PRAY FOR THE CONVERSION OF OUR BISHOPS, THEY ARE THE ONLY ONES WE HAVE

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Paul Likoudis, Vindicated 

June 30, 2018
By CHRISTOPHER MANION
 
For years, Paul Likoudis, our late and beloved colleague at The Wanderer, chronicled the role of homosexuality in the crimes committed by clerics. Long before The Boston Globe published its “exposé” in early 2002, Paul reported on one instance after another of abuse and cover-up in chanceries nationwide. For his yeoman efforts, he was ridiculed, hectored, threatened, bullied, and, above all, studiously ignored whenever possible by one guilty bishop after another.
When The Globe’s series appeared in January 2002, the bishops could no longer persist in their obstinate denial. But they immediately insisted that they had the problem under control. “It’s over,” Auxiliary Bishop (now Vatican Cardinal) Kevin Farrell told the Knights of Malta in February 2002.
Payouts had been made, and appropriate action taken. That April, USCCB officials told the Vatican not to worry. Our bishops could handle the situation themselves, they insisted.
Days later, Pope John Paul summoned every American cardinal to the Vatican. He could have demanded serious changes, but he didn’t. Nor did he condemn the profound malfeasance of America’s hierarchy. Instead, he accepted the plaintive excuses that they had been repeating for years. They had been misled by “clinical experts” who thought that homosexual child rape was an illness, not a crime. It wasn’t their fault.
The sainted Pope took the American cardinals at their word. They had to do better, the Holy Father told them. And they went home.
Roger Cardinal Mahony attended that meeting with Pope St. John Paul. He returned to Los Angeles to spend a billion dollars of the faithful’s money to cover up for abuse and evading prosecution (he even insisted that priests’ personnel files were protected by the secrecy of the confessional!).
 
Not one of the American prelates offered his resignation. Nor did any demand the resignation of any of their colleagues in the bishops’ conference. In a curious aside, when asked about prospective reforms, the beleaguered USCCB President Bishop Wilton Gregory did tell the media in Rome that “it is an ongoing struggle to make sure the Catholic priesthood is not dominated by homosexual men.” But no one followed up on the question.
 
When the bishops met in Dallas that June, a special edition of The Dallas Morning News met them at the airport with a lengthy account indicating that well over half of them had enabled or covered up for abusers. Thus, when they issued their “Protection” charter, they exempted themselves on national TV and went home to circle the wagons. Not one quit (Cardinal Law, now deceased, fled to Rome).
 
When Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz of Lincoln, Neb., made a formal motion to investigate the causes of the scandals, his motion did not get a second from among the hundreds of bishops attending. Bishop Gregory’s comment was forgotten.
 
“Everybody Knew”
 
Another prelate attending the meetings in Rome and Dallas 2002 was Washington Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. In his previous posts in Newark and Metuchen, he had already privately settled two lawsuits involving his sexual assaults on adult males. Rod Dreher reports that a group of Catholics had gone to Rome to warn the Pope about McCarrick — to no avail: Pope John Paul appointed him archbishop of Washington, D.C., in 2000, and named him a cardinal the following year.
 
Today, McCarrick, long retired from a busy, high-level career in domestic and foreign affairs from his perch in Washington, has been proven to be a repeat offender and sexual abuser of an adolescent altar boy. New York’s Cardinal Dolan was “saddened and shocked” at the news, but few others were. Paul Likoudis certainly wouldn’t be.
 
Likoudis was a pioneer in digging into the unsavory rot that Bishop Gregory pointed to in Rome. However, while Gregory never mentioned it again, Paul was a junkyard dog, and his analytical eye went much deeper than the merely criminal. In the pastoral letter Always Our Children (1997), which took a soft approach to homosexuality, he detected the fine Italian hand of Archbishop Rembert Weakland of Milwaukee (Weakland was later revealed as an embezzler, having used hundreds of thousands of dollars in Church funds to pay off his boyfriend. He was never prosecuted). In case after case, Paul saw the emergence of a very secret, very effective homosexual network among prelates and clergy.
McCarrick the abuser. Why was no one surprised? Consider: When Los Angeles Archbishop José Gomez barred Cardinal Mahony from all “administrative or public duties” because of his role in the scandals, Cardinal Mahony flouted the order. When a reporter inquired about his brazen disobedience, the cardinal shouted, “Go home!” Not one bishop anywhere publicly criticized Mahony’s defiance. Mahony had already gotten Gov. Frank Keating, a former FBI agent, fired from leading the bishops’ own lay oversight board in 2002 (Keating was hot on his trail). No bishop publicly complained.
 
Many able Catholic critics, clerical and lay, have written about the deeply engrained homosexual rot in the American hierarchy. Fr. Paul Mankowski, SJ, former USCCB spokesman Russell Shaw, celebrated author Phil Lawler, and investigator Richard Sipe have chronicled the causes and the effects, all to no avail.
 
With Cardinal McCarrick’s abuses revealed, however, we might have turned a corner.
 
Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane called the McCarrick revelations a “major shift.” “People are prepared to speak up in a way that they would never have done before,” he said. Speak up, yes. But is this enough?
 
Somewhere, Sherlock Holmes told his friend, “Watson, when I say you are instructive, I mean I learn from your mistakes.” And our beloved bishops have made plenty of mistakes.
 
Bishop Robert Daniel Conlon of Joliet learned from the bishops’ mistakes, big time. When he served as the USCCB’s point man for “child protection,” he told diocesan leaders from around the country that “our [the bishops’] credibility is shredded.” Confronting the abuse issue is up to the laity, he said.
 
It’s up to the laity?
 
Yes. And a wise Jesuit explains why: “Bishops do not fraternally correct one another,” he says, “because they do not want to be fraternally corrected.”
 
So what is to be done?
 
After their 2002 Dallas meeting, the bishops — innocent and guilty alike — went home and circled the wagons.
Now is the time. The laity has to set those wagons on fire. The bishops have followed Ben Franklin’s adage — “either we hang together, or we hang separately.”
 
Enough! Every bishop who covered up for McCarrick and other abusers so they could all stay in power has to quit — right now. Their credibility is shredded — why do they stay?
 
“It’s up to the laity.” Well, we’ve got our marching orders.
Bishops Blind-Sided
 
By Supremes
 
During its final session of the summer this week, the U.S. Supreme Court delivered a double-barreled blow to the political activists at the USCCB. In Trump v. Hawaii, the court confirmed the validity of President Trump’s executive order limiting travel to the U.S. from certain countries. This policy threatens much of the federal funding that bishops and their NGOs have received in generous amounts during the Obama years. Our shepherds are going to feel the pinch, and soon.
 
In the Janus case, the court affirmed the rights of public sector employees, millions of them Catholic, to refuse paying dues to unions who support abortion rights, LGBT radicalism, and other objective evils.
Unfortunately, the bishops had opposed those Catholics, actually using funds from the people in the pews to pay for lawyers who were supporting the unions’ case. In a supreme irony, the court specifically articulated how vastly unions had changed in the past forty years, leaving us to wonder why the bishops’ left-wing bureaucracy is still embedded in the radicalism of the 60s and 70s.
And now, Supreme Court Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy has announced his retirement, opening the door for Donald Trump to nominate a replacement.
 
Normally Catholics would welcome this opportunity to replace him. After all, it was Kennedy who joined two colleagues famously to assert that “at the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life” (Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 1992) and upheld a “woman’s right to choose” abortion. But no, in spite of Trump’s defense of unborn life, our bishops are ungrateful.
 
Yes, the president has defended their religious liberty; defunded international abortionists; sent the HHS contraceptive mandate down the memory hole; and supported pro-life candidates across the country. But so what, they ask, with barely a nod of gratitude.
Why? Because Trump has reversed the Obama agenda that the bishops supported — on immigration, refugees, deportations, border security, welfare for illegals, sanctuary cities, health care, global warming, and the environment. He has cut off millions in the taxpayer support they counted on to fund their NGOs. And they undoubtedly fear that his new Supreme Court nominee, Catholic or not, will support Trump’s views, and not theirs.
 
Unfortunately, Trump’s appointee to the court is likely to further embitter our politicized bishops, most of whom are still silent on Humanae Vitae and the dozens of Catholic pro-abortion politicians running for the U.S. House and Senate this fall. One cannot dismiss the notion — bizarre on its face, to be sure — that our bishops might well abandon pro-lifers and support pro-abortion candidates in 2018 and 2020, so long as they support amnesty for illegal aliens.
 
Our beloved shepherds have lost their spines and desperately fear losing their federal money. But to paraphrase Lyndon Johnson, they’re the only bishops we’ve got. Pray for them.
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ONE CAN ONLY HOPE THAT THE WALKAWAY MOVEMENT GATHERS MOMENTUM AND HAS A BENEFICIAL RESULTS IN THE MIDTERM ELECTIONS

 

WATCH: #WalkAway Movement to Abandon Liberalism Goes Viral

 

BRIETBART NEWS

The #Walkaway movement that began with a popular Facebook video featuring a gay hairdresser in New York City explaining why he was leaving the Democratic Party has quickly morphed into a major force on social media and beyond.

According to an article last Thursday in the Epoch Times, some five million people on Facebook and YouTube have seen the groundbreaking video showing a “very handsome gay man” who describes his awakening to the inanities of liberalism and the Democratic Party.

“Once upon a time, I was a liberal. Well, to be honest, less than a year ago, I was still a liberal,” begins Brandon Straka, the unlikely face of the new “silent minority” of Americans.

“I reject a system which allows an ambitious, misinformed and dogmatic mob to suppress free speech, create false narratives, and apathetically steamroll over the truth,” he says. “I reject hate.”

“These are the reasons why I became a liberal. And these are the same reasons why I am now walking away.”

Straka published his original #WalkAway video on May 26, and since then his life “has been overtaken by a tidal wave,” the Epoch Times reports.

The movement has been especially successful because its spokespersons have not been the sort typically associated with conservativism. Young and old, black and white, men and women, gay and straight—the campaign seems to elude stereotypes and pigeonholing.

The popular young conservative commentator C.J. Pearson, for instance, has given the movement a significant push by highlighting the Democratic Party’s racist past. “The Democratic Party is the party of slavery. The party of Jim Crow. The party of segregation. The party of the KKK,” Pearson tweeted Saturday.

“Democrats walked away from black folks long ago. Now, it’s our time to #WalkAway,” he added.

It is enough to search for the hashtag #WalkAway on Twitter or Facebook to see how the campaign has taken on like wildfire, spawning an entire cottage industry of personal testimonials and “conversion” stories of how people woke up to the false promises of liberalism.

And yet, according to Straka, this is “so much more than a hashtag on Twitter.”

“This is a testimonial campaign, a grassroots movement that is going to change the political landscape of this country.”

Some Democrats say they are still expecting a “blue wave” come November. If social media is any indication, there seems to have been a sea change.

Follow Thomas D. Williams on Twitter

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GOD BLESS SENATOR TED CRUZ, A GREAT TEXAN, A GREAT AMERICAN, A GREAT CHRISTIAN, A GREAT CONSERVATIVE

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I HAVE WITH INCREASING FREQUENCY BEEN ASKED IF I THINK THAT WE ARE ON THE VERGE OF CIVIL WAR SUCH AS EXISTED IN 1850 AND I HAVE RESPONDED “NO” BUT ON FURTHER REFLECTION I NOW BELIEVE THAT THE VIOLENCE PERPETRATED BY THE LEFT IN OAKLAND, FERGUSON AND MANY OTHER PLACES, FOR EXAMPLE, MAY INDEED BE SYMPTOMATIC OF A NATIONAL ILLNESS DESCRIBED BY LINCOLN IN HIS 1838 ADDRESS.

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The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions:


Address Before the Young Men’s Lyceum of Springfield, Illinois

BY Abraham Lincoln (age 28)

January 27, 1838

As a subject for the remarks of the evening, the perpetuation of our political institutions, is selected.

In the great journal of things happening under the sun, we, the American People, find our account running, under date of the nineteenth century of the Christian era.–We find ourselves in the peaceful possession, of the fairest portion of the earth, as regards extent of territory, fertility of soil, and salubrity of climate. We find ourselves under the government of a system of political institutions, conducing more essentially to the ends of civil and religious liberty, than any of which the history of former times tells us.

We, when mounting the stage of existence, found ourselves the legal inheritors of these fundamental blessings. We toiled not in the acquirement or establishment of them–they are a legacy bequeathed us, by a once hardy, brave, and patriotic, but now lamented and departed race of ancestors. Their’s was the task (and nobly they performed it) to possess themselves, and through themselves, us, of this goodly land; and to uprear upon its hills and its valleys, a political edifice of liberty and equal rights; ’tis ours only, to transmit these, the former, unprofaned by the foot of an invader; the latter, undecayed by the lapse of time and untorn by usurpation, to the latest generation that fate shall permit the world to know. This task of gratitude to our fathers, justice to ourselves, duty to posterity, and love for our species in general, all imperatively require us faithfully to perform.

How then shall we perform it?–At what point shall we expect the approach of danger? By what means shall we fortify against it?– Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant, to step the Ocean, and crush us at a blow? Never!–All the armies of Europe, Asia and Africa combined, with all the treasure of the earth (our own excepted) in their military chest; with a Buonaparte for a commander, could not by force, take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the Blue Ridge, in a trial of a thousand years.

At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.

I hope I am over wary; but if I am not, there is, even now, something of ill-omen, amongst us. I mean the increasing disregard for law which pervades the country; the growing disposition to substitute the wild and furious passions, in lieu of the sober judgment of Courts; and the worse than savage mobs, for the executive ministers of justice. This disposition is awfully fearful in any community; and that it now exists in ours, though grating to our feelings to admit, it would be a violation of truth, and an insult to our intelligence, to deny. Accounts of outrages committed by mobs, form the every-day news of the times. They have pervaded the country, from New England to Louisiana;–they are neither peculiar to the eternal snows of the former, nor the burning suns of the latter;–they are not the creature of climate– neither are they confined to the slave-holding, or the non-slave- holding States. Alike, they spring up among the pleasure hunting masters of Southern slaves, and the order loving citizens of the land of steady habits.–Whatever, then, their cause may be, it is common to the whole country.

It would be tedious, as well as useless, to recount the horrors of all of them. Those happening in the State of Mississippi, and at St. Louis, are, perhaps, the most dangerous in example and revolting to humanity. In the Mississippi case, they first commenced by hanging the regular gamblers; a set of men, certainly not following for a livelihood, a very useful, or very honest occupation; but one which, so far from being forbidden by the laws, was actually licensed by an act of the Legislature, passed but a single year before. Next, negroes, suspected of conspiring to raise an insurrection, were caught up and hanged in all parts of the State: then, white men, supposed to be leagued with the negroes; and finally, strangers, from neighboring States, going thither on business, were, in many instances subjected to the same fate. Thus went on this process of hanging, from gamblers to negroes, from negroes to white citizens, and from these to strangers; till, dead men were seen literally dangling from the boughs of trees upon every road side; and in numbers almost sufficient, to rival the native Spanish moss of the country, as a drapery of the forest.

Turn, then, to that horror-striking scene at St. Louis. A single victim was only sacrificed there. His story is very short; and is, perhaps, the most highly tragic, if anything of its length, that has ever been witnessed in real life. A mulatto man, by the name of McIntosh, was seized in the street, dragged to the suburbs of the city, chained to a tree, and actually burned to death; and all within a single hour from the time he had been a freeman, attending to his own business, and at peace with the world.

Such are the effects of mob law; and such as the scenes, becoming more and more frequent in this land so lately famed for love of law and order; and the stories of which, have even now grown too familiar, to attract any thing more, than an idle remark.

But you are, perhaps, ready to ask, “What has this to do with the perpetuation of our political institutions?” I answer, it has much to do with it. Its direct consequences are, comparatively speaking, but a small evil; and much of its danger consists, in the proneness of our minds, to regard its direct, as its only consequences. Abstractly considered, the hanging of the gamblers at Vicksburg, was of but little consequence. They constitute a portion of population, that is worse than useless in any community; and their death, if no pernicious example be set by it, is never matter of reasonable regret with any one. If they were annually swept, from the stage of existence, by the plague or small pox, honest men would, perhaps, be much profited, by the operation.–Similar too, is the correct reasoning, in regard to the burning of the negro at St. Louis. He had forfeited his life, by the perpetration of an outrageous murder, upon one of the most worthy and respectable citizens of the city; and had not he died as he did, he must have died by the sentence of the law, in a very short time afterwards. As to him alone, it was as well the way it was, as it could otherwise have been.–But the example in either case, was fearful.–When men take it in their heads to day, to hang gamblers, or burn murderers, they should recollect, that, in the confusion usually attending such transactions, they will be as likely to hang or burn some one who is neither a gambler nor a murderer as one who is; and that, acting upon the example they set, the mob of to-morrow, may, and probably will, hang or burn some of them by the very same mistake. And not only so; the innocent, those who have ever set their faces against violations of law in every shape, alike with the guilty, fall victims to the ravages of mob law; and thus it goes on, step by step, till all the walls erected for the defense of the persons and property of individuals, are trodden down, and disregarded. But all this even, is not the full extent of the evil.–By such examples, by instances of the perpetrators of such acts going unpunished, the lawless in spirit, are encouraged to become lawless in practice; and having been used to no restraint, but dread of punishment, they thus become, absolutely unrestrained.–Having ever regarded Government as their deadliest bane, they make a jubilee of the suspension of its operations; and pray for nothing so much, as its total annihilation. While, on the other hand, good men, men who love tranquility, who desire to abide by the laws, and enjoy their benefits, who would gladly spill their blood in the defense of their country; seeing their property destroyed; their families insulted, and their lives endangered; their persons injured; and seeing nothing in prospect that forebodes a change for the better; become tired of, and disgusted with, a Government that offers them no protection; and are not much averse to a change in which they imagine they have nothing to lose. Thus, then, by the operation of this mobocractic spirit, which all must admit, is now abroad in the land, the strongest bulwark of any Government, and particularly of those constituted like ours, may effectually be broken down and destroyed–I mean the attachment of the People. Whenever this effect shall be produced among us; whenever the vicious portion of population shall be permitted to gather in bands of hundreds and thousands, and burn churches, ravage and rob provision-stores, throw printing presses into rivers, shoot editors, and hang and burn obnoxious persons at pleasure, and with impunity; depend on it, this Government cannot last. By such things, the feelings of the best citizens will become more or less alienated from it; and thus it will be left without friends, or with too few, and those few too weak, to make their friendship effectual. At such a time and under such circumstances, men of sufficient talent and ambition will not be wanting to seize the opportunity, strike the blow, and overturn that fair fabric, which for the last half century, has been the fondest hope, of the lovers of freedom, throughout the world.

I know the American People are much attached to their Government;–I know they would suffer much for its sake;–I know they would endure evils long and patiently, before they would ever think of exchanging it for another. Yet, notwithstanding all this, if the laws be continually despised and disregarded, if their rights to be secure in their persons and property, are held by no better tenure than the caprice of a mob, the alienation of their affections from the Government is the natural consequence; and to that, sooner or later, it must come.

Here then, is one point at which danger may be expected.

The question recurs, “how shall we fortify against it?” The answer is simple. Let every American, every lover of liberty, every well wisher to his posterity, swear by the blood of the Revolution, never to violate in the least particular, the laws of the country; and never to tolerate their violation by others. As the patriots of seventy-six did to the support of the Declaration of Independence, so to the support of the Constitution and Laws, let every American pledge his life, his property, and his sacred honor;–let every man remember that to violate the law, is to trample on the blood of his father, and to tear the character of his own, and his children’s liberty. Let reverence for the laws, be breathed by every American mother, to the lisping babe, that prattles on her lap–let it be taught in schools, in seminaries, and in colleges; let it be written in Primers, spelling books, and in Almanacs;–let it be preached from the pulpit, proclaimed in legislative halls, and enforced in courts of justice. And, in short, let it become the political religion of the nation; and let the old and the young, the rich and the poor, the grave and the gay, of all sexes and tongues, and colors and conditions, sacrifice unceasingly upon its altars.

While ever a state of feeling, such as this, shall universally, or even, very generally prevail throughout the nation, vain will be every effort, and fruitless every attempt, to subvert our national freedom.

When I so pressingly urge a strict observance of all the laws, let me not be understood as saying there are no bad laws, nor that grievances may not arise, for the redress of which, no legal provisions have been made.–I mean to say no such thing. But I do mean to say, that, although bad laws, if they exist, should be repealed as soon as possible, still while they continue in force, for the sake of example, they should be religiously observed. So also in unprovided cases. If such arise, let proper legal provisions be made for them with the least possible delay; but, till then, let them, if not too intolerable, be borne with.

There is no grievance that is a fit object of redress by mob law. In any case that arises, as for instance, the promulgation of abolitionism, one of two positions is necessarily true; that is, the thing is right within itself, and therefore deserves the protection of all law and all good citizens; or, it is wrong, and therefore proper to be prohibited by legal enactments; and in neither case, is the interposition of mob law, either necessary, justifiable, or excusable.

But, it may be asked, why suppose danger to our political institutions? Have we not preserved them for more than fifty years? And why may we not for fifty times as long?

We hope there is no sufficient reason. We hope all dangers may be overcome; but to conclude that no danger may ever arise, would itself be extremely dangerous. There are now, and will hereafter be, many causes, dangerous in their tendency, which have not existed heretofore; and which are not too insignificant to merit attention. That our government should have been maintained in its original form from its establishment until now, is not much to be wondered at. It had many props to support it through that period, which now are decayed, and crumbled away. Through that period, it was felt by all, to be an undecided experiment; now, it is understood to be a successful one.–Then, all that sought celebrity and fame, and distinction, expected to find them in the success of that experiment. Their all was staked upon it:– their destiny was inseparably linked with it. Their ambition aspired to display before an admiring world, a practical demonstration of the truth of a proposition, which had hitherto been considered, at best no better, than problematical; namely, the capability of a people to govern themselves. If they succeeded, they were to be immortalized; their names were to be transferred to counties and cities, and rivers and mountains; and to be revered and sung, and toasted through all time. If they failed, they were to be called knaves and fools, and fanatics for a fleeting hour; then to sink and be forgotten. They succeeded. The experiment is successful; and thousands have won their deathless names in making it so. But the game is caught; and I believe it is true, that with the catching, end the pleasures of the chase. This field of glory is harvested, and the crop is already appropriated. But new reapers will arise, and they, too, will seek a field. It is to deny, what the history of the world tells us is true, to suppose that men of ambition and talents will not continue to spring up amongst us. And, when they do, they will as naturally seek the gratification of their ruling passion, as others have so done before them. The question then, is, can that gratification be found in supporting and maintaining an edifice that has been erected by others? Most certainly it cannot. Many great and good men sufficiently qualified for any task they should undertake, may ever be found, whose ambition would inspire to nothing beyond a seat in Congress, a gubernatorial or a presidential chair;but such belong not to the family of the lion, or the tribe of the eagle. What! think you these places would satisfy an Alexander, a Caesar, or a Napoleon?–Never! Towering genius distains a beaten path. It seeks regions hitherto unexplored.–It sees no distinction in adding story to story, upon the monuments of fame, erected to the memory of others. It denies that it is glory enough to serve under any chief. It scorns to tread in the footsteps of any predecessor, however illustrious. It thirsts and burns for distinction; and, if possible, it will have it, whether at the expense of emancipating slaves, or enslaving freemen. Is it unreasonable then to expect, that some man possessed of the loftiest genius, coupled with ambition sufficient to push it to its utmost stretch, will at some time, spring up among us? And when such a one does, it will require the people to be united with each other, attached to the government and laws, and generally intelligent, to successfully frustrate his designs.

Distinction will be his paramount object, and although he would as willingly, perhaps more so, acquire it by doing good as harm; yet, that opportunity being past, and nothing left to be done in the way of building up, he would set boldly to the task of pulling down.

Here, then, is a probable case, highly dangerous, and such a one as could not have well existed heretofore.

Another reason which once was; but which, to the same extent, is now no more, has done much in maintaining our institutions thus far. I mean the powerful influence which the interesting scenes of the revolution had upon the passions of the people as distinguished from their judgment. By this influence, the jealousy, envy, and avarice, incident to our nature, and so common to a state of peace, prosperity, and conscious strength, were, for the time, in a great measure smothered and rendered inactive; while the deep-rooted principles of hate, and the powerful motive of revenge, instead of being turned against each other, were directed exclusively against the British nation. And thus, from the force of circumstances, the basest principles of our nature, were either made to lie dormant, or to become the active agents in the advancement of the noblest cause–that of establishing and maintaining civil and religious liberty.

But this state of feeling must fade, is fading, has faded, with the circumstances that produced it.

I do not mean to say, that the scenes of the revolution are now or ever will be entirely forgotten; but that like every thing else, they must fade upon the memory of the world, and grow more and more dim by the lapse of time. In history, we hope, they will be read of, and recounted, so long as the bible shall be read;– but even granting that they will, their influence cannot be what it heretofore has been. Even then, they cannot be so universally known, nor so vividly felt, as they were by the generation just gone to rest. At the close of that struggle, nearly every adult male had been a participator in some of its scenes. The consequence was, that of those scenes, in the form of a husband, a father, a son or brother, a living history was to be found in every family– a history bearing the indubitable testimonies of its own authenticity, in the limbs mangled, in the scars of wounds received, in the midst of the very scenes related–a history, too, that could be read and understood alike by all, the wise and the ignorant, the learned and the unlearned.–But those histories are gone. They can be read no more forever. They were a fortress of strength; but, what invading foeman could never do, the silent artillery of time has done; the leveling of its walls. They are gone.–They were a forest of giant oaks; but the all-resistless hurricane has swept over them, and left only, here and there, a lonely trunk, despoiled of its verdure, shorn of its foliage; unshading and unshaded, to murmur in a few gentle breezes, and to combat with its mutilated limbs, a few more ruder storms, then to sink, and be no more.

They were the pillars of the temple of liberty; and now, that they have crumbled away, that temple must fall, unless we, their descendants, supply their places with other pillars, hewn from the solid quarry of sober reason. Passion has helped us; but can do so no more. It will in future be our enemy. Reason, cold, calculating, unimpassioned reason, must furnish all the materials for our future support and defence.–Let those materials be moulded into general intelligence, sound morality, and in particular, a reverence for the constitution and laws: and, that we improved to the last; that we remained free to the last; that we revered his name to the last; that, during his long sleep, we permitted no hostile foot to pass over or desecrate his resting place; shall be that which to learn the last trump shall awaken our WASHINGTON.

Upon these let the proud fabric of freedom rest, as the rock of its basis; and as truly as has been said of the only greater institution, “the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”

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THE CRISIS WE ARE EXPERIENCING IN THE CHURCH AND SOME ROOTS DESCRIBED AND SOME REMEDIES PRESCRIBED

The Crisis in the Church – Roots and Remedies

JUNE 23, 2018
BY FSSPX.NEWS
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Bishop Bernard Fellay.

Message of Bishop Bernard Fellay, Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X, on the occasion of the conference on “The Roots of the Crisis in the Church,” Rome June 23, 2018.

This conference should prove most useful, for today it is imperative to trace the roots of the crisis in the Church. On the occasion of the publication last September of the Correctio filialis which I myself signed {Bishop Bernard Fellay and Bishop Rene Henry Gracida were the only two bishops in the world to sign on the Correction Filialis}, I expressed the desire that “the debate concerning important questions be broadened, in order to reaffirm truths and condemn errors” (FSSPX.News 09/26/2017). Thus I whole-heartedly support the goal you have here set: “Rejecting these errors and returning, please God, to Catholic truth full and lived is the necessary precondition of the Church’s renaissance.” (Presentation at the seminar of June 23, 2018)

The Correspondence Between Cardinal Ottaviani and Archbishop Lefebvre

Your meeting is along the same lines as a relatively unknown exchange of letters between Cardinal Ottaviani and Archbishop Lefebvre, which may help put things in perspective. This exchange took place in 1966, one year after the end of the Council.

On July 24, 1966 Cardinal Ottaviani, then Pro-Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, sent out to the bishops a letter addressing ten errors that had arisen after the end of Vatican II. Among the errors were the following, which are still relevant today, more than fifty years after the Council:

“Objective and absolute truth, firm and unchangeable, is today hardly recognized by many, who subject everything to a sort of relativism, arguing speciously that all truth must be determined by the evolution of consciousness and history.” (n. 4)

“Errors no less grave have spread in the field of moral theology.  For certain theologians, and not an inconsiderable number of them, dare reject the existence of objective morality.  Others reject the natural law while accepting the legitimacy of situation ethics, as they call it.  They propagate deleterious opinions regarding morality and questions concerning sexuality and matrimony.” (n. 9)

Letter from cardinal Ottaviani 

SACRED CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH

Circular Letter to the Presidents of Episcopal Conferences
regarding some sentences and errors arising
from the interpretation of the decrees of the Second Vatican Council

Since the recent successful conclusion of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, many wise Documents have been promulgated, both in doctrinal and disciplinary matters, in order to efficaciously promote the life of the Church. All of the people of God are bound by the grave duty to strive with all diligence to put into effect all that has been solemnly proposed or decreed, under the influence of the Holy Spirit, by the universal assembly of the bishops presided over by the Supreme Pontiff.

