ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

September 24, 2013

Priest’s abuse ‘known’

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

A man who was abused by a Hunter Valley priest as a child says he wants to know why it remained a secret “when so many people knew”.

Peter Gogarty fronted a special NSW commission of inquiry ­yesterday into how Catholic church officials and police ­handled child sex abuse allegations involving priests James Fletcher and Denis McAlinden.

During Mr Gogarty’s 15 minute submission, there were tears and some applause in the public gallery.

As a result of his experiences and through discussions with other victims, he said two ­questions commonly arose: “What would my life have been if I had never met him and why was there so much secrecy when so many people knew?”.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Priest Grassi trasnferred to Campana jail

ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires Herald

Priest Julio César Grassi, whose 15-year sentence to prison was confirmed yesterday by a Morón court, was transferred today from an Ituzaingo jail to one situated in the Buenos Aires lcoality of Campana.

According to authorities this place offers more security conditions, amid controversy surfaced over where the convicted priest would spend the next 15 years behind bars.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Archdiocese’s handling of priest allegations needs scrutiny, group says

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Andy Greder
agreder@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 09/24/2013

A Minnesota victims support group called for a grand jury investigation Tuesday into how the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis handled allegations against a priest now in prison.

The Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer, formerly assigned to Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in St. Paul, is serving a five-year prison term for sexually abusing two children and possessing child pornography.

SNAP, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, wants Minnesota prosecutors to investigate whether at least three top Catholic officials “hid, tampered with or tried to tamper with evidence,” according to a Minnesota Public Radio report. The report said that top archdiocese officials had known of Wehmeyer’s sexual compulsions for nearly a decade yet kept him in the ministry.

In a statement Monday, the archdiocese stood by its response to Wehmeyer’s actions, but added that improvements were being made to policies on how it deals with clergy misconduct.

The Ramsey County attorney’s office did not immediately return an email seeking comment Tuesday.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

El penal donde está Julio César Grassi es de mediana seguridad

ARGENTINA
Corrientes Hoy

[Summary: Priest Julio Cesar Grassi, convicted of abusing minors, had been sent to a medium security prison. The woman who heads a mothers and victims group said the prison to not secure enough to prevent potential escapes.]

Según la titular de la ONG “Madres y familiares de víctimas”, la propia gente del complejo reconoce que las instalaciones no están a la altura de las circunstancias. Alicia Angiono, titular de la ONG Madres y Familiares de Víctimas (Mafavi), sostuvo que la Unidad Penitenciaria número 39 de Ituzaingó “no está preparada para que estén alojados internos de máxima peligrosidad, sin embargo está cada vez más llena de asesinos, violadores seriales y femicidas, que son enviados allí por la cercanía con sus familias”.

“La propia gente del penal plantea que no tiene la estructura necesaria para evitar fugas, porque se trata de un complejo de mediana seguridad, diseñado para la etapa final de las condenas, cuando los internos empiezan a recibir salidas transitorias o trabajan afuera, para la resocialización. Esto de ninguna manera ocurre con presos como Julio Grassi o tantos más que lograron que los manden allí, y que son violadores seriales, asesinos o femicidas”, dijo Angiono.

La titular de la organización manifestó, asimismo, que “se viene trabajando hace varios años, porque los propios vecinos que habitan en cercanías de la cárcel saben que se registran muchísimas fugas de gente peligrosa, que reciben el beneficio del traslado y cuando pueden se escapan”.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Newark’s New Coadjutor

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Sep. 24, 2013 Distinctly Catholic

I dined with two clerics last night who had nothing but good things to say about the new coadjutor archbishop of Newark, Bp Bernie Hebda. I am just thrilled that this appointment came so quickly. Of course, in this case, Archbishop Myers lost all credibility when he penned an insanely defensive letter to his priests, accusing the press of being evil for its reporting of his own mistakes in handling sex abuse cases in both Newark and Peoria. And, the deposition that was released in Peoria was appalling – he sounded like a tobacco executive assuring us that smoking doesn’t cause cancer. But, nothing +Myers did was any worse than what was done by Bp Finn, who is still gloriously reigning in Kansas City- St. Joseph and, unlike Abp Myers, Bp Finn has been convicted of child endangerment in a civil court. It is time for Rome to take action, no matter what +Finn’s powerful patrons say.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Bernard Hebda is named coadjutor of NJ’s largest diocese, likely successor to Newark archbishop

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

[with video]

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on September 24, 2013

NEWARK — Newark Archbishop John J. Myers this morning welcomed a partner in governing the archdiocese.

Bernard A. Hebda, the bishop of Gaylord, Mich., will assist Myers in running New Jersey’s largest diocese, which has more than 1.3 million Roman Catholics in Essex, Union, Hudson and Bergen counties. Myers has been archbishop since 2001.

Myers said he requested a coadjutor from the Vatican “some time ago,” but he declined to say when. “I don’t think I need to talk about my conversations with Rome,” Myers said.

Myers said Hebda would be active in all parts of the archdiocese’s administration. He is expected to succeed Myers upon Myers’ retirement at age 75.

Hebda said he was surprised but happy about his new placement, and that he looked forward to the challenge.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Former Pittsburgh priest named archbishop-in-waiting in New Jersey

NEW JERSEY
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

By Bill Zlatos

Published: Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013

Pope Francis has appointed Bernard A. Hebda, a former Pittsburgh priest and bishop of Gaylord, Mich., as the coadjutor archbishop of the Archdiocese of Newark, N.J., local diocesan officials announced Tuesday.

Hebda was ordained a priest in the Diocese of Pittsburgh in 1989 and left the area in December 2009 to become the bishop of Gaylord.

According to the Star-Ledger of Newark, Hebda will assist John J. Myers in running New Jersey’s largest diocese, with more than 1.3 million Roman Catholics in Essex, Union, Hudson and Bergen counties. Myers has been archbishop since 2001.

As coadjutor archbishop, he will replace Myers at some point in the future.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Pope names Bishop Bernard Hebda as future archbishop of Newark, to succeed Archbishop John Myers

NEW JERSEY
News 12

NEWARK – Pope Francis has named a new bishop to help out, and eventually take over, for the archbishop in New Jersey’s largest city.

Bishop Bernard Hebda, from a diocese in Michigan, was named the coadjutor archbishop Tuesday. He will serve alongside 72-year-old Archbishop John Myers until he retires in mid-2016.

Myers has denied the appointment was made in response to the recent controversies surrounding the Rev. Michael Fugee, who was accused of sexual abuse.

Fugee has confessed to assaulting a boy, but returned to his post with an agreement that he be kept from unsupervised contact with minors. Authorities say he became part of a youth group despite this arrangement.

Fugee has since resigned and was arrested.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Pope names second archbishop to assist Newark Archbishop Myers

NEW JERSEY
NorthJersey.com

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The pope has named a new archbishop to help out and eventually take over for the archbishop of Newark, who is under fire for his handling of a sexually abusive priest.

Archbishop Bernard Hebda, recently of Gaylord, Michigan, was named coadjutor archbishop Tuesday for 72-year-old Archbishop John Myers, who is to retire in mid-2016.

When questioned about the change at news conference, Myers denied the appointment was made in response to the recent controversies involving the Rev. Michael Fugee.

Fugee confessed to grabbing a boy’s crotch but returned to the ministry under an agreement that he be kept from unsupervised contact with minors. Instead, authorities say he became a fixture at a youth group.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

KUDOS TO ARCHBISHOP NIENSTEDT

MINNESOTA
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the way St. Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop John C. Nienstedt is handling priestly misconduct:

On Sunday, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced it was putting a priest on leave after a woman said he inappropriately touched her. The priest denies the accusation; the allegation was reported to the police. Yesterday, Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) ran a story on a previous case: it said the archdiocese knew of the misconduct of Fr. Curtis Wehmeyer before he abused two boys in 2010.

In early June 2012, the mother of the abused boys told a priest about the molestation. He urged her to call the police. On June 14, she provided details and was told to report this to the archdiocese. On June 19, she met with officials and one of the boys was questioned. On June 20, the police were contacted; the authorities were told that the priest would be relieved of his duties on June 21. He was. In September, the Ramsey County Attorney commended the archdiocese saying, “They did the right thing.”

Some critics are saying the archdiocese should have dealt with Wehmeyer before the abuse occurred. In 2004, three years after being ordained, Wehmeyer made sexually suggestive remarks to two men, 19 and 20, but they never complained. The archdiocese found out anyway, and sent the priest to St. Luke Institute for counseling. Two years later, he was found cruising in an area known for gay sex; no law was violated. In 2009, he was arrested for drunk driving. Fr. Kevin McDonough, a former vicar general, said last week that “[N]othing, nothing, nothing in this man’s behavior known to us would have convinced any reasonable person that he was likely to harm kids.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

NEWS RELEASE: FORMER POPE BENEDICT DENIES SEXUAL ABUSE COVER-UP

UNITED STATES
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Former Pope Benedict Denies Sexual Abuse Cover-up
Attorney: Actions Speak Louder Than Words

Statement of Jeff Anderson

There is an expression that states, “When you blame others, you give up the power to change.” Former Pope Benedict’s statement issued today, denying the cover-up of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, is both alarming and disturbing and yet another crystal-clear reflection of the Vatican, its power structure and the clerical culture that is still present today.

Unfortunately, the Vatican’s cycle of blaming others and refusing to change continues despite records revealed across the globe, particularly in the United States as a result of civil litigation, which demonstrate a longstanding pattern and practice of secrecy inside the church hierarchy. Benedict, as former Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith from 1981-2005, received all reports made to the Vatican concerning child sexual abuse yet the pattern of secrecy remained in-tact as it still does today, as part of Canon law, concealed from the police, prosecutors and the public.

Apologies to victims of sexual abuse and recognition of mistakes does not alleviate the burdens these survivors carry, across the world, many of whom we work with every day. The wounds, caused by the clerics and top officials in concealing the sexual abuse, continue to remain open and every time responsibility is denied, salt is poured in these wounds.

Until there is full recognition and accounting of their responsibility that is more than just words, there can be no healing. That means, among other things, breaking the denial demonstrated by Benedict and embedded in the clerical culture. We will continue to stand beside the survivors, sharing in their journey to obtain the transparency and accountability that they so rightfully deserve.

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ARCHBISHOP MYERS ACQUIRES CO-ADJUTOR

NEW JERSEY
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments as follows:

Newark Archbishop John J. Myers is fortunate to acquire the stellar assistance of Bishop Bernard A. Hebda. Three of Newark’s bishops, including Myers, are in their 70s, so picking up the 54-year-old Bishop of Gaylord, Michigan is a real plus.

As usual, there are a few carping voices. Much is still being made over the antics of Fr. Michael Fugee, the priest who resigned after violating a judicial order. In 2001, he was charged with groping a teenager while wrestling in front of family members. Myers was unfairly blamed for Fugee’s refusal to abide by strictures he agreed to respect. Now critics are contending that Hebda’s appointment is a reflection on Myers’ tenure.

Archbishop Myers requested assistance from Rome some time ago; it is hardly an unusual request for someone nearing retirement age. Yet according to Charles Reid, who teaches at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota, “[A]t the very least we can say this happened because of the sex-abuse scandal.” At the very least, we can say it is a disgrace for a law professor to make accusations without corroborating evidence. Also, it is striking to see Reid get worked up about this issue: in July, he lectured the “religious right” for their fixation on “loose sexual mores.”

David Clohessy, director of SNAP, criticized Pope Francis for going easy on Myers’ alleged cover-ups. He knows something about cover-ups: he refused to report his brother, Kevin, to the cops when he learned that his sibling was a molester.

Robert Hoatson says the acquisition of Hebda means Myers is “on the way out.” He is an expert on what it feels like to be “on the way out”: he is an ex-priest. Moreover, he commands no following. To wit: last month he held a demonstration against Myers. Three people showed up.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

NJ – SNAP challenges new Newark Catholic official

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Sept. 24

Statement by Mark Crawford, SNAP New Jersey Director (732-632-7687, mecrawf@comcast.net)

Many Catholic feel hopeful because of the new coadjutor archbishop of Newark. Their hopes will soon be dashed, however, unless he takes clear, strong steps very soon to better safeguard kids.

So we publicly beg Archbishop Bernard Hebda to insist that the archdiocese post names of predator priests on its website. This is the quickest, safest and cheapest way Catholic officials can safeguard children – to let parishioners and the public know who the proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics are.

And it’s the best way for Archbishop Hebda to prove that he’s not just “window dressing” for a dreadfully corrupt archdiocesan hierarchy.

Roughly 30 US bishops have done this, almost always when facing strong public pressure and criticism.

[BishopAccountability.org]

None of those bishops has expressed regret about having posted these names. None, as best we can tell, has ever been sued for posting these names.

It would take virtually no expense and only a few hours to post this list. More names can always be added later.

