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 Reform2015-09-24 17:53:162015-09-24 17:53:16Professor Hamilton's pro bono amicus brief on constitutionality of revival SOL legislation
Assemblywoman Margaret Markey says NY is Among the Worst States in all America for How Victims Are Treated and NY’s Bishops are the Biggest Roadblock to SOL Reform
We are all excited about the momentous visit of Pope Francis, but disappointed that so little attention has been paid to the scourge of childhood sexual abuse, one of the most urgent topics of concern among so many New York Catholics.
The fight to address this issue in many states is directed at reform of archaic statute of limitations (SOLs) that restrict the time for victims to come forward and expose abusers and the organizations that hid or protected them. New York currently ranks among the very worst states in all of America for how it deals with victims — right at the bottom of all 50 states along with Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Indiana.
If a NY victim of child sex abuse doesn’t come forward within five years after their 18th birthday, they forever lose the opportunity to bring charges. Since research shows that many if not most abuse survivors do not come to grips with what happened to them until well into adulthood, if ever, that means that most victims never get justice and pedophiles remain free to abuse new generations of children.
My Child Victims Act of New York (A2872A/S63A) would to completely eliminate the civil statute of limitations for child sex abuse in the future and get justice for older victims. Even though the measure has passed the Assembly four time, it has never come to the floor of the State Senate and the most vocal opponent of this SOL reform is the New York Catholic Conference of Bishops.
I was encouraged by strong message of the Holy Father to his Pontifical Commission earlier this year that there was no place in the ministry for abusers and his call for reconciliation and healing for past victims. He has backed up those views by creating a Vatican tribunal to hold bishops accountable for cover-ups and failure to prevent abuse.
There is no limit to what is a life-time of suffering and anguish for so many victims of childhood sexual abuse. That is why there should be no limit on the ability of victims and society to hold abusers accountable. Nor should there be any limit on accountability for institutions and organizations that deliberately protected and hid perpetrators.
Earlier this year I reached out to His Holiness to ask for his help in convincing the Bishops of New York to follow his lead. During his visit here, I want to see Pope Francis help us transform the eminent opponents within his flock, New York’s Bishops, into advocates for children and survivors by urging them to support SOL reform in New York State in the future.
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 Reform2015-09-24 14:35:162015-09-24 14:41:18MY PLEA TO POPE FRANCIS: Please Ask Your NY Bishops to Follow Your Lead on Child Sex Abuse Offences to Show Mercy for Survivors
State Rep. Mark Rozzi was offered VIP tickets to attend papal events in Philadelphia this weekend.
Raised in the Catholic Church, the Berks County Democrat declined. Like many other survivors of clergy sex abuse, Rozzi finds the visit from Pope Francis and the reception extended painful and insulting.
“It’s so frustrating seeing everybody get so excited that the pope’s coming,” Rozzi said. “This is all we hear right now. What you hear is him talk about the fact that he wants to help this group or that group, but there is no mention of wanting to meet with victims.”
MARKROZZI.JPG
State Rep. Mark Rozzi, (D-Berks), plans to sit out his VIP invitation to see Pope Francis in Philadelphia. Rozzi says the church has not done enough to prosecute sexually abusive clergy. Seen here in March, Rozzi joined other lawmakers to call for reform of statutes of limitation. Mark Pynes | mpynes@pennlive.com
Mark Pynes | mpynes@pennlive.com
Rozzi, who was 13 when he and two other friends were sexually molested by priests in the Philadelphia Archdiocese, has long been at odds with the church. One of the priest died in 1999, having never been prosecuted for the alleged crimes as a result of expired statute of limitation. Rozzi’s two childhood friends committed suicide.
He has for years pushed in the House, legislation that would amend the statute of limitation. The bills would largely lift the expired limitations for prosecution and allow adults abused as children by clergy to press charges against their alleged abusers.
“It’s an insult,” said Rozzi of the papal visit. “Seeing how the church has treated us and now the church is blocking justice for us and welcoming this guy with open arms like what church did in the past doesn’t matter. It’s not OK. Things aren’t right. There are victims out there still committing suicide. It’s got to stop. The only way is to open the courts and let the voices be heard.”
Francis arrived in the U.S. on Tuesday and is spending Wednesday in Washington, having met with President Obama at the White House in the morning. He will address Congress on Thursday, before making his way this weekend to Philadelphia, where is scheduled to celebrate Mass before 1.5 million faithful.
Pope Francis
Pope Francis reaches from the popemobile for a child that is brought to him, during a parade in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)
Alex Brandon
Francis this year created a church tribunal tasked with judging bishops who fail to protect children from predatory priests. The new court will be part of the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a powerful panel that has judged priests accused of sexual abuse. The Vatican, however, has not up to now assigned an office to judge bishops.
“This is very painful for us.” – Art Baselice
Rozzi says he is not satisfied with that measure.
“He simply is not doing enough,” he said. “Actions speak louder than words. For me the only action he could take that could forgive the church is to tell Philadelphia Archbishop (Charles) Chaput to get his fingers of the statute of limitations bill. As soon as he lifts his fingers off and makes a call to Judiciary Committee Chairman Ron Marsico, the bill would run tomorrow.”
