L.A. church leaders sought to hide sex abuse cases from authorities

 

priest

Documents from the late 1980s show that Archbishop Roger M. Mahony and another archdiocese official discussed strategies to keep police from discovering that children were being sexually abused by priests

 
By Victoria Kim, Ashley Powers and Harriet Ryan, Los Angeles TimesJanuary 21, 2013, 2:31 p.m.
 

Fifteen years before the clergy sex abuse scandal came to light, Archbishop Roger M. Mahony and a top advisor plotted to conceal child molestation by priests from law enforcement, including keeping them out of California to avoid prosecution, according to internal Catholic church records released Monday.

The archdiocese’s failure to purge pedophile clergy and reluctance to cooperate with law enforcement has previously been known. But the memos written in 1986 and 1987 by Mahony and Msgr. Thomas J. Curry, then the archdiocese’s chief advisor on sex abuse cases, offer the strongest evidence yet of a concerted effort by officials in the nation’s largest Catholic diocese to shield abusers from police. The newly released records, which the archdiocese fought for years to keep secret, reveal in church leaders’ own words a desire to keep authorities from discovering that children were being molested.

In the confidential letters, filed this month as evidence in a civil court case, Curry proposed strategies to prevent police from investigating three priests who had admitted to church officials that they abused young boys. Curry suggested to Mahony that they prevent them from seeing therapists who might alert authorities and that they give the priests out-of-state assignments to avoid criminal investigators.

One such case that has previously received little attention is that of Msgr. Peter Garcia, who admitted preying for decades on undocumented children in predominantly Spanish-speaking parishes. After Garcia’s discharge from a New Mexico treatment center for pedophile clergy, Mahony ordered him to stay away from California “for the foreseeable future” in order to avoid legal accountability, the files show. “I believe that if Monsignor Garcia were to reappear here within the archdiocese we might very well have some type of legal action filed in both the criminal and civil sectors,” the archbishop wrote to the treatment center’s director in July 1986.

The following year, in a letter to Mahony about bringing Garcia back to work in the archdiocese, Curry said he was worried that victims in Los Angeles might see the priest and call police.

“[T]here are numerous — maybe twenty — adolescents or young adults that Peter was involved with in a first degree felony manner. The possibility of one of these seeing him is simply too great,” Curry wrote in May 1987.

Garcia returned to the Los Angeles area later that year; the archdiocese did not give him a ministerial assignment because he refused to take medication to suppress his sexual urges. He left the priesthood in 1989, according to the church.

Garcia was never prosecuted and died in 2009. The files show he admitted to a therapist that he had sexually abused boys “on and off” since his 1966 ordination. He assured church officials his victims were unlikely to come forward because of their immigration status. In at least one case, according to a church memo, he threatened to have a boy he had raped deported if he went to police.

The memos are from personnel files for 14 priests submitted to a judge on behalf of a man who claims he was abused by one of the priests, Father Nicholas Aguilar Rivera. The man’s attorney, Anthony De Marco, wrote in court papers the files show “a practice of thwarting law enforcement investigations” by the archdiocese. It’s not always clear from the records whether the church followed through on all its discussions about eluding police, but in some cases, such as Garcia’s, it did.

Mahony, who retired in 2011, has apologized repeatedly for errors in handling abuse allegations. In a statement Monday, he apologized once again and recounted meetings he’s had with about 90 victims of abuse.

“I have a 3 x 5 card for every victim I met with on the altar of my small chapel. I pray for them every single day,” he wrote. “As I thumb through those cards I often pause as I am reminded of each personal story and the anguish that accompanies that life story.”

“It remains my daily and fervent prayer that God’s grace will flood the heart and soul of each victim, and that their life-journey continues forward with ever greater healing,” he added. “I am sorry.”

Curry did not return calls seeking comment. He currently serves as the archdiocese’s auxiliary bishop for Santa Barbara.

