Critics Blast New Priest Abuse Guidelines

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Updated: 7/17/2010 8:16 am
After months of scandal in Europe and years after the problems spread across this country, Pope Benedict issued a new set of guidelines this week, hoping to deal with the sexual abuse crisis among the clergy.

Critics are already lashing out. The new policies speed up the process of removing abusive priests from the clergy, as well as extending the limits for reporting allegations to church authorities.

Groups like the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, also known as SNAP, complained the Pope's guidelines still come up short.

"He hasn't said that they should automatically report it to law enforcement," said Spokeswoman Judy Jones. "Who are these guidelines helping?"

Youngstown City Prosecutor Jay Macejko called the new policies a step in the right direction, yet he admits they won't give authorities any more power to go after abusive priests.

"This has no impact on the state's ability to prosecute these types of cases," Macejko said.

Although the statute for more serious crimes of rape and sexual battery can go back 20 years, other cases can only go back six years based on when the allegations took place, not when they might have been reported. Jones said state lawmakers need to update those limitations, but she also encourages victims to take their allegations to the proper authorities.

"Don't go to the Diocese," she said.

Youngstown Bishop George Murry said he hasn't had a chance to review the Vatican's new guidelines and is not able to talk about them.

The most recent allegations of priest abuse locally involved Father Thomas Crum, reportedly in the 1970s when he was a teacher at Cardinal Mooney High School. Those allegations surfaced a year ago.

While the criminal investigation into that case has been closed by prosecutors, the Bishop was informed this week the Vatican has officially removed Crum from the priesthood.

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ToniM - 7/17/2010 8:45 PM
The bottom line is that difinative actions protect children, not more words on yet another directive. This "new" set of church "laws" meets the criteria for the definition of insanity; "doing the same thing over & over, expecting different results". I am the mom of a recent victim (2001-2002).

pammer - 7/17/2010 11:22 AM
The Church could stop it's own demise if it would make efforts toward righting these wrongs. Instead, it hastens its death by framing the debate in a way that's all about them. They need to focus on the victims. They need to start selling their real estate and putting the money toward victim rehab. I am a 55 year old victim and I still need therapy to sustain my wounded spirit.

john kelly - 7/16/2010 8:19 PM
It really remains a completely astonishing situation. If a lay teacher was found to have sexually abused a child, he would not only be fired, but also tried as a criminal. If a lay school district was found to have covered up 30 years of abusive teacher behavior, moving him from school to school when a new incident arose, all those involved in the cover up would be tried as criminals. But this isn't the case with the Catholic schools. Why? The priest who abused me was found to have been abusing boys for more than 30 years, and shuttled into another school system each time a complaint was found to be believable. After countless--perhaps hundreds--of transgressions, the NY Arch liaised him five years ago. Yet he continues to live freely in his house, which is in a neighborhood filled with young children. How is this possible? How does the church have this immunity? The Pope's new "rules" are pathetic. And the documented history of his inaction in numerous cases is criminal. If there truly is retribution in the afterlife for sins committed while one was here on Earth, Benny is in for a pretty bad time.

JudyJones - 7/16/2010 6:26 PM
Question number 1. Why did Bishop Murry not make the news of Fr Crum being defrocked known to the public? 2. Where is Crum now,and is he being kept away from kids? Not a good situation for Youngstown victims. 3. Were Crum's victims even notified of his removal? If anyone has any information or has been harmed by this priest or any clergy, please report it to the local law enforcement. There is help and healing, you can also contact anyone with SNAP "Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests" Judy Jones, SNAP Midwest Associate Director, 636-433-2511, snapjudy@gmail.com

SMP TURLISH - 7/16/2010 5:58 PM
See this for what it is. Little more than another public relations move. By including the ordination of women as a most serious crime in the same breath as the sexual abuse of children, whether by priests, deacons, seminarians, nuns or lay church employees, the aim is to deflect attention from the church's continuing sexual abuse problems world wide. Individuals' attention and comments will then be addressing women's ordination and not the REAL CRIMINAL actions and IMMORAL behavior of thousands of sexually predatory individuals and the many complicit bishops who enabled and covered it up for years, decades, and yes, centuries. HOLDING CLERGY AND CHURCH LEADERS ACCOUNTABLE BEFORE THE LAW Professor Marci Hamilton and Sister Maureen Paul Turlish on NPR's Radio Times on WHYY in Philadelphia, April 12, 2010 http://whyy.org/cms/radiotimes/2010/04/12/holding-clergy-and-church-leaders-legally-accountable-for-child-abuse/ Sister Maureen Paul Turlish Victims' Advocate New Castle, Delaware maureenpaulturlish@yahoo.com
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