Thursday, November 22, 2012

Irish court deals with Pedophile like Maciel


Abused Irish woman finally finds justice




Being a priest can have its perks, as in the Maciel case. He basically got off Scot free after raping and sodomizing his own seminarians for decades and after after a host of other sexual crimes as yet not published.

This is a recent conviction in Ireland; note how long it was since the event. It does not seem like this 'statute of limitations' bit is not important over there, in contrast to the USA and the Vatican which tend to protect pedophiles and punish victims.


Woman awarded $5 million over 1970s sex abuse by church choir member

Victim has rapist's child who was given up for adoption


Abused Irish woman finally finds justice
Abused Irish woman finally finds justice

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An Irish woman who was repeatedly raped and sexually abused by a man in her church choir in the 1970s, was awarded $5 million (€4 million) in damages by a High Court jury.
Jacqueline O'Toole, 55, from Pearse Street, Dublin 2 took the case against Joseph Carrick from Carysfort Woods, Blackrock, Co Dublin, who was described in court as an "evil paedophile" who preyed on children.
Carrick, now 72, did not contest the actions taken against him and was not present in court during the trial. The accused was a member of a church choir at City Quay and often gave young girls a lift home, RTE reports.
The court heard how while she was between the ages of 13 and 15, Carrick took O'Toole to his office in Eden Quay and locked the door before raping and sexually abusing her.
O’Toole told the jury that as a result of the repeated rapes she fell pregnant and gave birth to a baby girl who was taken from her hours after delivery and was given up for adoption. The victim said the attacks occurred about twice a month and that she was terrified of O’Toole.
When O’Toole fell pregnant at the age of 15, Carrick stopped abusing her.
She hid her pregnancy from her family before she was admitted to hospital with suspected appendicitis, before doctors realized she was in labor.
She gave birth to a baby girl, whom was taken from her within hours of delivery. Choking back tears she told the court she often thinks about her daughter and wonders if she could be passing her on the street.
In a separate action on Tuesday, Geraldine Nolan, who is Ms O’Toole's cousin, was awarded $897,000 (€700,000) for rape and sexual assault by the same man.
Attorney Richard Lyons SC for the women, who had been friends since childhood, said they were "systematically raped and dominated by this monster".
He added: Carrick was an "evil paedophile”.

Monday, November 12, 2012



No Legion of Christ Sexual Abuser ever Punished!

Strange, isn't it. Fr. Maciel, the sexual predator, founder and instigator of sexual abuse in the Legion got away with a slap on the wrist from the Pope.

Nothing has ever been done about him and other Legionary sexual abusers. The Legion's Media Massage and Control has been very effective. Money talks and, in the Legion's case, money shuts people up.

[I must admit that the Legion has taken some of its sexual abusers out of circulation -discreetly- when the names have been published or leaked, or when victims have taken steps to expose them.]

In Ireland, a priest who sexually abused at least 10 altar boys recently got 2 years in prison; not much for destroying so many childhoods...But it is better than nothing. But in justice, the sentences should run sequentially adding up to 20 years at least, as he destroyed the childhoods of at least 10 people...say, 10 years by 10...


Irish priest sentenced to two years for sexual assault of ten young boys

Raymond Brady acted “like a predator” abusing boys between 11 and 17

An Irish priest who admitted to sexually assaulting 10 boys in the Diocese of Meath, has been sentenced to two years by Trim Circuit Criminal Court.

Fr Raymond Brady from Baltrasna, Oldcastle, Co Meath, acted “like a predator”, said Judge Michael O’Shea, according to the Irish Times.

The 77-year-old priest admitted assaulting the boys, some of them brothers, at different locations including the parochial houses in Drumconrath and Kilbeg and admitted an attempted assault on another boy. According to the Times, abuse also happened in a caravan in Bettystown and in Brady's car as he took the boys to and from funeral Masses.

The majority of the victims were altar boys aged between 11 and 17.

The abuse was revealed when one of the victims told a priest in Co Louth who contacted the Irish police. The investigation was led by Det Garda Moroney of Kells.

Some of the victims were abused as they sat on the priest’s knee in their own living rooms while their mother was in the kitchen making tea, the court heard.

One boy told Det Garda Bryan Moroney he woke in his bed to find the priest standing above him. Apparently, the priest knew the boy was alone in the house and had let himself in to sexually abuse him.

Two of the men, who are now middle-aged, read statements to the court.

One said when he goes to Mass “it maddens me the way we are asked to pray for the church but nobody is ever asked to pray for the abused”.

“I want everybody to know what Fr Brady has done,” he said.

Brady gave evidence and apologized “to anybody I have hurt or harmed in any way."

The court heard Brady stopped the assaults in the 1970s after “an encounter” with a teenage girl who was the victim of abuse, “who opened his eyes to the impact of sexual abuse on a child for the first time."

Defencing Senior counsel Padraig Dwyer said Brady has been suspended for a “considerable period of time from engaging in any activities in connection with the church”, and that he would be laicised after the court case.

When he passed sentence on Brady, Judge O’Shea said, “I am satisfied he acted as a predator.”

