Hundreds of lawsuits alleging childhood sexual abuse have been filed in Arizona courts as the deadline approaches under the Arizona Child Victims Act. The Act allows survivors to sue perpetrators and institutions for abuse that occurred when they were children. Many lawsuits have been filed against the Catholic Church, Boy Scout organizations, and other youth programs. Survivors are seeking justice and accountability from the organizations they believe failed to protect them from abuse. The number of lawsuits exceeds 300 and many remain anonymous by using pseudonyms in court documents. The Catholic dioceses of Phoenix, Tucson and Gallup are among those named in lawsuits, as well as various Boy Scout councils in Arizona. The deadline for survivors to file lawsuits under the Act is December 31, 2020
Hey grandma, can i live with you grandparents and the opioid epidemicMrsunny4
The other day I received a phone call from Helen. She and her husband Rick were beside themselves after learning their daughter, a 42-year-old PhD student, had relapsed into drug addiction. The couple, in their late-sixties, were not only charged with finding help again for their struggling daughter,
Hey grandma, can i live with you grandparents and the opioid epidemicMrsunny4
The other day I received a phone call from Helen. She and her husband Rick were beside themselves after learning their daughter, a 42-year-old PhD student, had relapsed into drug addiction. The couple, in their late-sixties, were not only charged with finding help again for their struggling daughter,
Implementing several forms of therapy within the matrix of Trauma Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in order to successfully treat victims of child sexual abuse.
A criminal charge can be a life-altering experience that brings with it overwhelming fear and disruption to you and your family’s life. And it is the criminal defense attorney’s obligation to ask for full and fair preliminary examinations in those instances that warrant a second look at the police officer’s decision. So, If you are charged with a criminal charge, you need a Criminal Defense Attorney like John R. Grasso to defend you.
Visit: http://www.johngrassolaw.com/
A very interesting read, a unanimous decision (of conservative-appointed judges) throwing out law banning gay marriage as unconstitutional. Both sides of the issue are clearly eloquated by opposing parties - I'm biased but the opposing sides arguments are starting to appear dated, not backed by evidence or sciense or research, and increasingly desparate.
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DeSantis gi.
Minority Youth and Crime Minority Youth in CourtYouth in genera.docxannandleola
Minority Youth and Crime: Minority Youth in Court
Youth in general, and young minority males in particular, often are demonized by legislators, the media, scholars, and the public at large. These attacks reinforce stereotypes and place a particularly heavy burden on young Black and Latino males.
LINDA S. BERES AND THOMAS D. GRIFFITH, “DEMONIZING YOUTH”1
In June 2001 Lionel Tate, an African American boy who was 12 years old when he killed a 6-year-old family friend while demonstrating a wrestling move he had seen on television, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Tate, who claimed that the death was an accident, was tried as an adult in Broward County, Florida; he was convicted of first degree murder. One month later, Nathaniel Brazill, a 14-year-old African American, was sentenced by a Florida judge to 28 years in prison without the possibility of parole. Brazill was 13 years old when he shot and killed Barry Grunow, a popular 30-year-old seventh grade teacher at a middle school in Lake Worth, Florida. Although Brazill did not deny that he fired the shot that killed his teacher, he claimed that he had only meant to scare Grunow and that the shooting was an accident. Like Tate, Brazill was tried as an adult; he was convicted of second degree murder.
These two cases raised a storm of controversy regarding the prosecution of children as adults. Those on one side argue that children who commit adult crimes, such as murder, should be treated as adults; they should be prosecuted as adults and sentenced to adult correctional institutions. As Marc Shiner, the prosecutor in Brazill’s case, put it, “This was a heinous crime committed by a young man with a difficult personality who should be behind bars. Let us not forget a man’s life has been taken away.”2 Those on the other side contend that prosecuting children as adults is “unwarranted and misguided.” They assert that children who commit crimes of violence usually suffer from severe mental and emotional problems and that locking kids up in adult jails does not deter crime or rehabilitate juvenile offenders. Although they acknowledge that juvenile offenders should be punished for their actions, they claim that incarcerating them in adult prisons for the rest of their lives “is an outrage.”3 According to Vincent Schiraldi, president of the Justice Policy Institute, “In adult prisons, Brazill will never receive the treatment he needs to reform himself. Instead, he will spend his time trying to avoid being beaten, assaulted, or raped in a world where adults prey on, rather than protect, the young.”4
Nathaniel Brazill is still incarcerated in the Brevard Correctional Institution. Assuming that none of his pending appeals are successful, he will not be released until 2028, when he will be 41 years old.5 Lionel Tate’s conviction, on the other hand, was overturned by a Florida appellate court in 2003. The court ruled that Tate should be retried because his competency to stan ...
