News Story of the Day
Former priest sentenced to 30 years for child pornography
By Submitted News, February 13, 2017, Sussex Living
A former U.S. Navy lieutenant commander and ordained Catholic priest was recently sentenced to 30 years in prison for charges involving the sexual exploitation of children, announced U.S. Attorney Charles M. Oberly III of the District of Delaware.
'Network Of Child Abusers' In Church Group Preyed On Boys During Camping Trips
By
An Anglican Church-founded youth group was used by a "network of sexual perpetrators" who knew of each other's offending while they abused children for more than a decade, a new report says.
The Child Sex Abuse Royal Commission report found the Church of England's Boys' Society's (CEBS) only formal response to the sex abuse was to strip awards given to certain offenders, while the body's national council decided against an apology in 2009.
Church laws deliberately misused to cover up sex claims: Royal Commission
By Rachel Browne, February 9, 2017, The Sydney Morning Herald
Catholic church authorities deliberately misused their own legal code to excuse claims of child sexual abuse and protect alleged perpetrators, according to testimony before a royal commission.
The fourth day of an inquiry into the Catholic church's approach to child sexual abuse heard that canon law has been used to justify the cover-up of alleged crimes.
How does a canonical trial work?
By Krystal Paco, February 08, 2017, Kuam
Archbishop Anthony Apuron is reportedly being tried in the Vatican for allegations of child sex abuse, but he was spotted in Fairfield, California just last month. What's the deal? One expert gives us a better understanding of protocol in Rome.
What can we expect from the ongoing canonical trial in Rome for Archbishop Apuron? Nothing.
California outlaws secret abuse settlements, hidden evidence
By Joelle Castiex, February 6, 2017, The Worthy Adversary
The era of secret child sex abuse settlements in California is over.
I am usually quick to beat up on California Governor Jerry Brown for his poor record on protecting institutions who cover-up child sex abuse. But a new law enacted January 1, 2017, slipped under my radar— and organizations who harbor men and women who prey on children should be on notice.
Royal commission into child sexual abuse: 1,880 alleged perpetrators identified in Catholic Church
By Philippa McDonald and Riley Stuart, February 5, 2017, ABC.net.au
More than 20 per cent of the members of some Catholic religious orders — including Marist Brothers and Christian Brothers — were allegedly involved in child sexual abuse, a royal commission hearing in Sydney has been told.
Nearly 2,000 Catholic Church figures, including priests, religious brothers and sisters, and employees, were identified as alleged perpetrators in a report released by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Canon lawyers: Guam clergy abuse trials could rip open secret archives
By Haidee V Eugenio
Guam clergy sexual abuse trials could rip open secret archives that every bishop or archbishop is required to keep under canon law, U.S.-based experts on laws governing the Catholic Church said.
The church secret archives contain sensitive records that could pertain to priest misconduct such as their sexual abuse of children, substance abuse and alcoholism, as well as mental health challenges, lawyers said.
SOFT JUSTICE Peter Ball, paedo bishop and pal of Prince Charles is free from prison halfway through his sentence for abusing 18 teen boys
A PREDATORY paedophile bishop and close pal of Prince Charles has been freed from prison halfway through his sentence.
Retired Bishop of Gloucester Peter Ball, now 84, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 for grooming and abusing 18 teenagers and young men.
One later committed suicide.
Elite private school allowed sex abuse for decades, grand jury finds
By Tony Rhodin, lehighvalleylive.com, February 1, 2017
Students were sexually abused over more than 50 years at a small private school in Bucks County, and although administrators knew of the crimes, they weren't reported to authorities, a county grand jury report says.
Most of the acts are past the statute of limitations so charges can't be brought, and the one case that could be prosecuted won't be at the request of the victim, the Bucks County District Attorney's Office said in a news release Wednesday.