The confidential files of at least 75 more accused abusers are slated to become public in coming weeks under the terms of a 2007 civil settlement with more than 500 victims. A private mediator had ordered the names of the church hierarchy redacted from those documents, but after objections from The Times and the Associated Press, a Superior Court judge ruled that the names of Mahony, Curry and others in supervisory roles should not be blacked out.

Garcia’s was one of three cases in 1987 in which top church officials discussed ways they could stymie law enforcement. In a letter about Father Michael Wempe, who had acknowledged using a 12-year-old parishioner as what a church official called his “sex partner,” Curry recounted extensive conversations with the priest about potential criminal prosecution.

“He is afraid … records will be sought by the courts at some time and that they could convict him,” Curry wrote to Mahony. “He is very aware that what he did comes within the scope of criminal law.”

Curry proposed Wempe could go to an out-of-state diocese “if need be.” He called it “surprising” that a church-paid counselor hadn’t reported Wempe to police and wrote that he and Wempe “agreed it would be better if Mike did not return to him.”

Perhaps, Curry added, the priest could be sent to “a lawyer who is also a psychiatrist” thereby putting “the reports under the protection of privilege.”

Curry expressed similar concerns to Mahony about Father Michael Baker, who had admitted his abuse of young boys during a private 1986 meeting with the archbishop.

In a memo about Baker’s return to ministry, Curry wrote, “I see a difficulty here, in that if he were to mention his problem with child abuse it would put the therapist in the position of having to report him … he cannot mention his past problem.”

Mahony’s response to the memo was handwritten across the bottom of the page: “Sounds good —please proceed!!” Two decades would pass before authorities gathered enough information to convict Baker and Wempe of abusing boys.

Federal and state prosecutors have investigated possible conspiracy cases against the archdiocese hierarchy. Former Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley said in 2007 that his probe into the conduct of high-ranking church officials was on hold until his prosecutors could access the personnel files of all the abusers. The U.S. attorney’s office convened a grand jury in 2009, but no charges resulted.

During those investigations, the church was forced by judges to turn over some but not all of the records to prosecutors. The district attorney’s office has said its prosecutors plan to review priest personnel files as they are released.

Mahony was appointed archbishop in 1985 after five years leading the Stockton diocese. While there, he had dealt with three allegations of clergy abuse, including one case in which he personally reported the priest to police.

In Los Angeles, he tapped Curry, an Irish-born priest, as vicar of clergy. The records show that sex abuse allegations were handled almost exclusively by the archbishop and his vicar. Memos that crossed their desks included graphic details, such as one letter from another priest accusing Garcia of tying up and raping a young boy in Lancaster.

Mahony personally phoned the priests’ therapists about their progress, wrote the priests encouraging letters and dispatched Curry to visit them at a New Mexico facility, Servants of the Paraclete, that treated pedophile priests.

“Each of you there at Jemez Springs is very much in my prayers and I call you to mind each day during my celebration of the Eucharist,” Mahony wrote to Wempe.

The month after he was named archbishop, Mahony met with Garcia to discuss his molestation of boys, according to a letter the priest wrote while in therapy. Mahony instructed him to be “very low key” and assured him “no one was looking at him for any criminal action,” Garcia recalled in a letter to an official at Servants of the Paraclete.

In a statement Monday on behalf of the archdiocese, a lawyer for the church said its policy in the late 1980s was to let victims and their families decide whether to go to the police.

“Not surprisingly, the families of victims frequently did not wish to report to police and have their child become the center of a public prosecution,” lawyer J. Michael Hennigan wrote.

He acknowledged memos written in those years “sometimes focused more on the needs of the perpetrator than on the serious harm that had been done to the victims.”

“That is part of the past,” Hennigan wrote. “We are embarrassed and at times ashamed by parts of the past. But we are proud of our progress, which is continuing.”

Hennigan said that the years in which Mahony dealt with Garcia were “a period of deepening understanding of the nature of the problem of sex abuse both here and in our society in general” and that the archdiocese subsequently changed completely its approach to reports of abuse.