It is the right and duty of the Hierarchy to monitor, guide, and promote the movement of renewal begun by the Council, so that the conciliar Documents and Decrees are properly interpreted and implemented with the utmost fidelity to their merit and their spirit. This doctrine, in fact, must be defended by the bishops, since they, with Peter as their Head, have the duty to teach with authority. Many Pastors have admirably already begun to explain the relevance of the doctrine of the Council.

Nevertheless, it must be acknowledged with sorrow that unfortunate news has been reported from various areas about abuses regarding the interpretation of the conciliar doctrine that are taking hold, as well as some brazen opinions circulating here and there causing great disturbance among the faithful. The studies and efforts to investigate the truth more profoundly are praiseworthy, especially when distinguishing honestly between that which is central to the faith and that which is open to opinion. But some of the documents examined by this Sacred Congregation contain affirmations which easily go beyond the limits of hypothesis or simple opinion, appearing to raise certain questions regarding the dogmas and fundamentals of the faith.

It is worthwhile to draw attention to some examples of these opinions and errors that have arisen both from the reports of competent persons and in published writings.

1) First of all regarding Sacred Revelation itself: There are some, in fact, who appeal to Sacred Scripture while deliberately leaving aside Tradition. But they then restrict the role and the strength of biblical inspiration and its inerrancy, abandoning a just notion of the true value of the historical texts.

2) In regards to the doctrine of the faith, some affirm that dogmatic formulas are subject to historical evolution even to the point that their objective meaning is susceptible to change.

3) The ordinary Magisterium of the Church, particularly that of the Roman Pontiff, is sometimes neglected and diminished, until it is relegated almost to the sphere of a mere opinion.

4) Some almost refuse to acknowledge truth that is objective, absolute, stable, and immutable, submitting everything to a certain relativism, with the pretext that every truth necessarily follows an evolutionary rhythm according to conscience and history.

5) The venerated Person of Our Lord Jesus Christ is called into question when, in the elaboration of the doctrines of Christology, certain concepts are used to describe his nature and his person though they are difficult to reconcile with that which has been dogmatically defined. A certain Christological humanism is twisted such that Christ is reduced to the condition of an ordinary man who, at a certain point, acquired a consciousness of his divinity as Son of God. The virginal birth, miracles, and the resurrection itself are admitted only as concepts, reduced to a purely natural order.

6) Similarly in sacramental theology, some elements are either ignored or are not taken into account, especially with regard to the Eucharist. There are some who talk about the real presence of Christ under the species of bread and wine as a kind of exaggerated symbolism, as though, the power of transubstantiation does not change the bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ, but simply invests them with a determined significance. There are those who, when considering the Mass, insist too much on the concept of agape love at the expense of the concept of Sacrifice.

7) Some would explain the Sacrament of Penance as a means of reconciliation with the Church, not expressing sufficiently the concept of reconciliation with God who has been offended. They affirm simply that in the celebration of this Sacrament it is not necessary to accuse oneself of sin, striving to express only the social function of reconciliation with the Church.

8) Some consider of little account the doctrine of the Council of Trent regarding original sin, or explain it in a way that at least obfuscates the original fault of Adam and the transmission of his sin.

9) The errors in the field of moral theology are no less trivial. Some, in fact, dare to reject the objective criteria of morality, while others do not acknowledge the natural law, preferring instead to advocate for the legitimacy of so-called situational ethics. Deleterious opinions are spread about morality and responsibility in the areas of sexuality and marriage.

10) In addition, it is necessary to comment about ecumenism. The Apostolic See praises, undoubtedly, those who promote initiatives, in the spirit of the conciliar Decree on Ecumenism, that foster charity toward our separated brothers and to draw them to unity in the Church. However, it is regrettable that some interpret the conciliar Decree in their own terms, proposing an ecumenical action that offends the truth about the unity of the faith and of the Church, fostering a pernicious irenicism [the error of creating a false unity among different Churches] and an indifferentism entirely alien to the mind of the Council.

These pernicious errors, scattered variously throughout the world, are recounted in this letter only in summary form for the local Ordinaries so that each one, according to his function and office, can strive to eradicate or hinder them.

This Sacred Dicastery fervently urges the same Ordinaries, gathered in their Episcopal Conferences, to take up this point of discussion and report back to the Holy See as appropriate, sending their own opinions before Christmas of this year.

The Ordinaries as well as those others who they reasonably choose to consult regarding this letter, are to keep it strictly confidential, since obvious reasons of prudence discourage its publication.

Rome, July 24, 1966.

 

The roots of the Church’s crisis can be found in questioning “objective and absolute truth” and “objective morality;” the promotion of “relativism;” and the acceptance of “situation ethics.”

When Superior General of the Holy Ghost Fathers, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre sent to Cardinal Ottaviani a list of questions on December 20, 1966. These dubiahad not arisen from any purely personal questioning, but rather from doubts he recognized as attributable to the Church’s official teaching after the Council. “Whether it be a question of:

– The transmission of episcopal jurisdiction,
– The two sources of Revelation,
– Scriptural inspiration,
– The necessity of grace for justification,
– The necessity of catholic baptism,
– The workings of grace in heretics, schismatics, and pagans,
– The ends of marriage,
– Religious liberty,
– The ‘end things,’ etc.

On these fundamental points traditional doctrine had been both clear and taught uniformly in catholic universities. But many of the Council’s documents provoked doubts concerning these very truths.”

In his article entitled “The Maturing of the Council” (in Communio n. 92, Nov. – Dec. 1990, p. 85 ff.), Fr. Peter Henrici s.j. confirmed the legitimacy of Archbishop Lefebvre’s worries. The Swiss theologian was frank in his affirmation that at the Council there had been an “opposition of two different traditions of theological doctrine which are fundamentally incompatible!”

The Practical Consequences of Doubts and Errors

Yet Archbishop Lefebvre did not stop at proclaiming and denouncing doubts that had recently arisen. He wrote to Cardinal Ottaviani, “The consequences of this have rapidly been drawn and applied in the life of the Church.” He went on to enumerate the practical and pastoral consequences of these doubts:

– Doubts about the necessity of the Church and the sacraments lead to the disappearance of priestly vocations;
– Doubts on the necessity for and nature of the “conversion” of every soul involve the disappearance of religious vocations, the destruction of traditional spirituality in the novitiates, and the uselessness of the missions;
– Doubts on the lawfulness of authority and the need for obedience, caused by the exaltation of human dignity, the autonomy of conscience and liberty, are unsettling all societies beginning with the Church—religious societies, dioceses, secular society, the family;
– Doubts regarding the necessity of grace in order to be saved result in baptism to be held in low esteem, so that for the future it is to be put off until later, and occasion the neglect of the sacrament of penance;
– Doubts on the necessity of the Catholic Church as the only true religion, the sole source of salvation, emanating from the declarations on ecumenism and religious liberty, are destroying the authority of the Church’s Magisterium. In fact, Rome is no longer the unique and necessary “Magistra Veritatis.”

Reply to cardinal Ottaviani 

 

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Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.

REPLY TO CARDINAL OTTAVIANI

Rome, December 20, 1966

Your Eminence,

Your letter of July 24, concerning the questioning of certain truths was communicated through the good offices of our secretariat to all our major superiors.

Few replies have reached us. Those which have come to us from Africa do not deny that there is great confusion of mind at the present time. Even if these truths do not appear to be called in question, we are witnessing in practice a diminution of fervor and of regularity in receiving the sacraments, above all the Sacrament of Penance. A greatly diminished respect for the Holy Eucharist is found, above all on the part of priests, and a scarcity of priestly vocations in French-speaking missions: vocations in the English and Portuguese-speaking missions are less affected by the new spirit, but already the magazines and newspapers are spreading the most advanced theories.

It would seem that the reason for the small number of replies received is due to the difficulty in grasping these errors which are diffused everywhere. The seat of the evil lies chiefly in a literature which sows confusion in the mind by descriptions which are ambiguous and equivocal, but under the cloak of which one discovers a new religion.

I believe it my duty to put before you fully and clearly what is evident from my conversations with numerous bishops, priests and laymen in Europe and in Africa and which emerges also from what I have read in English and French territories.

I would willingly follow the order of the truths listed in your letter, but I venture to say that the present evil appears to be much more serious than the denial or calling in question of some truth of our faith. In these times it shows itself in an extreme confusion of ideas, in the breaking up of the Church’s institutions, religious foundations, seminaries, Catholic schools — in short, of what has been the permanent support of the Church. It is nothing less than the logical continuation of the heresies and errors which have been undermining the Church in recent centuries, especially since the Liberalism of the last century which has striven at all costs to reconcile the Church with the ideas that led to the French Revolution.

To the measure in which the Church has opposed these ideas, which run counter to sound philosophy and theology, she has made progress. On the other hand, any compromise with these subversive ideas has brought about an alignment of the Church with civil law with the attendant danger of enslaving her to civil society.

Moreover, every time that groups of Catholics have allowed themselves to be attracted by these myths, the Popes have courageously called them to order, enlightening, and if necessary condemning them. Catholic Liberalism was condemned by Pope Pius IX, Modernism by Pope Leo XIII, the Sillon Movement by Pope St. Pius X, Communism by Pope Pius XI and Neo-Modernism by Pope Pius XII.

Thanks to this admirable vigilance, the Church grew firm and spread; conversions of pagans and Protestants were very numerous; heresy was completely routed; states accepted amore Catholic legislation.

Groups of religious imbued with these false ideas, however, succeeded in infiltrating them into Catholic Action and into the seminaries, thanks to a certain indulgence on the part of the bishops and the tolerance of certain Roman authorities. Soon it would be among such priests that the bishops would be chosen.

This was the point at which the Council found itself while preparing, by preliminary commissions, to proclaim the truth in the face of such errors in order to banish them from the midst of the Church for a long time to come. This would have been the end of Protestantism and the beginning of a new and fruitful era for the Church.

Now this preparation was odiously rejected in order to make way for the gravest tragedy the Church has ever suffered. We have lived to see the marriage of the Catholic Church with Liberal ideas. It would be to deny the evidence, to be willfully blind, not to state courageously that the Council has allowed those who profess the errors and tendencies condemned by the Popes named above, legitimately to believe that their doctrines were approved and sanctioned.

Whereas the Council was preparing itself to be a shining light in today’s world (if those pre-conciliar documents in which we find a solemn profession of safe doctrine with regard to today’s problems, had been accepted), we can and we must unfortunately state that:

In a more or less general way, when the Council has introduced innovations, it has unsettled the certainty of truths taught by the authentic Magisterium of the Church as unquestionably belonging to the treasure of Tradition.

The transmission of the jurisdiction of the bishops, the two sources of Revelation, the inspiration of Scripture, the necessity of grace for justification, the necessity of Catholic baptism, the life of grace among heretics, schismatics and pagans, the ends of marriage, religious liberty, the last ends, etc. On all these fundamental points the traditional doctrine was clear and unanimously taught in Catholic universities. Now, numerous texts of the Council on these truths will henceforward permit doubt to be cast upon them.

The consequences of this have rapidly been drawn and applied in the life of the Church:

Doubts about the necessity of the Church and the sacraments lead to the disappearance of priestly vocations;
Doubts on the necessity for and nature of the “conversion” of every soul involve the disappearance of religious vocations, the destruction of traditional spirituality in the novitiates, and the uselessness of the missions;
Doubts on the lawfulness of authority and the need for obedience, caused by the exaltation of human dignity, the autonomy of conscience and liberty, are unsettling all societies beginning with the Church—religious societies, dioceses, secular society, the family;

Pride has as its normal consequence the concupiscence of the eyes and the flesh. It is perhaps one of the most appalling signs of our age to see to what moral decadence the majority of Catholic publications have fallen. They speak without any restraint of sexuality, of birth control by every method, of the lawfulness of divorce, of mixed education, of flirtation, of dances as a necessary means of Christian upbringing, of the celibacy of the clergy, etc;

Doubts regarding the necessity of grace in order to be saved result in baptism to be held in low esteem, so that for the future it is to be put off until later, and occasion the neglect of the sacrament of Penance. This is particularly an attitude of the clergy and not of the faithful. It is the same with regard to the Real Presence: it is the clergy who act as though they no longer believe by hiding away the Blessed Sacrament, by suppressing all marks of respect towards the Sacred Species and all ceremonies in Its honor;
Doubts on the necessity of the Catholic Church as the only true religion, the sole source of salvation, emanating from the declarations on ecumenism and religious liberty, are destroying the authority of the Church’s Magisterium. In fact, Rome is no longer the unique and necessary “Magistra Veritatis”.

Thus, driven to this by the facts, we are forced to conclude that the Council has encouraged, in an inconceivable manner, the spreading of Liberal errors. Faith, morals and ecclesiastical discipline are shaken to their foundations, fulfilling the predictions of all the Popes.

The destruction of the Church is advancing at a rapid pace. By giving an exaggerated authority to the episcopal conferences, the Sovereign Pontiff has rendered himself powerless. What painful lessons in one single year! Yet the Successor of Peter and he alone can save the Church.

Let the Holy Father surround himself with strong defenders of the Faith: let him nominate them in the important dioceses. Let him by documents of outstanding importance proclaim the truth, search out error without fear of contradictions, without fear of schisms, without fear of calling in question the pastoral dispositions of the Council.

Let the Holy Father deign to encourage the individual bishops of their respective dioceses to correct faith and morals. It behooves every good pastor to uphold the courageous bishops, to urge them to reform their seminaries and to restore them to the study of St. Thomas; to encourage Superiors General to maintain in novitiates and communities the fundamental principles of all Christian asceticism, and above all, obedience; to encourage the development of Catholic schools, a press informed by sound doctrine, associations of Christian families; and finally, to rebuke the instigators of errors and reduce them to silence. The Wednesday allocutions of the pope cannot replace encyclicals, decrees and letters to the bishops.

Doubtless I am reckless in expressing myself in this manner! But it is with ardent love that I compose these lines, love of God’s glory, love of Jesus, love of Mary, of the Church, of the Successor of Peter, Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Jesus Christ.

May the Holy Ghost, to Whom our Congregation is dedicated, deign to come to the assistance of the Pastor of the Universal Church.

May Your Eminence deign to accept the assurance of my most respectful devotion in Our Lord.

+ Marcel Lefebvre,

Titular Archbishop of Synnada in Phrygia,

Superior General of the Congregation of the Holy Ghost

 

Some Concrete Solutions

Facing such evils, Archbishop Lefebvre respectfully suggested some concrete solutions to the Sovereign Pontiff. “May the Sovereign Pontiff deign use solemn documents to proclaim the truth and condemn error without fear of being contradicted, without fear of schisms, without fear of questioning the Council’s pastoral pronouncements.”

He asked the Pope to give efficacious support to faithful bishops. “May the Sovereign Pontiff deign:

– Encourage every bishop to shore up faith and morals in his own diocese, as befits every good shepherd;
– Support courageous bishops and prompt them to reform their seminaries, restoring within them Thomism;
– Encourage superiors general to maintain the fundamental principles of Christian asceticism, especially obedience, in their novitiates and communities;
– Encourage the spread of Catholic schools;
– Encourage orthodox publishing;
– Encourage associations that promote Christian family life;
– And finally, castigate and silence those who spread doctrinal errors.”

By founding the Society of St. Pius X in 1970, Archbishop Lefebvre attempted to introduce, as best he could, these very solutions: Thomistic instruction in the seminary, Christian asceticism and obedience in the formation of seminarians; and as an integral part of the Society’s priories – Catholic schools, Catholic publishing, associations promoting Christian family life.

For the founder of the Society of St. Pius X, this practical response was fundamental: doing what is possible given one’s position, with the grace of state, without ever forgetting, however, as Cardinal Ottaviani wrote, that “only the successor of St. Peter can save the Church.”

From Exclusivity to Inclusivity… and Back Again

One must here add that for Archbishop Lefebvre this practical response was an effective antidote to relativism. He wished to act doctrinally, but also pastorally, because he understood well the ideological character of the post-conciliar novelties. The ideologue sees in a purely speculative argument only an ideology contrary to his own, and not the opposite of an ideology. It is in that manner that subjectivist relativism reasons and dissolves “objective and absolute truth” and “the objective rule of morality.”

Surely the “doubts” referred to earlier cannot but call into question what is most basic – the Church’s role in salvation – by promoting secondary Christianity, as Romano Amerio so perspicaciously described it. Losing sight of that which is most fundamental has the effect of blurring a doctrinal and moral teaching that used to be clear. If the Church’s mission of bringing salvation to men is no longer its central purpose and guiding force, hierarchy and order give way to contradictions and incoherence, and then it is no longer a question of mere “doubts!”

Henceforth what Our Lord considered incompatible or exclusive – “either or” (“No man can serve two masters. For either he will hate the one and love the other; or he will sustain the one and despise the other.” Matt. 6, 24) – becomes reconcilable or inclusive, as people say today. Either or is replaced by a both and“that combines heaven and earth as a compound, in which the world is the predominant element that gives the character to the whole.” (Romano Amerio, Iota Unum, A Study of Changes in the Catholic Church in the XXth Century, Sarto House, 1996, p. 505) And all this is justified by a “pastoral mercy” that concerns itself with immigration, the rights of man, ecological questions, etc.

That is why Archbishop Lefebvre was so insistent that the Society of St. Pius X be left totally free to “give Tradition a try.” In the face of relativism and its debilitating consequences for the Church (a decline in vocations and an ever-diminishing practice of religion), he knew it was necessary to put into practice the fruits of a two-thousand-year-old Tradition. He hoped that the Church’s return to Tradition would one day allow it to reclaim its heritage. Going back to the roots of the crisis implies a return to Tradition: from effects to causes, or from the fruit to the tree, as Our Lord said. And at that point all ideologies crumble, for facts and figures are not “traditionalist” (and certainly not “lefebvrist”), they are either good or bad, just like the tree from which they come.

The goal of Archbishop Lefebvre and his Society is simply that the Church regain its Tradition by this simple but compelling experiment. We cannot but embrace whole-heartedly the conclusion of the letter addressed to Cardinal Ottaviani: “Doubtless I am reckless in expressing myself in this manner! But it is with ardent love that I compose these lines, love of God’s glory, love of Jesus, love of Mary, of the Church, of the Successor of Peter, Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Jesus Christ.”

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sol·stice: a noun, either of the two times in the year, the summer solstice and the winter solstice, when the sun reaches its highest or lowest point in the sky at noon, marked by the longest and shortest days.

spiritual solstice:  a noun, any of the times during the year when the Son is at the highest or lowest point in our spiritual life marking the longest period of the dark night of the soul or the brilliant light of ecstasy as we experience the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. – Abyssum
July 1, 2018
Now that the Summer Solstice has passed, and amateur Druids have left their plastic litter at Stonehenge for another year, the human mind has the past six months to reflect upon and the rest of the year to anticipate.

It is only because humans are in the image of God, which means we are able to think of him and reflect his love that made us, that we have the imaginative gift to picture past and future. Some scientists claim that certain animals have a reduced capacity for doing that, but only humans can say “I can’t imagine . . .” and “Can you imagine…?

A professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Yuval Harari, has speculated that even if there is some minimal ability for other creatures to remember and anticipate, “Only Homo Sapiens can cooperate in extremely flexible ways with countless numbers of strangers. One-on-one or ten-on-ten, chimpanzees may be better than us. But pit 1,000 Sapiens against 1,000 chimps, and the Sapiens will win easily, for the simple reason that 1,000 chimps can never cooperate effectively. Put 100,000 chimps in Wall Street or Yankee Stadium, and you’ll get chaos. Put 100,000 humans there, and you’ll get trade networks and sports contests.” You also get the Holy Church.

The Prince of Lies would twist the imagination so that we are haunted rather than hallowed by the past, and hesitant rather than hopeful about the future. The American Psychological Association surveyed 2,000 people and found that only one percent of them wanted to know about what is to come.

Our Lord did not tell the apostles about the future, except to say, “Follow me.” So the doctors of the soul bid us say upon rising in the morning: “Serviam—I will serve.” Whether you are a Latinist or indulge the vernacular when half awake, that consecrates the day.

Approximately 3,866 years after the completion of Stonehenge, New Yorkers can watch a similarly spectacular sight when Manhattan becomes a sundial here on our worst and best of streets, 34th Street, viewed from the East River right across to our parish along the Hudson. If you missed the Solstice, you can see this phenomenon on July 12 and 13. The sun becomes blinding as the east-west grid aligns with the sunset and creates a spectacle that has come to be called, in competition with the Druids, “Manhattanhenge.” The sun will sink below the skyscrapers at 8:20 pm on Thursday and on Friday at 8:21 pm.

I have the selfish privilege of going into our church to pray after the doors are locked at sunset, with the noise of 34th Street shut outside. The mellow light filters through the nineteenth-century German glass windows. “And the city hath no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine upon it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the lamp thereof is the Lamb” (Revelation 21:23).

 

Father George W. Rutler

 

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FATHER JAMES MARTIN: “I would say that LGBT people have more faith than straight people, because of that… I do hope in ten years you’ll be able to kiss your (male) partner (at the kiss-of-peace in the Mass), or, you know, soon to be your husband. Why not?”

James Martin and the Question of the Kiss

CRISIS MAGAZINE

Just a few days ago, James Martin, S.J. tweeted: “Jesus says, ‘Stop judging.’… Not ‘Judge if people are sinning.’ Not ‘Judge people to correct them.’… Jesus judged others, but he was the Sinless Son of God. Unless you are, too, ‘Stop judging.’”

Who is Martin fingering, and about what?

Fairfax County School Board member Pat Hynes knows. She just used Martin’s tweet to slam my excellent bishop, Michael Burbidge. Under Martin’s scold she tweeted: “Our school bd was lobbied by followers of Archbishop of Arlington VA to reject ‘sex assigned at birth’ language in sex ed curriculum. He’s not a biologist or doctor, so why weigh in if not to judge others’ lives?”

The non-judgmental Pat Hynes and her colleagues on the Fairfax County School Board just voted to teach children they aren’t really male or female, that biological sex is meaningless, and that they should consider taking a daily sex pill to reduce the chance of infection from condom-less gay sex with multiple partners of unknown HIV status. All of this, without their parents’ permission.

The problem with James Martin’s crusade is not just that he is leading young men and women astray with his statements about homosexuality. It is also that he gives aid and comfort to the enemies of both the Church and God’s precious children.

Professor Robert George’s position that James Martin is now orthodox on the question of homosexuality has caused a growing response from Catholics who seldom find themselves at odds with the esteemed Princeton professor.

After Professor George gave Martin a clean bill of theological health on this matter on Twitter, I and others responded, and George doubled down in a Public Discourse column.

Professor George says if we do not believe Martin when he says, “As a Catholic priest, I have never challenged Church teaching” on homosexuality—i.e., if we think he is lying—we will have to answer to God. I accept.

I see many contradictions between Martin’s statements and Church teaching (I have iterated some here) but one, in particular, continues to call for a response: Martin’s public statement that he looks forward to married gays kissing during the Sign of Peace.

Thousands, at least, have viewed an audio recording of the August 29, 2017, podcast of James Martin SJ at Villanova University. In a question and answer period before Martin’s speech to the theology department, journalist Brandon Ambrosino asks a question, really more of a statement. And I quote it at length, so I cannot be accused of strategic editing.

Ambrosino says: “Encounter is tough for LGBT people. I go to a Catholic church with my partner, Andy, and I still always have this moment of decision when we pass the peace … because every other couple just hugs and kisses each other and nobody makes a big deal of it, but I’ve never kissed Andy in church, and I’ve recently starting thinking about that. Will we be in church 10 years from now, in front of our children, and during that part of the service, we hug each other … it’s not that anyone has said anything to me, but nobody has gone out of the way to say, oh, just so you know, it would be okay… Encounter is a difficult thing. Just the fact of showing up, sitting in a church, it takes a lot of faith.”

James Martin replies: “It does, and I would say that LGBT people have more faith than straight people, because of that… I do hope in ten years you’ll be able to kiss your partner, or, you know, soon to be your husband. Why not?”

Why not? One does not have to be a Thomist to see this massive contradiction with Church teaching.

So far, Professor George has not helped us to work through this contradiction. And he should. I asked him on Twitter about James Martin and abortion, and Professor George answered immediately and eloquently about Martin’s pro-life bona fides. But when I asked him about this contradiction on homosexuality he did not answer. The reason is that one is easy and the other is very difficult.

Peter Wolfgang has proposed that Professor George may be playing a game of chess in the matter of James Martin. I do not think so. It would imply that Professor George really does not believe the orthodoxy of James Martin but that there is a stratagem that may pay off at some point. This cannot be true. Professor George is a brilliant tactician, but he does not deceive.

We owe him the honor of believing his words, that he believes that James Martin is orthodox on homosexuality. So, how would one parse “I do hope in ten years you’ll be able to kiss your partner, or, you know, soon to be your husband. Why not?” as orthodox? One could read it not as approving gay marriage but merely recognizing that it may legally happen for the reporter and his partner. And a kiss? A kiss does not necessarily mean there is anything more than a hearty male friendship.

Professor George has written about mental reservation. It very well could be that George accepts Martin’s belief that this statement does not violate Church teaching because of Martin’s possible mental reservation that the teaching on homosexuality has not been “received.”

I would say that what is in Martin’s mind may be important for his own soul, but it is not for ours. The more important thing is what comes out of his mouth. What counts is when this very public priest makes pronouncements that mislead. What counts is Martin saying these things to impressionable young men and women who may be deceived about Church teaching.

In his latest argument in defense of Martin, Professor George claims that Martin’s critics do not want him to befriend Martin, but to shun him. I do not know any of his public critics who hold such a view. In fact, quite the opposite. Professor George said someone had said this to him on Twitter. This is a thin thread upon which to make such a broad claim against Martin’s critics. We are not concerned about Professor George’s friendships. What we are concerned about is that he has thrown his cloak of orthodoxy over a man who does not seem to be orthodox on one of the most vexing questions of our day.

Finally, it gives me no pleasure to challenge Professor George. It is especially uncomfortable to do so in public, and extraordinarily uncomfortable since he can run rings around me brain-wise. He is a hero to so many of us. I have known him for more than twenty years and have often made common cause with him. I do not enjoy disagreeing with him and I fear I may annoyed him.

But these are questions that demand answers. Robby, how are we to square Martin’s claim never to have “challenged” church teaching when he says he looks forward to married gays kissing in church?

(Photo credit: Salt & Light interview / Youtube)

Austin Ruse

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Austin Ruse is president of C-FAM (Center for Family & Human Rights), a New York and Washington DC-based research institute. He is the author of Fake Science: Exposing the Left’s Skewed Statistics, Fuzzy Facts, and Dodgy Data published by Regnery and Little Suffering Souls: Children Whose Short Lives Point Us to Christ published by Tan Books. His forthcoming book from Tan Books, written with His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke, is expected this spring. The views expressed here are solely his own.

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WELCOME TO THE LIBERTARIAN WORLD WHERE NOTHING IS FIXED NOTHING IS UNCHANGEABLE SO CHANGE YOUR GENDER MARRY YOUR SON OR DAUGHTER OR YOUR HORSE. ITS A BRAVE NEW WORLD WHERE LANGUAGE NO LONGER HAS MEANING AND WE ARE EACH FREE TO DEFINE THE MYSTERY OF LIFE

Trans Today, What Tomorrow?

 

{EMPHASIS BY ABYSSUM IN RED TYPE}

In the spiritual life, there is no standing still. You are either advancing or retreating. Like many other true things, this is necessarily taxing, especially when just treading water seems like a triumph.

There is no standing still on the societal front either. Look how quickly the transgender movement followed Obergefell.  It would be folly to imagine that this “achievement” would placate progressives – as if transgenderism were the goal to end all goals.  So one logical question is: what comes next?

It seems there are only two general options.  We might recover a saner appreciation of reality and tradition, or we will continue to degenerate in yet other destructive ways. My guess, unfortunately, is that the latter is more likely.

