Lawsuit: Mormon church covered up sexual abuse at Hawaii camps
Courts » Two Utah men claim they were sexually molested decades ago as boys.
By Janelle Stecklein
| The Salt Lake Tribune
First Published Jan 23 2014 12:25 pm • Last Updated Jan 23 2014 07:01 pm
Two Utah men are suing the Mormon church claiming that decades ago they were sexually molested as boys after the church recruited them to pick pineapples in Hawaii.
A lawsuit filed Wednesday in the 2nd Circuit Court in Hawaii, alleges that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Maui Land and Pineapple Company Inc. and Youth Developmental Enterprises, recruited youths from Mormon communities in Utah and southern Idaho to go to camps in Maui to pick pineapples in the 1970s and 1980s, which led to them being sexually molested.
The camps were closed in the ‘90s, the lawsuit claims.
The men, now 41 and 42, now live in the Salt Lake City area.
The lawsuit claims that Mormon men in their 20s, who qualified for supervisory positions after completing their two-year missions, ran the camps, which recruited minors from church wards and scouting organizations.
The lawsuit claims that one man, who was appointed camp coordinator, branch president and stake high counselor for one of the camps, molested the two boys from 1986 until 1989.
The lawsuit also claims that the defendants knew of the camp coordinator’s “pedophilic sexual violence.”
Cody Craynor, a spokesman for the LDS church, said, “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has zero tolerance for abuse of any kind and works actively to prevent abuse. This case was filed yesterday, and many details in the legal complaint are unclear. The church will examine the allegations and respond appropriately.”
The alleged victims are seeking unspecified monetary damages, as well as changes to how the LDS Church deals with sexual abuse, and a written apology from the church.
The Maui Land and Pineapple Company Inc. did not immediately return messages left seeking comment.
The lawsuit was made possible by a Hawaii law passed in 2012 that increases the previous two-year time limit to bring sexual assault civil suits to eight years from the time an alleged victim turns 18, or three years from when an alleged victim realizes his or her injury is due to the sexual offense, according to attorneys for the two Utah men.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2014-01-24 19:48:202014-01-24 19:48:20This never would have gone to court without the Hawaii window!
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court faced three options Wednesday for extracting restitution from perpetrators of child pornography: Sock them for their victim’s full compensation, none of it, or something in between.
The justices didn’t like any of those options.
They all wanted “Amy” to be compensated for the estimated $3.4 million cost of her travails, which have made her childhood rape at the hands of her uncle one of the Internet’s most popular series of images for traffickers in child pornography.
They did not, however, think that Doyle Randall Paroline, who possessed two images and was sentenced in 2009 to two years in prison, should be held liable for the full amount. And while the federal government called for Paroline and others to pay fair shares for Amy’s psychotherapy and other costs, the justices had trouble with the math.
“The woman has undergone serious psychological harm because of her knowledge that there are thousands of people out there viewing her rape,” Justice Antonin Scalia said, later adding, “Each person increases the amount of her psychological harm.”
Amy, whose real name is not used in court papers, was raped and filmed at ages 8 and 9. It wasn’t until she was 17 that she learned the sex acts had gone viral on the Internet. As a result, her lawyers say, she could not finish college, has had trouble holding a job and will require weekly psychotherapy for the rest of her life
Since her images were discovered, federal authorities have identified more then 3,200 cases in which they were downloaded. They have won court orders for restitution totaling more than $1.7 million in 182 cases.
Deputy Solicitor General Michael Dreeben suggested that federal district court judges should decide how much each offender should pay, perhaps based on simple division. So far, he said, each one would be liable for about $18,000.
How, the justices wondered, should the first offender in such a system be treated if the ultimate number of offenders isn’t known?
“It doesn’t work very well for the first person,” Dreeben acknowledged.
The case stems from Congress’ passage of the Sexual Exploitation and Other Abuse of Children Act, which established penalties and restitution for sexual assault, domestic violence and child pornography. The law called for full restitution but did not specify who should pay what.
Amy’s attorney, Paul Cassell, argued that every offender should be held liable for the entire amount and made to pay what they can until she has been fully compensated. Otherwise, he said, it could take many years to reach the $3.4 million goal for Amy’s lifetime costs.
While the justices agreed she deserves the money, they didn’t agree that Paroline should be asked to pay it all. “Some limiting principle has to come into play,” Justice Stephen Breyer said.