“We now have retired FBI agents who thoroughly investigate every allegation, even anonymous calls. We aggressively assist in the criminal prosecution of offenders,” Hennigan wrote.

Mahony and Curry have been questioned under oath in depositions numerous times about their handling of molestation cases. The men, however, have never been asked about attempts to stymie law enforcement, because the personnel files documenting those discussions were only provided to civil attorneys in recent months. De Marco, the lawyer who filed the records in civil court this month, asked a judge last week to order Curry and Mahony to submit to new depositions “regarding their actions, knowledge and intent as referenced in these files.” A hearing on that request is set for February.

In a 2010 deposition, Mahony acknowledged the archdiocese had never called police to report sexual abuse by a priest before 2000. He said church officials were unable to do so because they didn’t know the names of the children harmed.

“In my experience, you can only call the police when you’ve got victims you can talk to,” Mahony said.

When an attorney for an alleged victim suggested “the right thing to do” would have been to summon police immediately, Mahony replied, “Well, today it would. But back then that isn’t the way those matters were approached.”

Since clergy weren’t legally required to report suspected child abuse until 1997, Mahony said, the people who should have alerted police about pedophiles like Baker and Wempe were victims’ therapists or other “mandatory reporters” of child abuse.

“Psychologists, counselors … they were also the first ones to learn [of abuse] so they were normally the ones who made the reports,” he said.

In Garcia’s 451-page personnel file, one voice decried the church’s failures to protect the victims and condemned the priest as someone who deserved to be behind bars. Father Arturo Gomez, an associate pastor at a predominantly Spanish-speaking church near Olvera Street, wrote to a regional bishop in 1989, saying he was “angry” and “disappointed” at the church’s failure to help Garcia’s victims. He expressed shock that the bishop, Juan A. Arzube, had told the family of two of the boys that Garcia had thought of taking his own life.

“You seemed to be at that moment more concern[ed] for the criminal rather than the victum! (sic)” Gomez wrote to Arzube in 1989.

Gomez urged church leaders to identify others who may have been harmed by Garcia and to get them help, but was told they didn’t know how.

“If I was the father … Peter Garcia would be in prison now; and I would probably have begun a lawsuit against the archdiocese,” the priest wrote in the letter. “The parents … of the two boys are more forgiving and compassionate than I would be.”

Intellectually disabled sex abuse victims are still waiting for justice

Reposted from a story by: Chief Court Reporter Sean Fewster  From: The Advertiser  January 08, 2013 10:30PM

 
Prian Perkins

Brian Perkins, a former bus driver for intellectually disabled Catholic students. Source: The Advertiser

IT took a decade to bring paedophile bus driver Brian Perkins to justice and another 10 years to assess the damage to his intellectually disabled victims.

Yesterday, the Catholic Church – which allowed Perkins to serve as a volunteer – asked that more than $7 million worth of compensation claims be postponed for as long as five years.

The church told the District Court the only way it could gather evidence to counter the claims was to psychologically study the victims over an extended period.

The parents of the victims, who are in their 70s, fear they may die before the claims are resolved – leaving their now-adult children without carers. Between 1987 and 1991, Perkins filmed and sexually assaulted 36 students attending St Ann’s Special School, Marion, where he volunteered as a bus driver and teacher.

He escaped arrest until 2002, was jailed a year later and died in custody.

 

In 2003, Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson offered “unconditional” payouts of $50,000 or $100,000 to 30 families.

Four sets of parents, however, filed claims of between $1 million and $4 million, saying the school and church failed to protect their children.

The parents want the compensation to guarantee ongoing care for  their children after their deaths.

The Advertiser understands that since Perkins’ arrest the victims have received counselling through Yarrow Place.

That process has been complicated because the victims struggle to communicate verbally. Court papers assert that counsellors believe the victims’ psychological harm was exacerbated because their trauma went untreated for 10 years.

Yesterday, the church said it needed to hire its own experts to assess the victims. It conceded that could take up to five years, and suggested the case be postponed until it had been done.

