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Denis Alexander – Carlekemp

11 Friday Jun 2021

Posted by Author in Clergymen, Lothian

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July 2021

Former monk Denis Alexander to be deported after child abuse sentencing

A former monk at a Catholic boarding school has been sentenced to four years and five months in prison for child sexual abuse.

Fr Denis Alexander, 85, pleaded guilty last month to two charges of lewd, indecent and libidinous practices against two boys between 1973 and 1976.

The offences took place at the Fort Augustus Abbey school in the Highlands.

The Australian national’s sentence was backdated to January 2017, so is spent, and he is due to be deported.

Sentencing him at the High Court in Edinburgh, judge Lord Burns said the abuse of vulnerable young boys was in “flagrant disregard” of the principles and beliefs which Alexander was duty bound to follow as a Benedictine monk.

Alexander was first named as a paedophile by a BBC Scotland documentary in 2013.

One of his victims was Hugh Kennedy, now aged 58, who later told the BBC how he was beaten, groomed and sexually abused by Alexander.

Fort Augustus Abbey, at the southern end of Loch Ness, had been a monastery for more than 100 years.

The Benedictine monks who lived there operated a prestigious fee-paying Catholic boarding school, thought of one of the best in the country.

Alexander preyed on the children while teaching history and during yoga classes at the school.

Lord Burns told him: “You have brought lasting shame on the order of which you were a member.

“You plead guilty to the sexual abuse of two young boys who were between 12 and 14 in 1973 until 1976. You were 37 to 40 years of age at the time.”

“That abuse is aggravated by the age of your victims and position of trust and authority resulting from your status as a teacher and as a monk.”

The judge added: “These vulnerable young boys were entrusted to your care and what you did was a gross abuse of the trust placed in you as a teacher.”

The sentencing of Denis “Chrysostom” Alexander brings to an end a long-running search for justice for his victims.

He had firmly denied abuse allegations when I confronted him in Sydney more than eight years ago.

But our BBC Scotland documentary in 2013 sparked a chain of events which led eventually to the Scottish authorities launching a complicated, disputed extradition process.

Alexander fought his extradition every step of the way, dragging out the process for as long as he possibly could.

One of his victims, Hugh Kennedy, who waived his anonymity, had said all he ever wanted was to face his abuser in court.

He finally got his wish earlier his year, when Alexander pleaded guilty to abusing him and one other boy.

The BBC is aware of other former Fort Augustus pupils allegedly abused by Alexander who did not get their day in court.

Observers of this case are clear that had it not been for the fortitude and determination of Hugh Kennedy, bearing the brunt of the public campaign to bring Alexander to justice, it may never have happened.

Today, Hugh told me he felt “empty, all in,” and hopes to start rebuilding his life.

“He hasn’t really shown any genuine remorse for what he did to me and the others. He remains the arrogant man I remember him as.

“He could have saved me and the others years of turmoil if he’d only accepted his guilt at the first opportunity.”

Alexander was a symbol of the toxic culture at the prestigious Catholic boarding school where he and other monks preyed on children, wrecking lives and abusing their position of trust.

For some former pupils, simply surviving Fort Augustus has been hard enough.

Now there is proper justice for at least a few.

Lord Burns backdated the sentence to 23 January 2017, when Alexander was placed in custody. The judge told him he would be subject to deportation.

Advocate depute Jane Farquharson QC told the court offences committed by Alexander were “a snapshot of what is believed to be wider, systemic abuse of children” within the school and its preparatory school, Carlekemp, also run by the Benedictine Order.

The prosecutor said the school was a subject of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry during 2019 and the English Benedictine Congregation accepted physical and sexual abuse of children took place. A sincere apology was tendered.

The court heard that one of Alexander’s victims had told the headteacher, but the police did not become involved.

Alexander left the school during the 1970s and stopped being a practising Benedictine monk, but remained a priest and moved to Australia.

Ms Farquharson said: “He came to the attention of the police as a result of a BBC documentary screened in the summer of 2013 called Sins of Our Fathers that focused on life within both institutions.”

‘Significant delays’
The Crown Office requested his extradition in August 2016 and a warrant was issued by an Australian court in January the following year. But Alexander did not consent to his return to Scotland to face justice.

After further legal proceedings, he did not continue to fight the move and came back to the UK in January 2020.

Ms Farquharson said: “Significant delays were occasioned in bringing the accused to Scotland as a result of his opposition to the extradition process.”

Defence solicitor advocate Shahid Latif said: “He is sorry and he can do no more than he has done and that is to have pled guilty.”

He said that Alexander had been in “a stressful working environment” at the time of the offending and worked long hours, seven days a week.

Alexander watched the sentencing proceedings via a video link to prison. He was placed on the sex offenders register indefinitely.

