Author Topic: Catholic church official charged in sex abuse coverup...  (Read 1862 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Catholic church official charged in sex abuse coverup...
« on: March 03, 2011, 10:36:55 AM »
There's another Catholic Church pedophile case currently sizzling on the grill; this one's based in the Philadelphia, PA area.

What's different this time is that it's not just the perps... who are being held to task. There's also an enabler... who has criminal charges filed against him here.

This short piece out of Nova Scotia nicely summarizes the key issues of this case:

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TRURO Daily News · Colchester County - Nova Scotia
Philadelphia Catholic church official charged in sex abuse coverup as times, laws change

Published on February 11, 2011

PHILADELPHIA - Philadelphia's district attorney has broken new ground in how authorities are dealing with the scandal over sexual abuse by priests.

This week, Seth Williams announced a grand jury has charged a high-ranking Roman Catholic official for allegedly failing to protect children. It's the first such charge brought against a member of the church hierarchy in the U.S. since the scandal erupted nearly a decade ago.

Some advocates for victims say political obstacles prevented these prosecutions before.

But former Philadelphia D.A. Lynne Abraham says that cases uncovered previously were past the statutes of limitations. Since then, she says laws have been changed to clear the way for prosecutions.

A lawyer for the charged church official, Monsignor William Lynn, says his client didn't knowingly put children at risk.


© Copyright 2008 - 2011
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Offline Ursus

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Downingtown priest charged with child endangerment
« Reply #1 on: March 03, 2011, 11:35:20 AM »
The Daily Local News
Downingtown priest charged with child endangerment

By ERIC S. SMITH, Staff Writer
Published: Friday, February 11, 2011




DOWNINGTOWN — A Downingtown priest, who previously served as the Secretary of the Clergy for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, will face two charges of endangering the welfare of a child after failing to report two priests who were allegedly abusing children, according to the Philadelphia District Attorney.

Monsignor William Lynn, who has been the priest at St. Joseph's in Downingtown since 2004, was responsible for investigating alleged abuse and making recommendations to "ensure that priests could not reoffend," District Attorney Seth Williams announced Thursday. Lynn served at the Archdiocese in that capacity from 1992 until 2004. Lynn is also listed on the St. Joseph School website as the school's pastor. The Archdiocese did not return comment about Lynn's current status with the school.

The charges against Lynn come after a grand jury found sufficient evidence to charge three priests — Edward Avery, Charles Engelhardt and James Brennan — as well as a teacher, Bernard Shero, with rape, indecent sexual assault and related offenses, Williams said. The priests and teacher all worked for St. Jerome Parish in Philadelphia at the time of the alleged assaults.

The grand jury report states that Lynn knew of previous reports of abuse by the priests in question. Avery was sent to a therapy program for sexual offenders and after he left the program, Lynn assigned him to St. Jerome, which had a school. Avery's previous record was not reported to anyone. The therapy program made recommendations that Avery should not be at a facility with minors, the grand jury report states.

The grand jury found that Lynn also knew of previous relations between Brennan and young boys and simply hid them. Brennan served as a member of the faculty at Cardinal O'Hara High School and was known to have "inappropriate relationship" with students, the grand jury report states.

"Monsignor Lynn acted as if his job was to protect the abuser, never the abused," the grand jury report states.

St. Joseph's parishioner Tom Caridi said that faith will play an important role as the charges and court proceedings continue.

"One would really have to be strong in their faith and believe that the truth would come out," Caridi said Thursday. "The truth should guide our decisions and any response in this matter. The truth will hopefully find Msgr. Lynn innocent of these charges.

"An unfortunate situation has come about for us in the local parish who responded well to Msgr. Lynn. We found him to be a humble servant in Christ."

Caridi admitted that the parishioners were unaware of what exactly Lynn's role was with the Archdiocese and what he did there. Fellow parishioner Kathy Wusinich agreed with Caridi about the way the congregation viewed Lynn.

"I can say nothing but good things about Msgr. Lynn," Wusinich said. "He is a very kind and good man. I've known him since he's been here and he's been nothing but a good, holy man."

The grand jury alleged that Avery, Engelhardt and Shero raped a 10-year-old boy about 12 years ago. The men reportedly committed the rapes on separate occasions.

In 1996, Brennan allegedly raped a 14-year-old boy, the grand jury found.

