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.

January 13, 2014

Panel: Allegation against former Jacksonville priest ‘credible’

ILLINOIS
State Journal-Register

By Chris Dettro
Staff Writer
Posted Jan. 13, 2014

A preliminary investigation has found “credible” an allegation that a Springfield Roman Catholic Diocese priest sexually abused a youth while he was serving in Jacksonville more than 30 years ago.
The finding by the Diocesan Review Board sends the case of the Rev. Robert “Bud” DeGrand, 61, to the next step of the Catholic Church’s investigative process in Rome.

DeGrand will continue to be on leave from public ministry and from his church residence. When the allegation surfaced in September, DeGrand temporarily withdrew from serving Catholic parishes in Sigel, Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville in east-central Illinois.

His case now goes to the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for further proceedings, according to a statement from the Springfield diocese on Monday.

The diocese compared the function of the Diocesan Review Board with that of a grand jury in a criminal proceeding. It determines whether criminal charges should be brought but does not make a determination of guilt or innocence.

Diocesan spokeswoman Kathie Sass said the Vatican Congregation is “reserved to handle the most serious offenses” within the church. She said Pope John Paul II directed that allegations of abuse be handled by that department.

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: Allegation Against Former Jacksonville Priest “Credible”

ILLINOIS
WUIS

By SEAN CRAWFORD

An internal church investigation has determined an allegation of sex abuse against an Illinois priest is “credible.”

30 years ago, Father Robert DeGrand worked in a Jacksonville parish. It was during that time he is alleged to have sexually abused a child. The Springfield Diocese formed a panel to review the claim. However, the details of the allegation have not been made public.

The 61 year old DeGrand has most recently worked in churches in the Effingham area. He’s on leave and his future within the church is unclear. The matter is being turned over to the Vatican which could remove him from the priesthood.

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.

Allegation Against Father DeGrand is Found to be Credible

ILLINOIS
XFM

Published on January 13 2014

Written by Greg Sapp

The preliminary investigation of an allegation of clerical sexual misconduct with a minor said to have occurred over 30 years ago has been concluded in the case of Father Robert “Bud” DeGrand. After examining the results of the preliminary investigation, the Diocesan Review Board unanimously found that the allegation against Father DeGrand is credible.

Father DeGrand is pastor of parishes in Sigel, Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville, in the Catholic Diocese of Springfield in Illinois.

In keeping with the Code of Canon Law, the case will now be forwarded to the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for further proceedings.

It should be noted that the finding of the Diocesan Review Board is not a final conclusion about guilt or innocence, but addresses whether the allegation by the accuser and other information are sufficient to reasonably suspect that the accused has engaged in sexual abuse of a minor. The function of the Diocesan Review Board in church law is analagous to a grand jury in civil law, which investigates potential criminal conduct and determines whether criminal charges should be brought. However, a grand jury does not conduct the actual criminal trial or make a final determination of guilt or innocence.

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.

CA–Stockton bishop seeks bankruptcy protection

STOCKTON (CA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 13

Statement by Joelle Casteix of Newport Beach CA, western regional director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 949 322 7434, jcasteix@gmail.com )

A bishop declaring bankruptcy is a convenient, self-serving dodge. It’s a way to prevent the truth from coming out about clergy sex abuse and cover ups, while shifting the attention away from crimes to cash.

[Fox 40]

A bishop dealing with predator priest cases has many options. Seeking Chapter 11 protection, however, is one of the most callous.

Despite this irresponsible decision, we hope that others who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes and cover ups in Stockton will step forward, call police, expose wrongdoers and protect kids. Now, that’s more important than ever.

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.

Switzerland–Victims leaflet outside cathedral

GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON JANUARY 13, 2014

Victims leaflet outside cathedral
They urge church members & staff to report suspicions
Group blasts Pope Francis for refusing to protect children
Catholic officials should encourage reporting to police

What
Holding signs and childhood photos, clergy sex abuse victims will hand out fliers to passers-by encouraging anyone with information about sexual misconduct with children report and blasting Pope Francis and Catholic officials for refusing to protect children.

They will also urge church officials to “actively seek out” anyone who “saw, suspected or suffered” clergy sex or cover ups and beg them to call police and prosecutors so that kids might be safer.

When
Tuesday, 14 January, 12:00 – 13:00

Where
On the sidewalk in front of Basilique Notre-Dame de Genève, Rue Argand 3, 1201 Genève

Who
Three-four members of a support group for clergy sex abuse victims called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, including a Chicago woman who is the organization’s President

Why
For the first time ever a committee of the United Nations is calling Vatican officials to give an accounting about its own record on children’s rights, in particular the widespread and systemic rape and sexual violence against children. This historic meeting takes place here in Geneva while a culture of secrecy pervades the church across the globe.