June 2021

‘Depraved’ pervert pleads guilty to sexually abusing boys at Scots school

A sick sex attacker has pleaded guilty to abusing boys at a school in the Highlands.

Denis Alexander attacked children in his care at Fort Augustus Abbey School ‘over the course of many years’.

The 85-year-old’s guilty plea was in relation to sexual offences.

The High Court in Edinburgh heard today how Alexander targeted the young males in his study and during Yoga classes.

Judge Lord Burns heard how Alexander, who was a monk with the Benedictine Order, later left Scotland and became a Priest in Sydney, Australia.

But he was brought to justice after a BBC documentary called the Sins Of Our Father was aired in 2013.

Alexander’s victims saw the show and plucked up the courage to contact police who requested his extradition.

The cleric initially fought attempts to bring him back to Scotland but was returned almost three years after the extradition request was sent to Australia.

Alexander observed proceedings sat in a wheelchair in court with his head bowed. He has poor hearing and his lawyer instructed him to tell him if he couldn’t follow proceedings.

Alexander was known as Father Chrysotum when he was teaching at Fort Augustus school. He also taught bagpipes.

The court heard Alexander’s first victim is now 60 years old and was aged around 13 when Alexander summoned him to his study and ordered him to sit down.

Alexander “pushed” his hand down the man’s trousers and started to touch his penis. After the abuse finished, the man did not tell anybody what happened until he saw the BBC programme.

August 2013

Abuse at the Abbey: How paedophile monks were finally exposed

For a century, children were sent to the exclusive Fort Augustus Abbey and its prep school for what their parents hoped would be a first-class Catholic education. Run by the devout monks of the Benedictine order, this fee-paying school was the jewel in the crown of Catholic education in Scotland.

Yet a six-month investigation into the Abbey and its monks has uncovered five decades of systematic physical and sexual abuse reportedly carried out by a series of sadistic and predatory paedophile monks. Men of God, supposedly.

When BBC journalists started investigating this story, Fort Augustus Abbey, in the Highlands, had been closed for 20 years; its prep school, Carlekemp, in East Lothian, for longer.

But there were whispers about the brutal practices carried out by some of the monks who had lived in the Abbey and taught in the school.

Given that nearly every Benedictine school in England had been involved in a child sex abuse scandal, one had to ask if the boys of Fort Augustus had just had a lucky escape, or if this foreboding old Abbey had closed with its dark secrets intact. The latter would soon emerge to be true.

Courageous men like David and Christopher Walls, brothers who lived through experiences that most readers might have believed were the stuff of nightmares, said that the Old Boys network of the school, who trumpeted the place as a wonderful, character-building boot camp, were in denial, and that the investigation should dig deeper. The omertà, or silence, often associated with abuse claims within the Catholic Church had to be broken, they said.

One by one, men opened up about the horrors of Fort Augustus, and it soon became clear that what was being uncovered was a suspected paedophile ring of monks who were patient, systematic and callous.

For some of these boys, life was torture: daily beatings; blood regularly drawn from the ferocity of birch on bare backside; children as young as seven pulled from their beds in the dead of night of night to be lined up and flogged.

Often, they never knew why. It would be years until they twigged.

“We were being groomed,” said David Walls, who attended Carlekemp in the late 1950s. His brother Christopher, a year younger, was savagely beaten most days for around three years by Father Aidan Duggan, one of the Abbey’s Australian monks, who have all now been exposed as paedophiles.

Suddenly, the beatings stopped.

“The relief was palpable,” said David. “You were just grateful. And that’s when the kissing and cuddling started. It wasn’t until later that it fell into place,” said Christopher. “That was what it was all about, all the beatings.”

Both boys were repeatedly molested by Duggan, who was one of the most prolific of the offenders we learnt about.

Donald MacLeod was raped by Duggan in 1962, when he was 14.

“I always sort of felt it was somehow my fault,” said Donald, who had been sent to the school from Australia.

He, like many of the abused boys tried to raise the alarm, but was told by the headmaster at the time to “stop telling lies” or he would go to hell.

The BBC investigation revealed allegations that headmasters at the school, all monks, had failed to alert police to serious child sex abuse allegations, claiming that they chose either to ignore them, or simply move the offender on.

The last surviving of those headmasters, Father Francis Davidson, stepped down last week from a prestigious role as religious superior of a Benedictine college within Oxford University, St Benet’s Hall, after a series of BBC allegations that he covered up child abuse. Last week, Fr Davidson said that he did “not recall them being reported to me during my time as headmaster of Fort Augustus Abbey School” and that he had “always co-operated fully with the police in their investigations and will continue to do so as they progress and further information is gathered”.

One of the monks, Father Chrysostom Alexander, is the only one accused of sex abuse who remains alive. He was tracked down to Sydney, where he had been working as a priest.

Aged 77, he might he might have taken opportunity to respond to the allegations. Instead, he threatened to call the police, drove his car into mine in a bid to escape questions and was anything but contrite.