But it would instantly warn perhaps thousands and thousands of unsuspecting neighbors, co-worker and even relatives about potentially dangerous clerics. It would surely prevent one child from being sexually assaulted by a priest, nun, seminarian or other Catholic employee.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Pope denies abuse cover up; Chicago abuse victim responds

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Sept. 24

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 312-399-4747, SNAPblaine@gmail.com )

After six months of virtual silence (and complete inaction), a pope finally addresses the continuing clergy sex crime and cover up crisis in the church. The problem is: it’s the wrong pope. And it’s the wrong message.

Pope Benedict, the retired pope, now denies ever covering up heinous, world-wide sexual violence against children. We obviously and vehemently disagree. (That’s why we have filed and continue pursuing a formal complaint against Benedict and three of his colleagues at the International Criminal Court.)

But it’s Pope Francis, not Pope Benedict, who should be addressing this crisis. And he should do so in the only way that matters – with deeds, not words. Those deeds, that action, has not happened yet, six months into Francis’ papacy. No child on the planet is safer now because Pope Francis replaced Pope Benedict.

But no one need give up on Pope Benedict yet. Though he is elderly and retired, he is clearly still very smart and articulate. He is freer now than ever to “come clean.”

Pope Benedict says he didn’t protect predators and conceal crimes. We challenge him to prove this. We challenge him to, right now, to better protect children, expose the truth and help heal the wounded, by publicly sharing any details about clergy sex crimes and cover ups. We challenge him to, right now, publicly name even a handful of the tens of thousands of bishops, priests, nuns, brothers and seminarians who have committed or concealed sexual violence against children. Especially those who are still on the job. Especially those who’ve been transferred from one nation to another. Especially those have not already been exposed thanks to the actions of brave victims, diligent journalists, determined prosecutors or courageous whistleblowers.

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Former Pope Benedict denies covering up sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
Toronto Star

By: Reuters, Published on Tue Sep 24 2013

VATICAN CITY- Former Pope Benedict has denied that he tried to cover up sexual abuse of children by Roman Catholic priests, in his first direct published comments since he stepped down.

The comments came in an 11-page letter to Italian author and mathematician Piergiorgio Odifreddi, who had written a book about the problems facing the Roman Catholic Church before the pope resigned in February.

“As far as you mentioning the moral abuse of minors by priests, I can only, as you know, acknowledge it with profound consternation. But I never tried to cover up these things,” Benedict, who now has the title Emeritus Pope, said. …

Victims groups have accused Benedict of not doing enough to stop the abuse of children by priests while he was pope and before when he was head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office.

They say there is much still to be discovered about how the Church behaved in the past and want more bishops who were aware of abuse to be held responsible.

The Catholic Church’s crisis came to light in Boston in 2002 when media began reporting how cases of abuse were systematically covered up and abusive priests were shuttled from parish to parish instead of being defrocked and handed over to civil authorities.

Since then, the Catholic Church in many countries has set up new guidelines to deal with cases of past abuse, prevent new cases, report abuse to police, and stop potential abusers from entering the priesthood in the first place.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Ex-Pope Benedict denies abuse cover-up

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

The former Pope, Benedict XVI, has denied any role in covering up child sex abuse by priests, in his first public comments since retirement.

The emeritus Pope, as he is now known, addressed the issue in a detailed letter to a prominent atheist, which also covered many other matters.

It is thought to be the first time that Benedict has publicly rejected personal responsibility for covering up abuse.

Some critics say he must have known of efforts to protect abusive priests.

Benedict’s letter, to the professor of mathematics Piergiorgio Odifreddi, was published in La Repubblica newspaper after the professor sought the former Pope’s permission.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Benedict emerges from papal retirement to defend record on sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
Telegraph (UK)

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has broken his self-imposed silence with a lengthy letter to a prominent atheist in which he defended himself from accusations he did not do enough to bring to justice sexually abusive priests.

By Nick Squires, Rome7:23PM BST 24 Sep 2013

The ex-pontiff spoke of his “profound consternation” that “evil” had entered so deeply into the Catholic faith. But he denied that he had, either as pope or previously as head of the Vatican office dealing with abuse cases, tried to “cover up” the scandals that tarnished the Church’s reputation around the world.

“That the power of evil penetrated so far into the interior world of the faith is a suffering that we must bear, but at the same time must do everything to prevent it from repeating,” he said.

The missive, sent to Piergiorgio Odifreddi, an atheist mathematician, and reprinted on the front page of leading Italian daily La Repubblica, was the first published statement from Benedict since he said on his retirement that he would live out his remaining years “hidden from the world”.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Former pope breaks silence, denies sex abuse cover up

VATICAN CITY
CNN

By Daniel Burke, CNN Belief Blog Co-editor

(CNN) – Retired Pope Benedict XVI says he never tried to hide the sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests, breaking his post-retirement silence to address one of the greatest threats to his legacy as a church leader.

In a lengthy letter published in La Repubblica, an Italian newspaper, the former pope answered theological and moral arguments from Piergiorgio Odifreddi, an Italian atheist and mathematician who had written about Benedict in 2011.

Earlier this month, La Repubblica also published a letter to its atheist editor from Pope Francis, Benedict’s successor.

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“I never covered up child sex abuse cases”, Ratzinger tells religion critic

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Benedict XVI gives prominent mathematician Piergiorgio Odifreddi a slap on the wrist in a letter published by Italian newspaper “La Repubblica”

MARCO TOSATTI
ROME

After Francis’ letter to Eugenio Scalfari, the founder of La Repubblica newspaper, it’s now Benedict XVI’s turn to send one. Ratzinger has written a letter to mathematician, media buff and religion critic, Piergiorgio Odifreddi. Odifreddi, who is particularly critical of the Catholic faith, wrote the book “Caro Papa ti scrivo” (“A word to you dear Pope”) in response to Ratzinger’s work “Introduction to Christianity”.

Now Benedict XVI has replied to him. His letter was too long for La Repubblica newspaper to publish in full but will feature in a new book by Odifreddi, who must be pretty happy to be publishing what he defined as “a one-off in the history of the Church: a dialogue between a theologian Pope and an atheist mathematician.”

“Church, do not keep silent about evils but let faith leave a trail of light.” This phrase sums up Ratzinger’s rich and profound theological thinking.

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Co-Adjutor Archbishop Named for Newark Archdiocese

NEWARK (NJ)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark

The Most Reverend John J. Myers, Archbishop of Newark, today announced to a gathering of local journalists and Archdiocesan employees and guests in the Newark Archdiocesan Center offices that His Holiness, Pope Francis, has granted his request to name a Co-Adjutor Archbishop to assist in the administration of this local Church of Newark.

The Most Reverend Bernard A. Hebda, until today Bishop of the Diocese of Gaylord, MI, was named Co-Adjutor.

In making this announcement, Archbishop Myers stated: “Today I have the personal privilege and honor of introducing Bishop Bernard A. Hebda.

“Considering some major projects to be implemented in the Archdiocese, and the fact that three of us Bishops in Newark are in our 70’s, I had requested a Co-Adjutor Archbishop some time ago. Pope Francis has honored my request and honored the Archdiocese of Newark by the gift of appointing Most Reverend Bernard Hebda as Co-Adjutor Archbishop of this Great Archdiocese.”

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Grassi behind bars ‘brings some peace to victims,’ plaintiff

ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires Herald

Plaintiff in the case that has ended with priest Julio César Grassi jailed yesterday charged with sexual abuse and corruption of minors, considered the judicial decision to put Grassi behind bars after more than 10 years since he was first convicted will bring “some peace” to the victims.

Lawyer Juan Pablo Gallego told media that “victims have been the great absents in this debate until now.”

“This person (Grassi) always considered that the only one with guarantees was him,” Gallego insisted and questioned the legal procedure that “kept” the priest “free” while he “accessed the Happy Children Foundation and insulted the victims in television.”

“The victims got some peace yesterday, their guarantees have been recovered and not only those of an impeached who has been convicted three times,” the lawyer affirmed.

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Cardinals’ summit shapes up as potential turning point

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Sep. 24, 2013

Francis’ papacy only just reached the six-month mark, so it’s probably premature to be talking about make-or-break moments for his legacy. That said, the Oct. 1-3 maiden summit of eight cardinals from around the world, tapped by the pope to advise him on governance and reform, profiles as a potentially critical turning point.

When those eight cardinals, plus a bishop-secretary, sit down with Pope Francis in a meeting room in the Apostolic Palace, the expectation is that some serious sausage will be ground on a variety of fronts:

An ongoing cleanup of Vatican finances;

* Reorganization, and potential downsizing, of the Vatican bureaucracy;
* Ensuring that the right people end up in the right Roman jobs;
* Vexed pastoral questions such as annulments and divorced and remarried Catholics.

Dubbed the “G-8,” the panel was announced in April and styled as a move toward greater collegiality. The American on the team is Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, joined by Cardinals Giuseppe Bertello, governor of Vatican City; Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga of Tegucigalpa, Honduras; Francisco Javier Errázuriz Ossa of Santiago, Chile; Oswald Gracias of Mumbai, India; Reinhard Marx of Munich; Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya of Kinshasa, Congo; and George Pell of Sydney. Rodríguez is the group’s coordinator.

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Emeritus Pope Benedict emerges and defends his abuse record

VATICAN CITY
The Salt Lake Tribune

By NICOLE WINFIELD | The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY • Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI has emerged from his self-imposed silence inside the Vatican walls to publish a lengthy letter to one of Italy’s most well-known atheists. In it, he denies having covered up for sexually abusive priests and discusses everything from evolution to the figure of Jesus Christ.

Excerpts of the letter were published Tuesday by La Repubblica, the same newspaper which just two weeks ago published a similar letter from Pope Francis to its own atheist publisher.

The letters indicate that the two men in white — who live across the Vatican gardens from one another — are pursuing an active campaign to engage non-believers. It’s a melding of papacies past and present that has no precedent and signals that the popes — while very different in style, personality and priorities — are of the same mind on many issues and might even be collaborating on them.

Benedict wrote the letter to Piergiorgio Odifreddi, an Italian atheist and mathematician who in 2011 wrote a book “Dear Pope, I’m Writing to You.” The book was Odifreddi’s reaction to Benedict’s classic “Introduction to Christianity,” perhaps his best-known work.

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He’s back! Benedict XVI speaks out on sex abuse – and calls Richard Dawkins ‘science fiction’

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Tim Stanley

We’ve heard very little from Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI since his retirement, but he’s made a surprise return to public life. Benedict has written a letter to the atheist mathematician Piergiorgio Odifreddi, covering subjects from the sex abuse scandal to evolution – and extracts have been released by Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper. Coming off the back of Francis’ letter to another atheist on the subject of obeying one’s conscience, it’s hard not to draw parallels between the two and there’s already discussion about the possibility of collaboration. Either way, Benedict makes some interesting points.

First, he rejects involvement in the cover up of priests engaged in sexual abuse:

I have never tried to hide these things. That the power of evil penetrate to such an extent in the inner world of faith is for us a suffering which, on the one hand, we have to endure, while, on the other, we must at the same time, do everything possible to ensure that such cases do not repeated.

This probably will not satisfy those who feel the Church hasn’t done nearly enough or with sufficient speed – and who will continue, fairly or not, to blame the Vatican for the inaction. Benedict adds that this one sin should not blind people to the wider accomplishments of Christianity:

You have to remember the great figures and even that faith has produced – by Benedict of Nursia and his sister Scholastica, Francis and Clare of Assisi, Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross, the great saints of charity as Vincent de Paul and Camillo de Lellis to Mother Teresa of Calcutta and the great and noble figures of the nineteenth century Turin. It is also true today that faith leads many people to selfless love, in service to others, sincerity and justice.

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Pope Francis Names Future Newark Archbishop

NEW JERSEY
CBS New York

NEWARK, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) – The pope has named a coadjutor bishop to help out and eventually take over for the archbishop of Newark who has faced harsh criticism for his handling of a sexually abusive priest.

Pope Francis appointed Bishop Bernard A. Hebda of Michigan to serve alongside current Archbishop John Myers.

Hebda will also succeed Myers when he vacates the office. Myers is 72 years old; bishops must submit their resignations when they turn 75.

Coadjutor bishops are often named for large archdioceses. They take over automatically when the incumbent retires or dies. Naming Hebda with three years to go before Myers retires could be a sign that Pope Francis believed Newark needed fresh leadership now.

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Hebda, Bishop of Diocese of Gaylord, named Coadjutor Archbishop of Newark, N.J.

MICHIGAN
Petoskey News

Jordan Spence (231) 439-9397 – jspence@petoskeynews.com
9:12 a.m. EDT, September 24, 2013

GAYLORD — Pope Francis has named Bishop Bernard Hebda, of Gaylord, coadjutor archbishop for the archdiocese of Newark, N.J.

As coadjutor, Archbishop Hebda will assist the current Archbishop John Myers in the administration of the archdiocese. He will automatically succeed Myers upon his retirement or death. Myers is set to retire in mid-2016 because of how he handled a sexually abusive priest. The archdiocese said it was unaware the priest subsequently worked with youths, according to the Associated Press.