Lawyers for the parents objected, saying it would cause the lawsuits to drag on indefinitely.

They said the church had already demanded the release of their clients’ medical records, causing delays. They asked the court to instead appoint a judge to oversee the claims.

That judge, they said, should act as a mediator and steer the claims towards resolution.

The case was adjourned until April

It amazes me that so called religious people seem to care more about the priests than the children?

When I was a kid I was pushed along to Sunday school to church to youth group and depending on where we lived whether the church was catholic or Baptist or salvation army, you see don’t think mom was particularly religious she just figured when 3 or 4 of her brood were being looked after by someone else was wonderful and if they learnt something along the way bonus.

The only difference I found between the different churches was the level of flamboyancy in the pictures of Jesus, the Catholics were the worst offenders Jesus always looked like cat Stevens being mobbed by children and the children even though in those days there were no Anglo Saxons in the middle east all the children had fair skin blond hair and blue eyes.

But irrelevant of whether  the munchkins were blonde hair or dark with an afro there were always scripture about how children were everything protect the children suffer unto me the children,what the hell happened?

Every time we read of another priest or Baptist minister or catholic school teacher molesting children, there is an outcry “not father paddy no not father Michael that horrid child probably flirted”?

 Then the Vatican steps in and the offending father is whisked away and ten years later he shows up somewhere as an archbishop or even worse the principal of a catholic boys school or director of an orphanage?

There is no suffer unto me the children anymore, it is more like “suffer under me the little children”! The Vatican has become a joke, they elect a former Nazi as pope, then they spend hundreds of millions a year running rehab centers for pedophile priests on every continent on earth except Antarctica, yet they deny the existence of such priests.

The pope himself recently said he didn’t know what the fuss was, when he was younger sex with children was an excepted choice no one really cared?

Unless the church as a whole irrelevant of whether catholic Baptist or Lutheran or any other denomination can erase the problem of pedophile members once and for all, they should be forbidden to run any institution of learning or any other organization where clergy has unfetted access to minors. The Catholic Church unless it comes completely clean should lose its tax exempt status worldwide.

People are going to flame me for this and I’ll be called all kinds of names, but they’re hypocrites. If it’s bad for Sandusky and Penn state and they were demonized, why is it not good for the church to be treated the same?

I have two nephews under 5 and they’re being raised catholic but I can tell you if any priest or monk or brother ever touches them their will hell to play and hell will receive a new tenant.

Mia what has this got to do with disabled access denied?

Just a few minutes ago someone who thought they had the right to challenge me on the content  of my blog sent me the above comment because I posted a story about disgusting pedophile catholic priests that even when they are proven guilty the church continues to pay their legal bills.

The writer demanded to know “what has this to do with disabled access denied.

em prentiss
prentissem@gmail.com
108.14.221.25

Could I ask what this has to do with disability access denied

 I replied the following

1/ it’s my blog
2/ I made it clear when I started this blog that as a survivor of severe child molestation, who had watched their mother abused beaten and almost killed many times as a child by my father, I would write for the disabled because I am and support the fight for tougher laws against pedophiles and child abusers and fight for the wives and women out there who are barely survivng at the hands of their abisuive spouses.
It is my belief that any ongoing wrong action that so inhibits a persons right to live their own life free of fear disables them, So By supporting all these causes I see no difference in my title disabled accessdenied but thankyou for asking.
P.S. if you as a 4 year old have ever witnessed a 6ft2 250lb man sinking steel cap boots over and over agan into your mothers barely dressed body because he just raped her as well, you come out of that so scarred you are in some way disabled

But further to that reply I ask her this?

 If I was writing about the defense of a child molester who had spent 40 years molesting students while working as a teacher, and the education department was paying their defense, would you be so upset, or is it the catholic factor?

