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Pedophile christian God pays $120M to anally rape children ! <=



" \"- Prof. Jonez©\""
6/3/2005 9:02:56 PM


Kentucky diocese settles for $120M
Nation's largest settlement for child molestation cases
COVINGTON, Kentucky (AP) -- The Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington agreed
Friday to set up a $120 million fund to compensate hundreds of victims of
child-molesting priests and other employees.
It would be the nation's biggest settlement in the scandal that has staggered
the church.
The settlement, which is subject to approval by a Kentucky judge, would bring to
a close a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of victims abused over a 50-year
period. It accuses the diocese of a cover-up of sexual abuse by priests and
others during that time.
"After personally meeting with more than 70 victims, I am painfully aware that
no amount of money can compensate for the harm these victims suffered as
innocent children," Covington Bishop Roger Foys said in a statement.
"Nevertheless, I pray that this settlement will bring some measure of peace and
healing to victims and their loved ones."
Victims will be grouped into four categories based on the severity of abuse, and
compensation will range from $5,000 to $450,000 per person before attorney fees
are deducted.
A portion will be set aside to provide counseling, the statement said. Any money
not used for claims or other expenses would be returned to the diocese, it said.
According to the statement, the class of victims "encompasses all persons, known
and unknown, who were abused during the 50-year class period." Lawyers for
plaintiffs and the diocese have said that number would be in the hundreds. It
could be months before an exact number is known, however, the lawyers have said.
"The additional anxiety and stress that would have occurred to the victims had
there been a trial has been eliminated," said Stan Chesley, the plaintiffs'
chief attorney.
Real estate, investments and insurance
A spokesman for the diocese would not comment on how the diocese could afford
the settlement -- or why the amount was so much larger than agreements reached
in other abuse settlements. "Both parties have agreed not to comment on the
details of the settlement at this time," said spokesman Tim Fitzgerald.
Last year, the Orange County, California Diocese agreed to a settlement that
participants said would pay $100 million to 87 victims. In 2003 the Boston
Archdiocese, where the scandal first erupted, settled with 552 victims for $85
million.
Covington -- a suburb of Cincinnati, which is across the Ohio River -- is far
smaller than Boston, the nation's fourth-largest diocese with about 2.1 million
parishioners. The Covington Diocese spans 14 counties and has 89,000
parishioners. The lawsuit also covers some Kentucky counties that were part of
the Covington Diocese until 1988, when a new diocese in Lexington formed.
In a statement the diocese and plaintiffs' attorneys said $40 million of the
settlement fund would come from a combination of church real estate and
investments, and $80 million would come from insurance.
Sue Archibald, head of the clergy-abuse victims advocacy group The Linkup,
called the settlement fair and commended the diocese for its efforts.
"It's difficult to put a dollar figure on damages that can't be valued, but the
size of the settlement signifies how serious the abuse and its effects were,"
Archibald said. "I hope the settlement enables the survivors to move forward
with their healing."
In addition to the dioceses that have reached major settlements, three -- in
Tucson, Arizona; Portland, Oregon, and Spokane, Washington -- have filed
bankruptcy claims because of abuse allegations.
With the lawsuit pending, the Covington Diocese settled other claims, paying $4
million from its savings and $6.5 million from insurance over the last 18 months
to resolve 56 sex abuse claims. It recently said it would move its offices to a
medical center to cut costs and earlier announced some layoffs.
"I don't know that the money is ever a remedy for what was taken from us," said
Kay Montgomery of Lexington, central Kentucky director of Survivors Network of
those Abused by Priests. She settled separately with the Covington diocese and
is not part of the new settlement.
"It doesn't bring back the lost innocence for the victims, and it certainly will
not bring the innocent life back to them," she said.
 
