study, commissioned by U.S. 
        bishops, found more than 300 instances of sexual abuse of children in 
        Catholic institutions every year from 1968 through 1980. The study showed 
        that by the mid-1990s, however, sexual abuse occurrences dropped to fewer 
        than 50 per year.
 
 "While even one instance is too many, 50 such instances for institutions 
        serving 70 million Catholics is, when compared to other institutions working 
        with kids, extraordinarily good," Nussbaum said.
 
 Nussbaum told the National Catholic Register that biased press coverage 
        led plaintiffs' attorneys in California to see the Catholic sexual abuse 
        hysteria as a gold mine. He said lawyers wanted to sue but had a problem 
        in finding current victims. Statutes of limitations prevented victims 
        with old complaints from suing. Therefore, the plaintiffs' lawyers lobbied 
        successfully for a bill that eliminated the statute for one year.
 
 "Some of the claims we're defending in California are 75 years old," 
        Nussbaum said. "Witnesses have died, memories have faded, and evidence 
        has eroded."
 
 To date, settlements involving 200 claims have cost California Catholic 
        institutions $250 million and have put $100 million into lawyers' pockets.
 
 Colorado nearly passed a law identical to California's, but it failed 
        after the Archdiocese of Denver, Nussbaum and the Colorado Catholic Conference 
        demanded that any lifting of the statute of limitations be done in such 
        a way that public schools could also be sued for old allegations.
 
 The leading Colorado bill was introduced and promoted by Senate President 
        Joan Fitz-Gerald.
 
 "Joan Fitz-Gerald's attitude made it hard to believe she had in mind 
        anything other than maximum legal injury to the church," said State 
        Sen. Shawn Mitchell R-Broomfield, a Mormon and an attorney who fought 
        to defeat the Colorado bills.
 
 Nussbaum said targeting the church reflects a "perfect storm" 
        phenomenon, in which several variables have combined to enhance anti-Catholic 
        hostility.
 
 "No. 1, the church is perceived by the plaintiffs' bar as having 
        deep pockets," Nussbaum said. "It doesn't have deep financial 
        resources, but in terms of real estate you could say it has deep pockets."
 
 Secondly, Nussbaum said, some members of the mainstream media have deep-seated 
        issues regarding church teachings on sex outside of marriage, homosexuality 
        and celibacy.
 
 "They see any sexual abuse in the church as affirmation of their 
        beliefs," Nussbaum said. "They believe that church teachings 
        on sexuality lead to sexual abuse. Others simply share a well-known and 
        deep-seated animus toward all things Catholic, and that's a part of our 
        culture. All of this has come together to create the perfect storm of 
        legislation and litigation."
 
 While all of it may be difficult for Catholics and the church, Mitchell 
        says it's far worse than that. He fought the Colorado bills because he 
        viewed them as a threat to American justice.
 
 "This kind of legislation distorts our principles and our system 
        of justice by targeting a particular defendant," Mitchell said. "These 
        laws tie the hands of the targeted defendants behind their backs and ensure 
        victory for plaintiffs. If we change the system in this manner for every 
        alleged demon on the legal landscape, we will trade a system of justice 
        for a system of bounties."
 
 Wayne Laugesen, who writes from Boulder, Colo., is a National Catholic 
        Register correspondent.
 
 
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