Pedophiles has everything to do with disability , I live with debilitating epilepsy as just one of my disabilities and there are several types of epilepsy involved three of them are biological  but one is called Physco-genic non epileptic seizures. Physco-genic non epileptic seizures  are seizures brought on by ptsd, as the brains way of protecting you from horrific memories or   when I have flash backs or become emotional because of a picture or a movie or reading a story about molestation I start to tremor I get face tics and many times I go into full seizure.

https://disabledaccessdenied.wordpress.com/2011/07/02/the-truth-about-psychogenic-nonepileptic-seizures/

This life altering debilitating disability is caused in full by my surviving almost 11 years of daily rape at the hands of a sibling from the age of 3-14.

If my seizures are caused by a pedophiles action why can’t I write about pedophiles? I write about car accidents causing paraplegia, or a roadside bomb causing a closed head injury. So if a monsters action also cause disability, why shouldn’t they be put under a spotlight like every other horrendous plague that causes our lives to be forever changed?.

Get over the catholic guilt, I’m not Christian but I know the Bible. Your virgin carpenter from Nazareth told the world “suffer unto me the little children” and also “the meek shall inherit the earth” and “he who refuses but one of mine refuses me”.

So if you believe in the book of fables called the Bible, then when you turn a blind eye to the sins of the Catholic fathers are you not refusing but one of his therefore refusing him?

So you keep going to confession and going into the little box and confessing to the man in the dress on the other side, but if I was you next time I would be wondering who and what he really is and is he worth more than the soul of a child.

catholic Church continues funding paedophile priests’ legal defence even when they know they’re guilty

November 16, 2012

Illustration: Ron Tandberg.Illustration: Ron Tandberg.

THE Catholic Church has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on legal fees to defend priests and brothers who have already been tried and convicted of serious sexual assaults against children in their care.

A Fairfax Media investigation has revealed that at least two Catholic orders have continued to fund the legal defences of some of their religious members as they went to trial for the second, third and even fourth time for the sexual abuse of children.

This includes the funding of multiple appeals, hiring top barristers who charge thousands of dollars a day, and hiring private investigators.

In some cases the result has been that criminal prosecutions and the victims of abuse are dragged through the courts for many years.

”It is extremely offensive and hurtful to victims that Catholic Church orders are continuing to fund the defences of priests and brothers after they have been convicted,” said Nicky Davis from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

”We can see what’s going on and we can see that it’s obscene.”

The head of professional standards at one of Australia’s largest Catholic orders, Christian Brothers, confirmed that the order had continued to fund the defence of two of its members – Brother Robert Charles Best and Brother Edward Vernon Dowlan – after they had been convicted of sexually abusing children at Catholic schools in Victoria.

Best has had at least five court battles funded by the Christian Brothers dating back to 1996, including multiple trials on multiple counts of indecent assault and buggery.

In August 2011 Best was jailed for a maximum of 14 years and nine months, but is currently appealing his conviction again in the Victorian Supreme Court.

According to the victim support group Broken Rites, by the late 1990s the Christian Brothers had already spent about $400,000 in defending Dowlan and Best.

Costs reportedly included ”56 full days in court, two Queen’s counsel barristers, a team of solicitors, legal office staff, private investigators, psychiatrists, psychologists and other paid experts who gave character evidence on behalf of the offenders”.

The order’s executive officer for professional standards, Brother Brian Brandon, confirmed that the order had funded Best and Dowlan’s defences, and said that the order had a broad policy of funding the defences of brothers charged in relation to child sex abuse.

When it was put to him that it was not appropriate for the order to continue funding its members’ legal defences after they had been convicted, he said: ”Well, that’s one perspective.”

”Either you, the taxpayer, are providing the funding via Legal Aid or the congregation is helping you out by providing the funding,” he said.

”We think it is better for the congregation to provide the funding, if a brother has no independent means, than for you, the public, to pay through Legal Aid.”

The Provincial of the smaller, Sydney-based Marist Fathers order, Father Paul Cooney, confirmed that his order had also funded the legal defence of two priests – Roger Michael Bellemore and Gregory Laurence Ferguson – after they had been convicted of sexually abusing children at church-run boarding schools in Burnie, Tasmania.

