Clergy Child Molesters (86) — References/Chronology

• Former Altar Boy Files Sexual Assault Charges [1962 Roach + 2] - Roman Catholic Church. U.S.A. flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   KWWL 7 (Iowa), www.kwwl.com/ Global/story. asp?S=1962094 , June 22, 2004
   CEDAR RAPIDS: Another sexual abuse scandal shakes the Catholic Church, this time in Cedar Rapids.
   A former Cedar Rapids altar boy has filed a lawsuit accusing several priests of sexually assaulting him more than 40 years ago. The man, who now lives in Texas, says he was assaulted by Father William Roach and two other priests in 1962.
   The lawsuit also involves the Archdiocese of Dubuque, which had supervision over the priests. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 09:50 PM] (This is the first of the Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse , for Tue June 22, 2004.)
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INTENTION: A challenge to RELIGIONS to PROTECT CHILDREN
Series starts: www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethicscontents.htm   Visit http://www.ncrnews.org/abuse
Sources JavaScript Kit and www.aftinet.org.au/campaigns/signonconfirm.html
   INCOMPLETE LINKS: Refer back to "References 61" for methods of obtaining the URLs.
• $100,000 sex abuse payout [Klep (Salesian)] - RCC. Cost $100,000. Warrant. Transferred to Samoa. Australia flag; Aust. Nat. Flag Assn.  Samoa flag; Mooney's Miniflags  Fiji flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Herald Sun (Melbourne), http://news. com.au/common/ story_page/0, 4057,99156 14%255E28 62,00.html , by Mark Dunn, June 22, 2004
   AUSTRALIA: The Catholic church has paid up to $100,000 in compensation to sex abuse victims linked to exiled priest Frank Klep.
   In 1998 Victoria Police issued a warrant for the arrest of Father Klep -- who was moved to Samoa by the church's Salesian order after investigations into fresh sex assault allegations began.
   Father Klep is now wanted by police over five charges of indecent assault but the church has refused to say whether it will order his return to Melbourne to face court.
   It is understood at least two other Victorian priests accused of child molestation were also relocated by the church to Samoa and Fiji after their matters were dealt with either in the courts or by the church's internal hearings.
   The Catholic Church's Salesian leader Ian Murdoch yesterday denied Victorian priests had been sent to Pacific island ministries to avoid further prosecution. [...]
   Father Murdoch yesterday denied the church was trying to help priests avoid police charges.
   But he conceded accused or convicted priests were able to continue working for the church.
   One of Father Klep's accusers, "Gerard", told the Herald Sun he was appalled at the church's handling of allegations.
   He claimed other victims had received individual compensation payments of $20,000 and more. # [Bolding added]
Samoa's pedophile anger [Klep (Salesian)] - RCC. Salesians and Australian Police took no action. Bishop ejects him.
   The Australian, www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,9926967%255E2702,00.html , By Claire Harvey, Michael Davis and Natalie O'Brien, June 23, 2004
   AUSTRALIA: Australian Catholic authorities learnt last October that convicted Australian pedophile priest Frank Klep was associating with children in Samoa, but failed to inform the Samoan Catholic Church until yesterday.
   The furious Catholic Archbishop of Samoa, Alapati Mataeliga, is now preparing to send Klep home to Australia "on the first plane", where he faces arrest.
   Victorian police last night could not explain why it had not sought the extradition of Klep under outstanding warrants, despite a Commonwealth agreement that allows extradition for crimes punishable by more than two years jail.
   Commander Terry Purton of Victoria Police Crime Department said there was an "active investigation" against Klep. "If he returns to this state he will be arrested."
   The Australian Federal Police last night also said it had informed Samoan authorities of Klep's convictions as far back as 1998, on advice from Victoria.
   However, chief inspector of Samoa's Criminal Investigations Bureau, Willie Lafaili, said yesterday he had never been asked to investigate Klep by Australian police.
   Archbishop Mataeliga has summoned the Salesian Order to his Apia office this morning to explain its "breach of trust", and ordered it to prevent Klep from delivering Mass or mixing with children.
Samoa Archbishop reported to be "furious" [Klep (Salesian)] - RCC.
   CathNews, www.cathnews.com/news/406/129.php [See newsitem elsewhere on this webpage.]
New suit accuses priest of sexual abuse of teen [1984, '87, '98-99 Schoettmer] - RCC.
   The Cincinnati Post, www.kypost.com/2004/06/22/suit062204.html ,
   By Kimball Perry, June-22-2004
   UNITED STATES: Defrocked priest Kenneth Schoettmer sexually molested a LaSalle High male student in 1998 and 1999, acts that could have been prevented had either the Archdiocese of Cincinnati or Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk reported the incident to police, a $10 million suit says.
   A plaintiff identified only as "C.B." filed the suit last week in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court.
   The action is similar to most of those filed in Hamilton County over the last two years that have made similar accusations of priest sex abuse. Almost all, though, have been thrown out because the apparent instances of abuse took place years before, and the statute of limitations had expired by the time the suits were filed, the suit says.
   The archdiocese didn't return calls Monday from The Post seeking comment.
   The suit accuses Schoettmer of engaging in a pattern of child molestation, including an offense claimed in a 1994 complaint filed against him with the archdiocese. The suit accuses the archdiocese of failing to report that allegation, as required by law.
   The unnamed accuser notes in the suit he sought spiritual and personal advise from Schoettmer at LaSalle High as well as at Queen of Peace Church in Millvale when Schoettmer was pastor there.
   In June 2003, Schoettmer, who has been suspended as a priest by that time, pleaded guilty to fondling a 17-year-old boy in June 1999 at Clifton's Esquire Theatre and was given probation. The original charges carried a prison sentence of 15 years.
   In a statement to parishioners read by another priest because Schoettmer said he was too ashamed to face his flock, he confessed to sexual encounters with two boys between 1984 and 1987, and a third boy in 1999.
   Pilarczyk and the archdiocese knew Schoettmer and others were molesting children, the suit contends, yet promoted predatory priests and protected them by failing to contact police when accusations against them were made.
   As part of a plea deal, the archdiocese was convicted last year of five counts of failing to report crimes -- priests sexually abusing children.
   The deal required the archdiocese also set up a $3 million victims compensation fund. Those wishing to apply for money from the fund must file claims before Sept. 1.
   To be eligible, accusers have to either drop current lawsuits against the archdiocese or promise not to sue in the future.
   The funds are available even to accusers who have had their claims thrown out of court because the incidents happened too long ago.
Diocese names an administrator to replace pastor; Barberton parish priest sentenced for growing pot remains on leave [Arko] - RCC.
   Akron Beacon Journal, www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/news/local/8981904.htm?1c , By Jessica Coomes, jcoomes@thebeaconjournal.com , Tue, Jun. 22, 2004
   UNITED STATES: Prince of Peace Catholic Church soon will have a new administrator to replace pastor Richard Arko, who pleaded guilty in April to growing marijuana in the church rectory.
   The Rev. Robert Jackson will begin his appointment to the Barberton church Aug. 3. Until then, he'll continue serving as the associate pastor of St. Sebastian Catholic Church in Akron.
   Arko was arrested in January, and police seized 35 marijuana plants, which he had insisted were for medical use. In April, he received two years' probation.
   Although he hasn't been involved in Prince of Peace operations since his arrest, Arko hasn't resigned his position as pastor, so the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland technically can't appoint a new pastor, said diocese spokesman Robert Tayek. Instead, Jackson will come to Prince of Peace with the title of administrator.
   "He doesn't have the title, but as administrator, he'll have the same responsibilities," Tayek said. Those responsibilities include maintaining the church building and finances and keeping sacramental responsibilities.
   For the past few months, those day-to-day responsibilities have been taken on by Larry Lauter, a layman, who had been appointed by Bishop Anthony Pilla to be the parish life coordinator.
Church compounds the sins of the fathers [Klep, Murphy (Salesians)] - RCC.
   The Age (Melbourne), www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/06/22/1087844932794.html , June 23, 2004
   AUSTRALIA: The Salesian order has failed to ensure priests do not flee police inquiries into sexual abuse.
   How many people would expect when charged with sexually abusing children that their employer would arrange a work transfer to a country conveniently beyond the reach of Australian law?
   If that seems outrageous, consider the case of Catholic priest and convicted pedophile Frank Klep, 60, who has been wanted in Victoria since 1998 on five charges of sexual assault.
   His order and employer, the Salesians of Don Bosco, transferred him to Samoa, where he still has contact with children. Unforgivably, Samoan church leaders were not informed of his record.
   In 1994, Father Klep was convicted of four charges of sexual assault during the 1970s at a school where he later became principal. The five outstanding charges also relate to that time.
   This week, Australian Salesian head Ian Murdoch said priests were not placed overseas to shield them from police inquiries or victims and that the order had co-operated with law enforcement agencies and would continue to do so.
   That assertion is at odds with the findings of an 18-month investigation by The Dallas Morning News, which this week reported that "Catholic leaders have used international transfers to thwart justice" in about 100 cases, with 30 priests still evading criminal inquiries by working for the church in another country.
   In the past, when the church refused to take responsibility for sexual abuse by its priests, it compounded the damage by transferring them to other parishes. Today, their destination is other countries. Samoa and its Pacific neighbour, Fiji, appear to have been destinations of choice for former Melbourne members of the Salesians who either face allegations of pedophilia or share responsibility for the handling of Father Klep's case.
   Another priest who is alleged to have sexually assaulted a student at the same school as Father Klep is in Samoa, as is Father Murdoch's predecessor, Father John Murphy, who oversaw Father Klep's 1998 transfer. Last year, Fiji enacted legislation to expedite extraditions, but the Australian Government needs to ensure Samoa will not continue to be a haven for fugitives, and that the Australian Federal Police have done all they can.
   But for the 1994 convictions, none of the allegations above have been proven in court and every accused priest is entitled to the presumption of innocence. The point to be made, though, is that such allegations should be investigated by police and, should they lay charges, the evidence should be tested in court. The church should in no way frustrate that process.
   Father Murdoch says the Salesians are "deeply sorry for the sexual misconduct of some of our members and for their violation of the young". Members of the order and the church they represent cannot begin truly to repent and atone for that - in the eyes of their public and their God - until their leaders do their moral and legal duty. The order has the power to recall Father Klep to answer the charges, and should, or else stand condemned for complicity. # [Bolding added]
Author addresses Press Club of Mobile - RCC. Jason Berry speaks. Marcial Maciel case.