How to estimate Paroline’s culpability in dollars and cents, however, proved impossible — and for good reason. Federal district court judges have come up with widely varying figures — some of which, Justice Elena Kagan said, appear to have been “plucked out of the air.”
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2014-01-22 20:26:092014-01-22 20:26:09Supreme Court in Ferber case said we need to stamp out child porn. This is an effective deterrent. Harm to victim occurs every time it is viewed.
Skvere Rebbe Allegedly Covered Up Latest Case Of New Square Child Sex Abuse, Allowed Alleged Molester To Continue To Teach In Square Schools
“My mother, my brother and I told him [Twersky] what was happening to me. He let him [Taubenfeld] walk free.…The community protected him.”
Moshe Menachem Taubenfeld
Skvere Rebbe Allegedly Covered Up Latest Case Of New Square Child Sex Abuse, Allowed Alleged Molester To Continue To Teach In Square Schools
Shmarya Rosenberg • Failedmessiah.com
The alleged victim of Moshe Menachem Taubenfeld reported Taubenfeld’s alleged sexual abuse to the Skvere Rebbe Rabbi David Twersky and other New Square leaders in late 2006 when the victim was 13- or 14-years old, the Journal News reported.
The victim, identified only as Laiby, said that when he and his family reported the abuse – which allegedly began in September 2001 after the young victim told Taubendeld how traumatized he was by the September 11 terror attacks – to Twersky, Twersky forbade them from reporting Taubenfeld, a teacher in Skvere schools, to police.
“My mother, my brother and I told him [Twersky] what was happening to me. He let him [Taubenfeld] walk free.…The community protected him. Since New Square did not want to deal with this, I went to police [in July 2013]. I need to feel a closure,” Laiby, who is now 20-years-old, reportedly said.
This mirrors the stories of other New Square child sex abuse victims who say they also went to Twersky to report child sex abuse and were ordered by him not to report the crimes to police and to not talk about them within the community or with reporters.
Twersky did not respond to requests for comment from the paper.
As FailedMessiah.com was the first to report, Taubenfeld – who was still teaching in Skvere schools and who had assumed the name of Mendel Zarkowsky (although his true identity was well known in New Square and was known to Twersky) – was arrested Friday. He is currently free on $25,000 bail.
His brother Hershel Taubenfeld – who also taught in Skvere hasidic schools – pleaded guilty to forcibly touching a young boy in 2011. His admission of guilt came after he was promised a no-prison sentence of six years of probation. He was originally charged with with 10 counts of forcible touching, 10 counts of endangering the welfare of a child, and 10 counts of third-degree sex abuse. All those charges are misdemeanors.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2014-01-21 20:22:372014-01-21 20:22:37This must stop and NY SOL reform must open the courts to all the victims they have destroyed
Ex-student calls teacher over alleged sex abuse, posts talk on YouTube
By Holly Yan, Cheri Mossburg and Janet DiGiacomo, CNN
updated 8:06 AM EST, Tue January 21, 2014
(CNN) — A woman who says a female teacher from middle school sexually abused her for years decided to confront the teacher — and post video of the exchange on YouTube.
Within hours, the educator resigned from her job at another school in California. Police launched an investigation. And the former student, who once felt powerless, now says she feels vindicated knowing the ex-teacher is no longer working with children.
The video
The former student, who calls herself “Jamie,” said the abuse started when she was 12 years old.
Woman records confrontation with alleged sexual abuser
“I am 28 years old and have been waiting years to get up enough courage to report a teacher for sexually abusing me for years,” Jamie’s caption on her YouTube video states.
“When I finally got up enough courage to report her, I found out that the statute of limitations was up and she will never have to pay for the things that she did to me.”
So she decided to expose the teacher on the Internet.
“I decided I’m going to call her to get some answers from her,” Jamie said to a camera in her home.
After the woman identified as the teacher picked up the phone, Jamie asked, “So what happens when a student comes in and says that they’re having (a) sexual relationship with a teacher?”
“I would involve law enforcement,” the woman said.
“So how is that any different from what you did” years ago, Jamie said.
“It’s not,” the woman replied.
“Do you realize that you brainwashed me, and you manipulated me, and that what you did was wrong?” Jamie asked.
“Yes. And I regret it,” the woman responded.
