Everyday thousands of children are being sexually abused. You can stop the abuse of at least one child by simply praying. You can possibly stop the abuse of thousands of children by forwarding the link in First Time Visitor? by email, Twitter or Facebook to every Christian you know. Save a child or lots of children!!!! Do Something, please!

3:15 PM prayer in brief:
Pray for God to stop 1 child from being molested today.
Pray for God to stop 1 child molestation happening now.
Pray for God to rescue 1 child from sexual slavery.
Pray for God to save 1 girl from genital circumcision.
Pray for God to stop 1 girl from becoming a child-bride.
If you have the faith pray for 100 children rather than one.
Give Thanks. There is more to this prayer here

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Showing posts with label NY Statute of Limitations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NY Statute of Limitations. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 July 2018

62 Child Pervs Arrested, NY Senate Disgusts Again, 2 Survivor's Stories on Today's USA PnP List

ICAC team makes 62 child sexual abuse arrests
in Louisiana in 2018

More than 60 child sexual predators have been arrested this year as part of “Operation Broken Heart,” a two-month long national investigative and prevention effort by federal, state and local authorities.

Joined by members of the Louisiana Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, Chief Deputy Attorney General Bill Stiles announced the Louisiana Department of Justice (LADOJ) made 32 arrests between the months of April and May on a range of crimes associated with production, distribution, and possession of child sexual abuse images and videos.

“The LADOJ is committed to finding and arresting child predators throughout our State; and I am grateful to our agents, examiners, and investigators who work tirelessly to keep Louisiana’s children safe,” said state Attorney General Jeff Landry. “Operation Broken Heart is a reminder of how dangerous the Internet can be and how important it is for parents and guardians to be aware of what your children are doing and with whom they are communicating.”

As a whole, the ICAC Team made 62 arrests throughout Louisiana during the 2018 Operation Broken Heart.

“The sexual abuse and exploitation of children is one of the most vile and disgusting acts of human behavior in any society,” said United States Attorney for the Middle District of Louisiana Brandon Fremin. “I am extremely proud of the work of our partners here in the Middle District of Louisiana and across the nation in these efforts. This is just another example of the profound impact law enforcement and prosecutors can have when we focus the resources provided by local, state and federal law enforcement.”

FBI Special Agent in Charge Eric Rommal of the New Orleans Field Office said the FBI would continue to investigate claims of child sexual abuse.

“Child sexual abuse inflicts life-long mental and physical scars on its victims and stopping those who do harm to innocent children is one of this agency’s top priorities,” said Special Agent in Charge Jere T. Miles of Homeland Security Investigations in New Orleans.




NY state Senate GOP pulls football from Charlie Brown again - Statute of Limitations stands
Kenneth Lovett

Gary Greenberg, a child sex abuse survivor who has campaigned for victim rights, will use his PAC to try to unseat state Legislature Republicans. (Robert Sabo/New York Daily News)

Upset that the state Senate Republicans this year again failed to pass legislation to help child sex abuse survivors seek justice as adults, a “bewildered” Gary Greenberg is using his political action committee to try to help the Democrats win control of the chamber in November.

Greenberg, an upstate investor and child sex abuse survivor who several years ago created the political action committee to push for passage of the Child Victims Act, had previously backed Democrats but this year began working with the Senate Republicans in hopes of getting them to finally act on a bill.

He helped craft legislation with Sen. Catharine Young (R-Cattaraugus County) and even spent money to hire a Republican lobbyist to gain traction within the GOP conference.

Greenberg helped craft legistation to help child victims with Republican Sen. Catharine Young (above). (Hans Pennink/AP)

But Republican leadership blocked Young’s bill, which was opposed by the Democrats and many advocates, from coming to the floor for a vote. Greenberg had hoped a vote would help spur negotiations.

“It’s quite obvious to me that (Senate Majority Leader John) Flanagan doesn’t want to do anything,” Greenberg said. “He refused to take any action to help victims, and that’s sad.”

As a result, Greenberg said his PAC is endorsing Democrats Anna Kaplan, who is running against GOP Sen. Elaine Phillips in Nassau County, and Assemblyman James Skoufis, a Democrat seeking the Senate seat being vacated by longtime Republican Sen. William Larkin in Orange County. Skoufis is facing Republican Tom Basile.