Hebda expressed sadness at having to leave the Diocese of Gaylord in a letter written after being informed of his new appointment.

“Today’s news that the Holy Father has named me the coadjutor archbishop of Newark brings with it the sadness of having to leave the Diocese of Gaylord,” Hebda wrote. “I have come to consider this local church my home and will find it difficult to leave so many faith-filled parishes, schools and friends. Anything that I know about being a bishop I learned from you — and for that I will be always thankful.”

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Benedict denies concealing abuse; SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

Pope Benedict now claims he never covered up for predator priests. He could not be more wrong.

[Reuters]

Over a clerical career that lasted more than six decades, we can’t think of a single child molesting bishop, priest, nun, brother or seminarian than Benedict ever exposed.

In the church’s entire history, no one knew more but did less to protect kids than Benedict. As head of CDF, thousands of cases of predator priests crossed his desk. Did he choose to warn families or call police about even one of those dangerous clerics? No. That, by definition, is a cover up.

Benedict is a smart man. He knows that each one of those individuals should have been reported to law enforcement. Yet he never made those call. Nor did he order others to make those calls. Nor did he ever discipline or denounce – in even the slightest way – those who clearly hid clergy sex crimes from law enforcement (like Bishop Robert Finn of Kansas City who was convicted for hiding clergy child sex crimes).

Only under intense pressure, and only in the waning months of his papacy, did Benedict begin to even make the most pathetic gestures regarding child sex crimes or cover ups. And they were indeed gestures – largely symbolic acts that had and have zero impact in protecting kids.

The opposite of “covering up” is “uncovering” or “disclosing.” Again, we cannot name one predatory bishop, priest, nun, brother or seminarian who was publicly exposed because of Benedict.

Six months ago, here’s what we said about “Setting Pope Benedict’s record straight” –

Let’s get specific. What exactly DID Pope Benedict do about the committing and concealing of child sex crimes in the church? LA Times writer Mitchell Lansberg did a good job of summarizing the case made by Benedict’s defenders, who say that he:

1. “essentially banished an influential Mexican priest, Father Marcial Maciel, who had long been suspected of sexually abusing seminarians and boys in his care and had fathered at least three children”

2. “ordered investigations into sexual abuse and issued guidelines in 2010 that made it easier to punish abusive priests”

3. “spoke of the ‘deep shame’ and ‘humiliation’ the scandal had brought on the Catholic Church. He apologized to victims”

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What The Church Needs More Than a ‘Good Pope’

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

Mary E. Hunt

According to a September 20 AP report, “Pope Francis offered an olive branch of sorts to the doctrine-minded, conservative wing of the Catholic Church on Friday as he denounced abortions as a symptom of today’s ‘throw-away culture’ and encouraged Catholic doctors to refuse to perform them.”

This is indeed ironic, as many have already noted, coming as it does just a day after the publication of the pope’s apparently anti-culture war interview. However, in her analysis below Mary E. Hunt expresses her concern that a failure to change doctrine may ultimately yield little or no change. Thus, her both/and approach is affirmed, and nearly in real time. –eds

***

The Jesuit journalistic coup, quickly known as the Pope’s interview—officially “A Big Heart Open to God”—will take years to parse. Early headlines heralding a new moment in church history are largely correct, but not necessarily for the reasons cited. While it is true that Pope Francis has downplayed some of the hot button issues: “abortion, gay marriage and the use of contraceptive methods…it is not necessary to talk about these issues all the time,” it’s also true that in no way did he disavow them: “The teaching of the church, for that matter, is clear and I am a son of the church…”

I would not advise holding one’s breath until those official teachings are replaced with sensible, respectful recognitions that adults make their own choices on matters of personal morality. Rather, I observe that the trajectory that millions of lay Catholics have set is finally being joined by some clerics, including this most highly placed one. My caution is simpy not to miss the forest for the trees.

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Cipriani no dice si habló de Miranda con el Papa

PERU
La Republica

En una entrevista concedida al portal Zenit, el arzobispo de Lima, Juan Luis Cipriani, reveló que durante más de una hora habló con el papa Francisco de temas pastorales referentes al Perú en un “clima de amistad y confianza”, pero no mencionó si se trató también el caso del ex obispo Gabino Miranda.

El primado contó además que regaló al Sumo Pontífice dos estatuillas de Santa Rosa de Lima y de San Martín de Porres, así como sus respectivas biografías, porque poco después de ser elegido como Santo Padre le dijo: “No te olvides de rezar por mí a Santa Rosa” y, poco después, le pidió que lo “encomiende al negrito de la escoba”, tal y como es conocido San Martín de Porres.

Agregó que el Papa lo recibió con el “cariño de siempre” y que se saludaron con “un largo abrazo”. Luego dijo que Francisco le preguntó por el seminario y por las vocaciones sacerdotales, a lo que él respondió comentándole sobre el incremento de las confesiones, de asistencia a la misa y de que muchos sienten como si hubiera un ambiente nuevo.

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Fiscal pide al Arzobispado y al nuncio apostólico las acusaciones contra Miranda

PERU
La RepublicaI

nvestigación. Representante del Ministerio Público de Ayacucho espera una copia del expediente para identificar a víctimas y poder establecer responsabilidades.
Elías Navarro, Ayacucho.

El fiscal Garay Chávez Valdivia, de la 1a fiscalía provincial de Huamanga, solicitó a los arzobispados de Ayacucho y Lima copias del expediente que determinó la salida de la Iglesia Católica del ex obispo auxiliar Gabino Miranda Melgarejo.

La misma solicitud fue hecha al nuncio apostólico, o representante diplomático de la Santa Sede en el Perú, monseñor James Patrick Green.

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Pedirán información a embajada del Vaticano en Perú sobre caso de pedofilia

JORNADA
Peru

Iniciaron las investigaciones. El presidente de la Junta de Fiscales del Distrito Judicial de Ayacucho, Javier Gonzáles, dio a conocer que ya se han iniciado las investigaciones por el presunto caso de pedofilia en contra del quien hasta hace un poco más de tres meses se desempeñaba como obispo auxiliar de Ayacucho, Gabino Miranda.

Por ese motivo, el fiscal encargado de llevar el caso es Garry Armando Chávez, de la Primera Fiscalía en lo Penal, el mismo que ya informó a sus superiores que se han cursado los documentos correspondientes para que la Fiscalía de la Nación, que tiene que ver con denuncias de delitos internacionales, tenga que ser la encargada de solicitar toda la información a través del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores a la embajada del Vaticano en el Perú.

“La denuncia fiscal, hasta el momento, se inició con la información que se ha propalado a nivel de los medios radiales y televisivos de alcance nacional, esperamos que los trámites con respecto a este tema se tengan que agilizar y tener una respuesta inmediata por parte de la Santa Sede sobre este particular; debo indicar también que la Fiscalía de la Nación nos remitió un documento para iniciar estas investigaciones”, manifestó Javier Gonzáles.

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Novicias fueron víctimas de obispo violador según reporte

PERU
El Popular

[Summary; The situation with former bishop Gabino Miranda is increasingly complicated. The complaint against the bishop came from the church and alleged that some novices were being pressured or sexually harassed by MIranda.]

La situación del ex obispo de Ayacucho Gabino Miranda, es cada vez más complicada. Según reveló el periodista Nicolás Lúcar en su programa Punto final, las agraviadas serían unas novicias.

“La denuncia ha provenido de la misma Iglesia católica, donde algunas novicias habrían sido presionadas o maltratadas sexualmente por el obispo, ahora simplemente Gabino Miranda”, afirmó el conductor del espacio dominical de Frecuencia Latina.

Como es público, el ex obispo Gabino Miranda fue destituido por el Papa, acusado de abusar de menores. La noche del domingo se conoció de la existencia de una carta del ex obispo de Ayacucho dirigida al Vaticano, en la que afirma que “en ciertas circunstancias he sido imprudente”. Aún no se sabe nada sobre su paradero.

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Creen en su inocencia…

PERU
Diario La Voz

Creen en su inocencia: jóvenes respaldan a Ex obispo Auxiliar Gabino Miranda

Un grupo de jóvenes catequistas se reunieron ayer en la Plaza Mayor de Huamanga para mostrar su respaldo al Ex obispo auxiliar de Ayacucho, Gabino Miranda Melgarejo, quien fue destituido de ese cargo por el presunto delito de pedofilia.

Los jóvenes catequistas que trabajaron con Gabino Miranda en la pastoral juvenil respaldaron la inocencia de Miranda Melgarejo, quien, según informaron, se encuentra delicado de salud.

“Nosotros venimos aquí para elevar nuestras oraciones y que el Señor y la Virgen del Carmen lo protejan, Desde aquí le mandamos un caluroso saludo porque la fuerza del Señor lo acompañe porque siempre estuvo en el camino del bien”, señaló la catequista Ana Tumbalobos quien destacó que Gabino Miranda era un misionero nato por sus constantes viajes.

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The Vatican made the announcement Tuesday.

MICHIGAN
Up North Live

GAYLORD — Pope Francis has named Reverend Bernard A. Hebda, of the Diocese of Gaylord, the Coadjutor Archbishop for the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey.

The Vatican made the announcement Tuesday.

As coadjutor, Archbishop Hebda will assist the current Archbishop John Myers in the administration of the archdiocese and will automatically succeed Archbishop Myers upon his retirement, transfer or death.

Myers is under fire for his handling of the sex abuse scandal in the Catholic church. According to the Associated Press, Myers has been criticized for his handling of a priest barred from unsupervised contact with minors after grabbing a boy’s crotch. The archdiocese said it was unaware he subsequently worked with children.

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Michigan bishop’s appointment as coadjutor archbishop in Newark archdiocese is confirmed

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Star-Ledger Staff
on September 24, 2013

The expected appointment of Bishop Bernard A. Hebda as coadjutor archbishop of the Archdiocese Newark was confirmed this morning in an e-mail from the Vatican News Service.

Hebda’s appointment will be made official at 11 a.m. today at the archdiocesan offices in Newark.

Hebda will assist John J. Myers in running New Jersey’s largest diocese, with more than 1.3 million Roman Catholics in Essex, Union, Hudson and Bergen counties. Myers has been archbishop since 2001.

Advocates for victims of clergy sex abuse suggested the move was almost certainly tied to scandals that have clouded Myers’ stewardship of the archdiocese this year. During that period, one priest was arrested after violating a ban on ministry to children, and another took up residence in a parish despite a credible history of sexual abuse.

Myers also was faulted last month for missing or ignoring signs of abuse among priests during his former assignment as bishop of Peoria, Ill.

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Katholischer Priester gesteht sexuellen Missbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
Merkur

Ein katholischer Priester hat vor dem Landgericht Würzburg den wiederholten sexuellen Missbrauch eines Jungen gestanden. „Ich möchte im Wesentlichen der Anklage zustimmen“, sagte der 58-Jährige zum Auftakt des Prozesses am Dienstag. Er sei jedoch nicht pädophil. Die Staatsanwaltschaft hatte ihm zuvor Kindesmissbrauch in 14 Fällen vorgeworfen. Der Angeklagte hatte sich 2011 an den Missbrauchsbeauftragten seines Ordens gewandt und selbst angezeigt. „Ich bedauere die Taten zutiefst“, sagte er.

Der Geistliche soll sich zwischen 1993 und 1998 am Sohn einer Freundin vergangen haben. Der Bub war anfangs fünf Jahre alt. Er lebte zeitweise im Pfarrhaus des 58-Jährigen im unterfränkischen Landkreis Main-Spessart, da die Mutter dort einige Jahre als Haushälterin arbeitete. Der Angeklagte nahm nach Darstellung der Staatsanwaltschaft eine Art Vaterrolle für den Jungen ein.

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To Bishop Kevin Britt and Msgr. John Zenz

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

The following is copy of a memo received by SNAP:

FROM: Bishop Bernard J. Harrington
RE: Sexual Harassment Case/Fr. Lou Grandpre/St. Paul of Tarsus

I met Lou Grandpre at the East Macomb Vicariate Meeting today and he was quite “down”. He has informed me that things have gone very poorly in the sexual harassment case. He has reported that we have lost the mediation process from last August with the recommended settlement of about $160,000.00.

Lou feels that our case was not well presented for the mediators. For example: the petitioner had a detailed psychiatric report on the devastation of this whole thing to the victim and no psychiatric evaluation was done by our side. That the documentation done by the opposition was twice the amount of documentation that was presented by our side and thirdly the opposition present three lawyers (one a woman) to the hearing, while our group was only presented by John Cassen. Even Karen Piper, who had been working on the case, did not show up at the hearing.

Lou feels that he and his staff are totally devastated. That it would be advantageous to settle it as quickly out of court as possible. He feels that if the case goes to court the settlement might even be higher. As well as the public scandal that would be involved.

My concerns are:
1) Is the Cardinal aware of the present situation of the court case?

2) Who is the Diocesan contact person involved in this case? I have not received any documentation on this case since the day it was turned over Karen Piper. I don’t know who is receiving documentation from the Diocesan lawyers.