Polygamy is a somewhat obvious candidate for the next wave to crash ashore. As predicted, Muslims in the West have begun advocating for its acceptance based upon legal precedent sanctioning “gay marriage.” Why should “love” lose in a polygamous context?

The point is not hard to appreciate: they got theirs by throwing reason out the window, why shouldn’t we get ours? There is also now a special term for incest – “Genetic Sexual Attraction” – designed to give it a scientific aura and thus a kind of respectability; well, if that is what we are calling it now, it’s ok then.

But we may also have to contend with an attempt to normalize pedophilia.  I hate to even write this, but you tell me what is beyond the pale nowadays – and why?  Providing a reason it should be singled out as verboten is not so easy, given the justifications we now accept for other transgressions.

A few months ago, I saw an episode of Chicago Med – a hospital-based TV drama – in which one of the patients facing a life-threatening medical emergency happened to be a pedophile. He did not want to continue being an offender and thus chose to forego treatment in order to ensure his death.

While cast in this sympathetic light, his medical team was eager to find explanations for his “condition”: there was talk about new “scientific” indications that pedophilia could be classified as a disease – traced back to a gene or some neurological trigger. This explains the title of that episode: “Born This Way.”

Pope Francis seems comfortable with that mindset if, as per media accounts, he really did tell a “gay” person – a victim of clerical sexual abuse! – he was born that way. Whatever Francis’ actual view, the impression remains that he might have actually confirmed him in that lifestyle; if so, why could he theoretically not say the same for a polygamist or even a pedophile?

And why does this justification only pertain to sexuality: was Bernie Madoff born to defraud the unsuspecting out of their life savings?

The Chicago Med program aired on NBC, an indication they suspect the public may be prepared to accept the concept that pedophiles (like gays) simply act as their biology determines them to act. You see, biology is unalterable (LGB), except, of course, when it is alterable (T).

 

Biology is what we say it is, when we say what it is. Got the reasoning there? Good, then you see the attempt to classify pedophilia as a disease for what it is: the first step towards normalization. Disease can become benign just as bad can become good – when we say so.

Netflix is streaming a drag queen superhero cartoon, and some public libraries have hosted drag queen story time – yet further indications that some want sexualizing children to go mainstream. UC Santa Barbara also apparently sees this stance as permissible. Are we really going to let the standard “argument” for the gay-rights lifestyle expand to include “access” to kids as a right?

In a recent 60 Minutes interview, Pope Francis spoke strongly against pedophilia – and yet had an unfortunate lapse in so doing. Perhaps it was another case of a poor word choice, but he said:

Towards pedophilia, zero tolerance! And the Church must punish such priests who have that problem, and bishops must remove from their priestly functions anyone with that disease, that tendency to pedophilia, and that includes to support the legal action by the parents before the civil courts.

That disease?  This is the linguistic opening through which zero tolerance morphs into exculpation.

If it is an enfermedad, why would we be talking about zero tolerance? Should a priest with arthritis or diabetes be shown “zero tolerance” when manifestations of those diseases resurface? Trying to reclassify the act of abusing an innocent person as a “disease” should be met with resounding repudiation.

But what do we really repudiate anymore? When there is no objective truth to defend, everything else becomes defensible. Perennial Catholic teaching may be difficult, but it is coherent and its truths fit together as a whole. Take away a seemingly small part of it, and the whole is bound to unravel.

Notice how children are viewed in our post-truth era: unwelcome (contraception), out of the equation (gay), malleable innocents to be steered towards destruction (LGBT indoctrination), and unworthy even of protection from violence (abortion).

Children can also become, through technology, objects engineered to suit the wishes of adults. If we accept these “reasons” to treat children in such a disinterested and ruthless manner, why cannot they also be used as sex objects?

Pushing the envelope in that direction may be packaged by some radical Westerners as “progress.” Yet the practice of abusing boys is already entrenched in Afghanistan.  Take PBS’ word for it.

Such is our mental landscape. Nihilistic willfulness is in charge; humane regard for others is on the chopping block. Appeals to reason are as welcome as appeals to religion. Maybe, after all, there is something to categorizing sin – as the Catechism does – as an offense against reason and truth.

We are so estranged from reason nowadays that we are poorly positioned to resist even greater harms lurking ahead.

Matthew Hanley

Matthew Hanley

Matthew Hanley is senior fellow with the National Catholic Bioethics Center. With Jokin de Irala, M.D., he is the author of Affirming Love, Avoiding AIDS: What Africa Can Teach the West, which recently won a best-book award from the Catholic Press Association. The opinions expressed here are Mr. Hanley’s and not those of the NCBC.

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ONE OF THE BLESSINGS OF MY YOUTH WAS THAT AS I GREW UP WILL ROGERS ROSE TO FAME AS AMERICA’S PHILOSOPHER LAUREATE SUCCEEDING MARK TWAIN. IF EVER YOU ARE IN CLAREMORE, OKLAHOMA VISIT THE WILL ROGERS MUSEUM. THE AUTHOR OF THE OKIE TRADITIONALIST BLOG MUST DRINK FROM THE SAME SPRING AS ROGERS AS HIS PHILOSOPHICAL MUSINGS HAVE GREAT CHARM AND VALUE.

 

The Okie Traditionalist


More Random Thoughts

Posted: 28 Jun 2018 06:48 PM PDT

Every person is an onion.   You really have to peel back the layers before you can even begin to understand them.   Their temperament,  personality,  personal life.
In short,  we need real personal connections with eachother.   I think the final nail on the coffin of human relations,  replaced by transhumanistic,  existential absurdity,  was the advent of social media and the smartphone.Case in point.   I sat in the cafeteria for lunch today where I work.   I made eye contact and said hello to the people around me.   And after eating my lunch, I just sat back and watched the crowded room of people.   Most of the people were spending the majority of the time looking at their smartphone screen.   I don’t expect a congress of philosophical discourse,  but every social interaction in the room was at best shallow and artificial.

My dog Peanut.   Loyal,  obsessively attached to me wherever I go,  giving me deep,  longing looks every day,  locking eyes with me,  conveying genuine love.   Her will is not free,  but she has a will,  and ironically this little mortal animal is more genuine and caring than 95% of Homo sapiens I encounter in the mainstream.

I remain mystified and detached.  I continue to work hard and progress.   But only the likes of poetry,  music,  whiskey,  and sitting in front of a fire can give clarity and perspective about the wasteland.

Can you relate?

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PEDOPHILIA IS NOT JUST A PROBLEM FOR THE CHURCH IN AMERICA, IT IS A WORLDWIDE PROBLEM AS THIS REPORT FROM AUSTRALIA INDICATES

notre_dame_paris


SEX CRIMES COMMITTED BY PRIESTS, RELIGIOUS AND LAY WORKERS Thu, Jun 28, 2018 at 10:26 PM
By Richard Stokes
Below is an incomplete list of offences by priests and religious in Australia, taken from Broken Rites Australia.
 
Most of the offences would seem to be from clerics ordained in the sixties, when the homosexual population of Australia was around 1%.
 
The last time I counted, the offences were 90% homosexual.  That suggests, given that those who preyed on boys were just 1% of the population, and that these produced 90% of the offences (and offenders), that homosexuals are 1 000 times more likely to offend than are the general population.
 
I understand that this is not mathematically watertight, but it gives an indication of the predatory nature of the homosexual.
 
For the first 100 cases I have noted in red those cases where boys are victims.  Girls are in blue.  This makes it easier to count.
 
Where a priest has molested both boys and girls, I have counted him as homosexual, since it seems reasonable that a man who molests boys is inclined that way.  Healthy heterosexuals are repelled by the thought of sexual contact with other men.
 
Sometimes the victim’s sex is unknown.  But if the school is run by Marist Brothers or Christian Brothers, it was certainly a boys’ school at the time of the offences, so the offender is clearly homosexual.
 
What I have not shown is the number of altar boys who have suicided.  Since around 80% of priests are former altar-boys, one wonders how many great vocations have been lost.  Who knows?  Maybe a bishop or even a Pope.
 
I have sent this information to our bishops, and I am holding my breath because I am sure that a reply will come soon.  But maybe not.
 
I am not aware of any case where a bishop actually prevented further attacks by a priest.  Not until Cardinal Pell, then Archbishop of Melbourne, brought a stop to the shuffling (the process of moving offending priests to other parishes) about 20 years ago.
 
