In Development:

 

Wuthering Heights

 

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By Emily Brontë.  Read by Marion Castle.  Music by Kevin Macleod.

 

 

Moby-Dick

 

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By Herman Melville.  Read by James Conlan.  Music by Kevin Macleod.

 

 

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl

 

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl

By Harriet Jacobs.  Read by Audio Élan.  Music by Former American Slaves.

 

 

Don Quixote

 

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By Miquel De Cervantes.  Read by Joe Rodriguez.  Music by Kevin MacLeod.

 

 

Emma

 

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By Jane Austen.  Read by Gina Mellotte.  Music by Kevin MacLeod.

 

 

CurrentNews:

 

Bob Noble Wins FMPTA Best Audio Award

 

UFOs FMPTA Award

 

The Hilton Orlando/Altamonte Springs hosted the Florida Motion Picture & Television Association's 21st Annual Crystal Reel Awards Gala on November 6th where Bob Noble won Best Narration/Voice-Over/Male in an Audio Program for M.P. Marshall's UFOs: God's Celestial Airforce

 

RecentEvents:

 

The Delphinus Chronicles wins first place in the audiobook division at the Hollywood Book Festival

 

 

Based in the capital of show business, the Hollywood Book Festival aims to spotlight literature worthy of further consideration by the talent-hungry pipeline of the entertainment industry; and facilitate getting those works into the proper hands for consideration

 

Hollywood Book Festival

 

The Philadelphia Report  audio demo button  Buy Button

The Philadelphia Report cover image - unabridged CD
 
 

TO THE HONORABLE GWENDOLYN N. BRIGHT, SUPERVISING JUDGE:

We, the County Investigating Grand Jury of September 17, 2003, were impaneled pursuant to the Investigating Grand Jury Act, 42 Pa.C.S.A 4541 et seq., and were charged to investigate the sexual abuse of minors by clergy. Having obtained knowledge of such matters from physical evidence presented and witnesses sworn by the Court and testifying before us, upon our respective oaths, not fewer than twelve concurring, do hereby submit this Report to the Court.


 

Midwest Book Review

Narrated by a group of voice professionals, and featuring a foreword by report co-author and professor of law Marci A. Hamilton, The Philadelphia Report is disturbing because it is true - and because it reveals a tremendous wrong saturated in the fabric of modern American society. A "must-have" for college libraries with a focus on criminal law and justice.

Richard Sipe

Marci Hamilton provides an eloquent foreword and the total document is well read by a variety of easy-to-listen-to voices. Of all the Grand Jury Reports into U.S. dioceses this is the model for investigation of the pattern and practice of Catholic clergy abuse and the cover-up perpetrated by authorities. A courageous team of Deputy District Attorneys including Charles Gallagher and William Spade navigated their way through the files and allegations against 62 Philadelphia priests—less than half the number of implicated clergy in the church files. This document is an important resource for anyone looking into the Catholic crisis and the dynamics of clergy abuse. It also demonstrates that the current Statutes of Limitations are restrictive in addressing the problem of abuse of minors in the State of Pennsylvania.  Children are not sufficiently protected from abuse under current laws that give preference to the abuser over the victim.

 


 

Marci A. Hamilton

Foreword

by Marci A. Hamilton

 

Those who would like to pretend clergy abuse is not a real problem, or an ancient problem, ought to sit down now and listen to the entire Philadelphia Investigating Grand Jury Report.

It is sobering - recounting the stories of over 60 abusing priests and more victims, and establishing, to a virtual certainty, that there are many other victims about whom we don't even know.

Not all of the abuse is decades old. The abuse is often ritualistic, always sick, and destroys both girls and boys.

Yet the report's legal conclusion will be troubling to many: According to the D.A.'s Office, there is no possibility of bringing criminal charges against the newly discovered perpetrators or the Archdiocese. Nor is there a chance of bringing charges against Cardinals Bevilacqua and Krol, or Secretary for Clergy Monsignor William J. Lynn.