 
" \"- Prof. Jonez©\""
6/3/2005 9:05:51 PM


"- Prof. Jonez" wrote:
Kentucky diocese settles for $120M
Nation's largest settlement for child molestation cases
COVINGTON, Kentucky (AP) -- The Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington
agreed Friday to set up a $120 million fund to compensate hundreds of
victims of child-molesting priests and other employees.
It would be the nation's biggest settlement in the scandal that has
staggered the church.
The settlement, which is subject to approval by a Kentucky judge,
would bring to a close a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of
victims abused over a 50-year period. It accuses the diocese of a
cover-up of sexual abuse by priests and others during that time.
"After personally meeting with more than 70 victims, I am painfully
aware that no amount of money can compensate for the harm these
victims suffered as innocent children," Covington Bishop Roger Foys
said in a statement.
"Nevertheless, I pray that this settlement will bring some measure of
peace and healing to victims and their loved ones."
Victims will be grouped into four categories based on the severity of
abuse, and compensation will range from $5,000 to $450,000 per person
before attorney fees are deducted.
A portion will be set aside to provide counseling, the statement
said. Any money not used for claims or other expenses would be
returned to the diocese, it said.
According to the statement, the class of victims "encompasses all
persons, known and unknown, who were abused during the 50-year class
period." Lawyers for plaintiffs and the diocese have said that number
would be in the hundreds. It could be months before an exact number
is known, however, the lawyers have said.
"The additional anxiety and stress that would have occurred to the
victims had there been a trial has been eliminated," said Stan
Chesley, the plaintiffs' chief attorney.
Real estate, investments and insurance
A spokesman for the diocese would not comment on how the diocese
could afford the settlement -- or why the amount was so much larger
than agreements reached in other abuse settlements. "Both parties
have agreed not to comment on the details of the settlement at this
time," said spokesman Tim Fitzgerald.
Last year, the Orange County, California Diocese agreed to a
settlement that participants said would pay $100 million to 87
victims. In 2003 the Boston Archdiocese, where the scandal first
erupted, settled with 552 victims for $85 million.
Covington -- a suburb of Cincinnati, which is across the Ohio River
-- is far smaller than Boston, the nation's fourth-largest diocese
with about 2.1 million parishioners. The Covington Diocese spans 14
counties and has 89,000 parishioners. The lawsuit also covers some
Kentucky counties that were part of the Covington Diocese until 1988,
when a new diocese in Lexington formed.
In a statement the diocese and plaintiffs' attorneys said $40 million
of the settlement fund would come from a combination of church real
estate and investments, and $80 million would come from insurance.
Sue Archibald, head of the clergy-abuse victims advocacy group The
Linkup, called the settlement fair and commended the diocese for its
efforts.
"It's difficult to put a dollar figure on damages that can't be
valued, but the size of the settlement signifies how serious the
abuse and its effects were," Archibald said. "I hope the settlement
enables the survivors to move forward with their healing."
In addition to the dioceses that have reached major settlements,
three -- in Tucson, Arizona; Portland, Oregon, and Spokane,
Washington -- have filed bankruptcy claims because of abuse
allegations.
With the lawsuit pending, the Covington Diocese settled other claims,
paying $4 million from its savings and $6.5 million from insurance
over the last 18 months to resolve 56 sex abuse claims. It recently
said it would move its offices to a medical center to cut costs and
earlier announced some layoffs.
"I don't know that the money is ever a remedy for what was taken from
us," said Kay Montgomery of Lexington, central Kentucky director of
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. She settled separately
with the Covington diocese and is not part of the new settlement.
"It doesn't bring back the lost innocence for the victims, and it
certainly will not bring the innocent life back to them," she said.
 
 
"Andy"
6/3/2005 11:05:37 PM




" "- Prof. Jonez"" <jonez@norcom.ca> wrote in message
news:NP8oe.272$BK2.3254@news.uswest.net...