“If they don’t want to change the law, the Senate Republicans have to be removed as the majority and we have to put in a majority that will bring change and provide justice and make the lives of victims better,” he said.

Skoufis said that if elected to the Senate, he will support “the strongest legislation possible that holds child sex abusers accountable while delivering justice for all survivors.”

Slime in a pin-stripe suit

Kaplan said “the fact that the Child Victims Act remains in limbo in Albany is inexcusable.”

“It’s quite obvious to me that Flanagan doesn’t want to do anything,” Greenberg said of state Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan (center), seen with Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (left) and Controller Thomas DiNapoli in January. (Hans Pennink/AP)

Phillips was a co-sponsor on Young’s bill, but Greenberg said it wasn’t enough since she was unable to get it to the floor for a vote.

Basile could not be reached for comment.

State Senate GOP spokeswoman Candice Giove said “any act of sexual abuse against a child is horrific, which is why year after year, the Senate Republican majority proactively takes steps to protect children from predators and these measures simply die in the Assembly.” Giove blamed the Assembly for a lack of a deal, saying they refused to discuss Young’s bill or “collaborate or work in any meaningful way to move this issue across the finish line.”

But advocates point the finger squarely at the Republicans for bottling up the issue for years.



The Democratic-controlled Assembly has the past two years passed the Child Victims Act backed by most survivor advocates that would extend the time frames that a victim could bring a civil case or seek criminal charges and create a one-year window to revive old cases time-barred under current law. Gov. Cuomo supports a similar measure but is opposed by the Catholic Church and other groups like the Boy Scouts of America and insurance companies.

Young’s bill would have created a $350 million Child Victim Reconciliation and Compensation Fund that would be run out of the state controller's office and funded with asset forfeiture money controlled by the Manhattan district attorney’s office. Supporters say it would help victims who were abused by those with little or no money, while critics say it would shield abusers and the institutions they work for.

It is just criminal how the Catholic Church and Boy Scouts of America are lobbying so hard to prevent people who were sexually abused under their watch from getting justice and from getting some kind of closure. There is no repentance, no assumption of responsibility, and certainly no fear of God in their actions. It is disgraceful! Insurance companies - you don't expect anything resembling responsibility to act in a humane manner. They are 110% about money and could care less how much people suffer. Unfortunately, some NY Republican Senators are obviously no better. 




40 years later, scars of abuse at NY school
remain for two women

Two Survivor's Stories - NY State schools
By Maki Becker, Buffalo News

It was more than 40 years ago.

Maggie George was a student in the Kenmore-Town of Tonawanda School District when, she said, she had a long-term, inappropriate relationship with a teacher at her high school.

At the time, she thought of it as a love story. She never considered him a boyfriend, but loved the attention he gave her.

Now 61, George sees what happened to her as emotional and sexual abuse and, inspired by the #MeToo movement, decided a few months ago to report what happened to the school district. She also shared her story with The Buffalo News.

"I’ve got a lesson for others to learn," George said.

She is not the only one.

A second woman, Lorna Barrie, now 59, has come forward to the school district and The News about an inappropriate sexual relationship she had with a different teacher at the same school that started when she was 16 and went on for years after she graduated.

Neither woman reported their allegations while they were students but both said that years later as adults, they tried to report the teachers. Nothing was done.

Then, last fall, came the widely publicized allegations against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, which marked a sea change in attitudes toward claims about sexual harassment and assault by powerful men.

Next, dozens of Olympic gymnasts accused their doctor of sexually abusing them.

Around the same time, a former student at the prestigious Nichols School in Buffalo came forward with allegations about an inappropriate relationship she had had with a teacher when she was a student, prompting a massive investigation by the school. Also, the Diocese of Buffalo acknowledged that dozens of priests had been accused of sexually abusing children.

Earlier this year when George came forward to her old school district, they listened.

“Based on the allegations, I don’t care if it happened last week or 40 years ago, it’s disturbing,” said Kenmore-Tonawanda Superintendent Stephen Bovino, who was appointed to his position in 2017.

But there’s a limit to what a school district can do, Bovino said, with so many years having passed. The teachers the women named have long since retired. Statutes of limitations would prevent any criminal charges from being filed.

It’s a quandary many institutions face: What do you do about decades-old accusations?

Confronting the past

It’s not uncommon for survivors of abuse to come forward many years later, said Robyn Wiktorski-Reynolds, clinical operations officer at Crisis Services, which operates a 24-hour sex assault hotline and provides advocates for victims.