After Bellemore was convicted at his first trial in 2006, the order apologised ”for any harm suffered by the former students”.

His lawyers then immediately lodged an appeal and won. In 2008 Bellemore was convicted again at his third trial.

Father Cooney said that the order had believed it was ensuring that its members were given a competent defence, but it had subsequently changed its policy regarding convicted members.

”If, now, a member was found guilty after the first case, we would say ‘no more money will be forthcoming from the church’.”

Fairfax Media understands that Catholic Church funding for the legal defence of priests and brothers who have already been convicted, comes from a number of sources, including the revenue of the individual orders. In some cases this may include the local church collection box, as well as property investments.

It is understood that in some cases the money may come from the church’s insurance company, Catholic Church’s Insurance Limited.

DEFENDED BY THEIR ORDERS

BROTHER ROBERT CHARLES BEST (Christian Brothers Victoria)

Best, from Victoria, has had at least five major court matters funded by the Christian Brothers, including three trials on multiple counts of indecent assault and buggery and at least two
Supreme Court appeals.

In August 2011 he was jailed for a maximum 14 years and nine months.

BROTHER EDWARD VERNON DOWLAN (Christian Brothers Victoria)

In 1993 Dowlan faced 64 charges over the sexual abuse of 23 boys. In 1996, after years of legal delays, he pleaded guilty to 16 counts of indecent assault against 11 boys aged nine to 13 and
was jailed for a maximum nine years and eight months.

Lawyers funded by the Christian Brothers appealed the sentence and had it reduced to 6.5,
with parole possible after four years.

FATHER ROGER MICHAEL BELLEMORE (Marist Fathers Tasmania)

After three trials and an appeal, Bellemore was found guilty in the Tasmanian Supreme Court in 2008 of maintaining a sexual relationship with a minor while at a number of boarding schools in
Burnie, Tasmania.

In each of his legal proceedings his defence was funded by the Marist Fathers.

FATHER GREGORY LAURENCE FERGUSON (Marist Fathers Tasmania)

Sentenced to a total of five years’ jail following two trials in 2007 for sexual offences against
boys in Tasmania in the early 1970s.

The Marist Fathers paid for Ferguson’s defence at the second trial despite his conviction in the first.

Australian state Inquiry to see list of pedophile priests

 

Reposted From: AAP  November 12, 2012 12:39AM

Helen Last of In Good Faith, a consultant for the Melbourne Victims Collective, will present the evidence to the state inquiry into how the churches handled sex abuse by priests, Fairfax says.

It comprises men who have been convicted in criminal courts or found by the Catholic Church’s own investigation to have had credible complaints made against them.

Ms Last said the church has known through its Pastoral Appointments Board and its bishops that there have been problems with the conduct of all these priests previously reported to them.

She said the placements gave these priests access to primary and secondary schools, hospitals, orphanages and other care institutions.

The 18 include some of the most notorious pedophiles, such as Gerald Ridsdale, Edward Dowlan, Michael Glennon and the socialite priest Vincent Kiss, as well as many who barely caught public attention.

Ms last said the 18 priests were selected to see how many times they were moved by the church.

She said the problem of clergy abuse was so prevalent that the collective believed a dedicated police unit should be set up to work with victims of clergy

A PSYCHOLOGIST who met dozens of child abuse victims claims three quarters of the Brothers from the St John of God order were suspected to be involved in the scandal.

Order implicated in abuse scandal 

Reposted from a story From: AAP  November 12, 2012 1:15AM

Michelle Mulvihill has also told Fairfax that Catholic Archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell helped in negotiations for a loan for the order that was later used to pay victims.

The Sydney-based psychologist was employed by the order for nine years, from 1998, to sit in on meetings between victims and representatives from the order. She left the job because of fears suspected pedophiles had too much power in the order.