   Mobile Register, www.al.com/news/mobileregister/index.ssf?/base/news/1087913774150890.xml , By HEATHER HENDERSON Staff Reporter,Tuesday, June 22, 2004
   UNITED STATES: Catholic Church officials often blame the fallout from the pedophile priest scandals on the news media instead of addressing internal problems, a noted investigative reporter said Tuesday.
   Jason Berry, a veteran journalist whose 1992 book documenting sexual misconduct among Catholic priests was among the first to expose the scandal to the general public, spoke at the Press Club of Mobile's 25th annual Awards Presentation luncheon, which honored area writers, photographers and commentators.
   "The reality is, where there has been pressure put on the media, it more often comes from the pulpit," Berry said.
   In too many instances, he said, the media has succumbed to that pressure. The idea that the church is going to sue the media has been an unspoken fear in the minds of some editors, he said.
   The scandal, which Berry called the worst crisis for the Catholic Church since the Reformation, most concerned him because of what he views as the church's systemic cover-up. Instead of removing priests who molested children and teens, many bishops adhered to an unspoken vow to protect priests at all costs, said Berry, a lifelong practicing Catholic. [...]
   Berry said the church refused to approve a streamlined process for removing child-molesting priests in the United States because the U.S. bishops, who would oversee such a process, had already been violating canon law on marriage annulments in the eyes of some high-ranking Vatican officials.
   Berry also spoke about the Vatican's refusal to discipline Legion of Christ founder Marcial Maciel despite numerous affidavits from priests that Maciel had molested them repeatedly when they were in the seminary. The Legion of Christ is an obscure Catholic religious order that operates prep schools in more than 20 countries, including the United States, Berry said.
   "Pope John Paul II has yet to acknowledge that the accusations (of sex abuse by Maciel) exist," Berry said. Children of these schools see photos all the time of Maciel and are taught he's a living saint.
   Berry said members of the Legion take a vow to never speak ill of their superiors, like Maciel.
   "Vows of Silence -- The Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II, a book Berry co-authored, compares the way Doyle and Maciel have been treated by the church hierarchy.
   Berry said the Pope, whom he characterized as one of the church's greatest modern leaders, had been key in the fall of the Iron Curtain and responsible for numerous human rights advances.
   "As brilliant as he is, he is utterly intransigent on questions of internal church reform, Berry said. That's a big part of the problem. "The Vatican has no plan to deal (with the issue)."
   Berry said the church's prohibition against priests marrying has allowed pedophiles to hide in the priesthood. # [Bolding added]
Priest Pleads Guilty To Sex Abuse, Sentenced To Eight Years [1976 Hargadon; $US 25.7m spent] - RCC.
   Wave 3 (Louisville, Ky), www.wave3.com/Global/story.asp?S=1960155&nav=0RZFO6dJ , June 22nd, 2004
   LOUISVILLE -- A Roman Catholic priest pleaded guilty Tuesday to molesting a boy in the mid-70s and received an eight-year prison sentence.
   The Rev. James Hargadon, of Louisville, admitted to molesting the 14-year-old boy at St. Polycarp School in Pleasure Ridge Park in 1976, where Hargadon was pastor. He pleaded guilty to second-degree sodomy.
   Hargadon, 76, is already serving eight years in prison after being convicted in Grayson County in April of sexually molesting two boys 30 years ago. Hargadon will serve both sentences at the same time.
   Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Carol Cobb said the plea and concurrent sentences will make a difference when Hargadon becomes parole eligible in about two years. [...]
   Two of Hargadon's victims were among more than 240 plaintiffs who filed lawsuits accusing the archdiocese of covering up sexual-abuse cases involving dozens of priests, teachers and others involved with the church. The archdiocese settled the lawsuits for $25.7 million last year. #
Body of pedophile suspect found -- Anglican [1964-70] -- and an accused cleric remains in post. Late-night leg massages.
   The Advertiser (Adelaide), http://news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,9926311%255E2682,00.html , By MILES KEMP, June 23, 2004
   ADELAIDE, S. Australia: One of nine men reported or charged this month for child sex offences has been found dead at his suburban Adelaide home.
   Police yesterday confirmed the former YMCA member, 67, had committed suicide. They would not confirm where he lived or when he died.
   The man was reported by the Adelaide Child and Family Investigation Unit on June 8 for three counts of indecent assault committed between 1964 and 1970 against three victims aged under 15 years.
   He was among nine men arrested or reported in the past two weeks by the police Pedophile Taskforce.
   His report was the result of a special police phone-in day last October, in which more than 100 people reported alleged sexual offences committed before 1982.
   News of the man's death came as it was revealed an Anglican priest has stayed in his job despite allegations of sexual abuse being raised with acting church head John Collas almost a year ago.
   The priest was only referred for investigation and action by former archbishop Ian George this month, following the release of the church's independent inquiry report into sex abuse. Evidence about the allegations was not given to the inquiry and the priest was not referred to in the report.
   Mr Collas has been critical of Dr George over his handling of sex abuse, but two parishioners of the priest said they first raised the issue with Mr Collas when he was acting for Dr George in the middle of last year and nothing happened.
   The allegations relate to the priest's dealings with five parishioners, outlined in affidavits presented to the church in the middle of last year when Mr Collas was acting in Dr George's absence.
   The women allege the priest forced them to attend his house at night, where he would strip to his underwear and make them massage his legs.
   They allege they were bullied into providing the service, often into the early hours of the morning, and when they complained were harassed and hounded within the church.
   Other problems brought to the attention of the church in the middle of last year when Mr Collas was acting in place of Dr George, included allegations of financial irregularities and drug addiction by the priest involved.
   Mr Collas said through his spokesman David Williams he had told Dr George about problems in the parish. He said Dr George did not act on them. Dr George, who has maintained public silence since he resigned on June 11, would not comment yesterday.
   The priest remains in his position in an Adelaide parish.
   A parishioner of the priest said Dr George was being made a scapegoat for abuse in the church. # [Bolding added]
Deeper Life Church: Ministry or money machine? [Deeper Life Church]
   San Antonio Express-News, www.mysanantonio.com/news/metro/stories/MYSA062104.1B.DeeperLife.1f5a2e03.html , by Rachel L. Toalson, Posted: June/21/2004
   SAN ANTONIO, USA: The dirty, melon-colored stone building with white trim sits unmarked, wedged between side streets and dusty East Side houses, its opaque windows offering no hint of life within.
   Few nonmembers ever see inside Deeper Life Church, not even the church's primary financial source — drivers at busy intersections who drop spare change into white buckets held by Deeper Life members.
   Even Child Protective Services workers had a tough time entering the San Antonio location, until they brought the San Antonio police along and threw open the door to show what was happening inside.
   More than a small San Antonio church, the pastor and his congregation of formerly homeless people are part of a larger, troubled national ministry based in Tampa, Fla., that directs more than 38 churches.
   "Deeper Life is one of the worst cases regarding the targeting of disadvantaged people," said Rick Ross, founder of the Ross Institute, a church watchdog group in New Jersey.
   "And that's one of the saddest things I've seen."
   Although it prefers to be called a fund-raising entity, according to an investigative series conducted by the Tampa Tribune in 2003, Deeper Life files with the Internal Revenue Service as a church.
   State and federal law protects churches from disclosing their finances, in keeping with the First Amendment's guarantee of the free exercise of religion. That freedom's vulnerability makes it easy to claim to be a church and then be unaccountable financially.
   Ole Anthony of the Dallas-based Trinity Foundation, a church watchdog, said the public must be careful about spontaneous donations.
   "It may feel good, but you really need to make sure it's a credible ministry," he said.
   Trail of controversy
   Deeper Life attorney Dennis G. Brewer Sr. said the church enlists mostly homeless crack or cocaine addicts "dependent upon the trash or state or federal government for their support."
   The church sends members out of town to solicit money with signs that say: "Help the women and children." At least four members have died in van accidents on these trips.
   Brewer said members are "involved in committing the word of God to memory 24 hours a day except when they are eating and sleeping."
   Women must wear dresses and must be chaperoned when leaving the building. Residents are required to take prayer and Bible classes.
   "(Deeper Life leaders have) always emphasized that it's a program, not a shelter. People have to accept their program to go there," said SAMMinistries manager Marjorie Suggs, who has worked with former Deeper Life members from San Antonio.
   One family was evicted when the parents refused to take their children out of school for the yearly pilgrimage to Florida required of all Deeper Life members, Suggs said.
Former Reading Pastor Sentenced
   ABC 6 (United States), http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/news/62204-pastor.html , June 22, 2004
   READING (AP): A 57-year-old former pastor from Reading accused of raping three girls several times, sometimes in a church office, will serve five to 20 years in state prison.
   Cesar Segura, former pastor of Iglesia Luterna Cristo Rendentor, pleaded guilty to rape and involuntary deviate sexual intercourse for having sexual relations with three girls between 9 and 14 during a period from April 1995 to March 2002. He has been held in Berks County Prison without bail.
   Berks County Judge Stephen Lieberman says Segura is a violent sexual predator under Megan's Law and must register his whereabouts with police and undergo counseling for the rest of his life.
   Segura told the judge that he was embarrassed and sorry.
   (Copyright 2004 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
New bail conditions for priest on rape charge  Haiti flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   Newsday, www.newsday.co.tt/stories.php?article_id=18070 , Tuesday 22nd June 2004
   HAITI: Conditions were yesterday added to the bail granted to a Haitian Catholic priest on charges of indecently assaulting and raping a woman. The conditions were requested by attorney Israel Khan, who has been granted "fiat" by DPP Geoffrey Henderson to prosecute in the matter.
   The 38-year-old man of the cloth, who had been granted bail in the sum of $60,000 by a Justice of the Peace on April 30, was ordered by Chief Magistrate Sherman McNicolls to surrender his passport within 48 hours and to report to the Central Police Station on St Vincent Street, Port-of-Spain, every Monday and Friday between 8 am and noon.
   The offences for which the accused was charged allegedly occurred on March 16 and 19 at Frederick Street in Port-of-Spain.
Rev. Robert Bullock, Critic of Cardinal Law, Dies at 75
   New York Times, www.nytimes.com/2004/06/22/obituaries/22bullock.html?ex=1088481600&en= 69616902d3720be0&ei=5062&partner=GOOGLE ; June 21, 2004
   BOSTON, Mass. -- The Rev. Robert Bullock, a parish priest who was one of the earliest and sharpest critics of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston for its slow reaction to the sexual abuse scandal there, died Saturday. He was 75.