“When a child is abused by an adult — an authority figure, a family member, a loved one or a person trusted with their care — it makes the ability to come forward even harder,” Wiktorski-Reynolds said. “The child wonders if they themselves will be punished, will they be believed.”

Rebecca Stevens, the director of the Child Advocacy Center, said in the 1970s and 1980s, child sex abuse was almost exclusively discussed in terms of “stranger danger.” But the reality then and now is that most children who suffer abuse aren’t plucked from a street by a scary stranger.  “They are abused by somebody they love or trust,” Stevens said.

Florina Altshiler, a Buffalo attorney who used to prosecute sex crimes in Alaska, predicted there will be many more cases. “We’re going to see a lot more old cases coming forward now,” Altshiler said, “because the culture is changing and victims of crime who remained silent for decades may feel like they’re not alone and may feel comfortable.”

Two former students of the Kenmore-Tonawanda Union Free School District are grappling with their experiences of sexual abuse at the school years ago. (John Hickey/News file photo)


‘A naïve and unworldly kid’

Lorna Barrie was 16 years old and a junior during the 1974-1975 academic school year when the alleged sexual contact began with her coach, who was also a teacher, she told the district and The News.

Barrie’s father died when she was 5. She thinks she was searching for a father figure in the coach who recognized her talent as an athlete.

He also recognized her vulnerability!

“In my junior year, I pulled my hamstring muscle during training,” she said. “He would take me into a smaller room at the field house … and ‘massage’ my strained muscle,” she told The News.

The massages turned to fondling and kissing, she said. She said the teacher also had her touch him.

“I was in shock and totally confused and terrified,” Barrie said. The teacher “told me I was special; I was his ‘beauty’ and that he was going to help me realize all of my dreams. I was a naïve and unworldly kid. I respected him as an authority figure and coach … so I just gave in and did as he said and accepted what he was doing to me.”

The touching turned to intercourse. She said the sexual incidents continued through the summer and into her senior year when she was 17. She said the teacher “assaulted me in his car, in his basement, in his home office and in his parents’ home and pool around the corner from where he lived.” She said there were several incidents on school property.

“I loathed myself,” she said. “I was absolutely disgusted by what was happening.” But she said she craved the teacher’s approval.

Another former student, who asked to remain anonymous, accused the same teacher of forcibly kissing her against her will in a locker room in June 1985 when she was 17 and a senior. She said she reported the incident to the district. Two other former students also recently reported witnessing inappropriate behavior by the same Ken-Ton teacher in the 1970s and 1980s.

The News contacted the accused teacher at his home in Florida on June 2. He declined to speak on the record at that time but arranged to speak again by June 5. The News made multiple attempts to reach him again but he did not return calls.

‘Robbed of a normal high school experience’

Maggie George said the relationship with her teacher started when he noticed her at a school dance. She was 14½, a sophomore, and she learned he had asked some girls about her. He was 27.

She said a few days later the teacher asked her to play one-on-one basketball then drove her to the Buffalo Zoo parking lot where he repeatedly tried to kiss her.

He was begging me to kiss him, George said.

She was taken aback. But she also liked the attention, she recalled. Like Barrie, her father had died. George said she was 11 when her father died of a heart attack in her arms.

It left her withdrawn. The teacher stopped his physical advances, at least for a while. But she said he continued to pay an unusual amount of attention to her. They would sit and talk for hours and also play tennis, she said.

In the summer at the end of her junior year, when she was 16, she said the teacher coaxed her to jump into the pool one day with their clothes on. George said he touched her breasts and then he put her hand on him.

“That is not what a teacher is supposed to be doing,” George remembered thinking. “I froze.”

At that moment, a custodian walked in to the pool area and George remembered the teacher saying something to him.

After that incident, George said she tried to keep her distance, but the teacher continued to pay attention to her and she was still drawn to him. She said she didn’t go to her prom because he didn’t want her to.

On the day of her high school graduation, George said the teacher found her after the ceremony and asked her to come meet him at his property five days later. She said she did and they had sex. She was no longer a student and was now 17, which was the legal age of consent.

She acknowledged that there were only a few physical encounters but she now believes the attention he lavished on her was inappropriate and manipulative.

George wrote about her experience with the teacher in a My View column titled “Predator stole years of my life” that appeared May 13.