“You should be so ashamed and so disgusted with yourself,” Jamie said, raising her voice.
Shortly after Jamie posted the video on YouTube, she sent the link to her former teacher. The educator resigned within hours, said Jamie’s attorney, David Ring.
The teacher has not responded to CNN’s phone and e-mail requests for comment.
Police have launched an investigation into the case, but the statute of limitations may be an issue, Riverside police Lt. Guy Toussaint said. It all depends on what the investigation reveals and what crimes may have occurred.
The Alhambra Unified School District, where Jamie said the teacher most recently worked, has not responded to CNN’s request for comment. But according to CNN affiliate KABC, the school district said it contacted Alhambra police immediately after discovering the YouTube link.
The Alhambra Police Department said it notified Riverside police because the reported abuse allegedly took place in Riverside.
“At this time in the investigation, there have been no identified crimes involving the suspect that have occurred in Alhambra,” APD said in a statement.
Now that she’s a mother, Jamie said she wanted to make sure the teacher couldn’t work with children again.
“The reason why I wanted to do this was to expose her for what she really was and to protect other kids, because she shouldn’t be around anyone’s kids,” Jamie told reporters Monday. “It took a lot for me to come forward, but I kept thinking about my own kids, and how I wouldn’t want anything to happen to them.”
Jamie said the abuse took place ‘off and on” between the ages of 12 and 18. She said she didn’t come forward as a teenager because the teacher had brainwashed her.
“She told me that my family didn’t love me. She told me that nobody cared about me and that she was the only one that loved me and the only one that was there for me,” Jamie said. “She made me believe that she was my only friend, and that I could trust her.”
Jamie said she didn’t want a physical relationship — but that the teacher threatened her multiple times.
“She said that she would kill herself if I ever left. And I believed that,” Jamie said.
Now, more than a decade after middle school, Jamie said she feels greater control in her life.
“In the beginning, I thought there was nothing that I could do. But after the outcome, obviously, there is something I can do.”
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2014-01-21 20:08:412014-01-21 20:08:41God bless this survivor and she deserves SOL reform, CA!
WASHINGTON (AP) — A woman whose childhood rapes by her uncle were captured on camera and widely traded on the Internet wants the Supreme Court to make it easier for victims of child pornography to collect money from people who view the brutal images on their computers.
The case being argued at the Supreme Court on Wednesday involves a Texas man who pleaded guilty to having images of children engaged in sex acts on his computer. Doyle Randall Paroline is appealing an order holding him responsible for the full amount of losses, nearly $3.4 million, suffered by the woman known as Amy. Of the several hundred incriminating images on Paroline’s computer, just two were of Amy.
Advocates for child pornography victims say that holding defendants liable for the entire amount of losses better reflects the ongoing harm that victims suffer each time someone views the images online. The threat of a large financial judgment, coupled with a prison term, also might deter some people from looking at the images in the first place, the advocates say.
“The threat that a person in the child pornography market may well bear the entire cost of the harm done to the victim, even if they are a ‘minor player,’ is likely to be a large deterrent, especially when the harm done typically runs into the millions for a victim’s lifetime of care,” said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University. Hamilton wrote a brief in the case on behalf of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children.
The money is intended to cover the cost of her psychological care, lost income and attorneys’ fees.
Thirty-four states, dozens of victims’ rights and child advocacy groups, local prosecutors and members of Congress are urging the court to uphold the ruling against Paroline by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
No one has intervened on Paroline’s behalf. But his lawyer, Stanley Schneider of Houston, said in court papers that there is no link between the restitution ordered by the appeals court and Paroline’s conduct.
“An award of $3.4 million against an individual for possessing two images of child pornography is punitive and grossly disproportionate,” Schneider said. The $3.4 million estimate on the damages to the victim was calculated by a psychologist working for James Marsh, an attorney for Amy.
The Obama administration is trying to steer a middle course. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. said the government agrees with Amy that her injury comes from the widespread viewing on the Internet of the assaults by her uncle.
“The real question is whether … a court must impose all of Amy’s aggregate losses on each defendant. On that issue, Amy and the government take different views,” Verrilli told the court.
The administration said the correct answer is greater than zero and less than the entire amount and said trial judges should make the determination.
The issue centers on the interpretation of the federal law granting restitution to victims of sex crimes, including child pornography.
