Pope often quiet on abuse cases, When To Believe A Child, Missing dogs - rituals
2 views
Skip to first unread message
SMAR...@aol.com
unread,
Mar 21, 2013, 10:51:59 PM3/21/13
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to mcmartin-pr...@googlegroups.com
- Pope Francis was often quiet on Argentine sex abuse cases as
archbishop - Nightline: When To Believe A Child's Word - Missing dogs,
ritualistic killing confound Idaho officials
Pope Francis was
often quiet on Argentine sex abuse cases as archbishop By Nick Miroff,
March 18, 2013
HURLINGHAM, Argentina — Father Julio Cesar Grassi was a
celebrity in the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires. The young, dynamic,
media-savvy priest networked with wealthy Argentines to fund an array of
schools, orphanages and job training programs for poor and abandoned youths,
winning praise from Argentine politicians and his superior, Archbishop Jorge
Mario Bergoglio.
Grassi called his foundation Felices los Niños, “Happy
Children.”
Today, Grassi is a convicted sex offender who remains free on
a conditional release after being sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2009 for
molesting a prepubescent boy in his care.
Yet in the years after Grassi’s
conviction, Bergoglio — now Pope Francis — has declined to meet with the victim
of the priest’s crimes or the victims of other predations by clergy under his
leadership. He did not offer personal apologies or financial restitution, even
in cases in which the crimes were denounced by other members of the church and
the offending priests were sent to jail....
There is no evidence that
Bergoglio played a role in covering up abuse cases. Several prominent rights
groups in Argentina say the archbishop went out of his way in recent years to
stand with secular organizations against crimes such as sex trafficking and
child prostitution. They say that Bergoglio’s resolve strengthened as new cases
of molestation emerged in the archdiocese and that he eventually instructed
bishops to immediately report all abuse allegations to police.
In
September, after an Argentine priest from a rural area was convicted of abusing
dozens of boys between 1984 and 1992, the archbishop’s office released a
statement saying the case had “reaffirmed our profound shame and the immense
pain that result from the grave mistakes committed by someone who should be
setting the moral example.”
Nightline:
When To Believe A Child's Word Nightline - November 14, 1996
TURNING POINT: When Children Accuse - Who To Believe Byline:
Ted Koppel and Erin Haynes
ABC-Nightline - November 14,
1996
WHEN CHILDREN ACCUSE: WHO TO BELIEVE Child sex abuse is a very
serious problem.
In 1994 alone 140,000 new cases were investigated and
found to be real. But are innocent people being sentenced for crimes they never
committed because of the testimony of the young?
Doubt over the testimony
of children in sexual abuse cases has made it harder to try accused child
molesters, sometimes with deadly consequences, but authorities say children do
tell the truth in most cases.
TED KOPPEL: [voice-over] This week, another
tragedy.
1st RESPONDENT: I don't understand this. They- they knew. Why
did they let him come into this neighborhood? Or in any other
neighborhood?
TED KOPPEL: [voice-over] A convicted child molester avoids
prison because there is doubt over the testimony of a
child.....
STEPHEN CECI, Psychologist, Cornell University: Not only
do I believe children can be reliable in sexual abuse cases, I believe the vast
majority of them are reliable in those cases.
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over]
But Ceci says what is missing from many accounts of his work is that it is
fairly difficult to convince children to make up even the most harmless
stories.
STEPHEN CECI: Because in our studies we work at it very
hard....
ERIN HAYES: In fact, in his studies, most of the children
ultimately do not give in to interviewers' suggestions, and while many of the
interviews are about more serious subjects, medical exams, for example, they are
not about sex abuse, and many in the child protection field are troubled that
Ceci's research is being applied to sex abuse cases....
STEPHEN CECI:
Maybe 1 percent, 5 percent, 10 percent. I suspect it's nowhere near the
majority. My hunch is the majority of interviews done with kids by front-line
workers, child protective service, law enforcement, therapists, pediatricians,
are well-done....