Victims advocates have long contended that Marsico, a Dauphin County Republican, is beholden to the lobbying might of the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, of which Chaput is an official. As chairman of the House committee for judicial matters, Marsico, says Rozzi, is a significant roadblock against statute of limitations reform.
Current state law bars a victim of childhood sexual abuse from bringing a civil case against a perpetrator after the victim turns 30.
Advocates say the terms are inadequate in allowing many childhood victims to come to terms with their abuse. The law, advocates say, shelter too many perpetrators from accountability for their actions.
Victims advocates accuse Chaput of continuing to shelter predator priests. The archdiocese is at the center of two grand jury reports that detail decades of abuse of hundreds of children at the hands of priests. The reports accuse the archdiocese of failing to stop the abuse and allowing accused priests to remain in posts that give them access to children.
“I have no interest in seeing the pope until he accepts responsibility for these actions,” Rozzi said. He said more than a hundred priests in Philadelphia, and more across the state, face credible allegations of child sexual abuse.
“They left a lot of damage behind and they have to take care of that,” Rozzi said. “They have to take care of their mess.”
Marsico has in the past said components of the reform legislation would be unconstitutional in Pennsylvania and would not hold up in court.
Beyond the economic burden that would be placed on the church in Pennsylvania, the Catholic Conference, the public advocacy arm of the church, contends that it would be difficult for organizations to defend themselves in court. The conference says evidence, memories and witnesses are lost over the years, making it impossible to mount a defense. The conference holds that current laws are adequate.
UPDATE:
The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference notes that it holds the same position as the Task Force for Child Protection, which was created in the wake of revelations of sexual abuse at Penn State to examine child protective services law.
“The task force recommended a sweeping overhaul of our child protection statutes that resulted in more than 20 pieces of legislation being passed,” said conference spokeswoman Amy Hill. “The task force also took a close look at Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations and recommended that it not be changed. They cited fairness as a major concern, especially ‘the potential for staleness of evidence and possible constitutional concerns.'”
The report states: “The Task Force believes that the current statute of limitations is adequate, given that Pennsylvania is one of the most ‘generous’ states in terms of the length of time within which an action may be commenced.”
Pennsylvania extended its statute of limitations as recently as 2006. The General Assembly, however, did not in the 2013-14 legislative session consider any one of the nearly two dozen child protections bill proposed.
Like Rozzi, Art Baselice believes the only thing Francis can do to redeem the church in his eyes is to appeal for the lifting of statutes of limitation.
“He has spoken about everything else, global warming, immigration, but he has yet to deal with the problem that the church has created,” said Baselice, a retired Philadelphia detective who in 2006 lost his son, Arthur, to suicide.
Arthur Baselice, Jr., endured the ravages – including heroin addiction and depression – of having been sexually abused for years by two priests of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
By the time Baselice and his wife Elaine sought to prosecute the priests, the statutes of limitations had expired. One of the priests, Charles Newman, a former president of Archbishop Ryan High School, the largest Catholic high school in Philadelphia, was sentenced to prison in 2009 for stealing nearly $1 million from his religious order.
BASELICE.jpg
Elaine and Art Baselice have for years pushed for reforms in the state’s statute of limitations. The Baselices, whose son Arthur killed himself in 2006 after being abused by priests, plan to leave town ahead of the visit by Pope Francis.
No longer a practicing Catholic, Baselice said he wants no part of Francis’ visit.
“Why is he coming here,” he asked Tuesday night. “Families? Which families? The families who are continually in pain? Is he coming to my house? Is he going to the house of the other guy who lost a son?”
Baselice resents that Francis has remained largely silent on the issue of clergy sexual abuse.
“It’s an insult,” he said. “The wounds that we suffer every day are open. All he did was make them deeper.”
The Baselices, who live in New Jersey, plan to get out of town this weekend.
“This is very painful for us,” he said. “All we are seeing is pope, pope, pope. Is the pope coming to my house? I’m not going to be a part of this nonsense.”
Neither Rozzi nor Baselice said they believe that Francis, who is regarded as a progressive pontiff who has built a pontificacy around the theme of forgiveness, ushers a new era for the church.
“To me I understand that Pope Francis is a different leader for the church, but it’s like the changed cover of a book,” Rozzi said. “Everything inside the book has stayed the same. The cover has been upgraded to look better, but the victims of child sex abuse and the children are not in any way more protected because Francis is pope.”
Full article: http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2015/09/pope_francis_philadelphia_visi_37.html#incart_river
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 Reform2015-09-24 04:10:082015-09-24 04:10:08Ivey DeJesus, Pope Francis Philadelphia visit: Victims of clergy abuse will sit this one out, Penn Live
Speculation began almost as soon as Pope Francis’s first visit to the United States was announced months ago.
Would the popular pontiff – who has spoken boldly on so many controversial topics – address the clergy sexual abuse scandals that have caused many American Catholics to fall away from the church and detracted from his optimistic message of renewal? Would he take time to meet with survivors?
[Activists urge Pope Francis to address clergy sexual abuse during U.S. visit]
In his address to U.S. bishops at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, he at least partially answered that question.