Here are some examples of criminal cases, researched by Broken Rites Australia (since 1993), involving Catholic priests and religious brothers. This list is confined to cases in which victims were supported by Broken Rites.
  1. Fr Bert Adderley, Western Australia
    The Bunbury Catholic diocese in Western Australia harboured Reverend Dr Bertram Richard Adderley, Ph.D., B.A, while he was committing sexual crimes against boys in the 1960s and ’70s. As Adderley is deceased now, the police cannot charge him. Some of Adderley’s victim are forcing the Bunbury diocese to pay them financial compensation. According to Broken Rites research, Bertram Adderley had been a lay teacher at the Christian Brothers’ Aquinas College in Perth in the 1950s before entering the priesthood. He served as a priest in the Bunbury diocese from 1959 to 1974. In the early 1960s (after working as a priest at the Narrogin parish), Dr Adderley oversaw Catholic education in the Bunbury diocese but in 1965, following complaints about sexual abuse, he was relegated, out-of-sight, to parishes at Mannup and Manjimup. In 1975, he left parish ministry, “on leave”.
  2. Fr Michael Aulsebrook 
    Father Michael Scott Aulsebrook (a member of the Catholic religious order Salesians of Don Bosco) was jailed in 2011 and again in 2016 for child-sex crimes committed in the 1980s, including at Salesian College “Rupertswood” (a boarding school) in Sunbury, Victoria. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  3. Fr John Ayers, Salesian order 
    This priest was a danger to schoolboys during his long career in the Catholic religious order of Salesian Fathers. In 2011, the Victoria Police sex-crime squad was gathering evidence about his Victorian crimes but. by then, Ayers was elderly and was retired in Samoa, making it too difficult for police to bring him to court in Australia. He died in 2012.  Some of his former pupils in Australia have obtained justice by forcing the Salesians to pay them a civil settlement. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  4. Fr Wilfred Baker 
    After action by Broken Rites, Father Wilfred James Baker (also known as Father Bill Baker or Fr Billy Baker), Melbourne archdiocese, was sentenced in 1999 to 4 years jail (eligible for parole after 2 years) for offences against boys. See the Broken Rites story HERE. In early 2014, Baker was due to face court on more charges (after more of his earlier victims spoke to police) but he died, thus preventing these victims from obtaining justice.
  5. Former Christian Brother Ted “Bales“, Victoria
    A convicted pedophile, Christian Brother Edward Vernon Dowlan, changed his surname to Bales to avoid publicity. In 2015, Bales/Dowlan  was jailed again after he pleaded guilty regarding some more of his victims. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  6. Fr Charlie Barnett
    Charles Alfred Barnett, who ministered for the Vincentian order in Catholic parishes around Australia for 20 years until the mid-1990s, was sentenced in South Australia in August 2010 to at least four years for sexual offences against boys in that state. He is also facing complaints in other Australian states. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  7. Father Roger Michael Bellemore 
    This Marist priest was sentenced in Tasmania in 2006 to five years’ jail (with parole after 3 years) for offences against schoolboys. After he had spent nine months in jail, the appeal court granted him a re-trial. In February 2008, another jury found Bellemore guilty and he was sentenced to four years’ jail. See  Broken Rites  here.
  8. Br Robert Best 
    Christian Brother Robert Charles Best (also known as Brother Bob Best) was convicted in Melbourne in 1996 for sexual offences committed against one of his schoolboy victims. On 8 August 2011, after being convicted again for multiple offences (including buggery) against some more of his victims, he was sentenced (at the age of 70) to 14 years and nine months (eligible for parole after serving 11 years and three months). See Broken Rites  HERE.
  9. Fr Tony Bongiorno 
    The Melbourne Catholic archdiocese has been forced to admit that Father Anthony Salvatore Bongiorno committed sexual crimes against boys who were under his supervision. And, furthermore, the Victorian government’s Crimes Compensation Tribunal has awarded compensation to at least one of Bongriorno’s victims. When he was training for the priesthood, Bongiorno was in the same seminary group as George Pell and Denis Hart, both of whom eventually became archbishops. See Broken Rites here.
  10. Warren Booth
    Warren Douglas Booth was training to become a priest when he sexually assaulted a 12-year-old boy in the showers at a public pool in Campbelltown in Sydney’s south-west. Booth was sentenced in 1996 to 12 months jail.
  11. Fr Tom Brennan, Newcastle, NSW 
    In August 2012, police charged Father Thomas Brennan (of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese) with 10 counts of sexually assaulting a young male while Brennan was the parish priest (in the early 1980s) at Waratah, in Newcastle, north of Sydney. He was also charged with having failed to report the sex-crimes (in the 1970s) of another priest who was under Brennan’s supervision. Brennan was ordered to appear in court on 25 September 2012 on all these charges but he failed to appear and he died five days later. See  Broken Rites  here.
  12. Fr Peter Brock, New South Wales
    In 2008, Fr Peter Julian Brock, of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, north of Sydney, was charged by police with having committed 22 sex offences against two boys during the early 1970s. Brock contested the charges in court but later he gave the two victims a written apology for the abuse. The diocese paid a financial settlement to the two victims. See Broken Rites HERE.
  13. Fr Desmond Brown
    Father Desmond Joseph Brown, Redemptorist order, Victoria and NSW, non-custodial sentence, for indecent assault of a female.
  14. Fr Rex Brown
    Father Paul Rex Brown (once a senior priest in the Lismore Catholic diocese in New South Wales) was convicted in Queensland in 1996 for possessing child pornography. Police could have charged Brown with serious child sexual-assault offences but he chose to plead guilty to the lesser charge of child pornography. See Broken Rites  HERE.
  15. Marist Brother Thomas (“Patrick”) Butler
    Thomas John Butler (a Marist Brother whose “religious” alias was “Brother Patrick”) taught at Marist Brothers schools in Newcastle, Sydney and Brisbane for 50 years until 2001. In 2002, a Queensland magistrate ruled that there was enough evidence for Butler to stand trial before a judge in Brisbane District Court for indecently dealing with a Brisbane schoolboy, aged 11. However, for legal reasons, the court proceedings did not result in a conviction. “Brother Pat” died in 2006, aged 77. Victims of his have contacted Broken Rites.
  16. Fr John Byrne, a Jesuit
    In a submission to a Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic Archdiocese admitted that Father John Byrne (a Jesuit) committed offences against children in Melbourne while he worked at St Patrick’s College and Xavier College. He also taught at St Ignatius College, Riverview, Sydney. See Broken Rites HERE.
  17. Fr Neil Byrne
    In Brisbane on 7 March 2012, the Very Rev Dr Neil Joseph Byrne was sentenced to nine months in jail (suspended for two years) after he pleaded guilty to possessing and making child-exploitation material. As a lecturer in a seminary, Byrne has been involved in the training of Australian Catholic priests. See Broken Rites  here.
  18. Gerard Vincent Byrnes 
    Gerard Byrnes (born in 1948) originally trained as a Christian Brother before becoming a lay teacher in Catholic schools in Queensland and New South Wales. On 4 October 2010, he was jailed for 8-10 years after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting girls at a Catholic primary school in Toowoomba, Queensland. He was the school’s designated “child protection officer”. See Broken Rites here.
  19. Marist Brother “Romuald” Cable
    A member of the Catholic religious order of Marist Brothers — Brother Francis William Cable (born 1932), known as “Brother Romuald” — was convicted in the Sydney District Court in 2015 for multiple child-sex offences, including buggery. See Broken Rites HERE.
  20. Brian Cairns, former Christian Brother
    After beginning in the early 1970s as a Christian Brother, Brian Cairns worked as a lay teacher (“Mister” Cairns) in Catholic schools in Queensland. In 1985 he was jailed for sex-crimes against boys. In 2014, after more of his former pupils contacted Broken Rites and the police, Cairns was jailed again. See Broken Rites here.
  21. Fr Tom Carroll, Melbourne  ++++++++++
    The Melbourne Catholic archdiocese has acknowledged that Father Thomas Carroll committed sexual offences against children, including altar boys at Caulfield South (Holy Cross parish) in the 1950s and 1960s. Carroll’s earlier parishes around Melbourne included Mansfield and Epping. His victims were silenced by the church culture. Eventually, a victim decided to report Carroll’s crimes to the Victoria Police but, by then, Carroll was deceased and the police could not arrest him. Broken Rites is conducting further research regarding Carroll. (This Thomas Carroll in Melbourne should not be confused with any other Australian priest with the same name.)
  22. Br Greg Carter,
    Marist Brother Gregory James Carter (born 4 July 1957) was sentenced in Queensland in 1997 to 18 months jail (with release after six months served) after pleading guilty to multiple charges of indecent treatment of a 15-year-old boy who was a boarder at St Augustine’s Marist Brothers’ College in Cairns, north Queensland. See Broken Rites HERE.
  23. Fr Tony Caruana, MSC Order
    In October 1992, Catholic priest Anthony William Peter Caruana was charged in court in New South Wales, by the NSW Office of Public Prosecutions, with having committed an act of indecency on a 12-year-old boy in 1988 while on the staff of Chevalier College (a boys‘ boarding school in Bowral NSW, operated by a Catholic order, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart). The court case did not result in a conviction. Two decades later, in November 2012 the then leader of the MSC Order in Australia (Father John Mulrooney) was quoted in the Sydney Morning Herald as saying that, apart from this 12-year-old boy, a dozen former students have lodged formal complaints regarding Father Caruana at Chevalier College.
  24. Fr Dermot Casey, Brisbane archdiocese
    Fr Dermot Casey, who had a long career in south-east Queensland parishes, was charged in 2012 with sexual offences against ten children but he kept evading court on medical grounds and he finally died in August 2014 (aged 78), ten days before his next court date. The Brisbane archdiocese has begun compensating victims for the damage done by Casey. See Broken Rites HERE.
  25. Fr Richard Cattell
    Father Richard St John Cattell, of the Parramatta diocese, NSW, was jailed in 1994 after pleading guilty to indecent assault of a boy and he was jailed again in 2015 after another of his victims contacted the police. See Broken Rites HERE.
  26. Fr Peter Chalk 
    This priest (a member of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart religious order) ministered in Melbourne in the 1970s (around Croydon, Park Orchards and Warrandyte). Melbourne police later accumulated evidence which could enable them to prosecute Father Peter Gerard Chalk for sexually abusing children (as young as 12) in Melbourne. But Chalk’s religious superiors allowed him to stay out of Australia (and out of reach of the Australian police), working in Japan, where he changed his surname to a Japanese one. In 2010, Chalk suddenly died (in Japan), thus closing the Melbourne police file. See Broken Rites here.
  27. Br Bob Chambers, Queensland 
    The Brisbane Courier Mail has reported that in the Brisbane District Court on 10 October 2002, Christian Brother Robert George Chambers (then aged 60) pleaded guilty to assault occasioning bodily harm on a boy, aged 12, in 1968 while Chambers was teaching at St Joseph’s Christian Brothers College in Rockhampton, central Queensland. Brother Chambers, who was standing at a window in the Brothers’ residence, fired an air rifle at the boy in the school yard, hitting him twice in the back of his legs as the boy drank from a water fountain. Judge Julie Dick placed Chambers on a $100, six-month good-behaviour bond. The prosecutor said that the Crown had elected not to proceed with another, different charge against Chambers. In the 1980s, Brother Chambers taught at Ignatius Park College in Townsville.
  28. Br David Christian
    Marist Brother David Austin Christian (born 3 December 1942), formerly principal of Marist Brothers’ Newman College, Perth, Western Australia, pleaded guilty to multiple counts of aggravated indecent assault against two boys (aged 10 and 11) in the principal’s office. When charged in 1994, Br Christian had been teaching at Port Hedland, W.A. In 1995, Christian was fined $10,500 ($1,500 per incident) but the Marist Order said it would pay the fine for him. Brother Christian moved to live with the Marist Brothers in Templestowe, Melbourne. According to Marist websites (accessed in 2011), Brother David Christian continued to be accepted by his superiors and colleagues as a member of the Marist order.
  29. Fr Bob Claffey
    Father Robert Claffey, Ballarat diocese, Victoria, has been jailed See Broken Rites here.
  30. Fr Patrick Cleary
    Father Patrick Joseph Cleary, Brisbane archdiocese, 5-15 months jail for offences against boys. See more HERE.
  31. Fr Bryan Coffey
    Father Bryan Desmond Coffey, Ballarat diocese, Victoria, was sentenced to 3 years jail (suspended) for offences against children, mostly boys. See Broken Rites  here.
  32. Gregory Coffin (alias Coffey
    Gregory Vincent Coffey (birth-name Coffin) was originally a priesthood trainee in the Salesian order. Brother Greg Coffin taught at Salesian College (“Rupertswood”), Sunbury, Victoria, in 1969-1970, and at St Mark’s College, Port Pirie, South Australia, in 1971. In February 1972, he was sentenced to 12 months jail (suspended) for sexual abuse of a boy at the Port Pirie school. Despite this, he was still accepted as a lay teacher (Mr “Coffey”) in Catholic schools. Coffey was sentenced to a 2-year good behaviour bond in Victoria in 1994, plus 30 months jail (suspended) in Victoria in 1997 for offences against boys at Redden College, Preston, Melbourne, in the 1970s. See Broken Rites here.
  33. Fr Peter Colley
    Father Peter James Colley, of the Ballarat diocese in Victoria, pleaded guilty in the Moonee Ponds Magistrates Court, Melbourne, on 11 March 1993 to two charges — one indecent assault of an adult male in a public toilet at Moonee Ponds and one charge of escaping from legal custody. Court records gave Colley’s occupation as “priest”, living in at an address in Morriss Road, Warrnambool West, which is the address of the St Pius X Catholic presbytery. Colley was sentenced to a 12-months good behaviour bond. Peter Colley was born in Melbourne on 12 April 1948 and went to school at Parade Christian Brothers College, Melbourne. Originally he worked as a layman with the Pallottine religious order, including (he has said) among Aboriginals at Kalgoorlie, Western Australia. In the early 1970s he was living at Pallotti College, Millgrove, Victoria, seeking to be accepted as a Pallotine lay Brother but did not complete the training. Also in the 1970s, he is believed to have spent time at a Redemptorist seminary in Galong, south-western New South Wales. During the 1970s, Colley applied to Bishop Ronald Mulkearns of Ballarat to sponsor him as a Ballarat candidate for the priesthood. Thus, Colley was ordained at St Paul’s Seminary for Late Vocations in Sydney in 1979 and then joined the Ballarat diocese, where his parishes included Terang, Horsham, Bungaree (near Ballarat) and Warrnambool East. In early 2000, when his court appearance was becoming known, Colley left the Ballarat diocese and his name then disappeared from the annual Australian Catholic Directory.
  34. Fr Peter L. Comensoli
    In 1994, Father Peter Lewis Comensoli (then aged 55, of the Wollongong diocese, south of Sydney) was sentenced to a minimum of 18 months jail after pleading guilty to indecent assaulting altar boys. Comensoli’s abuse was reported to the Wollongong diocese in 1989 but the church authorities allowed him to continue ministering. Finally, two victims got him convicted. Despite this, Comensoli was not laicized or defrocked. As late as 2008, Father Peter L. Comensoli was still listed as a “supplementary priest” of the Wollongong diocese “on leave” or “retired”. See more from Broken Rites  here. This Father Comensoli is not to be confused with another clergyman, Auxiliary Bishop Peter A. Comensoli.
  35. Fr Doug Conlan
    Father Douglas Conlan began ministering in Western Australia’s Bunbury diocese in the 1970s. In 1999, aged 52, he was sentenced to 3 years jail (suspended) after pleading guilty to offences of gross indecency committed (in 1976) against a 16-year-old male. The court was told that the boy’s family trusted the priest who took the boy on a trip for services in country parishes. The offences occurred during an overnight stay in church accommodation.
  36. Fr Bernie Connell
    In November 1995, news media outlets in southern New South Wales reported that a Local Court magistrate had committed Father Bernard M. Connell (born 1938) to stand trial for child-sex offences allegedly committed in the Wagga Wagga diocese in southern New South Wales. However, the subsequent trial proceedings did not result in a conviction. New South Wales. See Broken Rites HERE.
  37. Fr Paul Connolly
    Father Paul Anthony Connolly, Hobart archdiocese, was sentenced in 2001 to eight months jail (suspended after serving four months) for multiple indecent assaults of a girl aged about 14. After the jailing, the Hobart archdiocese continued to list Connolly as a “supplementary” priest of the archdiocese. See Broken Rites here.
  38. Br John Coswello
    Christian Brother John Francis Coswello, then 70, was sentenced to jail on 22 June 2009 after a jury found him guilty of committing sexual offences against a 12-year-old boy in a Melbourne orphanage. Later, the Victorian Court of Appeal granted him a re-trial, at which another jury (in October 2010) found him not guilty. See Broken Rites here.
  39. Fr Kevin Nicholas Cox 
    A Sydney jury convicted this priest of sexual crimes against a girl aged 11 to 13. Church leaders and priests then submitted “good-character” references for Cox, asking the court for a lenient sentence. A judge imposed a part-time jail sentence but church lawyers appealed to a higher court against the conviction and won the appeal on technical grounds. Privately, a church leader later apologised to the girl’s family for what Cox had done to her. See Broken Rites HERE.
  40. Br Brendan Crawford, Passionist Order
    A Catholic religious brother, Vincent Crawford (a.k.a. Brother “Brendan” Crawford), of the Passionist Order, appeared in court in 2009, charged with sexual offences against a girl in the late 1970s. The court decided told that Crawford (aged 77 when charged) was medically unfit to undergo the court proceedings. See Broken Rites HERE.
  41. Fr Peter Creede, of the Vincentian order 
    In a submission to a Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic Archdiocese admitted that Father Peter Philip Creede (of the Catholic Vincentian order) committed sexual offences in Melbourne. Creede is dead now and it is too late for the police to prosecute him. Broken Rites has received multiple complaints from females who were abused (as children) by Father Creede in other parts of Australia. Born in Ireland (with seven siblings who became nuns or priests), he was ordained in Sydney. He worked at St Stanislaus College, Bathurst (New South Wales), followed by parishes in Southport and Wandal (Queensland), Ashfield (NSW) and Malvern (Victoria).
  42. Fr Neville Creen
    Father Neville Joseph Creen molested young girls while he served as a priest at Mount Isa, north-west Queensland (in the Townsville diocese), from 1973 to 1981. In Brisbane District Court in 2003 and 2004, Creen admitted to indecently dealing with 20 girls under the age of 13. One girl was aged just five when Creen abused her at a youth camp and later at the home of her grandparents. Creen was sentenced to three-and-half years’ jail (suspended after 14 months). Judge Ian Wylie said Creen had used his position as a priest and his standing in the community to intimidate the girls into remaining silent about their ordeals. See Broken Rites  here.
  43. Fr Pat Cusack, Canberra
    After action by Broken Rites, the Canberra-Goulburn archdiocese admitted that Father Patrick Cusack committed sexual assaults against primary school girls in St Matthew’s parish in Page, a Canberra suburb, in the 1970s. See more HERE.
  44. Fr Denis Daly
    This Irish-born priest committed child-sex crimes in the Sydney archdiocese in the 1960s and 1970s. The New South Wales police agreed not to prosecute him if the church moved him out of NSW. Therefore, the church transferred him to Western Australia and then allowed him to roam the world, thereby putting more children at risk. One boy victim in Ireland died by suicide. See the Broken Rites story HERE.
  45. Fr David Daniel
    In July 2000, Melbourne Catholic priest Father David Daniel was sentenced to six years’ jail, with parole after 4.5 years, for offences against four boys, a girl and an adult male. This priest’s last parish was St Brigid’s, Healesville. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  46. Chris D’Astoli, former priesthood trainee 
    Press and radio and TV news reports in May 1994 stated that a former trainee Catholic priest, Christopher D’Astoli, appeared in Oakleigh Magistrates Court (Melbourne) on 25 May 1994. D’Astoli (aged 50 in 1994) pleaded guilty to gross indecency and indecent assault against a 13-year-old Catholic school boy in the Oakleigh area in 1969-70, when D’Astoli was completing six years as a trainee priest at the Melbourne Catholic seminary (Corpus Christi College in Glen Waverley). The court was told that the boy reported the assault to his school and D’Astoli left the seminary a few days before he was due to be ordained. However, the court was told, the boy’s school (Salesian College, Oakleigh) persuaded the boy not to tell his parents or the police, and the police did not learn about the matter until 23 years later. Magistrate Susan Blashki placed D’Astoli on a three-year good-behaviour bond, and ordered him to pay $750 into the court fund. The information for this case was prepared by Sergeant Brendan Harper of Oakleigh Criminal Investigation Branch.
  47. Father Albert Davis 
    This Catholic priest (a member of the Dominican Fathers, the Order of Preachers) was charged in 2006 with 17 incidents of indecent assault involving seven boys at Blackfriars Priory School (conducted by the Dominican Fathers) in Prospect, Adelaide, between 1956 and 1960. A magistrate ruled that there was enough evidence for a jury to convict Davis. The magistrate committed him to stand trial in the Adelaide District Court. But Davis died in Canberra in March 2007 before the trial could be held. See Broken Rites   here.
  48. Fr Bernard Day
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese has admitted that Father Bernard Maxwell Day was a child-sex offender. Broken Rites has ascertained that he committed sexual offences against children while he lived in 1961-63 in a flat at St Catherine’s girls’ orphanage (conducted by the Sisters of Mercy) in Geelong, where he acted as the “chaplain”, giving the girls “sex education”. Some of these women are still trying to repair their damaged lives. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  49. Monsignor John Day, Victoria 
    A detective gathered enough evidence to prosecute Monsignor John Day, who sexually abused many boys and girls in the Mildura parish in north-western Victoria. Influential church people blocked the prosecution. In 1997, after Broken Rites exposed the cover-up, the church reluctantly admitted Day’s crimes and was forced apologise to his victims. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  50. Father Adelrick D’Cruz
    This priest, aged 78, was convicted in the Victorian County Court at Shepparton on 22 May 2008 after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting a teenage girl in a north-eastern Victoria parish 24 years previously. D’Cruz had ministered in the Sandhurst diocese in northern Victoria and later did freelance ministry in the Anglo-Indian community in Melbourne. See Broken Rites  here.
  51. Fr Frank De Dood, Salesian order
    In the Melbourne County Court on 7 August 2017, Catholic priest Frank De Dood (then aged 64) was sentenced to jail for indecently assaulting five young boys while he was teaching and ministering at Catholic schools in Melbourne between 1978 and 1983. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  52. De La Salle Brother Wilfred De Cruz
    The Catholic religious order of De La Salle Brothers has acknowledged that it accommodated Brother Wilfred D’Cruz (now deceased) while he committed sexual crimes on schoolboys. The DLS Order has made amends with two victims of this Brother at a DLS secondary school at Scarborough, Queensland (now called Southern Cross Catholic College). See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  53. Fr Ray Deal
    Father Raymond Deal, Melbourne archdiocese, was sentenced to four months jail (suspended) for an offence against a male who was under his supervision. See Broken Rites here.
  54. Fr John Denham 
    Father John Sidney Denham (of the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese, New South Wales), who is already in jail for child-sex crimes, pleaded guilty in a Sydney court on 1 August 2013 to more crimes committed against more boys. He will be sentenced again in early 2014. On 2 July 2010, Denham was sentenced to 19 years and 10 months in jail (with parole possible after 13 years and 10 months) for offences (including buggery) committed against boys in the 1970s and 1980s. See a comprehensive background article from Broken Rites HERE and the judge’s sentencing remarks HERE and another family’s complaint HERE.
  55. Fr Frank Derriman
    Francis Edward Derriman was sentenced in Brisbane in 1998 to 12 months jail (suspended after serving four months) after being found guilty of indecently dealing with a teenage girl (Joan) while Father Derriman was a priest in Brisbane in 1968. The court was told that Derriman left his church posting in 1970 after getting another teenage girl pregnant. In 2013 he is living in Melbourne. To read more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  56. Fr Mark Devoy
    A number of women, now elderly, have provided evidence that Fr Mark Devoy SM (from the Society of Mary religious order) committed sexual crimes on them when they were young school girls in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. These victims lived in different parts of Australia; they did not know each other; and the attacks happened in various parishes. One woman says some of her assaults occurred during Confession. Devoy was protected by the Society of Mary while he worked in parishes in Sydney, Brisbane and Perth (and also, previously, in New Zealand). In 2015, when she was aged 85, one victim finally told her story when had a private interview with Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission, and gave evidence about how Father Devoy committed numerous criminal assaults on her in 1941, when she was aged 11, in a parish in Hunters Hill, Sydney. Another witness told the Commission that Devoy assaulted her in the Hunters Hill parish when she was aged 11 in 1949. These women still feel hurt by the church’s culture of cover-up, which enabled Devoy’s crimes to be concealed from the police. Devoy is now deceased.
  57. Br Gerard Dick
    In 1995, Christian Brother Gerard William Dick (then aged 67) was sentenced to three and a half years jail in Perth, Western Australia, after pleading guilty to ten incidents of indecently dealing with boysaged eight to ten at a Christian Brothers orphanage, Castledare, in W.A. in the 1960s. Dick was just one of many Christian Brothers who abused boys in W.A. orphanages but most of the others were never brought to justice.
  58. Br Edward Dowlan
    Christian Brother Edward Vernon Dowlan (known as Ted Dowlan), Victoria, 1996, was jailed in 1996 for sexual crimes against boys. After more victims contacted police, he was jailed again in 2015(under his new surname, Bales). See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  59. Br “David” Down
    Christian Brother Graeme James Down (known in the Christian Brothers as “Brother David Down”) indecently touched boys aged 10-12 from St Mark’s College in Bedford, Western Australia, in the 1980s; he left the Christian Brothers in 1999; was convicted in 2007 (pleaded guilty); received a 30-months jail sentence, with parole after one year. Later in 2007, Broken Rites received further complaints about Brother Down at the same school in the 1980s. This resulted in Down being given additional jail time in 2008. See Broken Rites here.
  60. Fr Aidan Duggan, Sydney
    Australia’s child-abuse Royal Commission has been told that an Australian paedopile priest (Fr Aidan Duggan, a member of the Benedictine religious order) indecently assaulted children while ministering in Scotland and was then recruited by the Sydney Catholic archdiocese, where he again committed offences. His Sydney parishes included Bass Hill, Gymea, Camperdown, Drummoyne and St Mary’s Cathedral. To see more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  61. Fr Reginald Durham
    Father Reginald Basil Durham, Rockhampton diocese, Queensland, was jailed for indecent assault of a girl aged 12-14 at Neerkol orphanage. He also had other victims. See Broken Rites HERE.
  62. Br John Dyson
    Marist Brother John Desmond Dyson (born 21 March 1950), who taught at Assumption College, Kilmore, Victoria, was sentenced to 12 months jail after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting threeboys, aged 12 to 14. The sentence was served in community work. See Broken Rites here.
  63. Fr Anthony Eames
    Father Anthony Eames, Melbourne archdiocese, was sentenced to six months jail (suspended) for offences against girls. See Broken Rites  here.
  64. Fr Finian Egan
    In Sydney on 20 December 2014, Father Finian James Egan was sentenced to at least four years’ jail after a jury found him guilty of one count of rape and seven counts of indecent assault, committed against three girls who were aged from 10 to 17, between 1961 and 1987. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  65. Fr Michael Endicott
    On 25 June 2010 in Brisbane, Father Michael Ambrose Endicott was given a one-year jail sentence (suspended) after pleading guilty to indecent treatment of a schoolboy. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  66. Br Rex Elmer
    Christian Brother Rex Ignatius Elmer, Victoria, was sentenced in 1998 to five years jail (with parole after 3 years 4 months) after pleading guilty to indecent assault of 12 boys at St Vincent’s Boys’ Home in South Melbourne. See the Broken Rites article here.
  67. Br Michael Evans, New South Wales 
    By December 1994, New South Wales police had gathered sufficient evidence to charge Christian Brother Michael Evans with multiple sexual crimes against Catholic schoolboys. But Evans committed suicide, thereby evading the justice process. His victims included pupils at Edmund Rice College (Wollongong) and St Patrick’s College (Strathfield, Sydney). The Christian Brothers Order has apologised to Evans’s victims.
  68. Fr Paul Evans, Boys’ Town, NSW 
    On 3 October 2008 Father Paul Raymond Evans (born 20 October 1951) was sentenced to 15 years’ jail (with parole possible after nine and a half years) after a Sydney jury found him guilty of multiple sex offences against boys in the 1970s and 1980s, while he was a dormitory master at Boys’ Town (a Catholic institution for troubled teenagers) inEngadine, south of Sydney. After 1988, Evans worked in parishes in the Broken Bay diocese in Sydney’s north. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  69. Fr John Joseph  Farrell, northern NSW, 1980s
    Father John Joseph Farrell (sometimes referred to as “Father F”) assaulted children as a Catholic priest in northern New South Wales in the 1980s (and later in western Sydney until 1992). He was jailed in 2016. See a comprehensive Broken Rites article about Farrell’s background HERE.
  1. Marist Brother Stephen Farrell, NSW
    The Marist Brothers organisation has apologised to former students who were sexually abused by Marist Brother “Stephen” Farrell (real name Keith Boyd Farrell, born1922) at Marist schools (including St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill, Sydney; Marcellin College, Randwick, Sydney; and Ashgrove in Brisbane. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  2. Christian Brother Stephen Farrell, Victoria
    Brother Stephen Francis Farrell (a member of the Victoria-Tasmania province of the Christian Brothers) was a teacher at St Alipius Catholic primary school in Ballarat East, Victoria, in 1973-74 but later left the order. In the Ballarat Magistrates Court on 17 January 1997, Farrell (then aged 45) pleaded guilty to nine counts of indecently assaulting two boys at St Alipius. Farrell was sentenced to two years’ jail, suspended for two years. In December 2013 (aged 62) Farrell was jailed for three months (not suspended) after another of his victims (from 1974) contacted the police. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  3. Fr Nazzareno Fasciale, Melbourne 
    The Melbourne Catholic archdiocese harboured this offender for many years until Broken Rites encouraged his victims to report his crimes to the police, who then charged Father Fasciale (pronounced “Fah-SHAH-Lay”) with numerous indecent assaults of boys and girls. Fasciale admitted these crimes in a police interview. He died after being summoned to court. The church later admitted that Fasciale was a child-abuser and it has been forced to pay compensation to his victims. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  4. Fr Gregory Ferguson
    Father Gregory Laurence Ferguson, of the Marist Fathers, was sentenced on 15 May 2007 to two years jail (eligible for parole after 12 months), for offences in 1971 against two boys aged 13 at Marist College, Burnie, Tasmania. On 13 December 2007, he was sentenced to an additional three years’ jail for offences against a third boy, making a total of five years’ jail (but he can apply for parole after two and half years). See Broken Rites here.
  5. Christian Brother Gerald Fitzgerald, teaching in Ballarat
    The Christian Brothers have accepted (and have settled) a complaint from a former pupil of St Alipius primary school in Ballarat who was indecently assaulted by Brother Gerald Leo Fitzgerald in 1976-77, aged about 9. Fitzgerald, who also indecently assaulted other boys, died in 1987 and therefore police cannot charge him regarding his crimes.
  6. Fr Gerard Fitzgerald, Melbourne priest
    Father Gerard Fitzgerald, of Melbourne, was investigated by Victoria Police detectives in one of his early parishes (in 1964) about sexual crimes against children but, after high-level negotiations between the Melbourne archdiocese and the Police Department, the church saved him from prosecution and allowed him to remain a priest with access to children. Fitzgerald (born in Ireland in 1932) died in 2010 after 50 years in the priesthood.See Broken Rites HERE.
  7. Fr Robert Flaherty, Sydney
    This priest (born 1943) was jailed in 2016 for indecent assaults committed against children in parishes in western Sydney in the 1970s and 1980s. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  8. Fr James Fletcher
    Father James Patrick Fletcher, Maitland-Newcastle diocese, NSW, 7.5 years to 10 years jail for sexual penetration of an altar boy. Fletcher died in jail. See Broken Rites  here.
  9. Br Michael Folli 
    In the New South Wales District Court, after lengthy proceedings (including an appeal by the accused), Marist Brother Michael Anthony Folli (born 4 January 1945) has been sentenced to four and a half years’ jail for sexual offences against two boys during four years from 1980 to 1983 when the boys were aged 12 to 15. The prosecution said the two siblings met Brother Folli through their Marist Brothers school at Auburn, in Sydney’s west. Folli befriended the family and became a frequent visitor to their house, where the alleged incidents occurred.
  10. Br Raymond Foster 
    Marist Brother Raymond Sidney Foster (born 26 November 1931) was originally called “Brother Celestine“. He taught at Catholic schools in Queensland and New South Wales. In 1999, police interviewed Foster (then aged 67) at a Marist Brothers retirement home in Mittagong, NSW) and charged him with indecent assaults against boys, committed at Chanel College, Gladstone, Queensland, in the 1970s. On 23 March 1999 he was found, hanged, just hours before he was due to appear in a New South Wales court to be extradited to Queensland. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  11. Fr Julian Fox 
    Father Julian Benedict Fox, 70, from the Catholic Salesian order, was jailed in 2015 for crimes committed against boys in two Melbourne Catholic schools. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  12. Fr Rob Fuller
    Father Robert Macgregor Fuller, 54, a priest of the Sydney Catholic archdiocese, was jailed in February 2010 for seeking to procure a child under the age of 16 via internet chat sites. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  13. Fr Des Gannon
    Father Desmond Laurence Gannon, Melbourne archdiocese, was jailed in 1995 for 12 months, plus suspended sentences in 1997, 2000 and 2003, and was sentenced in 2009 to another 14 months behind bars, for offences against boys. See the full story from Broken Rites  here.
  14. Fr Ray Garchow, St John of God religious order
    Raymond Garchow became a religious brother in the St John of God order in 1964, aged 17, and was upgraded to a priest in 1987, aged 40. In New South Wales in the early 1980s, he worked at “Kendall Grange” boarding institution for educationally disabled boys in Morisset, north of Sydney. In 2006, after he had been living and ministering around Sydney for several years, the Federal Court of Australia ordered that Garchow be extradited to face charges of child-sex abuse in New Zealand, where he had worked at an institution (Marylands special school for educationally disabled boys) in Christchurch in the 1970s. A trial was scheduled for Garchow in Christchurch. On 23 July 2008, the New Zealand prosecutors decided not to proceed with the trial for several reasons: Garchow, aged 61, was too ill; furthermore, one of the two complainants was also unwell; and the second complainant had trouble with a disability, which made the prospect of a trial difficult. The prosecutors entered a permanent stay of proceedings. Garchow’s counsel said afterwards that Garchow maintains his innocence. See more about the extradition proceedings  HERE.
  15. Br John Gaven
    Brother John Francis Gaven, a member of the Catholic Church’s Vincentian order, has been participating in proceedings in Sydney District Court. The outcome is not yet available.
  1. Br George, in De La Salle schools
    After one of his victims finally contacted the police, Albert Matthew Taylor (known as “Brother George“) pleaded guilty in the Sydney District Court on 8 August 1995 to two incidents of indecently assaulting an 11-year-old boy. The assaults occurred in 1967 at De La Salle College, Revesby, Sydney. Taylor, aged 79 in 1995, was placed on a three-year good behaviour bond. Taylor’s other schools included De La Salle College, Orange, NSW. See the Broken Rites story HERE.
  2. Br Terry Gilsenan
    In 2001, Marist Brother Terence Joseph Gilsenan (born 18 October 1955) was sentenced to three years jail (with parole after 21 months) after pleading guilty to one incident of homosexual intercourse and three incidents of gross indecency, committed against a 12-year-old boarder, from a country area, at St Gregory’s College, Campbelltown, New South Wales. The offences occurred in 1987-89 when Gilsenan, then in his early thirties, was the assistant boarding supervisor, a trainee brother and a teacher at the college. Despite his conviction, the Marists continued to accept Gilsenan as a member of the Marist Order, and in late 2004 a Marist website said that Gilsenan would be a member of a Marist “Ministry Team”, which would be associated with some Sydney schools which have Marist roots.
  3. Brother J.G. Gladwin 
    In 1998, Queensland detectives were ready to prosecute Gladwin for committing sexual crimes against schoolboys while he worked (as Christian Brother Gerard Gladwin) in Queensland in the 1960s and ’70s. But, before court proceedings could begin, Gladwin (aged 65) was found dead, gassed in his car, near Brisbane. He left a suicide note. Thus, he avoided the justice process. Brother Gerard Gladwin’s schools included: a school in Gympie between 1957 and 1962; St Mary’s College, Toowoomba in the 1960s; St Joseph’s Nudgee College, Brisbane, in 1970-71; and St Columban’s College, Brisbane, in the mid 1970s. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  4. Marist Br Dominic Gleeson
    In Newcastle District Court on 11 October 2013, former Marist Brother John Patrick Gleeson (who was one of several Marists who have been known as “Brother Dominic”) was convicted and sentenced to a good-behaviour bond after he pleaded guilty to seven incidents of indecent assault against three boys when he was a Marist Brother at Marist Brothers High School, Hamilton, in the Newcastle area (in New South Wales), fifty years earlier – in 1962. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  5. Fr Michael Glennon
    Father Michael Charles Glennon, Melbourne archdiocese, was jailed in 1978, again in 1991 and 2003, serving a total of 10.5 years minimum to 14.5 years maximum for multiple offences (including rape and indecent assault), mostly against boys. He committed many of his crimes while on bail awaiting trial for other sex offences. See Broken Rites  here.
  6. Fr Kevin Glover, Western Australia 
    The Catholic Church authorities in Western Australia harboured Father William Kevin Glover (known as Kevin Glover) for many years while he committed sexual crimes against local children. When his crimes became known in one parish, the church merely transferred him to another parish. Later, the church arranged for him to transfer to a mission in the Pacific Islands (there, he was safe from any complaints by his Australian victims). To read more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  7. Paul Goldsmith
    Former trainee priest Paul Ronald Goldsmith, Tasmania, was jailed for six and a half years (with parole possible after four years) for offences against 20 boys, aged 13 to 16. See Broken Rites story  here.
  8. Fr Terence Goodall 
    Originally, in civil out-of-court negotiations, the church’s investigator upheld this victim’s complaint about pastoral abuse, but the archbishop’s office interfered evasively and deceptively. Therefore, to obtain justice, this victim had to go to the police, resulting in a magistrate’s court case in which Father Goodall pleaded guilty to indecent assault of this adult male victim. The magistrate convicted Goodall and sentenced him to remain in custody in the courtroom until the morning’s court session ended. See the Broken Rites story  HERE.
  9. Br Brian Gordon
    Marist Brother Brian Robert Gordon (born 15 December 1942) sexually abused boys while teaching at a Marist Brothers primary school in Dundas, Sydney, in 1969-71. The Marists kept quiet about Gordon’s behaviour and he eventually became the Brisbane diocese’s deputy directory of Catholic Education. In 1998 he was sentenced to a minimum of 12 months jail for eight sexual offences committed in 1969-71 against four boys, aged about 11, at the Sydney school. See Broken Rites  here.
  10. Br Thomas Grealy
    Brother Thomas William Grealy, alias Brother “Augustine”, of the Patrician Brothers order, was sentenced in 1997 to seven years jail (parole after four years) after pleading guilty to repeated indecent assaults of two young boys while he was the principal of the primary section of a Patrician Brothers school in Grimwood Street, Granville, in western Sydney, in the 1970s. Before molesting a boy in his office, Brother Augustine would cover a statue of the Virgin Mary with a raincoat to hide his shame. See more from Broken Rites  HERE.
  11. Monsignor Philip Green
    Monsignor Philip Richard Green, Hobart archdiocese, was sentenced to three months jail (suspended) after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting a young man who was mourning the death of a sibling. See Broken Rites here.
  12. Fr Jack Gubbels 
    On 18 August 1995, Victorian detectives went to Queensland to arrest Father Jack William Gubbels for sexual crimes crimes against Melbourne boys. But, expecting the arrest, Gubbels was found dead in bed. Thus he avoided the justice process. Gubbels had worked as a priest in the Melbourne and Townsville (Queensland) dioceses. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  13. Fr Barry Gwillim
    Father John Barry Gwillim, Melbourne archdiocese, was sentenced to 32 months jail (suspended) after pleading guilty to offences against a boy. See Broken Rites here.
  14. Fr John Haines 
    In the Victorian County Court on 4 November 2008, Father Edmund John Haines (of the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese, based in the Geelong district) was sentenced to four years and three months jail (with a non-parole period of two years six months) after he pleaded guilty to six counts of an indecent act with a boy under 16, procurement of a minor for child pornography and possessing child pornography. Haines was previously a priest in Papua New Guinea. See Broken Rites here.
  15. Br “Malcolm” Hall 
    Marist Brother Philip Stanley Hall (born 12 November 1925, alias Brother Malcolm) worked in Catholic schools in Mount Gambier (Sth Aust.), Parkes and Forbes (NSW) and Warragul (Victoria). In 1998, police arrested him (and gave him a summons to appear in court) for sexual crimes against boys and girls in Victoria. But he died just before the scheduled court date, so the court case had to be cancelled. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  16. Br John Francis Hallett, Northern Territory
    In the Northern Territory Supreme Court on 25 May 1995, this Christian Brother (then aged 46) was sentenced to five years’ jail for committing gross indecency against two Aboriginal boys while he was headmaster of a Catholic school on the Tiwi Islands, north of Darwin. Later an appeal court quashed this conviction because of alleged defects in the jury trial. Hallett belonged to the Christian Brothers’  Queensland province, which serviced the Northern Territory.
  17. Bede Hampton, Queensland, ex-Marist Brother 
    In December 2010 a former Catholic Marist teaching brother, now living in Australia — Bede Hampton, aged 62 — was sentenced in New Zealand’s High Court to jail for two years and six months for indecent assaults committed against boys in a New Zealand Catholic boarding school (St Joseph’s College in Masterton) in the early 1970s. Hampton left the Marist Brothers when he was 29. He has become an interior decorator based in Queensland. One of his victims now also lives in Australia. See more from Broken Rites here.
  18. Phillip Hardy, trainee priest 
    In 1990, Phillip John Hardy began training for the Catholic priesthood with the Divine Word Missionaries at Box Hill in Melbourne but he did not reach ordination. In Sydney District Court in 1995, aged 41, he was sentenced to 11 years’ jail (with a minimum of seven years before parole) for sexual offences committed against a boy during an eight-year period, in 1978-1986, when the boy was aged from 8 to 16. During the time of the offences, Hardy was teaching at Marist Brothers College, Eastwood, Sydney, where he was in charge of “religious studies”.
  19. Br Martin Harmata
    In September 2013, Brother Martin Harmata, aged 60 (of the Catholic order of Patrician Brothers) was sentenced to three-and-a-half years jail after he pleaded guilty to eight child-sex offences committed against three boys who were under his authority while he was working at Patrician Brothers College in Blacktown, western Sydney.  See more from Broken Rites  here.
  20. Br Bernard Hartman
    In 2015, American-born Brother Bernard Hartman was jailed in Australia for sexual crimes committed against Melbourne children in the 1970 and 1980s. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  21. Br Francis Hesford
    Marist Brother Hesford (born 1 February 1914), formerly of Assumption College, Kilmore, Victoria (later moved to Western Australia), was given a non-custodial sentence in 1997 after pleading guilty to offences against two girls at Kilmore. The offences were committed in 1970, when Hesford was aged 56. See more from Broken Rites here and also here.
  22. Fr Ted Hewitt
    Father Edward Patrick Hewitt, of the Perth diocese, Western Australia, pleaded guilty in a Perth court on 2 April 1996 to a charge of wilful exposure. The prosecution alleged that Hewitt (then aged 50) had stood naked in the back yard of his home, exposing himself to children as they walked past, through an adjoining park, on their way to school. At the sentencing, in May 1996, the court fined Fr Edward Hewitt $1,000.
  23. Br Bill Hocking 
    0n 31 October 1992 Christian Brother William Hocking was sentenced to 150 hours of community service after being convicted of sexually assaulting a teenage boy at a Catholic Church youth refuge, “Eddy’s Place”, in Wollongong, New South Wales.
  24. Fr Stan Hogan, Jesuit priest
    Father Stanislaus John Hogan, then aged 69, who has long been associated with prominent Catholic schools in Adelaide, Sydney and Melbourne, was jailed in 2015 after he pleaded guilty to child-pornography charges. See Broken Rites HERE.
  25. Patrick Holmes, of the Camillian Fathers
    This religious-order priest was jailed in Western Australia in 2014, aged 79, after he pleaded guilty to indecently dealing with two Perth girls (one girl in 1969, the other in 1980). See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  26. Ronald Hopkins
    Ronald William Hopkins originally trained to be a Christian Brother but ended up as a lay teacher in Catholic schools. In 2005, Hopkins pleaded guilty to offences (five counts of unlawful sexual intercourse by a teacher, five of indecent assault and one of gross indecency) against five schoolboys, aged 12 to 16, between 1975 and 1991 while he was a teacher at two Adelaide schools — St Bernadette’s in a suburb called St Mary’s and Blackfriars Priory School at Prospect. In the S.A. Supreme Court in 2006, Hopkins (then aged 70) was sentenced to ten years’ jail. See Broken Rites here.
  27. Fr Dan Hourigan, Victoria 
    On 18 September 1995, Victoria Police charged Father Daniel Dominic Hourigan, (of the Sale diocese) with sexual crimes against boys. Three days later, he died unexpectedly, thereby avoiding a court appearance. Thus the court case had to be cancelled. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  28. Fr John Houston, visiting New South Wales 
    A Catholic priest, John Charles Houston (born 3 March 1955), has appeared in a court near Newcastle in New South Wales, accused of filming boys showering during a surf lifesaving carnival. The magistrate ordered that Houston be supervised by mental health workers, continue to take his medication and not loiter near public pools or beaches. See Broken Rites here.
  29. Br William Houston
    Christian Brother William Stuart Houston has been jailed on charges relating to St Augustine’s orphanage, Geelong, Victoria, See Broken Rites here.
  30. Fr Kevin Howarth
    Father Kevin Howarth, Sandhurst diocese in north-eastern Victoria, sexually abused young girls and was sentenced to three months jail. The sentence was to be served in community work. See Broken Rites here.
  31. Fr James Hughes
    This priest (also known as Fr Jamie Hughes or Fr Jim Hughes) was born in Ireland on 15 May 1920 and was ordained in 1946. Father James Hughes ministered briefly in Hobart in 1947-49 and then in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese in New South Wales from 1949 until 1990. In 1977-81, he was a chaplain at the Mater Misericordiae Hospital, Waratah (a suburb of Newcastle, NSW). In August 2002, a woman notified the New South Wales police that she had been indecently assaulted by Hughes while she was a patient at this hospital in March 1981. After beginning an investigation, detectives found that Hughes had died in 1996 and he therefore could not be prosecuted. Backed by Broken Rites, the woman then approached the Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” office. A private investigator, hired by the church, confirmed to Towards Healing that evidence “exists to support the complaint.” See Broken Rites HERE.
  32. Fr Glenn Humphreys
    This Catholic priest (from the Vincentian religious order), who has ministered in several Australians states, was jailed in October 2014 for offences committed in Western Australia. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  33. Fr Bill Irwin 
    William Stanley Irwin was originally a Brother (and then a priest) in the Catholic Vincentian order. A Sydney court heard how the church authorities protected Irwin, concealing his criminal behaviour in a church file marked “Strictly Confidential”. In 2011 a jury found Irwin guilty of two incidents of gross indecency against a youth whom he was “counselling”. The judge imposed two six-months jail sentences, which were suspended upon Irwin undertaking a six-months good-behaviour bond. See Broken Rites  here.
  34. Fr Jim Jennings
    James Patrick Jennings was once a Catholic priest in the Australia-wide Vincentian order. On 30 April 2014, Jennings (now aged 81), was jailed for child-sex crimes in Victoria in the 1960s. See more Victorian material from Broken Rites HERE, plus some New South Wales background from Broken Rites HERE.
  35. Monsignor Penn Jones
    By 1995, Broken Rites discovered evidence about Monsignor Penn Harold Jones (of the Melbourne Cathedral parish) that would have resulted in him being convicted by a criminal court but Jones died before police could charge him. After action by Broken Rites, the Melbourne archdiocese apologised in 2005 to two men who were sexually abused by Monsignor Jones while they were schoolboys in the 1960s. Jones, who was an accountant before entering the priesthood, became the Chancellor of the Melbourne archdiocese. See Brken Rites HERE.
  36. Br Fabian Jordan
    Christian Brother John Joseph Jordan (alias Brother “Fabian” Jordan, born 23 October 1927), worked at St Augustine’s boys home and St Vincent’s boys’ home in Victoria; he later left the Christian Brothers and retired to South Australia. In 1999 he was sentenced to a 12-months good behaviour bond for indecent assault (i.e, touching) of a 13-year-old boy at St Augustine’s in the early 1960s. This was not the only complaint about Jordan.
  37. Fr John Keane, western Victoria
    The Adelaide Advertiser reported on 6 January 1990 (page 2) from Melbourne:
    “A Catholic priest pleaded guilty in Melbourne Magistrates Court yesterday to offensive behaviour in a public toilet. John Keane, 52, who gave his address as St Michael’s Church, Wycheproof, was given a 12-month good behaviour bond. The prosecutor said plainclothes police saw Keane expose himself on April 13 last year.”
  38. Frank Keating
    De La Salle Brother Frank Terrence Keating (alias Brother “Ibar” Keating) was sentenced to 8 to 36 months jail in Victoria in 1998, plus 12 months jail (suspended) in Queensland in 2000, all for multiple indecent assaults of boys in Catholic schools. Keating also taught in Western Australia and South Australia. See the Broken Rites story HERE
     
