Sunday, February 13, 2011

Catholic priest sexual abuse of children in Philadelphia and the World.


February 13, 2011
February 13 is … Get A Different Name Day and Dream Your Sweet Day
BRUCE A. BRENNAN BLOG FROM THE WORLD AND MY MIND
The news as I see it and the views as I want them.

What new name would you pick if today you could just change your name today, not your life, just your name. Would you upset your parents or family?

In a story out of Philadelphia I have been watching on the internet, two Roman Catholic priests, a former priest and a Catholic school teacher were charged Thursday with raping young boys, while a former high-ranking church official was accused of transferring problem priests to new parishes without warning anyone of prior sex-abuse complaints. The charges stemmed from a two-year grand jury investigation into priest abuse in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, the second such inquiry in the city. In the rare, if not unprecedented, move, the grand jury charged Monsignor William Lynn with endangering children in his role as head of priest placement. Lynn 60, had a duty to protect children in the five-county archdiocese and refer priests with known sexual problems for rehabilitation or prosecution, District Attorney Seth Williams said in announcing the charges. "He instead lied to parishioners and went out of his way to reassign priests without telling pastors or principals that they were pedophiles," Williams said. Lynn's defense lawyer said the two endangerment counts should not apply because Lynn did not have any children under his care. He also questioned the merits of the counts, which carry a maximum 14-year prison term. "We certainly don't concede for a moment that he knew he was putting children at risk," lawyer Tom Bergstrom told The Associated Press

The charges brought by the Grand Jury in a True Bill may not be sustainable in a Court of Law. Grand Juries generally indict anyone the States requests indictments on. The Defendant does not participate in the Grand Jury process unless called as a witness but they would and should take the 5th, so called lawyer up if called. The indictments will get the churches attention, however. Is that what we want our Judicial System to do, indict to make a point?

While American dioceses have paid hundreds of millions of dollars to abuse victims to settle civil lawsuits in recent years, criminal charges in clergy sex abuse cases have been rare. People who were molested as children often wait for decades before gaining the courage to come forward usually long after the statute of limitation for criminal charges has run out. A small number of accused clergy have been prosecuted and convicted since 2002, when the clergy sex abuse crisis erupted in the Archdiocese of Boston. However, no bishop or church administrator has been taken to trial over their failures to protect children from accused priests. Lynn featured prominently in a scathing 2005 grand jury report that found 63 priests in the Philadelphia archdiocese had been credibly accused of child sexual assault over several decades while local church officials turned a blind eye. Frustrated prosecutors then concluded, though, that they could not file any criminal charges because the statute of limitations on the crimes had expired.

Pennsylvania has since revised laws to give child sex-assault victims more time to report abuse, while the archdiocese under Cardinal Justin Rigali has pledged to refer credible complaints to law enforcement. The current case, referred by the archdiocese, involves two victims, one of them a boy who was allegedly abused by two priests and his sixth-grade teacher at St. Jerome Parish, starting when he was a 10-year-old altar boy in 1998. The Rev. Charles Engelhardt, now 64, and the Rev. Edward Avery, now 68, both raped the boy in the church sacristy after Mass, the report charged. Engelhardt also allegedly gave the boy wine and showed him pornography. He later told Avery about the encounter, prompting Avery to demand that the boy perform a striptease act after Mass, followed by oral and anal sex, the report said. Bernard Shero, now 48, his sixth-grade teacher the next year, raped him during a ride home from school, then made him walk home, the report said. The victim, later plagued like many abuse victims by depression and substance abuse, reported the attacks years later.

Avery had been on the church's radar since at least 1992. That's when a 29-year-old medical student told the archdiocese that Avery, who frequently moonlighted as a disc jockey at city nightclubs, had abused him in the 1970s and 1980s. Avery was sent to six months of sex-offender treatment, although his parish was told the leave was for unspecified "health" reasons, the report said. Despite the center's recommendation that he be kept away from adolescents or other vulnerable minors afterward, Lynn recommended him for a position at a parish with an adjacent elementary school, authorities said. Bevilacqua agreed, but sent him instead to a different parish, St. Jerome. Rigali succeeded Bevilacqua in 2003 and soon afterward deemed the medical student's abuse claims credible. He removed Avery from his priestly duties that December. "That was five years too late to protect Billy (a pseudonym for the altar boy) and who knows how many children," the report said. According to the report, Bevilacqua could not be charged because there was no evidence linking him to the alleged cover-up of the assaults against these two victims. His lawyer told investigators the 87-year-old retired prelate suffers from cancer and dementia. While investigating Engelhardt, authorities came to charge his predecessor at St. Jerome, the Rev. James J. Brennan, with raping a 14-year-old boy. The alleged abuse occurred during a leave of absence Brennan requested in 1996 to deal with what he called his own childhood sexual abuse, the report said. The victim, a member of St. Andrew Church in the Philadelphia suburb of Newtown, later attempted suicide, the report said. Lynn and other church officials had also been aware that Brennan, now 47, had a prior history of impropriety with minors, the report said. And, even today, 37 accused priests in the archdiocese work in assignments that put them near children while complaints are investigated or, in some cases, deemed not credible, the grand jury found. This seems to be one of the Catholic Churches biggest sins. They have a shortage of priests so they just recycle the bad ones rather than discharge them, usually while keeping any accusations of wrongdoing secret.

