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.

December 17, 2013

Letter from Archbishop Nienstedt regarding allegation

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date:Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Source: Most Reverend John C. Nienstedt

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

This is a difficult letter for me to write to you. This past weekend I learned of an allegation from a young man whom I anointed in the Sacrament of Confirmation who alleged that he believes I inappropriately touched his buttocks during a public photo session following the ceremony. Please allow me to say that I normally stand for those photos with one hand on my crozier (staff) and the other either on the right shoulder of the newly confirmed or on my pallium (the short stole), which hangs from my chest. I do that deliberately and there are hundreds of photographs to verify that fact.

I do not know the individual involved; he has not been made known to me. I presume he is sincere in believing what he claims, but I must say that this allegation is absolutely and entirely false. I have never once engaged in any inappropriate contact with a minor and I have tried to the very best of my ability to serve this Archdiocese and the church faithfully, with honor and due regard for the rights of all, even those with whom I disagree.

I have taken strong stands on the moral teachings of the Church and been criticized for it. I would not have done so if I did not believe those teachings and was personally bound to living up to them in practice.

True, I am a sinner, but my sins do not include any kind of abuse of minors. I have met victims and I know the lasting damage that such abuse causes.

The psalms from the Liturgy of the Hours have had a special echo in my heart these past weeks as I pray for those in distress. “But God does hear the cries of the poor. Blessed be the Lord.”
I hope that the investigations can be thorough but quick. I already long to be back in public ministry—to be able to serve as the Lord has called me to serve.

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.

Archbishop Nienstedt accused of inappropriately touching boy

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Archbishop John Nienstedt has been accused of inappropriately touching a boy, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced Tuesday. Nienstedt will remove himself immediately from public ministry while the matter is investigated.

A statement released Tuesday morning said, “An allegation has been brought by a mandated reporter within the Church to the St. Paul Police of inappropriate touching of a minor male on the buttocks by Archbishop John Nienstedt. The single incident is alleged to have occurred in 2009 during a group photography session with the archbishop following a confirmation ceremony.

“Archbishop Nienstedt emphatically denies the allegation.”

The statement said that upon learning of the allegation last week, the archdiocese instructed the mandated reporter to make the matter known to the police.

“The archbishop and the archdiocese stand ready to cooperate fully with the St. Paul Police,” the statement said.

The archdiocese has been rocked by allegations of clergy sex abuse and assertions that church officials covered up some situations. On Sunday Nienstedt spoke at Our Lady of Grace Church in Edina, where several accused priests were assigned, and apologized for clergy abuse. At the time, he said he had should have investigated allegations of sex abuse more thoroughly.

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.

Women abuse, too

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on December 17, 2013

I was in an airport last week and struck up a conversation with the woman sitting next to me. After we discussed what we each did for a living, she pursed her lips and looked at me seriously. Then, she said, “What really disgusts me is that now women are becoming sex abusers.”

She was probably referring to stories like this, and this, and this.

“It’s actually good news that you’re hearing about these cases,” I told her. She looked at me like I was nuts. That’s when I explained to her that women have been child sex offenders just as long as men have. But now … finally, their victims—girls and boys—are getting a shot at justice.

Why are these cases getting publicity and court time now? I think it’s a combination of factors:

First—Our overall societal awareness of sexual abuse has matured and our civil and criminal laws have become more victim-centered. More and more people recognize the signs of grooming. Most of us understand that it is never okay for an adult to have any kind of sexual or romantic relationship with a child, especially if the adult is in a position of power (like a teacher, pastor or coach).

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 Francis does not reconfirm prominent conservative Cardinal Burke to top post

WISCONSIN
CBS News

LA CROSSE, Wis. — Wisconsin native Cardinal Raymond Burke is losing his influential role in the appointment of bishops in the United States.

The former La Crosse bishop was not reconfirmed to the Congregation for Bishops by Pope Francis. The former St. Louis archbishop had been a member for several years.

Burke served as La Crosse bishop from 1994 to 2003 and went to the Vatican in 2008 after serving in St. Louis.

He’s popular with conservative Catholics in the U.S. for upholding church rites and traditions favored by Pope Benedict. He drew attention in the U.S. in 2004 when he said he would deny Communion to Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, a Roman Catholic who supports abortion rights.

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 Francis: Out with the conservative cardinal, in with the moderate

UNITED STATES
NBC News

By Tracy Connor and Aaron Mermelstein

Four years ago, the former archbishop of St. Louis, Raymond Burke, was caught on tape saying that the head of the Washington archdiocese, Donald Wuerl, and other moderates were “weakening the faith” by refusing to ban pro-choice politicians from receiving communion.

Burke had to apologize for the remark, but it didn’t diminish his profile in Rome under former Pope Benedict, who had appointed him head of the Vatican’s equivalent of the supreme court and given him a coveted spot in the influential Congregation of Bishops.

Now, there’s a new pontiff in town.

Pope Francis this week shook up the bishops panel, replacing the conservative Burke, now a cardinal, with none other than the moderate Wuerl, also a cardinal, in a move that could have a far-reaching effect on church leadership.

“This is one of the most significant moves so far,” the Rev. Thomas Reese, author of “Inside the Vatican: The Politics and Organization of the Catholic Church,” said of Monday’s big announcement.

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 Francis directs Curia to hear confessions

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By Eric J. Lyman | Religion News Service, Updated: Tuesday, December 17

ROME — As part of Pope Francis’ pastoral reforms, all 44 senior members of the Roman Curia, or governing body, must take turns hearing confession at a church near the Vatican.

There is even speculation that Francis himself could hear confessions at the Church of the Santo Spirito in Sassia, just outside the Vatican walls, where his bishops and cardinals have been directed to perform the sacrament of penance and reconciliation.

“I think it’s likely the pope will discreetly hear confessions at some point,” said Giacomo Galeazzi, a veteran Vatican watcher from Italy’s La Stampa newspaper. “The pope has long been an advocate of the pastoral aspects of the ministry and now the Curia will as well.”

Galeazzi and others said the change, announced Sunday (Dec. 15), is part of a wider reform of the Vatican bureaucracy under Francis that includes the appointment of Archbishop Pietro Parolin as secretary of state. The two share a similar approach with an emphasis on humility.

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.

Bishops Accused of Abuse

WALTHAM (MA)
BishopAccountability.org

In the sexual abuse crisis, attention has focused on priests who have sexually abused children; the problem of bishops and major superiors who abuse has not received systematic scrutiny. Yet a bishop who is guilty of child abuse, or who has other violations of celibacy to conceal, has compromised his role in the formation of his priests and in assigning them properly. Bishops who sexually abuse seminarians, as Anthony J. O’Connell has admitted doing, may establish a generational pattern of clergy abuse. The following list includes 22 U.S. bishops who have been publicly accused of sexually abusing minors. We have also provided a preliminary list of 33 bishops accused of sexual misconduct in other countries

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.

MI – Controversial priest selected as a Michigan bishop; SNAP responds

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2013

David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

Father John Doerfler of the Diocese of Green Bay is the new bishop of Marquette, Michigan. We are disappointed with this promotion.

Doerfler has been a high ranking official in that diocese for some time. It’s a diocese with a terrible track record on clergy sex abuse and cover up cases.

We believe that Fr. Doerfler is also associated with a controversial Catholic group called Courage:

[New York Times]

We hope that as Marquette’s new bishop he will immediately warn parents, parishioners and the public about a former Marquette priest, Fr. Benedict Van der Putten, who was defrocked due to credible child sex abuse allegations and who now lives in Hawaii.

It’s irresponsible for Catholic officials to recruit, educate, ordain, hire, train and transfer priests and merely oust them when they molest kids. Bishops should also warn others about them, especially when they move far away as Van der Putten has done. We strongly suspect that families who live near him now have no idea that he’s a predator.

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 Francis removes “culture warriors” from selection committee for new bishops

UNITED STATES
Daily Kos

The Congregation for Bishops oversees the selection of new bishops and their picks usually are confirmed by the Pope. Whoever is named to this committee has a large say in who should be a new bishop, especially from his home region/country.

During a recent round of appointments, Francis decided to not appoint Cardinals Raymond Burke and Justin Rigali to the committee.

The fact that Burke was not on the list may raise eyebrows, in part because some observers see him as representing a more aggressive line than the pope on the Western culture wars.

Michael Sean Winters of the National Catholic Reporter is not a fan of either:

Burke is the consummate culture warrior and he has encouraged the appointment of men to prominent sees who, like himself, look out at the world and see nothing but dread, who have bought into a narrative in which all the Church’s problems and challenges are someone else’s fault, and that the Gospel is best preached from a defensive crouch, with finger wagging at any and all who do not see the world as they do. I cannot think of a single churchmen who is less like Pope Francis…

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 priest now advocates for priest abuse victims

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Posted: Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

Pat Wall was ordained in December 1993, serving as a Roman Catholic priest and Benedictine monk for five years.

He left the Winona Diocese in 1998, “because every (parish) assignment I had was to follow a priest-pedophile,” he said last week.

Now, he’s on the other side of the collar, so to speak. Wall, an attorney with Jeff Anderson and Associates of St. Paul, advocates for and represents victims of abuse by priests.

A list of 14 priests accused of sexual abuse released Monday by the Winona Diocese will likely add to those ranks, but the list tells only part of the picture, Wall said.

“It doesn’t say what the bishops knew, when they knew it and what they did about it,” he said at a news conference Monday. “It doesn’t say which parishes the priests were serving” when the accusations were leveled.

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.

Mater Dei Boys’ B-Ball Players Bullied Their Co-Captain, Calling Him “Bitch” and “Nigger”: Claim

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Weekly

By Gustavo Arellano Tue., Dec. 17 2013
Last week, we reported that Mario Soto, a forward on Mater Dei High’s boys basketball team, was leaving the school for reasons unknown. Today, we know why he left: bullying by former and current teammates, including allegations of physical assaults and that they called him “bitch” and “nigger”–never mind that Soto is half-Puerto Rican and half-Indian.

And lest petty Mater Dei fans skewer Soto by claiming he’s making up excuses for not being able to hack it it under coach Gary Mcknight (never mind that Soto was a returning starter who had been a co-captain since his sophomore year), the senior is serious about his claims. He has retained the counsel of John Manly, the legendary Newport Beach lawyer who has sued his alma mater many times for its pedophilically inclined employees and is a wrecking ball of righteousness.

Last Friday, Manly sent a letter to Diocese of Orange general counsel Maria Schinderle stating he would represent Soto and his family and described a “3-year saga at Mater Dei where [Soto] was bullied, harassed, intimidated, physically assaulted, and perhaps worse, routinely called a ‘nigger.'” Named in the claim were Orange Bishop Kevin Vann, McKnight and his son, Clay (an assistant coach), and Mater Dei president Pat Murphy. Sources tell the Weekly that the bullying was brought to the attention of Mater Dei officials to no avail, which wouldn’t be the first time they ignored warnings that something was amiss in McKnight’s program.

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 Francis removes …

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Pope Francis removes former St. Louis Archbishop Burke from Congregation of Bishops

• By Jesse Bogan jbogan@post-dispatch.com > 314-340-825575

Former St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke has been bumped from the influential Congregation of Bishops — a post that gave him say in the selection of bishops.

Some observers of the Roman Catholic Church said the move by Pope Francis is yet another example of his effort to tone down highly publicized stances on divisive social issues such as gay marriage, contraception and abortion, on which Burke has made strong remarks.

The announcement came Monday from the Vatican as Francis reorganizes the Congregation, which has considerable power because it recommends bishop candidates to the pope when vacancies occur. New bishops shepherd their local flocks, but some of them will be promoted down the road to high-profile church leadership positions.

Also gone from the Congregation is another former archbishop from St. Louis, Justin Rigali — though that action was anticipated, because Rigali recently stepped down as archbishop in Philadelphia.

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’s appointment of Cardinal Wuerl extends ties between Pittsburgh and Vatican

UNITED STATES
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

December 16, 2013

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pope Francis has appointed Cardinal Donald Wuerl to a Vatican board with strong influence on the appointment of bishops — the latest in a string of appointments of native Pittsburgh clerics to high places.

The move is also seen as reflecting the pontiff’s emphasis on pastoral rather than combative leadership.

Pope Francis on Monday named Cardinal Wuerl, the former longtime bishop of Pittsburgh and now archbishop of Washington, D.C., to the Congregation of Bishops, a body of bishops from throughout the world who recommend appointments for positions as bishop. Although the congregation as a whole votes on recommendations, and the pope has the final word, the recommendations of individual members for positions in their home countries typically carry clout, say Vatican observers.

