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Posts tagged ‘Penn State’

NCAA Proves Tougher on Sex Abuse than Catholic Church

In my last post I came down pretty hard on the NCAA for not handing Penn State’s football program the death penalty. While my opinion still stands, I want to commend the NCAA for taking decisive action against Penn State for its role in the child sex abuse scandal involving Jerry Sandusky.

Now if only we could get the Catholic Church to do the same within its own ranks.

Yesterday in Philadelphia, Msgr. William J. Lynn became the first Roman Catholic Church official in the United States to be convicted of covering up sexual abuses by priests under his supervision.  A Philadelphia judge sentenced Monsignor Lynn, 61, to three to six years in prison, after a three-month trial that revealed efforts over decades by the Philadelphia archdiocese to play down accusations of child sexual abuse and avoid scandal.

According to a report published today by The New York Times, “Monsignor Lynn served as secretary for clergy for the 1.5 million-member archdiocese from 1992 to 2004, recommending priest assignments and investigating abuse complaints. During the trial, prosecutors presented evidence that he had shielded predatory priests, sometimes transferring them to unwary parishes, and lied to the public to avoid bad publicity and lawsuits.”

Let me say that again, this guy… shielded predatory priests, sometimes transferring them to unwary parishes, and lied to the public to avoid bad publicity and lawsuits.”

I think we all need a moment after reading that, because right now I feel sick to my stomach.

But what’s really making me about to vomit in my mouth is that this man only got three to six years. And already, supporters of Msgr. Lynn are calling the sentence too severe and unbalanced.  But I won’t go into how I feel about that since I’m liable to burst a blood vessel or worse, have a coronary. And these people aren’t worth my sons losing their mother.

I’d rather talk about what the Catholic Church is doing about all this, since – and I’ll admit – I’m regrettably at the moment a member of its ranks, albeit at the very bottom. (And as a women, I doubt I hold much clout with the Vatican.) Before I let that Tasmanian devil out of its cage, let me turn your attention now to the statement below released by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia yesterday:

STATEMENT FROM THE ARCHDIOCESE OF PHILADELPHIA
AFTER SENTENCING OF MONSIGNOR WILLIAM LYNN

From the challenges the Church has faced both nationally and locally over the past decade, we understand the full gravity of sexual abuse. This year and even this week, Pennsylvania has been the epicenter of this issue, and we know there is legitimate anger in the broad community toward any incident or enabling of sexual abuse. The trial of the past several months has been especially difficult for victims, and we profoundly regret their pain.

The public humiliation of the Church has emphasized the vital lesson that we must be constantly vigilant in our charge to protect the children in our parishes and schools. Since the events some ten years ago that were at the center of this trial, the Archdiocese has changed. We have taken dramatic steps to ensure that all young people in our care are safe, and these efforts will continue even more forcefully now and in the years ahead. 

We remain committed to protecting children and caring for victims. Fair-minded people will question the severity of the heavy, three to six year sentence imposed on Msgr. Lynn today. We hope that when this punishment is objectively reviewed, it will be adjusted.

We pray for Msgr. Lynn and his family at this difficult time.

***

As you can see, I took the liberty to highlight some key phrases that I believe warrant further criticism consideration. But I know you all are smart and intelligent people so I’m not going to waste your precious reading time pointing out the obvious. Instead, I’d like to play pretend.

If the NCAA Penalized the Catholic Church …

What if we could turn this whole mess over to the NCAA and let them assess the penalty on the Church? That’s exactly what one reader suggested on CNN.com and I think the idea is brilliant. Just wish I would have thought of it first. Here’s what this smart chap named Robert had to say …

Robert – Onset, MA:  ”… If Penn State was worth $60 million this could easily go $150 million. Also, let’s put an injunction of the church that prohibits them from holding any religious services for 6 years and any marriages, christenings, last rites and funeral services are to be null and void, and any saints that have been beatified in the last 50 years are out. They should also convict the Pope and the College of Cardinals for allowing this to go on and not reporting it to the authorities.”