  39. Fr Terrence Keliher
    Father Terrence Thomas Keliher, aged 62, was sentenced in Brisbane in 2000 to 30 months jail (eligible for parole after 8 months) for indecently dealing with a girl, aged about 11. Keliher was friendly with the girls’ parents, who were intellectually impaired, and he had officiated at the parents’ wedding.
  40. Fr Vincent Kiss
    Father Vincent Keiran Kiss belonged to the Wagga Wagga diocese (NSW) but also worked and played in other areas, including Melbourne and the Philippines. In Sydney in 2002, then aged 70, he was sentenced to ten and a half years in jail (eligible for parole after seven years) for sex crimes against four teenage boys. He pleaded guilty to three charges of buggery and ten of indecent assault. See Broken Rites  story  here.
  41. Fr Frank Klep
    Father Frank Gerard Klep, of the Salesian order, Victoria, was convicted in 1994, 2005 and 2014 after 25 of his numerous victims had contacted the Victoria Police sex crime squad. His jail sentences totalled 15 years 6 months, with a total of 10 years 6 months behind bars. See the Broken Rites story here.
  42. Marist Brother Kostka 
    In the Australian Capital Territory Supreme Court on 23 June 2008, Marist Brother John William Chute(born 13 June 1932), whose religious name is “Brother Kostka” (in honour of a 16th Century saint), was jailed after pleading guilty to sexually molesting four students when they were aged 13 and 14 at Canberra’s Marist College in the 1980s. See Broken Rites  here.
  43. Paul Lane, seminarian, NSW
    A seminary student, Paul Lane, committed child-sex crimes in the 1970s while he was training to become a Catholic priest in New South Wales. He eventually dropped out of the seminary. Forty years later, on 7 July 2014, one of his victims obtained justice by getting Lane convicted in court. See more from Broken Rites here.
  44. Michael Lannen, ex-trainee priest
    Michael William Lannen spent two years in the 1980s as a trainee priest at the Catholic seminary in Banyo, Brisbane. He later became a senior psychologist for Queensland’s prison system. In 1996, aged 49, he was sentenced to four years jail after being found guilty of corruptly intimidating prisoners into engaging in oral sex with him in return for favourable reports regarding the prisoners’ future. The prosecution said that Lannen held considerable power over the prisoners, regarding their early release or whether they were given leave of absence or home detention or were accepted into work-release schemes. Lannen’s conviction relates to a period after he ceased being a trainee priest but the conviction is being included in this list, as a matter of public record, for the information of anybody who encountered Lannen in a church-related situation.
  45. Fr Patrick Laws, of the Salesian order
    The Catholic order of Salesian priests have acknowledged that a prominent Salesian, Father Patrick Laws, committed sexual offences against schoolboys in his custody. Laws’ postings included Salesian colleges at “Rupertswood” (in Sunbury, Melbourne), Brooklyn Park (Adelaide) and Engadine (near Sydney). See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  46. Br Bill Lebler
    In 1951, aged 29, William John Lebler became among the first Australian-born recruits to join the St John of God Brothers, taking his vows at the order’s “Kendall Grange” institution for intellectually handicapped boys at Morisset, north of Sydney. He later worked with SJOG in New Zealand and Papua New Guinea. In 2003, prosecutors sought to extradite him from Australia to face trial in New Zealand on child-abuse charges there, dating back as far as 1955. However, a Sydney magistrate released William Lebler because of his age (82 years) and health and because of the delay in reporting his alleged offences. Lebler is also mentioned in another Broken Rites article HERE.
  47. Christian Brother P.N. Lennox, in NSW
    Former Christian Brother Peter Nicholas Joseph Lennox, who had a senior role in Catholic schools at Manly (in Sydney) and Goulburn (in southern New South Wales), has been committed for trial in Sydney, charged with child-sex offences, allegedly committed in the 1970s in the Catholic school system. To read more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  1. Fr Leo Leunig, Western Australia
    Father Leo St Clair Leunig, then aged 66, of the Perth diocese, Western Australia, was sentenced to six years jail in 1994 after pleading guilty to 46 offences against three young boys between 1965 and 1969; and he was sentenced in 1995 to another 12 months jail for offences against another boy. The offences included indecent touching, oral sex and sodomy. The church authorities had known since 1979 about Leunig’s criminal behaviour, but they retained him in the ministry and merely moved him from a one-parish appointment to a multi-parish role as a relieving priest. This meant that he had access to boys in the new parishes where he would be relieving. While he was relieving, Leunig lived for many years at the South Perth presbytery, which is adjacent to a primary school, but the church authorities did not warn the school’s principal or parents about him. While Leunig was serving his jail sentence (and also after he was released), the Perth diocese defiantly continued to list him for years in the annual Australian Catholic Directories as a “supplementary” (relieving) priest of the Perth diocese.
  2. Fr Bruce Little
    In the Southport District Court (Queensland) on 2 February 1996, Father Bruce Francis Little (then aged 50) was fined $750 after pleading guilty to engaging in an indecent act in a public place. Little admitted to having oral sex performed on him by a man in a public toilet block at Pizzey Park, Miami, on the Queensland Gold Coast. The court was told that police arrested Little one afternoon as they patrolled the park, a popular playground for children. (Case reported in the Brisbane Courier Mail, the Gold Coast Bulletin and the Rockhampton Morning Bulletin, 3 February 1996.) Little, who was then a priest of the Brisbane archdiocese, later transferred to the Rockhampton diocese.
  3. Marist Brother “Nestor” Littler
    The Marist Brothers have admitted that Brother John Aloysius Littler (alias “Brother Nestor”) committed sexual offences against boys during his long career in Catholic schools in Australia. Some of his victims have reported his offences to the police, while others are tackling the Marists for compensation and an apology. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  4. Raymond HughLogan
    Logan was originally a De La Salle Brother (known as Brother “Pius Bernard”) in NSW, W.A. and Victoria. He later worked as a lay teacher (“Mister” Logan) in NSW. He was convicted in 2000 for some of his NSW offences against boys. See Broken Rites HERE.
  5. Kevin Lynch
    Kevin John Lynch was originally a Christian Brother, teaching in Catholic schools in Queensland. One of these schools is believed to have been St Brendan’s College, Yeppoon. After leaving the Christian Brothers, he worked as a school counsellor at Brisbane Boys’ Grammar School (Anglican) in the 1980s and at St Paul’s School (Anglican), Bald Hills, Brisbane, in the early 1990s. In 1997, police charged him with committing sexual crimes against boys while working as a counsellor. During prosecution, he committed suicide, thereby failing to clear his name.
  6. Fr Daniel Lyne, CP 
    In 2002, New South Wales police were about to prosecute Father Daniel Lyne in court for sexual offences against young males but suddenly he died and the court case could not proceed. Lyne (born 1937) was a Catholic priest in the Congregation of the Passion religious order (the Passionist Fathers). Originally, Father Lyne had taught in a Passionist “juniorate” at St Ives, Sydney (this was a secondary school for boys who were “aspiring” to become priests in the Passionist order). He later worked in Africa and India. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  7. Fr Bernard Mackin
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese admitted that Fr Bernie Mackin was a child-sex offender. After action by Broken Rites, the archdiocese has apologized to a female victim of this priest.
  8. Marist Br John Dennis Maguire
    Maguire sexually targeted eleven-year-old boys at St Joseph’s College boys’ boarding school in Hunters Hill, Sydney, in the 1980s. He was finally jailed in 2015. See the Broken Rites story HERE.
  9. Br Edward Mamo, MSC religious order 
    In 2013 a Catholic former religious Brother, Edward Mamo (born in 1944) was jailed in Victoria after he pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting seven boys (aged as young as eleven) at Monivae College, a Catholic secondary school, at Hamilton, 290 kilometres west of Melbourne, in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He was jailed again in 2015 after some more of his victims contacted the police. Mamo also worked at Chevalier College (Bowral, NSW) and in accommodating Vietnamese refugees in Sydney. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  10. Br William Marchant
    In 1995, Christian Brother William Edwin Marchant (then aged 59) was convicted for offences against a 12-year-old boy at Tardun boys’ home, Western Australia, in 1967-68. He appeared in Broome Magistrates Court and was given a non-custodial sentence. By 1995, Marchant had left the Christian Brothers and was working  as a drug and alcohol counsellor for an Aboriginal community. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  11. Marist Br “Denis” Martin, in NSW
    Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission was told in 2014 that Brother “Denis” Martin (real name Raymond Martin, born 2 February 1930) regularly committed indecent assaults of boys (as young as 12 years) in 1956-58 at the Marists Brothers “La Valla” boarding school in Bowral, NSW. This school recruited boys with a view to them becoming Marist Brothers, thus influencing these recruits to become child-abusers themselves.
  12. Fr Denis McAlinden 
    This Irish-born priest belonged to the Maitland-Newcastle diocese in New South Wales, where he molested girls and women. This diocese then lent him to other dioceses around Australia (and in New Zealand and Papua New Guinea), keeping him out of the reach of the police as he continued to commit offences. Police accumulated evidence to prosecute McAlinden in court but when they finally caught up with him in 2005, he was in a church-run aged-care centre in Western Australia, where he died one month later. Since then, the Maitland-Newcastle diocese has been paying compensation to some of McAlinden’s victims. See the Broken Rites story here.
  13. Fr Michael McArdle,
    Father Michael Joseph McArdle, of the Rockhampton diocese in Queensland, was sentenced in 2003 to six years jail (with parole possible after two years) after pleading guilty to 62 incidents of indecent dealings against 14 boys and two girls between 1965 and 1987. McArdle told a journalist that the church was aware of his offences but it never alerted police or parishioners.
  14. Fr Charles McCann 
    A young woman made a sworn statement to Victoria Police in 1993 that Fr Charles McCann, of St Kevin’s parish, Templestowe, in Melbourne’s north-east, had invasively mauled her breasts while she was asleep in bed in her family home when she was a teenager in 1983. McCann, who was a friend of the girl’s family, was making a “home visit”. Police interviewed McCann in 1993 and, as a result, of this interview, they gave him a summons to appear in court in March 1994 to answer a charge of indecent assault. However, the girl’s parents and grandparents feared that the case would embarrass the church, so they pressured the young woman to withdraw the charge, threatening to disinherit her if she proceeded. Feeling defeated, the young woman withdrew the charge two days before the court hearing. The church authorities then felt justified in retaining McCann in the priesthood until he retired nine years later, in 2003.
  15. Fr Peter McCudden, Western Australia 
    Numerous women have complained (separately) to Broken Rites that Father Peter McCudden committed sexual offences against them (when they were girls as young as ten or eleven) in Perth in the 1950s and 1960s.
  16. Br Bernard McGrath
    St John of God Brother Bernard Kevin McGrath was jailed in New Zealand in 1993, was jailed in Sydney in 1997, and was in jail again in New Zealand from 2006 to 2008. Any Australian victims of McGrath should have a chat with the Lake Macquarie detectives office in New South Wales, telephone 02-49429909. See more HERE.
  17. Fr Ron McKeirnan
    Father Ronald McKeirnan, of the Brisbane archdiocese, was sentenced to three years jail (one year minimum) in 1998, plus 3 yrs jail (suspended) in 2003, for offences against boys. See Broken Rites story  here.
  18. Fr Paul McLachlan
    Father Paul McLachlan, of the Brisbane archdiocese, was sentenced to 3 yrs 8 months jail in 2000, plus 18 months jail in 2001, for offences against boys. McLachlan was formerly the head of Brisbane’s Catholic Media Office for 19 years and appeared on television religious programs. See Broken Rites here.
  19. Christian Brother Daniel McMahon, later a priest
    Christian Brother Daniel John Virgil McMahon committed numerous child-sex crimes while he was working in the Catholic Education system in Western Australia (from the 1960s to the 1980s). In the early 1990s, he became a priest in Tasmania. By 2012, W.A. police had obtained evidence from one of McMahon’s victims but McMahon was seriously ill and he died in Tasmania before the police could extradite him to a W.A. court to face the criminal charges. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  20. Br Gerard McNamara
    Marist Brother Gerard Joseph McNamara (born 9 March 1938) was sentenced in Melbourne to three years jail (suspended) after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting six boys. McNamara, who taught mainly in Victoria, was originally known as “Brother Camillus” (not to be confused with another Marist Brother “Camillus” in Sydney). See the Broken Rites report  here.
  21. Br “Ossie” McNamara
    Marist Brother Hugh Michael McNamara (born 7 March 1933) taught at St Joseph’s College in Hunters Hill in Sydney as Brother “Oswald” McNamara until about 1978. He ceased being a Brother and then taught as a lay teacher at the Marist Brothers college at Ashgrove in Brisbane, where he was jailed in 1995 for indecently dealing with a boy. In Sydney in 1999, he was convicted of physical assault of a boy at St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill in 1970; and a charge of indecently assaulting the same boy was dismissed because of lack of witnesses.
  22. Rick McPhillamy, cathedral acolyte 
    In 2011, Richard John McPhillamy (who has been an acolyte at the Bathurst Catholic Cathedral and who is a former assistant dormitory master at St Stanislaus College, Bathurst) was sentenced to a minimum of 12 months jail after he was found guilty of sexual crimes against two boys while he was working as an assistant housemaster at St Stanislaus College, Bathurst in the mid-1980s. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  23. Fr Terence Merivale
    Father Terence Michael Merivale was a priest in the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese but left the priesthood. Later, in 2000, he was sentenced to six months jail after pleading guilty to seven charges of indecent assault (including one of digital penetration) on three young girls when he was ministering in St Bernard’s parish, Belmont, Geelong, between 1969 and 1975.
  24. Fr Murray Moffat 
    In August 2010, Father Murray Alexander Moffat, of Brisbane, was sentenced to 18 months jail, with the first three months to be spent behind bars and the remainder suspended for three years. He pleaded guilty to indecent treatment of a 12-year-old girl between 1977 and 1981. See the Broken Rites story here.
  25. Br Rodger Moloney 
    This member of the St John of God Brothers has worked in Australia and New Zealand. In August 2008 in New Zealand, Rodger William Moloney, 73, was jailed for sexually abusing educationally-disadvantaged boys in Christchurch, N.Z., in the 1970s. He was released from jail in September 2009. The court was told that, after completing his sentence, he would be deported to Australia. Any Australian victims of Moloney should have a chat with the police sexual offences units in Australia. See more from Broken Rites about Moloney here. And see a Broken Rites background story about the St John of God Brothers in Australia  here.
  26. Fr Len Monk, western Victoria 
    The Catholic Church harboured a priest, Father Leonard Monk, in western Victoria for many years while he committed sexual crimes against boys. The victims say that the church’s “holy” image intimidated them into not reporting Monk’s crimes at the time. Now his victims would like to report him to the police but Monk has died and therefore the police can no longer arrest him. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  27. Fr Syd Morey, Victoria
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Catholic Church admitted that Father Sydney Morey was a known child-sex offender. Broken Rites has ascertained that the Ballarat diocese (covering western Victoria) has been forced to apologise to at least one victim of Morey. This priest was protected by the church while he committed crimes against young boys in the 1960s and ’70s. Morey was originally a Marist Brother (in New South Wales) before becoming a priest. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  28. Fr Brian Morrison, in Melbourne and Perth
    Fr Brian John Morrison (born in Melbourne, 1933) was originally a priest in the Blessed Sacrament Fathers but he left this order and went to Western Australia, doing some parish work in the Perth and Bunbury dioceses. He finally established the “Father Brian Crisis Care Centre” in Perth, raising money for disaster relief (East Timor etc). The church has received complaints about Morrison sexually abusing young people (a girl aged 14 in Melbourne in 1968 and a boy aged 14 in Perth in 1984).
  29. Br Berchmans Moynahan
    Brother Martin Joseph Moynahan (alias “Brother Berchmans”), St John of God order, died during prosecution (indecent assault at an institution in Melbourne for boys with intellectual disabilities). See a Broken Rites story about the St John of God Brothers  here.
  30. Br Terry Mulligan
    Marist Brother Terence Mulligan was sentenced in Sydney in 2000 to 6 months periodic detention for indecent assaults against two boys. Mulligan met the two siblings through their Marist Brothers school at Auburn, in Sydney’s west. He assaulted the boys in the family’s house. One of the victims, “Ricky” (aged 32 in 2000), said outside the court that the sexual abuse devastated his personal development. His life became a blur of drugs, alcohol and rage. Ricky’s wife said the effect of the abuse was being felt by her and the whole family.
  31. Fr Gerard Mulvale
    Father Gerard Joseph Mulvale, born 17 July 1948, from Western Australia, jailed 18-36 mths in Melbourne 1995 while he was a priest in the Pallottine order. See Broken Rites story HERE.
  32. Br Lawrence Murphy 
    Christian Brother Lawrence Denis Murphy worked in Catholic boys’ orphanages at Tardun, Castledare and Clontarf in Western Australia in the 1940s and ’50s. In May 1997, he was arrested in Adelaide and extradited to Western Australia on charges of unlawful carnal knowledge and indecent dealing at the orphanages. In 1998 a West Australian magistrate ruled that there was indeed sufficient evidence for a jury to convict Murphy (then aged 80) but Murphy died before the the trial could be held.
  33. Fr Hugh Edward Murray 
    This Catholic priest (from the Vincentian religious order) appeared in court in Sydney in 2010, charged with indecently assaulting boys in the 1960s and ’70s. In July 2011, a judge granted Murray a permanent stay because of his advanced age (then 81 years) and health problems. See more from Broken Rites here.
  34. Monsignor James Murray
    In June 2000, Monsignor James William Murray, Geelong, Victoria (Melbourne archdiocese), was convicted and fined $500 after pleading guilty to having indecently assaulted a 25-year-old woman who had requested his pastoral care. See Broken Rites story here.
  35. Fr “Max” Murray
    After Father Magnus William Murray committed child-sex offences in New Zealand, he was transferred to Sydney, where he was allowed to minister in the Woollahra parish in 1972-76. His past was concealed from Sydney parishioners. He later returned to New Zealand, where he was sentenced in 2003 to five years jail after pleading guilty to ten representative charges of committing indecent assaults and indecent acts on four boys in New Zealand between 1962 and 1972. The Sydney archdiocese now denies that it breached its duty of care in allowing Murray to minister in Australia because (it claims) Murray was New Zealand’s responsibility, not Sydney’s.
  36. Br Ross Murrin
    On 10 March 2008, Marist Brother Ross Francis Murrin (born 10 June 1955) was sentenced to 39 months’ jail, with a non-parole period of 18 months, after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting Catholic primary school boys in the 1970s. In February 2010, he received additional jail time after pleading guilty to sexually abusing another boy at a later school. See Broken Rites story  here.
  37. Brother Robert John N*****
    This former De La Salle Brother, received a ten-year jail sentence in NSW in February 2002 (when aged 55), eligible for parole after 6 yrs (the judge granted the offender a name-suppression order). See Brokien Rites story HERE.
  38. Fr Martin Newbold
    Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission has been told how the Catholic Church allowed a priest, Father Martin Newbold, to commit sex-crimes against young girls. The church concealed his crimes from the police and transferred him from Western Australia to Melbourne (and then back to W.A.) to protect him. Thus the church inflicted this criminal on more victims in new parishes. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  39. Br Peter E. Noonan, Victoria 
    The Christian Brothers Order has acknowledged that Brother Peter Eymard Noonan (born about 1949) used to commit sexual offences against young schoolboys who were in his custody. Despite this, it allowed Noonan to remain a Brother until he died in 2004, aged 55. This Noonan (not to be confused with other Noonans in the Order) was offending from the very start of his teaching career — at St Mary’s boys’ school, St Kilda (in inner-Melbourne) in the late 1960s. He later taught at St Kevin’s College (Toorak). In 1985 he went to CBC St Kilda, where he became the headmaster in 1987.
  40. Br Dominic Obbens
    Christian Brother William John Obbens (also known as Brother “Dominic” Obbens) has been jailed in New South Wales for child-sex abuse committed while he was a teacher in the Catholic school system. To read more from Brokenk Rites, click HERE.
  1. Fr Ross O’Brien
    In Glen Innes Local Court in New South Wales in May 1993, Father Thomas Ross O’Brien (then aged 57) was charged with indecent assault of a hitch-hiker, whom he had picked up between Lismore and Casino on 22 October 1992. Magistrate Chris Bone found the offence proved and placed Father O’Brien on a $100 good-behaviour bond for 18 months. (Reported in the Glen Innes Examiner 28 May 1993 and mentioned again in the Sydney Sunday Sun-Herald 19 March 2000.) Father O’Brien belongs to the Armidale diocese. When in court in 1993, he was ministering at the Glen Innes parish. He was later located at the Armidale Cathedral and then in the Quirindi parish. In several editions of the annual Australian Catholic Directory (e.g., the editions from 1997 to 2004), he was listed as the contact person for the “Continuing Education of Clergy” in the Armidale diocese — that is, he has been involved in the training of priests.
  2. Fr John O’Callaghan, Melbourne
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic Archdiocese admitted that Father John Ignatius O’Callaghan was a known sex-offender against young people. Broken Rites has ascertained that O’Callaghan was once a chaplain for the girls’ section of the Young Christian Workers (YCW) movement. He later worked in Melbourne suburban parishes and was a military chaplain. See more from Broken Rites about O’ Callaghan’s child-sex offences HERE. Father O’Callaghan observed the church’s rule of priestly “celibacy” (that is, he did not get married to anybody); instead, in the 1980s, he had a private relationship with a woman, who gave birth to Father O’Callaghan’s TWO CHILDREN.
  3. Br Damien O’Dempsey
    In Brisbane in 1994, Christian Brother Damien John O’Dempsey (then aged 46) was sentenced to 18 months’ jail (with parole after four months) after pleading guilty to six counts of indecently dealing with a 15-year-old boy at St Mary’s Christian Brothers College, Toowoomba, Queensland, in 1987. In 1998, O’Dempsey was summoned to a magistrates’ court again, facing 22 charges (indecent dealing and carnal knowledge) involving another boy at a Townsville school in 1981-84. The magistrate ordered O’Dempsey to stand trial, which was listed for 1999. However, a tragedy occurred in the family of the alleged victim and the trial was abandoned. See the Broken Rites report  here.
  4. Fr Kevin O’Donnell
    Father John Kevin O’Donnell, Melbourne archdiocese, was sentenced to 15 months jail for offences against children, mainly boys. Broken Rites helped O’Donnell’s victims to obtain justice. See Broken Rites story here.
  5. Fr David O’Hearn
    In 2016, after seven years of legal proceedings, Father David Anthony O’Hearn (of the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese in New South Wales) was sentenced to jail (18 years maximum, with possible earlier release on parole). See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  6. Fr Thomas O’Keeffe
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese admitted that Father Thomas O’Keeffe was a known child-sex offender. After action by Broken Rites, the archdiocese has apologised to some of O’Keeffe’s altar boys. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  7. Fr John O’Regan 
    This priest ministered with the Catholic order of Oblate Fathers, in Queensland and Western Australia and possibly elsewhere. In September 1998, Queensland detectives began investigating O’Regan regarding indecent assaults of girls at Nazareth House girls’ home, Wynnum North, Brisbane, in the 1950s and ’60s. But O’Regan died during this prosecution process. See the Broken Rites story  HERE.
  8. Marist Brother “Dominic” O’Sullivan
    A Marist Brother, Darcy John O’Sullivan (also known as “Brother Dominic”), was jailed in September 2016 after he pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting boys while he was teaching in Catholic schools in northern New South Wales in the 1970s and ’80s. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  1. Br John Parker
    Various news media outlets reported that Christian Brother John David Parker appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on 22 March 1995, charged with sexual assault of a nine-year-old boy in Grade 4 at Parade Christian Brothers College junior school in Alphington (in Melbourne’s inner north-east) in 1958. Brother Parker contested the charge. Magistrate Phillip Goldberg committed Brother Parker (then aged 60) for trial and listed the matter to go to a judge in the Melbourne County Court for 19 June 1995. However, alleged victim opted not to proceed to the trial, as he was satisfied with having succeeded in getting his allegation aired in the Magistrates Court. In the Christian Brothers, Parker adopted the religious name John “Neri” Parker (there was once a Saint Neri) and was listed as Brother J.N. Parker. Brother Parker has also taught at other Catholic schools in Victoria, including Ballarat (St Patrick’s primary school, Drummond Street) in the 1970s and Mill Park (St Francis of Assisi primary school) in Melbourne’s north in the 1990s. He also taught with the Christian Brothers in Tasmania.
  2. Brother Paschal, a Franciscan 
    The Franciscans (the Order of Friars Minor) have been forced to acknowledge that Brother Paschal Bartlett (real name Ernest Joseph Bartlett) was a child-abuser. This Brother was in charge of the altar boys at the Mary Immaculate Catholic parish in Waverley, Sydney, in the late 1960s and early 1970s. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  3. Fr Paul Pavlou
    On 29 June 2009, Melbourne diocesan priest Father Paul Pavlou (then aged 50) pleaded guilty to committing an indecent act with a 14-year-old boy and another charge of possessing child pornography. He was given an 18-months jail sentence (suspended) plus a two year community-based sentence (to be served by doing community work). See more from Broken Rites here.
  4. Br Peter Pemble, New South Wales
    This Marist Brother was jailed on 23 July 2015 for indecently assaulting a schoolboy in Maitland NSW in 1971-1972. Later in his career, Brother Peter Pemble became the principal of several Catholic schools in Sydney before retiring in 2009. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  1. Fr Dave Perrett
    Father David Perrett, who was a “chaplain” to Aborigines in the Armidale diocese in northern New South Wales, was convicted in 1996 after pleading guilty to sexual crimes committed against young Aboriginal boys. He has since been the subject of further complaints. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  2. Fr Dominic Phillips, Vincentian priest 
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese admitted that Father Dominic Phillips (a member of the Vincentian Fathers religious order) committed sexual offences against young girls while he was ministering in a Melbourne parish. See more from Broken Rites  HERE.
  3. Fr Kevin Phillips
    In Sydney on 21 April 2011, Fr Kevin Francis Phillips (of Mackay in the Rockhampton diocese in Queensland) was jailed after pleading guilty to offences against a boy at St Stanislaus College (a boys’ boarding school) in Bathurst, New South Wales, in 1990. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  4. Fr Ron Pickering
    For years, Father Ronald Dennis Pickering was protected by the Melbourne Catholic hierarchy. In late 1993 he suddenly fled from Australia to England, fearing that one of his victims would talk to police. The police eventually obtained enough evidence for a prosecution but were discouraged by the problem of locating Pickering in England (although the Melbourne archdiocese secretly knew his England address) and also the problem of extraditing him to Australia for the court proceedings. The Melbourne Catholic Archdiocese, which had long known about Pickering’s liking for boys, admitted that Pickering was an offender and it made civil settlements with some of his victims, so as to limit the church’s financial liability. See the full Broken Rites article  here.
  5. Fr Terry Pidoto
    On 17 September 2007, Father Terrence Pidoto, of the Melbourne archdiocese, was sentenced to seven years and three months’ jail (with a minimum of five years before becoming eligible for parole) on charges of buggery and indecent assault against boys. To see more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  6. Ex-Brother Alan James Pollock, in NSW
    Originally, Pollock was a trainee Brother in the Catholic religious order of Patrician Brothers but later he left the brotherhood and then worked as a lay teacher in Sydney Catholic schools, where he committed sexual crimes against children. Years later, eleven of his victims reported his crimes to the police. Finally, in 2014 he was jailed. To see more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  7. Priest #1, Adelaide 
    In Adelaide in 1989, Catholic Church authorities tried to conceal a priest’s court case. In Holden Hill Magistrates Court, Adelaide, on 21 July 1989, this diocesan priest and another man were found guilty of indecent behaviour and were each fined $100. Late on a summer’s night, police had found the pair lying under bushes near Walkerville oval, engaging in sexual activity. The priest also was originally charged with giving a false name and address. Church lawyers persuaded the court to prohibit the media from publishing the priest’s name but media lawyers contested this application. The Supreme Court lifted the suppression order and the case was reported fully, with names, in the Adelaide “Advertiser” and “Sunday Mail” during July 26-30, 1989. Archbishop Leonard Faulkner wrote in a letter to all priests on 7 June 1989: “In reflecting my decision that [this priest] continue his ministry at [his parish], I remembered my own shortcomings and those of a number of our brother priests.” The priest is still in charge of an Adelaide parish.
  8. Priest #2, Adelaide and northern Sydney 
    This priest was a mature-age entrant to the priesthood. He was recruited by (and was trained for) the Adelaide diocese, where he worked in parishes in the 1970s and ’80s. While visiting Cairns, Queensland, he was caught wilfully exposing himself on a beach. In a Cairns court on 27 July 1987, he pleaded guilty and was fined $100. After this, the church authorities transferred him to the Broken Bay diocese, in the northern suburbs and outskirts ofSydney, where he was put in charge of parishes, including parish schools. In February 1995, the Cairns court case was revealed in the “Manly Daily”, Sydney (circulating in the Broken Bay diocese), in an article headed “Shock of priest’s past: Parents stunned at exposure case”. The priest verified this report.
  9. Fr “Joseph” Pritchard
    Father Peter Harold Pritchard (alias Fr “Joseph” Pritchard), of the St Gerard Majella religious order in the Parramatta diocese, NSW, was sentenced in 1997 to 6 years jail (four years minimum) after pleading guilty to charges of buggery, intent to commit buggery, and indecent assault involving seven trainee Brothers and another young male, all aged 16 to 21, over a 19-year period. See Broken Rites story here.
  10. Fr David Rankin, SJ
    In Sydney in 2014 Father Gregory David Rankin (then aged 79), of the Jesuit Order, was given an 18-months jail sentence (with 12 months of this to be behind bars) after pleading guilty to historical acts of indecency on young boys in Sydney. He had lived as a Jesuit priest in Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra and overseas. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  1. Fr David Rapson, Victoria
    In 1992 Catholic priest David Edwin Rapson (of the Salesian religious order) was jailed for sexually assaulting a boy in a Catholic school in Melbourne (see Broken Rites HERE). In 2015 he was convicted regarding another boy (see Broken Rites HERE).
  2. Fr Ernest (“Chappy”) Rayson — in Melbourne, Sydney Perth
    Catholic Church authorities admit that young males were targeted by Father Ernest “Chappy” Rayson, a member of an Australia-wide religious order called the Blessed Sacrament Fathers. He ministered at: St Francis church in Lonsdale Street in central Melbourne; St Peter Julian’s in George St, Sydney; and All Saints Chapel in Perth. At least one victim eventually reported Rayson’s offence to the police but Rayson can no longer be arrested because he died in 1996. Rayson ran choirs and he befriended HIV/Aids sufferers.
  3. Fr Michael Reis, MSC religious order 
    Father Michael Francis Reis (known as Mick Reis), who has taught at Monivae College in Victoria and Downlands College in Queensland, was sentenced in Brisbane on 6 November 2008 to 18 months jail (with a minimum of six months) for offences against two young girls in the 1980s and 1990s. See Broken Rites story  here.
  4. Christian Brother “Neil” Richards
    Christian Brother Desmond Eric (“Neil”) Richards has been jailed in New South Wales for sex crimes against schoolboys. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  5. Fr Gerry Ridsdale
    Father Gerald Francis Ridsdale, Ballarat diocese, Victoria, has pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting a total of 40 children (mostly boys). In April 2014, after he had been in jail for 20 years, some more years were added to his previous sentence because some more of his earlier victims came forward. See the full Broken Rites story  HERE.
  6. Br Gregory Riley
    Christian Brother Francis Riley (known as Brother Greg Riley), New South Wales, was sentenced in 1999 to three years jail after pleading guilty to 17 counts of indecent assault against boys.
  7. Fr Robert Rippin
    Former students (who do not know each other) have told Broken Rites that a criminal offence (indecent touching) was committed on them (repeatedly) by Father Robert Frederick Rippin, a priest in the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart order, at MSC secondary schools around Australia: Chevalier College (Bowral, NSW), Downlands College (Toowoomba, Queensland) and Monivae College (Hamilton, Victoria).
  8. Br Chris Roberts, Sydney
    Christian Brother John Vincent Roberts (also known as Brother “Chris” Roberts) has been jailed for crimes committed against Catholic children in South Wales. Roberts has also taught in Canberra. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  1. Fr Stephen Robinson
    In 1998, Father Stephen Joseph Robinson (then aged 51), who was then a Catholic priest in the St Gerard Majella order in the Parramatta diocese, NSW, was sentenced to a minimum of 18 months’ jail for acts of indecency on two trainee Brothers. See Broken Rites story HERE.
  2. Fr Victor Rubeo
    Father Victor Gabriel Rubeo, Melbourne archdiocese, pleaded guilty in 1996 to having indecently assaulted two boys in a previous parish (Laverton in the 1960s). On 28 October 2011, Rubeo appeared in court again, charged with additional incidents from the 1960s and was ordered to re-appear on 16 December 2011 for a full hearing but he died (aged 78) before this next hearing date. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  3. Marist Br. “Gerard” Rush, Victoria
    Br. Michael Gerard Rush (born in 1940 and known as Brother “Gerard”) has been jailed for child-sex crimes committed while he was working in Marist Brothers boys’ schools in Victoria. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  1. Fr Paul-David Ryan
    Father Paul David Carl Ryan, Ballarat diocese, Victoria, was sentenced in 2006 to 18 months jail (12 months minimum) for offences against boys. See Brokien Rites story  HERE.
  2. Fr Vince Ryan
    Father Vincent Gerard Ryan, of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, NSW, was sentenced in 1996-97 to 16 years (minimum of 11) for offences against boys. See the Broken Rites story HERE.
  3. Fr Jim Scannell
    In 2014 a Melbourne jury convicted Father James Henry Scannell, 88 (of the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese), on a charge of buggery, committed against a 12-year-old boy more than 40 years ago.  See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  4. Fr Peter Searson
    This Melbourne diocesan priest pleaded guilty in a magistrates’ court in 1997 to physically assaulting a 12-year-old altar boy. The police also had evidence of sexual abuse committed by Searson, but Searson chose to plead guilty to the physical abuse, thereby ensuring a more lenient sentence. The court ordered Searson to observe a good-behaviour bond. Also in 1997, the Melbourne archdiocese’s Commissioner on Sexual Abuse investigated certain other allegations about Fr Searson, involving a number of women, boys and girls. See the Broken Rites report HERE.
  5. Fr Kelvin Sharkey
    On 29 April 2010, Father Kelvin Gerald Sharkey (a priest of the Wollongong Catholic Diocese in New South Wales) was sentenced to a minimum 15 months in jail after pleading guilty to buggery and indecent assault of an altar boy. See the Broken Rites story here.
  6. Jack Shea
    John Rowan Shea was originally a priesthood trainee in Melbourne archdiocese and was later a prominent layman (a “good Catholic”) in Melbourne parish affairs and in the St Vincent de Paul Society. In 1996, aged 73, he was sentenced to three years jail (minimum of one year) for offences against boys in his “care” in church-related situations in the 1970s. There have also been allegations that he abused boys while he was a football coach at a Catholic school, Whitefriars College, in Melbourne in the 1960s.
  7. Fr Les Sheahan, Victoria
    In 2015, Father Leslie John Sheahan (Ballarat diocese) was jailed for indecently assaulting young girls in some of his earliest parishes, in the 1960s. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  8. Fr Hugh Shearer, Tasmania
    The Catholic Church’s professional standards office in Tasmania has accepted a complaint by a man that he was sexually abused (when he was a homeless teenager in the late 1970s) by Father Hugh Shearer in the priest’s house at Invermay, Launceston. A similar complaint was made in 1996 by another man (now deceased) who said he was abused (as a homeless teenager) by Fr Shearer in the same house in 1977.
  9. Br Terence Simpson,
    former Christian Brother Terence Simpson, Brisbane, was sentenced to two years jail (suspended) for offences against boys. See Broken Rites story  here.
  10. Marist Brother John Skehan
    He was convicted in 2010 and 2014 for child-sex crimes committed at Marist Brothers boys’ schools in Victoria and New South Wales in the 1970s. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  11. Fr Michael Slattery
    On 9 August 2007 a Catholic priest from Western Australia, Father Michael Slattery, was sentenced in Sydney District Court to an 18-months jail sentence (suspended, with a good-behaviour bond) after he pleaded guilty to committing three acts of indecency (masturbation) in the presence of a schoolgirl, who was aged 14 to 15. The offences occurred in 1981-82 while Slattery was a lay teacher at a North Sydney Catholic girls school before becoming ordained as a priest for Western Australia. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  12. Fr Brian Spillane
    In late 2016, Father Brian Joseph Spillane (of the Vincentian religious order) was in jail after a series of trials in New South Wales concerning his crimes against 18 boys and some girls. See the Broken Rites story HERE.
  13. Br “Bartholomew” Spratt
    Marist Brother Peter Richard Spratt (born 2 August 1937) was originally known as “Brother Bartholomew”. His teaching jobs included Marist Brothers Lismore (in northern NSW) in the 1960s and, later, Marist College in Canberra. In 1996 he was convicted in NSW after pleading guilty to two acts of indecency, committed against a 14-year-old boy in 1979. Brother Bartholomew Spratt also taught at Marist Brothers, Pagewood, Sydney. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  14. Brother David Standen, New South Wales
    In February 2016, Christian Brother William Peter “David” Standen, 67 (who had worked at schools in Sydney, Penrith and Goulburn, NSW), pleaded guilty to offences committed against boys at St Patrick’s College Goulburn in 1978-81. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  15. Fr John Stockdale, Victoria 
    The Catholic Church harboured Father John Peregrine Stockdale for decades in parishes in the Sandhurst (Bendigo) diocese, covering northern and north-eastern Victoria, while he committed offences against boys. His priestly status protected him from the police. In 1995, Father Stockdaleale died while celebrating New Year’s Eve in a sex-cubicle at a males-only club in Melbourne. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  16. Br Gregory Sutton
    Marist Brother Gregory Joseph Sutton (born 1951) taught in 1973-1987 at Catholic primary schools (in Queensland, New South Wales and Canberra).He admitted committing numerous crimes against young girls and boys. When a family complained to the NSW police, the Marists gave him a trip to Canada. He then became principal of a Catholic school in the U.S. NSW police brought him back to Australia, where he was jailed in 1996 for a maximum of 15 years (with parole possible after 12 years) for his NSW crimes. In 2014, Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission examined how the Marist Brothers had harboured this criminal. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  17. Fr John Sweeney 