Francis lauded the bishops for their “courage” in the face of what he called “self-criticism and at the cost of mortification and great sacrifice.”
“I realize how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims – in the knowledge that in healing we, too, are healed – and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis said.
But it wasn’t the answer that many victims’ advocates had hoped to hear. They criticized Francis for offering comfort and
sympathy to the bishops and praising their bravery while saying little to address the suffering of clergy sex abuse survivors.
“To characterize the response of American Bishops to clergy abuse victims as ‘generous’ and ‘courageous’ is bizarre,” said
John Salveson, president of the Philadelphia-based Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse and a survivor of clergy sex abuse.
“In reality, the American church hierarchy has treated clergy sex abuse victims as adversaries and enemies for decades,” he said. “His concern about how the abuse crisis has weighed on the bishops’ spirits, and his hope that all of their good deeds will help them heal from the crisis, reflects a profound misunderstanding of the role the church has played in this self-inflicted crisis.”
Barbara Dorris, victims outreach director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, called Francis’s remarks “a slap in the face to all the victims, that we’re going to worry about how the poor bishop feels.”
“You’re the ones who created it, and now we’re going to feel sorry for what you created?” Dorris said.
It is not yet clear whether Francis will address the scandal again, or meet with survivors during his visit, which will also include stops in New York City and Philadelphia, where he will address a global meeting on family issues in a city that has been rocked over the last decade by abuse allegations.
Several top U.S. church officials said that the pope would meet with survivors, but have been reluctant to give specifics.
A Vatican spokesman declined comment on the pope’s remarks at the cathedral, which were met with lengthy applause by the bishops.
Bernie Nojadera, head of the Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the work that Francis praised during Wednesday’s remarks is focused on the victims, and established consequences for bishops who are not following reporting laws when reports of sexual abuse arise.
Francis’s remarks were a “clear message” to bishops in other countries that are still grappling with their own sex abuse crises to take the issue seriously,” he said.
Others, however, said they had expected more from Francis, whose rhetoric advocating broader tolerance has made him one of the most popular pope’s in generations.
This isn’t the first time Francis has waded into the issue. He embraced victims of sexual abuse and asked for their forgiveness at a 2013 Mass “for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse.”
Then in June, about 13 years after the scandals first broke, he launched a Vatican tribunal to punish clergy who try to cover up instances of abuse. He has also created a commission that recommends how best to help survivors.
In the United States, activists have consistently criticized the Catholic Church, which has spent millions on prevention and training, for continuing to fight survivors in legal battles and declining to hold some bishops explicitly accountable.
In 2012, Monsignor William Lynn in Philadelphia became the first priest to be convicted on charges of concealing the crimes of accused priests.
In a poll conducted by the Pew Research Center in June, 53 percent of U.S. Catholics said Francis was doing a good or excellent job of addressing clergy sexual abuse, well below his approval ratings on most other issues.
While the Catholic Church has done more to address the crisis in the United States than church officials have in other countries, most sex abuse survivors have never received an apology from their church leaders, advocates say. They are unable to seek relief in criminal or civil courts because of statutes of limitation and are left with deep scars
that can make it challenging to hold a job or have an intimate relationship.
Many activists were hopeful that Francis would add to his earlier momentum in addressing clergy sexual abuse during his visit, though his official itinerary bore no mention of the topic. Now, some advocates say, Francis has dashed hopes that he’ll push for more accountability among the clergy and opened the church to fresh criticism that it is more concerned with protecting its own than victims of abuse.
“It’s encouraging that he recognizes [the abuse], but it sounds like it is all aimed at the bishops themselves rather than
the survivors,” said Bill Casey, who advocates for survivors with Voice of the Faithful. “If that’s all he says, I think that would be disappointing.”
The remarks run counter to Pope Francis’s image as protector of the most vulnerable, said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University who has represented hundreds of victims.
“I am surprised, I really did think he’d be the person from the church to say it’s the children and the little ones that matter,” Hamilton said. “For him to take this path is troubling.”
A few survivors offered hope that Francis will return to the subject later in his journey. The pope still has plenty of opportunities, they said, to meet with survivors or address their concerns.
“I think it’s too early to condemn the pope,” said Daniel F. Monahan, who has represented victims of sexual abuse in Philadelphia. “I like to give anyone a benefit of the doubt, and things take time to change. He has time in his papacy to make some progressive changes. . . . I think it’s too early to condemn the pope. I’m sure he’s facing a mountain of opposition from a lot of conservative clergy that don’t agree with him on a lot of things.”
Full article: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/09/23/advocates-for-clergy-sex-abuse-victims-criticize-pope-franciss-remarks-to-bishops/
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 Reform2015-09-24 04:00:232015-09-24 04:00:23Abby Ohlheiser, Michelle Boorstein and Terrence McCoy, Why advocates for clergy sex abuse victims call Pope Francis’s remarks a ‘slap in the face’, Washington Post
Speculation began almost as soon as Pope Francis’s first visit to the United States was announced months ago.
Would the popular pontiff – who has spoken boldly on so many controversial topics – address the clergy sexual abuse scandals that have caused many American Catholics to fall away from the church and detracted from his optimistic message of renewal? Would he take time to meet with survivors?