   The cause was cancer, his parish, Our Lady of Sorrows, in Sharon, announced.
   Father Bullock was president of the Boston Priests' Forum, a support group for clergy members, and was among the first to criticize priests, including himself, for having failed to detect and end the abuse when it was first uncovered in the archdiocese, the nation's fourth largest.
   He was among the first to call for Cardinal Bernard F. Law to resign as archbishop after it became clear that many bishops had shuffled priests known to have sexually abused young boys from one assignment to the next without stopping the behavior or reporting it to the authorities.
   Cardinal Law resigned in 2002. The Boston archdiocese has paid about $85 million in damages to victims of abuse by members of the clergy.
   Father Bullock's sole survivor is an older brother, the Rev. Myron Bullock, pastor of the Sacred Heart parish in Gloucester, Mass.
Cleric slipped out of U.S., continues to work in Mexico; 'Everyone knew you had to stay away from Aguilar' [Aguilar, Rivera, Mahony] - RCC. Mexico flag; Mooney's Miniflags  U.S.A. flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   The Dallas Morning News, www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/062204propriestpt3.1db08. html ; By BROOKS EGERTON and BRENDAN M. CASE, 10:03 AM CDT, Tuesday, June 22, 2004
   DALLAS (Texas): The Mexican bishop had trouble on his hands. An attacker had nearly killed one of his priests, whose sexual misconduct was well known to the bishop. And now villagers were telling police about a stream of young male visitors to the priest's parish residence.
   The U.S. bishop had a different problem: a lack of Spanish-speaking priests to serve a growing immigrant population.
   And so, in 1987, the Rev. Nicolás Aguilar got a fresh start in Southern California. Just nine months later, he was on the move again, leaving behind one of the largest child sexual abuse cases in Los Angeles Archdiocese history. Again, scandal was contained with the priest hiding abroad.
   Father Aguilar's tale of international flight fits a pattern that Catholic Church leaders have repeated around the world, a yearlong Dallas Morning News investigation has found.
   In this case, the two bishops have become prominent figures in the global Catholic hierarchy. One, the Rev. Norberto Rivera, is now Mexico City's cardinal and one of his country's most powerful men. The other, Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony, leads the largest diocese in the United States.
   Father Aguilar is more than just an old skeleton in their closets. After dodging criminal charges in California, where police said he had molested at least 26 boys, he was charged in a 1997 Mexican abuse case. Church leaders kept him in ministry while the matter was pending and even after his conviction in 2003. Recently, he was spared punishment on a technicality, a Mexican judge said.
   Cardinal Rivera did not respond to The News' written requests for information about the priest. Asked after a recent Mass what had become of Father Aguilar since his return to Mexico, the cardinal said: "I'm absolutely ignorant." He would not elaborate.
   Cardinal Mahony declined to be interviewed. Spokesman Tod Tamberg did not respond to most questions from The News, although he did say that Father Aguilar was accepted in Los Angeles after Cardinal Rivera wrote that his cleric wanted to move there "for reasons of his family and health."
   Father Aguilar, in a brief interview at a courthouse in Tehuacán, 150 miles southeast of Mexico City, denied any wrongdoing.
   "God knows," he said, "that this is all just a slander to destroy me."
   Numerous documents and interviews with former parishioners suggest otherwise. [Emphasis added]
Abbot who admitted to abuse dies [1971+ Eidenschink] - RCC. Sex with fellow-monks.
   KSTP TV 5 Eyewitness News, www.kstptv5.com/article/stories/S665.html?cat=1 , 10:36:19 AM, June/21/2004
   COLLEGEVILLE (AP) - The Rev. John Eidenschink, a former St. John's abbot who admitted he sexually abused two abbey monks, has died.
   Eidenschink, born in Detroit Lakes, died at the abbey's retirement center on Saturday, abbey spokesman the Rev. William Skudlarek said. He was 89. "He'd been failing for awhile," Skudlarek said.
   Eidenschink admitted he sexually abused one monk before he was elected abbot - the highest-ranking member of the monastic community - in 1971 and another during his eight-year tenure.
   "He expressed his sorrow for the harm he had done, and I'm sure made his peace with God, and, to the degree it was possible, with those he had injured and harmed," Skudlarek said. "He expressed his sorrow, his repentance, his plea for forgiveness."
   The abbey is thankful for the good Eidenschink did during his lifetime, Skudlarek said.
   "He was a very conscientious and dedicated person in the tasks that were given to him," Skudlarek said. "He was certainly much more than the dark side, the negative side that was also there."
   Abbey leaders were told Friday that Eidenschink was dying, Skudlarek said.
   "It's a difficult and painful time," Skudlarek said. "It's a mixture of gratitude for the good he did, and sorrow for the harm he did."
   The abbot directs about 196 monks who sponsor and work at St. John's University, the Preparatory School and The Liturgical Press. St. John's Abbey monks also serve in parishes, hospitals and retirement homes. [Video clip at original webpage]
Responses to sex abuse suit draw fire [1984 Roberts] - RCC.
   St. Louis Post-Dispatch, www.stltoday. com/stltoday/news/ stories.nsf/News/ St.+Louis+City+% 2F+County/4C5 2E53CE99D12C98 6256EBB00122E90? OpenDocument& Headline=Responses+ to+sex+abuse+ suit+draw+fire ; By Joel Currier jcurrier@post-dispatch.com , June/21/2004
   BELLEVILLE: The Belleville and Dallas dioceses and the St. Louis Archdiocese are playing a game of "hot potato," critics say, each attempting to legally distance itself from a priest accused of sexually abusing a teenage boy in Illinois 20 years ago.
   All three are named in a lawsuit filed in November by John Doe. The suit alleges that the Rev. Kenneth Roberts, now retired, sexually abused Doe at St. Mary's Catholic School in Belleville in 1984.
   The St. Louis Archdiocese and the Dallas Diocese have responded by asserting that St. Clair County Court has no jurisdiction over them because they do not do business there. St. Louis also says Roberts was never assigned or employed here, although he was allowed to live in three parishes in Florissant and was permitted to conduct some religious services here.
   For its part, the Belleville Diocese denies that it was responsible for supervising Roberts. He spent a week at St. Mary's in 1984.
   In a statement Monday, the Belleville Diocese maintained that Roberts was a priest of the Dallas Diocese, where he was ordained in 1966.
   Member of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [SNAP] sent a letter Monday to all three religious entities urging them to stop their "legal maneuvering."
   "Here you have three bishops saying, 'not our problem, not our problem, not our problem,'" David Clohessy, SNAP's director, said at a news conference on Monday.
Drama uses cardinal's words [Law] - RCC. PLAY.
   The Union Leader, www.theunionleader.com/articles_showa.html?article=39613 , June 22, 2004
   MANCHESTER, U.S.A. - Using the former Archbishop Bernard Cardinal Law's own words, an actor portrayed Law's role in the Boston priest sexual abuse scandal last night in a jarring play about the scandal. Some 200 people attended "Sin: A Cardinal Deposed," which was performed at the Palace Theatre.
   They booed at the first mention of the name of John B. McCormack, the Catholic Bishop of New Hampshire and Law's former assistant, and sighed and "tsked," at other times.
   The performance was a benefit for the New Hampshire Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence.
   Written by Michael Murphy, the play relies on the testimony of Law during pretrial depositions in cases involving sexual assaults by John Geoghan and Paul Shanley. Other material comes from letters or public statements by priests, doctors, victims or their parents.
   The play featured Law trying to explain his actions or inaction, not recalling some statements or letters at times, at other times saying his subordinates would be responsible.
He hopes his painful role in 'Sin' helps bring healing
   Boston Globe, www.boston.com/ae/theater_arts/articles/2004/06/22/he_hopes_his_painful_role_in_sin_ helps_bring_healing ; By Catherine Foster, June 22, 2004
   UNITED STATES: Patrick Gannon, the vulnerable-looking actor in "Sin: A Cardinal Deposed," has one of the most emotional roles in Boston theater right now: playing Patrick McSorley.
   McSorley was one of the most quoted victims of priest sexual abuse and commented frequently about Cardinal Bernard F. Law's deposition testimony during hearings in 2001. McSorley died at the age of 29 in February of a drug overdose.
   Both at the Regent Theatre in Arlington, where the show is playing until Sunday, and in Chicago, where the Bailiwick Repertory show originated, Gannon has garnered positive reviews for his understated yet searing portrayal of McSorley. The character is one of several that Gannon plays in "Sin."
   To portray such a prominent figure on his home turf has been a bit daunting for the 32-year-old Gannon, who is Irish Catholic.
   "It's such a huge responsibility to do justice to his story," says Gannon. "Here even more so, because of the people that know him. He's so important to other survivors. During the rehearsal we had survivors come talk to us. The first thing they said was, who's playing Patrick?"
Survivors group: Dioceses playing 'legal hardball'; Advocates decry series of motions filed in the case of a former priest accused of abuse. [Roberts] -- wrote book Playboy to Priest
   Springfield News-Leader, http://springfield.news-leader.com/news/today/0622-Survivorsg-117295.html , By Betsy Taylor, Associated Press, June 22, 2004
   ST. LOUIS -- An advocacy group on Monday accused three dioceses of refusing to take responsibility in the case of a former Roman Catholic priest being sued for alleged sexual abuse of a minor.
   On Nov. 12, an Illinois man filed a lawsuit in Belleville, Ill., against a once-prominent Roman Catholic priest. The man alleged he was abused two decades ago as an eighth-grader by Kenneth Roberts, the nationally recognized author of a book called Playboy to Priest.
   The suit, filed in St. Clair County Circuit Court, named as defendants Roberts, the Archdiocese of St. Louis, and the dioceses of Belleville and Dallas, which all had some involvement with the former priest.
   Since then, lawyers for St. Louis and Dallas have filed motions objecting to the case being filed in Illinois. "The archdiocese does not do business in Illinois, so it (Illinois) is not the proper venue for this lawsuit," the Archdiocese of St. Louis said in a statement Monday.
   Lawyers for the Belleville diocese filed documents saying that Roberts was employed by the Dallas diocese. Belleville and Dallas representatives did not return phone calls seeking comment.
   The advocacy group, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, held a news conference Monday in St. Louis to say the dioceses were playing "hot potato" with the case.
   SNAP's national director David Clohessy wrote to the dioceses Monday, "Each of you apparently feels that you are not responsible for any actions of this man." He asked them to stop the "legal hardball" to help Roberts' alleged victim with healing.