Victims who want to ensure that others do not suffer as they did will pass out fliers prodding catholics, employees and former employees who have witnessed, experienced or suspect sex crimes to speak up and report it to police.

In a preliminary report Vatican officials dodged questions by the committee and claimed to be helpless while their own practices and policies provide cover for and enable sexual violence by church employees across the globe. SNAP wants victims and witnesses to report what the Vatican officials keep hidden.

The flier also blasts Pope Francis for refusing to punish bishops who endanger kids and protect predators. Pope Francis has not taken any action to protect children. Francis should be judged on his actions to protect children not his statements about caring for the poor. Suggested benchmarks to judge the new pope include whether he turns over evidence of sex crimes to police and when bishops who protect priest predators are punished and fired.

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.

Supreme Court gives archdiocese reprieve to release names of accused priests

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

By Doug Moore dmoore@post-dispatch.com 314-340-81251

The Archdiocese of St. Louis does not have to, for now, turn over the names of priests accused of sexual abuse.

On Monday, the Missouri Supreme Court issued a stay, allowing the names to remain a secret “until further notice from the court.”

The archdiocese sought the ruling after an appellate court ordered Thursday that two decades worth of sexual abuse allegations against archdiocese priests must be released. The deadline to do so had been set for 2 p.m. Monday.

The information is being sought as part of civil suit, filed in 2011 on behalf of a then-19-year old woman. The woman, listed in court filings as Jane Doe, said she was sexually abused from 1997 to 2001 by Joseph Ross, a now-defrocked priest.

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.

St. Louis archdiocese wins delay in abuse case

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Seattle PI

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Missouri Supreme Court is giving the Archdiocese of St. Louis additional time to release the names of more than 100 employees accused of child sexual abuse since 1986.

The high court’s ruling on Monday afternoon came after the archdiocese sought more time to comply with a lower court order to provide the names of 115 to lawyers for a woman who is suing the archdiocese.

The woman was 19 when the lawsuit was filed in 2011. She claims the abuse began when she was 5 years old and attended St. Cronan’s parish in the city. The now-defrocked priest had been convicted of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old boy at a University City parish decades earlier.

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 Stockton Officially Decides to File for Bankruptcy

STOCKTON (CA)
Fox 40

by Ian McDonald
Web Producer

STOCKTON-

After six months of consideration, the Diocese of Stockton says it will file for bankruptcy protection on Wednesday.

The Diocese says its financial woes came from settling sexual abuse cases.

“This has been a difficult decision. Nevertheless, I am convinced this step will allow us to achieve two essential goals,” Bishop Stephen Blaire said in a written statement. “First, it will provide a process to compensate as fairly as possible the victims of sexual abuse, including those who have not yet come forward or had their day in court. At the same time, the process will provide a way for us to continue the ministry and support we provide to the parishes, the poor and the communities located within our Diocese.”

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.

Stockton diocese to file for bankruptcy on Wednesday (UPDATED)

STOCKTON (CA)
The Record

By The Record
January 13, 2014

STOCKTON — Four months after warning parishioners that bankruptcy protection was likely, the Catholic Diocese of Stockton will take that legal step.

On Monday, Bishop Stephen Blaire announced the diocese will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Wednesday because of the financial drain from continuing court settlements stemming from sex-abuse lawsuits.

Over the last two decades, the Diocese has spent $32 million in legal fees and settlements.

Stockton became the nation’s 10th Diocese to file for federal court protection.

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.

Catholic Diocese of Stockton to declare bankruptcy

STOCKTON (CA)
Lodi News-Sentinel

By Wes Bowers/News-Sentinel staff writer

The Diocese of Stockton intends to file for bankruptcy Wednesday, after more than six months of discussing the possibility with its members and financial experts.

Bishop Stephen Blaire released a statement Monday afternoon stating the diocese’s financial difficulties can only be resolved for filing for bankruptcy protection.

Blaire said the diocese’s attorneys will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Wednesday, becoming the 10th in the country to do so.

“This has been a difficult decision,” Blaire said in Monday’s statement. “Nevertheless, I am convinced this step will allow us to achieve two essential goals.”

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.

Stockton diocese going ahead with bankruptcy filing

CALIFORNIA
News 10

C. Johnson

SACRAMENTO – The Roman Catholic Diocese of Stockton will file for bankruptcy protection on Wednesday.