    Father John Gerard Patrick Sweeney, St Gerard Majella order, Parramatta diocese, NSW, 18-27 months jail. See Broken Rites story  here.
  18. Fr Tadeusz Swiatkowski
    Father Tadeusz Swiatkowski, of the Society of Christ (a Polish religious order in Australia), appeared in a Brisbane court in 1994 for soliciting a prostitute (he later moved to Mayfield West, Newcastle, NSW).
  19. Alan Swingler 
    Alan Edward Swingler (born in September 1941) was originally a Marist Brother but left the Marist order and became a lay teacher of religious studies at St Joseph’s Christian Brothers’ College, Geelong, Victoria, where he stayed for 18 years. In 1996 Swingler, aged 54, was sentenced to seven years jail (minimum of five years) on one incident of buggery, three incidents of gross indecency and nine of indecent assault of boys. Outside the court, the mother of one victim said that, even after the family complained to the school about the crimes, the school kept Swingler on its staff.
  20. Br Colgan Taylor 
    Broken Rites is researching Marist Brother “Colgan” Taylor (real name Lancelot Kenneth Taylor), who was sentenced in November 2002 to 18 months’ jail (including four months behind bars) after pleading guilty to sexual offences against two very young girls (one of them intellectually disabled) in central Queensland between 1979 and 1983. Despite his conviction, the Marists allowed Taylor to remain in their Order. These girls were not Taylor’s first (or only) victims. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  21. Br Aubrey Tobin, Victoria
    The Marist Brothers have acknowledged that Brother “Aubrey” Tobin committed sexual assaults against boys at Marist schools in Victoria. Two of his victims, who were assaulted in the mid-1980s, later committed suicide because of the damage done to their lives. Br Aubrey’s birth name is believed to have been Michael Tobin, but the Marists assigned him the religious name “Brother Aubrey” in honour of a medieval saint. His schools included Assumption College (Kilmore) and St Paul’s College (Traralgon), plus other schools. See the Broken Rites story here.
  22. Br Peter Toomey
    Christian Brother Peter John Toomey pleaded guilty in 2005 to offences against 10 boys at Trinity Regional College in Brunswick, Melbourne, in the 1970s. He was finally sentenced to 4 years 3 months jail, with parole after 2 years 6 months. Originally the sentence was 27 months jail (with parole after six months) but this was increased after an appeal by the prosecution, on behalf of the victims. Toomey also taught at St Patrick’s College in Ballarat, Cathedral College in East Melbourne and elsewhere. See Broken Rites story  here.
  23. Fr John Treacy
    Father John Leslie Treacy (born 30 October 1943) was ordained on 19 May 1972 and belongs to the Sandhurst diocese in northern Victoria, where his original parishes included Tatura, Beechworth, Tallangatta, Wodonga and Rushworth. In 1993 he pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting a boy from one of his parishes and was given a non-custodial sentence (good-behaviour bond). The Sandhurst diocese later arranged for Treacy to move to Queensland, where Queensland bishops accepted him to minister in parishes and as a hospital chaplain, while he continued to be officially listed as a priest of the Sandhurst diocese.
  24. Fr Adrian Van Klooster
    Father Adrian Richard Van Klooster, Western Australia and NSW, was sentenced in 2003 in W.A. to 8 yrs jail for offences against boys and girls. He was released on paroie after five years behind bars. See Broken Rites story HERE.
  25. Paul Van Ruth, a former Brother
    On 4 March 2011 Peter Paul VAN RUTH, of Adelaide, was jailed after he pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting two boys in 1969 while he was a religious Brother at Salesian College, “Rupertswood”, Sunbury, Victoria. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  26. Br Geoffrey Veness
    Marist Brother Geoffrey Sydney Veness (born 30 September 1953) was sentenced to 12 months jail (suspended) after pleading guilty to offences against a boy who was a pupil at St Augustine’s College, Cairns, Queensland.
  27. Br Keith William Weston
    Christian Brother Keith William Weston, Melbourne, was sentenced to 30 months jail (suspended) for offences against boys. See the Broken Rites court story  here. Also, see an article by a Weston victim  HERE.
  28. Fr Ray Whitehouse 
    In a statement to a Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2013, the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese has admitted that Father Raymond Whitehouse was a child-sex offender. After action by Broken Rites, the archdiocese has apologised to one of Whitehouse’s altar boys. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  29. Fr Murray Wilson, of the Vincentian order
    After committing serious sexual crimes against children, this Catholic priest died died mysteriously in 1979 at the age of 44 (by inhaling gas at St Stanislaus College in Bathurst NSW), before his victims could bring him to justice in court. In 2006, after action by Broken Rites, the Vincentian Fathers’ Australian office apologized to one of Wilson’s victims, who was a 13-year-old boy in Victoria. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  30. Br Lambert Wise, Adelaide 
    In a South Australian court in 2009, former Christian Brother Francis Lambert Wise (born in 1920) was accused of two counts of buggery and five of indecent assault, allegedly committed against two schoolboys in the 1960s. At age 89, he was found to be too medically unfit to stand trial. Therefore, in 2009 a judge held special hearings, enabling two of Wise’s former pupils to have their allegations aired in court. Thus, the South Australian public was able to learn of the allegations. See more from Broken Rites here.
  31. Fr Leo Wright
    Father Leo Daniel Wright, Brisbane archdiocese, was jailed for 3 yrs (1995) and 18 months (1997) for offences against girls and a boy. See Broken Rites story here.
The above list is confined to Broken Rites cases — that is, criminal cases in which Broken Rites Australia gives support to victims either before or after the court proceedings. 
For civil out-of-court cases, see Section B, below. 
And Sections A and B are confined to priests and religious brothers (including trainees). For lay teachers in church schools, see some examples in Section F, at the bottom of this page.
Section B:
Out-of-court civil cases,
researched by Broken Rites
As well as the above-listed criminal cases (which would be conducted by the police), a victim can also take out-of-court civil action against the Catholic Church authorities for having inflicted the offender upon the victim. This can force the church to acknowledge the harm that has been done to the victim’s life (including harm done by the church’s tradition of cover-up). This can give the victim a sense of empowerment. Sometimes this action can force the church to give a written apology to the victim. Perhaps, the church might even offer to reach a private settlement with the victim, as the church often regards this as a cheap way of protecting the church’s public image and its assets.
Here are a few examples of cases (researched by Broken Rites), in which victims could tackle the church authorities for justice.
  1. Brother Pascal Alford 
    The Catholic order of Christian Brothers has made settlements with sex-abuse victims of Brother Donald Pascal Alford at St Augustine’s boys’ home, Geelong, Victoria. See our story  here.
  2. Fr David Anderson
    After action by Broken Rites, the Lismore Catholic diocese in northern New South Wales has apologized to two families who complained about sexual abuse committed by Father Clarence David Anderson(also known as Fr David Anderson). One complaint concerned two brothers, aged 14 and 9, who encountered Anderson while he was ministering in Macksville, including Nambucca Heads (on the mid-north coast), in 1966-68. The boys’ father had died, so their mother allowed this priest to “befriend” the boys, because the boys “needed a father”. Another complaint concerned two brothers, aged 9 and 15, who encountered Anderson when he ministered in the Tweed Heads parish (near the Queensland border) in 1969. These latter two brothers, likewise, were from a fatherless family; and they, too, were “befriended” by Anderson. 
  1. Fr Herbert Balding
    In 1997, after consulting Broken Rites, a Melbourne woman (Noreen) complained to the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese about a hospital chaplain (Father Herbert Balding, a member of the Jesuit order). In 1978, when she was a married woman aged in her thirties, Father Balding targeted Noreen sexually while she was in a vulnerable state, seriously ill, as an in-patient at Melbourne’s Mercy Hospital. The abuse disrupted her recovery and her later life. The archdiocese complaints commissioner (Peter O’Callaghan, QC) accepted the complaint and ruled that Noreen had indeed been sexually abused by Balding.
  2. Br Bede (St John of God order) 
    Former inmates of four homes operated by theHospitaller Order of St John of God have complained to police or the Catholic Church and/or Broken Rites that they were sexually assaulted by Brother Bede Donnellan (real name John Joseph Donnellan). Separate complaints came from four locations — Chelthenham, Greensborough and Lilydale (all in Melbourne) and the Granada Hostel in Ashgrove (Brisbane). Bede Donnellan died in 1995. See more about the St John of God order  here.
  3. Br. C. Beedon, Melbourne 
    Broken Rites is researching Christian Brother C. Beedon, who taught in the late 1960s and early 1970s at St Mary’s boys’ parish primary school (next-door to Christian Brothers College) in East St Kilda, Melbourne.
  4. Br. Matthew  Bell,  De La Salle
    Broken Rites is researching De La Salle Brother Matthew Placidus Bell (real name Michael Allan Bell, born 17 January 1930) who taught at Katoomba NSW in the 1950s and later at other Catholic schools.
  5. Br Luke Beltram, De La Salle 
    Two families (one in Victoria and one in New South Wales) have complained about Brother Luke Beltram, a religious teacher in the Catholic order of De La Salle Brothers. Luke Francis Beltram was born about 1947. His teaching appointments included De La Salle schools at Dandenong VIC, Dubbo NSW, Malvern VIC, East Bentleigh VIC and (finally) Castle Hill NSW. He died on 10 March 2000, aged 53. See our story  here.
  6. Br Benildus, De La Salle order 
    The Catholic order of De La Salle Brothers has accepted and settled complaints by former students (now elderly) who were sexually abused by “Brother Benildus” at De La Salle’s Oakhill College in Castle Hill (north-west of Sydney) in the 1950s. This senior Brother was born as Laurence de Moulin but adopted the religious name “Brother Benildus Joseph” in emulation of a 19th century “Saint Benildus”. At Oakhill (a boarding school), he taught primary-school boys at Year Six level or thereabouts, and he supervised the boarders, including in their dormitory. Benildus later worked at St Bernard’s Junior College, “Clairvaux” (which was then a boarding school in Katoomba NSW), where (according to former pupils) he was again sexually intrusive.
  7. Br “Bertinus” 
    In 2010, Australian Marist Brothers held a ceremony to “praise and congratulate” six long-serving Brothers — including a one who was formerly known as Brother “Bertinus”. A few months earlier, the Marists’ Australian administration had apologised to three ex-pupils for an encounter which each of them allegedly had with Brother “Bertinus” many years ago in their school days. See the Broken Rites report  HERE.
  8. Fr Glenn Boyd, Wagga Wagga diocese 
    In 2004, Father Glenn Boyd left the priesthood of the Wagga Wagga Catholic diocese in southern New South Wales after issues had been raised about aspects of his youth work. See more  here.
  9. BoysTown (De La Salle Brothers, Queensland) 
    In 2011 the Catholic religious order of De La Salle Brothers agreed to offer an out-of-court settlement to a former pupil, who lived in the 1960s at BoysTown (a Catholic institution for disadvantaged boys) in Beaudesert, Queensland. Similar complaints have come from others who were there in later decades. See more  here.
  10. Fr F.X.Brown (in the Dominican order) 
    A former Catholic altar boy (“Cedric”, born in 1950) has told Broken Rites about his experiences at the hands of Father Francis Xavier Brown (a Catholic priest in the Dominican religious order) in Adelaide around 1960. Cedric says he still feels hurt (half a century later) by his experience as an altar boy. See more  HERE.
  11. Fr Joseph Caldwell
    Two women, who do not know each other, have complained in Western Australia about being molested by Father Joseph Caldwell. He was a member of the Salvatorian order of Catholic priests, which is also known as the Society of the Divine Saviour. One complainant said she was abused in 1977, aged 8, and the other said she was abused in 1984 and 1985, aged 9 and 10. Both women told Broken Rites that the abuse (and the secrecy about it) adversely affected their personal development into their adolescence and adulthood. Born in Ireland, Caldwell had worked as a priest in many countries before coming to Australia. His parishes in Western Australia in the 1970s and ’80s included Greenmount, Dampier, Wickham and Midland. In 1980-81 he served in Western Australia’s Bunbury diocese. West Australian police have ascertained that Caldwell left Australia in the late 1980s and later died in Ireland.
  12. Br Brendan Carroll,  De La Salle
    In 2005 and 2006, after action by Broken Rites, the De La Salle Brothers in Australia apologized to two women for sexual abuse by Brother Brendan George Carroll when they were young girls. He was an uncle of the Most Reverend Francis Carroll, who became the archbishop of Canberra-Goulburn in 1983. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  13. Marist Br “Celsus” Fahey, NSW
    Multiple victims have complained about Marist Brother Francis Fahey (“Brother Celsus”), who taught at Lismore, New South Wales (not to be confused with a different Brother “Celsus” in the Marists’ Melbourne province).
  14. Chevalier College, Bowral, NSW
    Some ex-pupils of Chevalier College (a Catholic high school near Bowral in southern New South Wales) are still recalling allegations that a Catholic priest behaved indecently towards young boys at the school in the late 1980s. This school is owned by a religious order, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart. See more  here.
  15. Marist Brother Cleophas
    There have been several Marist Brothers who adopted the religious name “Cleophas” (in honour of a Disciple in the Gospels). In Victoria, Broken Rites is researching Marist Brother “Cleophas” Simmons (born on 26 March 1926), whose real name was John Edward Simmons (known to his family as Eddie). He became a trainee Brother at age 16 and spent his whole working life as a Marist Brother: at North Fitzroy, Bulleen, Templestowe and Sale in Victoria; Mount Gambier in South Australia; and Forbes, Leeton and Griffith in New South Wales. In New South Wales , Broken Rites is also researching a different Brother “Cleophas” (born in 1933) who taught at Marist Brothers schools in Sydney in the 1960s and 1970s.
  16. Br A.D. Collopy
    Former students of the Christian Brothers in two states — at St Bernard’s College (Essendon) in Melbourne and Trinity College in Perth — have complained about being indecently touched by Brother Anselm Dunstan Collopy, who served for a time on the Provincial Council (that is, the leadership team) of the Christian Brothers in Western Australia and South Australia.
  17. Br Colmcille, Trappist monk, Melbourne 
    Born in Ireland as Thomas Clifford, he adopted the Gaelic “religious” name Colmcille (pronounced Kollum-Kill) in honour of an ancient Irish missionary, Saint Columba (in Gaelic, also spelt as Colum Cille). Until 1974, Colmcille lived at Tarrawarra Abbey in Yarra Glen, east of Melbourne. This is the Australian address of the Cistercian Monks — also known as the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance (O.C.S.O.) or the order of Trappist monks. Two women, who do not know each other, have complained (separately) that they were digitally raped, at the age of nine, by Brother Colmcille when their families (and others) used to visit this monastery about 1969-1970. Brother Colmcille later returned to Ireland, leaving damaged victims in Australia. The Cistercian order has apologised for harm done by Colmcille.
  18. Fr Ernie Conlan, MSC order
    Broken Rites has received well-documented complaints that young girls were sexually abused by Father Ernest Conlan, a member of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart (MSC), who was prominent in Tasmania. These girls were abused between 1958 and 1963, when Father. Conlan was “ministering” in a parish at Kings Meadows, near Launceston. As Conlan “befriended” the local families, the young girls felt that they could not tell their parents about the abuse at the time, but they have disclosed the abuse in recent years, five decades after the events. In 1965, Conlan went to Adelaide (at the Sacred Heart parish, Hindmarsh). In the 1970s and 1980s, he was a chaplain at St Vincent’s Boys’ Home, Westmead, in western Sydney.
  19. Monsignor Joseph Conway
    The Port Pirie Catholic diocese, which includes the northern parts of South Australia, has acknowledged that Monsignor Arthur Joseph Conway sexually abused boys. Conway, who was evidently called by his middle name (Joseph), died in 1975 but victims are still feeling the hurt. Conway was given an elaborate grave and victims protested about this. Monsignor A.J. Conway’s later years were spent around Quorn, Orroroo and Carrieton (all east of Port Augusta).
  20. Ronald Conway, Catholic psychologist 
    This Melbourne therapist was highly regarded by Catholic Church leaders and he received many of his clients through Catholic hospitals and other Catholic agencies. He allegedly touched some of his young male clients sexually. These clients have grounds for demanding, at least, an apology from the church authorities. Ron Conway also acted for the church authorities in “screening” men who wished to become trainee priests in Victoria. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  21. Fr Frank de Dood
    In a settlement deed dated 7 February 2008, the Salesians of Don Bosco (a Catholic religious order) settled a complaint from a former student who was a boarder at “Rupertswood” Salesian College, Sunbury, Victoria, in 1982-83. The settlement deed states that the ex-student has alleged that he was sexually abused by Fr Francis de Dood and Father Frank Klep. The deed says the ex-student claimed that, “as a result of such assaults, he has sustained loss, damage and injuries that may require specialist counselling and therapy.”  Reverend Frank de Dood is still listed in the Australian Catholic Directory as a Salesian priest.
  22. Br Richard Doheny, Sydney 
    Various ex-students have complained about the sexually-abusive behaviour of this member of the Catholic order of Patrician Brothers in New South Wales. He was born (real name John Doheny) on 3 September 1935 in Ireland (at Balingarry, Thurles, County Tipperary), the third youngest of twelve children. He became a Patrician Brother in Ireland (becoming “Brother Richard”) and arrived in Australia in 1956, aged 21. He lived and worked (at primary and junior secondary levels) in Patrician Brothers schools in western Sydney (at Fairfield, Blacktown and Granville) until 2009.
  23. Fr Patrick Doherty, Armidale Diocese, NSW 
    The Catholic Church’s professional standards office in New South Wales has received a complaint from an elderly man who says he is still upset about having been sexually abused by Father P.G. Doherty when the complainant was a schoolboy in the Armidale diocese (in north-western NSW) in 1944-49. The boy was attending a Catholic parish primary school (aged seven to twelve) in Bundarra (between Armidale and Inverell). This school is closed now and the Bundarra parish (St Mary of the Angels) is administered now from Uralla. In 2008, when this complaint was being considered by the Armidale diocese, the diocese was acting evasively, which is a frequent response from church authorities. Father Patrick Doherty’s other parishes included Walcha, Bingara, and Warialda. This priest died in the 1950s and is said to be buried in the Armidale cemetery. It is common for a church victim to be still upset by childhood abuse many decades many years after the original cover-up, as shown by a similar case  here.
  24. Fr Frank Donovan, Redemptorist priest
    The Catholic Church’s Professional Standards Office in New South Wales has “accepted the veracity” of two complaints about Father Francis Donovan, a priest of the Redemptorist Fathers (also called the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer). Two women, acting separately, had complained that Donovan molested them when they were young girls in the late 1970s in buildings attached to the Sacred Heart parish church in Campbell’s Hill,Maitland. See our story  here.
  25. Fr Rex Donohoe
    In 2007, after action by Broken Rites, Archbishop Adrian Doyle of Hobart gave a written apology to a former altar boy of Fr Rex Donohoe. The archdiocese accepted a complaint that Donohue abused this victim in the Kingston parish in Tasmania in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Donohue specialised in the “training” of altar boys and this victim says that he was not the only altar boy who was abused by Donohoe. Donohoe established the Australian “Guild of St Stephen”, an organisation for altar boys. Donohue was later at Tasmania’s Lenah Valley parish and was also the Hobart diocesan master of ceremonies.
  26. Fr Bob Drake
    Broken Rites is researching Father Robert Drake, of the Sandhurst diocese in northern Victoria. In the 1970s his parishes included Wangaratta and Wodonga in Victoria’s north-east. After that, he worked outside the diocese — at a seminary in Papua New Guinea in the 1980s and at the Banyo seminary in Brisbane, Queensland, in the 1990s. Back in Victoria again, he was at the Chiltern parish in 1998 and at St Joseph’s parish, Quarry Hill (in Bendigo) from 1999 to 2006.
  27. Br K.E. Duckworth, Melbourne 
    Broken Rites is researching Christian Brother Keith Evin Duckworth, who touched boys inappropriately at the Parade College junior campus (for years 7 and 8) in Alphington, Melbourne, in the 1970s.
  28. Fr Aidan Duggan, Sydney
    This priest worked in Sydney parishes including Bass Hill, Gymea, Camperdown and Drummoyne before he retired in 1995 (he died in 2004). In 2002 a Sydney man (John Ellis, aged 40) complained to the Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” office that, when he was a 14-year-old altar boy at Bass Hill (near Bankstown) in 1975, he suffered serious sexual assaults by Father Duggan. This abuse (and the church’s code of secrecy) disrupted John Ellis’s adolescent development, leading to problems in his personal life and his professional career (as a solicitor) during his twenties and thirties. Through Towards Healing, the Sydney archdiocese offered John Ellis a small out-of-court “ex gratia” payment provided that he would sign a Deed of Release giving up his legal right to take court action against the archdiocese for a proper amount of compensation. John decided, instead, to sue the archdiocese in the New South Wales Supreme Court for a more appropriate sum to cover his loss of his professional earnings. In 2006 the Supreme Court granted permission for John’s case to proceed in court, but the archdiocese successfully appealed to the NSW Court Appeal, thus blocking John’s case. The church’s victory is known in legal circles as the “Ellis Defence“. Subsequently this precedent  has disempowered all church-victims throughout Australia. To read more about the church’s “Ellis Defence”, click HERE.
  29. Archbishop James Duhig 
    Three women, who do not know each other, have complained to Broken Rites that they were sexually abused in Queensland by Archbishop James Duhig when they were young. For example, one woman said she was assaulted by Duhig when she was living in the Brisbane Cathedral parish in 1941 aged six. James Duhig was Catholic Archbishop of Brisbane for 50 years until 1965.
  30. Br Wilfred Eastmure
    Christian Brother Wilfred Eastmure worked at St Augustine’s orphanage and St Vincent’s orphanage in Victoria. See our story  here.
  31. Br M.J. Esler, Victoria 
    A woman (“Cathy”) has forced the Australian leadership of the Christian Brothers to give her a written apology for having been touched indecently by Brother Maurice Esler when she was a child in Victoria. Originally, when Cathy contacted the Catholic  Church’s Professional Standards Office in Sydney, the PSO was evasive. But Cathy persisted and finally extracted the apology from the Christian Brothers.
  32. Brother Eunan or “Union”
    The Catholic order of De La Salle Brothers has settled with some victims of Brother John McHugh, whose religious name was “Brother Eunan“, which some of his ex-pupils pronounce as yoon-yon as in “trade union”. (There was once a Saint Eunan in Ireland.) Born in Ireland, Eunan McHugh was one of a significant number of Irish-born religious personnel who surfaced in Australia. In the early 1950s, Eunan McHugh taught and supervised boys at two schools in Katoomba, west of Sydney: “Clairvaux”” (the junior school of St Bernard’s College, Katoomba); and St Canice’s parish primary school, Katoomba. At Clairvaux, a boarding school, Brother “Union” was in charge of a dormitory and he himself slept next to the dormitory. Later in the 1950s, he taught at De La Salle College in Cronulla, in Sydney’s south (and this school, too, had boarders).
  33. Br P.T. Farrell, St Virgil’s College, Hobart
    In 2006, the Christian Brothers made a civil settlement with a former student of St Virgil’s College in Hobart, Tasmania. This ex-student had told Broken Rites in 1993 that, when he was a boarder at St Virgil’s (aged seven to eight) in the mid-1950s, he was sexually assaulted by Brother Patrick Timothy Farrell. This Brother, who was nicknamed “Jacky” Farrell at St Virgil’s, was in charge of the junior dormitory for several years until mid-1957. After that, he worked in various Christian Brothers institutions in Sydney.
  34. Marist Brother Stephen Farrell 
    The Marist Brothers head office in Sydney has settled complaints about child-abuse involving Marist Brother Stephen Farrell who died in 2004, aged 81. He taught for many years in New South Wales and Queensland. See more  here.
  35. Br Fintan, De La Salle schools 
    Brother Fintan Dwyer worked in De La Salle schools around Australia. Various ex-pupils have complained that Brother Fintan touched them sexually. His birth name was Louis Victor Dwyer. “Brother Fintan” was his “religious” name. Brother Fintan (not to be confused with a colleague, Brother Finian Allman) toured De La Salle schools, recruiting boys as future Brothers. He died in 1990. See our story HERE.
  36. Fr Dominic Fitzmaurice
    After action by Broken Rites, the Australian head of the Dominican Fathers apologised to a woman for sexual assaults committed by Father Dominic Fitzmaurice in Our Lady of Graces parish at Carina in Brisbane in 1972, when she was aged 12. See our story  here.
  37. Fr Bill Fleming, Boys Town, NSW, 1979 
    During the trial of Father Paul Raymond Evans in Sydney District Court in July 2008, one of Evans’s victims (from Boys Town school near Sydney) told the court that, after he was molested by Evans in 1979, the assault was reported to the school administration. The boy said he was later told by the school’s head, Father William Fleming (a member of the Salesian order) to forget about the incident because “men have urges”. The court heard that Father Fleming allegedly assaulted another boy, who had also made allegations against Evans. Fleming was the rector of Boys Town during the 1970s.
  38. Fr Leo Flynn
    The Melbourne archdiocese has apologized to a woman for sexual abuse committed by Fr Leo Flynn, a priest of the Jesuit order. At the time of the abuse, Flynn was working in a parish which the Jesuit Fathers were staffing on behalf of the Melbourne archdiocese. At first, the woman complained to the Jesuit order (the Society of Jesus) but the Jesuit administration ignored her.Broken Rites then helped the woman to present her case to the Melbourne archdiocese. The archdiocese accepted the woman’s account and apologised (this was reported in the Melbourne “Herald Sun” on 8 May 2000).
  39. Br Greg Fogarty 
    Broken Rites is researching Christian Brother Leo Gregory Fogarty (known as Brother GREG Fogarty) who worked at St Augustine’s boys’ orphanage (in Geelong, Victoria) from 1978 to 1985 inclusive; he became the superintendent there in 1979. See some background about St Augustine’s orphanage  here.
  40. Fr Julian Fox
    In 2000, a Catholic order of priests in Australia (theSalesians of Don Bosco) made a settlement with a Melbourne man (Luke, born in 1964). According to the settlement deed (whichBroken Rites has inspected), Luke alleged that “over a period of time between 1978 and 1979, whilst a student at Salesian College, Rupertswood, Sunbury [Melbourne], he was unlawfully sexually and/or physically assaulted by Fr Fox”. In 2006, six years after the settlement, Luke died, aged 42. Father Fox was given a position at the Salesian headquarters in Rome. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  41. Fr Laurie Gallagher, Marist Fathers
    Broken Rites is researching Father Lawrence Gallagher, S.M. (a member of a religious order, the Society of Mary), who taught at Marist College inBurnie, Tasmania, in the 1970s and early 1980s. In the late 1980s he was at St John’s College, Woodlawn, in Lismore New South Wales. He was also a relieving minister in parishes around Australia. For example, in 1991, he was the Parish Priest in charge of St Thomas More’s parish at Margaret River (in the Bunbury diocese) in Western Australia. It is believed that he formerly served as a missionary in Japan. This Laurie Gallagher is not to be confused with a former diocesan priest of the same name in Victoria.
  42. Fr Gerald Goss
    Women in several parts of Australia have complained to Broken Rites that they were indecently assaulted by this priest, who was a member of the itinerant Redemptorist order, visiting countless parishes throughout Australia. His victims included housekeepers in parish presbyteries, as well as women parishioners.
  43. Br Julian Hackett
    Christian Brother Vincent Julian Hackett was the superintendent of St Augustine’s orphanage, Geelong, Victoria. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  44. Br “Anselm” Hallam
    This member of the De La Salle Brothers was born as Tom Hallam and adopted the “religious” name Anselm (sometimes also spelt Anselem), which was the name of a medieval “saint”. “Brother Anselm” Hallam taught in the late 1960s at St Joseph’s parish primary school, Malvern, in Melbourne, and also taught middle-school students at the neighbouring De La Salle College. According to numerous victims, he was a notorious molester. He invasively mauled the genitals of his pupils. He gave “sex lessons” (really just “dirty talk”), while masturbating under his clerical frock. A female teacher, who knew what Anselm Hallam was doing, complained to the school’s head Brothers but they were not interested. Anselm Hallam died in the early 1990s, aged 92. One of his victims, who became a successful professional, has contributed an interview to the oral history collection at the National Library of Australia about his own professional career, and he included an account of his experiences at the hands of Brother Anselm Hallam.
  45. Fr John Harcombe
    Several people have complained that, as children or teenagers in Sydney in the 1970s, they were sexually abused  by Father John J. Harcombe. This priest was ordained, about 1972, from St Paul’s Seminary for Late Vocations, in Kensington, Sydney. He ministered in the Sydney archdiocese (and also in the Broken Bay diocese, north of Sydney) at parishes in Lewisham, Gosford, Auburn South, Lakemba, Epping, Asquith and Kincumber.
  46. Fr Guy Hartcher
    In March 1994, the Catholic order of Vincentian Fathers (officially called the Congregation of the Mission) signed a civil settlement with a former student of St Stanislaus College in Bathurst, New South Wales. This student was at the school in 1971, when he was aged 14. In the settlement Deed of Release, the Trustees of the Vincentian Fathers state that this agreement is “in full and final settlement” of all or any rights and actions that the ex-student may have “against the Trustees, Father Guy Hartcher or any servant or agent of the Trustees.” See our story  here.
  47. Br Bernard Hayes
    A man, “Roger”, contacted Broken Rites in 2004, stating that he had been sexually abused by Brother Bernard Robert Hayes at the Christian Brothers College preparatory school in Alphington, Melbourne, in 1969. Roger described how the abuse had damaged his psychological development and wrecked his marriage. Broken Rites advised Roger about how to tackle the Catholic Church.authorities. After much evasiveness, the Christian Brothers’ Melbourne headquarters accepted a report by a church psychologist and gave Roger a letter of apology and eventually (in 2006) signed a civil settlement with Roger. Brother Hayes’s previous schools were: St Monica’s Boys’ School, Moonee Ponds VIC, 1942-44; St Kevin’s College, Toorak VIC, 1944-55; Rostrevor College, Adelaide, 1955-60; and St Joseph’s College, Pascoe Vale VIC, 1960-66. When Roger was abused at Alphington in 1969, Brother Hayes was aged 47. The Alphington campus, which comprised Grades 7 and 8, was a preparatory school for Parade College, Bundoora, Melbourne.
  48. Fr Cletus Heffernan, Sydney
    Broken Rites is researching Father Cletus Joseph Heffernan, who was at St Brendan’s parish, Annandale, Sydney, from 1949 to the 1980s,
  49. Fr Len Henry, prominent in “sacred music” 
    The Sydney archdiocese has signed a settlement with a victim who was sexually abused by Father Leonard John Henry — one of Australia’s most prominent promoters of “sacred music”. The church gave Father Henry access to choirboys in Sydney, Melbourne, Tasmania and northern New South Wales. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  50. Br P.R. Heslin, Melbourne 
    The Christian Brothers have acknowledged sexual offences that were committed against boys by Brother Robert Heslin in Melbourne. Heslin’s various schools included: Our Lady of Mount Carmel College, Middle Park; St Joseph’s, Pascoe Vale; and St Bernard’s College, Essendon.
  51. Br “Callixtus” Hogan 
    Broken Rites has helped three former schoolchildren (two males and one female) to extract a settlement from the Marist Brothers regarding incidents that allegedly occurred in New South Wales in the 1960s while Brother Kevin “Calixtus” Hogan was the principal of St Francis de Sales College (in Leeton) and Red Bend Catholic College (in Forbes). See more here.
  52. Marist Br. “Crispin” Hopson 
    In 2014, Australia’s child-abuse Royal Commission was given information about Marist Brother Kevin Nicholas Hopson (religious name Brother “Crispin”). From the 1950s to the 1990s, he worked at Marist Brothers schools in Sydney (at Mosman, Daceyville, Lidcombe, Hunters Hill and Kogarah), as well as at Marist College Canberra. To see more from Broken Rites, click HERE.
  53. Marist Brother Edward Hosey at Coogee NSW 
    The Marist Brothers in New South Wales have made a small civil settlement with a former pupil (“Max“), who was at Marcellin Junior College (a primary school for boys in years 5 and 6) in 1973. This campus, which was then at 160 Coogee Bay Road,Coogee (Sydney), was a feeder school for the secondary-level Marcellin College at Randwick. Max made a formal, signed statement to the NSW police on 24 June 2003, alleging that he was mauled sexually by Brother Edward (his mathematics teacher) almost daily during 5th Grade, when he was aged 10. Brother Edward John Hosey (born 4 February 1911) has died and therefore the police cannot charge him. Max says the corrupt circumstances of this church-abuse disrupted his education and his adolescence, leaving him with serious difficulties in adulthood. In August 2003 the Marist Brothers promptly accepted Max’s complaint and arranged a civil settlement, although this does not make up for the disruption to Max’s life. Other victims of Hosey have contacted Broken Rites.
  54. Brother Maurice Howard
    The Christian Brothers harboured this paedophile in their schools throughout his long career as a Brother in Victoria (mainly), Tasmania and South Australia. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  55. Fr Cuthbert Hoy, MSC
    In early 2002, a woman (“Anne”) contacted Broken Rites, complaining that, when she was aged six in 1963, she was sexually assaulted on several occasions by Father Cuthbert Hoy, in the sacristy of “Our Lady of the Sacred Heart” church at Henley Beach in Adelaide. Hoy was a priest of theMissionaries of the Sacred Heart order, which conducted the Henley Beach parish, plus some other parishes around Australia. By 1966, Hoy had moved to a Hobart parish, also conducted by the MSC order. Broken Rites advised Anne about preparing a case for the Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” process. The MSC order gave Anne a written apology and, in 2003, it made a settlement with her.
  56. Fr Laurie Jennings, Bathurst diocese, NSW
    A woman told Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission in 2015 that, in the 1970s when she was in her mid-teens at Cowra parish (within the Bathurst diocese), Father Laurence Jennings required her (as a loyal Catholic) to perform oral sex on him. Jennings came from a family of “career” Catholics (he had two aunts who were nuns; and several of his brothers and sisters were priests and nuns). He eventually achieved the rank of Monsignor and “Prelate of Honour” and became the Chancellor of the Bathurst diocese.
  57. Fr Kevin Johnston, Western Australia 
    Born in Ireland, Father Kevin Daniel Johnston served as a priest in Western Australia’s Bunbury diocese from 1959 until 1997, when he retired to Ireland. The West Australian newspaper (February 16 and 26, 2005) revealed that Johnston was facing child-sex allegations. A man (Alan) alleged that at the age of nine or 10 in the early 1970s, when he was serving as an altar boy in morning Masses at Bunbury’s St Patrick’s Cathedral, the cathedral parish priest Kevin Johnston indecently mauled him on several occasions in a dressing room. The priest also allegedly forced the boy to indecently touch the priest. Unable to tell his devout parents, the boy became a grumpy and rebellious teenager, ending up with a hard-drug addiction. In his thirties, trying to mend his life, Alan finally complained to the Bunbury diocese. Fr Johnston then gave Alan a written apology, dated 26 August 1997, and soon retired to Ireland. In November 2004, the Bunbury diocese offered Alan a small payout to settle the complaint but Alan rejected this amount as insufficient to help his recovery. After the February 2005 publicity about Johnston, two more men reported that they were molested by Father Johnston, one during confession and the other more than 20 times as he served as an altar boy at the Bunbury cathedral. Broken Rites research indicates that during the last stages of his career, from the mid-1970s to 1997, Johnston ministered in parishes at Boyup Brook, Manjimup, Narrogin and Leschenhault/Australind.
  58. Fr Charles Joyce, OFM 
    Broken Rites is researching Father Charles Joyce, a member of the Order of Friars Minor (Franciscans), who was working at Padua College (a secondary school conducted by the Franciscan order) in Kedron, Brisbane, in the late 1960s.
  59. Marist Brother Norman Keyes, Sydney
    A victim of Br Norman Charles Keyes (at Marist Brothers Penshurst in Sydney in 1976) submitted a report about Keyes’ offences to Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission in 2014. Keyes was not the only criminal at this school; others included Brother “Kostska” Chute and lay teacher Robert “Dolly” Dunn.
  60. Fr Clem Kilby, Tasmania 
    The Hobart Archdiocese has accepted and settled a complaint from a woman who said that she was sexually assaulted by Fr Clement Kilby. This priest had enjoyed a prestigious ranking in Tasmania. In the late 1970s, he worked in St Mary’s Cathedral parish in Hobart (where the priest in charge at the time was Rev. Geoffrey Hylton Jarrett, who eventually became the bishop of Lismore, New South Wales). Later, Kilby was given the rank of Episcopal Vicar for Welfare and was director of the Catholic Church’s Centacare Family Services in Hobart during the 1980s and 1990s. Ironically, Kilby also participated in a church committee that dealt with professional standards, including issues of sexual abuse — an obvious conflict of interest. He died in early 2009.
  61. Br Clim Kissane
    The Victoria-Tasmania province of the Christian Brothers has signed a civil settlement with a male former pupil of Brother Clim Kissane. Brother Kissane taught at various schools including: St Joseph’s College in Geelong; St Virgil’s College in Hobart; St Joseph’s College in Pascoe Vale (Melbourne); Warrnambool Christian Brothers College (now called Emmanuel College) in Victoria; and St Joseph’s Technical College, South Melbourne.
  62. Fr Don Lane, Jesuit
    Australia’s Jesuit headquarters have acknowledged abuse committed by Father Richard Donal (Don) Lane, who worked at Jesuit schools (Xavier College in Melbourne; St Aloysius College at Milsons Point in Sydney and St Ignatius College at Athelstone in South Australia). He also spent periods working as a relieving priest in parishes throughout Australia.
  63. Br Anthony Leahy, St John of God
    Brother Anthony Vincent Leahy (born about 1948), a former head of the Catholic “Hospitaller Order of St John of God” in Australia, has had sex-abuse complaints made against him at a St John of God boarding institution for disadvantaged boys, called “Kendall Grange”, at Morriset, north of Sydney, New South Wales. He also worked in Papua New Guinea and with Aboriginal communities in Australia.
  64. Br P.N. Lennox, Sydney 
    In June 2012 the Christian Brothers organisation in Australia signed a settlement with a former pupil of Christian Brothers College at Manly (in Sydney), who attended this school as a 13-year-old boy about 1973. According to the settlement deed, this ex-pupil alleges that he was “unlawfully assaulted by Brother Peter N. Lennox, the principal of the school”. [The former CBC Manly is now called St Paul’s Catholic College, Manly.] See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  65. Marist Br. Leon Mackey, New South Wales;
    The Marist Brothers have paid settlements to former pupils who complained about sexual abuse by Brother Leon Mackey in Sydney and Newcastle. Brother Leon (real name Noel Mackey, born 31 July 1922) left the Marist Order in late 1955, changed his name to Noel Desmond Dowling and worked in administration for Mount Isa Mines, Queensland, until 1983.
  66. Br “Norbert” Mathieson
    This Marist Brother (real name Joseph Eric Mathieson), who last taught at Marist schools in Parramatta and Eastwood (in Sydney), died in 1954 but, half a century later, former students still remember him as a sex-abuser. His victims were intimidated into silence but some of the victims (now elderly) have finally told their sons and daughters about this abuse. Thus, these sons and daughters are dismayed and angry that their fathers were secretly harmed in this way. See our story here.
     