He added that the sexual abuse could only be described as “humiliating, horrific and disgusting. He took their childhood and innocence from them.”

Brady received the maximum two-year jail term on each of the 11 charges; they will run concurrently.
 

Friday, November 2, 2012

Minimizing Maciel and Armstrong

Marcial Maciel - Los Legionarios De Cristo : testimonios y documentos ineditos. (Tiempo de Memoria) (Spanish Edition)
 

Just thought I would pull those two realities together

Many Pro Legion people still find a way to defend Fr. Maciel, either by denying or by minimizing his sins/crimes/abuses

AMERICA posted the following article today about Armstrong, once a model and a hero. But he deceived and did what was wrong. It is interesting to read how those around him minimized. The same is true about many people who continue to love the Legion of Christ and the Regnum Christi: they minimize Maciel's crimes and the coverup of other Legion leaders. These people want to hold on the dream that Fr. Maciel and the Legion presents to them: "You can be Holy if you follow our system", just like for Lance and his followers: "You can win the Tour the France if you follow our system"


Peddling Deception


The Editors
NOVEMBER 12, 2012

T he resignation on Oct. 17 of the cycling superstar Lance Armstrong from the chairmanship of the organization for cancer survivors that he founded in 1997, following his own dramatic recovery from cancer, closed the door on one of the most spectacular careers in athletic history. In the immediate aftermath, corporate sponsors who had enriched him to the tune of more than $100 million dropped him. The world’s greatest cyclist’s seven triumphs in the Tour de France were the product of not only heroic human effort but performance-enhancing drugs. The scandal, according to the United States Anti-Doping Agency report that followed a two-year investigation, involved a complex conspiracy of teammates, coaches, a masseuse and drug suppliers—one of the greatest scandals in sports history.



Mr. Armstrong denies doping, but he has stopped fighting the U.S.A.D.A. accusations. Among his dwindling number of supporters, the most common defense of Mr. Armstrong’s actions is “everybody does it.” Indeed, Mr. Armstrong and his fellow conspirators used that very argument to rope into the plot younger racers, some of whom had thirsted for the excitement of international competitive cycling all their lives. The familiar syllogism ran: All the top racers use drugs; you wish to race with the top racers; therefore, you should use drugs too. If “everyone” is breaking the rules, the rules become meaningless. Buzz Bissinger, author of Friday Night Lights, argued in Newsweek (9/3) that Lance Armstrong is one of the few “heroes” America has left. “Even if he did take enhancers, so what?” He was just “leveling the playing field.” Those who are trying to bring him down are either jealous or just making a name for themselves, said Mr. Bissinger. Even less convincing arguments from Mr. Armstrong’s apologists involve his status as a celebrity-hero: He is a hero because he fought and overcame cancer; he is also a philanthropist, whose well-run charity has served countless cancer victims; his faults do not define the man.



But consider that from 1998 to 2005 Mr. Armstrong led a conspiracy involving teammates whom he bullied to dope up or get out. The deception involved an amalgam of transfused blood, testosterone and other natural and unnatural substances. One such substance, an artificial blood booster known as EPO, stimulates the production of red blood cells. EPO is potentially lethal and is known to generate and multiply cancerous cells. The complex chemistry of the substances involved made detection of Mr. Armstrong’s activity all the more difficult. Moreover, when faced with the prospect of intensive testing, Mr. Armstrong would simply lie or disappear when the inspectors approached.



The story of his teammates’ complicity is as old as Faust—the promise of fame, wealth and the company of the elite, all of which, at first, are attractive. Mr. Armstrong’s accomplices rationalized their cheating by convincing themselves that nothing would be lost except, they failed to realize, their honor. A pivotal figure, the Tour de France cyclist Kayle Leogrande, according to The New York Times, casually admitted his dope use to one of his team’s assistants, who, to his surprise, was “not O.K. with that.” The teammate then spoke to the anti-doping agency, which opened an investigation that led to Mr. Armstrong’s downfall. On Oct. 22 the International Cycling Union stripped Mr. Armstrong of his seven Tour de France titles and banned him from the sport.



The most disturbing stories about Mr. Armstrong’s activities came from teammates who finally realized that even though “everybody does it,” doping was still wrong. Some members of Mr. Armstrong’s team, who for years had gone along with the scam, opened their eyes and for various reasons—not all self-serving—saw how the moral compromises they had made had cost too much. Doping was wrong, they now realized, because it violated the ideals they had been taught by their parents, ideals that had motivated them as young people to compete. One teammate’s father nearly destroyed himself with drugs; the son was shocked to see himself cycling down the same road.



How can Lance Armstrong, who still insists that he never used drugs, close the door on this part of his life and regain his dignity? With great difficulty. Though Christians believe in redemption, Mr. Armstrong is not contrite. Even if he chooses to tell the truth now, proving to his family, friends and former supporters that he is a changed man will be harder than racing up the Pyrenees. Mr. Armstrong’s public life is over. He should now devote his energy and attention to confessing and making reparation. He must at last reject the gospel of winning at all costs and spend his remaining days helping his former colleagues to excise the moral cancer that now enfeebles the sport that made him famous.