3) Should there be an evaluation whether this case should be settled quickly and how this can take place and who are the persons that are to be involved in that decision?

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Pope Benedict challenges atheist, says he never hid abuse cases

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — In a letter to an atheist Italian mathematician, retired Pope Benedict XVI defended his own handling of allegations of the sexual abuse of minors by clergy and politely criticized the logician’s total reliance on scientific facts for meaning.

“I never sought to conceal these things,” the pope said of cases of clerical abuse, and lamented the scholar depicting the church as the only place where such “deviation” and “filth” occur.

The publication of the retired pope’s comments Sept. 24 to an atheist scholar came the same month a written letter by Pope Francis to an Italian journalist concerning dialogue with nonbelievers was published. Both letters were published, with the two popes’ permission, by the Italian daily La Repubblica.

The paper released long excerpts of Pope Benedict’s original 11-page response to Piergiorgio Odifreddi, a prolific science writer who authored the book, “Dear Pope, I Write to You” in 2011. The book, presented as a letter to Pope Benedict, proposes the superiority of a worldview in which belief should stem only from things that can be understood and empirically known over worldviews that include belief in things that cannot be fully understood or known.

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MI – Just-ousted priest was accused before

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

[A copy of the 1997 memo is here]

He allegedly sexually harassed someone 15 years ago
Victims’ group says archbishop breaks pledge of “openness”
And group wants archbishop to “come clean” about other predator priests
In sharply worded letter, SNAP blasts “recklessness, callousness and deceit”

For immediate release: Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013

For more information: David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Director 314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com, Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, SNAP Outreach Director 314-862-7688, SNAPdorris@gmail.com

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is releasing a private archdiocesan memo showing that a Detroit priest who was ousted last week because of credible child sex abuse allegations was also accused of sexual harassment 15 years ago.

In a one page memo, dated September of 1997, a high ranking Detroit archdiocesan official writes to two colleagues that “we have lost the mediation process” arising from accusations that Fr. Louis Grandpre sexually harassed an individual. The memo indicates the mediator “recommended (a) settlement of about $160,000.00”

The memo is written to then-Bishop Kevin Britt and Msgr. John Zenz by then-auxiliary Bishop Bernard J. Harrington and carries this subject line: “Sexual Harassment Case/Fr. Lou Grandpre/St. Paul of Tarsus.”

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, want Detroit Archbishop Allen Vigneron to “explain why this secret was kept from parishioners and the public” and “discipline the staffers who are responsible for this deceit.”

“Vigneron’s public relations team gave a list of Fr. Grandpre’s assignments and other details last week,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP’s director. “So why did the church hierarchy keep silent about another accusation against Fr. Grandpre? And what other wrongdoing – by Fr. Grandpre and other priests – are Vigneron and his staff they keeping secret?”

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I didn’t try to cover up child abuse, says Benedict XVI

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (UK)

Benedict XVI has denied trying to cover up cases of child abuse in the Catholic Church in extracts of a letter published by Italian daily newspaper La Repubblica.

The letter was addressed to Italian mathematician and philosopher Piergiorgio Odifreddi, who published a book in 2011, Dear Pope, I’m Writing You, which challenged Benedict’s trilogy of books on Jesus of Nazareth.

Benedict XVI wrote: “I never tried to cover up these things. That the power of evil penetrates to such a point in the interior world of the faith is, for us, a source of suffering. On the one hand we must accept that suffering, and on the other, at the same time, we must do everything possible so that such cases aren’t repeated.

“It’s also not a motive for comfort to know that, according to sociological research, the percentage of priests guilty of these crimes is no higher than in other comparable professional categories. In any event, one must not stubbornly present this deviance as if it were a nastiness specific to Catholicism.”

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Pope-emeritus exchanges letters with noted atheist philosopher

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

[with audio]

(Vatican Radio) Pope-emeritus Benedict XVI has had an exchange of letters with the noted Italian mathematician and philosopher, Piergiorgio Odifreddi, excerpts from which appeared in the Tuesday edition of the Italian daily, La Repubblica. At the beginning of September, Benedict sent a lengthy and detailed response to criticisms the atheist thinker Odifreddi had published in his volume, Caro papa ti scrivo, a book-length essay that was itself a critique of certain arguments and lines of thought found in the Pope-emeritus’ theological writings, starting from his 1967 volume, Introduction to Christianity.

The context of the exchange is therefore that of an ongoing conversation about the contents and merits of a lifetime of public intellectual engagement. The topics covered in the exchange range from the abuse crisis in the Church, to the question whether theology can properly be considered a science to the need for frank and open dialogue among believers and non-believers.

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‘I never tried to cover up’ abuse, Benedict says

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Sep. 24, 2013 NCR Today

ROME In itself, the fact that the pope made the front page of a major newspaper Tuesday is hardly surprising. Over the last six months, the papacy has been a global phenomenon, making waves and generating interest well beyond the borders of the Catholic church.

Which pope did so this time, however, is a different matter.

Instead of Francis, the newsmaker in this instance was Pope Benedict XVI, who stepped down Feb. 28 and who has stayed largely out of the spotlight ever since.

On Tuesday, however, the Italian daily La Repubblica published lengthy extracts of an 11-page letter by the 86-year-old emeritus pontiff to an Italian mathematician and philosopher named Piergiorgio Odifreddi, who had published a 2011 book challenging Benedict’s take on Jesus of Nazareth titled, Dear Pope, I’m Writing You.

It was the second time in recent weeks La Repubblica published a letter from a pope to an atheist intellectual after a Sept. 11 missive from Francis to Italian journalist and leftist activist Eugenio Scalfari.

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Ratzinger: “Caro Odifreddi le racconto chi era Gesù”

CITTA DEL VATICANO
La Repubblica

Il postino del Papa suona due volte

Papa Francesco scrive a Repubblica: “Dialogo aperto con i non credenti”

ll. mo Signor Professore Odifreddi, (…) vorrei ringraziarLa per aver cercato fin nel dettaglio di confrontarsi con il mio libro e così con la mia fede; proprio questo è in gran parte ciò che avevo inteso nel mio discorso alla Curia Romana in occasione del Natale 2009. Devo ringraziare anche per il modo leale in cui ha trattato il mio testo, cercando sinceramente di rendergli giustizia.

Il mio giudizio circa il Suo libro nel suo insieme è, però, in se stesso piuttosto contrastante. Ne ho letto alcune parti con godimento e profitto. In altre parti, invece, mi sono meravigliato di una certa aggressività e dell’avventatezza dell’argomentazione. (…)

Più volte, Ella mi fa notare che la teologia sarebbe fantascienza. A tale riguardo, mi meraviglio che Lei, tuttavia, ritenga il mio libro degno di una discussione così dettagliata. Mi permetta di proporre in merito a tale questione quattro punti:

1. È corretto affermare che “scienza” nel senso più stretto della parola lo è solo la matematica, mentre ho imparato da Lei che anche qui occorrerebbe distinguere ancora tra l’aritmetica e la geometria. In tutte le materie specifiche la scientificità ha ogni volta la propria forma, secondo la particolarità del suo oggetto. L’essenziale è che applichi un metodo verificabile, escluda l’arbitrio e garantisca la razionalità nelle rispettive diverse modalità.

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Ex-pope Benedict denies covering up sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY | Tue Sep 24, 2013

(Reuters) – Former Pope Benedict has denied that he tried to cover up sexual abuse of children by Roman Catholic priests, in his first direct published comments since he stepped down.

The comments came in an 11-page letter to Italian author and mathematician Piergiorgio Odifreddi, who had written a book about the problems facing the Roman Catholic Church before the pope resigned in February.

“As far as you mentioning the moral abuse of minors by priests, I can only, as you know, acknowledge it with profound consternation. But I never tried to cover up these things,” Benedict, who now has the title Emeritus Pope, said.

Excerpts of Benedict’s pope’s letter were published in the Rome newspaper La Repubblica on Tuesday with the former pope’s permission.

It was believed to be the first time Benedict has responded to the sexual abuse accusations in the first person, although the Vatican has always said he did much to put an end to sexual abuse of minors by priests and never tried to cover it up.

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MP warned bishop about paedophile priest: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By MICHELLE HARRIS Sept. 24, 2013

FORMER state MP John Hatton wrote more than 25 years ago to the then Archbishop of Sydney, Edward Clancy, to bluntly raise allegations of Father Denis McAlinden’s ‘‘sexual misbehaviour’’ with children and urge they be independently assessed.

Mr Hatton, then the independent MP for South Coast, wrote to the archbishop in May 1987 about the ‘‘extremely delicate matter which has come my way and which I believe should be handled within the church’’ .

The letter was among documents recently released by the Special Commission of Inquiry, which is examining the conduct of police and Catholic Church in response to the offending by two priests.

James Fletcher, who died in jail in 2006, was convicted of abusing an altar boy, although other victims came forward.

McAlinden, who died in late 2005, is suspected of abusing possibly hundreds of young girls.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 24 September 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father: …

– appointed Bishop Bernard A. Hebda as coadjutor archbishop of Newark (area 1,328, population 3,089,000, Catholics 1,427,000, priests 774, permanent deacons 184, religious 1,076), U.S.A. Archbishop-elect Hebda, previously bishop of Gaylord, U.S.A, was born in Pittsburgh, U.S.A. in 1959, was ordained to the priesthood in 1989, and received episcopal ordination in 2009.

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Amid Newark Scandal, Pope Ships “Steel” – Bernie Hebda Named Next Jersey Abp.

NEW JERSEY
Whispers in the Loggia

As only Lou Vallone could sum it up: “It just gets better and better, all the time.”

At Roman Noon this Tuesday, reacting with lightning speed to a considerable brutta figura in one of the nation’s largest dioceses, the Pope made his most consequential Stateside move to date, naming Bishop Bernard Hebda, the 54 year-old head of Michigan’s Gaylord diocese, as coadjutor-archbishop of Newark.

In New Jersey’s 1.4 million-member principal church, the Pittsburgh-born star – a beloved, unassuming cleric, yet one armed with degrees from Harvard and Columbia Law and over a decade’s experience in the Vatican’s office for legal affairs – will eventually succeed Archbishop John Myers, 72. One of the US church’s leading conservatives for a quarter-century and an influential figure on both the national and Roman scenes as chairman of the board of the Pontifical North American College, the Illinois-born metropolitan has been embroiled over recent months in an ongoing, increasingly ugly furore over claims of lacking oversight in cases of priests accused of sexual abuse.

While the new coadjutor will likely arrive to begin learning the turf as archbishop-in-waiting within two months, no timetable has yet been indicated for Myers’ handover of the reins. It’s likewise unknown whether the successor-to-be has been granted any special faculties by the Holy See, which would transfer sole authority over specified elements of the archdiocese’s governance to Hebda even while Myers remains in office.

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Pope names eventual replacement for NJ archbishop under fire for handling of accused priest

VATICAN CITY
Edmonton Journal

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SEPTEMBER 24, 2013

VATICAN CITY – The pope has named a new bishop to help out and eventually take over for the archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, who is under fire for his handling of a sexually abusive priest.

Bishop Bernard Hebda, currently of Gaylord, Michigan, was named coadjutor bishop Tuesday for Archbishop John Myers, who is to retire in mid-2016.

Coadjutor bishops are often named for large archdioceses. They take over automatically when the incumbent retires or dies. Naming Hebda with three years to go before Myers turns 75 could be a sign that Pope Francis believed Newark needed fresh leadership now.

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Bishop Hebda named Coadjutor Archbishop of Newark

NEW JERSEY/MICHIGAN
Roman Catholic Diocese of Gaylord

His Holiness Pope Francis has named the Most Reverend Bernard A. Hebda, shepherd of the Diocese of Gaylord for the past four years, the Coadjutor Archbishop for the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey. The Vatican made the announcement on the September 24, 2013 and it was shared in Washington by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, apostolic nuncio to the United States. The appointment is effective immediately. As coadjutor, Archbishop Hebda will assist the current Metropolitan Archbishop John J. Myers in the administration of the archdiocese and will automatically succeed Archbishop Myers upon his retirement, transfer or death.

“Today’s news that the Holy Father has named me the Coadjutor Archbishop of Newark brings with it the sadness of having to leave the Diocese of Gaylord,” Archbishop Hebda penned in a letter upon being informed of the appointment. “I have come to consider this local Church my home and will find it difficult to leave so many faith-filled parishes, schools and friends. Anything that I know about being a bishop I learned from you—and for that I will be always thankful.

Archbishop Hebda said he has been blessed here, finding the Church of Gaylord a wonderful diocese with “gifted clergy, generous deacons, dedicated Religious women, stellar schools, a tradition of prayerful liturgy, a rich history of cultivating lay leadership, and an exemplary commitment to Christian charity and social justice. What wasn’t to love? I would have been happy to spend the rest of my days here laboring in the vineyard at your side,” he added.