So there’s what I see as the lesson for the Vatican. You’ve got to do more than just send out letters denouncing sexual abuse or revamp safety policies and procedures. You’ve got do something radical. You’ve got to do something brash. Like the NCAA did with Penn State, you’ve got to hit them where it hurts. Take away their money. Take away their rights and privileges. And for God’s sake, start holding these people accountable.

Just like what the NCAA is doing now with Penn State, the Church must cut off offending parishes and dioceses at the knees, burn them down (figuratively speaking) and then raise them back up from the ashes, in whatever form that might be.

Oh and I almost forgot (OK, not really). Do you want to know what Monsignor Lynn’s conviction was actually for?

*heads nod furiously*

Ready for this? According to The New York Times story, Lynn failed to properly supervise a former priest named Edward V. Avery, who spent six months in a church psychiatric facility in 1993 after an “abuse episode.” Doctors said to keep him away from children. But Lynn transferred him to a rectory anyway and didn’t bother telling parish officials.

You can only guess what happened next.

“In 1999, Mr. Avery engaged in oral sex with a 10-year-old altar boy. He pleaded guilty to the assault just before Monsignor Lynn’s trial and was sentenced to two and a half to five years in prison.” -The New York Times, July 25, 2012

So what do you think the Church should do about the Archdiocese of Philadelphia?

Related Posts:

Confession of an Angry Catholic

Breaking the Conspiracy of Silence

PSU and Getting in Touch with My Own Anger

Ex-youth Coach Indicted in Citadel Sex Case

‘Stark Wake-Up Call’ for Penn State? Not for This SMU Grad

Earlier today the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) slapped Penn State with a $60-million fine and took away 14 seasons of football victories from the late Joe Paterno.

Adding a kick in the gut, the NCAA also banned PSU from the postseason for four years and limited the program to 15 football scholarships a year for four seasons. (Read about the full sanctions here.)

So that’s it?

Are you kidding me?

Can we really say that the punishment here fits the crime? Are these sanctions severe enough for football program whose officials – including the head coach - concealed evidence that former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused minors?

Not.

Even.

Close.

Let me tell you the story of another football program that got it way worse for something that technically speaking, wasn’t even a crime against the law.

The Death of SMU Football

In 1987, the NCAA found the football program at Southern Methodist University (SMU) guilty of recruiting violations (basically SMU was paying some of its players). As a result, the NCAA took out it’s big guns and shot SMU’s football program right between the eyes. Known as the death penalty – the harshest penalty a NCAA member school can receive – banned SMU from competing in football for the 1987-1988 season.

Here’s what the sanctions looked like in full, according to Wikipedia:

  • The 1987 season was canceled; only conditioning drills (without pads) were permitted until the spring of 1988.
  • All home games in 1988 were canceled. SMU was allowed to play their seven regularly scheduled away games so that other institutions would not be financially affected. The university ultimately chose to cancel the away games as well, wiping out football for two full seasons, instead of just one. (I started at SMU in 1991, so trust me when I say SMU football at that time was painful to watch.)
  • The team’s existing probation was extended to 1990. Its existing ban from bowl games and live television was extended to 1989.
  • SMU lost 55 new scholarship positions over 4 years.
  • The team was allowed to hire only five full-time assistant coaches instead of the typical nine.
  • No off-campus recruiting was permitted until August 1988, and no paid visits could be made to campus by potential recruits until the start of the 1988–89 school year.

In justifying the sanctions against SMU, the NCAA infractions committee cited the need to “eliminate a program that was built on a legacy of wrongdoing, deceit and rule violations” as a factor in what is still the harshest penalty ever meted out to any major collegiate program.

Let me repeat. So even given the Penn State/Sandusky scandal, the sanctions faced by SMU are still considered “the harshest penalty ever meted out to a major collegiate program.”

And I have a major moral issue with that.

The thing is, SMU committed NO CRIME. While SMU broke NCAA rules by paying some of its players with money and cars, the infractions had nothing to do with the abuse of a child. No child was harmed. No crime against a child was committed. There was no harboring of criminals. Still, SMU’s death penalty remains the worst penalty ever.

