老当益壮,加拿大七旬主教电脑藏有数千张儿童色情照

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来源:http://club.b ackchina.com/main/viewthread.php?tid=796966&extra=page%3D1
http://www.sina.com.cn 2009年10月10日08:52 环球时报

U2036P1T1D18800594F21DT20091010090724.jpg


  环球网实习记者关翔报道,据加拿大《环球华报》9日报道,已经69岁高龄的加拿
大天主教新斯科瓦省主教拉伊(Raymond Lahey)在通过海关检查时被查出拥有3000多
张色情照片,随后遭到全国通缉。日前拉伊前往位于加拿大首都渥太华的警察总部投案
自首后获得保释,稍晚他将再次上庭,面临“拥有和出口儿童色情资料”的起诉。

  9月15日,拉伊从欧洲返回加拿大时,在渥太华国际机场被联邦边境服务局官员拦
住。因为在检查其行李时发现问题,于是官员对其行李又进行仔细检查。结果在其笔记
本电脑里发现了3000多张儿童色情图片。当时,联邦边境服务局对拉伊放行,但扣留了
电脑和其他电子装置。

  9月25日,警方向拉伊提出指控,向全国发出“通缉令”和逮捕证。10月1日,拉伊
前往渥太华警察总部投案自首,面临“拥有和出口儿童色情资料”的起诉。

  在渥太华,加拿大著名刑案律师艾迪森(Michael Edelson)陪同神情沮丧的拉伊
走出黑色轿车。面对蜂拥而来的记者,拉伊没有回答记者竞相追逐的提问。当天下午拉
伊获保释后,未发一言就离开法庭,而其保释条件也很严格,不能使用网络,也不能接
近儿童。

  加拿大教会方面表示,该事情使整个加拿大宗教界都感到震惊,影响到大家对宗教
信仰的忠诚。罗马天主教会目前已解除拉伊在新斯科瓦省主教一职。不过哈利法克斯大
主教曼西尼(Anthony Mancini)则呼吁拉伊所在的安蒂戈尼什(Antigonish)教友要
坚守信心。

  其实宗教界与娈童案有染,是由来已久的国际性话题,美国宾州州立大学历史与宗
教研究教授杰吉斯(Philip Jenkins)曾出版著作,书名是《神职人员:1996年一个当
代危机的解剖》,其中指出天主教司铎中0.2 %到1.7%有恋童癖。目前国际疾病分类标
准中将“恋童”定义为“一种对儿童,通常为发育前或青春早期的男孩或女孩的性偏好
”。在绝大部分国家,涉及对儿童性行为都会面临法律制裁。
 
70岁的人了,还能这样致盎然,身体力行地跑遍全世界,博爱大手到处乱伸,真是能力超强,不简单呀!
 
要赔的钱太多,干脆申请破产,看你能把他们咋办!


Bankruptcy filing delays church sex abuse case

By BRIAN WITTE (AP) – 1 hour ago
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — A sex abuse case against Delaware's Catholic Diocese of Wilmington and a former priest will be delayed after the church filed for federal bankruptcy protection on the eve of proceedings.


The bankruptcy filing late Sunday automatically delays the case that had been set to start Monday in Kent County Superior Court, the first of eight consecutive abuse trials scheduled in Delaware.


"This is a painful decision, one that I had hoped and prayed I would never have to make," said the Rev. W. Francis Malooly, the bishop of the diocese, on the diocese's Web site.


Wilmington is the seventh U.S. Catholic diocese to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection since the church abuse scandal erupted seven years ago in the Archdiocese of Boston.


The diocese covers Delaware and the Eastern Shore of Maryland and serves about 230,000 Catholics.


Thomas Neuberger, an attorney representing 88 alleged victims, described the bankruptcy filing as a "desperate effort to hide the truth from the public and conceal the thousands of pages of scandalous documents" from being made public in court.


"This filing is the latest, sad chapter in the diocese's decades long 'cover-up' of these despicable crimes, to maintain the secrecy surrounding its responsibility and complicity in the sexual abuse of hundreds of Catholic children," Neuberger said in a statement.
Malooly said the decision was made "after careful consideration and after consultation with my close advisers and counselors" and that he believed "we have no other choice." He said "filing for Chapter 11 offers the best opportunity, given finite resources, to provide the fairest possible treatment of all victims of sexual abuse by priests of our Diocese."


"Our hope is that Chapter 11 proceedings will enable us to fairly compensate all victims through a single process established by the Bankruptcy Court," Malooly said.


The bankruptcy filing lists the diocese's assets as being between $50 million and $100 million but said its estimated debt is between $100 million and $500 million. Lawsuit plaintiffs as well as banks and pensions were listed as creditors.


Monday's case would have been the first to come to trial under a Delaware law that created a two-year "lookback" window that allowed claims of abuse to be brought regardless of whether the statute of limitations had expired. More than 100 lawsuits were filed before the period ended this summer, with four being settled.


Civil liability is the only recourse for victims of abuse that happened long ago because the U.S. Supreme Court has said states cannot change the statute of limitations for criminal cases.


Neuberger said the diocese's action may mean some sick and aging victims — some who claim they were abused when they were as young as 8 — could die before getting their day in court.


Attorneys negotiated throughout Sunday trying to reach a settlement, but couldn't.


Before Wilmington, bankruptcy protection was also sought in abuse scandals by dioceses in Davenport, Iowa, Fairbanks, Alaska, Portland, Ore., San Diego, Spokane, Wash., and Tucson, Ariz. The San Diego case was dismissed.


At least three of those bankruptcy cases ended with payments for victims. In May 2008, the Diocese of Davenport agreed to pay $37 million to more than 150 people. A $50 million settlement in 2007 involving about 175 lawsuits ended a bankruptcy filing by the Archdiocese of Portland, which set aside another $20 million for future claims. The Tucson diocese emerged from Chapter 11 in 2005 after creating a fund of more than $20 million for people molested by clergy.


Neuberger said he would make court filings in Delaware to "meet this fraudulent tactic with the full and immediate force of the law." He also vowed to seek out all assets of the diocese and its parishes.
More than 20 Delaware plaintiffs have filed lawsuits against former priest Francis DeLuca. DeLuca served for 35 years but was defrocked last summer after having been jailed in 2007 in New York for repeatedly molesting his grandnephew.


Barbara Blaine, president of the advocacy group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said the church has all the resources it needs to take care of victims, and she described the bankruptcy filing as a way of hiding the truth.


"The bottom line is that the bishop doesn't want the truth to be exposed," Blaine said.


The diocese has paid more than $6.2 million since 2002 to settle sexual abuse lawsuits. Like others around the country, it also has paid settlements to alleged victims who did not file lawsuits.
An annual report filed earlier this year by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops stated that the church has paid more than $2.6 billion in settlements and related expenses since 1950.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gpGQMt6LBG2r4b05dlRDSGHCdAsAD9BE6BBG0
 
据说读所谓圣经可以治阳萎,看来疗效确切
 
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