A Peruvian court sentenced a Catholic priest to 35 years in prison on Tuesday for repeatedly raping a boy in the school where he was chaplain – one of the few times Peru has jailed clergy accused of sex abuse.
The court found that Waldir Perez used his position as priest and chaplain at a private school in a poor district to abuse the boy between July 2010 and April 2012.
The boy was 10 years old when Perez first sexually assaulted him, the criminal chamber of Peru’s Supreme Court said in a statement.
Perez, who must also pay the victim 8,000 soles ($2,439) in reparations, confessed to the crimes, the court said. Medical and psychological tests also backed up the boy’s testimony.
The victim said that Perez once gave him 150 soles (about $45) after sexually abusing him so he could buy an MP3 player, the court said.
The Catholic Church has been rocked by sexual abuse revelations in the past decade, especially in the United States and Europe. In recent years, similar accusations against Church members have been growing in majority Catholic Latin America, where clergy are more active in schools.
Pope Francis has vowed to hold all sex abusers in the Church accountable. But victims say he has still not made the changes needed to protect children and punish offenders.
The sentencing of Perez comes as Peru’s attorney general is investigating whether the founder and former head of an elite Catholic society, Luis Fernando Figari, sexually abused children.
A victim of child abuse at a prestigious Queensland private school, who is about to be the subject of royal commission hearings, has called for the nationwide implementation of laws to prevent churches and schools escaping legal liability for covered-up cases of pedophilia.
The victim, “John’’ — who does not wish to be named — has been fighting for changes to statute of limitations laws. The changes were recently endorsed by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse but only Victoria has adopted the reforms. The royal commission will begin public hearings in Brisbane next week.
Brisbane Grammar School and St Paul’s Anglican School are being investigated over their response to the abuse of scores of students by two pedophiles; Kevin “Skippy’’ Lynch, at both schools, and Gregory Knight at the Anglican school.
Formal complaints had been made about Lynch more than a decade before he was eventually investigated, with the veteran teacher killing himself in 1997 just hours after being arrested.
A class action by 86 victims of Lynch was settled with the schools’ denying liability.
A victim of Lynch, John, has written a 75,000-word submission to the royal commission and has renewed a plea for legal changes to current Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk that he first made to her Labor predecessor, Anna Bligh, in 2009. A professional, John, is expected to be a star witness at the hearing.
He launched legal action against the Anglican Diocese of Brisbane in a separate case in 2007 over his abuse by Lynch at St Paul’s in the late 1980s and early 90s. He sought compensation only for actual economic loss for unearned income and the cost of medical treatment. The Anglican Diocese of Brisbane admitted in 2008 that there was “concrete evidence” of his abuse and a forensic psychologist reported John had been injured as a result of the abuse by Lynch.
But diocesan insurers raised a voluntary time limit defence to defeat his case, which prevents victims from suing three years after they turn 18 — unless they have new evidence.
He was forced to settle his claim in 2009 and sign a deed releasing the diocese from any further claim.
The church took the stance despite Brisbane Anglican Archbishop Phillip Aspinall publicly backing John’s request to relax the statute of time limits on abuse cases, which he labelled “harsh and inequitable’’.
In a letter to then premier Ms Bligh, Dr Aspinall said the laws should be changed, but the government took no action.
“Despite my being such a reasonable litigant, the diocese exploited me and exploited the time limits, forcing me to settle my claim for less than 10 per cent of the actual financial losses that I could prove that I had suffered,” John wrote to Ms Palaszczuk.
John is determined to protect the rights of abuse victims. In a five-page letter to Ms Palaszczuk, he detailed how institutions had escaped liability. “Relying on their inherent morality … has been tried for the past 100 years and proven to have consistently failed,” he said. “Until these institutions fear victims … suing them as adults, these institutions will have no self-interest in maintaining the safety of children in their care.”
Ms Palaszczuk was not available for comment.
Full article: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/in-depth/sex-abuse-victim-in-plea-to-reform-statute-of-limitations-laws/story-fngburq5-1227584629247?sv=9979889889a7ff61822d22f5d0bdf963
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 Reform2015-10-28 03:16:122015-10-28 03:16:12Michael McKenna, Sex abuse victim in plea to reform statute of limitations laws, The Australian
Filmmaker Danny Ben-Moshe had no interest at first in making a follow-up to Code of Silence, the Walkley-winning documentary about Manny Waks, the whistleblower who lifted the lid on child sex abuse within Melbourne’s Orthodox Jewish community.