Kentucky diocese settles for $120M
Nation's largest settlement for child molestation cases
COVINGTON, Kentucky (AP) -- The Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington agreed
Friday to set up a $120 million fund to compensate hundreds of victims of
child-molesting priests and other employees.
It would be the nation's biggest settlement in the scandal that has
staggered the church.
The settlement, which is subject to approval by a Kentucky judge, would
bring to a close a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of victims abused
over a 50-year period. It accuses the diocese of a cover-up of sexual
abuse by priests and others during that time.
"After personally meeting with more than 70 victims, I am painfully aware
that no amount of money can compensate for the harm these victims suffered
as innocent children," Covington Bishop Roger Foys said in a statement.
"Nevertheless, I pray that this settlement will bring some measure of
peace and healing to victims and their loved ones."
Victims will be grouped into four categories based on the severity of
abuse, and compensation will range from $5,000 to $450,000 per person
before attorney fees are deducted.
A portion will be set aside to provide counseling, the statement said. Any
money not used for claims or other expenses would be returned to the
diocese, it said.
According to the statement, the class of victims "encompasses all persons,
known and unknown, who were abused during the 50-year class period."
Lawyers for plaintiffs and the diocese have said that number would be in
the hundreds. It could be months before an exact number is known, however,
the lawyers have said.
"The additional anxiety and stress that would have occurred to the victims
had there been a trial has been eliminated," said Stan Chesley, the
plaintiffs' chief attorney.
Real estate, investments and insurance
A spokesman for the diocese would not comment on how the diocese could
afford the settlement -- or why the amount was so much larger than
agreements reached in other abuse settlements. "Both parties have agreed
not to comment on the details of the settlement at this time," said
spokesman Tim Fitzgerald.
Last year, the Orange County, California Diocese agreed to a settlement
that participants said would pay $100 million to 87 victims. In 2003 the
Boston Archdiocese, where the scandal first erupted, settled with 552
victims for $85 million.
Covington -- a suburb of Cincinnati, which is across the Ohio River -- is
far smaller than Boston, the nation's fourth-largest diocese with about
2.1 million parishioners. The Covington Diocese spans 14 counties and has
89,000 parishioners. The lawsuit also covers some Kentucky counties that
were part of the Covington Diocese until 1988, when a new diocese in
Lexington formed.
In a statement the diocese and plaintiffs' attorneys said $40 million of
the settlement fund would come from a combination of church real estate
and investments, and $80 million would come from insurance.
Sue Archibald, head of the clergy-abuse victims advocacy group The Linkup,
called the settlement fair and commended the diocese for its efforts.
"It's difficult to put a dollar figure on damages that can't be valued,
but the size of the settlement signifies how serious the abuse and its
effects were," Archibald said. "I hope the settlement enables the
survivors to move forward with their healing."
In addition to the dioceses that have reached major settlements, three --
in Tucson, Arizona; Portland, Oregon, and Spokane, Washington -- have
filed bankruptcy claims because of abuse allegations.
With the lawsuit pending, the Covington Diocese settled other claims,
paying $4 million from its savings and $6.5 million from insurance over
the last 18 months to resolve 56 sex abuse claims. It recently said it
would move its offices to a medical center to cut costs and earlier
announced some layoffs.
"I don't know that the money is ever a remedy for what was taken from us,"
said Kay Montgomery of Lexington, central Kentucky director of Survivors
Network of those Abused by Priests. She settled separately with the
Covington diocese and is not part of the new settlement.
"It doesn't bring back the lost innocence for the victims, and it
certainly will not bring the innocent life back to them," she said.
It is a lie.
 