“In his six months as Successor of Peter, Pope Francis has captured the attention of the world by his humility and his deep pastoral concern for his flock,” Archbishop Hebda told the Faithful of Gaylord. “I am confident that he will soon bless the Diocese of Gaylord with precisely the Shepherd that you need.

“As I take up my responsibilities in Newark, I would ask that you occasionally remember to pray that I might joyfully serve the Lord in that radically different setting. You can be sure that you will always be remembered in mine,” he concluded.

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Newark Archdiocese to Get 2nd Archbishop

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey 101.5

A second archbishop is to be named in the Roman Catholic Church’s archdiocese in Newark, where the archbishop is nearing retirement age and has been under fire for his handling of the case of a priest barred from unsupervised contact with minors, a Catholic publication reported Monday.

Pope Francis is appointing a coadjutor archbishop to assist Archbishop John Myers, the National Catholic Reporter said. A coadjutor bishop is expected to succeed a bishop who retires or dies.

The bishop of Gaylord, Mich., Bernard Hebda, will be named to the post Tuesday, said the Reporter, citing unidentified sources.

The archdiocese, which serves nearly 1.5 million parishoners in northern New Jersey, declined to comment but said it would be making “an announcement of significance” on Tuesday.

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Argentine priest finally imprisoned for sex abuse

ARGENTINA
New Zealand Herald

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) A Roman Catholic priest who was convicted in Argentina of sexually abusing a boy has finally begun serving a 15-year sentence in prison.

Father Julio Cesar Grassi was something of a star in the Buenos Aires diocese, well-known for persuading Argentine celebrities to donate to the Happy Children Foundation.

His fortunes changed after some of the orphans he cared for accused him of abusing them in 1996.

Grassi was convicted in 2009, but was able to keep living across the street from the orphanage while he appealed. After the top provincial court upheld his sentence last week, Grassi was taken into custody Monday.

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Argentine priest jailed for sexually abusing teenager

ARGENTINA
euronews

[with video]

An Argentine court has sent a Roman Catholic priest to prison immediately to serve a 15-year sentence for sexually abusing a teenage boy.

Julio César Grassi was convicted four years ago for abuse at his “Happy Children Foundation”.

Last week the Supreme Court upheld the jail term after the 57-year-old was found to have breached his house arrest conditions.

He strongly denies the abuse.

“The experts said clearly that I do not have any of the features of a paedophile. No trace of paedophilia,” he told the court. “The prosecution lawyer is lying.”

Allegations against Reverend Grassi surfaced more than ten years ago.

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Argentine pedophile priest begins 15-year jail sentence

ARGENTINA
Tengri News

A well-known Argentine priest began a 15-year prison sentence for pedophilia Monday, four years after he was convicted, AFP reports.

A court ordered the immediate arrest of Julio Cesar Grassi, 57, who was on provisional release after being convicted in 2009.

The arrest came after the supreme court of Buenos Aires province upheld his conviction.

Grassi was found guilty of abusing a 15-year-old boy who had been living at the Felices los Ninos (Happy Children) foundation in Hurlingham, 25 kilometers (15 miles) west of Buenos Aires.

The victim, then 19, first publicly recounted the abuse on television in October 2002.

Two other victims later came forward with their own stories of abuse by the priest.

Grassi, who was well connected politically in the 1990s, gained media exposure soliciting donations from actors, newscasters and politicians for the foundation, which cared for some 6,000 children.

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Priest Grassi sent to prison, court confirms 15-year sentence

ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires Herald

The first criminal court of Morón has ordered the immediate detention of Julio César Grassi, who was present today as judges ruled that a 15-year prison sentence for sexual abuse of minors would be imposed with immediate effect.

The clergyman was escorted out of the courtroom by law officials after hearing the verdict, and will be transferred to Penitentiary Unit 39 in the Buenos Aires Province locality of Ituzaingo.

Prosecutor Alejandro Varela, speaking earlier in the day, had urged judges to issue an arrest warrant for Grassi, founder of the Happy Children Foundation. “Leaving Grassi in freedom is almost like collaborating with the crime,” the attorney fired.

For his part, the priest denied that he was a flight risk and criticised Varela as well as the media for their treatment of him.

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Ex-priest found guilty of child sex abuse

OHIO
Statesboro Herald

BY Holli Deal Bragg
hbragg@statesboroherald.com 912-489-9414

After a weeklong trial, a former Catholic priest in Ohio who once worked in Glennville, Claxton, and Pembroke was found guilty Friday on charges he took a 10-year-old boy across state lines for sexual purposes.

A group that follows cases of sexual abuse by clergy, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests — also known as SNAP — hopes other victims will surface and share their experiences with law enforcement.

Robert Poandl, 72, will be sentenced at a later date, according to reports. He has worked in the past in seven Georgia towns as part of Glenmary Home Missioners, which is based in Fairfield, Ohio.

He was found guilty by jury Friday of taking the Cincinnati boy to West Virginia in 1991 for the purpose of sexually assaulting him. He was indicted Nov. 14 in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, according to the FBI Cincinnati division website, www.fbi.gov/cincinnati.

The victim originally reported the incident in 2009, but the case was dismissed, according to reports. It was revisited in 2012.

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Former Savannah Diocese Priest Convicted of Sex Crimes

GEORGIA
WJBT

By Andrew Davis, Anchor/Reporter

CINCINNATI, OHIO –
A former Savannah Diocese priest was convicted of sex charges in a Ohio Federal Court.

Fr. Robert Poandl was convicted of one count of transportation of a minor across state lines for illicit purposes.

The 72 year old priest now faces up to 10 years in prison for the crime.

Poandl was accused of molesting a 10 year old boy 22 years ago in a West Virginia rectory.

From 2010-2012 Father Poandl worked in churches in Claxton, Pembroke and Sandhill.

This was the 3rd person who has come forward claiming Father Robert Poandl molested him when the victim was just a boy.

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Vittorio Lupi, l’uomo che ha trasformato una diocesi, un grave problema per la società civile.

ITALIA
Abuse Trackers

A Savona santa madre chiesa predica bene ma razzola…. malissimo.

Sono Francesco Zanardi, portavoce nazionale della Rete l’abuso, un ragazzo savonese che da anni si occupa di raccogliere, catalogare e denunciare storiacce di pedofilia e omertà a danno di minori perpetrate in particolare da ecclesiastici.

Io sono una vittima tra queste.

Uno che può essere antipatico, ma che ha svolto un lavoro corposo e delicatissimo nella raccolta e denuncia di casi analoghi, ora al vaglio di diverse Procure della Repubblica italiane compresa quella Savonese che ha già prodotto diverse condanne.

Uno che – su questi raccapriccianti argomenti- è stato intervistato dalle Iene, da Cnn, Servizio Pubblico e altre d testate internazionali. Uno che è diventato un simbolo per le vittime di questa lotta senza giustizia, in Italia.

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Manos a la Obra

ARGENTINA
Pagina/12

Por Claudia Fernández Chaparro *

En 1987, Julio César Grassi se ordenó sacerdote bajo el lema “El padre de los que no tienen padre” y, el 23 de diciembre de 1993, creó la Fundación Felices los Niños. El cura se convirtió en un marketinero profesional que logró que el ex ministro Domingo Cavallo le donara 5 millones de pesos y 65 hectáreas para que funcionara la sede central de “su obra”.

Habrá que revisar qué pasó con el fenómeno Grassi, por qué este hombre se convirtió en el adalid de la infancia sin ningún control eficiente, sin la mirada del Estado, creando ese megahogar carente de toda perspectiva de derechos.

El caso Grassi también nos interpela como sociedad. ¿Cómo se puede llegar a naturalizar el hecho de que miles de niños vivan todos juntos, en un mismo predio, yendo al colegio en el mismo lugar y recreándose allí, encerrados, sin contacto con el mundo exterior, sometidos al arbitrio de un cura que oficiaba de amo y señor de sus vidas?

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Una pausa de trece años

ARGENTINA
Pagina/12

Desde la primera denuncia, la defensa logró esquivar los pedidos de condena del cura y luego su detención. La condena fue ratificada hasta por la Corte provincial.

Primera denuncia. El 29 de noviembre de 2000 fue presentada la primera denuncia judicial contra el cura Julio César Grassi, en el Juzgado de Menores N° 3 de Morón. Dos menores conocidos bajo los seudónimos de “Gabriel” y “Ezequiel” declararon que habían sido abusados por el sacerdote mientras estaban en la Fundación Felices los Niños en Hurlingham. El 23 de octubre de 2002, Grassi fue detenido por orden de la titular del Juzgado de Garantías N° 1 de Morón, Mónica López Osornio. La jueza dispuso el procesamiento del cura por abuso sexual agravado contra un menor y corrupción en dos casos. El cura negó las acusaciones en su contra y acusó de extorsión a uno de los chicos denunciantes. El sacerdote quedó preso un mes y luego fue beneficiado con la libertad controlada.

Juicio oral. Luego de años de postergaciones judiciales, el juicio oral comenzó en agosto de 2008. La fiscalía pidió 30 años de cárcel para el cura, la querella 37 y la defensa solicitó la absolución del imputado. Durante nueve meses el juicio se realizó a puertas cerradas. Sólo para la lectura del veredicto se dejó entrar al público. El 10 de junio de 2009, el Tribunal Oral en lo Criminal Nº 1 de Morón condenó a Grassi a 15 años de prisión, por dos hechos cometidos en 1996 contra “Gabriel”, y lo absolvió por otros 15 hechos que le imputaban. Los jueces, en su fallo, consideraron como agravante la condición de sacerdote de Grassi. El cumplimiento de la pena, sin embargo, se haría efectivo una vez que la sentencia quedara firme, determinaron los magistrados. Si bien los jueces Luis María Andueza, Mario Daniel Gómez y Jorge Eduardo Carrera no ordenaron la detención del cura, sí le impusieron una serie de restricciones: presentarse el primer día hábil de cada mes ante el tribunal, no poder ir solo a la fundación y no poder salir del país.

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“Antisocial, temerario, impune y peligroso”

ARGENTINA
Pagina/12

La parte acusadora recordó a los jueces el peligro de fuga, lo irreversible de la sentencia y su personalidad particular.

@La acusación contra Julio César Grassi recorrió varios frentes: su peligrosidad en caso de permanecer en libertad, lo “irreversible” de su sentencia, el peligro de “fuga inminente” y sus antecedentes, la transparencia que –a pesar de las maniobras de “un operador judicial”– tuvo el proceso de la causa. Los argumentos para pedir que el sacerdote fuera privado de su libertad fueron aportados por los abogados de la querella Sergio Piris y Juan Pablo Gallego y el fiscal Alejandro Varela, quienes al aportarlos recorrieron, al recordar obstáculos y definir al condenado Grassi, los años de tramitación que lleva la causa.

Piris, querellante en nombre de “Gabriel”, nombre ficticio del joven por cuyo abuso el sacerdote fue condenado, denunció que Grassi gozaba de “impunidad” y había obtenido el beneficio de la libertad vigilada gracias a la presión de “sectores de la Iglesia”, “amigos empresarios” y la actuación de un “operador judicial”. El querellante también señaló que, durante todas las instancias judiciales, el acusado finalmente condenado había visto respetadas sus garantías, incluyendo el principio de inocencia. Luego el fiscal Varela señalaría que las pruebas, la condena y sus sucesivas confirmaciones habían destruido esa presunción. “La gente se pregunta por qué Grassi está en libertad. Yo la respuesta no la tengo. La respuesta la tienen que dar ustedes, señores jueces. Grassi se manejó con impunidad.” Como sucedería luego durante el alegato de la defensa, Piris mencionó al papa Francisco. El pontífice, dijo, sostiene que “todos los pedófilos, como es Julio César Grassi, tienen que estar en su lugar: la cárcel”. Sin embargo, el cura gozaba de privilegios “de un actor de cine”.

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El rebaño del cura

ARGENTINA
Pagina/12

Una veintena de seguidores del cura condenado hicieron ruido, lloraron y rezaron por él. Se la tomaron a golpes con un camarógrafo e intentaron lo mismo con un querellante.

Por Carlos Rodríguez

“Paz para este hombre, paz para un hombre que tiene el demonio adentro.” Dos mujeres de unos sesenta años, vestidas con discreción, una de ellas con un vestido propio de una religiosa, le arrojaban “agua bendecida” al abogado querellante Juan Pablo Gallego, quien había bajado de un automóvil en la puerta de los tribunales de Morón y estaba haciendo declaraciones a la prensa. Aunque algunos periodistas reaccionaron con atendible molestia por la “lluvia” que estaban recibiendo junto con el “endiablado” Gallego, el gesto de esas dos casi amables defensoras de la “inocencia” del cura Julio César Grassi contrastaba con los gestos y palabras de otras manifestantes mucho más jóvenes, que le dedicaron frases y gestos violentos al abogado: “Gallego mentiroso, la puta que te parió”.