Implementing several forms of therapy within the matrix of Trauma Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in order to successfully treat victims of child sexual abuse.
A criminal charge can be a life-altering experience that brings with it overwhelming fear and disruption to you and your family’s life. And it is the criminal defense attorney’s obligation to ask for full and fair preliminary examinations in those instances that warrant a second look at the police officer’s decision. So, If you are charged with a criminal charge, you need a Criminal Defense Attorney like John R. Grasso to defend you.
Visit: http://www.johngrassolaw.com/
A very interesting read, a unanimous decision (of conservative-appointed judges) throwing out law banning gay marriage as unconstitutional. Both sides of the issue are clearly eloquated by opposing parties - I'm biased but the opposing sides arguments are starting to appear dated, not backed by evidence or sciense or research, and increasingly desparate.
TOPICSEnvironmentAnimal WelfareClimate Change/Air QualityEndangered Species & WildlifeEnergy PolicyEnvironmentEnvironmental JusticeNuclear WasteOceansPublic Lands/WildernessRural/FarmingSalmon RecoverySustainable AgricultureToxicsUrban Planning/TransportationWaste Reduction/RecyclingWaterHealth and WellnessAlcohol and Drug Abuse PreventionDisabilitiesDomestic Violence/Sexual AssaultHealth IssuesHIV/AIDS PreventionMental HealthReproductive HealthSmoking PreventionTeen Pregnancy PreventionSocial IssuesArts & CultureBudget Policy & PrioritiesCampaign Finance Reform/Money in PolCensusChildren's IssuesCivic EngagementCivil RightsCommunity Issues and VolunteeringConsumer IssuesCriminal JusticeCultural ResourcesEarly Childhood EducationEducationFamily/Father IssuesGun Violence PreventionHousing/HomelessnessHuman Rights/Racial JusticeHunger/Food/NutritionImmigrant IssuesInternational ReliefJuvenile JusticeLGBTQIA IssuesLivable Wages/Working FamiliesMedia ReformNative American IssuesPeacePhilanthropyPoverty IssuesSenior IssuesSocial JusticeWelfare ReformWomen's IssuesYouth IssuesREGIONMidwestIowaIllinoisIndianaKansasMichiganMinnesotaMissouriNorth DakotaNebraskaOhioSouth DakotaWisconsinNortheastConnecticutDistrict of ColumbiaDelawareMassachusettsMarylandMaineNew HampshireNew JerseyNew YorkPennsylvaniaRhode IslandVermontSoutheastAlabamaArkansasFloridaGeorgiaKentuckyLouisianaMississippiNorth CarolinaSouth CarolinaTennesseeVirginiaWest VirginiaSouthwestArizonaColoradoNew MexicoOklahomaTexasUtahWesternAlaskaCaliforniaHawaiiIdahoMontanaNevadaOregonWashingtonWyomingESPAÑOLTRANSLATE SITEMEDIA OUTLET SIGN UPSUPPORTSUPPORTERSLOGIN
Saturday, November 12, 2022PNS NewscastsAudio Activation"Siri, play the Public News Service (podcast)""Hey Google, play the Public News Service podcast""Alexa, play Public News Service podcast"
or "Alexa, what's my news flash?" once you set it up in the Alexa app
Close
2022 TalksAudio Activation"Siri, play the 2022 Talks podcast""Hey Google, play the 2022 Talks podcast""Alexa, play 2000 22 Talks podcast"
or "Alexa, what's my news flash?" once you set it up in the Alexa app
Close
The Yonder ReportAudio Activation"Siri, play the Yonder Report podcast""Hey Google, play the Yonder Report podcast""Alexa, play the Yonder Report podcast"
or "Alexa, what's my news flash?" once you set it up in the Alexa app
Close
PNS Daily Newscast - November 11, 2022Play
Subscribe
The balance of power for Congress remains in question as votes are still counted in states like Arizona, and this week's election's saw renewed concerns about gerrymandered maps in Wisconsin.2022Talks - November 11, 2022Play
Subscribe
DeSantis gi.
Minority Youth and Crime Minority Youth in CourtYouth in genera.docxannandleola
Minority Youth and Crime: Minority Youth in Court
Youth in general, and young minority males in particular, often are demonized by legislators, the media, scholars, and the public at large. These attacks reinforce stereotypes and place a particularly heavy burden on young Black and Latino males.