Cardinal Wuerl’s is the latest and one of the most important in a string of high-profile appointments of clerics with Steel City ties. Several priests from the diocese already serve as bishops and recently were elected to influential roles in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

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.

Vatican Reorganizes Congregation For Bishops; Burke And Rigali Not Reappointed

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Public Radio

By PATRICIA RICE
Monday two former St. Louis archbishops, Cardinal Raymond Burke and Cardinal Justin F. Rigali, lost their posts on the Congregation for Bishops. This powerful Vatican committee nominates priests to be bishops worldwide. It meets on alternate Thursdays in Rome.

While Rigali’s removal is not unexpected since he is retired with the title Philadelphia archbishop emeritus, the Burke move is dramatic.

Burke is a Vatican cardinal “in full” and head of the tribunal of last resort, which can countermand bishops when they want to remove priests from the clerical state, for example.

In 2008 when he had been St. Louis archbishop for less than five years, Burke became the first American appointed to the Vatican post of prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura. He was named cardinal and to the Congregation for Bishops as a result of this tribunal post. Vatican insiders say that he has been behind the naming of several U.S. bishops.

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.

The Shake-up In Rome

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Dec. 16, 2013 Distinctly Catholic

As few weeks back, I wondered why Cardinal Marc Ouellet had not been confirmed as Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops. Now, we know. This morning, the Holy Father announced a major shake-up of that all-important congregation, confirming Cardinal Ouellet as prefect, but shuffling the membership in profound ways, especially for the Church in the United States.

I confess to being a bit amazed. Nine months ago, Pope Francis knew very little about the Church in the U.S. But, the day of his election, a bishop in Latin America who knew him told me that the word he would use to describe him is “astute.” Indeed. In nine short months, Pope Francis realized that we have a problem in the hierarchy of the U.S. and that the problem had a name. Actually, two names: Cardinals Raymond Burke and Justin Rigali. Both of them have been removed from the Congregation for Bishops. Hallelujah.

Cardinals Burke and Rigali represent different types of problems. Burke is the consummate culture warrior and he has encouraged the appointment of men to prominent sees who, like himself, look out at the world and see nothing but dread, who have bought into a narrative in which all the Church’s problems and challenges are someone else’s fault, and that the Gospel is best preached from a defensive crouch, with finger wagging at any and all who do not see the world as they do. I cannot think of a single churchmen who is less like Pope Francis, and the difference goes far beyond Cardinal Burke’s penchant for the cappa magna. Those of us who were disappointed by the appointments in San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, and Denver and, most recently, Hartford, could discern the influence of Cardinal Burke – and behind him Cardinals Harvey and Law – in those appointments.

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Pro-life leaders shocked by removal of Cardinal Burke from important Vatican post

VATICAN CITY
LifeSite News

BY JOHN-HENRY WESTEN
Mon Dec 16, 2013

VATICAN CITY, December 16, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) – This morning the Vatican announced confirmations and new appointments to the important Congregation for Bishops leaving Cardinal Burke off the list. The news has shocked pro-life leaders for whom Burke has been the top ally in the Vatican curia in the work to restore a culture of life.

Burke has been known for his outspoken championing of the high priority that Popes Benedict and John Paul II gave to the Church’s pro-life and pro-family teachings. He has especially been both praised and criticized for his frequent insistence that persistently pro-abortion Catholic politicians must be denied Holy Communion according to Canon law requirements which Cardinal Ratzinger, before he became pope, directed the US bishops to follow.

The Vatican release confirmed Cardinal Marc Ouellet as the head of the Congregation of Bishops and also appointed Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl, and Westminster UK Cardinal Vincent Nichols among others as new members to the Congregation. Another American Cardinal who was retained on the Congregation is Cardinal William Levada.

Virginia Nunziante, the head of Italy’s March for Life has a special place in her heart for Cardinal Burke since he is the only Bishop in Italy to march in the March for Life, even though he’s at the Vatican rather than in Italy. The news of Burke’s being removed from the Congregation of Bishops, she described as “a tragedy.”

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Pope Francis removes former La Crosse Bishop Raymond Burke

VATICAN CITY
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pope Francis on Monday removed two American-born cardinals — including former La Crosse Bishop Raymond Burke — from the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops, meaning the ultraconservative prelate will lose his influential role in the appointment of bishops in the United States.

Burke and retired Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali were among more than a dozen members of the Vatican old guard who were removed from the 18-member congregation on Monday.

Among those appointed was Washington, D.C., Cardinal Donald Wuerl. While conservative, Wuerl is seen as a bridge-builder and less dogmatic than Burke, who has promoted the denial of communion to pro-abortion rights Catholic politicians and in recent interviews appeared to question the new pope’s plans to reshape the Vatican bureaucracy known as the curia.

Monday’s appointments are seen as the key to securing Francis’ legacy.

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Pope Replaces Conservative U.S. Cardinal on Influential Vatican Committee

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By JIM YARDLEY and JASON HOROWITZ
Published: December 16, 2013

ROME — Pope Francis moved on Monday against a conservative American cardinal who has been an outspoken critic of abortion and same-sex marriage, by replacing him on a powerful Vatican committee with another American who is less identified with the culture wars within the Roman Catholic Church.

Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington was named by Pope Francis to the Vatican committee that selects new bishops.

The pope’s decision to remove Cardinal Raymond L. Burke from the Congregation for Bishops was taken by church experts to be a signal that Francis is willing to disrupt the Vatican establishment in order to be more inclusive.

Even so, many saw the move less as an effort to change doctrine on specific social issues than an attempt to bring a stylistic and pastoral consistency to the church’s leadership.

“He is saying that you don’t need to be a conservative to become a bishop,” said Alberto Melloni, the director of the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna, Italy, a liberal Catholic research institute. “He wants good bishops, regardless of how conservative or liberal they are.”

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Francis Dumps U.S. Cardinal Who Is Outspoken Critic Of Abortion, Gay Marriage

VATICAN CITY
Talking Points Memo

ASSOCIATED PRESS – DECEMBER 17, 2013

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Pope Francis announced changes in the influential Vatican office that evaluates and nominates candidates for bishop around the world.

Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington was appointed Monday to the Congregation for Bishops. The pope also reconfirmed Cardinal William Levada, the former archbishop of San Francisco and former head of the Vatican’s orthodoxy watchdog office.

Some members of the congregation were very conspicuously not retained. Cardinal Raymond Burke, former Archbishop of St. Louis, will no longer serve in the office.

Burke is considered an outspoken critic of abortion and same-sex marriage and a favorite of conservative Catholics. He has also been publicly critical of Francis’s changes in the direction of the church. Burke retains his position as the head of the Vatican high court, the Apostolic Signatura.

Burke drew attention in the U.S. in 2004 when he said he would deny Communion to Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, a Roman Catholic who supports abortion rights.

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OH – Victims seek action about 2 priests

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

And they lay out hopes for incoming bishop
Group wants signs down that honor “wrongdoers”

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos, clergy sex abuse victims will push Toledo Catholic officials – and their yet-to-be-named next bishop– to take specific steps about priests who commit or conceal child sex crimes.

They will give the current church officials a screwdriver and urge them to take down signs on a street and a building that honor

–a priest who was credibly accused of molesting a child, and
–another priest who blocked an investigation into the murder of a nun.

And they will prod the church hierarchy to update and expand its public list of credibly accused child molesting clerics.

They will also give current Toledo Catholic officials a list of three steps to take immediately:

–personally visit each parish where predator priests worked, begging victims to call law enforcement,
–create a “whistleblower fund” to reward church employees who report suspected abuse to police, and
–demote at least one diocesan staffer who has been implicated in the abuse and cover up scandal.

WHEN
Tuesday, Dec. 17 at 10:30 a.m.

WHERE
Outside the Toledo Catholic headquarters, 1933 Spielbusch (near Cherry St) in Toledo

WHO
Two-four members and supporters of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, (SNAPNetwork.org) the nation’s largest support network for men and women abused in religious and institutional settings

WHY
Bishop Leonard Blair has left to head the Hartford archdiocese, after a decade of controversy as head of the Toledo diocese.

SNAP wants the diocese’s temporary leaders to disclose more about child molesting clerics and take steps to reduce the “climate of fear and hopelessness in the church” that they say makes it harder for victims to report sex crimes.

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.

Green Bay, Wis., priest named bishop of Marquette, Mich.

GREEN BAY (WI)
National Catholic Reporter

A press release this morning from the U.S. bishops’ conference informs us that the diocese left vacant when Bernard Hebda was appointed co-adjutor bishop of Newark, N.J., has a new bishop:

Pope Names Green Bay, Wisconsin Priest Bishop of Marquette, Michigan

December 17, 2013

WASHINGTON — Pope Francis has named Father John Doerfler, 49, a priest of the Diocese of Green Bay, Wisconsin, and vicar general of the diocese, as bishop of Marquette, Michigan. He succeeds Archbishop Alexander Sample, who became archbishop of Portland in Oregon, January 29, 2013.

The appointment was publicized in Washington, December 17, by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 17 December 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father appointed Rev. John Francis Doerfler as bishop of Marquette (area 42,152, population 321,000, Catholics 68,200, priests 90, permanent deacons 44, religious 51), U.S.A. The bishop-elect was born in Appleton, U.S.A. in 1964 and was ordained a priest in 1991. He holds a licentiate in canon law from the Catholic University of America, Washington, U.S.A., and a licentiate and doctorate in moral theology from the John Paul II Pontifical Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family, Washington. He has held a number of pastoral and administrative roles, including parish vicar of the “St. John Nepomucene Parish” at Little Chute and at “St. Francis Xavier Cathedral”; and vice chancellor, defender of the bond and judge of the tribunal; administrator of the cathedral and parishes of “Holy Trinity” at Casco/Slovan and “St. John”, Green Bay and rector of the “Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help” at Robinsonsville. He is currently vicar general of the diocese of Green Bay, member of the college of consultors and the presbyteral council of Green Bay, and adjunct professor at the Sacred Heart School of Theology, Hales Corner.

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Church dismisses idea of employment tribunal for Ayrshire priest

SCOTLAND
Scottish Catholic Observer

The Catholic Church has dismissed an attempt by an Ayrshire priest who was removed from his parish to take the Church to an employment tribunal.

Fr Patrick Lawson, who was removed from St Sophia’s parish church, in Galston, Ayrshire, in September by the Bishop John Cunningham of Galloway, has been granted legal aid to pursue the case but a spokesman for the Church said that action was not applicable to the situation.

“The Diocese of Galloway has received no intimation of an unfair dismissal claim,” a Church spokesperson said. “For such a claim to be made, there would need to be an employer/employee relationship in existence. Since the relationship between a priest and his diocese is not one of employment, reference to an Employment Tribunal would not be possible.”

If the case was taken by the Scottish courts it could have significant legal ramifications for the Church, which has always maintained priests cannot be regarded as the Church’s employees.

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NOMINA DEL VESCOVO DI MARQUETTE (U.S.A.)

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Bolletino

Il Santo Padre Francesco ha nominato Vescovo di Marquette (U.S.A.) il Rev.do John F. Doerfler, del clero della diocesi di Green Bay, finora Vicario Generale della medesima sede.

Rev.do John F. Doerfler
Il Rev.do John F. Doerfler è nato il 2 novembre 1964 ad Appleton (Wisconsin), nella diocesi di Green Bay. Ha frequentato l’”University of Saint Thomas” a Saint Paul (Minnesota), ottenendo il suo Baccalaureato in Filosofia (1987) e, poi, come seminarista del Pontificio Collegio Americano del Nord a Roma, ha conseguito presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana il Baccalaureato in Teologia (1991).

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Francis’ Flush – At Bishops’ Table, Pope Runs the Wuerlpool

UNITED STATES
Whispers in the Loggia

Honestly, it’s an even bigger deal than that.

While a Franciscan “flush” of the membership of the Congregation for Bishops has been expected for months, the move’s execution came with a flourish at Roman Noon as the Pope reshuffled roughly half the prior makeup of the all-powerful “Thursday table” that recommends nominees for episcopal appointments in the developed world.