Esa mezcla de adherentes serenas y ofuscadas –la mayoría eran mujeres con remeras o banderas de la Fundación Felices Los Niños– se repitió luego de conocerse la sentencia que envió a prisión a Grassi: algunas manifestantes se fueron llorando, otras golpearon en los testículos a un camarógrafo que las filmaba y varias intentaron linchar a Gallego, cuándo no, pero la policía pudo impedirlo. El abogado querellante, por su exposición mediática tal vez, fue quien despertó mayor virulencia.

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Viaje de Hurlingham al pabellón bonaerense

ARGENTINA
Pagina/12

Después de varias horas de cuarto intermedio, los jueces ordenaron que Grassi fuera enviado a la cárcel de Ituzaingó, en su jurisdicción canónica. Es posible que sea trasladado al penal 41 de Campana. Crónica de un día cruzado de acusaciones.

Por Carlos Rodríguez

Un Julio César Grassi en apariencia inmutable, aunque la tensión se le marcaba en los pómulos, sobre la línea que marca la mandíbula, y en la dureza de la mirada que dirigió a los jueces, escuchó ayer la sentencia del Tribunal Oral Nº 1 de Morón por la cual se ordenó su inmediata detención en la Unidad Penitenciaria 39 de Ituzaingó. Fue el único gesto benévolo, dado que la prisión queda dentro de la diócesis de Morón, a la que sigue perteneciendo el cura, a pesar de que su condena a 15 años de prisión por “abuso sexual y corrupción de menores” ya ha sido ratificada por una decena de jueces. El gesto, sin embargo, podría quedar trunco porque el Servicio Penitenciario provincial pidió que lo trasladen a la Unidad 41, de Campana, de máxima seguridad. “Hoy por hoy pesan sobre la cabeza del acusado tres fallos dictados por órganos judiciales de diferente instancia, agotando la jurisdicción provincial” y “confirmando (…) la culpabilidad del encartado y el consiguiente cumplimiento de la pena”, se dijo en la resolución, que fue leída, con voz firme, por la presidenta del tribunal, Mariana Maldonado.

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MEDIA RELEASE

NEWARK (NJ)
Road to Recovery

Appointment of Coadjutor Archbishop of Newark Not Enough
Myers Must Resign or be Fired and Investigated for Criminal Activity against Innocent Children, Teenagers, and Vulnerable Adults
Archbishop-in-Waiting Must Immediately Release Names and Files Concerning Predatory Priests

What: A demonstration celebrating the lessening of power for Archbishop John J.
Myers, a signaling of a “changing of the guard” in the Archdiocese of Newark and a corresponding call for the new coadjutor (with right of succession) Archbishop, Bernard Hebna, to immediately release files and information regarding sexually abusive clergy in the Archdiocese of Newark. The Newark Archdiocese will be called upon to end years of cover-up, deceit, and injustice against innocent children, teenagers, and vulnerable adults.

When: Tuesday, September 24, 2013 from 9:00 AM until Noon.

Where: On the sidewalk outside the headquarters of the Archdiocese of Newark, 171
Clifton Avenue, Newark, NJ, 07104.

Who: Members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of
sexual abuse, including its co-founder and President; survivors of sexual abuse, and supporters.

Why: The appointment of Bishop Bernard Hebna as coadjutor archbishop of Newark
indicates a major change in the Catholic Church in New Jersey. It is clear that Archbishop Myers has lost authority because of twelve years of cover-up, deceit, obfuscation, and disregard for truth, justice, and honesty. Demonstrators will call for Myers to leave immediately so the new coadjutor archbishop can begin to clean up the mess Myers made during the past twelve years. The Archdiocese of Newark is in serious crisis, and the removal or resignation of Archbishop John Myers is crucial if the Archbishop-in-waiting is going to be able to effect necessary change.

Contact: Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800

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Bishop pens letter to potential victims to come forward

PENNSYLVANIA
Citizens Voice

BY JOSEPH KOHUT (STAFF WRITER)
Published: September 24, 2013

The Diocese of Scranton appealed to its faithful for help in the investigation of a priest accused of having sex with a 15-year-old boy.

A letter penned by Bishop Joseph C. Bambera was read Sunday at each parish The Rev. William Paulish served, asking anyone with similar allegations against the priest to come forward.

“With sadness and a deep concern for you, I encourage anyone who may have been involved in or may be aware of any abusive situation involving (the Rev. Paulish) to immediately contact the Lackawanna County district attorney’s office at 570-963-6717 or local law enforcement,” Bishop Bambera wrote.

The diocese provided a copy of the bishop’s letter to The Times-Tribune on Monday, but officials refused to answer questions about the Rev. Paulish’s 14 reassignments and four leaves of absence over a 25-year career.

The Rev. Paulish, 56, of Blakely, was arraigned Friday after he was discovered in his red 2009 Toyota Venza, having just performed sex acts with a 15-year-old boy in a Penn State Worthington Scranton parking lot Thursday night, police said. Prosecutors would not comment Monday on whether the bishop’s appeal had generated any tips for investigators.

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Church overlooked paedophile priest to avoid scandal: inquiry told

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By MICHELLE HARRIS Sept. 24, 2013

THE Maitland-Newcastle Diocese “simply overlooked” 25 years of paedophile priest Denis McAlinden’s offending “in the interest of avoiding some scandal”, the Special Commission of Inquiry has been told.

Barrister for Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox, Mark Cohen, told the inquiry on Tuesday morning McAlinden had been moved around almost constantly from diocese to diocese, and to PNG and New Zealand, from 1969 to the 1990s to ensure he was “kept out of the way”.

By December 1971 it was observed McAlinden had left PNG because he was “very rough with the native people”.

By May 1976, McAlinden had been “run out of town again”from Forster-Tuncurry “by angry parents”, Mr Cohen said.

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John Furlong responds to former students’ abuse lawsuits

CANADA
The Tyee

By BOB MACKIN
Published September 23, 2013

Former Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics CEO John Furlong has denied in Sept. 23 court filings that he physically or sexually abused two students at a northern British Columbia Catholic school for aboriginal children in 1969 and 1970.

Furlong’s statements of defence counter July 24 lawsuits by Beverly Mary Abraham and Grace Jessie West. Furlong says that he does not recall whether he even taught or coached them while he volunteered at Immaculata Elementary School in Burns Lake, B.C.

“The defendant denies that he sexually molested or physically abused or engaged in any inappropriate conduct,” said the statements, which were filed in B.C. Supreme Court by Furlong’s lawyer John Hunter.

Abraham and West both claim Furlong abused them 44 years ago and accuse him of defaming them at a Sept. 27, 2012 news conference, where Furlong denied abuse allegations contained in a Georgia Straight feature story that was headlined “John Furlong biography omits secret past in Burns Lake.” Furlong filed a defamation lawsuit against the newspaper and reporter Laura Robinson last November.

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Furlong hits back at abuse allegations in court

CANADA
24 Hours

By Jeremy Nuttall, 24 hours Vancouver
Monday, September 23, 2013

Former VANOC boss John Furlong filed responses to civil claims alleging sexual abuse committed by him in B.C. Supreme Court Monday.

The responses were to allegations made in a claim filed July 24, 2013, by Grace West and Beverly Abraham.

West alleged while she was attending Immaculata Roman Catholic Elementary in Burns Lake, B.C. in 1969 she was physically and sexually abused by Furlong, the CEO for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games.

“The defendant Furlong sexually molested the plaintiff,” read West’s statement. “The defendant Furlong would touch the plaintiff sexually approximately once a week.”

Furlong’s legal response said he doesn’t remember if he coached the girls during the time of the allegations.

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Aboriginal man alleges he was sexually abused by former Vancouver Olympics chief John Furlong

CANADA
National Post

Brian Hutchinson | 23/09/13

An Aboriginal man has come forward with allegations claiming that Vancouver Olympic Winter Games chief executive John Furlong sexually abused him on three occasions almost 40 years ago, at the same B.C. elementary school where other former students have accused Mr. Furlong of committing assaults.

In a statement of claim filed Monday in B.C. Supreme Court, Daniel Morice claims that during the 1969-1970 academic year, Mr. Furlong, then a physical education teacher at Immaculata Roman Catholic Elementary School in Burns Lake, B.C., “isolated” him in a small room at the school. On two occasions, the plaintiff claims, Mr. Furlong “removed his penis from his pants and showed it to the plaintiff and forced the plaintiff to touch and masturbate him.”

On the last occasion, Mr. Furlong “penetrated the plaintiff’s anus with his penis,” it is alleged. Mr. Morice, who now lives in Smithers, B.C., was nine years old at the time of the alleged events. The new accusations have not been tested in court.

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Third lawsuit alleging sexual abuse filed against Furlong

CANADA
CTV News

Dene Moore, The Canadian Press
Published Monday, September 23, 2013

VANCOUVER — The former head of the Vancouver Olympic Games has formally denied sexual abuse allegations from two former students, even as another former student has filed a lawsuit alleging he, too, was abused by John Furlong.

In a civil lawsuit filed in Vancouver on Monday, a man said he was a nine-year-old student at Immaculata School in Burns Lake, B.C., when Furlong arrived as a volunteer teacher in 1969.

The man said Furlong isolated him in a small room after class, and on two occasions forced him to masturbate him. On a third occasion, the statement of claim said there was forced anal intercourse by Furlong.

“The defendant John Furlong told the plaintiff that if he ever told anyone about the abuse no one would believe him.”

The man said he has suffered emotionally and psychologically from the abuse, and “was generally disempowered as a result of racism and geographic isolation.”

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Furlong files documents denying allegations he abused students

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

SUNNY DHILLON
Vancouver — The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Sep. 23 2013

Former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong has filed court documents in which he denies sexually abusing two students when he was a physical education teacher.

Mr. Furlong, the public face of Vancouver’s 2010 Games, was sued in late July by two women who said they were abused as students more than 40 years ago. The allegations have not been proven.

He also said he could not recall teaching either Beverly Mary Abraham or Grace Jessie West during his time at Immaculata School in Burns Lake, B.C.

Allegations that Mr. Furlong physically abused several Aboriginal students first surfaced last September in the alternative weekly newspaper the Georgia Straight. Mr. Furlong filed a lawsuit against the newspaper, as well as the article’s author, in November.

Ms. Abraham was quoted in the story. Ms. West was not.

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Furlong denies abuse allegations in statement of defence

CANADA
CBC

Former VANOC CEO John Furlong has denied abusing two former students at a Burns Lake elementary school in a statement of defence filed in B.C. Supreme Court today.

Grace West and Beverly Abraham both claim to have been sexually and physically abused by Furlong while he was a physical education teacher in the Burns Lake area in late 1960s and early 1970s.

The two women filed a civil claim against Furlong in July, seeking compensation for the abuse and alleging defamation after he suggested at a press conference in September of last year that unnamed people were lying in an attempt to extort him.

In court documents filed Monday in the two cases, Furlong said he doesn’t recall if he taught West and Abraham during his time as a volunteer teacher at the Catholic school in northern British Columbia more than four decades ago.

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Peru: Ex-bishop accused of sex abuse admitted acting “imprudently”

PERU
This Week in Peru

By Rachel Chase

In a letter to church officials, Ayacucho priest Miranda denied criminal activity but admitted to making mistakes in judgment.

A letter written by former Auxiliary Bishop of Ayacucho, Gabino Miranda is shedding some light on the reasons for his recent removal. Miranda, who was dismissed from his post as auxiliary bishop in the Peruvian city of Ayacucho, has been accused of sexually abusing children. Miranda denies any criminal activity.

At this time, not much is known about the exact nature of the allegations, but a Peruvian church official confirmed to the press that Miranda’s removal was a result of new Pope Francis’s “zero tolerance” policy for sex offenders.

However, a newly revealed letter written by Miranda to church officials in Rome has provided some insight into the case. According to Peru21, the July 1 letter was sent as part of Miranda’s effort to appeal the Vatican’s decision to remove him from his post. In it, Miranda writes “I recognize that in some circumstances I have been imprudent […] but furthermore, I reiterate that in the conscience and presence of God, the supposed offenses cannot be characterized as crimes against the [sixth commandment].” The sixth commandment prohibits sexual activity outside of the bounds of marriage.

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STATEMENT REGARDING REVEREND W. JEFFREY PAULISH

SCRANTON (PA)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton

On September 20, 2013, the Diocese of Scranton was notified of an incident involving Father W. Jeffrey Paulish, a priest of the Diocese of Scranton, who according to law enforcement officials was discovered in an inappropriate sexual act with a minor. Upon being notified of this incident, the cleric was immediately removed from his assignment and his faculties to exercise priestly ministry were suspended. The Diocese has pledged its cooperation to law enforcement and asks that anyone who may have been sexually abused by Father Paulish or any member of the clergy notify the Lackawanna County District Attorney’s Office at (570) 963-6717 or local law enforcement.

In response to this situation, the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton, expressed his remorse and personal sorrow for the young man who was victimized and his family. In expressing his concern for the Prince of Peace parish community, where Father Paulish most recently served, as well as the faithful and clergy of the Diocese of Scranton, the Bishop said, “I wish to acknowledge how unsettling this is to me personally and to countless others, that yet again a priest has been involved in such inappropriate, immoral and illegal behavior.” The Bishop requests that the faithful of the Diocese join him in praying for this victim and all who are impacted by child sexual abuse.