LINDA S. BERES AND THOMAS D. GRIFFITH, “DEMONIZING YOUTH”1
In June 2001 Lionel Tate, an African American boy who was 12 years old when he killed a 6-year-old family friend while demonstrating a wrestling move he had seen on television, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Tate, who claimed that the death was an accident, was tried as an adult in Broward County, Florida; he was convicted of first degree murder. One month later, Nathaniel Brazill, a 14-year-old African American, was sentenced by a Florida judge to 28 years in prison without the possibility of parole. Brazill was 13 years old when he shot and killed Barry Grunow, a popular 30-year-old seventh grade teacher at a middle school in Lake Worth, Florida. Although Brazill did not deny that he fired the shot that killed his teacher, he claimed that he had only meant to scare Grunow and that the shooting was an accident. Like Tate, Brazill was tried as an adult; he was convicted of second degree murder.
These two cases raised a storm of controversy regarding the prosecution of children as adults. Those on one side argue that children who commit adult crimes, such as murder, should be treated as adults; they should be prosecuted as adults and sentenced to adult correctional institutions. As Marc Shiner, the prosecutor in Brazill’s case, put it, “This was a heinous crime committed by a young man with a difficult personality who should be behind bars. Let us not forget a man’s life has been taken away.”2 Those on the other side contend that prosecuting children as adults is “unwarranted and misguided.” They assert that children who commit crimes of violence usually suffer from severe mental and emotional problems and that locking kids up in adult jails does not deter crime or rehabilitate juvenile offenders. Although they acknowledge that juvenile offenders should be punished for their actions, they claim that incarcerating them in adult prisons for the rest of their lives “is an outrage.”3 According to Vincent Schiraldi, president of the Justice Policy Institute, “In adult prisons, Brazill will never receive the treatment he needs to reform himself. Instead, he will spend his time trying to avoid being beaten, assaulted, or raped in a world where adults prey on, rather than protect, the young.”4
Nathaniel Brazill is still incarcerated in the Brevard Correctional Institution. Assuming that none of his pending appeals are successful, he will not be released until 2028, when he will be 41 years old.5 Lionel Tate’s conviction, on the other hand, was overturned by a Florida appellate court in 2003. The court ruled that Tate should be retried because his competency to stan ...
31052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
03062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
01062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
‘वोटर्स विल मस्ट प्रीवेल’ (मतदाताओं को जीतना होगा) अभियान द्वारा जारी हेल्पलाइन नंबर, 4 जून को सुबह 7 बजे से दोपहर 12 बजे तक मतगणना प्रक्रिया में कहीं भी किसी भी तरह के उल्लंघन की रिपोर्ट करने के लिए खुला रहेगा।
role of women and girls in various terror groupssadiakorobi2
Women have three distinct types of involvement: direct involvement in terrorist acts; enabling of others to commit such acts; and facilitating the disengagement of others from violent or extremist groups.
हम आग्रह करते हैं कि जो भी सत्ता में आए, वह संविधान का पालन करे, उसकी रक्षा करे और उसे बनाए रखे।" प्रस्ताव में कुल तीन प्रमुख हस्तक्षेप और उनके तंत्र भी प्रस्तुत किए गए। पहला हस्तक्षेप स्वतंत्र मीडिया को प्रोत्साहित करके, वास्तविकता पर आधारित काउंटर नैरेटिव का निर्माण करके और सत्तारूढ़ सरकार द्वारा नियोजित मनोवैज्ञानिक हेरफेर की रणनीति का मुकाबला करके लोगों द्वारा निर्धारित कथा को बनाए रखना और उस पर कार्यकरना था।
In a May 9, 2024 paper, Juri Opitz from the University of Zurich, along with Shira Wein and Nathan Schneider form Georgetown University, discussed the importance of linguistic expertise in natural language processing (NLP) in an era dominated by large language models (LLMs).
The authors explained that while machine translation (MT) previously relied heavily on linguists, the landscape has shifted. “Linguistics is no longer front and center in the way we build NLP systems,” they said. With the emergence of LLMs, which can generate fluent text without the need for specialized modules to handle grammar or semantic coherence, the need for linguistic expertise in NLP is being questioned.
1. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 1/13
ARIZONA
As deadline nears, adults flood Arizona
courts with lawsuits alleging childhood
sex abuse
Lauren Castle Arizona Republic
Published 6:00 a.m. MT Dec. 30, 2020 Updated 12:22 p.m. MT Dec. 30, 2020
Hundreds of civil lawsuits by people who allege they suffered abuse as children are being
filed in Arizona's courts as a year-end deadline looms for them to seek justice.