But listening to the testimony presented to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse, he was dumb-struck at what he describes as the “phenomenally preposterous” answer a prominent rabbi gave to a question about appropriate adult conduct.
What was meant to be a jokey remark about making a sequel became reality, and 48 hours later he was filming outside Melbourne’s County Court.
The clincher was that the leaders of Melbourne Yeshivah Centre, who had refused to talk to the filmmakers in Code of Silence, were now under the spotlight in the courtroom making cringeworthy and clumsy confessions. Rabbi Yosef Feldman, among others, had unwittingly given them a gift.
“It was the prevarication, the obfuscation, the denials, the twisting,” recalls Ben-Moshe of the courtroom testimony.
In Breaking the Silence, a self-contained “sequel” to Code of Silence, the spotlight is again focused on Manny Waks and his parents and the fallout that followed Waks’ very public revelations of the abuse he suffered at the hands of members of the ultra-Orthodox Chabad sect. Waks and his father Zephaniah are now widely considered to be personae non grata in the close-knit community.
One year later, others have come forward with similar allegations, while perpetrators have been prosecuted. For Ben-Moshe and his producer Dan Goldman, the focus has shifted from what happened to how Yeshivah and the wider Jewish community has dealt with the “sordid scandal”.
“Manny went to Yeshivah several times before he went public. They weren’t interested. They mismanaged this all the way through the process, to [the point they were] hauled before the Royal Commission. In fact, the Yeshivah Centre wrote to the managing director of the ABC saying [Code of Silence] should not be made and the filmmakers … have no capacity to make this film.
“Which is really like saying, ‘Hello, we’ve got a story’. That’s how completely bizarre the whole approach and their hostility to any form of scrutiny and any form of reflection on the way they mishandled this whole thing is.”
Ben-Moshe, himself a practising Jew and active participant in Melbourne’s Jewish community, insists that the revelations about Yeshivah (similar scandals have also rocked the Maccabi Jewish sport organisation) is not specifically about putting that community on trial. He is also acutely sensitive to the possibilities of stirring anti-Semitism by exposing such unsavoury events.
“One of the things it tells us, it doesn’t matter whether you’re a Jew, a Catholic, a Muslim, or an agnostic, it’s about power. All this is about is protecting the institution over the individual and there’s a reason: the Catholic Church and in particular the Chabad movement are conservative religious organisations where the power of the rabbi and the power of the archbishop is unquestioned.
“I don’t think anyone in the Yeshivah leadership meant for this to happen … But they got it profoundly wrong. And the point was, it was too hard because of the power and reverence of the institution and the rabbis to turn around and say we got it wrong.”
In the latter part of Breaking the Silence, Waks decides to confront a man now living overseas who is believed to be one of the abusers. By Ben-Moshe’s own reckoning this point, at which documentary “observation” and “participation” morph, was highly fraught and uncomfortable.
“The whole story is an uncomfortable one and it was a genuine part of Manny’s journey,” says Ben-Moshe of the intervention, which he defends, while also pointing out that another victim, who is seen in the documentary but not identified, clearly disagrees with Waks’ actions.
“Manny feels he deserves justice and closure. I’m not judging him on that right,” says Ben-Moshe.
Like Code of Silence, Ben-Moshe expects the new film will send shock waves around the world. The webcast of the Royal Commission hearings was watched by Jewish communities across the globe, and in particular in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights.
A deputy district attorney in Los Angeles who Ben-Moshe interviewed was also shunned when he started looking into abuse issues in his Chabad community.
“The real question is, will there be people who agree with the film, agree that these rabbis should have stood down, who will now stand up themselves and feel confident about being counted, or will they still be afraid of the repercussions?”
WHAT
Breaking The Silence
WHEN
ABC, Tuesday, 9.30pm
This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/tv-and-radio/powerful-documentary-on-child-sex-abuse-in-melbournes-jewish-orthodox-community-20151020-gkba4n.html
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 Reform2015-10-23 02:53:542015-10-23 02:53:54Paul Kalina, Powerful documentary on child sex abuse in Melbourne's Jewish orthodox community, The Sydney Morning Herald
Media contact: Jacquie Posey at 215-898-6460 or jposey@upenn.edu
Amanda Mott at 215-898-1422 or ammott@upenn.edu
Penn Panel on 10-year Anniversary of Grand Jury Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Philadelphia Archdiocese
Oct. 21, 2015
WHO: The University of Pennsylvania’s Program for Research on Religion and Urban Civil Society will host a panel discussion featuring:
Lynne Abraham, former district attorney of Philadelphia
The Rev. William Byron, professor of business and society, Saint Joseph’s University
Marci Hamilton, Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University
Maureen S. Rush, vice president for public safety and superintendent, Penn Police Department
John DiIulio, faculty director of PRRUCS, moderator
WHAT: “The Ramifications of the Philadelphia Grand Jury Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on its 10th Anniversary: Lessons Learned and Spurned”
WHEN: Wednesday, Oct. 28, 6:30-8 p.m.