   The accuser, who filed the lawsuit as John Doe, alleges he was 13 and attending St. Mary's school in Belleville in early 1984, when Roberts spent a week as a guest priest and speaker.
   The accuser said he approached Roberts for advice about pursuing the priesthood but was molested when the two met privately, the lawsuit alleges.
   Roberts' whereabouts were not clear Monday.
   Roberts also was accused of sexual misconduct in the late 1960s in the Dallas area, where the diocese paid $8,900 in 1994 in therapy fees for a Roberts accuser in St. Louis and $30,000 in 1998 to a former Fort Worth, Texas, altar boy Roberts allegedly molested.
   Over the years, Roberts produced tapes, books and magazine articles and, until he was suspended in 1998, served on America Online's Catholic discussion group staff.
   The Dallas diocese granted Roberts a medical retirement in September 1995 and restricted his duties, though Roberts apparently began ministering online. After Roberts refused church orders to cease his public ministry and contact with young people, he was suspended in 1998 from celebrating Mass, wearing clerical clothing and presenting himself as an active priest.
   Roberts has denied past sex-abuse allegations.
   The St. Louis archdiocese previously said Roberts was a Dallas diocesan priest with permission to serve as a priest here from 1968 until August 1994, when St. Louis barred Roberts from practicing locally after it fielded two complaints of sexual misconduct involving the cleric 15 years earlier.
• Few early filings for compensation
   Cantonrep.com, www.cantonrep.com/index.php?Category=13&ID= 168382&r=0&external=&newCookie=yes& userID=81292 ; Tuesday, June 22, 2004
   CINCINNATI (AP) - Claims against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati for alleged sexual abuse by priests are expected to pick up as the Sept. 1 filing deadline for compensation nears.
   "We've talked to a number of lawyers who plan to submit claims, but they are waiting to the end to do it," said Robert Stachler, the lawyer who leads the tribunal that will disburse up to $3 million.
   Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen said the number of applicants so far has been lower than expected, although victims can have a chance at some compensation even if their lawsuits have been barred by the statute of limitations.
   Lawyer Matthew Garretson, who was hired to administer the fund, said Monday that "more than two dozen" people have applied for compensation.
   "The number of claims in now is artificially low," Garretson said. "There's no incentive to file early."
   Last November, the archdiocese pleaded guilty to five misdemeanor counts of failing to report allegations of child abuse and was fined $10,000. Prosecutors agreed to end their investigation, and the archdiocese agreed to create a $3 million fund to compensate alleged victims.
   By waiting to file claims, potential applicants give themselves more time to decide whether they are better off suing the archdiocese individually or seeking compensation from the fund.
   The fund's rules require anyone who applies for compensation to drop pending lawsuits against the archdiocese.
   "I'm glad the number is low," said Christy Miller, a leader of the Cincinnati chapter of the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests. "We don't want victims to be revictimized again, which is what this process does."
   Konrad Kircher, a lawyer who represents 77 people suing the archdiocese, said five of his clients have expressed interest in the fund but have not yet filed claims. He said the other 72 are inclined to keep fighting in court.
Lawsuit in priest abuse case to move ahead [1970s, 1985 Widera]
   The Post-Crescent (Wisconsin), www.wisinfo.com/postcrescent/news/archive/local_16616812.shtml , Posted June 22, 2004
   WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Monday allowed a lawsuit to proceed that accuses the Archdiocese of Milwaukee of transferring a child molester from Wisconsin to work as a Roman Catholic priest in California.
   The justices declined without comment to block a lawsuit involving allegations that the priest, Sigfried Widera, molested an 8-year-old California boy after his move.
   Widera committed suicide in 2003, a year after Eric Paino sued him and the Milwaukee Archdiocese over the alleged 1985 sexual assault.
   Before his death, Widera fled the country to avoid trial on dozens of counts of child molestation in Wisconsin and California.
   He had been convicted of perversion with a boy in Wisconsin in the 1970s before he moved to California.
   Matthew Flynn, the attorney for the Milwaukee Archdiocese, said that California courts should not handle cases involving out-of-state religious institutions.
   The lawyer also said in court papers that Widera decided on his own to move to California to be near family, and that the archdiocese no longer had ties with him in 1985.
   Paino’s attorney, Katherine Freberg, said records show the leader of the Milwaukee Archdiocese arranged the job transfer after repeated complaints about Widera in Wisconsin.
   A California court had said that the archdiocese knew Widera was a serious threat to boys in California churches and could be sued.
   The archdiocese appealed that decision to the Supreme Court.
Hubbard says he'll stand his ground; Bishop stresses that he has "no intention" of leaving and that he's pleased with conference results
   Times Union, www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=259638 &category=REGIONOTHER&BCCode=HOME&newsdate= 6/22/2004 ; By MICHELE MORGAN BOLTON, mbolton@timesunion.com , Tuesday, June 22, 2004
   UNITED STATES: Bishop Howard Hubbard responded Monday to calls that he step down from leadership of his 400,000-member Roman Catholic diocese, saying he has "no intention of doing that."
   "I intend to stay the course," Hubbard said in a telephone interview Monday evening.
   Hubbard's statements came on the heels of a small demonstration at the Capitol last week by members of the Coalition of Concerned Catholics, who waved signs telling the cleric to go. The Illinois-based Roman Catholic Faithful and the victims group SNAP, or Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, have also said he should resign.
   Hubbard faces allegations of inappropriate homosexual behavior close to 30 years ago, and has been criticized by abuse victims who say he should step down for shielding abusers for years.
   The bishop was fresh from a six-day, closed-door conference in Denver with fellow clerics from around the country. He said he came away pleased that the U.S. Conference of Bishops approved a second audit of church compliance with sexual abuse policies.
   Hubbard, 65, traveled to Colorado for what was supposed to be a private spiritual retreat that comes along once every five years for the national church leaders.
   But much of the first day and a half was devoted to the sex-abuse issue after some bishops, including New York Cardinal Edward Egan, pushed to put off a decision on the audit until the fall.
   That infuriated advocates of victims of clergy sexual abuse as well as the 13-member National Review Board, the lay panel created to investigate reports of sexual abuse in the church. The board had called for a second review this year.
   "It demanded some type of immediate attention," said Hubbard, who serves on the ad-hoc committee addressing the crisis. "Waiting until November would have bypassed the audits for this year. We didn't want to do that."
   Hubbard said he was pleased that the recommendations were adopted: "It reinforces our commitment to public accountability on the issue."
   The bishops' conference voted overwhelmingly for the audit, like the one approved in 2002 in Dallas. That accounting found about 90 percent of dioceses had implemented the reforms, including removal of a priest after a single credible allegation.
   This second audit should be completed by Dec. 31, the bishops' conference said.
   About a third of U.S. dioceses, including Albany, were found to be in compliance with rules adopted by the Dallas conference, but Albany was not one of 129 to receive a commendation.
   Lawyer John Aretakis, who represents dozens who say they are victims of clergy sex abuse, scoffed at the idea of a second audit, saying abusive priests named in the first go-around were undercounted.
   In a separate interview, he said his figures are more in line with diocesan investigator Thomas Martin, who last week said he "had priests coming out of his ears" in investigations of at least 150 local clerics.
   "I think Bishop Hubbard is still being deceptive when he tries to promote a false appearance of being proactive," Aretakis said. "He should step down for mismanaging clergy for 27.5 years under his watch. There are still massive amounts of pedophiles in active ministry." [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 06:44 AM]
////////// End of Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker www.ncrnews.org/abuse , Tue June 22, 2004
Religions' sex abuse Chronology, visit: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont86.htm
#### Clergy Sex Abuse Tracker, www.ncrnews.org/abuse, Wed June 23, 2004 edition follows:-
US Catholic diocese threatens bankruptcy after abuse payouts [1960s, '70s, '80s; 126 accused; ~$US 20m wasted]
   The Guardian (Britain), www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1245908,00.html , by Dan Glaister in Los Angeles, Thursday June 24, 2004
   ARIZONA, USA: A Catholic diocese in Arizona, facing a series of potentially ruinous civil lawsuits that allege sexual abuse by its priests, is preparing to declare itself bankrupt.
   The move would be the first time that a diocese has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the US. In an open letter read to parishioners on Sunday, the Bishop of Tucson, Gerald Kicanas, described it as "the only option" available.
   Under the scheme, the diocese would be allowed to continue to operate while reorganising its debt.
   But the move has provoked protests, with critics arguing that it would enable the church to avoid its moral responsibility and that the threat of filing for bankruptcy is a tactic to make the alleged victims of sexual abuse feel guilty.
   "I don't believe that the church has to or will file for bankruptcy," said Barbara Blaine, the president of Snap, the Survivors' Network of those Abused by Priests.
   "The only way for anyone to know the truth is for the church to open up its books. It's common for the bishops to threaten to file bankruptcy, but no one has yet, and the Vatican would not allow anyone to do so because it would mean handing over control of its assets to a civil court.
   "It is a tactic to instil fear and force victims to withdraw their claims by making them feel guilty."
   In February the Tucson diocese said 126 of its priests faced allegations of sexual abuse by 100 people.
   It is facing 19 civil lawsuits alleging sexual abuse. These come in the wake of several large settlements by the diocese that have led to it paying out close to $20m.
   In January 2002 an out-of-court settlement was reached with 10 men who alleged they had been abused by four priests during the 60s, 70s and 80s. Although the amount of the settlement was secret, it is thought to have been $16m.
   Last August the church paid out a reported $1.8m to the families of five girls alleging abuse by a teacher at a Catholic school in Yuma on the Arizona-Mexico border.
   The next month, facing a further 14 lawsuits, the diocese sold its Tucson headquarters. It now says it faces a long-term debt of $4.7m and a budget deficit of $7m for the year. [Posted by Kathy Shaw at 10:16 PM]
Samoa Acts to Deport Priest in Abuse Case [Klep] -- Salesian Samoa flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   New York Times, www.nytimes.com/2004/06/24/national/24abuse.html ,June 23 for June 24, 2004
   DALLAS, (AP) - The Samoan government said on Wednesday that it would deport a Roman Catholic priest because he did not disclose his conviction for child molesting when he entered the country in 1998.
   The announcement that the Rev. Frank Klep would be deported came three days after The Dallas Morning News reported that the Salesians of Don Bosco, an order of Catholic priests, transferred members of the clergy overseas to start new lives after the men were accused of sexual abuse. The order has disputed the newspaper's report.