[Activists urge Pope Francis to address clergy sexual abuse during U.S. visit]
In his address to U.S. bishops at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, he at least partially answered that question.
Francis lauded the bishops for their “courage” in the face of what he called “self-criticism and at the cost of mortification and great sacrifice.”
“I realize how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims – in the knowledge that in healing we, too, are healed – and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis said.
But it wasn’t the answer that many victims’ advocates had hoped to hear. They criticized Francis for offering comfort and
sympathy to the bishops and praising their bravery while saying little to address the suffering of clergy sex abuse survivors.
“To characterize the response of American Bishops to clergy abuse victims as ‘generous’ and ‘courageous’ is bizarre,” said
John Salveson, president of the Philadelphia-based Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse and a survivor of clergy sex abuse.
“In reality, the American church hierarchy has treated clergy sex abuse victims as adversaries and enemies for decades,” he said. “His concern about how the abuse crisis has weighed on the bishops’ spirits, and his hope that all of their good deeds will help them heal from the crisis, reflects a profound misunderstanding of the role the church has played in this self-inflicted crisis.”
Barbara Dorris, victims outreach director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, called Francis’s remarks “a slap in the face to all the victims, that we’re going to worry about how the poor bishop feels.”
“You’re the ones who created it, and now we’re going to feel sorry for what you created?” Dorris said.
It is not yet clear whether Francis will address the scandal again, or meet with survivors during his visit, which will also include stops in New York City and Philadelphia, where he will address a global meeting on family issues in a city that has been rocked over the last decade by abuse allegations.
Several top U.S. church officials said that the pope would meet with survivors, but have been reluctant to give specifics.
A Vatican spokesman declined comment on the pope’s remarks at the cathedral, which were met with lengthy applause by the bishops.
Bernie Nojadera, head of the Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the work that Francis praised during Wednesday’s remarks is focused on the victims, and established consequences for bishops who are not following reporting laws when reports of sexual abuse arise.
Francis’s remarks were a “clear message” to bishops in other countries that are still grappling with their own sex abuse crises to take the issue seriously,” he said.
Others, however, said they had expected more from Francis, whose rhetoric advocating broader tolerance has made him one of the most popular pope’s in generations.
This isn’t the first time Francis has waded into the issue. He embraced victims of sexual abuse and asked for their forgiveness at a 2013 Mass “for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse.”
Then in June, about 13 years after the scandals first broke, he launched a Vatican tribunal to punish clergy who try to cover up instances of abuse. He has also created a commission that recommends how best to help survivors.
In the United States, activists have consistently criticized the Catholic Church, which has spent millions on prevention and training, for continuing to fight survivors in legal battles and declining to hold some bishops explicitly accountable.
In 2012, Monsignor William Lynn in Philadelphia became the first priest to be convicted on charges of concealing the crimes of accused priests.
In a poll conducted by the Pew Research Center in June, 53 percent of U.S. Catholics said Francis was doing a good or excellent job of addressing clergy sexual abuse, well below his approval ratings on most other issues.
While the Catholic Church has done more to address the crisis in the United States than church officials have in other countries, most sex abuse survivors have never received an apology from their church leaders, advocates say. They are unable to seek relief in criminal or civil courts because of statutes of limitation and are left with deep scars
that can make it challenging to hold a job or have an intimate relationship.
Many activists were hopeful that Francis would add to his earlier momentum in addressing clergy sexual abuse during his visit, though his official itinerary bore no mention of the topic. Now, some advocates say, Francis has dashed hopes that he’ll push for more accountability among the clergy and opened the church to fresh criticism that it is more concerned with protecting its own than victims of abuse.
“It’s encouraging that he recognizes [the abuse], but it sounds like it is all aimed at the bishops themselves rather than
the survivors,” said Bill Casey, who advocates for survivors with Voice of the Faithful. “If that’s all he says, I think that would be disappointing.”
The remarks run counter to Pope Francis’s image as protector of the most vulnerable, said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University who has represented hundreds of victims.
“I am surprised, I really did think he’d be the person from the church to say it’s the children and the little ones that matter,” Hamilton said. “For him to take this path is troubling.”
A few survivors offered hope that Francis will return to the subject later in his journey. The pope still has plenty of opportunities, they said, to meet with survivors or address their concerns.
“I think it’s too early to condemn the pope,” said Daniel F. Monahan, who has represented victims of sexual abuse in Philadelphia. “I like to give anyone a benefit of the doubt, and things take time to change. He has time in his papacy to make some progressive changes. . . . I think it’s too early to condemn the pope. I’m sure he’s facing a mountain of opposition from a lot of conservative clergy that don’t agree with him on a lot of things.”