Topping the slate of his new picks, Francis tapped Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington to join the body’s membership. Already a member of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on B16’s nod, the ever-assiduous, 73 year-old DC prelate (a veteran of the Curia from his early days overseeing the Congregation for the Clergy as priest-secretary to Cardinal John Wright) becomes the table’s lone resident member on these shores…

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Final decision on ex-Catholic brother’s extradition reserved

NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand Herald

By Kurt Bayer

4:04 PM Tuesday Dec 17, 2013

A final decision on whether a former Catholic brother could be extradited to Australia to face 252 child sex abuse charges has been reserved.

The Commonwealth of Australia wanted Bernard Kevin McGrath, 66, extradited from New Zealand to face the allegations.

Judge Jane Farish at Christchurch District Court ruled earlier this year that McGrath should stand trial across the Tasman.

But her decision was appealed to the High Court at Christchurch.

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Former Catholic brother back in NZ court

AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND
ABC News

A long running attempt to extradite a former Catholic brother to Newcastle on hundreds of child sexual abuse charges returns to a New Zealand court today.

Bernard Kevin McGrath is wanted in Australia to face more than 250 charges relating to allegations that he sexually abused 35 boys in the Lake Macquarie region of New South Wales in the 1970s and 80s.

A formal extradition request was made in 2012.

In June this year, the Christchurch District Court ordered that McGrath be surrendered to Australian authorities.

McGrath lodged an appeal and his defence lawyer, Philip Hall QC argued that the District Court judge should have referred such a significant extradition request to New Zealand’s Immigration Minister.

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Police to interview serial pedophile priest

AUSTRALIA
3AW

Posted by: Phil Johnson | 17 December, 2013

A court has heard police want to question a serial pedophile priest about other matters.

The serial pedophile priest, who cannot be identified, is already in custody on other matters and appeared in court via video link.

The court heard police wanted to interview him but his lawyer asked for the matter to be adjourned so she could speak to him before it was decided whether to oppose or consent to the application.

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Priest employed by elite SA school charged as part of global child pornography ring

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

CHIEF COURT REPORTER SEAN FEWSTER THE ADVERTISER DECEMBER 17, 2013

A PRIEST employed by one of the state’s elite private schools has faced court accused of child pornography offences.

The Advertiser cannot name or show the eastern-suburbs man, 69, because of state law that bans identification of those charged with child-sex offences until they enter a plea.

Although legislation now exists allowing media outlets to challenge that restriction on public interest grounds, the Adelaide Magistrates Court today refused to permit publication.

The man was initially charged with one aggravated count of possessing, and one count each of using a carriage service and the postal service to access, child pornography.

It will be alleged the man was one of 65 Australians arrested as part of a global investigation into a Canada-based child-exploitation ring .

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Priest reported to Vatican over alleged child sex chat

AUSTRALIA
Daily Examiner

Jessica Grewal 17th Dec 2013

THE Lismore Diocese is yet to receive instructions from the Vatican about what to do with a local priest who has alleged links to the child sex industry in Thailand, the royal commission has heard.

Lismore Bishop Geoffrey Jarrett told the commission he referred a priest to the Vatican after he was allegedly heard telling others of a place in Thailand where “under-age people were available to foreign visitors”.

Bishop Jarrett said he had reported the allegations between 2011 and 2012 but that he understood that a response could take some time.

A spokesperson for the Lismore Diocese confirmed on Monday that the allegations had also been referred to the ombudsman but could not say whether the priest remained in the area.

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Philly priest with Gallup ties ‘unsuitable for ministry’

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Dec. 16, 2013

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP – A Catholic priest from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia who worked in the Diocese of Gallup for several years has been found “unsuitable for ministry” after a lengthy investigation, the Philadelphia Archdiocese announced Sunday.

The Rev. Stephen B. Perzan, aka Stephan Perzan, was one of seven priests placed on administrative leave by Archbishop Charles J. Chaput in March 2011, following a grand jury report.

The archdiocese announced that Chaput has decided two of the seven priests are suitable for ministry, one priest is unsuitable because of a substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor, and four priests, including Perzan, are unsuitable because of substantiated violations of the Standards of Ministerial Behaviors and Boundaries.

The Official Catholic Directory lists Perzan as serving in the Gallup Diocese from 1995 to 1998 in Rio Arriba County. Perzan, whose name is spelled “Stephan Perzan” in the directory, was assigned to the mostly Hispanic and Native American parishes of St. Francis of Assisi in Lumberton and St. Anthony Mission in Dulce on the Jicarilla Apache Reservation.

According to the archdiocese’s announcement, Perzan is 68 years old and was ordained in 1973. The archdiocese’s records list Perzan serving in the Diocese of Gallup from 1994 to 1997. Before and after his stint in Gallup, Perzan is listed as working in parishes and schools in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, as well as briefly in Puerto Rico from 2002 to 2004.

Archdiocese officials said all the cases were first reported to the appropriate local district attorney’s office. Upon declination of criminal charges by the district attorney, the Archdiocesan Office of Investigations began a canonical investigation in each case. Following Chaput’s decision regarding the five priests found unsuitable for ministry, announcements were made at the parishes where the priests last served. Counselors were made available for parishioners.

Information: http://archphila.org/home.php

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Monk, St. John’s Abbey apologize for message prompted by blog post

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

COLLEGEVILLE — Officials at St. John’s Abbey are doing damage control after one of its monks sent an expletive-ridden anonymous message to a blogger who has chronicled sexual abuse of students by abbey monks.

Brother Peter Sullivan reportedly wrote to the blogger, Patrick Marker, “I hope you die in a car accident” and “Die a hundred deaths you worthless crap stain of a human being.”

As first reported by KMSP-TV Fox 9 News, the Stearns County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the message, which was sent last week. The sheriff’s office confirmed the investigation Monday but said it’s too early to say where it could lead.

Marker is a former St. John’s Preparatory School student who says he started his blog, “Behind the Pine Curtain,” to shine a light on sexual abuse he and others suffered from St. John’s Abbey monks.

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WHO AM I TO JUDGE?

VATICAN CITY
The New Yorker

BY JAMES CARROLL
DECEMBER 23, 2013

On most Wednesdays, the Pope gives a general audience, and this one was packed. It was a balmy October morning, and more than a hundred thousand pilgrims, tourists, and Romans had funnelled into St. Peter’s Square. It was the first of three large gatherings Pope Francis presided over that week for a celebration of the family during the Catholic Church’s “Year of Faith.”

Wooden railings imposed order in the square. I was about thirty yards from the Pope. In front of me were a pair of Vatican ushers in white tie and tails, several clergy, a short man in a yarmulke, and a handsome couple holding hands. Beyond them, Francis, seventy-six years old, in his stark-white cassock and skullcap, seemed energized by the festive crowd. A large man with a ready smile, he read from a brief text in Italian, but with fervor. “What kind of love do we bring to others? . . . Do we treat each other like brothers and sisters? Or do we judge one another?” The throng was silent, listening carefully. After Francis spoke, others summarized the remarks in various languages. Then a line of prelates approached his chair.

Now the prelates were gone, and Francis, with guards at a discreet distance, moved along the railing, greeting the people. The couple in the front row were in their thirties, tall, and dressed in dark clothing. Unlike others at the railing, who were waving and calling, “Papa Francesco! Papa Francesco!,” they held back. But when Francis turned to them the woman leaned forward with such gravity that the Pope took notice and stopped. Tears streaked her face. Francis reached for her hand, which she took as license to put her mouth by his ear. She whispered something. Francis looked startled, drew back a bit, then turned to her partner. The Pope embraced him, then drew the woman in. They stood like that for a while, the couple enveloped in the arms of the Bishop of Rome. Then Francis placed his hands on the man’s head. The man’s shoulders shook slightly. The Pope made a sign of the cross in the air above them and moved on. …

But, in all this anticipated progress, the Church’s sexual-abuse crisis still lingers. Anne Barrett Doyle, the co-director of BishopAccountability.org, a comprehensive archive of the abuse crisis, pointed out to me that the Vatican questionnaire contains no questions about what the exploitation of children by priests has done to Catholic families. What of the broken trust? When will parents again resume the easy confidence in parish priests that was once a defining mark of Catholic life? And how will bishops resume their role as dependable shepherds?

Early this month, Francis met in Rome with bishops from the Netherlands. In 2011, an official Dutch commission concluded that Church officials had “failed to take adequate action” regarding the abuse of tens of thousands of children in Catholic institutions, going back to 1945. The Dutch Church, humiliated and penitent, was staggered. More victims surfaced. In prepared remarks, Francis was to have said to the bishops, “I wish to express my compassion and to insure my closeness in prayer to every victim of sexual abuse, and to their families. I ask you to continue to support them along the painful path of healing that they have undertaken with courage.” The text was handed to the bishops, but instead of actually speaking it Francis engaged the bishops informally, and the prepared expression of compassion, while released by the Vatican press office, was not delivered as written.

Since becoming Pope, Francis has hardly mentioned the abuse crisis. He has not met with victims, and, though continuing Benedict’s espoused “zero tolerance” of sexual abuse itself, he has yet to adjust Vatican policies governing the responsibilities of bishops. Two days after Francis’s meeting with Dutch bishops, the Vatican refused to provide the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child with records of its sexual-abuse investigations. A fierce critic of self-serving and entitled priests, Francis has yet to confront the way in which the inbred clerical culture itself provided the cover—and the license—both for abuse and for the denial and deflection with which bishops responded to it.

For Doyle and other critics, the failure starts with Bergoglio’s role in Argentina, a country where sexual abuse of children by priests remains a largely untold story. “The Pope should begin with his own record in Argentina,” Doyle said in a statement. “We urge him to release a complete list of all credibly accused clerics with whom he dealt. . . . He should then compel every bishop and religious superior worldwide to publish a similar list, as twenty-six U.S. bishops and religious superiors have done.”

Miriam Lewin is a prominent Argentine journalist whose investigations into priests’ abuse of children over a dozen years have helped push the scandal into the open in Buenos Aires. I asked her what she made of the Pope’s recent expression of compassion for victims. “Just words,” she said. “He should meet personally with victims. He should support civil justice against priests and send the pedophiles to jail. After that, his words will mean something.” When I asked her what she thought of Bergoglio, she answered that he has a different “kind of responsibility now.” She added, “Bergoglio is one thing. Francesco is another.”

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ANALYSIS: Pope Francis’ Vatican reforms may prompt curial pushback

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By David Gibson | Religion News Service, Published: December 16

In private conversations, Pope Francis often acknowledges that reforming the Vatican will be a difficult task opposed by powerful interests in the church. Developments on Monday (Dec. 16) showed both the progress he has made and the challenges that remain.

Case in point: Cardinal Raymond Burke, an influential American conservative who has worked in the Roman Curia since 2008, lost one key post on Monday when he was left off the Vatican body that vets bishops for the pope to appoint. Those appointments are seen as the key to securing Francis’ legacy.

But in an interview a few days earlier, Burke — who remains head of the Vatican equivalent of the Supreme Court — also publicly raised doubts about Francis’ plans to make wholesale changes in a papal bureaucracy in keeping with the pontiff’s vision of a more open, pastoral church.

“The service of the Roman Curia is part of the very nature of the Church, and so that has to be respected,” Burke told EWTN, a U.S.-based Catholic cable network that spotlights conservative views.

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St. Anne’s Residential School survivors face off with Ottawa

CANADA
CBC News

By Karina Roman, CBC News Posted: Dec 17, 2013

St. Anne’s Residential School survivors are before the Ontario Superior Court today in a bid to get the federal government to release documents the former students say would help corroborate their claims of abuse.

The documents they want are from a five-year Ontario Provincial Police investigation in the 1990s, as well as files from the subsequent trials that resulted in several convictions against school staff and supervisors.

Read the court documents

St. Anne’s operated in Fort Albany, Ont., near James Bay, and was the site of some of the worst cases of abuse in the country, including physical and sexual abuse. Survivors tell stories of children being forced to eat their own vomit and of the nuns and brothers shocking children as young as six in a homemade electric chair.

“We’re just so tired of trying to convince people that this happened,” said Edmund Metatawabin in an interview with CBC News. He attended St. Anne’s for eight years starting in 1956.

​Under the residential school settlement, former students can make a claim for compensation through the independent assessment process (IAP). In a private hearing, they tell their stories to an adjudicator. The adjudicator is meant to have information on the school, known perpetrators and convictions in advance. However, until recently, the information provided on St. Anne’s said there were no known incidents of sexual abuse at the school, despite the police investigation and trials.