Regardless of the outcome of the court case, Congress could change the law. The U.S. Sentencing Commission recommended that lawmakers consider doing just that to eliminate confusion among federal judges about the right way to calculate restitution.
Amy’s lawyers estimate that tens of thousands of people worldwide have collected and viewed Amy’s images.
Since 2005, there have been about 2,000 prosecutions in federal court that, like Paroline’s, included images of the rapes, for which Amy’s uncle spent about 10 years in prison and paid a few thousand dollars for counseling sessions for Amy.
Marsh devised the idea of pursuing the people who were convicted of possessing Amy’s images, among other child pornography. He identified a provision of the 1994 Violence Against Women Act directing judges to order defendants to pay victims the “full amount” of their losses.
The psychologist employed by Marsh to tally the losses began filing claims on Amy’s behalf after she received notices from the Justice Department, under a separate law passed in 2004, telling her of people who had been arrested with her images on their computers.
Courts so far have awarded restitution in 182 cases and Amy has collected $1.6 million. Of that total, $1.2 million came from one man.
Typically, the court-ordered awards and the amounts collected have been much smaller, as little as $50 in one case, according to Justice Department records. Many judges have ordered no payments at all, Marsh said.
The restitution law does not allow Amy to receive more than the lifetime estimate of her losses, Marsh said. But until the 5th Circuit ruling, Marsh said, “She has been forced to go around the country endlessly seeking out defendants with assets. It’s endless, and it takes a toll on the victim.”
If upheld, the ruling would change the equation. Courts would not have to determine exactly how much harm any one defendant caused Amy. Instead, all defendants would be liable for the entire outstanding amount, raising the possibility that a few well-heeled people among those convicted might contribute most, if not all, of the remaining restitution.
Marsh said such an outcome would be just, and wealthy defendants could fight among themselves about who should pay what. “It’s really about shifting the burden from the innocent victim to the people who are responsible,” Marsh said.
The case is Paroline v. Amy Unknown and U.S., 12-8561.
After years of high-level obstruction and denial, there’s an air of justification in watching Vatican envoys squirm as a United Nations panel grilled them on the church’s worldwide clergy abuse epidemic. The Holy See’s represenative finds himself in the uncomfortable crosshairs of a high-profile interrogation – a long-anticipated moment for victims of the priests’ abuse.
The U.N. investigation drives home the point – particularly for U.S. Catholics – that priest abuse isn’t a Boston issue, nor an exclusively American problem, but rather a global crisis.
The official Vatican response to U.N. questioning falls short of accepting full responsibility for decades of child sexual abuse by its clerics. But the answers include refreshing pledges, finally, that Rome “gets it.”
In concert with the U.N. probe, Pope Francis delivered powerful remarks about the scandal in his homily during Thursday’s Mass at the Vatican.
Thus, corrupt priests, instead of giving the bread of life, give a poisoned meal to the holy people of God.” – Pope Francis
“Thus, corrupt priests, instead of giving the bread of life,” Francis said, “give a poisoned meal to the holy people of God.”
Will these admissions translate into more accountability, particularly for bishops who have been accused of covering up the priest abuse crisis by silencing young victims and shuffling abusers from parish to parish – and effectively spreading the abuse?
At Thursday’s Mass, however, the pope was joined by Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, the former Los Angeles archbishop who, recently publicized documents showed, also had a history of protecting abusive priests from prosecution.
As with other topics, such as homosexuality and economic inequality, Francis has been blunt and forthright on clergy sex abuse. But now he must show that the Vatican will not only speak loudly against the church’s systemic rape of its children for decades – but also that it will take concrete action to finally put a stop to the abuse and punish those who enabled it.
The pope can be forgiven for looking to a future in which the church will probably be a safer place for children. But he can’t be permitted to let past acts go unpunished so that healing can finally begin.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2014-01-18 19:09:062014-06-22 17:55:09Catholic Church called to answer for priest abuse scandal, finally: Editorial, Star-Ledger Editorial Board
This never would have gone to court without the Hawaii window!
/in Hawaii /by SOL Reformhttp://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/ news/57438270-78/church- lawsuit-sexual-camps.html.csp
Lawsuit: Mormon church covered up sexual abuse at Hawaii camps
Courts » Two Utah men claim they were sexually molested decades ago as boys.