WHERE: University of Pennsylvania, Claudia Cohen Hall,
Terrace Room, 249 South 36th St.
Ten years ago, a grand jury released a report detailing sexual abuse by priests of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. On Oct. 28, PRRUCS will host a panel discussion, “The Ramifications of the Philadelphia Grand Jury Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on its 10th Anniversary: Lessons Learned and Spurned.”
PRRUCS faculty director John DiIulio will moderate the discussion. Attendees must RSVP to wendyjen@sas.upenn.edu. Media are encouraged to get press credentials contact Jacquie Posey at 215-898-6460 or jposey@upenn.edu or Amanda Mott at 215-898-1422 or ammott@upenn.edu.
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 Reform2015-10-22 20:26:572015-10-22 20:26:57Phila Alert Wed, Oct 28 at Penn
The former Penn State assistant football coach convicted on multiple child sex-abuse charges will be returning to court for an appeal hearing.
WJAC-TV ( http://bit.ly/1NSfG3B ) reports that Judge John Cleland has ordered that Jerry Sandusky be moved from a state prison in Greene County to Bellefonte so he can be present for the Oct. 29 hearing.
Sandusky is appealing his 2012 conviction, claiming his trial attorney was ineffective. He also claims he was prejudiced because three former Penn State administrators awaiting trial on alleged cover-up charges weren’t available to testify at his trial.
The attorney general’s office already has filed a response calling the appeal “baseless.”
Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years for his conviction on more than 40 child-sex abuse charges.
Full article: http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/penn-state-coach-child-sex-abuse-appeal-34596223
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 Reform2015-10-22 17:36:302015-10-22 17:36:30Former Penn State Coach to Appear at Child Sex-Abuse Appeal, Associated Press
Peru court sentences Catholic priest to 35 years for raping boy, Reuters
/in International /by SOL ReformA Peruvian court sentenced a Catholic priest to 35 years in prison on Tuesday for repeatedly raping a boy in the school where he was chaplain – one of the few times Peru has jailed clergy accused of sex abuse.
The court found that Waldir Perez used his position as priest and chaplain at a private school in a poor district to abuse the boy between July 2010 and April 2012.
The boy was 10 years old when Perez first sexually assaulted him, the criminal chamber of Peru’s Supreme Court said in a statement.
Perez, who must also pay the victim 8,000 soles ($2,439) in reparations, confessed to the crimes, the court said. Medical and psychological tests also backed up the boy’s testimony.
The victim said that Perez once gave him 150 soles (about $45) after sexually abusing him so he could buy an MP3 player, the court said.
The Catholic Church has been rocked by sexual abuse revelations in the past decade, especially in the United States and Europe. In recent years, similar accusations against Church members have been growing in majority Catholic Latin America, where clergy are more active in schools.
Pope Francis has vowed to hold all sex abusers in the Church accountable. But victims say he has still not made the changes needed to protect children and punish offenders.
The sentencing of Perez comes as Peru’s attorney general is investigating whether the founder and former head of an elite Catholic society, Luis Fernando Figari, sexually abused children.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/27/us-peru-church-rape-idUSKCN0SL2WX20151027
Michael McKenna, Sex abuse victim in plea to reform statute of limitations laws, The Australian
/in Australia, International /by SOL ReformA victim of child abuse at a prestigious Queensland private school, who is about to be the subject of royal commission hearings, has called for the nationwide implementation of laws to prevent churches and schools escaping legal liability for covered-up cases of pedophilia.
The victim, “John’’ — who does not wish to be named — has been fighting for changes to statute of limitations laws. The changes were recently endorsed by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse but only Victoria has adopted the reforms. The royal commission will begin public hearings in Brisbane next week.
Brisbane Grammar School and St Paul’s Anglican School are being investigated over their response to the abuse of scores of students by two pedophiles; Kevin “Skippy’’ Lynch, at both schools, and Gregory Knight at the Anglican school.
Formal complaints had been made about Lynch more than a decade before he was eventually investigated, with the veteran teacher killing himself in 1997 just hours after being arrested.
A class action by 86 victims of Lynch was settled with the schools’ denying liability.