Judge Says Priest's Records Are Open To Lawyers' Review [1997-2000 Ensey, Urrutigoity] -- Society of St John
   The Scranton Times, www.scrantontimes.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=11989297&BRD=2185 &PAG=461&dept_id=415898&rfi=8 ; BY DAVID SINGLETON, June/17/2004
   UNITED STATES: A federal judge won't reverse his decision to allow attorneys for a man who contends he was molested by two Roman Catholic priests to review one of the clergymen's psychological records.
   However, in an unusual move, U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III agreed to let the Rev. Eric Ensey and the Rev. Carlos Urrutigoity immediately appeal his order to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
   A civil complaint filed in 2002 accused the priests, both members of the Society of St. John, of molesting a former St. Gregory's Academy student identified in court papers as John Doe between 1997 and 2000.
Sharing evaluations of accused priests upheld
   Times Leader (Pennsylvania), www.timesleader.com/mld/timesleader/news/8949994.htm , By MARK GUYDISH, Tel. 829-71611, Posted on Fri, Jun. 18, 2004
   SCRANTON - In refusing to reverse his own ruling, a federal judge took some polite but pointed jabs at two priests accused of sexual misconduct in the Diocese of Scranton.
   The rebuke came Tuesday in a ruling on what might be a critical point in the civil lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District by a man identified only as John Doe. Doe claims he was molested as a juvenile by the Revs. Eric Ensey and Carlos Urrutigoity, two leading figures at the Society of St. John in Shohola, Pike County.
   When the allegations emerged, the priests went for evaluations two separate times in two separate places. Ordinarily, such evaluations would be considered private under doctor-patient privilege, but U.S. District Judge John E. Jones ruled in March that no privilege existed because the results were shared with diocese officials. He ordered that the results be shared with John Doe's attorneys, but be restricted them from the public.
   On April 1, the priests' attorneys tried to get Jones to reverse that decision. On Tuesday, Jones rejected their request, and in his written response chose to "utilize this opportunity to make several necessary points."
   Jones wrote that he didn't buy the argument that then-Bishop James Timlin was never supposed to see the evaluation results:
   The priests "were quite obviously evaluated at the behest of Bishop Timlin, in accordance with the standard operating procedures of the diocese in matters of this type, and with every expectation that the results ultimately would be placed in the hands of the diocese."
   Jones also dismissed claims that the evaluation reports were intended solely for the attorney of the two priests, saying that it was "clear" the lawyer "intercepted" the psychological reports "in a creative attempt to cloak them with yet another privilege (attorney-client) and thus prevent their disclosure in this litigation."
   Jones did give the priests an out, agreeing with their attorney that they have the right to appeal the decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
Samoa moves to deport fugitive priest [Klep]
   The Dallas Morning News, http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/062304dnprodlep. 28de9ddab.html ; By REESE DUNKLIN, Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   The Samoan government, prompted by a Dallas Morning News investigation, is moving to deport a fugitive Catholic priest because he failed to disclose his conviction in a previous child molestation case when entering the country.
   The priest's superiors in the Salesians of Don Bosco religious order also face an immigration inquiry because they, too, failed to make the same disclosures, said Auseuga Poloma Komiti, the senior adviser to Samoa's prime minister and Cabinet.
   Samoan authorities will serve the Rev. Frank Klep a deportation order Wednesday afternoon Dallas time that gives him three days to leave voluntarily or seek an appeal, said Mr. Komiti.
• Vatican's opinions about the sex abuse crisis irritating; conservatives waking up to handover of powers to UN  Vatican City flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   National Catholic Reporter, www.nationalcatholicreporter.org/word , "Conservative critique of the Vatican," Part of "The Word From Rome," By Vatican correspondent JOHN L. ALLEN JR., June 18, 2004
   Catholic conservatives historically have tended to exempt the Vatican from their normal antipathy towards bureaucracies. The Holy See, after all, is vested with the authority of the pope, which gives it a moral standing that the U.S. Postal Service certainly can’t claim. Moreover, conservatives are accustomed to thinking that the Vatican is more likely to be on their wavelength than, say, big government or the academy.
   In recent months, however, a conservative critique of the Vatican has been gathering strength, especially in the United States. It emerged with the sex abuse crisis, when many Americans were disappointed that the Holy See did not act more aggressively. That disillusionment metastasized into anger when a couple of Vatican officials suggested the American crisis was the product of a hostile press and a litigious culture. (These things didn’t irritate just conservatives, but that’s another story).
   Resentment was compounded by perceptions of anti-American bias during the build-up to the war in Iraq. With Vatican Radio suggesting that the Bush administration wanted to expand American oil interests, and even the secretary of state, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, asking out loud if the Americans had "learned anything from Vietnam," some conservatives began to see the Vatican as just another European talk shop.
   The result is a new form of the classic distinction between the Holy Father and the men around him.
   As this critical reflection deepens in conservative circles, one issue where I suspect it will increasingly focus is the Vatican’s attitude towards the United Nations. Although the Holy See has waged battles against elements within the United Nations on the family and population control, the Vatican remains one of the United Nations’s most enthusiastic cheerleaders on international relations and war and peace.
   Conservatives devoted to the principle of subsidiarity increasingly wonder why the Vatican is gung-ho about handing over chunks of national sovereignty to an international authority they see as unaccountable and occasionally hostile to religious values.
   The June 2004 issue of Catholic World Report, widely read in conservative Catholic circles, offered a special dossier critiquing what it called this "strange alliance."
   "The U.N. shows very little respect for the Catholic faith, or for the public positions taken by the Holy See on crucial matters of international policy," an opening editorial said. "Although the Vatican apparently views the U.N. as an ally, many important actors at the U.N. clearly look upon the church as an enemy."
   This reticence feeds what has become a standard conservative critique of John Paul – that he’s a magnificent evangelizer and visionary, but a so-so governor. He has worked around rather than through the Vatican, according to this reading, leaving "the system" largely intact.
   On international questions, this approach has meant a heavily European sociology and cultural formation still shapes Vatican thinking. The clergy who graduate from the Vatican’s school for diplomats, the Accademia, tend to come from the same social and intellectual milieu as the politicians who end up running foreign ministries in France, Italy and Germany. Hence the center of gravity in the Vatican is, like the EU, instinctively -- and some would say, uncritically -- pro-U.N.
   Given these perceptions, important elements of the church’s conservative wing are likely to push for a successor to John Paul who will take the reins of governance into his own hands, and who will challenge some of the customary patterns of doing business within the Roman Curia.
   Expect the United Nations, and the whole question of the international legal order, to be high on their list -- especially among Americans.
   * * *
   A fascinating window onto this conservative critique of international law was opened by a June 13 and 14 Rome conference on "International Law, Democratic Accountability, and Moral Diversity."
   Sponsors of the event included some of the most prominent figures in conservative Anglo-American Catholic thought and activism: the Federalist Society, Ave Maria Law School, the Culture of Life Foundation, the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, and The National Interest.
   Some of the most prominent names in those circles were in attendance, including Judge Robert Bork, nominated for the U.S. Supreme Court under President Ronald Reagan but not confirmed for his strict constructionist views about constitutional interpretation; William Cash, perhaps England’s most prominent Euro-skeptic; John O’Sullivan of The National Interest and a former advisor to Margaret Thatcher; and John O. McGinnis of the Northwestern University School of Law.
   In different ways, speakers sounded alarms about the use of international law to impose policies through judicial fiat, especially concerning abortion, marriage and human sexuality, that could not prevail in an open democratic vote.
   William Saunders of the Family Research Council, for example, cited remarks by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor to the effect that American courts should look more to decisions of European and other international tribunals. Saunders said this is indicative of a growing tendency to "smuggle" the decisions of international courts into U.S. law through a judicial backdoor.
   Bork delivered the event’s keynote address during a June 13 dinner at the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See. Other sessions took place at Rome’s Santa Croce University.
   In his speech, Bork warned against what he called a caste of "Olympians," self-appointed experts who know better than everyone else how life ought to be ordered. Since it is difficult for such people to win elections, Bork suggested, they tend to prefer to work through the judiciary, especially at the international level where few checks and balances exist. Bork therefore described himself as "pessimistic" about the possibility of building democratic accountability into any international legal system.
   Bork challenged the Vatican’s insistence that the U.S.-led war in Iraq should have had the support of the United Nations. He called the idea that the morality of the conflict was somehow dependent upon a majority vote in the General Assembly or a unanimous vote in the Security Council a "doctrinal innovation."
   (In fairness, it should be noted that this was not quite what Vatican diplomats were saying. Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, now the Vatican librarian but then the foreign minister of the Holy See, said repeatedly that there were both legal and moral objections to the conflict. The question of United Nations authorization pertained to legality. The war’s morality, however, depended upon traditional just war tests. Nevertheless, one can understand the confusion, given the tendency of some Vatican spokespersons to invest the United Nations with moral significance).
   During question time, I asked Bork how he explains Vatican support for the United Nations. He replied that the only answer he can give is the European influence.
   McGinnis argued that trade agreements such as the World Trade Organization that promote open markets are democratically defensible, but international instruments on matters such as the environment, human rights, criminal justice or world peace should be viewed with deep skepticism.
   McGinnis argued that treaties are to be preferred to customary international law, meaning interpretations of law based on how states really act, which he said is a form of rule by "a secular priestly caste -- this time in the form of nongovernmental organizations and law professors."
   Bruce Anderson, a conservative columnist for the Independent, shared the fear that a narrow cast of extremists could manipulate international tribunals and conventions.
   "International law as practiced by the left is an oxymoron," Anderson said. "It is not between nations, and it’s not law. We must repudiate it and fight it whenever we can."
   Alternate views were represented.
   Italian scholar Natalino Ronzitti took on McGinnis, saying that the World Trade Organization "can’t substitute for the broader world order." He defended the International Criminal Court, saying it operates on the principle of complementarity, meaning that it asserts jurisdiction only when a national court is unwilling or unable to prosecute a crime.
   Austin Ruse of the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute argued that even when international agreements on matters such as human rights are unobjectionable in themselves, they spawn interpretive bodies that "go out completely on their own." He cited the example of Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, whose implementation committee, Ruse charged, "directed China to legalize prostitution."
   "It’s hard to see how multilateral agreements are always democratic," he said.
   In the end, O’Sullivan and Cash seemed to articulate one of the overriding concerns of this group: how to assert the supremacy of the democratic process, the "power of the people," over that of judges and activists.