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over] But his critics point out
Underwager uses his own standards for determining what is repeated and leading.
For instance, he has said that interviewers' questions like this one, "Okay ...
I don't want you to say anything you can't remember for sure," could be
considered leading. And most of the tapes he reviews come to him from defense
attorneys, for whom he consults. When he testifies for them, he says, he is paid
$2,500 a day. Underwager admits he has no way to known if the children's
accounts of abuse in the cases he reviews are actually false. [interviewing] How
do you know, in each of these cases, that the abuse did not happen?
RALPH
UNDERWAGER: I don't. That's not my function. That's the function of the justice
system.
ROB PARRISH: If that's the case, then there's no reason for him
to be expressing an opinion in the justice system, any more than any of the rest
of us. I mean, you could call anybody in that circumstance to say, "I've viewed
the tape and I think it's a bad interview, so therefore I think this child's
probably not telling the truth."
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over] At least 10
courts have disallowed Underwager's testimony. One ruled he "...did not have
bone fide qualifications..." as a researcher. Another said his work "...was not
scientifically reliable..." Underwager does continue to testify, which concerns
many of his critics, who say is expertise is colored by what they see as a
sympathetic view toward pedophiles. In a Dutch publication [Paidika] three years
ago, Underwager said, "Paedophiles need to become more positive and make the
claim that paedophilia is an acceptable expression of God's will for love and
will among human beings." Underwager says he has always believed sex between
adults and children is harmful, but says to help treat pedophiles, they must
first be encouraged to openly proclaim their sexuality....
MARK ELLIS,
National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse: His methods and theories are not
accepted by others in his field, and have been subject to a great deal of
criticism by others in his field.
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over] Prosecutors
are also critical of Dr. Gardner, who not only testifies, but publishes and
markets his own books on child sex abuse, books often quoted in court
cases.
ATTORNEY: [law firm videotape] Now, I want to talk to you about
the most common cause of false accusations.
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over] In
this videotape produced by a law firm, an attorney cites from Dr. Gardner's
research Gardner's conclusion that false allegations of child sex abuse are
commonplace in custody disputes.
ATTORNEY: [law firm videotape] This
phenomena [sic] has been examined in research and it's now been given the name
"parental alienation syndrome."
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over] That disorder,
however, cannot be found in the standard manual of psychiatric diagnoses. It is
a term Dr. Gardner coined himself, based mainly on his own experience as a
psychiatrist. But the largest study done on the subject to date found that false
allegations of child sexual abuse rarely surface in custody disputes ["...less
than 2% of cases involved an allegation of sexual abuse." Dr. Gardner declined a
videotaped interview for this report, but he sells tapes of his own, as well, in
which he describes his criteria to help determine whether a child's allegation
of sexual abuse is true or false. Among his criteria?
Dr. RICHARD
GARDNER: [videotape] If it sounds incredible, it's probably not true. In extreme
cases, children who are sexually abused become like little street-smart sluts. I
believe that children who are false accusers are going to have a higher
incidence of reading mystery stories.
ERIN HAYES: [voice-over] Dr.
Gardner concedes no one has scientifically tested his criteria, not even
he.
Missing dogs, ritualistic
killing confound Idaho officials Reuters March 21, 2013 By Laura
Zuckerman
SALMON, Idaho, March 21 (Reuters) - The
mysterious disappearance of about 30 dogs in southern Idaho has
baffled animal control officials and raised concerns among dog
lovers after a German shepherd was found with its head crushed in
a suspected ritual killing.
The missing canines range widely in size,
breed and age.
"The dogs seem to vanish into thin air," said
Debbie Blackwood, director of the animal shelter in Twin Falls,
Idaho.
Officials say some 30 dogs have gone missing in recent months
in Twin Falls and nearby communities in an agricultural region in
south-central Idaho known as the Magic Valley....