A victim of Lynch, John, has written a 75,000-word submission to the royal commission and has renewed a plea for legal changes to current Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk that he first made to her Labor predecessor, Anna Bligh, in 2009. A professional, John, is expected to be a star witness at the hearing.
He launched legal action against the Anglican Diocese of Brisbane in a separate case in 2007 over his abuse by Lynch at St Paul’s in the late 1980s and early 90s. He sought compensation only for actual economic loss for unearned income and the cost of medical treatment. The Anglican Diocese of Brisbane admitted in 2008 that there was “concrete evidence” of his abuse and a forensic psychologist reported John had been injured as a result of the abuse by Lynch.
But diocesan insurers raised a voluntary time limit defence to defeat his case, which prevents victims from suing three years after they turn 18 — unless they have new evidence.
He was forced to settle his claim in 2009 and sign a deed releasing the diocese from any further claim.
The church took the stance despite Brisbane Anglican Archbishop Phillip Aspinall publicly backing John’s request to relax the statute of time limits on abuse cases, which he labelled “harsh and inequitable’’.
In a letter to then premier Ms Bligh, Dr Aspinall said the laws should be changed, but the government took no action.
“Despite my being such a reasonable litigant, the diocese exploited me and exploited the time limits, forcing me to settle my claim for less than 10 per cent of the actual financial losses that I could prove that I had suffered,” John wrote to Ms Palaszczuk.
John is determined to protect the rights of abuse victims. In a five-page letter to Ms Palaszczuk, he detailed how institutions had escaped liability. “Relying on their inherent morality … has been tried for the past 100 years and proven to have consistently failed,” he said. “Until these institutions fear victims … suing them as adults, these institutions will have no self-interest in maintaining the safety of children in their care.”
Ms Palaszczuk was not available for comment.
Full article: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/in-depth/sex-abuse-victim-in-plea-to-reform-statute-of-limitations-laws/story-fngburq5-1227584629247?sv=9979889889a7ff61822d22f5d0bdf963
PA Alert: Wed., Oct. 28, 6:30pm
/in Pennsylvania /by SOL Reform10-Year Anniversary of the 2005 GJ Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Philadelphia Archdiocese, Open to the Public, RSVP requested
PRRUCS Event 1028_mh
Paul Kalina, Powerful documentary on child sex abuse in Melbourne’s Jewish orthodox community, The Sydney Morning Herald
/in Australia /by SOL ReformFilmmaker Danny Ben-Moshe had no interest at first in making a follow-up to Code of Silence, the Walkley-winning documentary about Manny Waks, the whistleblower who lifted the lid on child sex abuse within Melbourne’s Orthodox Jewish community.
But listening to the testimony presented to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse, he was dumb-struck at what he describes as the “phenomenally preposterous” answer a prominent rabbi gave to a question about appropriate adult conduct.
What was meant to be a jokey remark about making a sequel became reality, and 48 hours later he was filming outside Melbourne’s County Court.
The clincher was that the leaders of Melbourne Yeshivah Centre, who had refused to talk to the filmmakers in Code of Silence, were now under the spotlight in the courtroom making cringeworthy and clumsy confessions. Rabbi Yosef Feldman, among others, had unwittingly given them a gift.
“It was the prevarication, the obfuscation, the denials, the twisting,” recalls Ben-Moshe of the courtroom testimony.
In Breaking the Silence, a self-contained “sequel” to Code of Silence, the spotlight is again focused on Manny Waks and his parents and the fallout that followed Waks’ very public revelations of the abuse he suffered at the hands of members of the ultra-Orthodox Chabad sect. Waks and his father Zephaniah are now widely considered to be personae non grata in the close-knit community.
One year later, others have come forward with similar allegations, while perpetrators have been prosecuted. For Ben-Moshe and his producer Dan Goldman, the focus has shifted from what happened to how Yeshivah and the wider Jewish community has dealt with the “sordid scandal”.
“Manny went to Yeshivah several times before he went public. They weren’t interested. They mismanaged this all the way through the process, to [the point they were] hauled before the Royal Commission. In fact, the Yeshivah Centre wrote to the managing director of the ABC saying [Code of Silence] should not be made and the filmmakers … have no capacity to make this film.
“Which is really like saying, ‘Hello, we’ve got a story’. That’s how completely bizarre the whole approach and their hostility to any form of scrutiny and any form of reflection on the way they mishandled this whole thing is.”
Ben-Moshe, himself a practising Jew and active participant in Melbourne’s Jewish community, insists that the revelations about Yeshivah (similar scandals have also rocked the Maccabi Jewish sport organisation) is not specifically about putting that community on trial. He is also acutely sensitive to the possibilities of stirring anti-Semitism by exposing such unsavoury events.