  67. Fr Patrick Maye
    The Melbourne Catholic archdiocese promised to ban this priest after accepting sexual-abuse complaints from several women but it failed to enforce the ban on him completely. See more from Broken Rites  HERE.
     
  68. Br L.C. McAllen
    Former pupils, now advancing in age, still feel the injustice of having been abused by Christian Brother L.C. McAllen at St Patrick’s College, Strathfield, Sydney, in the early 1960s. See more from Broken Rites here.
     
  69. Fr Patrick McCarthy, Wollongong NSW, 1960s
    Broken Rites Australia is researching Fr Patrick Thomas McCarthy, who ministered in the Wollongong diocese in New South Wales until the early 1970s. McCarthy’s parishes included: Corrimal (St Columbkille’s parish); Thirroul (St Michael’s parish), West Wollongong (St Teresa’s); and Helensburgh (Holy Cross parish).
     
  70. Fr John McCulloch, Sydney region
    Broken Rites is researching Fr John McCulloch, who ministered around Sydney (e.g., Katoomba parish in the 1980s). At Toukley and Gwandalan (on the coast, north of Sydney) he conducted “family camps for families in need.”
  71. Br Thomas McGee
    After action by Broken Rites, the Victorian province of the Christian Brothers has apologised to victims of Brother William Thomas McGee. Brother McGee worked at several Christian Brothers’ orphanages: in Bindoon and Castledare in Western Australia; St Augustine’s orphanage, Geelong, Victoria; and St Vincent’s boys’ home, South Melbourne. He also worked at St Vincent’s hostel, South Melbourne. See our story  here.
     
  72. Fr Bob McNeil, Sydney
    Since 2006, the Sydney archdiocese has accepted (and settled) complaints from some victims of Father Robert McNeil. Despite his offending, McNeil was protected during his career (from the 1950s to the 1990s) by his friends in the church hierarchy.
  73. Br “Laetus” Mennie 
    Former residents of St Vincent’s Boys’ Home at Westmead (in western Sydney), which was operated by the Marist Brothers, have complained about this Marist Brother (his birth name was Joseph Michael Mennie). Brother Laetus worked at this home in 1947-49 and was the director there in 1965-67.
     
  74. Fr Gerard Monaghan 
    The Canberra-Goulburn Catholic diocese has been forced to apologise to a woman who was sexually abused by a priest (Fr Gerard Monaghan) immediately after the death of her husband. See the Broken Rites story  here.
     
  75. Fr Peter Moore, Wollongong NSW 
    Broken Rites is researching Father Peter Moore, who was the vicar-general of the Wollongong Catholic diocese in New South Wales in the 1980s and 1990s, while he was also in charge of St John Vianney’s parish in Fairy Meadow. In the 1970s he had been at St Paul’s parish, Albion Park.
     
