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Not the
Catholic Church? (IV): L.A. School District 'Repeatedly' Returned Child
Molesters to the Classroom; Where's the MSM? |
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Will the MSM follow up on this? Will the LAT follow
the lead of the Boston Globe? |
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- May 2009 - |
An
explosive, front-page investigation on Sunday (5/10/09) in the Los
Angeles Times reported that the Los Angeles Unified School
District (LAUSD) "repeatedly" returned teachers and aides
credibly accused of child molestation back to classrooms, and these
individuals then molested children again. The jaw-dropping story, by
Times staffer Jason Song, is incredibly angering, and the tales of abuse
are stomach-turning. (An
accompanying audio slideshow at the Times web site is quite sad and
maddening.)
In the last several years, media outlets have endlessly ripped and
tarred the Catholic Church for mishandling episodes from decades ago.
Meanwhile, these episodes in LAUSD date back are all quite recent. One
documented case dates back to just last year! From Song's story:
- The first complaint against [Ricardo] Guevara came in 1995 ...
Guevara, who denied the allegation, was never charged with a crime.
He was cleared to return to work at the same school ... Several
years later, he was hired full time at the Miramonte Early
Education Center ... District administrators knew of the 1995
accusation, but no one informed school leaders ... In 2002, a
6-year-old accused "Mr. Ricardo" of repeatedly touching her groin
during class one day ... But with no witnesses besides the child,
who over time mixed up details of what had occurred, prosecutors
declined to pursue the case. Guevara returned to Miramonte to work
with children.
- In 2002, a student reported that Michael McMurray, a
fourth-grade teacher at Plainview Avenue Elementary School in
Tujunga, had on several occasions forced a girl to sit on his lap
and pose for a camera ... Two years later, during class,
McMurray wrote a note to a fourth-grader on a Post-it, according to
police documents. "Are you comfortable with me putting my hand on
your knee?" he asked ... McMurray, who molested her on at least two
occasions, later pleaded no contest to sexual abuse of a child and
was sentenced to 16 years in prison. Ten other girls stepped
forward, complaining that they too had been touched
inappropriately by McMurray, but the charges were dismissed as part
of a plea agreement. At least three girls have sued the district.
- James Marlo Duffin, a fourth-grade teacher at Middleton
Elementary School in Huntington Park, had been investigated in May
2001 for allegedly touching a girl's buttocks ... Duffin returned
to the classroom. Almost two years later, while teaching at Gulf
Avenue Elementary School in Wilmington, he was accused of touching a
girl's buttocks and molesting two other students ... It is not clear
whether Duffin's new principal had been told of the prior
allegation.
- Even as he was applying to be a trainee at the district in 2001,
the aide, Paul Thompson, was under investigation by police for
allegedly raping a 10-year-old boy at a group home where he had
worked ... A district background check failed to pick up on the
complaint ... Between July 2002 and March 2003, Thompson repeatedly
forced the boy to perform sexual acts, according to amended criminal
charges in 2005 alleging eight counts of lewd acts with a child.
After a jury acquitted Thompson on five counts and could not agree
on the other three, a mistrial was declared. In a second trial that
ended in November 2005, the jury acquitted him of all remaining
charges. Within a week, Thompson was reassigned to Blythe Street
Elementary School in Reseda to be a special education aide to a
female second-grader, according to his later testimony. It is
unclear whether his new principal was told of the prior allegations.
- [In 2007], before he was transferred to Markham Middle School as
assistant principal, [Steve] Rooney had been arrested on suspicion
of assault with a deadly weapon. He allegedly brandished a handgun
at the stepfather of a student who attended Foshay Learning Center
... Police told senior district officials that they had found
evidence in Rooney's home of a possible sexual relationship between
Rooney and the student, police later told The Times. But the
student, 17, did not cooperate with the LAPD investigation, police
said. No charges were filed. Without conducting their own
investigation, L.A. Unified officials reassigned Rooney to Markham
after a few months. In 2008, Rooney was arrested
for allegedly kidnapping and sexually assaulting a 13-year old
female student from Markham at his home. Since then, he has been
charged with various sexual crimes involving four girls, two
former students at Foshay and two at Markham.
Where's the outrage?
- At
Google News, the only link I can find about the scandal is the
original story in the Times.
- The web sites of
ABC7 Los
Angeles,
NBC4 Los Angeles, and
CBS2 Los Angeles
currently carry nothing about the story and give no indication
they've covered this at all.
- If KFI radio's popular morning host
Bill Handel,
a perpetual Church basher, announced the story this morning
(5/11/09), I missed it. Instead, I tuned in this morning at 7:40 am
to hear Handel spending several minutes on the story about a
Catholic priest
several thousand miles away in Florida who had an affair.
Handel then proceeded to voice several falsehoods about the Church.
(See below.)
KABC's Doug
McIntyre deserves credit for interviewing Song this morning on his
radio show and at least spending a few minutes on the issue.
Meanwhile: Is the Times finally turning a corner in their reporting?
For several years, we have reported on the disparate coverage by the
Times and other mainstream outlets when reporting the awful crime of
child abuse. While the Times and others seem to trumpet each-and-every
decades-old allegation against a Catholic priest, they have either
downplayed or ignored current-day scandals in our nation's schools. As
we've
written before, "When it comes to the abuse of children, it sure
seems like the national media doesn't get too worked up unless the words
'Cardinal,' 'bishop,' or 'priest' is in someone's job title." (For a
catalog of this disparity, see
"Los Angeles Times: Clergy Abuse and School Abuse" at
TheMediaReport.com.)
A couple questions remain, however:
- Will the Times follow up on this report and continue to uncover other
egregious cases? Remember how the Boston Globe handles the Catholic
Church abuse scandal in 2002: It wasn't just one article. The Globe
alone ran a mind-blowing 989 articles related to the scandal in
the 2002 calendar year alone! (Yes - that's an average of almost three a
day!
See for yourself.)
On McIntyre's show this morning (5/11/09, 9 am hour), Song told the
audience that, "Since the Rooney incident, the number of teachers
'housed' - that's the term they use for being placed on
administrative leave while charges against the employee are being
investigated - has almost tripled in number."
- As the rest of the national media tracked the Church scandals in
Boston several years ago and expanded on it, will mainstream outlets give this outrageous
scandal the wide attention it deserves?
Stay tuned.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Falsehoods by Bill Handel: 1. Priestly celibacy in the
Church only came about "1,000 years after Jesus." Wrong.
The
Council of Elvira, circa 309 A.D., shows that priestly celibacy was
already being firmly practiced by the Church. 2. "Gays
can't receive communion."
Nope. Just having homosexual desires does not bar anyone from
receiving the Eucharist. 3. "Divorced Catholics cannot
receive communion."
Wrong again. That's another myth.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Previous:
"Not the Catholic Church? MSM Mum About Huge L.A. School Sex Abuse
Scandal"
See also:
TheMediaReport.com: "Los Angeles Times: Clergy Abuse and School Abuse"
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