While at the Archdiocese, Lynn worked under Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua. The grand jury found insufficient evidence to charge Bevilacqua in this case, but said more reports of abuse "are still coming in."

These findings come more than five years after a 2005 Philadelphia grand jury found that the Catholic church was covering up many acts of sexual abuse. That report says there was documentation of abuse by at least 63 priests in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Cardinal Justin Rigali, the archbishop of Philadelphia, said in a statement that he is willing to work with the district attorney's office during the investigation.

"It is my intention to consider carefully and take very seriously any observations and recommendations of this grand jury," Rigali said.

"At this moment, as people of faith we must reach out in compassion and support for one another and for all who are affected by this news. Victims of sexual abuse by clergy may find this news deeply painful. Our thoughts and prayers are with them."

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, is a national organization that is designed to help those who have been abused by the clergy.

"This might be the first time ever that a high-ranking individual Catholic official has been specifically charged with recklessly endangering children," SNAP spokeswoman Barbara Dorris said in a written statement. "This news may mean that finally one of the hundreds of complicit Catholic officials who have hidden or are hiding clergy sex crimes might be brought to justice. Our hearts ache for these two victims who, along with hundreds of other Philly area boys and girls, were betrayed twice — first by predatory Catholic priests and employees, and later by Msgr. Lynn."

To contact staff writer Eric S. Smith, send an e-mail to [email protected].


© Copyright 2011 The Daily Local News
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Offline Ursus

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Docs for "Downingtown priest charged with child endangerment
« Reply #2 on: March 03, 2011, 11:40:05 AM »
Docs accompanying the just above article, "Downingtown priest charged with child endangerment" (by Eric S. Smith; Friday, Feb. 11, 2011; The Daily Local News):

  • Click here to read the grand jury report (PDF).
  • Click here to read Cardinal Rigali's statement (PDF).
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Offline Ursus

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Philadelphia church official charged in scandal
« Reply #3 on: March 04, 2011, 12:06:34 PM »
Middletown Journal · OHIO
Philadelphia church official charged in scandal

The Associated Press · Updated 8:52 PM Friday, February 11, 2011


    In this undated photo released by the Philadelphia District Attorney's office, Monsignor William Lynn is shown. Lynn, the former secretary of clergy under Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, is charged with felony endangerment according to a grand jury report released Thursday Feb, 10, 2011. Prosecutors say Lynn transferred abusive priests to new parishes with schools and youth groups without warning parish officials. (AP Photo/Courtesy of the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office)[/list]

    PHILADELPHIA — Nearly a decade after the scandal over sexual abuse by priests erupted, Philadelphia's district attorney has taken a step no prosecutor in the U.S. had taken before: filing criminal charges against a high-ranking Roman Catholic official for allegedly failing to protect children.

    "I love my church," said District Attorney Seth Williams, himself a Catholic, "but I detest the criminal behavior of priests who abuse or allow the abuse of children."

    Williams announced charges Thursday against three priests, a parochial school teacher and Monsignor William Lynn, who as secretary of the clergy was one of the top officials in the Philadelphia Archdiocese from 1992 to 2004.

    The three priests and the teacher were charged with raping boys. Lynn, 60, was accused not of molesting children but of endangering them. A damning grand jury report said at least two boys were sexually assaulted because he put two known pedophiles in posts where they had contact with youngsters.

    "The rapist priests we accuse were well-known to the secretary of clergy, but he cloaked their conduct and put them in place to do it again," the report said.

    The grand jury report went further and suggested that the archbishop at the time, Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, who retired in 2003, may have known what was going on. But no charges were brought against him. The report said that there is no direct evidence against the cardinal and that his lawyer testified that the 87-year-old Bevilacqua is suffering from dementia and cancer.

    "On balance, we cannot conclude that a successful prosecution can be brought against the cardinal — at least for the moment," the grand jury said.

    Lynn could get up to 14 years in prison if convicted. His attorney, Tom Bergstrom, said: "We certainly don't concede for a moment that he knew he was putting children at risk."

    Mark Crawford, New Jersey state director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, joined a few other activists for a rally Friday outside the archdiocese headquarters to welcome the charges.

    "It's really incredible it's taken this long to say, 'Enough is enough,'" he said.

    Five years ago, Williams' predecessor as district attorney issued a scathing report accusing the church of protecting child-molesting priests. But no charges were brought against the church, a huge and powerful entity in the Philadelphia region, where about one-third of the population is Catholic. With 1.5 million Catholics, the archdiocese is one of the biggest in the country.