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Residential-school survivors to press court for access to Ontario documents

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

GLORIA GALLOWAY
OTTAWA — The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Dec. 17 2013

Lawyers for the survivors of one of Canada’s most notorious residential schools say an order of nuns who taught at the institution is trying to stop them from obtaining police documents that could support their claims for federal compensation.

The lawyers, who represent about 60 former students of St. Anne’s Indian Residential School in Fort Albany, Ont., are scheduled to appear in a Toronto courtroom Tuesday to ask whether the federal government is obligated to hand over thousands of documents created by the Ontario Provincial Police during a five-year investigation into abuses at the school that was conducted in the 1990s.

That investigation resulted in the conviction of five former employees, including Anna Wesley and Jane Kakeychewan, both former members of the Sisters of Charity of Ottawa. The nuns were found guilty of assaulting children but served no time in jail.

The former students want the OPP documents to bolster their case for compensation under the Independent Assessment Process (IAP), an out-of-court method for resolving claims of sexual and serious physical abuse at the schools. Late last week, they were told the nuns will try to stop the case from proceeding.

“I can confirm to you that there was a request made on Friday afternoon at 5 o’clock for an adjournment by the Sisters of Charity,” said Fay Brunning, a lawyer for the former students. “We are not agreeing to an adjournment.”

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‘We will be a stronger and holier church’: Bishop expresses sadness over allegations; says diocese reaching out to help parishioners

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

By Jerome Christenson jchristenson@winonadailynews.com

Diocese of Winona releases list of 14 priests; victims’ advocates hope to get internal files

The names of 14 Diocese of Winona priests credibly accused of child sexual abuse are now public, nearly a decade after they were first collected. Read more

Bishop John Quinn spoke with the voice of a penitent church Monday morning.

“For me, this is a very, very sad morning,” he said in a lengthy interview on the day the diocese made public the names of 14 priests credibly accused of sexual abuse of children. “I love God’s people, and I am very sad when they are injured.

“We are trying to make this an event that never happens again,” he said.

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Abuse Royal Commission: Paedophile priest Raymond Foster …

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Abuse Royal Commission: Paedophile priest Raymond Foster allowed to keep teaching job despite complaints

BY THOMAS ORITI – ABC
December 17, 2013

An inquiry into child sexual abuse within the Catholic Church has revealed a paedophile priest was allowed to continue teaching at a Sydney school, despite a number of complaints against him.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the church’s responses to Raymond Foster and his victims.

The inquiry is focusing on the case of a man known to the Commission as DG, who says he was sexually abused by Foster between 1970 and 1973. He provided a statement to police in 1994.

It has heard that although Foster was stood down from the Hunters Hill school in 1994, similar complaints were made against him in relation to events dating back to the 1950s.

He had worked at St Augustine’s college in Cairns at the time.

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Marist Brothers leader Alexis Turton ‘failed to act’ over alleged abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN DECEMBER 17, 2013

THE leader of a Catholic religious order failed to pass on allegations that one of his colleagues had sexually abused children to either the police or to the school where he knew the brother was teaching.

The former Sydney provincial of the Marist Brothers, Alexis Turton, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that he chose not to take action, despite the cleric having personally admitted to his crimes.

Documents tendered to the commission show Brother Turton was aware of several allegations made against the second cleric, Raymond Foster, during the 1990s, including that “he enjoyed watching people abuse themselves and masturbate.”

These described alleged abuse committed when Foster was teaching at a school in far-north Queensland during the 1950s, the commission heard.

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No public apology for abuse, inquiry hears

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Marist Brothers did not want to make a public apology to a victim of sex abuse because it would affect people at the Queensland school where the abuser had worked, a national inquiry into child sex abuse has heard.

Brother Michael Hill, the former head of the Marist Brothers in NSW, Queensland and the ACT, denied at the inquiry on Tuesday he tried to protect the order over the needs of a man whose life had been shattered by the abuse.

He apologised for his handling of the complaint against Brother Raymond Foster, who molested a 13-year-old boy in the 1970s.

In a letter to the principal of the North Queensland school in late 2000 he said the complainant, identified as DG, was seeking a public apology.

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Abusive brother at top Sydney school

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL AAP DECEMBER 17, 2013

A MARIST brother who ended up working at one of Sydney’s most prestigious Catholic schools had possibly been abusing children since the 1950s, an inquiry has been told.

Brother Raymond Foster was teaching at St Joseph’s College, a secondary boarding school in Hunters Hill, in August 1994 even though there had been complaints about him starting in 1991.

The complaints between 1991 and 1994 included an allegation Br Foster had molested a boy when he was at St Augustine’s College, Cairns, in the 1950s.

Brother Alexis Turton, who was provincial of the Marist Brothers Sydney region until the mid-1990s, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he had not taken action against Br Foster until Queensland police began an investigation in 1994 after a man accused the brother of molesting him when he was 13.

The man, identified as DG, attended a north Queensland Marist school in the 1970s.

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Royal Commission: Marist Brothers allowed child molester …

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Royal Commission: Marist Brothers allowed child molester to teach at St Joseph’s College Hunters Hill

December 17, 2013

Catherine Armitage
Senior Writer

The Marist Brothers allowed child molester Brother Raymond Foster to continue teaching at the prestigious boys’ boarding school St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill on the strength of an assurance that he wouldn’t do it again.

Brother Alexis Turton, whose job in 1994 was to deal with such complaints, said Foster was not withdrawn from teaching boys as young as 12 despite being the subject of three complaints in as many years because “I assume I would have got an assurance from him that what was referred to 40 years ago was not an issue now”.

There’d been an anonymous complaint in 1991, a telephone call in 1993 and, in May 1994, a further letter identifying Brother Foster as molesting boys at St Augustine’s College in Cairns as far back as

Wasn’t that astonishing, Brother Turton was asked by Angus Stewart, counsel assisting the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. He agreed that “looking back now”, his response to the allegations was “absolutely” unacceptable. He said the Marist Brothers had naively seen child sexual abuse as “pretty much a moral problem that was essentially a matter of following up with someone…that [they] recognise it is wrong and it won’t happen again”.

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Kardinal Kasper bekräftigt Null-Toleranz-Politik bei Missbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
Kipa

[Summary: Cardinal Walter Kasper has confirmed that he supports a zero-tolerance policy for clergy accused of sexual abuse.]

Hamburg, 12.12.13 (Kipa) Im Umgang mit Missbrauchstätern in der Kirche hat Kurienkardinal Walter Kasper (80) eine Null-Toleranz-Politik bekräftigt. Geistliche, die sich schuldig gemacht hätten, sollten aus dem Priesteramt entlassen werden, sagte der langjährige Ökumene-Minister im Vatikan in einem Interview mit der «Zeit» (Donnerstag). Dies habe auch schon der Vorgänger von Papst Franziskus, Benedikt XVI., gewollt, betonte Kasper.

«Früher gab es eine zu grosse Toleranz gegenüber Missbrauchstätern, weil man über die schlimmen Folgen für die Opfer zu wenig wusste», führte der Kardinal aus. «Da haben wir alle dazulernen müssen.» In der katholischen Kirche gelte jetzt, «dass Missbrauch nicht nur eine persönliche Sünde ist, sondern ein Verbrechen, und dass der Bischof den Staatsanwalt informieren muss».

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Notes on a scandal: the Jimmy Savile case is all too familiar

UNITED KINGDOM
The Conversation

Chris Greer
Professor of Sociology at City University London

Eugene McLaughlin
Professor of Criminology at City University London

For all its extraordinary impact, the Jimmy Savile scandal has not unfolded in an exceptional way. The media and justice systems’ treatment of the affair is only the latest example of a relatively new type of scandal: the institutional child sex abuse scandal.

Institutional CSA scandals emerged only recently as a focus for sustained public concern because of the longstanding taboos that for decades kept child abuse hidden from ‘official’ visibility and marginalised from UK public debate. These taboos were only challenged in the 1980s by sustained feminist campaigning, media coverage, and public testimony from individual survivors, finally making open allegations possible and the pursuit of justice for victims a political priority. Yet because news coverage of abuse continued to focus on the dominant idea of “stranger danger” and the powerful image of the “predatory paedophile”, still little attention was paid to the more prevalent problems of institutional and familial abuse.

Since the 1980s, a succession of scandals has exposed the sexual abuse of children in care homes, schools, universities and various religious institutions, and forced the problem of institutional child sexual abuse onto the political and journalistic agenda.

Through an empirical examination of the Savile story, we have been developing a model of how institutional child sexual abuse scandals unfold. This model is also applicable to past scandals of this type; it shows how the Savile case, far from being anomalous, has in fact followed an established pattern. Understanding that pattern can help identify the forces which keep these stories from emerging – and the ones that drive them once they do.

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Man Charged With Raping 13-Year-Old In Church

KENTUCKY
WTVQ

A man accused of raping a 13-year old girl at a church and in his home answered to rape and sex abuse charges on Monday.

According to police reports, 26-year old Rafael Ardon admitted to having sexual contact with the girl.

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Celibacy a probable cause…

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

Celibacy a probable cause of ‘tsunami of sexual abuse’ that hit church Marist Brother says

MATTHEW BENNS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 17, 2013

THE vow of chastity imposed on young priests is the probable cause of the “tsunami of sexual abuse” to hit the Catholic Church.

Michael Hill, the former head of the Marist Brothers in Australia, told the Royal Commission into childhood sexual abuse that his training for a life of celibacy consisted of one word: “Don’t”.

Justice Peter McClellan asked: “Do you look upon the vow of chastity imposed upon teenage boys, soon to become men, as one of the elements that may be responsible for the tsunami that came?”

Brother Hill, a trained psychologist, told him: “In some cases I agree that that’s a probable cause, yes.”

He said the lack of training on the vow of celibacy when he became a Marist brother in the 1960s as an 18-year-old was “intolerable” and would be “totally unacceptable” today.

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Long Road to Release of Names of Priests Accused of Sexual Abuse

MINNESOTA
KAAL

(ABC 6 News) – Two weeks ago, the Winona Diocese was ordered by a judge to release the names of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse. Thirteen were on that list, and the 14th is actually being criminally charged. The others likely won’t, because the evidence is long gone

Before this year, victims who were sexually abused as children had only until age 24 to report their attackers. That changed with two votes by the Minnesota legislature.

“The law allows them now to come forward and take action and get help,” attorney Jeff Anderson said back in August.

Soon after Governor Dayton signed the bill ending the statute of limitations into law, victims started coming forward.

We spoke with an alleged victim in August who says he was abused by a priest more than 50 years ago

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Diocese of Winona releases list of 14 priests; victims’ advocates hope to get internal files

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

[Documents via Jeff Anderson & Associates
12-3-2013 Order
Diocese of Winona List of 14
Doe 1 Summons and Complaint 5-29-13
Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis List
Timeline of efforts to have Winona’s list released
Winona List of 14 photos
Leo C. Koppala]

By Jerome Christenson, Abby Eisenberg and Brian Voerding news@winonadailynews.com

The names of 14 Diocese of Winona priests credibly accused of child sexual abuse are now public, nearly a decade after they were first collected.

The diocese released the names Monday in response to a court order earlier this month. Bishop John Quinn called it a “very difficult morning,” and advocates for abuse victims described the release as a big, but only the first, step toward healing and justice.

Those on the list have worked at 45 parishes in 44 cities across southern Minnesota. All but five are deceased, some have not been active in the diocese for decades and only one still lives in the Winona area. Their service at Winona-area parishes runs primarily from the mid-1950s through the 1970s, though a few continued to serve into the 2000s.

Some of the priests were suspended and then defrocked, while others left the diocese voluntarily or died before any formal action was taken.

None of the priests on the list have been convicted of any criminal sexual crime. Only one faces an active criminal investigation stemming from the allegations; the others still living were never charged with a crime, and in most cases the statute of limitations would have long expired.

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Winona diocese posts names of priests

MINNESOTA
Fairmont Sentinel

December 17, 2013
Jodelle Greiner – Staff Writer , Fairmont Sentinel

WINONA- The Diocese of Winona released a statement Monday by Bishop John M. Quinn that included a list of priests with credible accusations of abuse.

The diocese covers southern Minnesota. The list includes 14 priests, nine of whom are deceased.

Leo Charles Koppala of Blue Earth was the only priest listed as being accused of abuse since 2004. He currently faces a criminal sexual conduct charge in Faribault County.

Ramsey County District Court had ordered public release of the names of the priests.