Many of those filing are listed in court documents simply as “John Doe” or “Jane Doe.”
They have filed civil complaints against priests, teachers, volunteers, the Roman Catholic
Church, the Presbyterian Church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Boy
Scout councils, Big Brothers Big Sisters and other institutions.
The Arizona Child Victims Act allows survivors of sex abuse to sue their perpetrators and
organizations that allowed the incident to happen. The act, passed by lawmakers in 2019,
raised the statute of limitations for a civil claim to the age of 30 from the previous age of 20.
Survivors who are 30 or older have until Dec. 31 to file a claim.
The number of lawsuits filed under the act is not known, but an Arizona Republic survey of
court dockets across the state indicates the number is well over 300. So far, the majority
appear to have been filed against Boy Scout organizations.
AVAILABLE RESOURCES: What victims of child sex abuse should know
Annette Slade, 60, filed a lawsuit in November and chose to not be anonymous in hopes to
encourage other survivors to come forward.
She told The Republic she was abused at 10 years old by a music teacher while attending St.
Thomas the Apostle School in the 1970s. Slade is suing the school and the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Phoenix.
She is fed up with hearing stories about child abuse, she said.
2. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 2/13
"I want them to protect these children. It has really messed up my life," she said. "How many
children are out there right now that are not being protected, who will end up suffering the
same fate that I have over these many years?"
The Diocese of Phoenix did not respond to The Republic’s multiple requests for an interview
on the subject.
The motivation behind the lawsuits
For those who say they were victims of abuse, civil lawsuits are a way to obtain justice when
the criminal legal system has let them down or if they believe entities also need to be held
accountable.
Priests, pastors, Boy Scout leaders, teachers and others have been convicted in Arizona on
criminal chargesfor molesting children. But some survivors believe the religious institutions,
Scout councils and youth organizations were not held responsible.
Others have made police reports that didn't lead to prosecution. It can be horrific for
children if they are ignored and can increase the trauma, Marci Hamilton, the CEO and legal
director for Child USA, said.
Others have watched their abusers take plea agreements or go through trials for other
crimes.
In other cases, many abusers are dead and survivors only can sue the entities that they
believe didn’t protect them.
Robert Pastor, Slade's lawyer, said survivors care about other things than just the money. He
said the lawsuits allow for a "transformative justice."
"I tell my clients, this litigation is an opportunity to take all of the baggage that they've been
carrying around: the guilt, the shame, the depression, the anger, the anxiety, the
resentment," Pastor said. "Take all of those feelings and let's put them on the shoulders of
those who are actually responsible."
Pastor filed a lawsuit on Nov. 18 on the behalf of a client against Big Brothers Big Sisters of
Central Arizona and its national office. The lawsuit claimed it did not protect a 9-year-old
child in 1983 from sexual abuse. The “big brother,” Italo Arbulu, later was convicted for
molesting children in California.
3. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 3/13
Jessica Whitney, the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Arizona spokesperson, told The
Republic it doesn't know about the lawsuit.
“We are not aware of any lawsuit or filing, so we are not able to comment at this time,”
Whitney said.
According to the lawsuit, the child, who didn't want to be matched with Arbulu, was abused,
and Arbulu violated policies by having overnight visits.
Big Brothers Big Sisters has been under scrutiny for decades on how it handles child abuse
allegations. At least 22 volunteers across the country were convicted of sex crimes from 1982
to 1987, according to a 1987 report by The Los Angeles Times.
In 1992,the American Bar Association’s Center on Children and the Law did an analysis of
Big Brothers Big Sisters of America’s sexual molestation reports from 1982 to 1991. Out of
the 304 reports from those years, seven were from Arizona.
The lawsuit against Arbulu referenced a 1982 report by the national organization on child
abuse, which was published a year before the child and Arbulu were matched. The report
stated an abuser would encourage overnight visits and that Big Brothers Big Sisters' clients
are “a ‘high risk’ for the potential abuser.”
The child’s family reported the abuse to the Phoenix Police Department. According to the
survivor’s lawyer, Arbulu never was prosecuted in Maricopa County.
The survivor has dealt with emotional distress, embarrassment, loss of self-esteem, disgrace,
anger and more, according to the lawsuit.
Decades later, in 2016, Arbulu was convicted of molesting children in California. He was
sentenced to more than 100 years in prison for molesting five boys as a track and soccer
coach.
