Friday, 1 June 2012

Confessions of Priest Who Molested 17 Boys Released

The lurid confessions of a priest who sexually abused young boys in his parish choir and the seminary offer a glimpse into one of the minds behind the massive sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church.
Former priest Robert Van Handel's 27-page sexual history, which he wrote for a psychologist between 1993 and 1994, details his history of abuse and fantasies of abusing boys age 8 to 11. The document was released as part of a settlement between the Franciscan order of priests and 25 abuse victims.
In the essay, Van Handel, now 65 and a registered sex offender in Santa Cruz County, describes wrestling, tickling, and fondling young boys whom he invited to attend one-on-one choir practices, admits to molesting high school boys at a seminary where he taught, and says he took pictures of young boys wearing few clothes or showering.
"It was clearly my choir and the fulfillment of my fondest dreams," he wrote. "Now I understand that it was also a constant supply of attractive little boys."
He also described an encounter with another priest, while Van Handel was in seminary around high-school age, in which the priest molested him while he was in the infirmary.
"While I don't think it is of crucial importance in my life, it is curious that this is nearly the exact activity I would perform 10 to 15 years later," he wrote.
Van Handel's account of his own descent into pedophilia traces his shame and guilt growing up, learning about and trying not to think about sex, into young adulthood, where he bought porn magazines and became interested in naked children.
"I asked my best friend once if he saw anything 'special' in pictures of children. He said, 'no, not at all.' I began to realize that I was different. Sometimes I worried about this, but I thought that as long as it was just fantasy, there was no reason to panic," he wrote.
He progressed from reading about sex with boys to taking pictures of young boys and finally, when he took over directing a boys' choir, abusing boys.
"We used to wrestle, and I would tickle him, while paying special attention to touching his genitals," he wrote. "(He) never seemed to mind, and I wasn't about to stop on my own."
Van Handel describes trying to speak to a Franciscan counselor about his actions twice in the early 70's, but said he was too vague for the counselor to understand what he was saying.
In 1992, Van Handel pleaded guilty to one count of lewd and lascivious behavior with a minor and served four years in prison, and another four years on parole.
The release of Van Handel's confessions is rare, even among the thousands of church abuse cases that have made it to the court system in the past 10 years, according to attorney Jeffrey Anderson, who has handled more than 2,000 church abuse cases.
"This is unique," Anderson told the Associated Press. "It really is a glimpse into the mind of the molester."
Van Handel and his attorney, Robert "Skip" Howie, did not return calls from ABC News seeking comment.

abc news

Monday, 28 May 2012

PDP Determined to Transfer Wealth to Masses -Tukur

The National Chairman of Peoples Democratic Party, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, has said the party is determined to transfer wealth to the masses in the country.
He said this in a statement issued on Monday by the party`s National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Olisa Metuh.
Tukur said the party was also determined to establish a strong and sustainable middle class as defined in its ideology.
He, however, noted that the party needed the cooperation of all Nigerians to be able to deliver on its promises and to evolve a greater nation. 
``Nowhere in the world has true democracy and economic transformation evolved overnight; it takes time, sacrifice and patience.
 ``However, for the first time in the history of this great nation, we have had 13 years of an uninterrupted journey to the promise land.
``The PDP needs the cooperation of all Nigerians, especially the opposition parties and the civil society to join hands and build this great country of ours,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Tukur as saying in the statement.
He said the nation was going through a transition time, stressing that it was not a ``time to walk on political divide and demonise the ruling party because the issues involved was beyond politics.’’
 ``Unity should remain our watchword. It was unity that made us a great nation and leader of the African continent and will make us greater still.
 ``This is the time to come together and build afresh if only we can place the nation’s interest above personal ambitions.
 ``We may be of different ethnic groups, religion and ideology but our diversity is our greatest strength. PDP is always working to ensure that Nigeria is one nation, one people.
``Our commitment is to ensure meaningful changes in the life of the current administration,’’ the PDP chairman stated.
Tukur noted that when the party was entrusted with the leadership of the country in 1999, it promised to re-build the country based on the ideology of its founding fathers.
He added that the party had since then made significant progress in returning the country to the path of sustainable development and steady economic growth as a basis to stabilise and consolidate its democracy.
The nation