Read Marci Hamilton's email about Philadelphia Church Scandal

by AndersonsInfo 6 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    Sanity will prevail when we get the people of Pennsylvania (and every other state) to back the reforms needed to protect children.

    I was a Special Asst District Attorney in the Phila grand jury investigation, and I can tell you it was extraordinarily frustrating that the law posed nothing but roadblocks. There are serious insufficiencies in the laws that protect children, and unless citizens demand changes in the law, as the report suggests, we'll have more of the same. If you know anyone in Pennsylvania, tell them to contact their state reps in Harrisburg and demand change. Perhaps Pa can get some momentum for the victims in every state.

    Best regards, Marci

  • Sunspot
    Sunspot

    I apologize if this has been mentioned before on here, I haven't been on this board very often lately so I haven't kept up on things.

    Was there more information given about this case in PA, or is there something more to go on to find out about it ?

    TIA,

    Annie

  • blondie
    blondie

    http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&q=abuse+philadelphia

    If you put abuse and philadelphia in Google News you get many articles. One of this was posted on JWD.

    Another good place to go for abuse cases re the Catholic Church is this site which has the Philadelphia case headlined.

    http://www.snapnetwork.org/

    Blondie

  • Sunspot
    Sunspot

    WOW! Blondie!

    Thanks for the info, and I will do. You amaze me, always so on top of everything! I'll check it out.....

    Hugs and kudos to the Gal who knows where to find everything, or knows how to obtain it!

    Annie

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    Here's a copy of an article which I recently posted on a thread started by Devon McBride named, "Another child abuse coverup by the Catholic Church."

    If the dreadful information found in this article doesn't push all of us to write a letter to the Pennsylvania Legislature demanding changes to Pennsylvania's child abuse laws, what will?

    Blondie, or anyone who has the time, would you please research and post contact information as to where we can write our letters to.

    Thank you,
    Barbara

    BUT NO JUSTICE FOR VICTIMS AS GRAND JURY'S POWERLESS TO ACT

    By WILLIAM BUNCH & DANA DiFILIPPO
    [email protected]

    The devil is in the details.

    For example, there is the Philadelphia-area Roman Catholic priest who
    raped an 11-year-old girl, causing her to become pregnant, and then took
    her to have an abortion, and who also molested a 5th-grader inside the confessional booth.

    There is also the case of the teenage girl who was immobilized in
    traction in a hospital bed and was molested by a priest.

    And another priest is said to have been a sadomasochist who paid boys to
    place him in bondage - and then perform acts such as defecating so he
    could lick their excrement.

    When the Roman Catholic clergy sex-abuse scandal exploded in 2002 in
    Boston, many wondered if Philadelphia - the 7th-largest archdiocese in
    the country with more than1.4 million parishioners - could have similar problems.

    That April, Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham convened a
    grand jury to look into sexual abuse in the archdiocese and whether
    there had been a cover-up by church leaders.

    The results, announced yesterday, show the child sexual-abuse problems
    in the archdiocese were worse than anyone could have imagined.

    "I want to correct the misconception that this was inappropriate
    touching - we're not speaking about a misplaced pat or overly
    enthusiastic hug," Abraham said at a packed news conference yesterday. "We're talking about child rape. Our children were used as masturbation tools and [in] disgusting acts of sadomasochism."

    The grand jury, which issued a comprehensive 418-page report, said it
    was able to document the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by at
    least 63 priests in the archdiocese - and speculated there was much more it could not uncover.

    "We heard testimony about priests molesting and raping children in
    rectory bedrooms, in church sacristies, in parked cars, in swimming
    pools, at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, at the priests' vacation houses in the Poconos and the Jersey shore, in the children's schools and even in their own homes," the grand jury
    reported.

    But the panel, and Abraham, saved some of the most blistering words for
    the two men who led the archdiocese during the period covered by the
    probe - retired Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua and the late Cardinal John Krol, who was a 20th century icon of Philadelphia.

    The report said the two cardinals took part in a cover-up that greatly
    increased the number of children who were abused - by simply moving
    pedophile priests to other parishes or leaving them in their posts with no punishment.

    "[I]n its callous, calculating manner, the archdiocese's handling of the
    abuse scandal was at least as immoral as the abuse itself," the report
    stated.

    However, the grand jury did not charge anyone with committing a crime.
    Its report said that was only because either the statute of limitations
    had expired, or because of other flaws in current laws.

    "We are left, then, with what we consider a travesty of justice: a
    multitude of crimes for which no one can be held criminally
    accountable," it states.

    The long-awaited report drew a strangely mixed response from the
    archdiocese. Cardinal Justin Rigali, who took over when Bevilacqua
    reached mandatory retirement age in 2003, apologized again to the victims at a news conference. Yet the archdiocese also issued a blistering 70-page report that blasted the probe's findings and even sought to link it to anti-Catholic prejudice of the 1840s.

    The written response from the archdiocese said Abraham's probe was "a
    40-month investigation with a pre-determined end result and a report
    that is actually a biased advocacy piece."

    Indeed, yesterday's back-and-forth showed that the grand jury report did
    not come close to resolving the controversy over the archdiocese's
    handling of child sexual abuse. Abraham asked yesterday: "Has anything changed? Does the archdiocese get it? Do they understand fully their responsibility? The answer to that is an emphatic, 'No.' "

    Nevertheless, the report brought some Philadelphia-area victims of
    priest sexual abuse, and their advocates, closer to a state of closure
    than at any time since the scandal broke.