The Boy Scouts and the LDS church
Boy Scout councils in Arizona were hit with more than 290 lawsuits claiming they did not
protect children from child predators. The state's councils are independent from Boy Scouts
of America, which filed for bankruptcy and had its own deadline for abuse claims.
Many of the troops were connected with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The
church and the Boy Scouts of America this year broke off their partnership that had lasted
4. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 4/13
more than a century.
The Abuse in Scouting law firm filed many of the claims. It filed a lawsuit in Maricopa
County Superior Court last week on the behalf of at least 75 people between the ages of 20 to
70. The lawsuit is against the national BSA organization, the Grand Canyon Council, Catalina
Council, Las Vegas Council, Crossroads of the West Council and Great Southwest Council.
Andrew VanArsdale, a lawyer for the firm, said three groups of people are among its clients:
those who grew up and were part of troops in Arizona, those who were brought to the state
on trips, and others who were affiliated with a church-related troop in the state.
According to the lawsuit, the plaintiffs were abused by Scoutmasters, den mothers and other
youths in the troops, which were based out of churches, schools, Boys and Girls clubs,
YMCAs, Lions Club and Elks Lodge locations. Some of the locations included Orangewood
Elementary School and Christ the King Lutheran Church in Phoenix, First United Methodist
Church in Mesa, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in Tolleson, Davis-Monthan Air Force
Base in Tucson and Christensen Elementary School in Flagstaff.
"The Boy Scouts of America knew they had a problem with pedophiles coming into their
ranks and abusing children, and they didn't do enough to stop it," VanArsdale said. "They
certainly didn't warn any parents."
The law firm was able to make an agreement with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints allowing survivors to come forward past Arizona's Dec. 31 deadline. If the church
doesn't keep its promise, the law firm is allowed to sue it in the future.
Other attorneys also have filed lawsuits against Boy Scout councils claiming child sex abuse.
Hurley, McKenna and Mertz P.C., a Chicago-based law firm, filed 30 lawsuits against
councils in Maricopa and Pima County superior courts. Seven of the lawsuits are also against
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. According to the lawsuits, the victims were
between the ages of 9 to 15. The abuse occurred as late as 1972 and as recently as 2009.
Attorney Mark McKenna said his clients filed the lawsuits because they are searching for the
truth and want closure. He said entities that had close relationships with the Boy Scouts like
the LDS Church need to answer the victims' questions.
"What did the organizations know, when did they know it, and what did they do to stop the
epidemic of pedophiles infiltrating Scout troops and sexually abusing scores of children,"
McKenna said in a statement.
5. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 5/13
Allegations against the Catholic Church
The dioceses of Gallup, Phoenix and Tucson oversee Roman Catholic parishes and schools in
Arizona. Numerous lawsuits filed under the Arizona Child Victims Act have named the
dioceses, priests, other staff and Catholic schools.
The church and its religious orders have been accused for years of transferring accused
priests from one diocese to another without alerting communities of their pasts.
"This isn't just about holding the perpetrator accountable who is now deceased," said Tim
Hale, an attorney representing a victim. "It's also about holding the members of the diocese
and hierarchy who made the decisions to not prioritize the safety of children first and instead
prioritize the reputation of the organization."
A lawsuit filed in September claimed at least 73 children have been sexually abused by
priests, deacons and others overseen by the Diocese of Phoenix.
FOR SUBSCRIBERS: Lawsuit against Diocese of Phoenix highlights history of Catholic
priests fleeing Arizona
A lawsuit filed in November accused a female eucharistic minister of abusing teenage boy at
St. William Catholic Parish in Avondale.
Brian Clites, a religious studies professor at Case Western Reserve University, said abuse for
children in the Catholic Church can be really traumatic and can be suppressed. He said a life
event can trigger an adult survivor's memory of the abuse later.
Priests have a special role in the Church, and children could be confused about why a person
who has a special connection with God would do harm to them, according to Rev. Gerard J.
McGlone, a senior research fellow at Georgetown University's Berkley Center for Religion,
Peace and World Affairs.
Therefore, it can be hard for them to come forward.
In 2003, the Maricopa County Attorney's Office, under Rick Romley, investigated the
Diocese of Phoenix.
Now-former priest Joe Ladensack was told by a friend that he saw another priest molesting
his teenage son. Ladensack called police and told then-Bishop Thomas O'Brien.
6. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 6/13
O'Brien told the priest to tell the family to be quiet. Ladensack refused and went to Romley.