Full article: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/09/23/advocates-for-clergy-sex-abuse-victims-criticize-pope-franciss-remarks-to-bishops/
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 Reform2015-09-24 04:00:102015-09-24 04:00:10Abby Ohlheiser, Michelle Boorstein and Terrence McCoy, Why advocates for clergy sex abuse victims call Pope Francis’s remarks a ‘slap in the face’, Washington Post
Professor Hamilton’s pro bono amicus brief on constitutionality of revival SOL legislation
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformSliney v Previte – Final Brief Packet 09212015
NY Action Alert TODAY
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformMY PLEA TO POPE FRANCIS: Please Ask Your NY Bishops to Follow Your Lead on Child Sex Abuse Offences to Show Mercy for Survivors
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformAssemblywoman Margaret Markey says NY is Among the Worst States in all America for How Victims Are Treated and NY’s Bishops are the Biggest Roadblock to SOL Reform
We are all excited about the momentous visit of Pope Francis, but disappointed that so little attention has been paid to the scourge of childhood sexual abuse, one of the most urgent topics of concern among so many New York Catholics.
The fight to address this issue in many states is directed at reform of archaic statute of limitations (SOLs) that restrict the time for victims to come forward and expose abusers and the organizations that hid or protected them. New York currently ranks among the very worst states in all of America for how it deals with victims — right at the bottom of all 50 states along with Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Indiana.
If a NY victim of child sex abuse doesn’t come forward within five years after their 18th birthday, they forever lose the opportunity to bring charges. Since research shows that many if not most abuse survivors do not come to grips with what happened to them until well into adulthood, if ever, that means that most victims never get justice and pedophiles remain free to abuse new generations of children.
My Child Victims Act of New York (A2872A/S63A) would to completely eliminate the civil statute of limitations for child sex abuse in the future and get justice for older victims. Even though the measure has passed the Assembly four time, it has never come to the floor of the State Senate and the most vocal opponent of this SOL reform is the New York Catholic Conference of Bishops.
I was encouraged by strong message of the Holy Father to his Pontifical Commission earlier this year that there was no place in the ministry for abusers and his call for reconciliation and healing for past victims. He has backed up those views by creating a Vatican tribunal to hold bishops accountable for cover-ups and failure to prevent abuse.
There is no limit to what is a life-time of suffering and anguish for so many victims of childhood sexual abuse. That is why there should be no limit on the ability of victims and society to hold abusers accountable. Nor should there be any limit on accountability for institutions and organizations that deliberately protected and hid perpetrators.
Earlier this year I reached out to His Holiness to ask for his help in convincing the Bishops of New York to follow his lead. During his visit here, I want to see Pope Francis help us transform the eminent opponents within his flock, New York’s Bishops, into advocates for children and survivors by urging them to support SOL reform in New York State in the future.
Sincerely, Assemblywoman Margaret Markey
MY PLEA TO POPE FRANCIS – HELP WITH NY SOL REFORM
Ivey DeJesus, Pope Francis Philadelphia visit: Victims of clergy abuse will sit this one out, Penn Live
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformState Rep. Mark Rozzi was offered VIP tickets to attend papal events in Philadelphia this weekend.
Raised in the Catholic Church, the Berks County Democrat declined. Like many other survivors of clergy sex abuse, Rozzi finds the visit from Pope Francis and the reception extended painful and insulting.
“It’s so frustrating seeing everybody get so excited that the pope’s coming,” Rozzi said. “This is all we hear right now. What you hear is him talk about the fact that he wants to help this group or that group, but there is no mention of wanting to meet with victims.”
MARKROZZI.JPG
State Rep. Mark Rozzi, (D-Berks), plans to sit out his VIP invitation to see Pope Francis in Philadelphia. Rozzi says the church has not done enough to prosecute sexually abusive clergy. Seen here in March, Rozzi joined other lawmakers to call for reform of statutes of limitation. Mark Pynes | mpynes@pennlive.com
Mark Pynes | mpynes@pennlive.com
Rozzi, who was 13 when he and two other friends were sexually molested by priests in the Philadelphia Archdiocese, has long been at odds with the church. One of the priest died in 1999, having never been prosecuted for the alleged crimes as a result of expired statute of limitation. Rozzi’s two childhood friends committed suicide.
He has for years pushed in the House, legislation that would amend the statute of limitation. The bills would largely lift the expired limitations for prosecution and allow adults abused as children by clergy to press charges against their alleged abusers.
“It’s an insult,” said Rozzi of the papal visit. “Seeing how the church has treated us and now the church is blocking justice for us and welcoming this guy with open arms like what church did in the past doesn’t matter. It’s not OK. Things aren’t right. There are victims out there still committing suicide. It’s got to stop. The only way is to open the courts and let the voices be heard.”
Francis arrived in the U.S. on Tuesday and is spending Wednesday in Washington, having met with President Obama at the White House in the morning. He will address Congress on Thursday, before making his way this weekend to Philadelphia, where is scheduled to celebrate Mass before 1.5 million faithful.
Pope Francis
Pope Francis reaches from the popemobile for a child that is brought to him, during a parade in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)
Alex Brandon
Francis this year created a church tribunal tasked with judging bishops who fail to protect children from predatory priests. The new court will be part of the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a powerful panel that has judged priests accused of sexual abuse. The Vatican, however, has not up to now assigned an office to judge bishops.
“This is very painful for us.” – Art Baselice
Rozzi says he is not satisfied with that measure.