    "The silver lining today is that now other people will know this," said
    Pat Hitchens, a local member of Survivors Network of those Abused by
    Priests, who said she was abused in the 1960s by a priest operating in Southwest Philadelphia and Darby. "The district attorney is giving a voice to so many people who have suffered for so long and who had no voice."

    "We need to begin an atmosphere of reconcilation where the leadership
    and priests are not afraid to talk about this instead of saying this is
    past history," said Bud Bretschneider, of Voice of the Faithful. "It is not history. It is very much real and alive."

    The report spoke extensively of the lingering adult problems of those
    who were abused decades ago as children, including what it referred to
    as "soul murder" - when their defilement
    leads to a loss of faith.

    "In order for a priest to satisfy his sexual impulses, these children
    lose their innocence, their virginity, their security, and their faith,"
    it said. "It is hard to think of a crime more heinous."

    One victim, identified by the grand jury as "Billy," said that when the
    Rev. James Brzyski thrust his hands down Billy's pants when he was just
    11, it "turned this good kid into this monster.

    "I had no God to turn to, no family, and it just went from having one
    person inside me to having two people inside me," he testified. "This
    nice Billy... that used to live, and then this evil, this darkness Billy... that had to have no conscience and no morals in order to get by..."

    That account is just one of many gut-wrenching anecdotes in the lengthy
    report.

    Some of the harshest words are for the Rev. Nicholas Cudemo, who was
    described by a top aide to Bevilacqua as "one of the sickest people I
    ever knew."

    It was Cudemo, the report said, who abused a girl, "Ruth," in the late
    1960s when she was nine or 10, raped her when she was 11, took her for
    an abortion, and continued to abuse her until she was 17. "She has suffered severely ever since," the report stated.

    Cudemo, also the priest who molested a 5th-grader in the confession
    booth, taught at three area high schools - Bishop Neumann, Archbishop
    Kennedy, and Cardinal Dougherty and was repeatedly tranferred because of, the report said, "what were recorded in archdiocese files as 'particular friendships' with girls."

    The report said that numerous reports of the Rev. Albert Kostelnick
    fondling young girls "spanned 32 years, beginning in 1968, when he
    fondled the genitals and breasts of three sisters, ages 6 to 13 years old, as he showed slides to their parents in the family's darkened living room."

    The grand jury reported a fourth sister was the girl that Kostelnick
    fondled as she lay in traction after a 1971 automobile accident. "They
    said the injured girl had to ring for the nurse to stop her molestation," it said.

    Despite the long history of complaints about Kostelnick - including a
    1987 report to police that he'd allegedly fondled an 8-year-old girl -
    he was kept on for years as pastor of St. Mark in Bristol, and in 1997 he was honored by Bevilacqua with a luncheon at the cardinal's house.

    The grand jury said that the Rev. Raymond Leneweaver, at Saint Monica's,
    in South Philadelphia, named a group of altar boys the "Philadelphia
    Rovers" and made up T-shirts for them. It said he repeatedly molested the 11- and 12-year-old boys and anally raped at least one boy.

    When one boy tried to report Leneweaver, it said, his own father beat
    him until he was unconscious and said repeatedly, "Priests don't do
    that."

    The report also documents repeated efforts by archdiocese officials to
    cover for pedophile priests. One, it said, was transferred so many times
    that church officials worried they had run out of places to put him. In another case, the grand jury found, when a nun complained that a priest who had been convicted of receiving child pornography was still ministering to children, the woman was fired from a post directing religious education.

    The grand jury found that it could not find the archdiocese guilty of
    corporate criminal liability because the church is not organized as a
    legal corporation.

    The panel recommended several changes in state law to address any future
    problems, including abolishing the statute of limitations for sexual
    offenses against children - a step already taken in some other states.

    It also recommended tightening the Pennsylvania Child Protective
    Services Law to require those who learn of abuse to report it to
    authorities, and to require background checks on employees of any organization that supervises children.


    Staff Writer Kitty Caparella contributed to this report.

  • blondie
    blondie

    http://www.ncsl.org/public/leglinks.cfm

    The above is a website that you can search any state's list of legislators. (PA below)

    http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/home/member_information/representatives_alpha.cfm

    http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/home/member_information/senators_alpha.cfm

    But check your own state. What are the laws there regarding reporting and the statute of limitations? Could they be improved?

    Also check the SNAP website above and see if there is a local support group in your area that is probably already at the forefront of the fight.

    Suggestions from SNAP as to how to contact legislators.

    http://www.snapnetwork.org/legislation/write_your_rep.htm

    Pennsylvania SNAP Chapters

    Philadelphia, PA

    Contact: Marie Whitehead, Chapter Director Phone: 610-520-0672, 215-200-1043 (cell) E-mail: [email protected]

    Contact:
    Pat Clancy- Support Leader Phone: 610-520-0672E-mail: [email protected]

    Contact:
    Ann Hitchins- Outreach Leader Phone: 610-520-0672E-mail: [email protected]

    Contact:
    John Salveson- Media Relations Liaison
    Phone: 215-870-0680
    E-mail: [email protected] Essay: ". . .Still Trying to Make Things Right"
    Local Web Site: SNAPPhila.org

    SNAP Support Group Meetings: We hold two meetings each month. In general, the first monthly meeting will be held on the 2nd Wednesday of each month and will focus on the "business" of SNAP. The second monthly meeting will be held on the 4th Thursday of the month and will be focused more on sharing and support. All meetings are scheduled to be held at Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church at 7:00 PM.

    E-Mail Group: To sign-up for inclusion in mailings from the local chapter, send an e-mail to: [email protected]

  • stillconcerned
    stillconcerned

    Blondie- you truly are an incredible source of information...

    Kudos to you for spreading the word.

    Kimberlee d.

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