“In 2002, the National Review board commissioned the John Jay College of Criminal Justice to conduct a blind study to determine the nature and scope of child sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic Church in the United States,” the statement from the diocese reads. “Each diocese in the United States was contacted by John Jay College and was required to report the number of priests within its diocese who had ‘credible’ accusations of abuse.”

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Catholic Church Sex Scandal Leaves Five Priests Sacked in Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
International Business Times

By Sounak Mukhopadhyay | December 17, 2013

Five priests have been removed and one more has been asked to go on leave as a result of the investigation related to their involvement in a case of child sex abuse. It was announced on Sunday by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

The priests who were found “unsuitable to return to the church” were Reverend Peter J Talocci, Reverend Stephen B Perzan, Reverend Joseph M Glatts, Reverend Mark E Fernandes and Reverend Michael A Chapman. The decision came after the misconduct and child sex abuse investigation had taken place in reference to a grand jury report in Feb 2011. Rev Glatts and Rev Fernandes were not accused of sexual misconduct. However, they were accused of the violation of church standards.

According to NBC Philadelphia, Reverend John P. Paul from one of the North Philadelphia churches has been sent on administrative leave as there is an investigation pending on him being accused of sexually abusing minors, which occurred over 40 years back. Rev Paul submitted his resignation in Nov after a police investigation had begun on the allegations against him abusing minors during his days as a seminarian. On the other hand, it was learned by the archdiocese that there were additional allegations against Rev Paul even after he resigned.

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December 16, 2013

A Statement from Most Rev. John M. Quinn, Bishop of Winona

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona

WINONA, MN – December 16, 2013 – Earlier today, the Diocese of Winona released a list of 13 priest names associated with the John Jay Study commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) in 2002 as well as one additional name representing a recent claim. The accompanying statement provided detailed information about the study and the Diocese of Winona’s release of the priest names. This statement can be found on our website at www.dow.org.

Over the past few decades, a number of clergy members in the Diocese of Winona sadly have been accused of violating the sacred trust placed in them by children, youth and their families and were accused of detestable crimes of sexual abuse. This hascaused insufferable harm to victims, their families, parishioners and the Church. For this I am truly sorry.

The Diocese of Winona has fully adopted the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People (“the Charter”), as promulgated by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishop, and is committed to combating the problems of sexual abuse, protecting the young and vulnerable, caring for the victims of abuse, and restoring trust and hope. We are committed to a process of transparency about sexual abuse by clergy and the disclosure of names of those with substantiated claims so that this will never occur again.

The Diocese of Winona works vigorously and has taken extraordinary measures to ensure that all of the schools, parishes and programs administered in the Diocese adhere to the Charter so that those entrusted to our care are safe.

Nearly 5,000 priests, deacons, lay employees, volunteers and seminarians complete the Virtus Safe Environment Program annually. This ongoing program strengthens the stringent policies and procedures that have been in place for over a decade now. Everyone is invited to examine these resources on our website www.dow.org and share with us ideas and ways that we can further strengthen our programs. If you have been harmed or know someone who has been harmed, the information needed to report the claim can be found on the site.

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List from diocese of accused priests includes some with ties to Steele, Dodge counties

MINNESOTA
Owatonna People’s Press

By JEFFREY JACKSON jjackson@owatonna.com
Posted on December 16, 2013

Two priests with ties to Steele County and three others with ties to Dodge County are among the 14 priests named Monday by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona as being “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors.

The two priests with Steele County ties have since died. Two of the priests with Dodge County ties have died and the third has had his ministerial privileges suspended.

The diocese filed the list in Ramsey County District Court Monday morning, a day before a deadline set by a judge.

Most of the priests on the list served in Catholic churches and schools from the late 1940s to the early 1990s, though two served in the last decade.

The priests with ties to Steele County are:

The Rev. Sylvester F. Brown. He was ordained May 31, 1956, and served at St. Mary School in Owatonna beginning on Aug. 16 of that same year. He also served at the State School in Owatonna, beginning on Aug. 22, 1961. In June 1963, he was assigned to Winona and served in various parishes after that. He returned to the area on Nov. 1, 1989, when he was assigned to St. Ann church in Janesville — a parish to which he continued to be assigned, with his last assignment coming on Dec. 31, 2007. Brown died on Jan. 6, 2010.

The Rev. Louis G. Cook. He was ordained May 31, 1958, and served various parishes in the diocese until Oct. 15, 1970, when he was assigned to Holy Trinity in Litomysl. He also served at Queen of Angels church in Austin in 1970. On March 13, 2000, Cook was assigned to St. Augustine in Austin. He died on Nov. 26, 2004.

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Three former Waseca County priests on Winona Diocese list of accused abusers

MINNESOTA
Waseca County News

By CHRISTEN FURLONG cfurlong@wasecacountynews.com
Posted on December 16, 2013

UPDATE: The name of a former priest, Jack L. Krough, who served in Waseca County from 1990-96 has been added to this story.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona on Monday named 14 priests credibly accused of sexually abusing minors. Three of those priests served in Waseca County at some point in their careers.

The list was filed in Ramsey County District by the diocese, only a day before a deadline set by a judge. The three priests who served in Waseca County were Sylvester Brown, Ferdinand Kaiser and Jack Krough, the two former are now deceased.

The list includes priests who the diocese considers to be credibly accused. Joel Hennessy, spokesman and communication director for the Winona Diocese, said that Bishop John Quinn hoped that releasing the list demonstrates “the sincere apology of the diocese, and the desire to heal and begin moving forward.”

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Controversial Theologian Hans Küng: ‘I Don’t Cling to This Life’

GERMANY
Spiegel

By Markus Grill

Hans Küng fought his whole life for the reforms being weighed by the Vatican today. In a SPIEGEL interview, the elderly Swiss theologian discusses Pope Francis’ chances to revolutionize the church, why John Paul II shouldn’t be canonized and what he hopes to learn in heaven.

Swiss theologian Hans Küng has been a voice for reform in the Catholic Church for decades on issues such as papal infallibility, the celibacy of priests and euthanasia. His advocacy cost him his license to teach Catholic theology and has led many to brand him a heretic. As the 85-year-old suffers from Parkinson’s disease and other ailments, he watches the church under Pope Francis contemplate many of the reforms he has long championed. He recently sat down with SPIEGEL for a wide-ranging conversation about his life and hopes for the future of the church.

SPIEGEL: Professor Küng, will you go to heaven?
Küng: I certainly hope so.

SPIEGEL: Some would say you’re going to hell because you are a heretic in the eyes of the church.

Küng: I’m not a heretic, but a critical reform theologian who, unlike many of his critics, uses the gospel instead of medieval theology, liturgy and church law as his benchmark.

SPIEGEL: Does hell even exist?

Küng: Alluding to hell is a warning that a person can completely neglect his purpose in life. I don’t believe in an eternal hell.

SPIEGEL: If hell means losing one’s purpose in life, it must be a pretty secularist notion.

Küng: Sartre says that hell is other people. People create their own hell — in wars like the one in Syria, for example, as well as with unbridled capitalism.

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Diocese of Winona releases list of 14 accused priests

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

More “overlooked” priests … . The Winona Daily News reports, “The Diocese of Winona released a list today of 14 priests who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse. Those on the list have worked at 45 parishes in 44 cities across southern Minnesota. All but five of the priests on the list are deceased, and some have not been active in the diocese for decades. Some of the priests were suspended and then defrocked, while others left the diocese voluntarily or died before any formal action was taken. The diocese’s list contains 13 names identified by a 2004 nationwide study to determine the scope of clergy sex abuse, as well as a 14th name, one priest accused of abuse since 2004, which the diocese was ordered to release by early January.”

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Accused Former Columbia Heights Priest Also on Winona Diocese List

MINNESOTA
Patch

Posted by James Warden (Editor) , December 16, 2013

A former Columbia Heights priest who was on the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ list of accused priests is also on a similar list that the Diocese of Winona released Monday.

In response to a Ramsey County District Court order, the Diocese of Winona publicly released a list of 14 priests with “credible” accusations of abuse. According to the list, Thomas P. Adamson was ordained in 1958 and worked in 13 parishes in the Diocese of Winona through 1979.

Monday’s release follows the Dec. 5 release by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis of priests “credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors in the Archdiocese.”

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Sex Abuse Victims Face Former Yeshiva Guard in Australian Court

AUSTRALIA
Jewish Daily Forward

By JTA
Published December 16, 2013.

The sex abuse victims of an Orthodox man contracted to a Chabad-Lubavitch school in Melbourne confronted their attacker in court.

David Samuel Cyprys, a former security guard at Yeshivah College in Melbourne, appeared in court Monday for a pre-sentencing hearing. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 20 for raping one child and molesting eight others.

“I remember the shame,” one of the nine victims, whose name is suppressed, told the court. “I remember the guilt. I remember the anger. I remember the taunts and the teasing. I remember the pain and suffering.”

Another victim, who had his statement read out by the prosecution, said it was his dream to become a rabbi, but he had now abandoned Orthodoxy.

A jury of the County Court of Victoria found Cyprys guilty in August of raping one boy five times between 1990 and 1991. Cyprys also pleaded guilty to abusing eight others.

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Ordaining 31 Legionaries, cardinal says they are part of order’s reform

ROME
Catholic Register

Written by Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service
Monday, 16 December 2013

ROME – Ordaining 31 new priests for the Legionaries of Christ, Cardinal Velasio De Paolis told them they were not responsible for the scandals that threatened to destroy their order, but they have been part of the effort to renew and reform the order.

“You who have stayed are not personally responsible for the painful facts relived over the past three years” as the Legionaries acknowledged the sexual abuse and sinfulness of their founder, the late Mexican Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, Cardinal De Paolis said in his homily Dec. 14 at the ordination Mass.

The Legionaries are scheduled to begin a general chapter meeting Jan. 8 to vote for new leaders for the order and to adopt a new constitution. The new structure and rules will be submitted to Pope Francis for his approval or for further instructions for the future of the order, which has about 950 priests and hundreds of seminarians.

During the ordination Mass at the Basilica of St. John Lateran, Cardinal De Paolis said the new constitutions “are not simply the result of a juridical process; they are the fruit of a long examination of conscience by the entire congregation.”

“There was a moment in the Legion when sin oppressed it, when sin became so visible and clamorous that it reached monstrous proportions and filled the media throughout the world,” the cardinal said. “The Legion’s survival seemed uncertain.”

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Report …

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Report into the Jeremy Forrest affair damns school for ignoring seven months of warning signs that led to the abduction of a pupil

RICHARD GARNER Author Biography EDUCATION EDITOR Monday 16 December 2013

A secondary school repeatedly turned a blind eye to evidence one of its teachers was having an affair with a pupil until it was too late to stop him abducting her, a serious case review concluded yesterday.

Seven months after the first complaint was raised, the teacher – Jeremy Forrest, from Bishop Bell Church of England school in Eastbourne, East Sussex – fled to France with her where they had sex. He has been jailed for five-and-a-half years.

During these seven months, the school was told that the two had been seen holding hands on a school trip, had tweeted messages such as “miss you” to each other, while other pupils had spotted an “inappropriate” photograph of him on her mobile.

Yet the school repeatedly failed to see this as evidence he was an abuser and appeared to adopt a default position of supporting a colleague – unable to comprehend he could be in the wrong.

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Jeremy Forrest school ‘may be taken over by government’

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Graeme Paton, Education Editor
16 Dec 2013

A school that repeatedly failed to raise the alarm before teacher Jeremy Forrest abducted one of his pupils has been threatened with takeover by the government, it emerged today.

The Department for Education may intervene in the running of the Bishop Bell C of E School in Eastbourne, East Sussex, because of the “inexcusable” way it handled the child abuse case.

Edward Timpson, the Children’s Minister, said urgent issues needed to be addressed at the state comprehensive to ensure pupils are properly protected.

The warning follows the publication of a damning report that found the school missed repeated opportunities to blow the whistle on inappropriate conduct between the teacher and a teenage schoolgirl.

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School dismissed teacher-abuse fear

UNITED KINGDOM
Herts and Essex Observer

School staff missed repeated opportunities to blow the whistle on inappropriate conduct between teacher Jeremy Forrest and a teenage schoolgirl before he abducted her, a damning review has found.

Concerns raised by children about the growing closeness between married maths teacher Forrest and his pupil were “repeatedly dismissed”.