“He simply is not doing enough,” he said. “Actions speak louder than words. For me the only action he could take that could forgive the church is to tell Philadelphia Archbishop (Charles) Chaput to get his fingers of the statute of limitations bill. As soon as he lifts his fingers off and makes a call to Judiciary Committee Chairman Ron Marsico, the bill would run tomorrow.”
Victims advocates have long contended that Marsico, a Dauphin County Republican, is beholden to the lobbying might of the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, of which Chaput is an official. As chairman of the House committee for judicial matters, Marsico, says Rozzi, is a significant roadblock against statute of limitations reform.
Current state law bars a victim of childhood sexual abuse from bringing a civil case against a perpetrator after the victim turns 30.
Advocates say the terms are inadequate in allowing many childhood victims to come to terms with their abuse. The law, advocates say, shelter too many perpetrators from accountability for their actions.
Victims advocates accuse Chaput of continuing to shelter predator priests. The archdiocese is at the center of two grand jury reports that detail decades of abuse of hundreds of children at the hands of priests. The reports accuse the archdiocese of failing to stop the abuse and allowing accused priests to remain in posts that give them access to children.
“I have no interest in seeing the pope until he accepts responsibility for these actions,” Rozzi said. He said more than a hundred priests in Philadelphia, and more across the state, face credible allegations of child sexual abuse.
“They left a lot of damage behind and they have to take care of that,” Rozzi said. “They have to take care of their mess.”
Marsico has in the past said components of the reform legislation would be unconstitutional in Pennsylvania and would not hold up in court.
Beyond the economic burden that would be placed on the church in Pennsylvania, the Catholic Conference, the public advocacy arm of the church, contends that it would be difficult for organizations to defend themselves in court. The conference says evidence, memories and witnesses are lost over the years, making it impossible to mount a defense. The conference holds that current laws are adequate.
UPDATE:
The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference notes that it holds the same position as the Task Force for Child Protection, which was created in the wake of revelations of sexual abuse at Penn State to examine child protective services law.
“The task force recommended a sweeping overhaul of our child protection statutes that resulted in more than 20 pieces of legislation being passed,” said conference spokeswoman Amy Hill. “The task force also took a close look at Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations and recommended that it not be changed. They cited fairness as a major concern, especially ‘the potential for staleness of evidence and possible constitutional concerns.'”
The report states: “The Task Force believes that the current statute of limitations is adequate, given that Pennsylvania is one of the most ‘generous’ states in terms of the length of time within which an action may be commenced.”
Pennsylvania extended its statute of limitations as recently as 2006. The General Assembly, however, did not in the 2013-14 legislative session consider any one of the nearly two dozen child protections bill proposed.
Like Rozzi, Art Baselice believes the only thing Francis can do to redeem the church in his eyes is to appeal for the lifting of statutes of limitation.
“He has spoken about everything else, global warming, immigration, but he has yet to deal with the problem that the church has created,” said Baselice, a retired Philadelphia detective who in 2006 lost his son, Arthur, to suicide.
Arthur Baselice, Jr., endured the ravages – including heroin addiction and depression – of having been sexually abused for years by two priests of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
By the time Baselice and his wife Elaine sought to prosecute the priests, the statutes of limitations had expired. One of the priests, Charles Newman, a former president of Archbishop Ryan High School, the largest Catholic high school in Philadelphia, was sentenced to prison in 2009 for stealing nearly $1 million from his religious order.
BASELICE.jpg
Elaine and Art Baselice have for years pushed for reforms in the state’s statute of limitations. The Baselices, whose son Arthur killed himself in 2006 after being abused by priests, plan to leave town ahead of the visit by Pope Francis.
No longer a practicing Catholic, Baselice said he wants no part of Francis’ visit.
“Why is he coming here,” he asked Tuesday night. “Families? Which families? The families who are continually in pain? Is he coming to my house? Is he going to the house of the other guy who lost a son?”
Baselice resents that Francis has remained largely silent on the issue of clergy sexual abuse.
“It’s an insult,” he said. “The wounds that we suffer every day are open. All he did was make them deeper.”
The Baselices, who live in New Jersey, plan to get out of town this weekend.
“This is very painful for us,” he said. “All we are seeing is pope, pope, pope. Is the pope coming to my house? I’m not going to be a part of this nonsense.”
Neither Rozzi nor Baselice said they believe that Francis, who is regarded as a progressive pontiff who has built a pontificacy around the theme of forgiveness, ushers a new era for the church.
“To me I understand that Pope Francis is a different leader for the church, but it’s like the changed cover of a book,” Rozzi said. “Everything inside the book has stayed the same. The cover has been upgraded to look better, but the victims of child sex abuse and the children are not in any way more protected because Francis is pope.”
Full article: http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2015/09/pope_francis_philadelphia_visi_37.html#incart_river
Abby Ohlheiser, Michelle Boorstein and Terrence McCoy, Why advocates for clergy sex abuse victims call Pope Francis’s remarks a ‘slap in the face’, Washington Post
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformSpeculation began almost as soon as Pope Francis’s first visit to the United States was announced months ago.