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Twin Cities archdiocese knew of priest’s compulsions, report says

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Associated Press

When the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer was accused last year of sexually abusing children, officials from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis told police he would immediately be relieved of his duties and were praised for their quick response.

But top archdiocese officials had known of Wehmeyer’s sexual compulsions for nearly a decade yet kept him in ministry and failed to warn parishioners, Minnesota Public Radio News reported Monday. MPR cited canon lawyer Jennifer Haselberger, who resigned in April, and dozens of other interviews and documents.

A 2011 memo shows the former vicar general — the top deputy of the archdiocese — did not want employees at Wehmeyer’s parish to know about his past. “At every step of the way, this could have been prevented,” Haselberger said.

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Bishop wasn’t adequately trained to deal with abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

The New South Wales inquiry into child sexual abuse has heard the former bishop of the Hunter Valley’s Catholic Church was not adequately trained to deal with paedophile priests.

The special commission is investigating senior policeman Peter Fox’s claims police and the church covered up abuse by two priests, James Fletcher and Denis McAlinden.

In summing up today, his barrister Mark Cohen told the inquiry paedophile priest Denis McAlinden was moved from diocese to diocese “in the interest of avoiding scandal”.

Simon Harben, representing the former Maitland-Newcastle bishop Michael Malone, urged the commissioner on several occasions not to make any adverse findings against his client.

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Prominent Priest Finally Jailed In Argentina For Sexually Abusing Minor

ARGENTINA
inSerbia

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina – Father Julio César Grassi, a Roman Catholic priest in the Buenos Aires suburb of Morón, has been ordered to serve his prison sentence after a court ruling denied his pleas to remain under house arrest.

In 2009, the priest was convicted by a three-judge panel in the criminal court of Morón of sexually abusing a minor, a teenage boy. In that case, the prosecutor was seeking a 30-year sentence for the priest and eventually, the court sentenced him to fifteen years after finding him guilty of two of the seventeen charges he was facing, the most grave of those being sexual abuse and “corruption” of a minor.

Grassi repeatedly appealed the ruling and was rejected three times, including last week at his final appeal at the Supreme Court of Buenos Aires Province in the city of La Plata. That ruling paved the way for the priest to be taken back to the court that originally tried him in Morón for final sentencing. There, he tried to appeal once again, this time regarding the way the sentence would be served and not the length of the sentence.

The court in Morón then rejected that appeal, ordering Grassi to the original fifteen year prison sentence he received in 2009, minus one month that he served that year.

The case piqued the interest of people in Argentina and elsewhere in Latin America, a country and a region long associated with powerful catholic clergies and figures. The judicial system was criticized by many in Argentina for seemingly granting the priest many privileges that non-clergy do not enjoy, like receiving house arrest only one month after beginning his fifteen year sentence under certain conditions.

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Priests aware of abuse claims: NSW inquiry

AUSTRALIA
9 News

At least five senior Catholic priests were well aware of sexual abuse allegations against serial Hunter Valley paedophile priest Denis McAlinden years before a church official notified police, a special commission of inquiry has heard.

Speaking on behalf of McAlinden victims, Barrister Maria Gerace said former Maitland/Newcastle diocese bishops Leo Clarke and Michael Malone; former vicar generals Bill Burston and Allan Hart; and Fr Brian Lucas, a church law expert who had investigated more than 30 cases of alleged child sexual abuse by NSW Catholic priests all knew about the allegations.

Ms Gerace was addressing commissioner Margaret Cunneen in Newcastle Supreme Court on the second last day of public hearings into how police and church leaders handled child sexual abuse allegations involving two Hunter priests, Fr McAlinden and James Fletcher.

A church official notified police in 1999 of some allegations against Fr McAlinden, but as his whereabouts were allegedly unknown by church leaders he was then not spoken to by police until 2005, shortly before he died of cancer in a West Australian Catholic home.

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NOMINA DEL COADIUTORE DI NEWARK (U.S.A.)

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service – Bolletino

Il Santo Padre ha nominato Arcivescovo Coadiutore di Newark (U.S.A.) S.E. Mons. Bernard Anthony Hebda, finora Vescovo di Gaylord.

S.E. Mons. Bernard Anthony Hebda

S.E. Mons. Bernard Anthony Hebda è nato a Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) il 3 settembre 1959.
Laureatosi all’Harvard University nel 1980 in Scienze Politiche, ha ottenuto il Juris Doctor dalla Columbia Law School presso la Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law nel 1983.
Ha compiuto gli studi filosofici presso il Saint Paul Seminary a Pittsburgh (1984-1985). Inviato a Roma al Pontificio Collegio Americano del Nord, ha frequentato la Pontificia Università Gregoriana dove ha ottenuto il Baccalaureato in Teologia (1985-1988) e, poi, la Licenza in Diritto Canonico (1988-1990).

Ordinato sacerdote il 1° luglio 1989 per la diocesi di Pittsburgh, ha ricoperto i seguenti incarichi: Vicario parrocchiale nella Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish ad Ellwood City (1989); Segretario personale dell’allora Vescovo di Pittsburgh, S.E. Mons. Donald W. Wuerl e Maestro delle Cerimonie (1990-1992); Parroco in solidum nella Prince of Peace Parish a Pittsburgh (South Side) (1992-1995); Giudice del Tribunale diocesano (1992-1996); Direttore del Newman Center della Slippery Rock State University (1995-1996).

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September 23, 2013

Argentine priest Julio Grassi jailed over sexual abuse

ARGENTINA
BBC News

A prominent Roman Catholic priest in Argentina has been jailed, four years after being convicted of sexually abusing a teenage-boy.

A court in Buenos Aires province rejected an appeal by Father Julio Cesar Grassi, who has been sentenced to 15 years in jail, to remain under house arrest.

He was convicted in 2009 of abusing the boy at his “Happy Children” foundation.

He insists he is innocent and says the case is based on false evidence.

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STORY OF ARCHDIOCESE OF ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS’ WEHMEYER COVER-UP SHOCKINGLY FAMILIAR

MNNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates:

JEFFREY R. ANDERSON

Today’s Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) story about the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ failure to protect its parishioners from one of its predator priests, Fr. Curtis Wehmeyer, needs to be read by everyone. The headline – “Archdiocese knew of priest’s sexual misbehavior, yet kept him in ministry” – itself tells the story. From there, the details of Archdiocesan self-preservation and negligence are disserving and alarming.

In 2012, Wehmeyer was convicted of criminal sexual conduct and possessing child pornography in connection with Wehmeyer’s sexual abuse of two boys, ages 12 and 14, in a camper he kept parked outside Blessed Sacrament Church in St. Paul, where he served for six years. He supplied the two boys with alcohol and molested them in the camper.

Prior to Wehmeyer’s arrest in the summer of 2012 for sexually abusing the boys, the Archdiocese had ample information regarding his prior sexual conduct but failed to warn parishioners, according to MPR. The Archdiocese learned early on that Wehmeyer sexually propositioned young men at a bookstore, cruised a local park known for anonymous sex, solicited a teenager to camp with him, and approached another priest for sex, and yet the Archdiocese kept him in ministry, placing him a new parish in 2008 and 2010. Archdiocesan knowledge of the reports pre-dated Wehmeyer’s abuse of the two boys. “Top archdiocese leaders knew of Wehmeyer’s sexual compulsions for nearly a decade but kept him in the ministry and failed to warn parishioners …” according to today’s story, citing a former Archdiocesan canon lawyer, Jennifer Haselberger, and dozens of other interviews and documents.

Rev. Kevin McDonough, the Archdiocesan Vicar General from 1991 – 2008, wrote in 2011, wrote in 2011 an internal memo defending the Archdiocese’s decision to keep Wehmeyer’s sexual behavior secret. Interviewed for today’s MPR story, McDonough continues to defend the Archdiocese’s handling of the Wehmeyer matter, “I have no regrets based on the information we have.”

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Police investigating Maplewood priest for sexual misconduct

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
September 23, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Maplewood police say they have been investigating allegations of criminal sexual misconduct by a Maplewood priest since May 1.

The Rev. Mark Huberty, pastor of the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Maplewood, has taken a voluntary leave of absence over an allegation he inappropriately touched a woman, which he denies.

Maplewood Deputy Police Chief Dave Kvam said the conduct involving Huberty occurred over an unspecified period of time.

“There’s no safety risk to others and no indication that this would involve more than one victim — at least at this point,” Kvam said.

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Court confirms Grassi sentence, priest sent to prison

ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires Herald

The first criminal court of Morón has ordered the immediate detention of Julio César Grassi, who was present today as judges ruled that a 15-year prison sentence for sexual abuse of minors would be imposed with immediate effect.

The clergyman was escorted out of the courtroom by law officials after hearing the verdict, and will be transferred to Penitentiary Unit 39 in the Buenos Aires Province locality of Ituzaingo.

Prosecutor Alejandro Varela, speaking earlier in the day, had urged judges to issue an arrest warrant for Grassi, founder of the Happy Children Foundation. “Leaving Grassi in freedom is almost like collaborating with the crime,” the attorney fired.

For his part, the priest denied that he was a flight risk and criticised Varela as well as the media for their treatment of him.

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Ramsey Co. Attorney: Archdiocese’s response to priest’s misconduct ‘troubling’

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio,
Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
September 23, 2013

Ramsey County’s top prosecutor says he’s deeply concerned about the way the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis handled the case of a priest who was known to be a sex addict — and who was later convicted of child sexual abuse.

An MPR News investigation found that Catholic Church leaders did not alert parishioners to the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer’s past, and didn’t immediately report allegations of abuse to police.

Wehmeyer would later plead guilty to abusing two boys in his parish. Ramsey County Attorney John Choi told MPR News today that he found the report “troubling.”

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A prisión cura argentino condenado por abuso

ARGENTINA
El Nuevo Herald

BY POR DEBORA REY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BUENOS AIRES — Un tribunal argentino ordenó el lunes la detención del sacerdote Julio César Grassi, quien gozaba del beneficio de la libertad pese a estar condenado desde 2009 a 15 años de cárcel por abuso sexual de un menor.

La medida fue dispuesta por el Tribunal Oral en lo Criminal N 1 de Morón, al oeste de Buenos Aires, seis días después de que la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la provincia de Buenos Aires dejó firme la sentencia contra el cura por pedofilia.

“Se debe hacer cesar la alternativa de la libertad vigilada y proceder a la inmediata detención de Julio César Grassi en el entendimiento que una decisión en contrario a esta altura sería de alta gravedad institucional e impediría restablecer las vigencia de las normas y la confianza en la justicia”, según la resolución de los tres jueces del tribunal.

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A cuatro años de la condena, Grassi irá a la cárcel por abuso sexual

ARGENTINA
La Voz

El cura Julio César Grassi deberá ir preso, ya que el Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón decidió esta tarde su “inmediata detención” para que cumpla su condena a 15 años de cárcel por los delitos de abuso sexual y corrupción de menores.

El sacerdote salesiano y extitular de la “Fundación Felices los Niños”, de 57 años, tomó conocimiento de que perdía el privilegio de la libertad vigilada en una audiencia realizada en la sede del tribunal.

Desde 2009 Grassi estaba condenado a 15 años de encierro pero el mismo tribunal le había otorgado el beneficio de la libertad vigilada, por lo que vivía en una casa quinta ubicada enfrente de su fundación, escenario de los hechos juzgados.

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Un largo proceso que lleva más de diez años

ARGENTINA
El Tribuno

El caso del padre Julio César Grassi generó una situación insólita en la Justicia, donde pese a ser confirmada en dos instancias su condena a 15 años de prisión, siguió gozando hasta hoy de la libertad, en un derrotero judicial que aún no tiene fin. El 10 de junio de 2009 el Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón condenó a 15 años a Grassi por ‘abuso sexual agravado por resultar sacerdote, encargado de la educación y de la guarda del menor víctima, reiterado, dos hechos, en concurso real entre sí, que a su vez concurren formalmente con corrupción de menores agravada‘.

No obstante, y pese a los pedidos de las tres querellas y el fiscal Alejandro Varela, Grassi pudo seguir en libertad hasta esta noche porque el Tribunal entendió que no debía ir detenido hasta tanto ese fallo quedase firme. En cambio, le impusieron una libertad vigilada que implicó determinadas reglas de conducta como el no ausentarse de su domicilio, no hablar de las víctimas del caso en público y la prohibición de ingresar a la Fundación Felices Los Niños donde ocurrieron los hechos y a metros de la vivienda donde actualmente vive el religioso.

Las querellas y la fiscalía apelaron y en septiembre de 2010 la Cámara de Casación Bonaerense confirmó la condena. Pese a lo que se preveía y tal cual ocurre en la mayoría de los casos, Grassi pudo permanecer en libertad.