Instead, Bishop Bell C of E School in Eastbourne, East Sussex, adopted a “default position” of “intuitively supporting a colleague” in the face of evidence that he might be an abuser.

It was also revealed that the girl, who cannot be named, was never spoken to by school staff in a supportive way, according to the serious case review by the East Sussex Local Safeguarding Children Board.

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4 former local priests identified on Diocese of Winona list

MINNESOTA
Albert Lea Tribune

Two priests who served in Albert Lea, plus one in both New Richland and Wells, were identified on the Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona’s list of priests accused of sexually abusing minors.

The southeastern Minnesota diocese filed the list in Ramsey County District Court on Monday. That’s a day before the deadline set by a Ramsey County judge.

All four of the priests served in the 1950s and ’60s. They are the following:

• Thomas Adamson, now 80, who served a stint at St. Theodore Catholic Church in Albert Lea in the 1960s who faces a civil lawsuit in Ramsey County over allegations of sexual abuse. He was also released on the list released last week of accused priests by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Adamson served in the St. Theodore Catholic Church parish in 1967 and 1968, at which time he was also chaplain of Lea College, an institution of higher learning on the west side of Albert Lea that shut down in 1973. He was removed from the ministry in 1985 and lives in Rochester.

• William D. Curtis was assigned to the St. Theodore parish in August 1968, where he served until receiving a new assignment at St. Teresa in Mapleton in January 1976.

His ministerial privileges were suspended in July 1990 and died in April 2001.

• Ferdinand L. Kaiser, who served in the All Saints parish in New Richland starting Dec. 3, 1952, until he received a new assignment in April 1967 in Iosco.

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2 former Austin priests among 14 accused of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Austin Daily Herald

The Diocese of Winona released on Monday a list of 14 priests accused of sexually abusing minors, including two former Austin priests.

The list also includes two priests who served in Albert Lea, one who served in Brownsdale, one in Hayfield, and one in both New Richland and Wells.

The southeastern Minnesota diocese filed the list in Ramsey County District Court on Monday, a day before the deadline set by a Ramsey County judge.

Some of the priests who served in the area include:

— Louis G Cook, who was ordained in 1958, served at Austin’s Queen of Angels Catholic Church in 1970, and Austin’s St. Augustine Church in 2000, according to the diocese. He died in November 2004 at 80 years old.

— Jack L. Krough, 64, was ordained in 1976 and began serving at Austin’s St. Augustine Church and Pacelli Catholic Schools in June 1976. He also served at St. Edward’s Catholic Church in Austin and Brownsdale’s Our Lady of Loretto in 1996. His ministerial privileges were suspended in June of 2002 indefinitely; laicization, or the process of permanently removing his ministerial privileges, is pending. Krough lives in Barron, Wis.

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Towards Healing Hearings Resume (Or: Priests Don’t Gossip)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse today continued its hearings concerning the Catholic Church’s scheme for dealings with victims, the “Towards Healing” process. It is concentrating on four victims, in two dioceses (Brisbane in Queensland Sate and Lismore in New South Wales State), and two religious orders.

[The enquiry has heard from the current bishop of Lismore, Geoffrey Hilton Jarrett. Some media reports referred to him as Geoffrey Hilton. Fr. Geoffrey Hilton was a Catholic Priest in the U.K., who recently had child sexual abuse claims against him dropped. Fr. Hilton had attracted attention because he had been a chaplain to the British Olympic Team at the London Olympics.]

Bishop Jarrett is more than a year past the mandatory retirement age of 75 imposed by the Catholic Church. Maybe, no one wants to take over the mess that is the Lismore diocese.

Jarrett told the enquiry that he had, in 2011, referred one of his priests to the Vatican because the priest had been “telling people he knew of a place in Thailand where under age people were available to foreign visitors.” (See previous postings on S.E.Asian “orphanages”) He had not yet heard back from the Vatican, but said this was to be expected since the Vatican was being swamped with such complaints.

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New transformational Roman Catholic pontiff voted winner in survey of Top 10 Religion News Stories of the Year

UNITED STATES
Religion Newswriters Association

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | Dec. 16, 2013

Columbia (MO): The selection of a reform-minded Argentinian as the new leader of the world’s largest religious institution was voted the Top Religion Story of the Year by the nation’s religion journalists.

Members of Religion Newswriters Association chose as the No. 1 Religion Story of the Year the election of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, who took the name Pope Francis. Pope Francis’ predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, was in the No. 2 spot because of his historic resignation.

Pope Francis also was named Religion Newsmaker of the Year, beating out Pope Benedict XVI and Billy Graham, who turned 95 this year.

The online ballot was conducted Friday, Dec. 12 through Sunday, Dec. 15. Only RNA members were eligible to vote.

The ballot items are listed here, in order. All 20 news items on the ballot are ranked.

1. Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina is a surprise choice to succeed Benedict, becoming the first Latin American and first Jesuit pope, and the first to take the name of Francis. He immediately launches a series of stunning and generally popular forays—meeting with the poor in Brazil, embracing the ill, issuing conciliatory words toward gays and calling for a poorer and more pastoral church.

2. Pope Benedict XVI, citing age and strength issues, becomes first pope to resign in almost 600 years.

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Winona archdiocese releases names of 14 accused pedophile priests

MINNESOTA
Digital Journal

By Brett Wilkins
Dec 16, 2013

Winona – The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Winona, Minnesota has released the names of 14 priests suspected of raping or sexually abusing children.

CBS Minnesota reports the archdiocese filed the list in the Ramsey County District Court on Monday, a little more than a week after John Van de North ordered it and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to release the names of 46 suspected pedophile priests by December 17. The larger archdiocese named 34 accused clergy sex abusers earlier this month. Archbishop John Nienstedt also apologized for the “insufferable harm” suffered by victims of the abuse.

Of the 14 priests named by the Winona archdiocese, nine are now dead. Of the five who are still alive, only one has been removed from the priesthood. Three priests are in the process of being ousted and one is on administrative leave pending the outcome of a criminal case.

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Newest list of accused priests includes 10 from area

MINNESOTA
Mankato Free Press

By Robb Murray
rmurray@mankatofreepress.com

Ten of the 14 priests whose names are on the list of Winona Diocese priests accused of sexually abusing minors served at parishes in the Mankato area.

The list of names, released by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona, was filed Monday morning in Ramsey County District Court, a day before the deadline set by a Ramsey County judge.

Among the names of priests who served at Mankato-area parishes were:

• Sylvester F. Brown, who served at SS. Peter and Paul in Blue Earth in 1970s, Immaculate Conception in St. Clair in and St. Ann in Janesville from 1989 to 2007. He died in 2010.

• Joseph Cashman, who served at St. Joseph in Good Thunder and Loyola High School in 1967 and St. John the Baptist in Mankato in 1977.

• William D. Curtis, who served at St. Joseph in Good Thunder in 1984. He died in 2001.

• Richard H. Hatch, who served at St. James in St. James in 1960. He died in 2005.

• Ferdinand L. Kaiser, who served at SS. Peter and Paul in Blue Earth in 1944, and All Saints in New Richland in 1952. He died in 1973.

• Jack L. Krough, who served at All Saints in New Richland and St. Joseph in Waldorf in 1990.

• James W. Lennon, who served at St. James in St. James in 1978. He died in 2000.

• Leland J. Smith, who served at SS. Peter and Paul in Blue Earth in 1953 and St. Casmir in Wells in 1960.

• Robert H. Taylor, who served at St. Mary in Madelia in 1984, Holy Family in Lake Crystal and St. Katherine in Truman in 1985. He died in 2012.

• Leo Charles Koppala, who served at SS. Peter and Paul in Blue Earth and St. Mary in Winnebago in 2009.

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Accused Former Apple Valley Priest Also on Winona Diocese List

MINNESOTA
Patch

Posted by James Warden (Editor) , December 16, 2013

A former Apple Valley priest who was on the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ list of accused priests is also on a similar list that the Diocese of Winona released Monday.

In response to a Ramsey County District Court order, the Diocese of Winona publicly released a list of 14 priests with “credible” accusations of abuse. According to the list, Thomas P. Adamson was ordained in 1958 and worked in 13 parishes in the Diocese of Winona through 1979.

Monday’s release follows the Dec. 5 release by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis of priests “credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors in the Archdiocese.”

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Winona Dioceses releases names of 14 Catholic priests accused of child sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: PATRICK CONDON , Associated Press Updated: December 16, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona on Monday named 14 priests accused of sexually abusing minors, most of whom were not previously known by the public or local churchgoers to have faced such allegations.

The diocese filed the list in Ramsey County District Court, a day before a deadline set by a judge. Some of the listed priests served at dozens of Catholic churches and schools in southern Minnesota cities and small towns, primarily from the late 1940s to the early 1990s, although two served in the last decade.

Nine of the priests on the list are dead. Of the five still living, the diocese said one has been removed from priesthood, three are in that process, and one is on forced leaving pending criminal proceedings in Faribault County.

The list released Monday includes priests who the diocese considers to be credibly accused. A spokesman for the Winona Diocese did not immediately return a call seeking further comment.

It’s the latest such disclosure as Catholic bishops in Minnesota face ongoing legal pressure after years of keeping the names secret. Attorneys for abuse victims had sought the public disclosure of the list, saying it was in the interest of public safety. Earlier this month, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis named 34 priests accused of abuse under the same judicial order.

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Winona priests ‘credibly accused’ of child sex abuse disclosed

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 12/16/201

The Diocese of Winona has released its list of 14 priests it judged “credibly accused” of sexually abusing children.

The list, released Monday morning, includes nine priests who are deceased. The others live in Rochester; Winona; Baron, Wis.; and Dallas, Texas.

One clergyman listed, Leo Koppala, was charged in June with criminal sexual abuse involving an 11-year-old girl in Faribault County, whom he allegedly kissed and fondled. The case against him is pending.

According to court records, he is living at the Carmelite Hermitage in Houston, Minn.

The other 13 priests were listed as part of a 2004 study commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and conducted by John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York.

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Lawsuit alleges child sex abuse by Golden Valley priest in 1962

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 12/16/2013

A man who alleges he was sexually abused by a priest at a Golden Valley church around 1962 has sued the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.

The plaintiff, identified as John Doe 108, served as an altar boy at the Church of St. Margaret Mary when Rudolph Henrich was the priest there, according to the suit filed Monday in Ramsey County District Court.

Henrich sexually assaulted the child by sliding his hands down the boy’s pants and fondling him, the lawsuit said.

“Such abuse happened at report card time when Fr. Henrich would have the kids sit on his lap to go over their report cards,” according to the suit.

At the time, the boy was 10 or 11 years old, the suit said.

Henrich is not named as a defendant in the suit; he died in 1992.

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A Statement from Most Rev. John M. Quinn, Bishop of Winona

WINONA (MN)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona

[with list of names]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEDIA CONTACT:
Joel Hennessy, Director of Communications
jhennessy@dow.org office 507.858.1249 cell 507.254.3948

WINONA, MN – December 16, 2013 – In 2002, the National Review Board commissioned the John Jay College of Criminal Justice to conduct a blind study to determine the nature and scope of child sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. Each diocese in the United States was contacted by John Jay College and was required to report the number of priests within its diocese who had “credible” accusations of abuse.

The national study required the report of any accusation that was not implausible (see definition below). This included allegations that did not necessarily result in a criminal, civil or diocesan investigation and allegations that were unsubstantiated.

The national study defined an implausible allegation as one that could not possibly have happened under the given circumstances (e.g., an accusation is made to a bishop about a priest who never served at that diocese). The study went on to say that erroneous information does not necessarily make the allegation implausible (e.g., a priest arrived at the diocese a year after the alleged abuse, but all other facts of the case are credible and the alleged victim might have mistaken the
date). Allegations that were determined not to be “implausible” have since been referred to as “credible” accusations.

The methodology of the national study encouraged over-reporting and the study specifically directed each diocese not to engage in the endeavor of weighing the credibility of any of the accusations out of concern that the data produced by the study would arguably be invalid because of subjective determinations as to the credibility of, or substantiation of, the allegation(s).

The national study concluded that approximately 4% of priests in ministry in the United States had accusations of abuse made against them. The study also found that the annual number of incidents of sexual abuse of minors by priests increased steadily to a peak in the late 1970s and early 1980s and then declined sharply after 1985.