   "This is the debate of the day," Cash said. "Subsuming into domestic courts of international principles is attacking the right of the people to review. … The whole question of democracy and accountability is put at risk."
   Though no one quite said so out loud, it was clear the Catholics in the group worry that the Holy See has uncritically embraced the evolving international system of jurisprudence. Their message is certain to reach the Vatican, since one of the participants in the conference was Jesuit Fr. Robert Arujo, who works for the Holy See’s observer mission at the United Nations. Arujo was careful not to identity himself with one or another position, but as a lawyer and an astute listener, he will have gotten the point.
State prepares plea to extradite priest
   The Age, www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/06/23/1087845007466.html , June 23, 2004
   AUSTRALIA: The Federal Government had not acted to extradite a convicted pedophile priest from Samoa, where he was posted by a Catholic order after being charged with sexual abuse, because it had not received a formal request from Victoria, federal Justice Minister Chris Ellison said yesterday.
   Senator Ellison said the Australian Federal Police had been aware of Father Frank Klep and provided information to Samoan authorities in 1998 when he was moved there by his order, the Salesians of Del [? Don] Brosco.
Church and State under pressure over Father Klep
   Australian Broadcasting Corporation, www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2004/s1138887.htm ,
   [Can't be found - 19 Jul 04]
Second priest in secret payout [Ayers, Klep] -- RCC. Rupertswood College
   Herald Sun (Victoria, Australia), http://news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,9934859%255E2862,00.html , by Mark Dunn, June 24, 2004
   MELBOURNE: A second Catholic priest exiled in Samoa was named in a $45,000 payout to a man who claimed he was sexually abused over two years.
   The Catholic church moved Father Jack Ayers to Samoa with Father Frank Klep in 1998, when both were the subject of sexual assault complaints by men who as children attended the Salesian order's Rupertswood College in Sunbury during the 1970s.
   A document obtained by the Herald Sun shows Father Ian Murdoch, the Salesians' Melbourne leader, in 2000 arranged a $45,000 payout to an alleged victim of Father Ayers on the condition the victim stop public complaints.
   The document says the church refuses to accept the allegations were true. The alleged victim yesterday said he was told telling police would be useless because extradition from Samoa was impossible.
   Several of Father Klep's victims have also received confidential church payouts of $20,000 or more. [...]
   Victoria Police Assistant Commissioner (crime) Simon Overland said moves were in progress to extradite Father Klep, six years after the most recent charges were laid.
   Father Murdoch refused to take calls on the issue yesterday.
Diocese asked for advocate -- -- RCC. 500 lawsuits settled last year
   Massachusetts Live, www.masslive.com/hampfrank/republican/index.ssf?/base/news-7/1087977048308770.xml , By BILL ZAJAC, wzajac@repub.com , Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   SPRINGFIELD, USA - Martin P. Bono of Chicopee knows suicides, financial woes and job problems plagued many clergy sexual abuse victims in the Archdiocese of Boston after 500 or so lawsuits were settled last year.
   In an effort to avoid those problems from plaguing victims in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, Bono wants the diocese to provide a grant to fund a survivor advocate who can link victims with needed services.
   "Someone may be in need of family counseling or transitional assistance or job training. They may need to be pointed in the right direction. Maybe they will need help with an addiction," said Bono, one of about 60 people seeking clergy sexual-abuse settlements in the Springfield diocese.
   If a survivor advocate had been in place in Boston, many problems encountered by clergy abuse victims could have been avoided, according to Bono. He has been developing the idea for the advocate through discussions with several clergy abuse victims from Boston.
   "The day after the settlements here, victims are still going to have the same problems they had before the settlement, except they will need advice in handling money," said Bono. He said many victims in Boston have spent their settlements in less than a year.
   "I don't want to see that happen here," Bono said. "Money is not going to solve anyone's problems."
Bridgeport Diocese To Do Sex Abuse Audit - RCC.
   NBC 30, www.nbc30.com/news/3450466/detail.html , POSTED 8:03 am EDT June 23, 2004
   BRIDGEPORT, Conn. -- The Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport will again open up its records to auditors for allegations of sexual abuse. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops voted at its Denver conference last week in favor of a second round of audits.
   Bridgeport Bishop William Lori said that the diocese has nothing to hide. Lori is a member of the bishops' conference Ad Hoc Committee on Sexual Abuse.
   Lori said that for the past year the Bridgeport diocese has had n aggressive and comprehensive program to maintain and enhance a safe environment in the parishes.
   A spokesman for the diocese said that about half of the 20,000 church employees, contractors and volunteers in 87 parishes have completed the Bridgeport diocese's Safe Environments Program. The program includes a four-hour training course that teaches participants how to detect signs of abuse and how to report it to church and secular authorities.
   Auditors will review records to ensure the dioceses are reaching out to victims and make sure they do not have child molesters in active ministry.
   The last round of audits completed last fall found that 90 percent of the 191 dioceses audited nationwide, including Bridgeport, were in compliance with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.
Samoan archbishop raises concerns about Australian priest with history of sexual abuse
   Australian Broadcasting Corporation, www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2004/s1138513.htm [Can't find 19 Jul 04]
Bishop keeping the faith, but knows much work lies ahead - RCC.
   Troy Record, www.troyrecord.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=12060050&BRD=1170&PAG=461&dept_id=7021&rfi=6 , By: Robert Cristo , June/23/2004
   ALBANY (NY) USA - Even with the recent approval of a second round of accountability audits into the Roman Catholic Church's compliance with sexual abuse policies, Albany Bishop Howard J. Hubbard concedes it is going to take a long time to alleviate the anger, suspicion and disillusionment among many parishioners.
   "Obviously there's a severe breach of trust on the part of a number of priests and bishops that's very jarring and upsetting," said Hubbard in a telephone interview.
   "If we are faithful to our promise we can hopefully help restore trust and credibility, but there's no magic wand solution. ... It's a long, hard process," added the bishop, who is facing allegations of homosexual behavior (with an adult) that he vehemently denies.
   Following last week's six-day conference in Denver with clerics from across the country, Hubbard said he was pleased that the U.S. Conference of Bishops approved a second annual analysis of how dioceses are responding to reforms adopted in the wake of the clergy sex abuse scandal that started in the Boston Archdiocese.
   Bishops voted 207-15 for the accountability audits, which were adopted in Dallas - with Hubbard's support - two years ago.
   New York Cardinal Edward Egan was one of the few who wanted to put off last week's decision on the audits until the fall, which upset advocates for alleged clergy abuse victims.
Ex-priest pleads guilty to abuse; Hargadon receives second 8-year term in a month's time [1974, 1976 Hargadon] - RCC.
   The Courier-Journal, www.courier-journal.com/localnews/2004/06/23ky/B5-priest06230-4963.html , By JASON RILEY, jriley@courier-journal.com , June 23, 2004
   JEFFERSON: A retired priest, shackled at the wrists and ankles, shuffled into a Jefferson Circuit courtroom yesterday morning and acknowledged to a judge that he orally sodomized a 14-year-old boy nearly three decades ago.
   Under a plea agreement, the Rev. James Hargadon, who had worked in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Louisville, pleaded guilty to sodomizing Todd D. Robertson in 1976 in a church rectory and was sentenced to eight years in prison.
   It was the second time in a month that Hargadon, 76, received an eight-year sentence on sexual abuse charges.
   In April, a Grayson Circuit Court jury convicted him of sexually molesting Lawrence Thompson and John Kaelin at a camp on Rough River during a summer 30 years ago when the boys were working in a garden at St. Polycarp Church in Pleasure Ridge Park, where Hargadon was pastor. He was sentenced in that case in May.
   Hargadon will serve the sentences concurrently and could be eligible for parole in about a year and a half. If he had been found guilty at a jury trial in Jefferson County, Hargadon could have been sentenced to up to 10 years in prison.
   As part of his plea agreement, Hargadon will not ask for probation.
Cincinnati sexual abuse claims slow coming in - RCC.
   The Plain Dealer, www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1087983251244413.xml , Associated Press, Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   CINCINNATI - Claims against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati for alleged sexual abuse by priests are expected to pick up as the Sept. 1 filing deadline for compensation nears.
   "We've talked to a number of lawyers who plan to submit claims, but they are waiting to the end to do it," said Robert Stachler, the lawyer who leads the tribunal that will disburse up to $3 million.
   Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen said the number of applicants so far has been lower than expected, although victims can have a chance at some compensation even if their lawsuits have been barred by the statute of limitations.
   Lawyer Matthew Garretson, who was hired to administer the fund, said Monday that "more than two dozen" people have applied for compensation.
   "The number of claims in now is artificially low," Garretson said. "There's no incentive to file early."
'Anomaly' allows priest accused of sex abuse to stay -- Anglican Australia flag; Aust. Nat. Flag Assn.
   ABC News Online, www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200406/s1138935.htm , Last Update: 9:23pm (AEST), Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   ADELAIDE (S. Australia): The Anglican Church in Adelaide says a priest at the centre of allegations of sexual abuse and misconduct has declined to stand aside and the Administrator has no authority to suspend or dismiss him.
   The anomaly in the Church's law has come to light following media reports that the Church Administrator, Archdeacon John Collas had failed to investigate allegations against the priest.
   The Church says complaints about the priest were made to the Archbishop, not Archdeacon Collas.
   The Archbishop referred the complaints to the Professional Standards Director, who then initiated an investigation in October 2003.
   The Church says earlier this month the Professional Standards Committee told the Archbishop it was recommending further action be taken on the matter.
   The Church says within 24 hours the Archbishop acted on that recommendation, and the process of dealing with its findings is now underway. But the process is facing problems.
   The Administrator, John Collas, today asked the priest to stand aside but the request was declined and at this stage Archdeacon Collas does not have the authority to suspend or dismiss the priest.
Did diocese hide priest's sex abuse?
   Daily Herald, www.dailyherald.com/news_story.asp?intid=38161325 , [Can't find - 19 Jul 04]
Priest in grand jury probe critical of media
   The Providence Journal, www.projo.com/ap/ne/1087992606.htm , [Can't find - 19 Jul 04]
Court Of Appeals Upholds Dismissal Of St. John's Prep Abuse Case [1981 Moorse] - RCC. Time limit expired.
   WCCO TV 4 (Minneapolis), http://wcco.com/localnews/local_story_175082304.html , 7:20 am US/Central, Jun 23, 2004
   ST. PAUL (AP): The state Court of Appeals has upheld a lower court's decision to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a former St. John's Preparatory School student who accused a St. John's Abbey priest of sexual abuse.