    The Rev. Thomas Doyle, a canon lawyer and one-time church insider who has become an advocate for victims of clergy abuse, said the charges against the monsignor reflect the shrinking power and influence of the Catholic Church since the crisis erupted in Boston in 2002.

    "Up until now, there have been threats and the possibility of indictment, but for political reasons, people did not want to move in on the Catholic Church. It's never happened," Doyle said. "I really think this is a major breakthrough and I really hope that it is a signal and a sign of encouragement for district attorneys and federal prosecutors around the country."

    Lynne Abraham, Williams' predecessor as district attorney, said the reason there haven't been charges before isn't political. She said victims are afraid to come forward when the wrongdoers are in positions of authority. And by the time the scandal unfolded, the statute of limitations had expired in the cases she investigated, she said.

    Cardinal Justin Rigali, who succeeded Bevilacqua, said in a statement that the church is cooperating with authorities and would consider the grand jury's recommendations. He also said there are no priests working in the archdiocese who "have an admitted or established allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against them."

    Outside the U.S., one Catholic bishop in France was convicted of shielding a priest in a sex-abuse. Pierre Pican, bishop of Bayeux-Lisieux in northwestern France, was sentenced to a three-month suspended prison term.

    Over the past decade, prosecutors have pressed high-ranking church officials in the U.S. to accept responsibility for covering up abuse but never actually brought criminal charges against them as individuals.

    For instance, Phoenix Bishop Thomas O'Brien admitted in 2003 that he sheltered abusive priests, an acknowledgment made as part of a deal with prosecutors that gave him immunity from any potential obstruction-of-justice charge. He agreed to institute reforms and cede some authority to other church officials.

    The Diocese of Manchester, N.H., admitted wrongdoing but avoided criminal charges in 2003. The Archdiocese of Cincinnati pleaded no contest in 2003 to charges of failing to tell authorities about sex abuse claims against priests, paid a fine and created a fund for victims.

    And in 2005, the Boston Archdiocese struck a deal to avoid an unprecedented federal indictment on allegations of making a false statement to federal authorities. Among other things, the archdiocese agreed to closer scrutiny of its child-protection programs.

    The Philadelphia District Attorney's Office also convened a grand jury in 2002 to look into abuse by priests since the 1960s. Its report, issued in 2005, said that there was evidence of abuse by at least 63 priests and that church officials had transferred offenders to other parishes and dioceses. While Bevilacqua and other church officials were criticized, none were charged.

    Abraham, district attorney at the time of the 2005 report, which included names and photographs of allegedly abusive priests, said Friday that it was the statute of limitations that held her office back. She joined other advocates in pressing for Pennsylvania's child protection laws to be rewritten. She said the resulting changes helped clear the way for the charges Williams brought.

    In a statement announcing the case against the five defendants Thursday, Williams said: "I know ultimately they will be judged by higher authority. For now, it is my responsibility as the elected district attorney of all the citizens of Philadelphia to hold them accountable."

    ___

    Lavoie reported from Boston. Associated Press Religion Writer Rachel Zoll in New York and videographer Angie Yack in Philadelphia also contributed.

    ___

    February 12, 2011 01:47 AM EST
    Copyright 2011, The Associated Press.
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    Offline none-ya

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    Re: Catholic church official charged in sex abuse coverup...
    « Reply #4 on: March 05, 2011, 05:42:03 AM »
    WWJD?
    « Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
    ?©?€~¥@

    Offline Ursus

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    Re: WWJD
    « Reply #5 on: March 05, 2011, 10:13:09 AM »
    Quote from: "none-ya"
    WWJD?
    Geeeezzzz...


     :clown:
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    Offline Ursus

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    4 priests charged in sex abuse investigation
    « Reply #6 on: March 20, 2011, 11:27:04 PM »
    Here's the in-depth local coverage; pics accompanying this article to be posted immediately following...

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    The Philadelphia Inquirer — Breaking News
    Posted on Thu, Feb. 10, 2011

    4 priests charged in sex abuse investigation

    By David O’Reilly
    Inquirer Staff Writer


    Monsignor William Lynn, former head of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia's Office for Clergy, has been charged for allegedly failing to protect children from sexual abuse by priests, District Attorney Seth Williams announced today.