"Because of him, I was robbed of a normal high school experience that I could look back on with any semblance of fond memories," she wrote. "The guilt and shame I felt were overpowering at times ... As is typical of childhood sex abuse victims, I spent years blaming myself for the abuse, feeling guilty and ashamed, and viewing myself negatively."

The teacher George accused of sexually abusing her denied knowing George and refused any other comment to The News.

A friend of George’s from high school confirmed to The News that she saw the teacher paying an unusual amount of attention to George and that she confided in her that their relationship had become sexual around the time it was going on.

Another former student said that the same teacher touched her buttocks after engaging her in a game of one-on-one basketball when she was a senior and 17, around 1973.

Previous attempts to report

Barrie read George’s account in The News and was stunned to see the parallels in what had happened. They did not know each other in high school, they said. She reached out to George and the two have remained in touch and are supporting each other’s decisions to come forward.

They’re also part of a closed Facebook group of alumni. Neither woman reported the incidents while they were students, but both said they tried to.

Barrie said she sent a handwritten letter to the district many years ago — possibly in the 1990s. She said she met with an administrator at her old high school — while the teacher she had the relationship with was still there — but nothing happened after that. She also said she reached out to local newspapers, including The News.

“I never heard anything back from anybody,” she said.

George said she reported her situation to the Ken-Ton school district in the fall of 1998 after learning the teacher may have been involved with another student. She learned at the time that the teacher had retired. She said the person she talked to at the district — she doesn’t know the name of the person — said that an attorney would get back to her. “I never heard from anyone,” she said.

Revoking teaching certification

Ken-Ton Superintendent Stephen Bovino, who was appointed to his position in 2017, said his administration is limited in what it can do about allegations about incidents from the 1970s. Ken-Ton officials declined to discuss details about allegations made against former teachers, but talked in general about how it has handled recent complaints.

The district could — and would — do a lot more if the allegations were made about recent behavior, or if accused teachers were still employed by the district. “We would interview other students, staff members,” Bovino said. “If the allegations were found to be accurate, that would result in discipline or termination.”

The district can collect information about the allegations, as well as how previous administrations dealt with reports, and file a moral character complaint to the state Education Department, known as a “Part 83” complaint. It includes allegations of sexual abuse but includes all kinds of complaints that could lead to an educator’s certification to be permanently revoked.

Bovino said he is “obligated to report whenever there’s a situation with current or past employees that calls into question their moral character.” The state receives thousands of Part 83 complaints every year. In the last three years, the state has revoked the licenses of 267 educators as a result of Part 83 complaints.

The district hired a private investigator to find the teachers and determine whether they were still teaching or coaching minors. The district did not obtain any information that indicated either man was teaching or coaching, officials said.

The district also encouraged the women to take their allegations to law enforcement. The incidents that happened when the women were under 16 could be considered crimes, but anything later would not. The age of consent in New York has been 17 since 1967, according to research by the Erie County District Attorney’s Special Victims Bureau.

But statutes of limitations on sex crimes against children would prevent any possible charges from being filed about earlier incidents, even under the proposed Child Victims Act. The legislation, passed by the State Assembly in May and delivered to the State Senate, would extend the statute of limitations on pressing criminal charges of the most serious sex crimes to 10 years after the child turns 18 and give a victim until he or she is 50 to file a civil lawsuit about child sex abuse. George is 61 and Barrie is 59. Statutory rape isn’t included in the Child Victims Act.

Bovino said the district learned about the closed Facebook page, and directed Chris Swiatek, the district’s assistant superintendent of human resources and Patrick Fanelli, the district’s community relations coordinator, to express that the district “is more than willing to listen to what they had to say,” Bovino said.

Swiatek talked to George by phone and interviewed Barrie in person, the women told The News. Other Ken-Ton alumni also have contacted the district to report they had seen one of the teachers behave inappropriately, they told The News.

Barrie and George said they felt that this time, the district took their complaints seriously. “He seemed sincerely dedicated to trying to help,” Barrie said.

George said: “As far as currently, we could not ask for more cooperation than we are receiving from Mr. Chris Swiatek at KenTon.”

George and Barrie said they’ve been in contact with state education officials, who said that their cases will be investigated but any outcome could take years. Both the women said that while their memories are painful, they have moved on with their lives and are happy now.