By Janelle Stecklein
| The Salt Lake Tribune
First Published Jan 23 2014 12:25 pm • Last Updated Jan 23 2014 07:01 pm
Two Utah men are suing the Mormon church claiming that decades ago they were sexually molested as boys after the church recruited them to pick pineapples in Hawaii.
A lawsuit filed Wednesday in the 2nd Circuit Court in Hawaii, alleges that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Maui Land and Pineapple Company Inc. and Youth Developmental Enterprises, recruited youths from Mormon communities in Utah and southern Idaho to go to camps in Maui to pick pineapples in the 1970s and 1980s, which led to them being sexually molested.
The men, now 41 and 42, now live in the Salt Lake City area.
The lawsuit claims that Mormon men in their 20s, who qualified for supervisory positions after completing their two-year missions, ran the camps, which recruited minors from church wards and scouting organizations.
The lawsuit claims that one man, who was appointed camp coordinator, branch president and stake high counselor for one of the camps, molested the two boys from 1986 until 1989.
The lawsuit also claims that the defendants knew of the camp coordinator’s “pedophilic sexual violence.”
Cody Craynor, a spokesman for the LDS church, said, “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has zero tolerance for abuse of any kind and works actively to prevent abuse. This case was filed yesterday, and many details in the legal complaint are unclear. The church will examine the allegations and respond appropriately.”
The alleged victims are seeking unspecified monetary damages, as well as changes to how the LDS Church deals with sexual abuse, and a written apology from the church.
The Maui Land and Pineapple Company Inc. did not immediately return messages left seeking comment.
The lawsuit was made possible by a Hawaii law passed in 2012 that increases the previous two-year time limit to bring sexual assault civil suits to eight years from the time an alleged victim turns 18, or three years from when an alleged victim realizes his or her injury is due to the sexual offense, according to attorneys for the two Utah men.
jstecklein@sltrib.com
Twitter @sltribjanelle
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/ news/57438270-78/church- lawsuit-sexual-camps.html.csp
Supreme Court in Ferber case said we need to stamp out child porn. This is an effective deterrent. Harm to victim occurs every time it is viewed.
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformSupreme Court weighs restitution in child pornography case
http://www.usatoday.com/story/ news/nation/2014/01/22/ supreme-court-child- pornography-restitution/ 4774101/
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court faced three options Wednesday for extracting restitution from perpetrators of child pornography: Sock them for their victim’s full compensation, none of it, or something in between.
The justices didn’t like any of those options.
They all wanted “Amy” to be compensated for the estimated $3.4 million cost of her travails, which have made her childhood rape at the hands of her uncle one of the Internet’s most popular series of images for traffickers in child pornography.
They did not, however, think that Doyle Randall Paroline, who possessed two images and was sentenced in 2009 to two years in prison, should be held liable for the full amount. And while the federal government called for Paroline and others to pay fair shares for Amy’s psychotherapy and other costs, the justices had trouble with the math.
“The woman has undergone serious psychological harm because of her knowledge that there are thousands of people out there viewing her rape,” Justice Antonin Scalia said, later adding, “Each person increases the amount of her psychological harm.”
Amy, whose real name is not used in court papers, was raped and filmed at ages 8 and 9. It wasn’t until she was 17 that she learned the sex acts had gone viral on the Internet. As a result, her lawyers say, she could not finish college, has had trouble holding a job and will require weekly psychotherapy for the rest of her life
Since her images were discovered, federal authorities have identified more then 3,200 cases in which they were downloaded. They have won court orders for restitution totaling more than $1.7 million in 182 cases.
Deputy Solicitor General Michael Dreeben suggested that federal district court judges should decide how much each offender should pay, perhaps based on simple division. So far, he said, each one would be liable for about $18,000.
How, the justices wondered, should the first offender in such a system be treated if the ultimate number of offenders isn’t known?
“It doesn’t work very well for the first person,” Dreeben acknowledged.
The case stems from Congress’ passage of the Sexual Exploitation and Other Abuse of Children Act, which established penalties and restitution for sexual assault, domestic violence and child pornography. The law called for full restitution but did not specify who should pay what.
Amy’s attorney, Paul Cassell, argued that every offender should be held liable for the entire amount and made to pay what they can until she has been fully compensated. Otherwise, he said, it could take many years to reach the $3.4 million goal for Amy’s lifetime costs.