O'Brien took away Ladensack's ministerial duties.
Under Romley, six priests were indicted; others fled the country; others were sued in civil
court.
O’Brien was granted immunity from prosecution after admitting his part in cover-ups.
He acknowledged about 50 priests and church staff were accused of abuse over the years and
the diocese had paid millions to settle lawsuits.
"I acknowledge that I allowed Roman Catholic priests under my supervision to work with
minors after becoming aware of allegations of sexual misconduct," said the settlement
agreement. "I further acknowledge that priests who had allegations of sexual misconduct
made against them were transferred to ministries without full disclosure to their superiors or
to the community in which they were assigned."
Clites said in his work he has found that many survivors will forgive the priests that have
harmed them but remain angry at the bishops who were over the dioceses at the time.
"They remain angry and resentful at the bishops," Clites said. "Especially when that priest
was reported and they were told word of mouth that they would not have contact with kids
again, and they found out 20 years later they were sent to a parish across a state line or a
county line and continued to hurt more kids."
The Diocese of Phoenix has four lists for those who have been removed from ministry after
claims of sexual misconduct with a minor:
Priests and deacons of the diocese: 18.
Priests and deacons of other dioceses who served in the diocese: 13.
Priests of religious communities who served in the diocese: 28.
Brothers of religious communities who served in the diocese: 8.
The lists do not include names of those who were dead at the time of the accusations.
The diocese made an agreement with the Maricopa County Attorney's Office to appoint a
curator to oversee internal investigations and provide $700,000 for treatment of victims.
The diocese began publishing lists of accused priests in 2012. However, the civil lawsuit filed
in September contends what has been done is not enough, because the diocese does not
publicly identify accused priests until they are faced with criminal or civil legal proceedings.
7. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2020/12/30/adults-flood-arizona-courts-lawsuits-alleging-childhood-sex-abuse/3797115001/ 7/13
"The Diocese has publicly identified less than half of the actual number of Roman Catholic
Church leaders who have been accused or suspected of posing a risk to children, and who
have been assigned or in residence within the Diocese," the lawsuit stated.
Alleged abuse in schools, parochial and public
Her mother sensed something wasn’t right with her fifth-grade daughter, Annette Slade
recalled.
She remembers her mother wanting to know what was wrong. The 10-year-old girl didn’t
want to budge, but her mother wouldn’t give up.
"It wasn't anything in particular," Slade said about her mom's intuition. "It was just a gut
feeling."
Slade told The Republic the music teacher abused her at St. Thomas. He would keep her after
class or pull her out of other classes to molest her. She said no one ever questioned the
teacher or checked on them in the music room.
Slade's lawsuit is one of many involving Catholic schools in the Diocese of Phoenix.
At least four lawsuits were filed against St. Thomas for the time the Rev. John Doran was the
pastor of the parish and an administrator for the school. Three of the lawsuits accuse Doran
of abuse. The priest is on both the dioceses of Phoenix and Tucson’s credibly accused lists.
He died in 1997.
According to Slade's lawsuit, the diocese should have known that it “had numerous agents
who had sexually molested children.” She went to St. Thomas while Doran was the pastor.
“Defendants knew or should have known that some of the leaders and people working in
Catholic institutions within the Diocese were not safe and that there was a specific danger of
child sex abuse for children participating in their youth programs,” the lawsuit stated.
After her mother was able to get Slade to open up about the abuse, she immediately filed a
report with Phoenix police.
Slade said after the police report was filed, her mother and stepfather were asked to come to
the school office one day. Slade and her brother went with them.
"They basically told us it would be for everyone's best interest if we were to go to another
school and leave St. Thomas," Slade told The Republic.
8. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
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The diocese did not respond to The Republic's request for comment.
Slade said she felt the Catholic Church was trying to "push it under the rug" and didn't give
her any support or show empathy.
She said the Church needs to "do as its supposed to be doing with its flock: protecting,
encouraging and loving."
Slade said she hopes her lawsuit will motivate the Catholic Church to find a better way to
protect children to prevent others from having the same story as her. She wants the Catholic
Church to support survivors more, besides saying it did wrong in the past.
Slade is no longer a practicing Catholic, but an atheist. She only goes to a church when it's for
a funeral.
Hale is one of the lawyers representing another St. Thomas student. He told The Republic his
client was abused by Doran in the eighth grade from 1971-1972.
"He grew up in a very devout family," Hale said. "So obviously, a priest like Doran is going to
hold a very very high status in the eyes of the family."
The lawsuit filed in September claimed Doran abused the child on and off school property.