In stark contrast, the officials at Penn State empowered a sexual predator. THEY LET A MONSTER ROAM FREE. They allowed a sick and deranged individual to continue getting his sexual “fix” on young boys – all in the name of football, which makes me sicker than a dog left out in this 100-plus degree Texas heat. Bottomline, Penn State sacrificed the sanctity of children to keep Sandusky’s “problem” under wraps.

And all SMU did was pay its players.

I’m sorry, but that pales in comparison of what went down at Penn State. We aren’t talking apples to apples here. It’s more like apples to rotted oranges.

A $60-million fine will never come close to making up for the mental and physical anguish suffered by these children that will most likely haunt them for the rest of their lives.

Taking away scholarships will never make up for the horrendous sexual crimes that were allowed to take place in showers, in locker rooms and behind closed doors.

And removing a statue of a revered coach will never erase the scars left by a football culture built on a legacy of abuse, cover ups and lies.

SMU might have been in the wrong for paying some its players, but I’ll defend my Alma mater all the way into next week when it comes to upholding the law.

“The corrective and punitive measures the executive committee and the Division I board of directors have authorized [against Penn State] should serve as a stark wake-up call to everyone in college sports,” said Ed Ray, chairman of the NCAA’s executive committee.

And yet, the NCAA stopped short of handing the death penalty to Penn State.

Does anyone else see a disconnect here?

Holler loudly if you do. I’m all ears as big as Texas.

Related posts:

Breaking the Conspiracy of Silence

PSU and Getting in Touch with My Own Anger

Ex-youth Coach Indicted in Citadel Sex Case

PSU and Getting in Touch with my own Anger

Reblogged from runningfromhellwithel:

Click to visit the original post

  I’ve followed the Jerry Sandusky case with a bit of self-protective distance until yesterday.  Revelation after revelation exposed both horrific child abuse and an even worse phenomenon: a Code of Silence that protected a football program while it sacrificed the safety and welfare of young men.  Not only did the football coach I’d so admired uphold the Code: so did the athletic director and the Penn State University president.

Read more… 650 more words

A note from Stephanie: Hello friends. Today I am sharing a post from E.L. Farris, who is a abuse survivor, lawyer, author, runner and mom. El has read LITTLE 15 and can relate to the sexual abuse that goes on in the story. Hers is a perspective we all need to hear; especially coming off the horrific revelations in the Sandusky/Penn State child abuse case. We need survivors like El to remind us why we must be vigilant advocates for our children and watchful administrators of our schools, churches and youth and community sports programs.

Ex-youth Coach Indicted in Citadel Sex Case

Ex-youth Coach Indicted in Citadel Sex CaseHere's yet another example of a teacher/coach using a position of authority to prey on innocent children. And just like Penn State and certain clergy of the Roman Catholic Church, the Citadel - easily one of America's most prestigious military academies - chose to look the other way. This is the type of real-life story that inspired my novel, LITTLE 15. The issues here go deeper than just pedophilia and sexual misconduct; it's about power and control and taking advantage of the most vulnerable members of our society.Parents: talk to your children about these type of "friendly" predators and entrust your kids to no one. Don't leave it to the schools to do it for you. Never assume that coaches and teachers have your children's best interests in mind. And whatever you do, minimize your kids' alone time with other adults outside of school and sports, or better yet, don't allow it at all unless you are present and aware.Thank you to my dear husband for passing along this news story to me. 

Read more

Thank You, Herman Cain!

Today I want to talk about Herman Cain.

Actually, I really don’t care to talk about him at all.

But, I  do want to thank him for giving me another reason to spout off. Read more

Breaking the Conspiracy of Silence

As I’ve watched the sex abuse scandal unfold at Penn State, I can’t help but recognize the obvious similarities to the sex cases that rocked the Roman Catholic Church in the last decade.

I could go all day about how both are managed by male dominated-hierarchies and revered by millions of people.

Perhaps the most striking parallel, though, is how both allegedly had knowledge of ongoing sexual abuse of children within their ranks, yet chose not to inform law enforcement authorities. Read more

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