While the justices agreed she deserves the money, they didn’t agree that Paroline should be asked to pay it all. “Some limiting principle has to come into play,” Justice Stephen Breyer said.
How to estimate Paroline’s culpability in dollars and cents, however, proved impossible — and for good reason. Federal district court judges have come up with widely varying figures — some of which, Justice Elena Kagan said, appear to have been “plucked out of the air.”
“In criminal sentencing, imprecision and estimation is the order of the day,” Dreeben said. “A reasonable estimation is better than all or none.” news/nation/2014/01/22/ supreme-court-child- pornography-restitution/ 4774101/
http://www.usatoday.com/story/
This must stop and NY SOL reform must open the courts to all the victims they have destroyed
/in New York /by SOL ReformSkvere Rebbe Allegedly Covered Up Latest Case Of New Square Child Sex Abuse, Allowed Alleged Molester To Continue To Teach In Square Schools
Moshe Menachem Taubenfeld
Skvere Rebbe Allegedly Covered Up Latest Case Of New Square Child Sex Abuse, Allowed Alleged Molester To Continue To Teach In Square Schools
Shmarya Rosenberg • Failedmessiah.com
The alleged victim of Moshe Menachem Taubenfeld reported Taubenfeld’s alleged sexual abuse to the Skvere Rebbe Rabbi David Twersky and other New Square leaders in late 2006 when the victim was 13- or 14-years old, the Journal News reported.
The victim, identified only as Laiby, said that when he and his family reported the abuse – which allegedly began in September 2001 after the young victim told Taubendeld how traumatized he was by the September 11 terror attacks – to Twersky, Twersky forbade them from reporting Taubenfeld, a teacher in Skvere schools, to police.
“My mother, my brother and I told him [Twersky] what was happening to me. He let him [Taubenfeld] walk free.…The community protected him. Since New Square did not want to deal with this, I went to police [in July 2013]. I need to feel a closure,” Laiby, who is now 20-years-old, reportedly said.
This mirrors the stories of other New Square child sex abuse victims who say they also went to Twersky to report child sex abuse and were ordered by him not to report the crimes to police and to not talk about them within the community or with reporters.
Twersky did not respond to requests for comment from the paper.
As FailedMessiah.com was the first to report, Taubenfeld – who was still teaching in Skvere schools and who had assumed the name of Mendel Zarkowsky (although his true identity was well known in New Square and was known to Twersky) – was arrested Friday. He is currently free on $25,000 bail.
His brother Hershel Taubenfeld – who also taught in Skvere hasidic schools – pleaded guilty to forcibly touching a young boy in 2011. His admission of guilt came after he was promised a no-prison sentence of six years of probation. He was originally charged with with 10 counts of forcible touching, 10 counts of endangering the welfare of a child, and 10 counts of third-degree sex abuse. All those charges are misdemeanors.
God bless this survivor and she deserves SOL reform, CA!
/in California /by SOL Reformhttp://www.cnn.com/2014/01/21/ justice/california-teacher- alleged-sex-assault/index. html?c=homepage-t
Ex-student calls teacher over alleged sex abuse, posts talk on YouTube
(CNN) — A woman who says a female teacher from middle school sexually abused her for years decided to confront the teacher — and post video of the exchange on YouTube.
Within hours, the educator resigned from her job at another school in California. Police launched an investigation. And the former student, who once felt powerless, now says she feels vindicated knowing the ex-teacher is no longer working with children.
The video
The former student, who calls herself “Jamie,” said the abuse started when she was 12 years old.
“I am 28 years old and have been waiting years to get up enough courage to report a teacher for sexually abusing me for years,” Jamie’s caption on her YouTube video states.
“When I finally got up enough courage to report her, I found out that the statute of limitations was up and she will never have to pay for the things that she did to me.”
So she decided to expose the teacher on the Internet.
“I decided I’m going to call her to get some answers from her,” Jamie said to a camera in her home.
After the woman identified as the teacher picked up the phone, Jamie asked, “So what happens when a student comes in and says that they’re having (a) sexual relationship with a teacher?”
“I would involve law enforcement,” the woman said.
“So how is that any different from what you did” years ago, Jamie said.
“It’s not,” the woman replied.
“Do you realize that you brainwashed me, and you manipulated me, and that what you did was wrong?” Jamie asked.
“Yes. And I regret it,” the woman responded.