But they want people to understand that what happened caused long-lasting damage that took them years to come to grips with. Barrie said she and George were inspired by the #MeToo movement but don’t want people to think they’re just jumping on the bandwagon.

“I don’t want the attention,” she said. “I don’t want anything out of it other than for him and people like him to be stopped.” The women want to keep other girls and boys from going through what they did and for teachers and administrators to take action when they notice a colleague paying too much attention to a student.

And they want other people to not be afraid to come forward.

“For all of you who are still keeping your decades-old stories inside of you,” George wrote in an email, “I hope you find peace. Forgive yourself for not protecting yourself. What did we know? We were just children. I am OK now. Please be OK, too.”





Wisconsin man sentenced to 20 years for child
sexual assault granted a retrial
Sharon Roznik, Fond du Lac Reporter 

FOND DU LAC - The same judge who, back in 2015, sentenced a Brandon man to 20 years in prison for repeated sexual assault of a 13-year-old girl has granted him a retrial. 

Joseph Doehler, 57, was released from Stanley Correctional Institution on May 30 and remains in custody in the Fond du Lac County Jail on a $100,000 cash bond.     

Fond du Lac Circuit Court Judge Peter Grimm vacated the conviction against Doehler on April 25 and granted him a new jury trial on grounds he was denied effective counsel — a right guaranteed under the Sixth Amendment.

According to Grimm's findings, the jury was deprived of evidence, did not have all available facts and was improperly instructed by state prosecutors. 

"In this court's 27 years on the bench, this case, with its highly unique facts, presents the backdrop for the difficult decision for a trial court who allows counsel the leeway to have a fair trial and conduct it as they see fit," Grimm wrote, stating it was his first time ever granting such a motion.

Doehler was found guilty during a four-day jury trial held in November 2014, during which he was represented by attorneys Anthony Nehls and Dylan Schultz. Grimm presided over the case and sentenced the defendant to prison in March 2015.

The teenager accused Doehler of having sexual intercourse with her multiple times for nearly two years, and claimed the sex was consensual. The girl told police she also had sex with Doehler’s 30-year-old stepson on two occasions, according to court records.

Despite numerous meetings with law enforcement, social workers, therapists and other professionals, the teen did not report the alleged abuse to anyone until living arrangements changed that made her unhappy, the finding states.

The teen, who was labeled "troubled, with significant behavioral issues," had reportedly lived in numerous places, had a reputation for being untruthful, previously reported sexual abuse from other men she knew and had received treatment for mental health issues, Grimm stated in the record.

The teen's testimony was the whole case and her credibility was vital to obtain a conviction, Grimm said.

 An investigation revealed there was no physical evidence that Doehler had sexually assaulted her. The defense also presented testimony that the teen accused two other men of having sex with her after she had been accused of bad behavior. In a few instances, she later denied she said it, Grimm wrote.

The judge said defense counsel showed deficient conduct when cross-examining the teen regarding prior inconsistent statements and various contradictions, and it failed to object to jury instructions from the state that were an "erroneous statement of law," and "deficient and prejudicial," the findings stated.

"The court's improper jury instruction preventing a jury determination on a prior untruthful allegation of sexual assaults further undermines confidence in the outcome," Grimm stated.

The jury verdict was signed by a 22-year-old foreperson, who disclosed they had been raped at age 13 and was not believed by their family, Grimm wrote in his findings. No issue of the defense attorney's failure to strike this juror was raised in any post-conviction motions. 

The case was not an "open and shut case for the state," Grimm wrote. Regardless of whether the trial counsel was ineffective, the combined impact of the evidence that the jury never heard, the erroneous non-standard jury instructions and the missing jury instruction justifies reversal in the interest of justice, he wrote.

Doehler served about three and a half years of his original 20-year sentence. The case is scheduled for further court proceedings.





Monday, 30 January 2017

The True Cost of Child Sexual Abuse

BY NIKKI DUBOSE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

After failing to change the law last year, New York State is set once again to consider doing away with the statute of limitations on prosecuting sex crimes against children — this time with Gov. Cuomo hopefully leading the reform charge against a likely intransigent state Senate.

Under current statutes, a victim must seek justice in criminal or civil court by her 23rd birthday, or she loses the opportunity to do so forever.

To understand why this is so perverse, you have to try to grasp the psychological impact that child sex abuse has on those subjected to it.