He may not have answered any questions, but a dark past that he had been avoiding for 30 years had finally caught up with him.

He is now at the centre of police investigations in both Scotland and Australia.

I salute the men who came forward for our investigation and who were brave enough to speak about the so-called Men of God who have haunted their dreams. There are 10 monks accused of the abuse. Around 50 former pupils who were abused, half of those sexually, have now spoken out.

The victims of the abusive monks of Fort Augustus have decided they will no longer obey the omertà, and will not go quietly.

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Brian Rutledge – Gosport

28 Friday May 2021

Posted by Author in Clergymen, Hampshire

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May 2021

Disgraced priest from Gosport jailed for nine years for raping boy, 15, in traumatising sex attack

A paedophile Catholic priest who raped a boy whispered to him ‘you have been chosen by god’ before his sickening sex attack.

Predatory pensioner Brian Rutledge, of St Georges Walk, Gosport, has been jailed for nine years for his crime after being convicted of two counts of indecent assault on a boy under 16 and one count of buggery with a boy under 16 following a trial at Reading Crown Court.

The offences all occurred in the 1980s when Rutledge – now 82 – was a parish priest at a church in Reading.

The disgraced priest had set up and run a number of clubs for boys while at the church.

His victim, then aged 15, was a member of one of the groups when he was targeted by the twisted pervert.

During a stay at Rutledge’s home, the youngster was sexually abused and raped.

The victim had woken to find Rutledge sitting on his bed and he told the victim that he had been ‘chosen by god’ before clambering into bed with him and molesting him.

After carrying out his sex attack, depraved Rutledge then told the boy not to tell anyone about what had happened, saying that keeping it as a secret was good practice for when the youngster became a priest.

The court was told that Rutledge was also jailed in 2008 after he was sentenced to four years and 10 months in prison after indecently assaulting a 17-year-old, as well as a 15-year-old boy

May 2008

Ex-priest jailed for sex attacks

A former Catholic priest has been jailed for sexually abusing two teenage boys in the 1980s.

Brian Rutledge, 69, was found guilty at Southampton Crown Court in March of attempting a sex assault on a boy aged 17 while he was staying at his house.

He earlier admitted indecently assaulting the 17-year-old, as well as a 15-year-old boy.

Rutledge of Waldegrave Close, Woolston, Southampton, has been sentenced to four years and 10 months in prison.

During his trial, the court heard Rutledge befriended the 17-year-old at a religious camp in Shropshire in 1975.

He later invited the boy, whose father was a naval officer, to stay at his home. 

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Nigel Cahill – Port Talbot

18 Thursday Mar 2021

Posted by Author in Clergymen, Glamorgan

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April 2021

Aberavon vicar sentenced for 200 indecent images of children

A vicar has been sentenced to an 18 month community order after admitting looking at hundreds of indecent images of children.

The Rev Canon Nigel Cahill, the Rector of Aberavon, was suspended from his duties after being arrested at his Port Talbot home in June last year.

The 61-year-old had pleaded guilty to two offences of making indecent images of children between 2016 and 2020.

Judge Paul Thomas QC said Cahill would suffer significant public disgrace.

At a hearing at Swansea Crown Court on Monday, Cahill was also ordered to take part in a 45-day rehabilitation activity and to sign the Sex Offenders’ Register for five years.

Judge Thomas said prison was not appropriate due to Cahill’s lack of previous convictions, but the vicar had let a “large number of people down”.

“They will feel a sense of betrayal by a man they looked up to and relied on for spiritual guidance,” he said.

Cahill was arrested at his home in June after police found 219 indecent images of children on his devices.

The court had heard how Cahill used aliases when talking to people via Skype, and police cyber experts found his search history indicated a sexual interest in children.

Prosecutor Julie Sullivan told magistrates: “Mr Cahill said he was online talking to someone and looking at pictures of grown men.

“He said: “I’m not denying I have looked at younger boys. It’s a problem I’ve had for years when I’m stressed. I drink and look at pictures online.”

March 2021

Reverend found with hundreds of indecent images of children on devices

A clergyman caught with hundreds of indecent images of children told police he looked at “younger boys”.

The Reverend Canon Nigel Cahill, the rector of Aberavon and the parish priest at St Agnes Church in Port Talbot, was cautioned on June 25 last year when police officers, assisted by the digital forensic cyber crime unit, executed a warrant at his home address in Forge Road, Port Talbot.

It came after police were informed that an image of a child had been uploaded from an internet source at The Rectory.

The 61-year-old told officers: “I was online talking to someone and we were looking at pictures of older men and there was younger ones. I’m not denying I look at younger boys. There is no point denying it.”

Swansea Magistrates’ Court heard prosecutor Julie Sullivan explain that police recovered a number of digital devices belonging to Cahill and he provided them with details on how to access each device.