   The appeals court affirmed the lower court's ruling that Bill Quenroe filed his lawsuit against the Rev. Dunstan Moorse after the statute of limitations had expired.
   The three-judge appeals panel issued its opinion last week, and the Court of Appeals posted it on its Web site Tuesday. Quenroe's lawyer, Jeff Anderson, said he is considering another appeal.
   Quenroe accused Moorse of sexually abusing him in 1981 when Quenroe was a student at St. John's Prep and Moorse was a teacher and spiritual adviser there.
   Quenroe signed a statement in 1992 outlining the alleged abuse and met with then-Abbot Timothy Kelly in 1995 to discuss financial assistance for the injuries Quenroe said he sustained. That shows Quenroe understood then that the alleged abuse had caused him harm, defense attorneys argued.
   Therefore, defense attorneys argued, Quenroe had to file the lawsuit by the end of 1998, and no later than 2001, for it to fall within the statute of limitations. The lawsuit was filed in June 2002.
   Anderson argued Quenroe had developed coping mechanisms that made him incapable of realizing the resulting damages from Moorse's conduct until recently. He also argued the abbey and Moorse fraudulently concealed their conduct, thereby delaying when the clock should start running on the statute of limitations.
Guest Opinion: Vatican has compassion for cardinal, not victims [Law, John Paul II] - RCC. Vatican City flag; Mooney's Miniflags  U.S.A. flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   Tucson Citizen, www.tucsoncitizen.com/index.php?page=opinion&story_id=062304b5_guestchurch , By RENEE SCHAFER HORTON, Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   TUCSON: If there were ever a doubt that Rome is out of touch with U.S. Catholics, that doubt was removed May 27.
   With the appointment of Cardinal Bernard Law as pastor of Rome's Basilica of St. Mary Major, no one can argue that the Vatican has the best interests of the greater church in mind when decisions are made. Unless, of course, Rome defines the church as the hierarchy and not, as the Second Vatican Council proclaimed, the people of God.
   The man whose name is synonymous with the words "clergy sex scandal" has been rewarded for his complicity in moving priest molesters from parish to unsuspecting parish by getting an assignment at one of the four most important basilicas in the Eternal City.
   He will live in a palatial apartment and receive a monthly stipend of about $5,000, Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls told the National Catholic Reporter recently.
   With more than 50 Boston parishes closed last month to pay for the scandal he helped create, and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tucson announcing that Chapter 11 bankruptcy is being explored to pay for clergy sexual abuse claims, it seems sinful that money that could be used to help dioceses instead will go toward sending Law to Rome.
   If Law, 72, were a cleric of spotless reputation, the decision might make sense. But it was under his watch that the most notorious priest pedophiles were allowed to serve. And it was he who, when victims came forward, helped construct settlements that bound them to silence. Most damning, when all this came to light, Law denied he had done anything wrong.
   When Law resigned in December 2002, Catholics across the county breathed a sigh of relief. Finally, they thought, someone in the episcopate was forced to take responsibility for the scandals. Finally Rome was paying attention to the real crisis in the church: episcopal authority without accountability.
   But with this appointment, Catholics are led to conclude they were wrong. Rome isn't paying attention to what the laity wants. The Vatican, well aware of U.S. concerns, apparently doesn't care.
   Rome has compassion for Law but not for the victims. And worse, with no public outcry from bishops, they don't appear to care, either. Surely many bishops know their silence is a slap in the face to clergy abuse victims, not to mention every Catholic who puts money in the collection plate. [Emphasis added]
Teachers busted in Internet sex sting
   Newsday (New York), www.nynewsday.com/news/education/nyc- sting0623,0,2845621.story?coll=nyc-homepage-headlines [Can't find - 19 July 04]
• Church aid, legal lapses leave cleric free to roam; 'That's when your hair stands on end and your blood boils' [Dominic a.k.a. Yousuf] Italy flag; Mooney's Miniflags  Pakistan flag; Mooney's Miniflags  Philippines flag; Mooney's Miniflags  Britain flag; Mooney's Miniflags  U.S.A. flag; Mooney's Miniflags
   The Dallas Morning News, www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/religion/stories/062304dnprodominic.1de2b. html , By BROOKS EGERTON and REESE DUNKLIN, 12:45 PM CDT, Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   ALBISSOLA MARINA, Italy - Inside a 16th-century Catholic church by the Mediterranean Sea, the priest dresses as a man of God and preaches about the Holy Spirit. Outside, he tells lies.
   "I'm not a functioning priest," he says, until he realizes a reporter has just seen him celebrate Sunday evening Mass.  ... Italy, it turns out, is at least the third country in which he has worked in parishes since denying child molestation charges in England seven years ago and fleeing, before he could be tried. The Dallas Morning News tracked him down after Scotland Yard failed. [Read whole article below] [Bolding added]
Church aid, legal lapses leave cleric free to roam; 'That's when your hair stands on end and your blood boils'
   The Dallas Morning News, www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/religion/stories/062304dnprodominic.1de2b. html , By BROOKS EGERTON and REESE DUNKLIN, 12:45 PM CDT, Wednesday, June 23, 2004
   ALBISSOLA MARINA, Italy - Inside a 16th-century Catholic church by the Mediterranean Sea, the priest dresses as a man of God and preaches about the Holy Spirit. Outside, he tells lies.
   "I'm not a functioning priest," he says, until he realizes a reporter has just seen him celebrate Sunday evening Mass. Then he says he only "occasionally" leads a service and isn't in active ministry. "Ministry means one has to be in a parish," he says.
   In fact, the Pakistani has been serving here since last fall as associate pastor of Nostra Signora della Concordia. He has also been leading a smaller congregation in the nearby village of Ellera.
   Italy, it turns out, is at least the third country in which he has worked in parishes since denying child molestation charges in England seven years ago and fleeing, before he could be tried. The Dallas Morning News tracked him down after Scotland Yard failed.
   Church aid and law enforcement lapses have made the sojourn possible, as they have in many other cases that The News reviewed in its yearlong investigation of accused priests' international movements.
   British church leaders bailed the priest out of jail, and bishops in Pakistan knew he was a fugitive and let him work anyway. And he has recently served in the United States, apparently without undergoing a background check.
   Such is the tangle of this priest's life that even his name and age are unclear. He is the 54-year-old Rev. Yusaf Dominic in the Archdiocese of Lahore, Pakistan, where he was ordained and technically remains based. But here in the Italian Diocese of Savona-Noli -- whose leader said he knew nothing of the abuse case -- he is known as the 48-year-old Rev. Dominic Yousuf.
   On Concordia's steps, Father Dominic offered no explanation for the confusion. "I don't have anything in my mind" about it, he said during a rambling interview in which he frequently contradicted himself.
   In the Archdiocese of Newark, N.J., where Father Dominic worked at St. Francis of Assisi Church in 2002, queries about the priest's name brought a chuckle from the associate pastor.
   "That was a question that was always under debate," said the Rev. Eugene Field.
   One of Father Dominic's accusers in London expressed outrage at the priest's continuing parish assignments, which keep him in the presence of children.
   "That's when your hair stands on end and your blood boils," said the young man, who spoke on the condition he not be identified. "This guy's got to be stopped."
Fitness always in doubt
   Father Dominic's globetrotting began in the 1970s, long before he was arrested in London -- but well after he was first identified as a poor prospect for ministry.
   "He was not a very good student," said Lahore Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha, who taught him at a junior seminary and has been a diocesan boss since 2001. "He's not coordinated in his thinking, not logical. His mind is not very clear."
   Asked how such a young man could be deemed fit for the priesthood, the archbishop replied: "That's a good question. It was not in my hands."
   A few years after he was ordained in 1974, Father Dominic began visiting London periodically and working temporarily in parishes of its Westminster Archdiocese. He studied in Rome in the mid-1980s, sometimes spending summers as a substitute priest in the New York City area.
   Father Dominic was arrested in late 1996 while at St. Bernard Parish in London, accused of molesting two boys in the 1980s. After leaving jail, he was sent to a clergy treatment center in rural England run by the Servants of the Paraclete religious order, which became notorious in the United States for its past practice of helping return abusers to parish work.
   In early 1997, Father Dominic disappeared and flew home to Pakistan. He told The News that he fled after treatment center officials forced him to sign an admission of abuse.
   Father Dominic said that he did not abuse the boys and that they made allegations in retaliation for his efforts to collect a debt from an accuser's father. "That's B.S.," said the one accuser The News reached, who is unrelated to the other alleged victim.
   A current treatment center leader, the Rev. Liam Hoare, declined to comment and would not provide contact information for the predecessor who oversaw Father Dominic's treatment. The News could not locate that priest, whom Father Hoare said had been transferred to the Philippines.
   Father Dominic said British authorities returned his passport when he left jail; authorities would not confirm that.
   Westminster Archdiocese records show no information about how Father Dominic got out of England, spokesman Timothy Livesey said. But he acknowledged that church representatives erred in arranging Father Dominic's bail.
   The Rev. Tony Brunning agreed to be liable for the bail, which was a "mistake," said Mr. Livesey. Father Brunning, a longtime friend of the suspect, declined to comment.
   After Father Dominic absconded, Mr. Livesey said, "the diocese wrongly paid" the approximately $3,600 that Father Brunning owed. He identified the person who authorized this indemnification as the Rev. Ralph Brown, who was the diocese's vicar general at the time. Monsignor Brown did not respond to an interview request.
   It is a crime in Britain even to agree to indemnify someone who is liable for a bail payment, and Mr. Livesey acknowledged that the archdiocese came under criminal investigation because of Monsignor Brown's action. The archdiocese was not prosecuted.
   Monsignor Brown "did not realize there was anything wrong" in what he was doing and has apologized, Mr. Livesey said
   The original investigator on the case, Detective Constable Keith Olivant, said that what happened was "an absolute offense where ignorance is no excuse." He said he did not know why the archdiocese was not prosecuted.
   "It's something they ought to be prosecuted for," the detective said.
   A spokeswoman for the Crown Prosecution Service declined to comment on anything related to the case because it remains open.
Legal standstill
   Britain and Pakistan have no extradition treaty, and London police apparently quit working the case.
   The accuser interviewed by The News said he has never heard from the current investigator on the case, Detective Sgt. Caer Taylor. The detective told The News she didn't know whether the case was still pending and, when told that a reporter had located the priest, she didn't ask for his address.
   Instead of staying beyond the reach of the law, Father Dominic moved to countries where extradition would have been routine -- first the United States and later Italy.