I was sexually abused at age 8 by a male figure, and then again by my mother from the ages of 9 to 13 until the police removed me from my home. There was a lot of domestic violence and physical abuse, but the sexual abuse impacted me the most. I developed eating disorders, depression, psychosis, post-traumatic stress disorder and suicidal ideation. I dropped out of high school and failed out of college twice.

I ultimately managed to get my high school diploma and eventually succeeded at college, but not before I became addicted to drugs, alcohol and sex, and was nearly homeless in my early 20s. I had no direction and zero self-esteem.

It wasn’t until after my mother died an alcoholic almost five years ago and I left my modeling career due to anorexia nervosa that therapy finally helped me to uncover the repressed memories of sexual abuse.

By this time, I had blown through hundreds of thousands of dollars due to my mental illnesses, including the loss of my house. It took everything I had to get better, and with eating disorder treatment costing anywhere from $500 a day to $30,000 a month, I had to search for alternative care.

I hope my experience sheds light on why it is cruel and unrealistic to expect people violated as boys and girls to be emotionally ready to face their abusers by the time they turn 23.

But if that doesn’t persuade the state Senate, led by Sen. John Flanagan of Long Island, to join Cuomo and finally change the statute of limitations, I’d like to make an appeal on other grounds that fiscal conservatives might appreciate: the huge and largely hidden costs to society.

What a sad commentary on Republican lawmakers that one has to appeal to the bottom line rather than the rights of a victim of pedophilia to get some form of justice! Without that right, what incentive does the Catholic Church or the Jewish Yeshivas have to ensure the safety of children now in their care? Why do Republicans protect the criminals at the expense of the victims? The answer is, unfortunately, too obvious.

Child sexual trauma is immensely expensive, carrying an average lifetime fiscal impact of more than $210,000 per child, according to the most recent study published in the journal Child Abuse and Neglect.

That includes the not-insubstantial costs of dealing with learning disabilities and mental illnesses such as depression, suicide, eating disorders and more, many of which result from child sexual abuse.

Tack on other indirect costs, such as depleted jobs and the strain on public health programs, and sexual abuse costs society billions of dollars a year, much of which is shouldered by taxpayers.

It just happened that I was thinking about this last night and the medical costs must be staggering, but the costs in lost productivity from people who have to live with depression, anxiety, PTSD, inability to concentrate, poor memories, and a host of other ailments must be incredible. And that's not to mention the creativity that might have been.

I don’t mean to suggest that we can put a price tag on having your soul taken away. As advocate June Busacco of Brooklyn puts it, “No amount (of money) can compare to the brutal treatment” she received as a child. But the unacceptably high price society pays can and should underline the unfathomable pain subjected upon thousands of individuals — pain that society has an obligation to face, not ignore.

I give Cuomo additional credit for pushing to open a one-year window during which those who suffered from past abuse can pursue claims, even as he works to lengthen the statute of limitations going forward.

I have heard the claims from those who say that lengthening statutes of limitations will make it too easy for innocent people to get dragged through the mud. That’s just not true. The high standard of proving a case in a court of law will still apply. The only thing adjusting the statute does is give people who were victimized the opportunity to seek justice.

An old proverb says, “The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is now.” That is how we must view fixing the state’s statute of limitations on sexual abuse committed against children. No one, particularly New York’s boys and girls, can afford to wait any longer.

DuBose is a former model turned author and activist. And one of my favorite people.

Wednesday, 7 September 2016

A Priest, A Petting Zoo Guy, A Mormon, 3 New Yorkers on Today's P&P List

Priest who demanded homosexuals have a ‘celibate life’ suspended after being accused of molesting 15-year-old boy in the Bronx
Exported.;
Father Anthony Giuliano in September 2004

BY ROCCO PARASCANDOLA
GRAHAM RAYMAN
THOMAS TRACY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

A priest who once said homosexuals had to live a “celibate life” to be good Catholics has been accused of molesting a 15-year-old boy at a Bronx church about 30 years ago.

But without a change to the statute of limitations on child sex abuse in New York, the alleged crimes committed by the man of the cloth will forever go unpunished.

Father Anthony Giuliano was running two parishes in Dutchess County — about 85 miles from Manhattan — on Aug. 16 when a 43-year-old man told police the priest had molested him in the late 1980s.

The Archdiocese of New York immediately removed him from the two parishes as the NYPD launched an investigation.