Fairfax also reported that according to Dr Mulvihill, the order hid documents and did not properly supervise suspected pedophile Brothers.

She said of the 40 to 50 Brothers in the order at the time she was there, around 75 per cent had been subject to allegations.

Dr Mulvihill said the order included Brothers who had carried out “the worst examples of child abuse I have ever heard of”, Fairfax reported.

There have been calls for a royal commission into sexual abuse by religious groups.

NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell has already announced a special commission to investigate allegations of child sex abuse by Catholic Church clergy in the Hunter region

Third child sex suit aimed at Stockton diocese

Man, 22, says Kelly molested him in Lode in early 2000s
Reposted from a story By Jennie Rodriguez-Moore Record Staff Writer November 08, 2012 12:00 AM

STOCKTON – The Diocese of Stockton has been hit with a third child sex abuse lawsuit that names former priest Michael Kelly, who returned to Ireland in April in the middle of another sex abuse trial.

A 22-year-old Orange County man filed the latest civil lawsuit Wednesday, saying Kelly molested him in the early 2000s while the then-boy was a parishioner at Mokelumne Hill Church. Kelly served the small mission church after leaving St. Andrew’s Church in San Andreas.

Identified as John MT Doe, the plaintiff is suing for damages claiming negligence, constructive fraud and sexual harassment, among others.

His attorneys say the diocese and its top leaders had a duty to disclose Kelly had previously been accused of sexual misconduct, and that they should have stopped him from ministering to children.

The diocese sent Kelly for a psychological evaluation in 1999, and a psychologist said in a report, according to the lawsuit: “I do not believe that we are able to rule out the possibility that some underlying or latent pedophilic elements may exist in this case.”

The lawsuit states the plaintiff tried to commit suicide in 2011 as a result of the abuse.

Calaveras County sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. Chris Hewitt said his office also is conducting an investigation and has forwarded a report to prosecutors, but he could not verify whether the victim is John MT Doe.

“Because of the type of case it is, it has a strict rule of confidentiality on it,” Hewitt said. “What I can tell you is that this Father Kelly allegedly molested the victim.”

The plaintiff’s attorney, John Manly, of Newport Beach-based Manly & Stewart, said it is the same case, but he is disappointed with the slow progress of the year-long criminal investigation.

Calaveras prosecutor Dana Pfeil said her office is awaiting the Sheriff’s Office to conduct interviews with multiple other victims to complete the criminal report. Then, she said, the case can be evaluated for charging.

Pfeil said she could not offer other details, since it is a pending case.

Kelly is accused of molesting at least three boys, according to civil filings in San Joaquin County. One resulted in a $3.75 million settlement in April with abuse victim Travis Trotter, after Kelly abruptly left for Ireland before the civil trial could end. That same jury had unanimously found him personally liable before turning their attention to allegations against the diocese.

Another lawsuit was filed in September by a 24-year-old former St. Andrew’s Church altar boy.

The diocese’s attorney, Paul Balestracci of Stockton’s Neumiller & Beardslee, said he could not comment on the newest case because he has not seen the lawsuit

Cop’s own sex abuse case delayed: priest

Reposted from a story From: AAP  November 09, 2012 11:46

A SENIOR NSW police officer who reported being sexually abused by clergy has been waiting more than a year for police to take action, a former Catholic priest says.

Kevin Lee, who is supporting calls for a royal commission into child sex abuse by the church, says the high-ranking officer has seen his own case delayed by 18 months with no arrests made since he came forward with his allegations.

“If it’s hard enough for a police officer to get justice, then how much harder must it be for an average person to get some sort of action?” he told ABC Lateline on Friday.

Father Lee, a former priest at Padre Pio parish in Glenmore Park, said he ended up leaving the church and became a private investigator after church leadership failed to deal with sex abuse cases – and even dismissed his own complaints as hearsay.

He said some of his fellow priests had confessed to him that they were pedophiles yet the church did not take it seriously.