That conclusion does not stem from any finding that the institution, or these men, did not engage in indictable offenses. Rather, it is simply because the statute of limitations has expired on all of the criminal charges that might, earlier, have been lodged.

The report heavily underlines what has long been clear: It's time for all states to abolish child abuse statutes of limitations for criminal charges in the future.  It's also time for all states to retroactively and prospectively abolish statutes of limitations for civil claims based on child sex abuse.

The citizens of Pennsylvania - and especially its legislature -- should be shocked by the Philadelphia D.A's report, because it is inconceivable that the Commonwealth's laws could be so utterly inadequate to address so great an evil.

I too would have been shocked by my experience in assisting with the report. But to me, the report's conclusions were all too familiar.

I have testified and litigated on the side of clergy abuse victims in numerous states.  I also frequently write on the subject. As a result, I have met too many victims, and seen too much suffering, to have been able to hold onto the hope that perhaps Philadelphia's could be an Archdiocese that did not have such problems.

At this point, I strongly doubt there is any Archdiocese or diocese in this country immune from this plague. And I have come to this conclusion on the basis of harsh experience, with the hope it might have been otherwise. My husband and kids are Catholic; I'm Presbyterian. Certainly, I have no quarrel with Catholicism, and I am a religious person.

However, the actions of some of the Catholic Church's leaders have left me appalled, disgusted, and dismayed with them -- and also with a Church that continues to support them, while leaving children to be preyed upon, and leaving adults who once were just such children, to suffer abuse's lasting harms.

The Philadelphia investigation, like so many before it, unearthed strong evidence of enormous harm and evil. In the face of this evidence, it is extremely dispiriting for those of us who believe in the American system to think such wrongdoing cannot result in criminal charges. What the report chronicles, after all, is a series of horrific crimes against the most vulnerable of victims.

The Archdiocese's "response" to the report should be subtitled, "It's All About Us." Setting aside the throw-away opening and closing paragraphs, its 60+ pages continues the callous disregard of children that has been repeatedly evident since this controversy began.

Unbelievably, the Archdiocese's repeatedly tries to make it sound as though the lack of indictments absolves it of criminal and moral responsibility. But the truth is, they got off on a technicality.

Moreover, in civil cases, they may not be so lucky.  While extending criminal statutes of limitations retroactively has been held unconstitutional, that is not true of civil statutes of limitations. Under our Constitution, civil statutes of limitations may, indeed, be retroactively extended. Let us hope that in Pennsylvania, they are - and that when the cases are litigated, victims cite the Archdiocese's pitiful response to the D.A's report as evidence in favor of a large award of punitive damages.

Let's put the technicality of the statute of limitations aside, and look at the substance of the report. It is unequivocal. On the merits, but for the statute of limitations, the dozens of priest perpetrators who were placed in one parish after another were guilty of rape, statutory sexual assault, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, indecent assault, endangering welfare of children, and corruption of minors. The tragedy is that victims need such a long period of time to come forward and none had the capacity to come before the grand jury within the statute of limitations. It is still everyone's hope involved in this investigation that those who were more recently abused will be able to stop the cycle of abuse and come forward now.

Ten, or even twenty, years from now, the question will be asked whether Pennsylvania adequately responded to the facts laid out before it in the Philadelphia grand jury's report. No longer can lack of knowledge be used as an excuse.

Childhood sexual abuse - in Pennsylvania and every other state - cannot continue to be governed by laws that favor abusers and the institutions knowingly continuing to employ them.

Doubtless, the Catholic Church will continue to lobby against such reforms, making reform difficult. But the fact that justice is hard to achieve, is no excuse for not striving for it.

Too many children have been hurt too much, for too long. The failure to change, at this point - with all this evidence before us - would be inexcusable.

The facts demand reform, and the politics, for once, need to be set aside for the sake of our children.

 



Investigated Clergy


 

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