Would the popular pontiff – who has spoken boldly on so many controversial topics – address the clergy sexual abuse scandals that have caused many American Catholics to fall away from the church and detracted from his optimistic message of renewal? Would he take time to meet with survivors?
[Activists urge Pope Francis to address clergy sexual abuse during U.S. visit]
In his address to U.S. bishops at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, he at least partially answered that question.
Francis lauded the bishops for their “courage” in the face of what he called “self-criticism and at the cost of mortification and great sacrifice.”
“I realize how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims – in the knowledge that in healing we, too, are healed – and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis said.
But it wasn’t the answer that many victims’ advocates had hoped to hear. They criticized Francis for offering comfort and
sympathy to the bishops and praising their bravery while saying little to address the suffering of clergy sex abuse survivors.
“To characterize the response of American Bishops to clergy abuse victims as ‘generous’ and ‘courageous’ is bizarre,” said
John Salveson, president of the Philadelphia-based Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse and a survivor of clergy sex abuse.
“In reality, the American church hierarchy has treated clergy sex abuse victims as adversaries and enemies for decades,” he said. “His concern about how the abuse crisis has weighed on the bishops’ spirits, and his hope that all of their good deeds will help them heal from the crisis, reflects a profound misunderstanding of the role the church has played in this self-inflicted crisis.”
Barbara Dorris, victims outreach director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, called Francis’s remarks “a slap in the face to all the victims, that we’re going to worry about how the poor bishop feels.”
“You’re the ones who created it, and now we’re going to feel sorry for what you created?” Dorris said.
It is not yet clear whether Francis will address the scandal again, or meet with survivors during his visit, which will also include stops in New York City and Philadelphia, where he will address a global meeting on family issues in a city that has been rocked over the last decade by abuse allegations.
Several top U.S. church officials said that the pope would meet with survivors, but have been reluctant to give specifics.
A Vatican spokesman declined comment on the pope’s remarks at the cathedral, which were met with lengthy applause by the bishops.
Bernie Nojadera, head of the Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the work that Francis praised during Wednesday’s remarks is focused on the victims, and established consequences for bishops who are not following reporting laws when reports of sexual abuse arise.
Francis’s remarks were a “clear message” to bishops in other countries that are still grappling with their own sex abuse crises to take the issue seriously,” he said.
Others, however, said they had expected more from Francis, whose rhetoric advocating broader tolerance has made him one of the most popular pope’s in generations.
This isn’t the first time Francis has waded into the issue. He embraced victims of sexual abuse and asked for their forgiveness at a 2013 Mass “for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse.”
Then in June, about 13 years after the scandals first broke, he launched a Vatican tribunal to punish clergy who try to cover up instances of abuse. He has also created a commission that recommends how best to help survivors.
In the United States, activists have consistently criticized the Catholic Church, which has spent millions on prevention and training, for continuing to fight survivors in legal battles and declining to hold some bishops explicitly accountable.
In 2012, Monsignor William Lynn in Philadelphia became the first priest to be convicted on charges of concealing the crimes of accused priests.
In a poll conducted by the Pew Research Center in June, 53 percent of U.S. Catholics said Francis was doing a good or excellent job of addressing clergy sexual abuse, well below his approval ratings on most other issues.
While the Catholic Church has done more to address the crisis in the United States than church officials have in other countries, most sex abuse survivors have never received an apology from their church leaders, advocates say. They are unable to seek relief in criminal or civil courts because of statutes of limitation and are left with deep scars
that can make it challenging to hold a job or have an intimate relationship.
Many activists were hopeful that Francis would add to his earlier momentum in addressing clergy sexual abuse during his visit, though his official itinerary bore no mention of the topic. Now, some advocates say, Francis has dashed hopes that he’ll push for more accountability among the clergy and opened the church to fresh criticism that it is more concerned with protecting its own than victims of abuse.
“It’s encouraging that he recognizes [the abuse], but it sounds like it is all aimed at the bishops themselves rather than
the survivors,” said Bill Casey, who advocates for survivors with Voice of the Faithful. “If that’s all he says, I think that would be disappointing.”
The remarks run counter to Pope Francis’s image as protector of the most vulnerable, said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University who has represented hundreds of victims.
“I am surprised, I really did think he’d be the person from the church to say it’s the children and the little ones that matter,” Hamilton said. “For him to take this path is troubling.”
A few survivors offered hope that Francis will return to the subject later in his journey. The pope still has plenty of opportunities, they said, to meet with survivors or address their concerns.
“I think it’s too early to condemn the pope,” said Daniel F. Monahan, who has represented victims of sexual abuse in Philadelphia. “I like to give anyone a benefit of the doubt, and things take time to change. He has time in his papacy to make some progressive changes. . . . I think it’s too early to condemn the pope. I’m sure he’s facing a mountain of opposition from a lot of conservative clergy that don’t agree with him on a lot of things.”
Full article: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/09/23/advocates-for-clergy-sex-abuse-victims-criticize-pope-franciss-remarks-to-bishops/
Abby Ohlheiser, Michelle Boorstein and Terrence McCoy, Why advocates for clergy sex abuse victims call Pope Francis’s remarks a ‘slap in the face’, Washington Post
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformSpeculation began almost as soon as Pope Francis’s first visit to the United States was announced months ago.