“One of the things it tells us, it doesn’t matter whether you’re a Jew, a Catholic, a Muslim, or an agnostic, it’s about power. All this is about is protecting the institution over the individual and there’s a reason: the Catholic Church and in particular the Chabad movement are conservative religious organisations where the power of the rabbi and the power of the archbishop is unquestioned.
“I don’t think anyone in the Yeshivah leadership meant for this to happen … But they got it profoundly wrong. And the point was, it was too hard because of the power and reverence of the institution and the rabbis to turn around and say we got it wrong.”
In the latter part of Breaking the Silence, Waks decides to confront a man now living overseas who is believed to be one of the abusers. By Ben-Moshe’s own reckoning this point, at which documentary “observation” and “participation” morph, was highly fraught and uncomfortable.
“The whole story is an uncomfortable one and it was a genuine part of Manny’s journey,” says Ben-Moshe of the intervention, which he defends, while also pointing out that another victim, who is seen in the documentary but not identified, clearly disagrees with Waks’ actions.
“Manny feels he deserves justice and closure. I’m not judging him on that right,” says Ben-Moshe.
Like Code of Silence, Ben-Moshe expects the new film will send shock waves around the world. The webcast of the Royal Commission hearings was watched by Jewish communities across the globe, and in particular in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights.
A deputy district attorney in Los Angeles who Ben-Moshe interviewed was also shunned when he started looking into abuse issues in his Chabad community.
“The real question is, will there be people who agree with the film, agree that these rabbis should have stood down, who will now stand up themselves and feel confident about being counted, or will they still be afraid of the repercussions?”
WHAT
Breaking The Silence
WHEN
ABC, Tuesday, 9.30pm
This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/tv-and-radio/powerful-documentary-on-child-sex-abuse-in-melbournes-jewish-orthodox-community-20151020-gkba4n.html
Phila Alert Wed, Oct 28 at Penn
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformMEDIA ADVISORY
Media contact: Jacquie Posey at 215-898-6460 or jposey@upenn.edu
Amanda Mott at 215-898-1422 or ammott@upenn.edu
Penn Panel on 10-year Anniversary of Grand Jury Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Philadelphia Archdiocese
Oct. 21, 2015
WHO: The University of Pennsylvania’s Program for Research on Religion and Urban Civil Society will host a panel discussion featuring:
Lynne Abraham, former district attorney of Philadelphia
The Rev. William Byron, professor of business and society, Saint Joseph’s University
Marci Hamilton, Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University
Maureen S. Rush, vice president for public safety and superintendent, Penn Police Department
John DiIulio, faculty director of PRRUCS, moderator
WHAT: “The Ramifications of the Philadelphia Grand Jury Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on its 10th Anniversary: Lessons Learned and Spurned”
WHEN: Wednesday, Oct. 28, 6:30-8 p.m.
WHERE: University of Pennsylvania, Claudia Cohen Hall,
Terrace Room, 249 South 36th St.
Ten years ago, a grand jury released a report detailing sexual abuse by priests of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. On Oct. 28, PRRUCS will host a panel discussion, “The Ramifications of the Philadelphia Grand Jury Report on Child Sex Abuse in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on its 10th Anniversary: Lessons Learned and Spurned.”
PRRUCS faculty director John DiIulio will moderate the discussion. Attendees must RSVP to wendyjen@sas.upenn.edu. Media are encouraged to get press credentials contact Jacquie Posey at 215-898-6460 or jposey@upenn.edu or Amanda Mott at 215-898-1422 or ammott@upenn.edu.
PRRUCS panel 10 28 advisory
Former Penn State Coach to Appear at Child Sex-Abuse Appeal, Associated Press
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformThe former Penn State assistant football coach convicted on multiple child sex-abuse charges will be returning to court for an appeal hearing.
WJAC-TV ( http://bit.ly/1NSfG3B ) reports that Judge John Cleland has ordered that Jerry Sandusky be moved from a state prison in Greene County to Bellefonte so he can be present for the Oct. 29 hearing.
Sandusky is appealing his 2012 conviction, claiming his trial attorney was ineffective. He also claims he was prejudiced because three former Penn State administrators awaiting trial on alleged cover-up charges weren’t available to testify at his trial.
The attorney general’s office already has filed a response calling the appeal “baseless.”
Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years for his conviction on more than 40 child-sex abuse charges.
Full article: http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/penn-state-coach-child-sex-abuse-appeal-34596223