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To: J. C. Dithers who wrote (3949)3/21/2002 11:33:04 AM
From: E  Respond to of 21057
 
The man was innocent OF THE CRIME OF WHICH HE WAS FRAMED AND CONVICTED.

Law enforcement officials framed him on perjured testimony.

This is, by many people, considered unacceptable.



To: J. C. Dithers who wrote (3949)3/21/2002 12:07:10 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21057
 
What's your take on the Pope's message?

MARCH 21, 11:39 ET
Pope Denounces 'Grave' Sex Scandal

By VICTOR L. SIMPSON
Associated Press Writer

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John Paul II on Thursday broke his silence on the sex abuse cases rocking the Roman Catholic Church, saying the ``grave scandal'' was casting a ``dark shadow of suspicion'' over all priests.

In an annual message to priests worldwide, the pope said ``as priests we are personally and profoundly afflicted by the sins of some of our brothers who have betrayed the grace of ordination.''

The pope's yearly pre-Easter message has not previously dealt with such a burning issue. The letter typically expresses the pope's closeness to his corps of priests around the world.

He said they had succumbed ``to the most grievous forms'' of what he called, using the Latin phrase, ``mystery of evil.''

``Grave scandal is caused, with the result that a dark shadow of suspicion is cast over all the other fine priests who perform their ministry with honesty and integrity and often with heroic self-sacrifice,'' the pope said.

John Paul said the Church ``shows her concern for the victims and strives to respond in truth and justice to each of these painful situations.''

It was the first time the pope publicly addressed the issue since widespread accusations of sexual misconduct by priests surfaced in the United States in recent months. The accusations have led to the resignation of one bishop, from Palm Beach, Fla., and tarnished the reputation of Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston for failing to take action against a child-molesting priest.

The problem has worldwide implications for the Church.

In January, the Catholic Church in Ireland agreed to a landmark $110 million payment to children abused by clergy over decades. More than 20 priests, brothers and nuns have been convicted of molesting children.

Sexual abuse cases involving cover-ups have also been reported in England, France and Australia, among other countries.

John Paul has been described as particularly saddened by sexual harassment allegations leveled against the archbishop of Poznan in the pope's native Poland. Archbishop Juliusz Paetz, who worked with John Paul at the Vatican and was sent by him to Poland in 1982, denied the allegations in a letter read in parishes last Sunday.

For years, the Vatican viewed such reports as attempts to discredit the church or as part of an orchestrated campaign against celibacy.

Ray Flynn, a former U.S. ambassador to the Vatican and one-time mayor of Boston, said the pope's message was a strong signal that abuse will not be tolerated.

``This historic message for reform in the way church leaders deal with allegations of sexual abuse by priests against children, is not a suggestion, but an ultimatum,'' Flynn said. ``Changes and reforms will take place and they will be universal,'' said Flynn, who is now president of the Catholic Alliance, a nonpartisan advocacy group.

At a Vatican news conference to present the pope's letter, Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos said John Paul was ``supportive'' of bishops and priests in dioceses shaken by the scandal.

But he refused to answer specific questions about the sex scandal, reading a written statement that defended the Church's efforts to uphold morality and punish wrongdoers within their ranks.

He cited a study showing that 3 percent of American clergymen had the ``tendency'' to abuse minors and that 0.3 percent were pedophiles.

He said there were no comparative studies for other categories ``including parents and relatives.''

In Paris, meanwhile, judicial officials ruled Thursday that a Roman Catholic bishop facing allegations that he sexually abused a child in the early 1970s cannot be charged because the statute of limitations has run out.

The prosecutor's office dismissed the case against Jean-Michel di Falco, an auxiliary bishop in the French capital, saying the alleged abuse happened too long ago, officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. A man, whose name was not released, had claimed the bishop abused him as a child from 1972 to 1975.