   He left Pakistan after Lahore Archdiocese leaders barred him from ministry, Archbishop Saldanha said. By 1999, he was living in the New York City area and trying to get American dioceses to hire him. Los Angeles and Brooklyn were among those that refused, citing vaguely negative reports from Lahore.
   The Rev. John J. Brown, Brooklyn's clergy personnel director, said the Lahore Archdiocese did not reveal that there was a criminal case in London. Lahore church leaders knew of its existence, according to a British church official's letter to one of Father Dominic's accusers.
   Monsignor Brown said Father Dominic did mention the case but said it had been dismissed and he had been exonerated. He said he did not check the priest's claims with authorities.
   Hearing details this week about Father Dominic's case was "disturbing," Monsignor Brown said. He said the U.S. church must rely on foreign bishops to be open and honest about their priests who come to this country to work.
   After striking out in the United States, Father Dominic returned to his native Pakistan. Archbishop Saldanha said he worked at a Muslim school in Lahore and then found a Catholic leader who would take him in another part of Pakistan: Bishop Andrew Francis, leader of the Multan Diocese.
   The priest became pastor of the Multan cathedral, "not with our permission," Archbishop Saldanha said. But after a while, Bishop Francis sent the priest back to Lahore.
   "There was some personal animosity," said the archbishop, who added that he knew no details. Bishop Francis could not be reached for comment.
   Next Father Dominic tried his luck in America again. And this time, he succeeded: The Newark Archdiocese put him to work in summer 2002, shortly after U.S. bishops passed a "zero tolerance" sexual abuse policy during their annual meeting in Dallas.
   He was stationed at St. Francis of Assisi in Ridgefield Park on instructions from archdiocese headquarters, said Father Field, the priest who worked with him. He said he did not know who gave the instructions.
   But the Newark archdiocesan office that oversees visiting priests said it had no record of Father Dominic. The Rev. William Fadrowski, who was executive director of clergy personnel in 2002, said he had never heard of the priest and didn't understand how he could have been allowed to work at St. Francis.
   "It's very, very abnormal," Monsignor Fadrowski said.
   Newark Archbishop John Myers said he, too, did not recognize Father Dominic's name and called his presence in a parish "odd."
   "It certainly is not according to our policies and expectations," he said.
   Archbishop Saldanha, head of the priest's home diocese in Pakistan, initially said he thought Father Dominic was living at the New Jersey church "on a private visit" and was not exercising his ministry.
   Archbishop Myers did not ask whether the priest should be allowed to function, Archbishop Saldanha said. In a later interview, however, he said he had received a background check form from Newark but did not complete and return it.
   Archbishop Saldanha also said that Father Dominic had occasionally said Mass while at St. Francis but that he was "not doing any pastoral work ... not dealing with people."
   Father Dominic left St. Francis after about two months, according to Father Field, who said he thought the priest had returned to his home country because of problems with his religious worker's visa.
A friend of the bishop
   It isn't clear where Father Dominic went after Newark. But by last October, he was living along northern Italy's Riviera, working in the quaint beach town of Albissola Marina and up in the hills at Ellera.
   In announcing the priest's appointment, the Savona-Noli Diocese newsletter described him as a friend of the bishop, the Rev. Domenico Calcagno.
   The bishop told The News he had met Father Dominic when he traveled to Pakistan in the early 1990s, before assuming his current post. At the time, Bishop Calcagno said, he was a priest working at the Vatican's foreign missions office and Father Dominic was teaching in a Lahore seminary.
   The bishop said Father Dominic came to his diocese last fall after the head of the Lahore Archdiocese requested a temporary placement for the priest while he worked on a book.
   Bishop Calcagno turned pale when told by a reporter about the London criminal case and that church leaders in Pakistan were familiar with it.
   "I am absolutely not aware of this," the bishop said. "This is very strange. I received a written fax from the bishop. He was asking me to help Father Dominic with his studies. To me there was no reason to suspect anything about it."
   Archbishop Saldanha initially told The News that he didn't know where Father Dominic was and hadn't communicated with any Italian dioceses. But when he learned that the newspaper had located the priest and interviewed Bishop Calcagno, the archbishop acknowledged that he had given Father Dominic permission to "study theology and do some work in an old-age home, not work in a parish" in Italy.
   Bishop Calcagno said he planned to keep Father Dominic on duty, "putting a close eye on him from now on." Archbishop Saldanha said he would ask Father Dominic "what he's really doing."
   The priest continues to profess his innocence. Father Dominic said he sometimes cries out to God, asking why he has suffered so.
   "They have really devastated all my priesthood," he said. "I'm just a helpless person."
   Staff writer Brooks Egerton reported from Dallas, and staff writer Reese Dunklin reported from Albissola Marina. Freelance journalist Mark Williams-Thomas contributed from London.
The human toll
   What the priest did to him was bad enough, the young man says. What came later, when he reported it to church officials, was worse.
   The story starts late one night in December 1984, he says, when the Rev. Yusaf Dominic abused him. He was 9 years old and had a part in the Nativity play at his family's London church. His parents had asked the visiting Pakistani cleric to spend the night.
   Twelve years later, in 1996, the traumatized child had become a college kid who could contain the memory no longer -- especially when he found out that Father Dominic had returned from Pakistan to work in another parish in the Westminster Archdiocese.
   He went there and told his story to the head priest, who said, "These things happen," the young man recalls.
   "He offered to arrange a meeting" at which Father Dominic would apologize "and we could all have a cup of tea together."
   Father Dominic -- who has since denied wrongdoing -- stayed on duty. The young man and his family appealed to a bishop, who suggested that the priest might merely have been engaged in "horseplay," or that a counselor might have implanted a false memory.
   "But I hadn't been to a counselor," the man says.
   The bishop also dispensed some advice: "You don't want to go to the police." He ignored that advice and found someone who took him seriously.
   "All the church personnel I spoke to minimized what happened," the young man says. "It's the secondary victimization that hurts people most."
   -- Brooks Egerton
   COMING IN SUNDAY READER: Commentators from across the spectrum of American Catholicism react to The Dallas Morning News' four-part series, "Runaway Priests." Also, The News' editorial board calls for reform. [Emphasis added]
The Dallas Morning News, "Church aid, legal lapses leave cleric free to roam; 'That's when your hair stands on end and your blood boils'," By BROOKS EGERTON and REESE DUNKLIN, Wednesday, June 23, 2004
www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/religion/stories/062304dnprodominic.1de2b. html
Also see: www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/ethics/ethcont86.htm#dominic
Six Months Later, Phoenix Bishop Says He Feels at Home
   KPHO News 5 (Arizona), www.kpho.com/Global/story.asp?S=1962213
   PHOENIX-AP) -- It's been six months since Bishop Thomas Olmsted took over the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix.
   In an interview with reporters this morning, he says things have gone relatively smooth and that he feels at home.
   The bishop says that while the Tucson diocese may be on the verge of bankruptcy because of large sexual abuse settlements, he didn't believe the Phoenix diocese was on a similar road.
   Olmsted says he's met with several victims of sexual abuse by priests and in all but one instance, was able to pray with them.
   He also says he'd love to have a Catholic university in Arizona to expand religious teachings.
Appeals court upholds dismissal of St. John's Prep sex abuse suit [Moorse]
   Duluth News Tribune, www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/news/politics/8987896.htm , Associated Press, Posted on Tue, Jun. 22, 2004
   ST. PAUL - The state Court of Appeals has upheld a lower court's decision to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a former St. John's Preparatory School student who accused a St. John's Abbey priest of sexual abuse.
   The appeals court affirmed the lower court's ruling that Bill Quenroe filed his lawsuit against the Rev. Dunstan Moorse after the statute of limitations had expired.
   The three-judge appeals panel issued its opinion last week, and the Court of Appeals posted it on its Web site Tuesday. Quenroe's lawyer, Jeff Anderson, said he is considering another appeal. [and similar to previous newsitem]
Catholic order denies report it moved accused priests -- RCC. Salesians
   Anchorage Daily News, www.adn.com/24hour/nation/story/1451481p-8830833c.html , The Associated Press, 6:57 pm ADT, June 22, 2004
   DALLAS (Texas): Leaders of an order of Roman Catholic priests denied on Tuesday allegations that they moved priests accused of sexual abuse from country to country to avoid law enforcement.
   The Dallas Morning News reported Sunday that the Salesians of Don Bosco transferred priests accused of abuse, allowing them to start new lives in unsuspecting communities and continue working in church ministries.
   In a statement posted on its Web site Tuesday, the order said it "categorically denies such behavior and condemns every kind of abuse of minors."
   The newspaper, which has been investigating the international movement of abusive Roman Catholic priests for more than a year, stood by its reporting, saying it had documented several instances in which the Salesians moved accused priests across international borders.
   "Our team spent months interviewing and gathering documents for our stories on the Salesians," said Robert W. Mong, the Morning News' president and editor. "We attempted to interview international and regional leaders of the order, but they declined. We remain confident of our reporting."
   The newspaper said the Salesians' statement did not address several specific cases described in its Sunday report.
   The Salesians, a large order founded in 19th century Italy, work mainly with poor children.
Former altar boy accuses Cedar Rapids Roman Catholic priests of sexual abuse [1962 Roach] - RCC.
   Quad City Times, www.qctimes.com/internal.php?story_id=1029884&t=Iowa+%2F+Illinois&c=24,1029884 , Associated Press, Last Updated: 12:09 am, Wednesday, June 23rd, 2004
   IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - A former altar boy at a Roman Catholic church in Cedar Rapids has filed a federal lawsuit accusing several priests of sexual assaulting him 42 years ago.
   The victim, now living in Dallas, Texas, says in the lawsuit he was sexually assaulted on two occasions during the summer of 1962 by the Rev. William Roach and at two other priests.
   The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Cedar Rapids, also names the Archdiocese of Dubuque, which had supervision over Roach and the other priests.
   A diocese spokesman and attorney said they had not been notified of the lawsuit and declined comment.
The Catholic gun didn't go off: Silence greets Dallas News series - RCC.
   Get Religion, http://getreligion.typepad.com/getreligion/2004/06/the_gun_didnt_g.html , by Terry Mattingly, Tuesday June 22 2004
   Once there was a man who lived in a lighthouse on the foggy Atlantic.
   That's the start of a very, very old sermon illustration. I thought of it this past weekend as I read the first chunks of the sprawling Dallas Morning News reports on the globalization of the clergy sex-abuse scandal in the Roma