    Two felony counts of endangering the welfare were lodged against Lynn follow a grand jury investigation, Williams said at a news conference.

    Williams also announced the Revs. Charles Engelhardt, 64, and Edward Avery, 68, and Bernard Shero, 47, a former 6th grade teacher at St. Jerome's School in Northeast Philadelphia, had been charged with raping and sexually assaulting the same boy in the parish between 1998, when he was 10 years old, and 2000.

    Another priest, the Rev James Brennan, 47, is charged with raping and sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy in 1996.

    All five men were arrested today, official said.

    Williams said Lynn, who was the Archdiocese's Secretary of the Clergy from 1992 to 2004, "supervised two of the abusers . . . knew they were dangerous and chose to expose them to new victims."

    Since 2004 Lynn has served as pastor of St. Joseph's Church in Downingtown, a parish of nearly 4,000 families.

    As head of the clergy office, Lynn oversaw all priest personnel issues, which included advising Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua and his successor, Cardinal Justin Rigali, on the assignment of priests; interviewing persons who reported sexual abuse by a priests; and overseeing the treatment of clergy known to have abused children.

    In a message to church deacons, Rigali said he could not comment directly on the grand jury report because he had not yet received it.

    But, he added: "I know the release of this report will be painful and my deep concern is for all of those who have been abused. I urge all the faithful of the Archdiocese to pray for, to extend every concern for and remain open to understanding the experience of the victims. It is in that spirit that we reflect upon the grand jury's actions and the recommendations they make."

    At Lynnn's church in Downingtown, workers in the parish office declined comment, abruptly referring reporters to Donna Farrell, the archdiocesan spokeswoman.

    When an Inquirer reporter began to speak with a female parishioner outside the building, one of the workers ran out, grabbed her, and pulled her inside.

    Several other parishioners expressed shock at news of the charges but declined to give their names. A man arriving for choir practice said he did not have enough information to comment. A woman who pulled up at the adjacent church school - which her daughter attends - said she did not want her remarks to reflect adversely on the school.

    "We love this school," she said. "I'm absolutely stunned; we totally trusted him."

    Today's charges come nearly 5 1/2 years after a Philadelphia grand jury excoriated the Archdiocese of Philadelphia for an "immoral cover-up" of its sexually abusive clergy, and for creating what it said was a climate that exposed hundreds of children to assault.

    Although the 2005 report directed much of its ire at Bevilacqua, the Roman Catholic archbishop from 1988 to 2003, it mentioned Lynn 652 times - more than any other member of the archdiocesan hierarchy, including Bevilacqua.

    "Secretary for Clergy Lynn . . . treated victims as potential plaintiffs. Not only did they not receive apologies acknowledging their abuse, but many were bullied, intimidated, lied to, even investigated themselves," the report said.

    It also accused Lynn of repeatedly failing to investigate abuse charges, reassigning abusive priests, and concealing their crimes from civil authorities and the Catholic laity.

    "It became apparent to the Grand Jurors that Msgr. Lynn was handling the cases precisely as his boss [Bevilacqua] wished," it said.

    The assistant district attorneys who wrote the scathing, 468-page report in 2005 said their office had sought ways to bring criminal charges against several archdiocesan leaders but were frustrated by Pennsylvania's "inadequate" state laws, such as the statute of limitations.

    Read the full Grand Jury report (PDF)

    Inquirer staff writer Kathleen Brady Shea contributed to this story.


    Copyright 2011 Philly.com
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    Offline Ursus

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    Pics for "4 priests charged in sex abuse investigation"
    « Reply #7 on: March 21, 2011, 12:34:04 AM »
    St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Downingtown, PA:

      "CHERISHING OUR PAST
      EMBRACING OUR FUTURE"
      [/list]

      Pics accompanying the just above article follow:

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      Msgr. William Lynn, inset, faces criminal charges of failing to protect children from sexual abuse by two priests. He is pastor at St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Downingtown. (Tom Gralish/Staff)


      Shown: Rev. Edward Avery, top left; Rev. Charles Engelhardt, top right; Rev. James Brennan, bottom left; and, Monsignor William Lynn, bottom right. Source: Philadelphia District Attorney's Office.


      Bernard Shero, 47, a former 6th grade teacher at St. Jerome's School in Northeast Philadelphia. (Source: Philadelphia District Attorney's Office)


      Copyright 2011 Philly.com
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