  76. Fr Brian Moran, Toowoomba diocese
    Two women, who do not know each other, have complained that, when they were young girls in the early 1960s, they were sexually abused by Father Brian Anthony Moran, of the Toowoomba diocese, which covers an extensive region in western Queensland. Father Brian Moran, who was born about 1929, was sometimes nicknamed Mick Moran. He ministered until 1995 throughout an area bounded by Toowoomba city, Dalby, St George, Cunnamulla, Mitchell and Miles.
  77. Fr John F. Moran, Rockkhampton & Sydney 
    A man (“Tom”) reported to Broken Rites in 1994 that, as a 15-year-old in 1981, he was indecently assaulted by Father John Fabian Moran in the Sacred Heart parish at Yeppoon, in the Rockhampton diocese, in central Queensland. The boy’s parents were away from home and they understood that Father Moran would be supervising him. The parents had been led to believe that their child would be safe under the supervision of a Catholic priest. Father Moran visited the boy and took him on outings. After beginning with playful “wrestling”, Father Moran allegedly mauled the boy’s genitalia on several occasions, and Tom allegedly was required to masturbate the priest. The boy felt intimidated into silence and was not able to tell his Catholic parents about the assaults until he was aged 26 (he contacted Broken Rites at age 27). According to the Crimes Act, an adult who sexually mauls a young person is committing “indecent assault of a child” and the perpetrator is not allowed to claim, as a defence, that the child consented. This crime is regarded as being particularly aggravated when it is perpetrated by a person supposedly in a position of trust, such as a priest. Later in the 1980s and early 1990s, Fr John Moran was a chaplain at Rockhampton’s Emmaus College (a secondary school). About 1994-95, he was on the staff at St Paul’s Seminary for Late Vocations in Sydney and was a part-time school chaplain in Sydney.
  78. Marist Br. “Roland” Moran, Sydney
    Broken Rites is researching John Francis Moran (born in 1926) who became Brother “Roland” Moran when he joined the Marists. He worked in Marist schools (including at Pagewood and Randwick NSW).
  79. Br. “Organ” Morgan, Monivae College, Victoria 
    Leaders of a Catholic religious order — the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart — have apologised for sexual acts committed by Brother G.M. Morgan on boys at Monivae College at Hamilton in western Victoria in the 1960s. Students nicknamed this Brother as “Organ” Morgan because of his indecent assaults on boys’ genitals. Broken Rites possesses a written apology , which the MSC leadership gave to one ex-student, dated 22 February 1994. Morgan was not the only such offender on the Monivae College staff.
  80. Fr Roger (“Gabriel”) Mount
    The Catholic “St John of God Brothers” religious order, which operated homes for disadvantaged boys in New South Wales and Victoria, has paid settlements to several former inmates who made allegations about Brother “Gabriel” Mount. This Brother later became a priest in Papua New Guinea, where he became known as Father Roger Mount. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  81. Fr Gerald Moylan, northern Victoria 
    Women have complained that Father Gerald Leo Moylan (of the Sandhurst diocese in northern Victoria) harassed them verbally about “sex” when they were schoolgirls in Wodonga, Victoria, in the 1960s (or when women were interviewed by Moylan before a church wedding ceremony). In the 1970s and ‘80s, Moylan was in charge of the Numurkah parish and was appointed as the “spiritual director” of the Catholic Women’s League in the diocese. He was promoted to the rank of monsignor.
  82. Fr Noel Murphy, Sydney 
    The Sydney archdiocese has apologised to female victims of Father Nolan Joseph Murphy (known as Fr “Noel” Murphy),  who was at St Monica’s parish in Richmond (in Sydney’s north-west) in the 1960s and at  St Augustine’s parish in Balmain (inner-Sydney) in the 1970s and 1980s.  His earlier parishes (before Richmond) included Campsie, Rozelle, Lithgow, Rockdale, Balgowlah, Rockdale, Clovelly, Enmore and Toronto.
  83. Murrumburrah parish, NSW
    A man (“Peter”), born in 1961, made a lengthy, detailed written statement to a clinic of the New South Wales Health Department in 2002, stating that in 1968-69 he was sexually assaulted by a senior parish priest (a Monsignor) in the “Our Lady of Mercy” parish at Murrumburrah, near Cootamundra, southern New South Wales (within the Canberra-Goulburn diocese). Shortly after the period of alleged abuse, the monsignor died in a road accident. As commonly happens in church-abuse cases, Peter felt intimidated (by the church culture) into remaining silent about the abuse until he was in his mid-thirties. His adult life was seriously affected by the cover-up.
  84. Fr “Jerome” Myszkowski
    A South Australian woman (“Mandy”, born in 1945) says she is still feeling upset about having been sexually assaulted repeatedly by a Polish-born priest, Father Hieronim Myszkowski, when she was a young child in the St Francis Assisi parish in Newton, Adelaide, in 1950-54. This priest, who was known in Australia as Fr Jerome Myszkowski, was a member of the Capuchin Franciscan Friars (the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin). He befriended Mandy’s family and, from when the girl was aged 5, he made weekly visits for meals at their home, where (Mandy says) he would secretly touch Mandy’s genitalia (i.e., the crime of indecent assault). Mandy was unable to tell her parents because they believed that priests could do no wrong. Father Jerome also molested Mandy inside the church (while parishioners, including her father, were attending choir practice) and in his bedroom in the presbytery. On the church premises, the sexual assaults of Mandy became more invasive and more criminally serious. The attacks continued for four years until Mandy was aged nine, in 1954, when Myszkowski left Adelaide to become a chaplain for the Brisbane Polish community, which was based at “Our Lady of Victories” parish in Bowen Hills, Brisbane. Mandy contacted Broken Rites in October 1993. She had written to the church authorities about Myszkowski but, she said, they were evasive. Broken Rites does not know if Mandy has achieved a successful outcome since then.
  85. Marist Brother Don Newton, NSW & Queensland
    Marist Brothers leaders in Australia have received a complaint against Brother Donald Brodie Newton, made by a former schoolboy (who was at Marist Brothers Maitland in the late 1970s). This Brother Don Newton is not to be confused with a De La Salle Brother of the same name. See more HERE.
  86. Br Nicholas, Marist Brothers, 1948-50 
    A man (“Brian”, born in 1938) complained to the Catholic Church “Towards Healing” process in 2003 that he was sexually abused by a Brother “Nicholas” at a Marist Brothers school in Rosewater, South Australia, about 1948 when he was aged 10. Brian said he was forced to remain silent about the abuse at the time but he now realises that this code of silence was unfair, putting more children at risk. The Marist Brothers administration in Melbourne acknowledged to Brian that Brother Nicholas (real name Kevin Stanton, born 6 September 1922) taught at the Rosewater school in 1948, and he transferred to a Marist Brothers school inThebarton (Adelaide) in 1949. In 2005, the Marist administration in Melbourne apologised to Brian for his unhappy experiences at the Rosewater school, and it made a relatively modest “ex gratia” payment to Brian to settle his complaint. Brian was not Nicholas’s only victim — in 1994 Broken Ritesreceived a complaint from another man (“Daryl”, born 1942), saying that he was sexually abused by Brother Nicholas at the Marists’ Thebarton school, before Nicholas left there in 1950. The Marists say that Brother Nicholas left the Marist order in the early 1950s and has since died.
  87. Fr John O’Callaghan, Adelaide
    After action by Broken Rites, the Adelaide Catholic diocese has made civil settlements with former altar boys of this priest. The incidents occurred in 1969-71 at St Monica’s parish, Walkerville, where O’Callaghan ministered from the mid-1960s till about 1981. Previously, O’Callaghan had been at Adelaide’s Salisbury parish.
  88. Fr Bill O’Connor, Parramatta diocese, NSW 
    A woman (“Kerry”), born in the 1940s, has complained that she was sexually assaulted, aged 13, by Father William G. O’Connor (then an assistant priest in the Sydney archdiocese) in the presbytery at Springwood (St Thomas Aquinas parish) in the Blue Mountains in the late 1950s. The Catholic culture prevented the girl from telling her mother about having been sexually abused by a Catholic priest. All this disrupted the girl’s development, and Kerry is still suffering the damage today. Subsequently, O’Connor was the Parish Priest in charge of the Seven Hills parish (Our Lady of Lourdes) for thirty years to 1989. Springwood and Seven Hills were originally in the Sydney diocese but by 1989 they became a part of the new Parramatta diocese. William O’Connor rose in the church ranks in the 1970s and was given the title “Very Reverend”. Kerry went through the church’s Towards Healing process. At first the church officials behaved evasively but eventually they signed a settlement with her.
  89. Br J. A. O’Neill 
    The Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” office has accepted some complaints about Christian Brother John Anselm O’Neill, who taught at Catholic schools including: St Gabriel’s school for the deaf, Castle Hill, NSW, in the 1950s; St Joseph’s primary school, Rozelle, Sydney, in the 1960s; and St Patrick’s primary school, Launceston, Tasmania, in the 1970s and 1980s.
  90. Br Theodore O’Shannessy 
    The De La Salle Brothers have apologised to (and signed a settlement with) a victim of Brother Theodore O’Shannessy. This Brother, who was born about 1940 (real name Patrick O’Shannessy ), taught in De La Salle schools at Haberfield, Bankstown, Dubbo and Cootamundra (all in New South Wales) and Scarborough (in Queensland).
  91. Padua College, Kedron, Brisbane 
    A former pupil of Padua College (a Catholic boys’ school at Kedron, Brisbane) has complained that he was sexually abused in the 1960s by a priest from the Franciscan order (the Order of Friars Minor — OFM).
  92. Br Mark Payne, a Marist 
    Former pupils have complained about sexually abusive behaviour by Marist Brother Mark Donald Payne (born 5 December 1957) who taught at St Augustine’s College in Cairns, Queensland, about 1985.
  93. Fr Leo Perry 
    Broken Rites is researching this priest in Australia and New Zealand. Originally, from 1948 to 1956, he was a member of the Jesuit religious order in New Zealand, where he taught young boys at high-school level in the Holy Name minor seminary (staffed by Australian Jesuits) at Riccarton, Christchurch. At this seminary, he invasively mauled the genitals of boys in their dormitory, in his private room and during car trips. In 1957 the church authorities covered up this problem by transferring Perry to the Townsville diocese in north Queensland, where he ministered (as a diocesan priest, not a Jesuit) in unsuspecting parishes: Mundingburra parish in the late 1950s; Ayr parish about 1960-61; and Townsville cathedral parish until 1967. At Townsville, his victims included at least one boy from Cootharinga Home for Crippled Children.
  94. Br J.M. Podger, Sydney, 1953 
    Broken Rites is researching Brother Ronald John Podger (this surname rhymes with “Roger” or “lodger”) who taught at Christian Brothers  Lewisham in 1952-53, using the religious name “John Maximus” Podger (called after an ancient “Saint” Maximus). Podger later left this religious order. A pupil (“Basil”, who was aged eleven in 1953) is still deeply concerned about Br Podger half a century later. The Christian Brothers have accepted (and settled) a complaint from Basil.
  95. Fr Peter Quirk, Maitland-Newcastle diocese 
    Broken Rites is researching this priest (born 1 April 1957), who ministered from 1986 to 1991 at: Maitland cathedral; Toronto parish; and Taree parish. He targeted teenage boys. He died on 27 September 1991, aged 34. This Father Peter Quirk is not to be confused with any other priest of the same name in another diocese.
  96. Fr Graham Redfern, Melbourne
    The Melbourne Catholic archdiocese’s Independent Commission into Sexual Abuse found in November, 1997, that Father Graham Redfern had sexually abused a youth in 1976, after conducting the funeral of the youth’s mother. The then archbishop of Melbourne, George Pell, formally apologised in a letter to the complainant in May, 1998, for the “wrongs and hurt you have suffered at the hands of Father Redfern”. The archdiocese then signed a civil settlement with the complainant. See more HERE.
  97. Br Neil Richards, New South Wales 
    After action by Broken Rites, the New South Wales province of the Christian Brothers has made a settlement with a former student, who had lodged a complaint about a Brother Richards. The settlement deed identified the Brother as “Desmond Eric Richards”, but he was known in the Christian Brothers as Br Neil Richards. He taught in Catholic primary schools in Sydney and country New South Wales until he retired.
  98. Br Bernie Ring, Victoria
    Broken Rites is researching Christian Brother Bernard Ring (born 22 May 1934). As a child, he lived at St Vincent’s boys’ home in South Melbourne (until 1951) and then, like some other orphanage boys, he became a Christian Brother. Brother B.A. Ring worked in schools at Geelong, Ballarat (St Patrick’s College), East Melbourne and Fiji, and at St Vincent’s boys’ home, South Melbourne.
  99. Marist Brother “Roland“, Sydney
    Brother “Roland” Moran’s birth name was John Francis Moran. Broken Rites has received complaints from a male victim (at Marist Brothers Pagewood in the 1960s) and a female victim (her older siblings attended Marcellin College Randwick in the 1970s – and Brother Roland abused her from age 8 onwards when he kept making “home visits” to this family).
  100. Fr Frank Ryan, Perth
    Broken Rites is researching Father Francis Tully Ryan, at the Inglewood parish in Perth in the 1950s and 1960s. He “befriended” a young female parishioner who took her own life.
  101. Fr Kevin Ryan, Melbourne 
    In 2003, following action by Broken Rites, the Melbourne archdiocese’s commissioner on sexual abuse (Mr Peter O’Callaghan, QC) accepted a complaint by “James” (born in 1954) that Father Arthur Kevin Ryan (known as Fr Kevin Ryan) sexually abused him as an 11-year-old pupil at St Matthew’s parish school, Fawkner North, about 1965. Ryan’s other Melbourne parishes included Yarraville, Thornbury and Glenhuntly. Mr O’Callaghan ruled that “James” was also sexually abused by a prominent Catholic layman, Robert Charles Blunden (known as Bert Blunden), who lived at Fr Ryan’s Fawkner North presbytery.
  102. Br Innocent Schofield
    The Australian Christian Brothers have accepted a complaint from a man, now elderly, that he was sexually abused by Brother Aloysius Innocent Schofield at St Augustine’s boys’ orphanage in Geelong, Victoria, in the late 1940s. Schofield adopted the “religious” name Aloysius Innocent when he joined the order (there have been “saints” with those names). Brother A.I. Schofield rose to become the principal of Christian Brothers schools in Queensland: Christian Brothers College in Warwick (1952-57); St Mary’s College in Toowoomba (1964-69); and St Edmund’s College in Ipswich (1972-77).
  103. Fr Bill Shanahan, Victoria, 1960s 
    Broken Rites is researching Fr William Shanahan regarding one of his earliest parishes — St Joseph’s parish, Warragul (100km east of Melbourne), in the 1960s, when this priest was aged in his thirties.
  104. Fr Peter Slattery, of the Carmelite order
    Broken Rites has received complaints that Father Peter Slattery targeted boys while he was the co-ordinator of “religious” studies at Whitefriars College, a Catholic boys’ school in Donvale, Melbourne, in the 1970s. Slattery, who died in 1995, is honoured by the church in an annual “Peter Slattery Memorial Lecture” at the Notre Dame Australia University in Perth.
  105. Fr Manny Spiteri, Sale diocese, Victoria 
    The Catholic Church has settled a sex-abuse complaint involving a Maltese-born priest, Father Emanuel Joseph Spiteri, who spent 35 years ministering in the Sale diocese in the state of Victoria. See more from Broken Rites  here.
  106. Fr Vincent Sproules, western Victoria 
    The Ballarat Catholic diocese, covering western Victoria, has been forced to apologise for sexual assaults that were committed on a girl (“Zelda”, in her early teens) by Father Vincent Sproules inside a small rural church near Colac in the 1950s. Zelda, from a “very Catholic family”, was forced to remain silent about this breach of trust. This damaged her view of men and she never married. At the age of 75, shortly before dying, she finally revealed her secret to her siblings, who then demanded an apology from the diocese. Meanwhile, Father Sproules had enjoyed a long career as a Catholic priest, including twenty years in charge of St Mary’s parish, Warracknabeal.
  107. Fr Patrick Stephenson, Jesuit 
    The Jesuit religious order says that some former students have complained (separately) about having been “touched inappropriately” by the Father “Paddy” Stephenson (now deceased) at Xavier College, Melbourne. See the Jesuits’ statement HERE.
  108. Br Loyola Sullivan, Sydney 
    Broken Rtes is researching Marist Brother “Loyola” Sullivan, who worked at St Vincent’s Boys Home in Westmead, Sydney, in 1943-1948. He is still remembered by former residents of this institution. This Brother Loyola also taught at Marcellin College, Randwick.
  109. Fr Terence L. Sullivan, Sydney, 1960s 
    This Father Terry Sullivan (not to be confused with other priests with a similar name) had numerous victims among boys in their early teens. Many have complained to Broken Rites. The church has made civil settlements with a number of these victims who demonstrated that Sullivan (and the church’s harbouring of him) had disrupted their adolescent and adult development. Fr Terence Sullivan’s parishes included: Kingsgrove (Our Lady of Fatima parish) in the early 1960s; Penrith (St Nicholas’s parish) and Asquith (St Patrick’s parish) in the mid-1960s and Gosford (St Patrick’s) in 1967. Sullivan targeted boys at Catholic schools, including De La Salle College at Kingsgrove, St Leo’s College at Wahroonga (this was then was a Christian Brothers boys’ school) and St Edward’s Christian Brothers school at Gosford. He left the ministry “on leave” about 1968 and never returned.
  110. Fr Joseph Sultana, Queensland 
    A former altar boy has launched a civil lawsuit against the Catholic Church, alleging years of abuse by a priest, Father Joseph Emmanuel Sultana, in the Australian Catholic diocese of Cairns. See more here.
  111. Br Laurie Sweeney
    An order of Catholic priests, the Salesians of Don Bosco, confirmed in 2004 that it has made a civil settlement with two victims of Salesian Brother Laurence Sweeney — a boy and his sister, who have complained about being sexually abused by Sweeney at a Salesian club in Oakleigh, Melbourne in 1975.
  112. Br Mark Thomas 
    The Christian Brothers have settled a complaint about Brother Brian Thomas. This Brother (born 1938) adopted the religious name “Brother Mark Thomas” when he joined the order. He worked in various Catholic institutions including: at St Augustine’s orphanage in Geelong VIC in 1969; at schools in Box Hill VIC, Albury NSW and Balmain NSW in the 1970s; at Chatswood NSW, Strathfield NSW, Toorak VIC and Canberra in the 1980s; and at Waverley NSW in the 1990s.
  113. Monsignor Maurice Tully, New South Wales 
    Broken Rites is investigating this priest who had a long career (until 1975) in the Armidale diocese in northern New South Wales. While working in a parish, he also acted as the diocese’s vicar-general (chief administrator) and this high status protected him from complaints. See more from Broken Rites here.
  114. Fr John Walshe, Melbourne
    The Melbourne Catholic Archdiocese has confirmed that it has paid a $75,000 settlement to a former student (John Roach) who alleged that, when he was 18 in 1982, he was targeted sexually by Father John Thomas Walshe. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  115. Fr Peter Waters, Melbourne
    Father Peter Maurice Waters was prominent in the Melbourne archdiocese until 1999, when the archdiocese was forced to admit to the media that it “has received and accepted the findings of Mr Peter O’Callaghan QC, the Independent Commissioner, which accepted the accusations of four complainants against Father Peter Waters.” The complainants included two nephews of the late B.A. Santamaria, a powerful Australian lay Catholic political activist (Fr Waters was a friend of the Santamaria family). Because of the media exposure, the archdiocese had to stop giving Fr Waters any more parish appointments in Melbourne, although it paid him retirement benefits.
  116. Br Frank Webster 
    The Christian Brothers Australian administration has accepted complaints from victims who were abused, when they were young boys, by Christian Brother Aloysius Francis Webster (also known as Frank Webster or “Lou” Webster) while he was the superintendent (principal) at St Augustine’s orphanage, Geelong, Victoria, from 1954 to 1959. See the Broken Rites story  here.
  117. Fr Adrian Wenting
    A number of ex-students have complained that Father Adrian Wenting committed offences of indecency against them at the Salesian College boarding school in Brooklyn Park, South Australia, where he was the principal until 1979. Wenting also worked at the Boys Town residential institution in Engadine NSW and at Salesian College Chadstone in Melbourne. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  118. Westmead Boys’ Home, NSW 
    Broken Rites is investigating complaints from former inmates of St Vincent’s Boys’ Home, Westmead, in Sydney’s west. This orphanage was operated by the Marist Brothers until it closed in 1991. Broken Rites possesses a printed list, compiled by the Marists, of all Brothers who worked at this institution. The Westmead site is now a campus of the University of Western Sydney.
  119. Fr Dennis Whelan, NSW 
    Broken Rites is researching Father Dennis R. Whelan, who ministered in the Bathurst Catholic diocese in north-western New South Wales, notably St Brigid’s parish in Dubbo and St Mary’s in Dubbo North. Dennis Whelan’s middle name was either Redmond or Raymond.
  120. Fr John Whiting 
    Broken Rites is researching Father John Thomas Larmer Whiting. Originally a member of the Redemptorist order, he founded a small Australian society of priests and brothers called the “Confraternity of Christ the Priest”. He established a small seminary at Scoresby, in Melbourne’s east. A man who inquired about joining the order in 1981 (aged 19) says that, during the interview, Father John Whiting inspected the young man’s genitals. Another young aspirant says that he was required to bathe naked, with Fr Jack Whiting, in a pool. In later years, Whiting’s society also provided seminary training in Wagga Wagga in southern New South Wales.
  121. Fr Paul Willy, Melbourne
    Broken Rites is researching Father Paul Willy, who was a chaplain in Melbourne for the Young Christian Workers organisation in the 1960s. Paul Willy is included in a Broken Rites article about Fr John Ignatius O’Callaghan HERE.
  122. Fr Kevin Wright, southern New South Wales
    Broken Rites is researching Father Kevin Wright, who spent many years in the Wagga Wagga diocese (e.g., at the Jerilderie parish, 1970-73, followed by the Junee parish).
  123. Bert Zeelen, sacristan, Adelaide cathedral 
    Broken Rites is researching Hubertus Zeelen (a Dutch name), who was the full-time sacristan, caretaker and chief altar-server at St Francis Xavier Cathedral, Adelaide, in the 1960s and 1970s. He was in charge of altar-boys. He lived in a dwelling at the cathedral.
Section C:
Court cases ending with no conviction
Sometimes, for various legal reasons, a court case might fail to result in a conviction. For example:
  1. Fr Theo Arrivoli, Sydney
    Father Theodore Arrivoli, who ministered in many parishes around the Sydney region during 60 years, was charged in court on 15 January 2015 (when he was aged 92) regarding alleged sexual assaults (including buggery) against two children near Sydney in the 1970s. However, at a later hearing, the case did not proceed any further at this stage because of the elderly priest’s health issues. See more from Broken Rites HERE.
  2. Fr Dennis Corrigan 
    On 9 February 2012 Father Dennis John Corrigan, 68, who worked in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, north of Sydney, was acquitted in the New South Wales District Court on charges of indecent assault on a boy. See more from Broken Rites here.
  3. Fr Peter Dwyer 
    In the New South Wales District Court on 9 May 2011, a jury found Father Peter William Dwyer not guilty of alleged sexual offences, between 1977 and 1992, against four students who attended St Stanislaus College, Bathurst NSW (where Fr Dwyer had been a music teacher and later a headmaster).
  4. Christian Brother Steve McLaughlin, Queensland
    A Catholic website (CathNews) reported in July 2002 (quoting the Brisbane Courier Mail) that Brother Stephen David McLaughlin, then aged 50 (a former head of the Christian Brothers order in Queensland), had been ordered by a Brisbane magistrate (at a committal hearing in 2002) to stand trial in the District Court on child-sex charges. However, the case did not proceed to a trial. See more HERE.
  5. St Stanislaus College, Bathurst NSW
    In a judge-alone trial at Sydney District Court on 4 March 2016, a former Catholic priest (now aged 73) was acquitted on charges of indecently assaulting a male student at St Stanislaus College boys’ school in Bathurst, New South Wales, in the 1970s. The defence lawyer has obtained a court order, prohibiting the publication of the ex-priest’s name. See more HERE.
Section D:
Lay teachers in church schools,
researched by Broken Rites
The above lists (Sections A to C) on this website all relate to priests or religious brothers, as distinct from lay teachers. Many victims have contacted Broken Rites about offences committed by lay teachers in Catholic schools or school youth camps. The teachers’ cases are too numerous to be all listed on this website. Here are just a few examples to demonstrate the range of cases:
  1. Yvo Gulien Cleyman, at Gosford, NSW, 1970s
    In the New South Wales District Court at Gosford (New South Wales) on 20 April 2004, Yvo Gulien Cleyman (then aged 59) was sentenced to a maximum of six years’ jail over a series of sex offences against two schoolboys in the late 1970s. The case was reported next day in the Central Coast Herald(and the preliminary proceedings had been reported in the Central Coast Express on 26 February 2003). The boys, aged 13 and 14, were attending St Edward’s Christian Brothers School in East Gosford (north of Sydney), where Yvo Gulien Cleyman was a lay teacher of languages and social studies in the late 1970s. The court was told that, on school camps, on drives to isolated places and out fishing, he forced anal intercourse on the boys as well as forcing them to give and receive oral sex. Cleyman pleaded guilty to six counts of buggery and two counts of indecent assault on the two victims. When charged in 2003, Yvo Gulien Cleyman’s address was given in court as Buccan, Queensland. He was extradited to New South Wales for the court proceedings. After the conviction, theChristian Brothers headquarters in New South Wales began having mediation meetings with victims of Cleyman.
  2. John Coogan, teacher, Geelong, Victoria 
    John Patrick Coogan, then aged 61, was sentenced in 1994 to five years jail (minimum of three years) after pleading guilty to seventeen charges of indent assault of boys while he was a lay teacher at St Joseph’s College (Christian Brothers) in Geelong. Outside the court, one of the victims said the St Joseph’s College administration had known that Coogan was a child-molester but it did nothing about him.
  3. Mark Dean, northern Victoria 
    Mark Christopher Dean, a Catholic lay teacher, pretended to be a priest during role-playing sessions with children while he sexually abused them, the Bendigo Magistrates Court was told in July 1992. Dean, then aged 33, of Rochester and Bendigo, who taught in north Victorian Catholic schools, pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting eight schoolboys in three towns during the 1980s. Dean was sentenced to a six-months suspended jail term. The victims’ families told police that Dean had been protected by the church authorities.
  4. John Gahan, lay teacher, NSW 
    On 30 October 2007 in the New South Wales District Court, John Stephen Gahan was sentenced to 13 months jail (with a non-parole period of six months), on three charges of indecent assault of a boy, aged 11 to 13, while Gahan was a lay teacher at St Mary’s Catholic parish primary school in Scone (in the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese), in the late 1970s. Gahan befriended the boy’s family. Gahan admitted that the abuse (masturbating the boy) occurred on a number of occasions during two years — in Gahan’s car and on overnight trips. The victim said in his impact statement that, as a child, he did not understand what was happening — “only that here was a man that took an interest in my future and this was a small sacrifice to maintain his friendship”. The victim said that the abuse caused problems in his adult life, including in his marriage.
  5. Mato Karapandzk, cathedral caretaker 
    On 11 March 2008 in the South Australian District Court, a 37-year-old woman gained justice for sexual abuse that she experienced while she was a pupil at Adelaide’s St Aloysius Catholic girls’ school. At age 12 in the early 1980s, the girl was told to wheel a disabled elderly nun over to the Adelaide cathedral (opposite the school) for church services. There, the girl was befriended by Mato Karapandzk (then over 50), a Croatian-born caretaker at the cathedral. Over the next five years, he sexually abused the girl in and around the cathedral building, “under the noses of the cathedral staff and the school”, sometimes giving her $20 after the abuse, the court was told. He continued as the cathedral caretaker until the victim came forward with her complaint in 2004. Karapandzk, aged 77 at sentencing, was given a nine-year jail sentence (with four years behind bars before parole).
  6. Willi Kovac, sports teacher 
    In Melbourne County Court in December 2005, Kovac (then aged 73) was jailed for a maximum of nine and half years’ jail, with a non-parole period of 5½ years, after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting three boys (aged between nine and fourteen) in the 1960s and 1970s. German-born Kovac was an athletics coach at Melbourne’s Xavier College and Marcellin College and other Catholic schools and worked as a co-ordinator at summer camps for Catholic school children. Judge Pamela Jenkins said that, since the offences, Kovac’s three victims had struggled with life, including drug and alcohol abuse and relationship breakdowns, and had under-achieved in their work-life. These three boys were not Kovac’s only victims. He also had victims from other Catholic schools. Some victims have contacted Broken Rites. According to information given in court in 2005, Kovac was also jailed in 1970 for indecent assault. One prominent Catholic school sacked Kovac for his behaviour but it then breached its duty of care by allowing him to work at other Catholic schools, putting more boys in danger.
  7. Paul John Lyons, Canberra
    In 2006 and 2007, Daramalan College, a Catholic co-educational school in Canberra (run by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart), finally began making civil settlements with victims of a former teacher, Paul John Lyons. Lyons taught at Daramalan from 1989 to 2000. He took dozens of students to his home overnight or away on sporting trips. In 2000, police caught up with Lyons who admitted indecently assaulting a 15-year-old schoolboy. Police charged Lyons but, a few days later, he committed suicide. His police interview indicated that Lyons had many other victims, meaning that more charges would have been likely.
  8. John Marsden, solicitor, school sports coach
    John Marsden was originally a trainee for the Catholic priesthood but he left the seminary and later became a prominent lawyer and president of the New South Wales Law Society. In a crimes compensation case on 6 July 2001, NSW District Court judge Ken Taylor found that, “on the balance of probabilities”, Marsden had sexually abused an eight-year-old schoolboy in the late 1960s when Marsden was a swimming and football coach at a Catholic school, St John’s, Campbelltown, in Sydney’s south-west. The court was told that, on three occasions, the boy was forced to engage in mutual genital fondling with Marsden and on the third occasion he was forced to perform oral sex on Marsden. The boy then complained to school authorities but was not believed over the respected local solicitor and former trainee priest, the victim told the court. The victim took his allegations against Marsden to Mr Justice Wood’s royal commission into corruption in 1996, but Marsden was never charged by police. The victim then began a civil action in the NSW Supreme Court, but said he was “threatened with financial ruin” by the rich and powerful lawyer. On legal advice, he sought victim’s compensation instead. Judge Taylor awarded the plaintiff the then maximum amount of $40,000 in victim’s compensation, plus $5078 for psychiatrists’ fees and $8000 in legal costs. This finding could not be revealed in 2001 because it was subject to a court suppression order. Marsden died in May 2006, aged 64, and the Weekend Australian published the court documents on 3 June 2006.
  9. Former Test cricket umpire Steve Randell
    He was jailed in 1999 for sexual offences against young girls while he taught at Marist College in Burnie, Tasmania, in the early 1980s (after the school became co-educational). Randell also taught at St Virgil’s College in Hobart. He also allegedly had male victims. See our article about a different offender at Marist College  here.
  10. St Mark’s College, South Australia
    Jenny Christall, who was an education support officer at St Mark’s College in Port Pirie (South Australia) in 2001, learned that a male religious education teacher, Sunil Francis Clark, was sexually abusing female students. Mrs Christall alerted the school administration and the Port Pirie Catholic diocese but, she says, these authorities failed to contact police. Ms Christall contacted the police herself but this meant losing her job because of a workplace confidentiality agreement. After this, she says, she was banned from working at more than 100 Catholic schools in South Australia. The male teacher, Sunil Clark, was charged in the South Australian District Court in 2006 with sexual offences against two schoolgirls, including two charges of unlawful sexual intercourse by a teacher. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to four years and nine months in prison, with a non-parole period of three years.
  11. Stephen Stockdale-Hall, Adelaide
    In the South Australian Supreme Court in December 2005, Stephen John Stockdale-Hall (aged 56) was sentenced to 10 years’ jail (with parole after eight years) after admitting that he sexually abused nine boys, aged between eight and 16 years, between 1977 and 1989, while he was a Catholic schools lay teacher. His crimes started while he was a teacher at Adelaide’s Blackfriars Priory School and went on for a decade after he resigned when he continued to take students on camping expeditions. Stockdale-Hall also encouraged some of his Catholic school victims to drink alcohol and take drugs. See our story  here.
  12. Darren Tector, former lay teacher 
    In 1994, Darren John Tector was jailed for sexual offences against boys while he was a teacher at a Catholic primary school (Our Lady of Lourdes) at Seven Hills, near Parramatta, west of Sydney. He was jailed again in 2007 (aged 41) for using the internet and a telephone to procure a child (a 12-year-old boy) for sexual activity. See our story  here.

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