He also told them that the names used on devices were aliases.

The devices were digitally examined and were found to have 216 indecent images of children. He was subsequently arrested.

Police investigations led them to another address in Cardiff that Cahill had access to and a search there also found another device with indecent images and a sexualised chat.

When he was first interviewed by police Cahill said in a prepared statement that he accepted he had used the digital devices to access improper images and that what he accessed was improper and wrong.

He admitted he had a problem and would accept any help on offer to him before adding he did not wish to make any further comment due to his “high emotional state”.

Cahill was again interviewed by police on February 1 and he gave a largely no comment interview.

The court heard how there were internet searches on Cahill’s devices which indicated his sexual interest in children.

Appearing in court on Wednesday Cahill pleaded guilty to two counts of making indecent photographs of a child

Cahill will now be sentenced at Swansea Crown Court on March 29.

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Hugh Graham – London

11 Thursday Feb 2021

Posted by Author in Clergymen, London

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February 2021

Jail for Hampstead and Camden paedophile church minister

A former United Reformed Church (URC) minister has been jailed for four years for downloading thousands of child abuse images and attempting to groom at least one young teenager.

Hugh Graham,  60, was minister at St Andrew’s Frognal in Finchley Road, Trinity Camden Town and Lumen in Regent’s Park at the time of his arrest in November 2019. 

He admitted a range of offences including attempting to incite a child to engage in sexual activity and possessing an “extreme” pornographic image – along with possession of prohibited images of children.

He was sentenced on February 11 at Snaresbrook Crown Court. 

The Crown Prosecution Service said Graham had communicated with “at least two children” using the app Grindr, and had described himself as “an open-minded perv” in messages. 

The paedophile advised looking on the “dark web” to find images and videos, while also wrote to one victim: ““I’m hoping you aren’t a gang of blokes trying to trap me. I could get into trouble for chatting to you lol.”

When Graham was arrested and his computers seized, police found more than 35,000 abuse images dating back to at least 2012.

Some included children as young as three, and children who were handcuffed.

Prosecutor Paul Addison said: “Hugh Graham was a trusted and respected member of the community who thought he could hide his criminality behind a screen.

“He preyed on children for his own sexual gratification and used Grindr and the dark web to feed his addiction. Graham knew what he was doing was wrong and he will now have to accept the consequences of his actions.”

Graham was also given a sexual harm prevention order and placed on the sex offenders register.

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Eamonn Crossan – Co Donegal

05 Friday Feb 2021

Posted by Author in Clergymen, Republic of Eire

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February 2021

Priest who gave boy, 13, booze before abusing him at parish home jailed

A former priest has been jailed for plying a 13-year-old boy with drink and abusing him at a parochial house.

Eamonn Crossan admitted taking the teenager to the property in Kincasslagh, Co Donegal, and indecently assaulting him.

Judge John Alymer imposed a three-year sentence, the final 12 months of which were suspended.

Crossan, now 69, was placed on the sex offenders register for 10 years.

Following sentencing, the Diocese of Raphoe released a statement in which Bishop Alan McGuckian apologised to the victim and his family.

It confirmed Crossan was a priest in the diocese from 1976.

He was removed from ministry immediately on receipt of the complaint in 1998 and gardai and the HSE/Tusla were informed.

Bishop McGuckian said: “I am deeply saddened an innocent child had to endure this devastating abuse.

“It is all the more serious that it involved abuse by someone in a position of sacred trust and power.

“I apologise sincerely to the man who suffered and to his family.

“I fully accept that no apology can undo the harm inflicted on an innocent child.

“If anyone else has a concern or complaint, either now or from the past, I encourage them to come forward and contact the diocese and the statutory authorities.”

Crossan appeared at Letterkenny Circuit Court where he admitted a single charge of indecent assault on an unknown date between 1984 and 1985.

The court heard he gave the boy alcohol, including Smithwicks and shots of whiskey. He then woke up in bed beside Crossan, who was 33 at the time. Both were naked.

The court heard the priest had taken over as a father figure to the boy after the recent death of his dad.

The victim, Kevin O’Brien, instructed his solicitor to waive his right to anonymity so that Crossan could be named.

Mr O’Brien was not in court and was represented by his adult daughter who read out his victim impact statement.

He said he has not been able to fulfil his role as a father, friend or husband and this all stemmed from the “sick actions” of the priest.

He has always felt trapped “like a frightened child”.

Mr O’Brien added he tried to report the matter when he was younger but nobody listened to him.

He suffered what he thought were two strokes but they were seizures brought on by the stress of reliving what had happened to him.

Crossan’s barrister Shane Costello SC said the accused now lives outside of Donegal and almost lives a “hermit-like” existence.

Crossan also penned a letter to his victim in which he stated the situation was all his fault and it had nothing to do with his victim.

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