The priest told the child he had behavioral issues because he was "not being loved at home,"
according to the lawsuit.
Hale said the priest took the child on an overnight trip to the mountains alone. The house
where they were staying did not have a phone. That's when the priest is accused of
first abusing him. According to the lawsuit, the priest made the child touch his penis.
On one occasion, the priest did not stop abusing the boy until after the child protested
several times, according to the lawsuit. The child feared the priest would kill him, and when
he told the priest to stop abusing him, Doran attacked him, according to the lawsuit.
The child's parents reported the abuse to another priest and then-Bishop Edward McCarthy
of the Phoenix diocese. According to the lawsuit, McCarthy told the parents Doran was in
behavioral treatment and that if they went to the newspaper, their claims wouldn't be
published.
The lawsuit claimed McCarthy did not report the abuse to the police and said he would
transfer Doran. A transfer did not happen at that time, the lawsuit said.
9. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
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Doran called the parents multiple times asking to speak to the child or requesting to take him
places, the lawsuit said. The parents refused. The child hid from him at school. Even after
Doran was finally transferred, he called the family to ask if the child could visit him,
according to the lawsuit. The family finally moved to California.
The lawsuit claims Doran also stalked a child when he was overseen by the Diocese of
Tucson.
"When the boy’s parents reported the abuse to Defendants’ agents, those agents told the
parents to keep Father Doran’s abuse of their son a secret because even though Father
Doran’s sexual abuse of a child was a sin, it would be an even greater sin to bring scandal to
the Roman Catholic Church,"the lawsuit said.
Hale said the diocese had the opportunity to remove Doran from ministry to prevent him
from hurting other children.
The boy, now an adult, has issues trusting others, dealing with authority figures and more,
according to Hale. He said the man believes his academic and career path would have been
different if he weren't abused. The man wants the diocese to acknowledge Doran's conduct,
how it managed abusive priests and how it didn't protect children.
Brophy College Preparatory also was hit with a lawsuit in September for claims against
former priest James Sinnerud, who worked at the school in the 1980s. According to the
victim's lawyers, the priest was a teacher and coach.
According to 2018 report by the Omaha World-Herald, the Midwest Province of the Society
of Jesus suspended him from public ministry and pulled from working at a school in
Nebraska after a sexual misconduct allegation from his past was brought forward.
Public schools named in other lawsuits
Arizona public schools are also impacted by the new law.
Arizona has about 55,000 certified, working teachers. Every year, about 40 of them are
disciplined by the Arizona State Board of Education or surrender their teaching certificate
after allegations of sexual misconduct, a 2019 analysis by The Republic and KJZZ, the
Phoenix public radio station, determined.
Tiffany Franco, 22, filed a lawsuit in May in Maricopa County Superior Court against former
Red Mountain High School teacher Alan Grantham, Mesa Public Schools, other school staff
10. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
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and the city's police department.
In the lawsuit, Franco claimed school administrators, teachers and an on-campus Mesa
police officer ignored persistent rumors about a sexual relationship between her and
Grantham.
Grantham denied the allegations in 2019 and has not been criminally charged for Franco's
claims.
Rumors swirled in 2014, but the school district didn't investigate until two years later,
according to the lawsuit. By that time, Franco had graduated. Grantham resigned in
November 2016 and surrendered his teaching certificate in 2018.
Mesa Public Schools, the city's police department and a school resource office appealed to the
U.S. District Court in Arizona in hopes it would dismiss the lawsuit. The court gave Franco
30 days to amend her complaint.
Behind the Arizona Child Victims Act
Tasha Menaker, director of Arizona Coalition to End Sexual Violence, said knowing their
abuser can cause children shame, confusion and betrayal. Sometimes the abuser may
threaten a child to stay silent.
"Sometimes they shame the survivor themselves and frame as though they are to blame for
the abuse that's happening to them," Menaker said.
Children, especially, internalize these messages and have legitimate fears of coming forward
that can last for years, she said.
Across the country, advocates are encouraging states to look into statute of limitations
reform on both the criminal and civil sides of the legal system.
Arizona doesn't have a statute of limitations for criminal charges. And Arizona joined 17
other states last year that revived expired civil claims by allowing survivors over 30 years old
to have until Dec. 31 to file a lawsuit. Those who are children now will have until they are 30
to file a claim.
The state law allows survivors to sue the abuser, any privately held entity and government
agencies, including school districts and juvenile detention centers.
11. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
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Sen. Paul Boyer, R-Phoenix, sponsored the bill and pushed for it to be passed,
withholding his vote on the state budget until the bill was addressed. Sen. Heather Carter, R-
Cave Creek, co-sponsored the bill with Boyer and also withheld her vote on the budget.
Boyer said it was important to make sure survivors had the opportunity to confront their
abusers in court and get closure.
He said he first got he idea of improving the state law after learning about Dan Allender, who
works with childhood sex abuse survivors. Boyer found out Arizona's statute of limitations
law for survivors skewed really young; a survivor only had until the age of 20 to sue their
abuser.
"The fact that we bumped it up to 30 was an improvement, but I think we still have more to
do," he said.
Boyer, advocates and many lawyers representing survivors believe there should not be a
statute of limitations because individual survivors reveal their abuse in different ways and at
different times.
Hamilton said the average age that survivors report they were abused is 52.
"The only way to protect children is to give the victim as long as they need," she said.
Statutes of limitations benefit organizations that might be sued and their insurance
companies. Many times, the insurer will handle the legal fees and any settlements.
In some cases across the country, Boy Scout councils and Catholic dioceses have set up funds
specifically created to deal with payments for sexual abuse claims. Many times, survivors
receive payments that are less than what they could get as the result of a lawsuit.
Funds can be good for survivors who are not emotionally or mentally able to go through the
litigation process. Attorney Tim Hale said these types of funds allow many accusations to
stay private and keeps identification of perpetrators private as well.
Laws like the Arizona Child Victims Act help make institutions transparent and allow
litigation to publicize evidence that can make today's children safer, Hale said.
According to Child USA, 12 states have eliminated statutes of limitation on civil lawsuits:
Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Hampshire, Utah and Vermont.
12. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
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If Arizona won't eliminate the statue of limitations for civil lawsuits, Hale hopes lawmakers
would extend the Dec. 31, 2020 deadline because of COVID-19. New York extended its
deadline because of the pandemic, he said.
Some survivors are stressed and the pandemic has made it more difficult for them to come
forward, Hale said.
Legal roadblocks for survivors
The Arizona Child Victims Act has offered child abuse survivors the chance to seek justice,
but more updates are needed so the right doesn't disappear, advocates say.
Arizona's law makes it difficult for survivors to sue institutions, according to some lawyers.
Hale said the law created a higher burden for the survivor to sue an entity because there
must be gross negligence.
A finding for the plaintiff can occur only if the person can show child abuse took place
and the institution knew there was a history of criminal conduct and covered it up.
"For a survivor to come forward and be successful in Arizona, they must have a very, very
clear and strong case," Hale said.
Hale also said every state should require every adult to be a mandatory reporter with no
exceptions.
Arizona does require religious leaders to report child abuse if they see it. However, Arizona
and some other states allow religious leaders to not report child abuse if they are informed
through a religious confession while performing their duties.
"A member of the clergy, a Christian Science practitioner or a priest who has received a
confidential communication or a confession in that person's role ... may withhold reporting
of the communication or confession if the member of the clergy, the Christian Science
practitioner or the priest determines that it is reasonable and necessary within the concepts
of the religion," the law states.
Arizona state law allows priests, members of the clergy and Christian Science practitioners to
not be a witness in any civil or criminal case concerning child abuse if a religious confession
was made to them.
13. 1/3/2021 Adults flood Arizona courts with lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse
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Two Mormon bishops and a teacher were sued in November and accused of not reporting a
Bisbee father for sexually and physically abusing three of his children. A bishop claimed he
did not have to report the abuse after being told by the father because of the legal exceptions
for clergy. The father later was criminally charged but died in jail before a trial.
Boyer said institutions need to improve their practices to prevent child abuse and better
oversight.
Arizona is one of a few states that doesn't require overnight camps to perform criminal
background checks on staff and volunteers. Some overnight camp organizers in Arizona take
it upon themselves to conduct criminal checks of the adults who will be supervising children.
But not all do.
Many child sexual abuse claims occurred at overnight camps. According to VanArsdale,
many of the claims against the Boy Scouts involve leaders who did not have background
checks.
Menaker said Arizona needs to provide state funding for sexual assault services. This type of
funding can support survivors be productive in the community. According to Menaker, 17
states provide funding for sexual assault services or prevention.
Hamilton said therapy can cost a survivor thousands of dollars, and that is one reason why
the lawsuits are important.
Have thoughts about Arizona's legal system? Reach criminal justice reporter Lauren Castle
at Lauren.Castle@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @Lauren_Castle.