AP IMPACT: Predator priests shuffled around  globe By BRADLEY BROOKS and 
ALESSANDRA RIZZO (AP) 4/14/10 RIO DE JANEIRO  

There he was, five decades later, the priest who had raped Joe Callander  
in Massachusetts. The photo in the Roman Catholic newsletter showed him with 
a  smile across his wrinkled face, near-naked Amazon Indian children in his 
arms  and at his feet.
The Rev. Mario Pezzotti was working with children and  supervising other 
priests in Brazil.

It's not an isolated example. In an  investigation spanning 21 countries 
across six continents, The Associated Press  found 30 cases of priests accused 
of abuse who were transferred or moved abroad.  Some escaped police 
investigations. Many had access to children in another  country, and some 
abused 
again. A priest who admitted to abuse in Los Angeles  went to the Philippines, 
where U.S. church officials mailed him checks and  advised him not to 
reveal their source. A priest in Canada was convicted of  sexual abuse and then 
moved to France, where he was convicted of abuse again in  2005. Another 
priest was moved back and forth between Ireland and England,  despite being 
diagnosed as a pederast, a man who commits sodomy with  boys.

"The pattern is if a priest gets into trouble and it's close to  becoming a 
scandal or if the law might get involved, they send them to the  missions 
abroad," said Richard Sipe, a former Benedictine monk and critic of  what he 
says is a practice of international transfers of accused and admitted  
priest child abusers. "Anything to avoid a scandal." Church officials say that  
in some cases, the priests themselves moved to another country and the new  
parish might not have been aware of past allegations. In other cases, church  
officials said they did not believe the allegations, or that the priest had 
 served his time and reformed.
_http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jF3SgJdO8u1pi0PkautQAtzuJ
KaAD9F33EE03_ 
(http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jF3SgJdO8u1pi0PkautQAtzuJKaAD9F33EE03)
   

$1.4 million awarded in Boy Scout abuse case William McCall, Associated  
Press April 14, 2010 
Portland, Ore. - A jury delivered an embarrassing  rebuke to the Boy Scouts 
of America on Tuesday when it found that the  organization failed to 
protect a man who was molested by an assistant  scoutmaster in the early 1980s. 
Jurors awarded $1.4 million to the former  Portland man and decided that the 
Irving, Texas-based organization was liable  for up to $25 million in 
punitive damages to be decided in a separate phase of  the trial. Over the 
first 
three weeks of testimony, secret Scout "perversion  files" - records of known 
sex offenders - were used as evidence, though it's  unclear if jurors 
consulted the documents while deliberating over two days.  
_http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/04/14/MNGR1CU7K1.DTL_
 
(http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/04/14/MNGR1CU7K1.DTL)  

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