“You should be so ashamed and so disgusted with yourself,” Jamie said, raising her voice.
“I am. I am,” the woman said.
30 day sentence for teacher who raped his 14-year-old student
Shortly after Jamie posted the video on YouTube, she sent the link to her former teacher. The educator resigned within hours, said Jamie’s attorney, David Ring.
The teacher has not responded to CNN’s phone and e-mail requests for comment.
Police have launched an investigation into the case, but the statute of limitations may be an issue, Riverside police Lt. Guy Toussaint said. It all depends on what the investigation reveals and what crimes may have occurred.
The Alhambra Unified School District, where Jamie said the teacher most recently worked, has not responded to CNN’s request for comment. But according to CNN affiliate KABC, the school district said it contacted Alhambra police immediately after discovering the YouTube link.
The Alhambra Police Department said it notified Riverside police because the reported abuse allegedly took place in Riverside.
“At this time in the investigation, there have been no identified crimes involving the suspect that have occurred in Alhambra,” APD said in a statement.
Former sixth grade teacher admits sex with boy
Why now?
Now that she’s a mother, Jamie said she wanted to make sure the teacher couldn’t work with children again.
“The reason why I wanted to do this was to expose her for what she really was and to protect other kids, because she shouldn’t be around anyone’s kids,” Jamie told reporters Monday. “It took a lot for me to come forward, but I kept thinking about my own kids, and how I wouldn’t want anything to happen to them.”
Jamie said the abuse took place ‘off and on” between the ages of 12 and 18. She said she didn’t come forward as a teenager because the teacher had brainwashed her.
Ex-L.A. teacher sentenced to 25 years in lewdness case
“She told me that my family didn’t love me. She told me that nobody cared about me and that she was the only one that loved me and the only one that was there for me,” Jamie said. “She made me believe that she was my only friend, and that I could trust her.”
Jamie said she didn’t want a physical relationship — but that the teacher threatened her multiple times.
“She said that she would kill herself if I ever left. And I believed that,” Jamie said.
Now, more than a decade after middle school, Jamie said she feels greater control in her life.
“In the beginning, I thought there was nothing that I could do. But after the outcome, obviously, there is something I can do.”
Ex-PTA president accused of making child porn at elementary school
CNN’s Dave Alsup and Artemis Moshtaghian contributed to this report.
Court To Decide On Child Porn Victim Restitution
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformCourt To Decide On Child Porn Victim Restitution
by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) — A woman whose childhood rapes by her uncle were captured on camera and widely traded on the Internet wants the Supreme Court to make it easier for victims of child pornography to collect money from people who view the brutal images on their computers.
The case being argued at the Supreme Court on Wednesday involves a Texas man who pleaded guilty to having images of children engaged in sex acts on his computer. Doyle Randall Paroline is appealing an order holding him responsible for the full amount of losses, nearly $3.4 million, suffered by the woman known as Amy. Of the several hundred incriminating images on Paroline’s computer, just two were of Amy.
Advocates for child pornography victims say that holding defendants liable for the entire amount of losses better reflects the ongoing harm that victims suffer each time someone views the images online. The threat of a large financial judgment, coupled with a prison term, also might deter some people from looking at the images in the first place, the advocates say.
“The threat that a person in the child pornography market may well bear the entire cost of the harm done to the victim, even if they are a ‘minor player,’ is likely to be a large deterrent, especially when the harm done typically runs into the millions for a victim’s lifetime of care,” said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University. Hamilton wrote a brief in the case on behalf of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children.
The money is intended to cover the cost of her psychological care, lost income and attorneys’ fees.
Thirty-four states, dozens of victims’ rights and child advocacy groups, local prosecutors and members of Congress are urging the court to uphold the ruling against Paroline by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
No one has intervened on Paroline’s behalf. But his lawyer, Stanley Schneider of Houston, said in court papers that there is no link between the restitution ordered by the appeals court and Paroline’s conduct.
“An award of $3.4 million against an individual for possessing two images of child pornography is punitive and grossly disproportionate,” Schneider said. The $3.4 million estimate on the damages to the victim was calculated by a psychologist working for James Marsh, an attorney for Amy.
The Obama administration is trying to steer a middle course. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. said the government agrees with Amy that her injury comes from the widespread viewing on the Internet of the assaults by her uncle.