The Ramsey County District Court has ordered that the Diocese of Winona publicly release the names associated with the John Jay College Study, as well any other priests who have had accusations of child sexual abuse since 2004. In compliance with that Order, the Diocese of Winona hereby releases the following names, ages, places of ministry, ministerial status and current location of each priest associated with the John Jay Study, as well as the same information of those who have been accused of perpetrating sexual abuse against a minor since 2002.

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Winona Diocese releases list of accused priest abusers

MINNESOTA
KARE

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona has named 14 priests accused of sexually abusing minors.

The southeastern Minnesota diocese filed the list in Ramsey County District Court on Monday. That’s a day before the deadline set by a Ramsey County judge.

KARE 11 is providing a link to the Winona diocese list.

Attorneys for abuse victims have long sought such lists by saying it’s in the interest of public safety. Earlier this month, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis published the names of 34 priests accused of abuse under the same judicial order.

Of the 14 priests identified by the Diocese of Winona, nine are dead. Of the five still living, the diocese says one has been removed from priesthood. Three are in the process of being removed, and one is on administrative leave pending criminal proceedings in Faribault County.

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MN – Winona bishop to release predator names; SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday December 16, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, SNAP Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

Because he’s being forced to do so by a judge and a determined victim, Winona’s Catholic bishop will release a list of proven, admitted and credibly accused predator priests soon. That’s just the beginning.

[Post-Bulletin]

Winona Catholic officials must now go further. The bishop should

— turn over to law enforcement every shred of paper he has about these potentially dangerous men ,

— put them in a remote, independent treatment center so they’ll be kept away from kids, and

— personally visit each parish where they worked, begging victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call the police.

Even if a predator is deceased, these records should be turned over and this appeal must be made. Even though an offender may not be able to be prosecuted, those who ignored or concealed his or her crimes might be.

We are absolutely certain that there is more information about child molesting clerics in Winona that should be made public too. The bishop should voluntarily provide that to parents, parishioners and the public.

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.

Winona Diocese releases names of accused child abusers

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

[the list]

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

The names of 14 priests considered “credibly accused” child abusers have been released by the Diocese of Winona.

Though at least one — Thomas Adamson — has been in the news for many years, the list provided some surprises, said a St. Paul attorney whose firm has represented dozens of the victims.

The diocese was ordered by a Ramsey County judge to release the names of the accused in the wake of a lawsuit that stemmed from an abuse case involving Adamson. The plaintiff said the Winona Diocese knew Adamson had been abusing children for years, but simply moved him around from parish to parish — until he eventually molested the plaintiff in 1976-77.

The diocese’s list covers the period from 1950 to 2002. A separate list exists of clergy credibly accused of abuse after 2004. That list has not been made public.

The list includes the names of the priests and the parishes they served. What it doesn’t reveal is when the abuse occurred, what the abuse was, how the church handled the reports of abuse and how the information was concealed.

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Diocese of Winona releases list of 13 priests accused of child abuse

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

[the list]

The Diocese of Winona released a list today of 13 priests who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse.

The diocese was ordered to release the list earlier this month by a Ramsey County judge, who also ordered the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to release a similar list of 33 names. The diocese released those names last week. Today is the judge’s deadline for the Winona diocese to release its list of names.

Shortly after the judge’s decision, Winona Bishop John Quinn said the diocese will “fully cooperate with the order.”

Barbara Dorris, the outreach director for SNAP — Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests — released a statement Monday calling on Quinn to also turn over all documentation on the people on the list, order them to be put in a treatment center, and pay personal visits to each parish where they worked.

“Let no one breathe a sigh of relief today,” she said. “Let no one misunderstand what’s happening in Winona. This is not reform. It’s simply a bishop obeying a court order so he won’t get in trouble.”

Attorneys with the law firm of Jeff Anderson, who has aggressively pushed the courts to release the lists of names, have planned an afternoon news conference in Rochester. Those on the list have worked at 45 parishes in 44 cities across southern Minnesota, according to the firm.

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Diocese of Winona releases names of priests accused of child abuse

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger  hopfen@startribune.com

The Diocese of Winona disclosed the names Monday of 14 priests who have been credibly accused of sexual misconduct with children, a list that was compiled a decade ago but never before made public.

The priests listed were parish priests and/or teachers in the diocese high schools or the Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary in Winona. The diocese released their names, their parish and work history, current residence, and year of death if deceased.

Unsealing the list was ordered by a Ramsey District Court judge earlier this month in response to a lawsuit filed on behalf of a man who said he was abused by former priest Thomas Adamson, who had been accused of molesting a number of boys in the Winona diocese before being transferred to the Archdiocese of St. Paul- Minneapolis.

It is the third such “secret list” made public in the past two weeks, following similar disclosures by the archdiocese and St. John’s Abbey of Collegeville.

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Media Advisory

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

December 16, 2013

Diocese of Winona Releases Secret List Containing Names of 14 Priests with Credible Abuse Allegations

Perpetrators worked at 45 parishes in 44 cities in Southern Minnesota

WHAT: At a news conference today in Rochester, sexual abuse attorney Mike Finnegan and former priest and advocate Patrick J. Wall, will respond to the court-ordered release of a list containing the names of 13 priests with credible allegations of child sexual abuse by the Diocese of Winona.

“The release of this list makes our communities safer for children and we applaud the courageous survivors who stood up and spoke out to make sure this list was released. We are now one step closer to full transparency and accountability. ” – Attorney Mike Finnegan

WHEN: Monday, December 16, 2013 at 1:30PM CST

WHERE: Hilton Garden Inn – Downtown Rochester
225 S. Broadway – Embassy Room
Rochester, MN 55904

WHO: Mike Finnegan, a sexual abuse attorney based in St. Paul, Minnesota has represented hundreds of sexual abuse survivors. Patrick J. Wall, former priest and monk is now a consultant and advocate for sexual abuse survivors.

Notes:

· Judge Van de North’s Order dated December 3, 2013, and the original Doe 1 complaint can be found on our website at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Mike Finnegan: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.205.5531
Contact Patrick Wall: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/949.307.3935

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TN – Victims challenge Catholic bishop

TENNESSEE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Memphis priest is accused of child sex abuse
He allegedly participated in “orgies” with other clerics
Group also wants prelate to post names of all predator priests

WHAT:
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will disclose that a Memphis priest has been accused – by several men in civil litigation – of molesting kids in “orgies.” They will also challenge Memphis’ Catholic bishop to:

–Disclose information and evidence about the allegations (made in litigation),
–Visit parishes where the accused priest worked and reach out to other victims, and
–Post on the diocesan website the names of all predator priests who have worked in western Tennessee.

WHEN:
Monday, Dec. 16 at 10:30 a.m.

WHERE:
On the sidewalk outside the Sacred Heart Catholic church, 324 Jefferson Ave. (corner of Cleveland) in Memphis (901-726-1891).

WHO:
Two members of an independent international self-help group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including a Missouri man who is the organization’s long-time executive director.

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.

Diocese of Winona to Disclose Names of Accused Priests

MINNESOTA
KAAL

By: Jennie Olson

The names of more Catholic priests accused of sexually abusing children are expected to be released Monday from the Diocese of Winona. A judge ruled they have until Tuesday to release it.

The Diocese of Winona says it will disclose the names of 13 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors. The list will include the name, birth date and year that each priest was ordained. It will also say whether the priest is alive, all parishes where they served within the Diocese of Winona, current status in the ministry and an address.

Earlier this month, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis released a similar list with 33 names.

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Wuerl named to bishops’ panel; Burke not confirmed

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Dec. 16, 2013 NCR Today

ROME Pope Francis on Monday named Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C., as a member of the Vatican’s all-important Congregation for Bishops, essentially ratifying Wuerl as a highly influential figure in terms of shaping bishops’ appointments in the United States.

Wuerl was the only new American named to the congregation by Francis, although the pope also confirmed Cardinal William Levada, who stepped down in July 2012 as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, as a member of the body.

Francis likewise confirmed that the Congregation for Bishops will continue to be led by Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet, who’s held the position since June 2010.

Notably, Francis did not confirm Cardinal Raymond Burke, president of the Apostolic Signatura, the Vatican’s highest court, as a member of the Congregation for Bishops. Generally seen as occupying a prominent place on the church’s conservative wing, Burke had been named to the Congregation for Bishops by Benedict XVI in 2009. The pope also did not confirm Cardinal Justin Rigali as a member, who stepped down as the archbishop of Philadelphia in 2011.

Under the Vatican’s process for picking bishops, the papal ambassador, or nuncio, in each country is responsible for compiling a list of names of candidates, called a terna, for openings as they arise. That terna is then submitted to the Congregation for Bishops, whose members vote on the final list to be submitted to the pope.

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Priest cleared of sex offence charges after prosecution offers no evidence

UNITED KINGDOM
Get West London

By John Shammas

A Hindu priest and well-known community leader who was facing sex offence charges has cleared his name.

The 42-year-old Gurudev Rajesh Parmar, founder of Hindu temple the Siddhashram Shakti Centre in Palmerston Road, Wealdstone, was acquitted on Friday of charges of assault causing actual bodily harm, a charge of conspiring to commit sexual offences and a charge for perverting the course of justice.

The Hindu priest, who lives in Headstone Drive, appeared at Harrow Crown Court for a plea and case management hearing for the charges to which he had denied.

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Charges against Hindu priest Gurudev Rajesh Parmar dropped

UNITED KINGDOM
This is Local London

By Bruce Thain

Charges against a Hindu priest have been dropped after the prosecution offered no evidence.

Gurudev Rajesh Parmar, a well-known founder of Hindu temple the Siddhashram Shakti Centre, in Palmerston Road, Wealdstone, had the charges dropped last week at a hearing at Harrow Crown Court.

The 42-year-old, of Headstone Drive, was accused one count of assault causing actual bodily harm, another of conspiring to commit sexual offences and one of perverting the cause of justice.

All charges, which Mr Parmar denied, were dropped after the prosecution failed to offer any evidence and a trial which was due to take place next year will not go ahead.

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Winona Diocese plans to release priest list this morning

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Posted: Monday, December 16, 2013
Mike Dougherty, mdougherty@postbulletin.com

WINONA — The Diocese of Winona said it plans on Monday morning to release the names of 13 Catholic priests accused of sexually abusing children.

The diocese has until Tuesday to release the list, according to an earlier judicial ruling.

A Diocese of Winona spokesman told the Post-Bulletin that Bishop John Quinn plans to release the names of the priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors. The list will include the name, birth date and year that each priest was ordained. The diocese will also say whether the priest is alive, list all parishes where the priest served within the Diocese of Winona, and cite the priest’s current status in the ministry and address.

St. Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop John Nienstedt spoke Sunday during two Masses at Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church, a large parish in suburban Minneapolis. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis released its list with 33 names earlier this month.

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County attorney: Grand jury not a likely option in archdiocese investigation

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Laura Yuen · St. Paul, Minn. · Dec 16, 2013

Anger over revelations about how the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis handled allegations of clergy sexual abuse seems to have yielded to a new resolve among victims, their advocates and members of the community: Lock them up.

The most outraged — many Catholics — want to see charges filed, not only against accused pedophile priests but against top church officials who kept the abuse secret over the years, putting children at risk.

Advocates for victims are calling for police search warrants and a grand jury investigation that could reveal potentially incriminating documents from the archdiocese.

But so far, there are no clear signs that St. Paul police and Ramsey County Attorney John Choi will use that approach.

Choi’s reluctance to use his grand-jury subpoena powers has drawn criticism from former Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham, who more than a decade ago mounted one of the most aggressive investigations into clergy sexual abuse. The work of Abraham and her successor culminated last year in the conviction of Monsignor William Lynn, the first senior Roman Catholic official in the nation convicted for concealing clergy sexual abuse.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 16 December 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father:

– confirmed Cardinal Marc Ouellet as prefect of the Congregation for Bishops;

– appointed the following as members of the same dicastery:

Cardinal Francisco Robles Ortega, archbishop of Guadalajara, Mexico; Cardinal Donald William Wuerl, archbishop of Washington, U.S.A.; Cardinal Ruben Salazar Gomez, archbishop of Bogota, Colombia; Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity; Cardinal Joao Braz de Aviz, prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life; Archbishop Pietro Parolin, secretary of State; Archbishop Beniamino Stella, prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy; Archbishop Lorenzo Baldisseri, secretary general of the Synod of Bishops; Archbishop Vincent Gerard Nichols of Westminster, Great Britain; Archbishop Paolo Rabitti, emeritus of Ferrara-Comacchio, Italy; Archbishop Gualtiero Bassetti of Perugia-Citta della Pieve, Italy; Bishop Felix Genn of Munster, Germany;

– confirmed the following as members of the same dicastery:

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, S.D.B., Cardinal Zenon Grocholewski, Cardinal George Pell, Cardinal Agostino Vallini, Cardinal Antonio Canizares Llovera, Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois, Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, Cardinal William Joseph Levada, Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, Cardinal Giovanni Lajolo, Cardinal Stanislaw Rylko, Cardinal Francesco Monterisi, Cardinal Santos Abril y Castello, Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello, Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli, Cardinal Jose Octavio Ruiz Arenas, and Archbishop Zygmunt Zimowski.