“The allegation has been found to be credible,” Reverend Gerald Walsh, the Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of New York, to parishioners at St. John the Evangelist and St. Charles Borromeo churches, located in Pawling and Dover Plains.

The accuser told Bronx Special Victims Squad detectives that he was working in the rectory of Holy Rosary Church in Baychester between 1987 and 1988 when Giuliano befriended him. The two used to play wrestle, he told cops.

During one session, Giuliano told the teen that he was going to “take him to the back and give him a frontal,” according to police sources.

The teen thought Giuliano was talking about a wrestling maneuver — until the priest told him to lie down on the ground, pulled the teen's pants and underwear down and molested him, police sources said.

Even if sufficient evidence is found to support the accuser’s claims, New York’s statute of limitations bars authorities from filing charges. Victims of child sex abuse have until age 23 to bring a criminal or civil case.

In June, Albany legislators failed to vote on the Child Victims Act, which would have made it easier for child sex abuse victims to seek justice against their abusers, as well as the Catholic Church and schools. The long-stalled legislation would have created a one-year window for past victims of abuse to bring charges against their tormentors.

The Catholic League called the legislation “a vindictive bill pushed by lawyers and activists out to rape the Catholic Church.”

An odd choice of words - 'rape the church'. If the church had been as proactive in stopping the rape of children by pedophile priests as they are in stopping those children from getting justice, this world would be a much better place.

Meanwhile, investigators are trying to determine if other, more recent victims of Giuliano can be found, police sources said.

“This is a shock,” the priest told the Daily News last month when the allegations surfaced. “It never happened.” When reached Tuesday, he refused to comment. The accuser also declined comment.

In an interview by a SUNY New Paltz student posted online in 2014, Giuliano said that homosexuals should be celibate if they want to be part of the Catholic Church. “It must be a celibate life like with the priesthood,” he said. “We are celibate for a greater purpose.”

He also questioned Pope Francis’ push to open the Catholic Church to same-sex couples. “We can’t say this for 2,000 years and then all of a sudden say, ‘Oh, we made a mistake for 2,000 years,’” Giuliano said.

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of Bishop Accountability, said the Archdiocese of New York notoriously hides information, preventing a more complete picture of the extent of abuse among priests in the state.

“We know of very few accused priests in New York State,” Doyle said. “We know about more accused priests in the diocese of Manchester, New Hampshire than we do in the Archdiocese of New York.” 

    Baychester, NY



Former petting zoo employee indicted for
child sexual abuse

By Tom Smith Senior Staff Writer, Times Daily

FLORENCE – A man working with the pony ride of a traveling petting zoo has been indicted on multiple counts of child sexual abuse.

Daryl Victor Raymond Jr., 48, of School Street, Stockholm, Maine, has been indicted on six counts of unlawful sexual abuse of a child under 12.

According to the indictments, the children were are all girls between the ages of 3 and 6.

The indictments were issued during the recently concluded August grand jury session. In the indictments, Raymond is accused of subjecting a child under 12 to “sexual contact.”

Police said Raymond was arrested April 30 after an investigation into the allegations that he inappropriately touched the girls, who were riding the pony ride where he was working.

Raymond is in the Lauderdale County Detention Center on bail totaling $300,000. He is scheduled to be arraigned on the charges Sept. 21 by Lauderdale County Circuit Judge Gil Self.

    Stockholm, Maine



New York man accused of child sex abuse
By WKTV

CANASTOTA N.Y. – A Canastota man has been arrested on several charges following a three-week investigation, according to the Madison County Sheriff’s Office.

Charles W. Pentland, 44, allegedly subjected a child younger than 11 years of age to sexual contact, the Sheriff’s Office said. He has been charged with felony criminal sexual act, felony sexual abuse, misdemeanor endangering the welfare of a child, misdemeanor sexual misconduct and misdemeanor forcible touching.

Pentland was arrested under an arrest warrant and was arraigned before the Village of Canastota Court. He was remanded to the Madison County Jail on $15,000 cash bail or $25,000 secured bond, and he is scheduled to answer the charges at a later date.

Members of the Madison County Child Protective Services and the Madison County Child Advocacy Center assisted sheriff’s investigators.