“The real question is whether … a court must impose all of Amy’s aggregate losses on each defendant. On that issue, Amy and the government take different views,” Verrilli told the court.
The administration said the correct answer is greater than zero and less than the entire amount and said trial judges should make the determination.
The issue centers on the interpretation of the federal law granting restitution to victims of sex crimes, including child pornography.
Regardless of the outcome of the court case, Congress could change the law. The U.S. Sentencing Commission recommended that lawmakers consider doing just that to eliminate confusion among federal judges about the right way to calculate restitution.
Amy’s lawyers estimate that tens of thousands of people worldwide have collected and viewed Amy’s images.
Since 2005, there have been about 2,000 prosecutions in federal court that, like Paroline’s, included images of the rapes, for which Amy’s uncle spent about 10 years in prison and paid a few thousand dollars for counseling sessions for Amy.
Marsh devised the idea of pursuing the people who were convicted of possessing Amy’s images, among other child pornography. He identified a provision of the 1994 Violence Against Women Act directing judges to order defendants to pay victims the “full amount” of their losses.
The psychologist employed by Marsh to tally the losses began filing claims on Amy’s behalf after she received notices from the Justice Department, under a separate law passed in 2004, telling her of people who had been arrested with her images on their computers.
Courts so far have awarded restitution in 182 cases and Amy has collected $1.6 million. Of that total, $1.2 million came from one man.
Typically, the court-ordered awards and the amounts collected have been much smaller, as little as $50 in one case, according to Justice Department records. Many judges have ordered no payments at all, Marsh said.
The restitution law does not allow Amy to receive more than the lifetime estimate of her losses, Marsh said. But until the 5th Circuit ruling, Marsh said, “She has been forced to go around the country endlessly seeking out defendants with assets. It’s endless, and it takes a toll on the victim.”
If upheld, the ruling would change the equation. Courts would not have to determine exactly how much harm any one defendant caused Amy. Instead, all defendants would be liable for the entire outstanding amount, raising the possibility that a few well-heeled people among those convicted might contribute most, if not all, of the remaining restitution.
Marsh said such an outcome would be just, and wealthy defendants could fight among themselves about who should pay what. “It’s really about shifting the burden from the innocent victim to the people who are responsible,” Marsh said.
The case is Paroline v. Amy Unknown and U.S., 12-8561.
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View/Save as PDF:Court To Decide On Child Porn Victim Restitution _ NPR
Catholic Church called to answer for priest abuse scandal, finally: Editorial, Star-Ledger Editorial Board
/in New Jersey /by SOL ReformAfter years of high-level obstruction and denial, there’s an air of justification in watching Vatican envoys squirm as a United Nations panel grilled them on the church’s worldwide clergy abuse epidemic. The Holy See’s represenative finds himself in the uncomfortable crosshairs of a high-profile interrogation – a long-anticipated moment for victims of the priests’ abuse.
The U.N. investigation drives home the point – particularly for U.S. Catholics – that priest abuse isn’t a Boston issue, nor an exclusively American problem, but rather a global crisis.
The official Vatican response to U.N. questioning falls short of accepting full responsibility for decades of child sexual abuse by its clerics. But the answers include refreshing pledges, finally, that Rome “gets it.”
In concert with the U.N. probe, Pope Francis delivered powerful remarks about the scandal in his homily during Thursday’s Mass at the Vatican.
Thus, corrupt priests, instead of giving the bread of life, give a poisoned meal to the holy people of God.” – Pope Francis
“Thus, corrupt priests, instead of giving the bread of life,” Francis said, “give a poisoned meal to the holy people of God.”
Will these admissions translate into more accountability, particularly for bishops who have been accused of covering up the priest abuse crisis by silencing young victims and shuffling abusers from parish to parish – and effectively spreading the abuse?
At Thursday’s Mass, however, the pope was joined by Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, the former Los Angeles archbishop who, recently publicized documents showed, also had a history of protecting abusive priests from prosecution.
As with other topics, such as homosexuality and economic inequality, Francis has been blunt and forthright on clergy sex abuse. But now he must show that the Vatican will not only speak loudly against the church’s systemic rape of its children for decades – but also that it will take concrete action to finally put a stop to the abuse and punish those who enabled it.
The pope can be forgiven for looking to a future in which the church will probably be a safer place for children. But he can’t be permitted to let past acts go unpunished so that healing can finally begin.