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Julio Grassi irá a prisión

ARGENTINA
La Nacion

El sacerdote Julio César Grassi deberá cumplir prisión efectiva por la pena de corrupción de menores y abuso sexual agravado por la que se lo condenó durante 15 años. De este modo perdió el beneficio de libertad vigilada que tenía, una resolución extraordinaria de la que gozó cuatro años pese a estar condenado a un delito grave. A esto lo definió hoy tras la audiencia de partes el Tribunal Oral Criminal (TOC) N° 1 de Morón.

Grassi quedó a disposición del servicio penitencial bonaerense. Será alojado en la unidad penitenciaria 39 de Ituzaingó.

La resolución se dio a conocer poco después de las 19 en la sede de los tribunales de Morón, luego de que esta tarde los jueces rechazaran la recusación de la defensa de Grassi.

El sacerdote fue condenado por el TOC 1 en junio del 2009 a 15 años de prisión por haber abusado de un menor que alojaba en guarda judicial en la Fundación Felices los Niños y la condena fue confirmada en tres instancias.

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The Church of the Blessed Sacrament in St. Paul

MINNESOTA
Grand Forks Herald

The Church of the Blessed Sacrament is on St. Paul’s east side. It merged with St. Thomas the Apostle under the archdiocese’s 2011 reorganization plan to form the Parish of the Blessed Sacrament. When the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer was accused in 2012 of sexually abusing children, officials from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis told police he would immediately be relieved of his duties and were praised for their response. But Minnesota Public Radio reports top archdiocese officials had known of Wehmeyer’s sexual compulsions for nearly a decade yet kept him in ministry and failed to warn parishioners.

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Charge: Archdiocese knew of convicted sex offender

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

Good luck defending this one … . At MPR Madeleine Baran reports, “Curtis Wehmeyer kept his white 2006 camper parked outside Blessed Sacrament Church in St. Paul where he served for six years, three of them as pastor. With the shades drawn, Wehmeyer could avoid the obligations of priestly life. He got drunk, smoked pot and looked at child pornography. He also lured to the camper two boys whose mother worked at the parish, plied them with alcohol, turned on pornography and told them to touch themselves. Several times, he touched one of the boys, according to police records. The family trusted ‘Father Curt.’ As a priest, he had special powers. He could anoint the sick and baptize the young. Maybe, the mother hoped, he could inspire one of her sons to become a priest. … This wasn’t the first time Wehmeyer had been in trouble. Top archdiocese leaders knew of Wehmeyer’s sexual compulsions for nearly a decade but kept him in ministry and failed to warn parishioners, according to canon lawyer Jennifer Haselberger, who resigned in April, and dozens of other interviews and documents. A memo written in 2011 obtained by MPR News from police shows the former vicar general – the top deputy of the archdiocese – did not want parish employees to know about Wehmeyer’s past.”

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Minnesota church officials covered up priest’s child molestation before turning him in

MINNESOTA
The Raw Story

By Arturo Garcia
Monday, September 23, 2013

Officials within the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota, were aware that one of its priests was sexually abusing minors for years before he was convicted, Minnesota Public Radio reported.

The archdiocese allegedly became aware of Curtis Wehmeyer’s illicit activities in 2005, seven years before his 2012 conviction on charges of criminal sexual conduct, and possession of child pornography. He is currently serving a five-year prison sentence.

MPR also published a 2011 memo from then-local vicar general, Rev. Kevin McDonough, recommending against making Wehmeyer’s actions known to parish employees. McDonough’s job duties included supervising the archdiocese’s efforts to protect young parishoners from sexual abuse. He resigned in September 2013.

“Disclosure in the church-rectory-office setting is aimed at preventing a priest from misusing his position as a priest to obtain impermissible favors (sex, money, information) from those to whom he ministers,” McDonough wrote in the memo. “With Father Wehmeyer, that has never been a question.”

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Survivor’s group calls for inquiry of abusive priest, archdiocese response after MPR story

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
September 23, 2013

A group representing people who have been abused by priests is calling for a criminal investigation of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, following revelations that archdiocese officials knew about a priest’s sexual compulsions for at least a decade before police arrested him for sexually abusing two boys.

Bob Schwiderski, director of the Minnesota chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said he wants a grand jury to investigate whether Catholic leaders violated any laws by not immediately reporting the abuse once they learned of it.

The call follows an MPR News investigation that found archdiocese officials knew about the sexual history of priest Curtis Wehmeyer, but disregarded it. Wehmeyer later sexually abused two young boys. Police arrested him in 2012. He pleaded guilty and is now serving five years in prison.

“If the institutions need to be woken up, so be it,” Schwiderski said. “It’s time for a criminal investigation into the acts or non-acts of the top religious officials of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.”

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Ex-priest found guilty of child sex abuse

OHIO
Statesboro Herald

BY Holli Deal Bragg
hbragg@statesboroherald.com 912-489-9414

After a weeklong trial, a former Catholic priest in Ohio who once worked in Glennville, Claxton, and Pembroke was found guilty Friday on charges he took a 10-year-old boy across state lines for sexual purposes.

A group that follows cases of sexual abuse by clergy, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests — also known as SNAP — hopes other victims will surface and share their experiences with law enforcement.

Robert Poandl, 72, will be sentenced at a later date, according to reports. He has worked in the past in seven Georgia towns as part of Glenmary Home Missioners, which is based in Fairfield, Ohio.

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The real test of Francis’ reform: touching the spiritually poor

National Catholic Reporter

Hans Kung | Sep. 23, 2013

This is the first of a series of articles examining Pope Francis’ recent interviews. A new article will be published each day this week on NCRonline.org.

Pope Francis shows courage: not only in his brave appearance in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, but also by entering into an open dialogue with critical nonbelievers. He has written an open letter to leading Italian intellectual Eugenio Scalfari, founder and longtime editor in chief of the major liberal Roman daily newspaper La Repubblica. These are not papal instructions, but a friendly exchange of arguments on equal levels.

Among the 12 questions from Scalfari printed in La Repubblica Sept. 11, the fourth seems to me of particular importance for a church leadership ready for reforms: Jesus perceived his kingdom not to be of this world — “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” — but the Catholic church especially, writes Scalfari, all too often submits to the temptations of worldly power and represses the spiritual dimension of the church in favor of worldliness. Scalfari’s question: “Does Pope Francis represent after all the priority of a poor and pastoral church over an institutional and worldly church?”

Let’s focus on the facts:

From the beginning, Francis has dispensed with papal pomp and glory and engaged in direct contact with people.

* In his words and gestures, he has not presented himself as the spiritual lord of lords, but rather as the “servant of the servants of God” (Gregory the Great).
* Facing numerous financial scandals and the avarice of church leaders, he has initiated decisive reforms of the Vatican bank and the papal state and called for transparent financial politics.
* By establishing a commission of eight cardinals from the different continents, he has underlined the need for curial reforms and collegiality with the bishops.

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NY diocese appeals Vermont ruling in priest sex abuse case

VERMONT/NEW YORK
Burlington Free Press

Written by
SAM HEMINGWAY
Free Press Staff Writer

The Albany, N.Y., Roman Catholic Diocese is disputing a Vermont federal judge’s decision to allow a case to proceed involving claims a New York priest abused a youth during trips to Vermont in the 1980s.

In papers filed at U.S. District Court in Burlington earlier this month, the New York diocese claims that federal court in Vermont lacks authority to preside over the case.

The lawsuit was filed in 2011 by a New York man who claims he was molested repeatedly as a young boy by the Rev. Gary J. Mercure of Albany, N.Y., during visits to Vermont.

The Burlington Free Press does not publish the names of victims of alleged sex crimes without their permission.

Mercure is serving a 20-year sentence in Massachusetts for sexually assaulting two former altar boys, including the victim in the Vermont case, during ski trips. He has been banished from priestly duties by the diocese but has not been defrocked.

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JURY CONVICTS PRIEST OF ILLEGAL INTERSTATE TRANSPORTATION OF A MINOR

OHIO
The United States Attorney’s Office, District of Southern Ohio

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2013
http://www.justice.gov/usao/ohs
CONTACT: Fred Alverson
Public Affairs Officer
(614) 469-5715

CINCINNATI – A U.S. District Court jury has convicted Robert Frank Poandl, 72, of Fairfield, Ohio of one count of interstate transportation of a minor for illicit purposes, a federal law known as the Mann Act.

Carter M. Stewart, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, Kevin R. Cornelius, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), William Hayes, Acting Special Agent in Charge of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in Ohio and Michigan; and agencies in the Greater Cincinnati Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force announced the verdict reached today following a trial that began September 16 before U.S. District Judge Michael R. Barrett.

According to trial testimony, in August 1991, Poandl transported a ten-year old boy from Cincinnati to Spencer, West Virginia where he sexually assaulted the child. The crime was not disclosed until the victim came forward in 2009. The crime is punishable by a sentence ranging from zero to ten years in prison. Judge Barrett will set a date for sentencing.

“Today’s verdict should give victims courage to come forward, even if the abuse happened years ago,” U.S. Attorney Stewart said.

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El cura Julio Grassi va a la cárcel por corrupción de menores y abuso sexual agravado

ARGENTINA
El Sol

El cura Julio César Grassi deberá ir preso, ya que el Tribunal Oral Criminal 1 de Morón decidió esta tarde su “inmediata detención” para que cumpla su condena a 15 años de cárcel por los delitos de abuso sexual y corrupción de menores.

El sacerdote salesiano y ex titular de la “Fundación Felices los Niños”, de 57 años, tomó conocimiento de que perdía el privilegio de la libertad vigilada en una audiencia realizada en la sede del tribunal.

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El padre Grassi irá preso

ARGENTINA
Diario Panorama

[Summary: The priest Julio Cesar Grassi must go to prison as punishment for corruption of minors and aggravated sexual abuse. He had been sentenced to 15 years but had been free for four years since the conviction. He will be housed in Ituzaingo 39 prison unit. The criminal court at Moron announced its decision shortly after 7 p.m. The judges during the afternoon rejected Grassi’s challenge that they were biased.]

[23/09/2013] El sacerdote Julio César Grassi deberá cumplir prisión efectiva por la pena de corrupción de menores y abuso sexual agravado por la que se lo condenó durante 15 años. De este modo perdió el beneficio de libertad vigilada que tenía, una resolución extraordinaria de la que gozó cuatro años un condenado a un delito grave. A esto lo definió hoy tras la audiencia de partes el Tribunal Oral Criminal (TOC) N° 1 de Morón.

Grassi quedó a disposición del servicio penitencial bonaerense. Será alojado en la unidad penitenciaria 39 de Ituzaingó.

La resolución se dio a conocer poco después de las 19 en la sede de los tribunales de Morón, luego de que esta tarde los jueces rechazaran la recusación de la defensa de Grassi.

El sacerdote fue condenado por el TOC 1 en junio del 2009 a 15 años de prisión por haber abusado de un menor que alojaba en guarda judicial en la Fundación Felices los Niños y la condena fue confirmada en tres instancias.

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El Tribunal de Morón ordenó la “inmediata detención” del padre Julio Grassi

ARGENTINA
Infobae

[con el documento]

Finalmente, los Tribunales de Morón fueron escenario de la audiencia judicial que definirá el futuro del sacerdote Julio César Grassi. Su defensa presentó a primera hora de la mañana un pedido de recusación para que los tres jueces del Tribunal Oral 1 de Morón se aparten del caso y no se realice el encuentro.

Sin embargo, el tribunal rechazó los escritos de recusación y nulidad presentados por la defensa de Grassi, y el encuentro entre las partes tuvo lugar. Tras las declaraciones de los interesados, la audiencia concluyó y los magistrados anunciaron que a las 19 darán su veredicto. En ese momento se sabrá si Grassi continúa en libertad o si será detenido.

En primer termino tomaron la palabra el fiscal Alejando Varela y los abogados Sergio Piris y Juan Pablo Gallego. Todos reiteraron el pedido de “inmediata detención” del sacerdote, argumentando que existe “peligro de fuga” y que además incumplió las normas que se le habían establecido al ser condenado a cambio de su libertad.

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Grassi va preso

ARGENTINA
TN

[Summary: The criminal court at Moron has decided priest Julie Cesar Grassi must go to prison. He was previously sentenced to 15 years in prisons for abusing minors but has repeatedly appealed. Plaintiff attorney Juan Paul Gallego said the court order should have happened much earlier. He maintained that Grassi posed a danger of fleeing.]

Así lo dispuso el Tribunal de Morón.

Lunes 23 de Septiembre de 2013 | 19:38

El Tribunal de Morón decidió que Julio César Grassi quede preso luego de que la Justicia lo condenara a 15 años de prisión por abuso de menores.

“Nos decidimos por la efectivización de la detención teniendo bases claras y precisas que dejan en evidencia un peligro de fuga concreto”, se detallaron entre los fundamentos del Tribunal.

También se indicó que por la condición de Clérigo de Grassi, el alojamiento será la unidad carcelaria 39 de Morón.

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