 
BlackWater
6/4/2005 6:30:13 AM


Aw ... they're just gonna pay off the offended parties and
then get right back to the molesting. They'll just molest a
bit more carefully next time ...
Anyway ... in Kentucky I've heard everyones first love is a
barnyard animal. Priests are a step up ..... :-)
" \"- Prof. Jonez?\"" <jonez@norcom.ca> wrote:
Kentucky diocese settles for $120M
Nation's largest settlement for child molestation cases
COVINGTON, Kentucky (AP) -- The Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington agreed
Friday to set up a $120 million fund to compensate hundreds of victims of
child-molesting priests and other employees.
It would be the nation's biggest settlement in the scandal that has staggered
the church.
The settlement, which is subject to approval by a Kentucky judge, would bring to
a close a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of victims abused over a 50-year
period. It accuses the diocese of a cover-up of sexual abuse by priests and
others during that time.
"After personally meeting with more than 70 victims, I am painfully aware that
no amount of money can compensate for the harm these victims suffered as
innocent children," Covington Bishop Roger Foys said in a statement.
"Nevertheless, I pray that this settlement will bring some measure of peace and
healing to victims and their loved ones."
Victims will be grouped into four categories based on the severity of abuse, and
compensation will range from $5,000 to $450,000 per person before attorney fees
are deducted.
A portion will be set aside to provide counseling, the statement said. Any money
not used for claims or other expenses would be returned to the diocese, it said.
According to the statement, the class of victims "encompasses all persons, known
and unknown, who were abused during the 50-year class period." Lawyers for
plaintiffs and the diocese have said that number would be in the hundreds. It
could be months before an exact number is known, however, the lawyers have said.
"The additional anxiety and stress that would have occurred to the victims had
there been a trial has been eliminated," said Stan Chesley, the plaintiffs'
chief attorney.
Real estate, investments and insurance
A spokesman for the diocese would not comment on how the diocese could afford
the settlement -- or why the amount was so much larger than agreements reached
in other abuse settlements. "Both parties have agreed not to comment on the
details of the settlement at this time," said spokesman Tim Fitzgerald.
Last year, the Orange County, California Diocese agreed to a settlement that
participants said would pay $100 million to 87 victims. In 2003 the Boston
Archdiocese, where the scandal first erupted, settled with 552 victims for $85
million.
Covington -- a suburb of Cincinnati, which is across the Ohio River -- is far
smaller than Boston, the nation's fourth-largest diocese with about 2.1 million
parishioners. The Covington Diocese spans 14 counties and has 89,000
parishioners. The lawsuit also covers some Kentucky counties that were part of
the Covington Diocese until 1988, when a new diocese in Lexington formed.
In a statement the diocese and plaintiffs' attorneys said $40 million of the
settlement fund would come from a combination of church real estate and
investments, and $80 million would come from insurance.
Sue Archibald, head of the clergy-abuse victims advocacy group The Linkup,
called the settlement fair and commended the diocese for its efforts.
"It's difficult to put a dollar figure on damages that can't be valued, but the
size of the settlement signifies how serious the abuse and its effects were,"
Archibald said. "I hope the settlement enables the survivors to move forward
with their healing."
In addition to the dioceses that have reached major settlements, three -- in
Tucson, Arizona; Portland, Oregon, and Spokane, Washington -- have filed
bankruptcy claims because of abuse allegations.
With the lawsuit pending, the Covington Diocese settled other claims, paying $4
million from its savings and $6.5 million from insurance over the last 18 months
to resolve 56 sex abuse claims. It recently said it would move its offices to a
medical center to cut costs and earlier announced some layoffs.
"I don't know that the money is ever a remedy for what was taken from us," said
Kay Montgomery of Lexington, central Kentucky director of Survivors Network of
those Abused by Priests. She settled separately with the Covington diocese and
is not part of the new settlement.
"It doesn't bring back the lost innocence for the victims, and it certainly will
not bring the innocent life back to them," she said.
 
 
"Peter Terry"
6/4/2005 6:41:49 PM




"Andy" <Andy@invalid.com> wrote in message
news:SfadnQvU5ckYhzzfRVn-sw@rogers.com...



" "- Prof. Jonez"" <jonez@norcom.ca> wrote in message
news:NP8oe.272$BK2.3254@news.uswest.net...

It is a lie.
Yet another guilty child rapist stands up for his abhorrent brother!!!!
PeterT
 
 
Barry OGrady
6/5/2005 11:23:58 AM


On Fri, 3 Jun 2005 23:05:37 -0400, "Andy" <Andy@invalid.com> wrote:


" "- Prof. Jonez"" <jonez@norcom.ca> wrote in message
news:NP8oe.272$BK2.3254@news.uswest.net...

It is a lie.
The catholic church should be closed down.
Barry
=====
Home page
http://members.iinet.net.au/~barry.og
 
 
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