– confirmed the Consultors of the same dicastery.

– appointed Bishop Georges Varkey Puthiyakulangara, M.E.P., as bishop of Port-Berge (area 23,367, population 699,000, Catholics 19,320, priests 15, religious 44), Madagascar. Bishop Puthiyakulangara, currently co-adjutor of the same diocese, was born in Endoor, India in 1953, was ordained a priest in 1982, and received episcopal ordination in 2009. He succeeds Bishop Armand Toasy, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese the Holy Father accepted, in accordance with canon 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law.

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Jack Graham Explains How to Have Your Best Christmas: Shun Church Critics, Especially Those “Watchdoggers”

UNITED STATES
FBC Jax Watchdogs

At left is Jack Graham, pastor of the mega church Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas.

Being the loving, caring pastor that he is, Pastor Jack delivered a sermon on December 8th explaining how his church members can have their best Christmas ever.

Here is Pastor Jack’s advice:

“There’s lots of bloggers and watchdoggers who love to attack pastors and churches…maybe people you hang out with who love to attack churches and be negative about the church. My advice to you if you want to be happy in life is to get as far away as possible from those people. They’re only going to drag you down….Instead, get around people who say something like this: ‘Isn’t it great what God is doing in our church?'”

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Archbishop Nienstedt says he ‘overlooked’ priest-abuse issue

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert
An interesting choice of words … For MPR, Tom Scheck covered Archbishop John Nienstedt’s “apology” to parishioners at Our Lady of Grace in Edina. “Nienstedt has started addressing the clergy sex abuse scandal head on, telling parishioners and the media Sunday that he’s sorry he overlooked issues of abuse among parish priests. Nienstedt said mass at Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church in Edina. He told parishioners and reporters after mass that he was told the issue of clergy sex abuse was taken care of when he became archbishop seven years ago. … Neinstedt did not take any questions. … His decision to speak at Our Lady of Grace comes at a critical time for area churches since Christmas is a top fundraising period. Our Lady of Grace historically gives the most of any parish to the Catholic Services Appeal — a collection that helps cover the general operating budget of the archdiocese.”

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The church re-abused this victim of Marist Brother Raymond Foster

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article posted 16 December 2013)

A sex-abuse victim has told a Royal Commission that he was made to feel like he was robbing the Catholic Church when he applied for compensation for his damaged life.

In Sydney on 16 December 2013, this victim (who is being referred to as “Mister DG”) gave evidence at Australia’s national Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The commission has begun examining the “Towards Healing” process established by the Catholic Church to handle the church’s sex-abuse victims.

“Mr DG” said he was sexually abused in his family home by Brother Raymond Foster in 1970, when he was 13 years old. DG was attending a Marist Brothers school in Queensland at the time.

And Broken Rites knows that DG was not Brother Foster’s only victim.

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Victims confront abuser Father Finian Egan in court

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 16 December 2013)

Three women who were sexually abused as children by prominent Sydney priest Finian Egan have confronted the 78-year-old in court and have slammed the Catholic Church for harbouring him in the priesthood for five decades.

On 16 December 2013, Sydney District Court began pre-sentence proceedings regarding Egan.

Previously, Egan had been found guilty of seven counts of indecent assault and one count of rape in relation to attacks on girls aged 10 to 17 in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s in Sydney and on the New South Wales central coast. Prosecutors are pursuing a custodial sentence.

The pre-sentence hearing is so that the court can receive submissions from the prosecution and defence before a sentence is finally imposed.

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Malvern Priest Removed from Ministry

PENNSYLVANIA
Patch

Posted by Nate Adams (Editor) , December 16, 2013

Five priests, including priests from Malvern and West Chester, have been permanently removed from their parishes and duties of ministry, according to a release from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Sunday.

Archbishop Charles Chaput made “final decisions in seven cases of priests places on administrative leave following a February 2011 Grand Jury report,” according the statement.

Reverend Peter Talocci, of St. Patrick’s in Malvern, is one of four priests who is deemed “unsuitable for ministry,” due to substantiated violations of the “standards of ministerial behaviors and boundaries,” the statement says.

According to Philly.com, Talocci faced sexual abuse allegations that could not be substantiated.

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Curia says compensation time-barred in St Joseph abuse case

MALTA
Malta Today

Chris Mangion

The Maltese archdiocese has told the court in a compensation suit filed by 11 men, that the request is not possible since the crime they are demanding compensation for is now time-barred.

But the lawyers for the 11 men said the Curia’s offer to help the victims of sexual abuse committed by two former MSSP priests at the St Joseph Home, had legally interrupted the call for ‘time-barring’ raised by defence lawyers.

In November 2012, MSSP priests Carmelo Pulis and Godwin Scerri were defrocked and handed a six and five-year jail term respectively. Following the priest’s imprisonment, the 11 victims, led by Lawrence Grech – the man who broke his silence on the case, called for financial compensation but did not specify any amount. The compensation claim was filed against the Curia, the government, the Attorney General, Carmel Pulis, Godwin Scerri, the Archbishop and the St Paul’s Missionary Society.

With parties in agreement on the dates mentioned in the previous judgements as the date of the offence, the defence counsel argued that the request for compensation was now time-barred.

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Archbishop offers apology; survivors say it falls short

MINNESOTA
KARE

EDINA — On the same day Archbishop John Nienstedt apologized to a packed sanctuary at Our Lady of Grace Church in Edina, the leader of an abuse survivors’ group says the apology falls short of meaningful action.

“The Catholics of this state don’t need him. They need good faith leaders,” said Bob Schwiderski, the Minnesota Director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests or S.N.A.P. “The survivors of this state don’t want him because he’s not capable of reaching out to us.”

Schwiderski added that he also doesn’t believe Nienstedt’s comment that he was “as surprised as anyone else,” when the wave of allegations against priests began to form this fall.

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Oproep katholieke kerk om stilzwijgen over kindermisbruik te verbreken

NEDERLAND
Omroep Brabant

RIJSWIJK – In de ochtendbladen is maandag een oproep verschenen om het zwijgen rondom seksueel misbruik van kinderen in rooms-katholieke instellingen te verbreken. Het initiatief komt van kardinaal Wim Eijk en Cees van Dam van de Konferentie van Nederlandse Religieuzen. Zij hopen dat priesters en anderen het zwijgen doorbreken, omdat de slachtoffers in veel gevallen het misbruik niet konden bewijzen en de klachten ongegrond moesten worden verklaard.

Maandag is het twee jaar geleden dat Wim Deetman zijn rapport presenteerde over ontucht met minderjaringen in Rooms-Katholieke instellingen.

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‘Unieke oproep katholieke kerk over misbruik’

NEDERLAND
Volkskrant

KLOKK, de belangengroep misbruik in de Rooms-Katholieke Kerk, is blij met de oproep van kardinaal Wim Eijk om het zwijgen te verbreken over wat priesters en leken weten van seksueel misbruik van kinderen. Vandaag vragen Eijk en Cees van Dam van de Konferentie van Nederlandse Religieuzen (een koepelorganisatie van religieuze instituten) in verscheidene ochtendbladen iedereen die misbruikgevallen kent dit te melden. KLOKK spreekt van een unieke en historische oproep.

De twee noemen het zwijgen verbreken belangrijk omdat in veel gevallen de slachtoffers het misbruik niet konden bewijzen en de klachten ongegrond moesten worden verklaard.

Vandaag is het 2 jaar geleden dat Wim Deetman zijn rapport presenteerde over ontucht met minderjarigen in rooms-katholieke instellingen.

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INVESTIGATORS: A monk’s message

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

[with video]

Updated: Dec 15, 2013

posted by Shelby Capacio
video report by Trish Van Pilsum

COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. (KMSP) –

“I hope you die a thousand deaths” — shocking and violent words from a Catholic monk in Minnesota whose message led to an apology from the head of St. John’s Abbey for a victim of sexual abuse — and a criminal investigation.

St. John’s Abbey is located in Collegeville, Minn., northwest of St. Cloud, Minn. A college, a prep school and a monastery that hundreds of monks of the Benedictine order have called home can be found there.

Most of the monks who lived there have never been in trouble, but in the past few days, St. John’s Abbey released a list of 18 monks who have faced credible allegations of sexual abuse.

No one has pushed harder for that release than a man named Patrick Marker. He was abused by a monk when he was a student at the prep school 30 years ago. Now, he maintains a website called Behind the Pine Curtain, which is devoted exclusively to exposing misconduct at St. John’s Abbey.

As one might expect, Marker gets mixed responses to his site.

“Everything from former students writing to share their stories and their support, and every once in a while I’ll get an e-mail from someone who doesn’t quite agree with the methods or the fact that I have anything to say about St. John’s,” Marker told the Fox 9 Investigators.

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“Metió su mano en mi trusa …

MEXICO
Correo

“Metió su mano en mi trusa y me empezó a acariciar”: informe final sobre pederastia clerical

MÉXICO, D.F.- Marcial Maciel y Nicolás Aguilar son los principales sacerdotes señalados en el informe “Pederastia Clerical de Mexicanos en México y en otros países 1944-2013″, el cual fue entregado al Comité de Derechos del Niño de la ONU.

El documento final de 23 páginas fue firmado por Alberto Athié, Bernardo Barranco, entre otros, así como diferentes organizaciones de derechos humanos.

El texto, que se reproduce al final de esta nota, apunta los abusos cometidos por Maciel y acusa complicidad del Vaticano. Además, indica que el padre Aguilar cometió entre 90 y 120 abusos sexuales contra menores en México y Estados Unidos, en los que el informe considera que existió complicidad con el actual cardenal mexicano, Norberto Rivera.

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Molestation Allegations Against former Tredyffrin Priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Patch

Posted by Bob Byrne (Editor) , December 16, 2013

A priest who once served at St. Isaac Jogues Parish in Tredyffrin has been put on administrative leave by Philadelphia’s Catholic Archbishop following allegations that he sexually abused minors over 30 years ago. According to the Archdiocese, the allegations were investigated by law enforcement and following a lengthy investigation no charges were filed.

Reverend John P. Paul served at St. Isaac Joques between 1974 and 1975, according to an announcement from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Rev. Paul’s suspension is not connected to the resolutions of cases of priests placed on administrative leave following the February 2011 Grand Jury Report announced Sunday, according to the Archdiocese.

While on administrative leave he is not permitted to exercise public ministry, administer any of the Sacraments, wear clerical attire or present himself publicly as a priest pending the outcome of the investigation.

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Philly archbishop removes 5 priests from ministry over sex abuse or misconduct allegations

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Fox News

The Archbishop of Philadelphia has removed five priests from ministry over allegations of sexual abuse or misconduct.

Archbishop Charles J. Chaput announced the removal of the priests, who were deemed “unsuitable for ministry” in a statement released to parishioners Sunday.

One of them, the Rev. Michael A. Chapman, had been cleared of a prior abuse allegation in May 2012 by an archdiocesan review board. However, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that a new accuser had come forward with allegations against Chapman dating back 30 years. The paper reported that the board had substantiated the new allegations against Chapman and placed him back on administrative leave.

“At no time was he ever returned to active ministry,” the statement from the archdiocese read.

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Sex abuse victim felt like he was ‘robbing the Church’ when he applied for compensation

AUSTRALIA
7 News

BY THOMAS ORITI
December 16, 2013

A man who was sexually abused by a Marist Brother as a boy has told an inquiry he was made to feel like he was robbing the Church when he applied for compensation.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has entered its second week examining the Towards Healing process established by the Catholic Church.

The man, known only to the Commission as DG, says he was sexually abused in his family home by Brother Raymond Foster in 1970, when he was 13 years old.

DG was attending a Marist Brothers school in North Queensland at the time.

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