“I saw a system of cover-ups, a system of blind eye-turning and just an ignorance of the fact that it was happening,” he told Lateline.

“There’s so many (victims) that even the police are bogged down. The police can’t possibly deal with the extensive number.”

Father Lee made the comments as the state government was criticised for launching a special commission on Friday that will look into allegations of child sex abuse only by Catholic church clergy within NSW’s Hunter region.

Father Lee said he knows of abuse cases across NSW that need to be looked at by a royal commission. “It’s quite widespread,” he said.

He has now written a book about abuse in the church, but said it can’t be published yet due to legal restrictions.

The public should realise, however, that not all allegations of sex abuse are historical, with some arrests likely in the near future, he said.

In the case of the police officer, Father Lee said it involves a Catholic school in western Sydney with both the parish priest and bishop aware of the abuse.

“I believe in the church. I just don’t believe in the oligarchy, the bureaucrats that run the church,” he said.

“I’ve lost my confidence in them.”

Unreported deaths linked to paedophile brotherhood

 

Date November 9, 2012
Dr Wayne Chamley“One of these boys was thrown down a staircase” … Dr Wayne Chamley alleges in the Broken Rites submission. Photo: Penny Stephens

A GROUP of religious brothers led by an ”alpha paedophile” are suspected of the unreported bashing deaths of two boys and the sexual abuse of more than 40 wards of the state and others at homes for the mentally impaired over three decades in Victoria, an inquiry into child abuse is expected to be told on Friday.

The 15 suspected paedophile brothers from the Hospitaller Order of St John of God have never been charged in Victoria because of a lack of police resources, said Wayne Chamley, a researcher for the church sex abuse victims group Broken Rites.

While the majority of the suspected paedophiles are dead, Fairfax is aware of three men who have left the order and moved away, but are in roles where they could have access to children.

The allegations relate to the order’s operations at Cheltenham and Lilydale where they provided homes for wards of the state, orphans, boys given up by their parents and those with intellectual disabilities from the 1950s to the 1980s.

In 2002, the order paid more than $3.6 million to 24 men who alleged they were abused as children by brothers from the order. Victorian police at the time confirmed they had launched an investigation into the allegations and had taken statements from a number of victims, and the Director of Public Prosecutions would decide how many of the suspects would be charged.

But Dr Chamley and former victims have confirmed more than a dozen suspected paedophile brothers had never faced charges in Victoria.

Dr Chamley is to read his submission to the Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Organisations on Friday, which will detail horrific abuse at the order’s homes.

This will include allegations boys were subjected to pack rapes and beatings, being drugged and committed to mental institutions where they received electro-shock therapy, and in two extreme cases may have been killed and their deaths not reported.

He will also mention research that out of one group of 69 boys, who went to the order’s homes, seven had committed suicide.

On Thursday a spokesman for the order said it acknowledged Broken Rites’ work and believed the parliamentary inquiry was the appropriate venue for it to present all its claims. He said the order would make itself available to appear at the inquiry if asked.

The most serious claims Dr Chamley will make are allegations two boys may have died in suspicious circumstances at the order’s farm at Lilydale, and two others were committed to a mental institution by the ”alpha paedophile” brother and given electro-shock therapy, impairing one so badly he was unable to care for himself and later died.

Dr Chamley alleges Broken Rites is aware of two statements made by former inmates who alleged two different boys sustained injuries as a consequence of beatings, with at least one case possibly resulting in death.

”One of these boys was thrown down a staircase (according to a witness) soon after he arrived at Lilydale,” he alleges in the submission. ”We are also aware of at least two boys who both experienced serial sexual abuse, who were as juveniles certified under the Lunacy Act (1915) and then incarcerated within the Royal Park Asylum.”

The order’s spokesman said the Australian provincial of the order, Brother Timothy Graham, was in Portugal and was unable to be contacted for comment.

The spokesman said in 1997 the order first became aware that there had been sexual abuse in facilities it ran in Victoria and immediately opened internal and police inquiries