Would the popular pontiff – who has spoken boldly on so many controversial topics – address the clergy sexual abuse scandals that have caused many American Catholics to fall away from the church and detracted from his optimistic message of renewal? Would he take time to meet with survivors?
[Activists urge Pope Francis to address clergy sexual abuse during U.S. visit]
In his address to U.S. bishops at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, he at least partially answered that question.
Francis lauded the bishops for their “courage” in the face of what he called “self-criticism and at the cost of mortification and great sacrifice.”
“I realize how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims – in the knowledge that in healing we, too, are healed – and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis said.
But it wasn’t the answer that many victims’ advocates had hoped to hear. They criticized Francis for offering comfort and
sympathy to the bishops and praising their bravery while saying little to address the suffering of clergy sex abuse survivors.
“To characterize the response of American Bishops to clergy abuse victims as ‘generous’ and ‘courageous’ is bizarre,” said
John Salveson, president of the Philadelphia-based Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse and a survivor of clergy sex abuse.
“In reality, the American church hierarchy has treated clergy sex abuse victims as adversaries and enemies for decades,” he said. “His concern about how the abuse crisis has weighed on the bishops’ spirits, and his hope that all of their good deeds will help them heal from the crisis, reflects a profound misunderstanding of the role the church has played in this self-inflicted crisis.”
Barbara Dorris, victims outreach director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, called Francis’s remarks “a slap in the face to all the victims, that we’re going to worry about how the poor bishop feels.”
“You’re the ones who created it, and now we’re going to feel sorry for what you created?” Dorris said.
It is not yet clear whether Francis will address the scandal again, or meet with survivors during his visit, which will also include stops in New York City and Philadelphia, where he will address a global meeting on family issues in a city that has been rocked over the last decade by abuse allegations.
Several top U.S. church officials said that the pope would meet with survivors, but have been reluctant to give specifics.
A Vatican spokesman declined comment on the pope’s remarks at the cathedral, which were met with lengthy applause by the bishops.
Bernie Nojadera, head of the Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the work that Francis praised during Wednesday’s remarks is focused on the victims, and established consequences for bishops who are not following reporting laws when reports of sexual abuse arise.
Francis’s remarks were a “clear message” to bishops in other countries that are still grappling with their own sex abuse crises to take the issue seriously,” he said.
Others, however, said they had expected more from Francis, whose rhetoric advocating broader tolerance has made him one of the most popular pope’s in generations.
This isn’t the first time Francis has waded into the issue. He embraced victims of sexual abuse and asked for their forgiveness at a 2013 Mass “for the sins of omission on the part of church leaders who did not respond adequately to reports of abuse.”
Then in June, about 13 years after the scandals first broke, he launched a Vatican tribunal to punish clergy who try to cover up instances of abuse. He has also created a commission that recommends how best to help survivors.
In the United States, activists have consistently criticized the Catholic Church, which has spent millions on prevention and training, for continuing to fight survivors in legal battles and declining to hold some bishops explicitly accountable.
In 2012, Monsignor William Lynn in Philadelphia became the first priest to be convicted on charges of concealing the crimes of accused priests.
In a poll conducted by the Pew Research Center in June, 53 percent of U.S. Catholics said Francis was doing a good or excellent job of addressing clergy sexual abuse, well below his approval ratings on most other issues.
While the Catholic Church has done more to address the crisis in the United States than church officials have in other countries, most sex abuse survivors have never received an apology from their church leaders, advocates say. They are unable to seek relief in criminal or civil courts because of statutes of limitation and are left with deep scars
that can make it challenging to hold a job or have an intimate relationship.
Many activists were hopeful that Francis would add to his earlier momentum in addressing clergy sexual abuse during his visit, though his official itinerary bore no mention of the topic. Now, some advocates say, Francis has dashed hopes that he’ll push for more accountability among the clergy and opened the church to fresh criticism that it is more concerned with protecting its own than victims of abuse.
“It’s encouraging that he recognizes [the abuse], but it sounds like it is all aimed at the bishops themselves rather than
the survivors,” said Bill Casey, who advocates for survivors with Voice of the Faithful. “If that’s all he says, I think that would be disappointing.”
The remarks run counter to Pope Francis’s image as protector of the most vulnerable, said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University who has represented hundreds of victims.
“I am surprised, I really did think he’d be the person from the church to say it’s the children and the little ones that matter,” Hamilton said. “For him to take this path is troubling.”
A few survivors offered hope that Francis will return to the subject later in his journey. The pope still has plenty of opportunities, they said, to meet with survivors or address their concerns.
“I think it’s too early to condemn the pope,” said Daniel F. Monahan, who has represented victims of sexual abuse in Philadelphia. “I like to give anyone a benefit of the doubt, and things take time to change. He has time in his papacy to make some progressive changes. . . . I think it’s too early to condemn the pope. I’m sure he’s facing a mountain of opposition from a lot of conservative clergy that don’t agree with him on a lot of things.”
Full article: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/09/23/advocates-for-clergy-sex-abuse-victims-criticize-pope-franciss-remarks-to-bishops/