    Canastota, NY



Utah man accused of child sex abuse tells judge
how he found God

Timothy Morgan Butler, of Layton, appeared in Judge Glen Dawson's Second Distrtict courtroom with his standby council Julie George and Mark Arrington in Farmington on Tuesday, September 6, 2016. He turned to the public in the courtroom to say that we are all brothers and sisters. In July Butler pleaded guilty to three counts of attempted aggravated sexual abuse of a child.
Image by: BRIANA SCROGGINS/Standard-Examiner

LORETTA PARK, Standard-Examiner Staff

FARMINGTON, Utah — A 56-year-old Layton man told a judge he found God when serving jail time 20 years ago when he read the Book of Mormon. 

I don't think he found my God

Timothy Morgan Butler spoke at a scheduled sentencing hearing before Judge Glen Dawson on Tuesday, Sept. 6, in 2nd District Court.

Butler, who is representing himself, asked if he could speak in court for a few minutes. Dawson had rescheduled the sentencing hearing for Sept. 20 because they had received the victim’s impact statement on Tuesday. Mark Arrington and Julie George have been appointed as stand-by council to help Butler with his case.

Butler accepted a plea deal on July 26. He entered guilty pleas to three counts of attempted aggravated sexual abuse of a child, first-degree felonies, in 2nd District Court, according to online court records. Each felony Butler pleaded guilty to carries a possible sentence of three years to life in Utah State Prison. Butler said in court Tuesday that he was ordered to serve a year sentence in the Davis County Jail 20 years ago for a drug possession charge. At that time he said he didn’t believe in God. 

Three months into the sentence, Butler said he received work release and his fiancee would pick him up from the jail and drive him to his job in Salt Lake County because his driver’s license had been suspended. The woman broke off their engagement, Butler said, so he decided to drive himself to work.

“I made a stupid mistake,” Butler said.

That’s when he called his mother, but she refused to talk to him. Butler said his father spoke with him on the phone and told him to read the Book of Mormon.

Butler said he didn’t believe in God but decided to read the book, and he couldn’t put it down. He said he talked to his cellmate and he was "filled with the Holy Spirit of God."

“I knew there was a God,” Butler said.

Butler then went on to say that later when he was released from jail he read 1 Corinthians Chapter 7 in the Bible and went to a bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with questions concerning virgins. Butler said he was a member of the LDS Church at that time.

Butler claims that verses in that chapter claim when a virgin passes a certain age then a man can do what he wants, and he hasn't sinned.

That's not what the Bible says. The reference is to a man's daughters and whether she should be married or remain a virgin. Doing what you want with her would not allow her to remain a virgin. I'm curious as to what the Mormon bishop told him.

As Butler left the courtroom he said, “God bless you,” to Dawson for allowing him to speak in court.

Officers with the Layton Police Department arrested Butler on March 25, 2014, after a 10-year-old girl accused him of touching her inappropriately, court records say. He told officers he sexually abused another child under the age of 10 around the same time as the first child, according to court records.

During an interview with police, Butler told an officer “the Bible did not set limits on the age between two partners,” a probable cause statement filed with the court says.

The New Testament is not a book of rules. It is about having a relationship with Jesus Christ that is so intimate that one should never do what would be repugnant to Christ, not because it is against a rule, but just because you have surrendered your will to Jesus and you want what He wants. I think he missed that part.

Though Butler’s mental competency was questioned during the case, two psychiatrists found he was competent to stand trial. He has spent time at Utah State Hospital for mental health-related issues in the past.





New York Mills man accused of child sexual abuse
By WKTV


NEW YORK MILLS, N.Y. – A New York Mills man has been charged for allegedly sexually abusing a child after a five-year investigation.

David R. Burr, 37, was indicted by an Oneida County Grand Jury and charged with felony criminal sexual act for allegedly sexually abusing a 10-year-old in Utica, according to Chief Deputy Joseph Lisi.

Rome Police detectives Richard Galluppi and Jason Worth, both formerly assigned to the county Child Advocacy Center, led the investigation. They said that on January 20, 2011, Burr sexually abused the child in Utica.

A five year investigation? Five years? Wow!

The investigation involved numerous members of the Advocacy Center, including Child Protective Services caseworkers, victim advocates and counselors who assisted the victim throughout the investigation.

Burr was arrested on an indictment warrant by members of the Oneida County Sheriff’s Office Warants Division and he is being held in Oneida County Jail without bail.

The victim has been offered additional counseling through the Child Advocacy Center.