Re: Pederastìa clerical 2011
2100 visitas en 11 dias.........
seguro que muchos esperan cuando abren el tema ver algun caso de pederastìa en el catolicismo........ pero se encuentran con la sorpresa
Apenas empeiza el año 2011 y conitnua llegando la ola de informes sobre el cúmulo de abusos sexuales de la curia romana; una muestra de la punta del iceberg del problemón que se tienen los curas es esta; crímenes que no serán lavados por más que alguien en su psicopatología continue buscando en la basura de todo el mundo con el único propósito de señalar casos aislados de pastores protestantes pedófilos.
Vemos como va la curia encubridora:
THE PRIEST whose clerical abuse crimes were revealed in a newly-published chapter of the Murphy Report last month has had his face slashed by another inmate in Midlands Prison, it is reported this morning.
The Star says that Tony Walsh – dubbed ‘Fr Filth’, who was defrocked in 1989 by the Pope after years of sexual abuse allegations – was attacked on his way back to his cell after attending Mass in the Portlaoise jail yesterday morning, and was cut from his ear to his cheek.
Walsh had to be rushed to hospital as a result, Michael O’Toole writes, where he received up to a dozen stitches. Walsh was unable to identify his attacker, it is thought.
The chapter from the Murphy Report detailing Walsh’s actions was only cleared for publication last month, when Walsh was convicted on 17 counts of sexual abuse.
The report outlined how the first allegations of misconduct made against him – involving a boy of 8 – were lodged in 1978, just two days after he was ordained.
Though he was only formally defrocked by Pope John Paul II in 1989, he had admitted his conduct to colleagues four years previously, but no action had been taken.
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has admitted that Walsh “should not have been allowed to stay in ministry one day longer” after the first allegations were made.
http://www.thejournal.ie/paedophile-priest-has-face-slashed-in-jail-2011-01/
http://www.thejournal.ie/defrocked-priest-tony-walsh-abused-hundreds-of-children-2010-12/
THE HIGH COURT has ruled that a chapter from the Murphy Report that has been withheld from publication until this point can now be released, following the sentencing of former priest Tony Walsh on 17 counts of sexual abuse.
Because of Walsh’s impending trial, chapter 19 of the Murphy report was not permitted to be published before now.
Walsh still has the right to appeal his sentence, however such an appeal would come before the Court of Criminal Appeal and would not involve a jury. Justice Paul Gilligan said this would mean there would be no prejudice to witnesses by reference to the person named in chapter 19, RTÉ reports.
Another chapter of the Murphy Report, chapter 20, will continue to be withheld pending the outcome of criminal proceedings.
The Murphy Report investigated the handling of allegations of child sexual abuse by church and state, which involved 46 priests in the Dublin archdiocese between 1975 and 2004.
At the beginning of this month, Walsh was sentenced to 16 years imprisonment for 17 counts of sexual abuse, including five counts of raping one child. The final four years of the term were suspended.
http://www.thejournal.ie/withheld-murphy-report-chapter-can-now-be-published-2010-12/
By Jay Lindsay, Associated Press
BOSTON — A prominent lawyer for Boston-area clergy sex abuse victims on Wednesday released a new list of accused abusers, saying it was time to "end the secrecy."
The list includes previously undisclosed names of 19 Catholic priests, brothers and one deacon who attorney Mitchell Garabedian said were among those accused in the scores of cases his firm settled with the church for "tens of millions" of dollars.
None of the newly disclosed people on the list have been tried or convicted of a crime, and at least 16 of the 19 are dead, including all who were priests of the Boston Archdiocese.
Garabedian said he released the names to protect the public, help victims heal and end what he says is a culture of secrecy in the church that enabled abusers to get away with their crimes for years.
Garabedian said he grew tired of waiting for Boston Cardinal Sean O'Malley to release a similar list.
"We've been waiting for O'Malley to come forward," he said. "I thought it was his obligation to come forward, and we gave him time to come forward. ... It's time to end the secrecy."
The list included 117 names of those accused in cases settled by Garabedian's firm in roughly the last 15 years.
The new names included 11 priests of the Boston archdiocese and one deacon. The other seven names were of brothers and priests from various religious orders.
Kelly Lynch, a spokeswoman for the Boston Archdiocese, said the 12 men associated with the archdiocese were dead when they were first accused of sexually abusing a child.
"Clearly, no child was put at risk because these names were not in the public domain," she said.
She said the archdiocese was still working to disclose more information was complex because there were "serious due process concerns" about releasing names of accused priests "whose guilt or innocence has not been established."
Of the three men whose identities are newly disclosed and who are still alive, two are brothers with religious orders, Nolan Farrell and Dennis Raeihle.
Farrell's location could not immediately be determined. The group BishopAccountability.org, which tracks clergy sex abuse cases nationally and linked to Garabedian's list, said Raeihle was affiliated with the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement in Garrison, New York.
A call to the order was not immediately returned.
The third man was the Rev. Donald Joyce of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate in San Antonio, Texas. A spokesman for the order declined to comment.
BishopAccountability.org said it now has 240 names of priests or other religious workers who have substantive abuse accusations against them and who worked in Boston at some point. But Terence McKiernan of the group said there are likely far more. He said dioceses that have fully disclosed their numbers of abusive priests have a far higher percentage of priests with substantive abuse allegations than what's been revealed in Boston.
Garabedian urged other attorneys who've handled clergy sex abuse cases to release similar lists. Attorney Carmen Durso, who's handled
numerous cases in the Boston area, said it was a good idea. But he said he didn't think he had any new names to disclose, and that releasing such names is something the archdiocese should do without prodding.
Durso said when an accuser's name goes public, his victims are more likely to step forward and get help.
The U.S. clergy sex abuse crisis erupted in Boston in 2002 after records revealed church officials kept molestation complaints secret. O'Malley was brought in to clean up the matter after Cardinal Bernard Law resigned.
Lynch, the archdiocese spokeswoman, said there is "no organization in the Commonwealth that has done more (than the archdiocese) in recent times to educate and empower children, parents and staff on the terrible and pervasive problem of sexual abuse in our society."
She said the archdiocese has settled 800 cases since O'Malley took over in 2003, completed 60,000 background checks on priests and other church workers who have contact with children and trained 300,000 children and 175,000 adults to spot and report abusers.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2011-01-20-sex-abuse-priests-named-20_ST_N.htm?csp=34news