"We would have assumed, by the year 2011, after all the revelations both here and around the world, that the church would not risk its youth by leaving them in the presence of priests subjected to substantial evidence of abuse. That is not the case," the report said. Lynn, still acting as a priest and assigned to a parish in suburban Downingtown, and the four others were surrendering Thursday to await arraignment. A defense lawyer for Brennan did not immediately return a message; it wasn't immediately clear whether the others had lawyers. Rigali, once again, vowed to take the grand jury report and its calls for further reforms seriously. Lying is a sin also Cardinal Rigali A lay Catholic group called BishopAccountability.org that tracks data related to the priest abuse problem praised Williams' decision to pursue church leaders. "To date, not one bishop or church official has spent a single day in jail for enabling crimes against children," the group said in a statement. Sponsored Links"Victims of sexual abuse by clergy may find this news deeply painful. Our thoughts and prayers are with them. It is in this spirit that the Archdiocese of Philadelphia is cooperating fully with the civil authorities in this and all related matters," Rigali said in a statement. We will see.

The Diocese of Manchester, N.H., averted criminal charges in 2002 by admitting it had harmed children when church officials transferred accused priests among parishes, and agreed to allow state prosecutors to audit the diocese's child protection policies. 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. Also in 2003, Phoenix Bishop Thomas O'Brien admitted he sheltered abusive priests in a deal that carried immunity from indictment for obstruction of justice. He agreed to institute reforms and cede some authority to other church officials.

The Catholic Church priest scandal has been around for decades. It receives so much press because the Catholic Church is so big, it is the largest land owner in the world, and because the sexual abusers are usually homosexual in nature. The fact is, the per centage of child sexual abusers in the priesthood is no higher than in the general male population. It is also likely lower in the Catholic Church than
it is in other Christian churches.

Two quick fixes seem as plain as day. One is allow priests to marry. This should weed out many who see the priesthood as a sanctuary for closet homosexuals. The second fix is to allow women to become priests. Neither of these reforms will end the crimes by priests against young children but nothing else is being done so they couldn’t hurt.

All churches and religious organizations downplay the sexual abuse story for obvious reasons. Although much of the information is kept secret, two web sites are quite good at investigating the data available. They are;
                        http://www.religioustolerance.org/clergy_sex.htm
                                                            and

Check these sites out if you are interested.

Music at the top of the charts on February 13th through history;

1948 Ballerina - Vaughn Monroe
I’ll Dance at Your Wedding - Buddy Clark with The Ray Noble Orchestra
Now is the Hour - Bing Crosby
I’ll Hold You in My Heart (Till I Can Hold You in My Arms) - Eddy Arnold
1956 Rock and Roll Waltz - Kay Starr
No, Not Much! - The Four Lads
Teenage Prayer - Gale Storm
Sixteen Tons - Tennessee Ernie Ford
1964 I Want to Hold Your Hand - The Beatles
You Don’t Own Me - Leslie Gore
Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um - Major Lance
Begging to You - Marty Robbins
1972 Let’s Stay Together - Al Green
Without You - Nilsson
Precious and Few - Climax
One’s on the Way - Loretta Lynn
1980 Rock with You - Michael Jackson
Do that to Me One More Time - The Captain & Tennille
Coward of the County - Kenny Rogers
Leaving Louisiana in the Broad Daylight - The Oak Ridge Boys
1988 Could’ve Been - Tiffany
Seasons Change - Expose
I Want to Be Your Man - Roger
Wheels - Restless Heart


BRUCE A. BRENNAN
DEKALB, IL 60115
COPYRIGHT 2011

VISIT ANY OF THE SITES LISTED FOR REVIEW, RESEARCH, ORDERING MY WRITING PRODUCTS OR TO CONTACT ME.
Go to web sites below to buy books by Bruce A. Brennan. It is still a good time to purchase an interesting and inexpensive read. My second book should be available by February 15, 2011. More information will be forthcoming.
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ (do a quick search, Title, my name)
http://www.smashwords.com/ Do a Title or author search, Check this site out.
Check out the site below. Paybox is a new site, competing with PayPal, etc. Sign up is free. It seems good for small businesses or ebay users.

“Never say you know a man until you have divided an inheritance with him.”




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