Base des données actuelles de 3.600 prêtres publiquement accusés
Base des données actuelles de 3.600 prêtres publiquement accusés
" We now post an astounding 160,000 pages of documents, articles, and
reports. Our Abuse Tracker provided its crucial round-up of breaking
abuse stories every day during 2011. We added over 150 names to our
Database of Accused US Priests. The most visited feature on our web
site, the database now has information on 3,600 accused clerics. "
" Particular projects at BishopAccountability.org that
improved accountability and transparency in the ongoing Catholic abuse
crisis include:
Boston — Our advocacy and the data on our site forced Cardinal
O’Malley to release a list of 159 accused priests; our database and the
files that support it were fundamental to the Boston Globe’s devastating
critique of O’Malley’s list. See also our list of 276 accused priests
who worked in Boston, and our linked inventory of the lists of accused
priests released by 24 U.S. bishops.
Philadelphia — In February, the District Attorney of Philadelphia
indicted three priests and a teacher for child rape and a top-ranking
archdiocesan official for child endangerment. BishopAccountability.org
provides the best access to the massive 2005 Philadelphia grand jury
report, which provided the groundwork for the 2011 grand jury report and
indictment. We also provide the little-known 2003 grand jury report;
the testimony of Cardinal Bevilacqua, also released in 2011; and the
indictment of Rev. Charles Newman OFM.
Europe — In addition to all the Irish reports and coverage of
breaking news in Ireland, we have posted useful features such as the
definitive text, available nowhere else, of the Irish Prime Minister’s
speech on the Cloyne report, and the notorious 1997 Storero and 2001
Castrillon Hoyos letters.
Scope of the Problem — We compiled data showing that the real
percentage of priests accused of child sexual abuse is 10%, not 4% as is
claimed by the Church, or less 1%, as then-Cardinal Ratzinger claimed
as recently as December 2002.
International Criminal Filing — Our archive provided most of the
20,000 pages of evidence filed in the case with the International
Criminal Court at The Hague by the Center for Constitutional Rights.
Los Angeles — We posted a detailed examination, with links to
documents, of a senior Sacred Hearts priest, Rev. Martin O’Loghlen SSCC,
who in 1996 had admitted to his religious order that he had sexually
abused a girl, but was still in ministery in early 2011, and after his
confession had even worked on the Los Angeles archdiocesan Review Board
for sexual abuse cases. Our webpage provided evidence that O’Loghlan had
been moved to the Philippines, where he was pastor of a huge parish,
during the Los Angeles SOL window and the litigation and settlement
there.
Chicago — We posted a history of the case of Rev. Donald McGuire SJ
with photographs and links to documents, laying out the very early
notice that Jesuit leaders had received of McGuire’s crimes.
Louisville — We posted documents from the Louisville archdiocese that
showed how much the late Archbishop Kelly knew about sexual abuse
crimes committed by his priests.
Major Reports — Our reports page is the best source of reports on the
ongoing Catholic abuse crisis, including these 2011 reports:
* Report of the Grand Jury, dated January 21, 2011, released February
10, 2011; see alsocriminal charges [Philadelphia archdiocese]
* USCCB Reports on the Implementation of the Charter for the
Protection of Children and Young People, 2010 (dated March 2011, but
released April 2011)
* Maeve O’Rourke, Submission to the United Nations Committee Against
Torture, 46th Session, prepared by Justice for Magdalenes (May 2011)
* Karen Terry et al., The Causes and Context of Sexual Abuse of
Minors by Catholic Priests in the United States, 1950-2010 (May 18,
2011) with Errata
* Concluding Observations of the Committee against Torture: Ireland,
Consideration of Reports submitted by States parties under article 19 of
the Convention, United Nations Committee against Torture, Forty-sixth
session (May 9-June 3, 2011)
* Judge Yvonne Murphy, Ms. Ita Mangan, and Mr. Hugh O’Neill, Report
into the Diocese of Cloyne, Commission of Investigation, dated December
23, 2010, released July 13, 2011
* Reports of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the
Catholic Church (NBSCCC), sponsored by the Irish Catholic Bishops’
Conference, the Conference of Religious of Ireland, and the Irish
Missionary Union, released November 30, 2011
- See also the 2008 Elliott report on the Cloyne diocese and the
linked map of Irish dioceses on the website of the Irish Catholic
Bishops’ Conference
- Ardagh and Clonmacnois diocese
- Derry diocese
- Dromore diocese
- Kilmore diocese
- Raphoe diocese
- Tuam archdiocese
In 2011, we also added the 1970 Kennedy report on Irish residential
institutions, the Canadian Hughes report, Vol. 1 and 2, on the Irish
Christian Brothers’ crimes at Mount Cashel in Newfoundland, and the
Winter report, Vol. 1, 2, and Conclusions, on St. John’s archdiocese in
Newfoundland. "
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