Wikipedophilia, Wikipedia child abuse misinformation
_http://eassurvey.wordpress.com/2010/04/22/wikipedophilia-wikipedia-child-ab
use-misinformation-clergy-abuse-suit/_ 
(http://eassurvey.wordpress.com/2010/04/22/wikipedophilia-wikipedia-child-abuse-misinformation-clergy-abuse-suit/
)   

A Better Chance at Justice for Abuse Victims By LAWRENCE LESSIG April  26, 
2010....I represented a victim of child sexual abuse in a case brought  
against a nonsectarian private school in New Jersey. The trial court in that  
case had held that a state statute immunizing charities against negligence 
also  protected the school even if its employees acted "willfully, wantonly,  
recklessly, indifferently - even criminally." I volunteered to help appeal 
that  ruling of absolute immunity, and get it reversed. On the other side were 
lawyers  for the insurance company that would have paid the bill if the 
school had been  found liable. Their position was completely understandable: An 
insurance company  has an obligation to its shareholders.

What was truly astonishing was the  appearance of the New Jersey Catholic 
Conference in the case. As its Web site  explains, the conference "represents 
the Catholic bishops of New Jersey on  matters of public policy," because 
"the Catholic Church calls for a different  kind of political engagement: one 
shaped by the moral convictions of well-formed  consciences and focused on 
the dignity of every human being, the pursuit of the  common good and the 
protection of the weak and the vulnerable."

Yet the  "well-formed consciences" of the conference had not entered the 
case on behalf  of the weak and the vulnerable. The Catholic Conference had 
filed a brief in  support of the insurance company, to defend a rule that 
would have left  institutions - like the church - immune from responsibility 
even if employees  "criminally" protected an abuser. The New Jersey Supreme 
Court ruled against the  insurers in 2006.

But representatives of the Catholic Church have  continued their work 
against the "weak and the vulnerable" here in New York. New  York has one of 
the 
nation's most restrictive statutes of limitations for child  sexual abuse, 
requiring victims to sue within five years of turning 18, whether  or not 
they have recognized the psychological harm caused to them by their  abuse.

Assemblywoman Margaret Markey, a Queens Democrat, has introduced a  bill to 
give victims another five years to seek compensation, plus a one-year  
window for victims blocked by the old limitations to now bring suit. That  
legislation has passed the Assembly three times, yet the Senate has refused to  
consider it. It has now been reintroduced into the Assembly. At the core of 
the  opposition to this bill is heavy lobbying by the New York Catholic 
Conference;  according to published reports, the conference has hired 
top-dollar 
lobbyists to  kill the bill. At least one bishop is reported to have 
threatened to close  schools and parishes in legislators' districts if they 
vote 
for the bill. And as  Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Cardozo University, 
has written, bishops  "publicly rail against statute of limitation reform as 
though it were the  equivalent of mandatory abortion."

If the New York Catholic Conference  stops this reform, it will achieve 
three things. First, it will protect its own  wealth. Second, it will assure 
that potentially thousands of victims who have  been abused by priests will 
have no opportunity for compensation. And third, it  will help preserve a 
system of irresponsibility that makes it too easy to ignore  child sexual 
abuse, 
because the costs of ignoring it are lower in New York than  in most other 
states.
_http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/27/opinion/27lessig.html_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/27/opinion/27lessig.html)   

Church in Mexico relieves priest of duties years after woman alleges  abuse 
By N.C. Aizenman Washington Post Staff Writer April 27, 2010 Roman  
Catholic Church officials in Mexico have temporarily relieved a priest of his  
parish duties pending further investigation of long-standing allegations that 
he 
 sexually abused a girl in San Francisco during the 1960s and early 1970s,  
according to a press release issued Monday in Spanish by the Archdiocese of 
 Yucatan. The priest, the Rev. Teodoro Baquedano Pech, 70, who has denied  
engaging in abuse, had been ministering in several rural hamlets near 
Yucatan's  state capital, Merida. A recent Washington Post article described 
how 
for 12  years Baquedano's alleged victim, Sylvia Chavez, now 54, and top 
church  officials in San Francisco repeatedly warned church leaders in Yucatan 
about the  priest. In 2003 a top deputy of Emilio Carlos Berlie Belaunzarán, 
the archbishop  of Yucatan, responded in a letter that "we have taken all 
precautions to  restrict Father Baquedano's access to children." Baquedano was 
never removed  from ministry, however. 
_http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/26/AR201004260
4261.html_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/26/AR2010042604261.html)
   


Child sex `no breach of virtue', some priests believe STEPHEN LUNN  The 
Australian April 28, 2010 SOME priests didn't see the molestation of boys as  a 
breach of their celibacy vows, retired Catholic bishop Geoffrey Robinson 
says.  The former auxiliary bishop of Sydney blames the absence of women from 
church  life as a catalyst for the sexual abuse crisis enveloping the faith. 
In an  interview with The Australian Women's Weekly, Bishop Robinson says 
boys suffered  more than girls at the hands of pedophile priests partly 
because they were more  available to them, with nuns tending to play a greater 
role in the religious  education of young girls. There was also a view among 
some offenders with whom  he had worked that a priest's celibacy vows weren't 
broken if a boy was  involved. 
_http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/child-sex-no-breach-of-virtue-some-priests-believe/story-e6frg6nf-1225859084
751_ 
(http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/child-sex-no-breach-of-virtue-some-priests-believe/story-e6frg6nf-1225859084751)
   

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