In recent months, the diocese has intimated the decision was appearing more likely after paying settlements to victims of sexual abuse committed by diocese personnel.

In Monday’s news release, diocese spokesperson Sr. Terry Davis said the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing will allow the diocese to plan how to compensate victims of sexual abuse, including those whose claims have not been adjudicated or have yet to come forward. Also, the ministry will be able to continue to support parishes and their communities.

Davis said the only entity seeking bankruptcy protection is the Roman Catholic Bishop of Stockton, not individual parishes and Catholic schools in the diocese.

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 Stockton Q&A

STOCKTON (CA)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Stockton

January 13, 2014

Dear People of the Diocese of Stockton,

Filing for bankruptcy is a painful but necessary decision for the Diocese of Stockton. I hope here to offer answers to some of the questions you may have about this process, and I will add to this discussion as we move forward together and new questions arise. During this challenging time, we place our trust and confidence in God and ask for guidance in light of our faith.

Why is the Diocese filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy?
A: After a great deal of careful consideration, consultation and prayer, we believe that filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection is the only way the Diocese of Stockton can continue the ministries and support it offers to Catholic parishes and communities, and fulfill the responsibilities it has to victims of sexual abuse, particularly those who have not yet had their day in court.

Chapter 11 is a process designed to bring all parties together in one place to resolve difficult claims fairly and finally, with the supervision of the bankruptcy court. A bankruptcy allows the Diocese to deal with all these issues collectively rather than one at a time.

How can the Diocese be bankrupt?
A: The Diocese has a balanced budget and has sufficient funds to continue its normal operations. It does not, however, have reserve funds available to settle pending lawsuits of sexual abuse, or to handle any new claims that may be made. In the past 20 years, we have paid more than $14 million in legal settlements and judgments in an effort to fulfill the responsibility we have to the victims of clerical sexual abuse. Total payments, including those from insurers and other payors, have amounted to $32 million.

How did the Diocese get in this situation?
A: Very simply, we are in this situation because of those priests in our diocese who perpetrated grave, evil acts of child sexual abuse. We can never forget that these evil acts, not the victims of the abuse, are responsible for the financial difficulties we now face.

Isn’t there some other way out of this problem?
A: We have tried to identify other solutions. For most of the past year, we have met with advisors, pastors, parishioners and community members in hopes of finding a different path forward. It now appears that Chapter 11 protection is the only way we can fulfill our responsibilities to the victims of sexual abuse and our responsibilities to the parishes and communities we serve. The bankruptcy process is the only avenue to get all parties in one place to resolve any remaining sex abuse claims in the fairest possible way.

What does filing for bankruptcy mean for sexual abuse victims?
A: In a Chapter 11 filing, the Bankruptcy Court supervises the process where whatever funds are available to claimants and creditors will be distributed as fairly as possible. Victims of sexual abuse will be represented in this process intended to result in fair compensation of all of these individuals. If we did not file, any remaining funds available to victims would likely be consumed in the next case, leaving nothing for those claims that have not yet been resolved.

How will the work of the Diocese continue after this filing?
A: In the bankruptcy filing, the Diocese will continue its regular business while giving creditors time to come forward with their claims and negotiate a fair plan of compensation. Chapter 11 bankruptcy is a reorganization, with the goal of negotiating a plan to compensate to the extent possible those who are owed money while the Diocese continues functioning.

The bankruptcy filing will allow representatives of the Diocese, the claimants, and the creditors to attempt to reach agreement on how much of the Diocese’s existing obligations can be paid, and establish a reorganization plan. If no agreement can be reached, the Bankruptcy Court will decide. The Diocese will continue its normal business operations, but expenses and decisions outside the normal scope of business must be approved by the court. We believe this will allow us to continue the programs and ministries we provide to parishes and the poor while we work with our creditors to satisfy our obligations.

Q7: What does this mean for my parish or school?
A: The parishes (which include the parish schools) within the Diocese of Stockton are organized as separate corporations, are not filing bankruptcy and should not be impacted by this filing. The only entity that is seeking bankruptcy protection is the Roman Catholic Bishop of Stockton, legally defined as a corporation sole.

The same is true for the Catholic high schools. These separate corporations and others – like the corporations that run Catholic cemeteries and the Madonna of Peace Retreat Center– are not involved in the bankruptcy filing.

In filings by other dioceses, creditors have challenged the status of these separate corporations. That is why we have advised our pastors to prepare for such challenges and to seek independent legal assistance.

Why can’t the Vatican provide a bailout for the Diocese?
A: That is not an option. In fact, dioceses all over the world support the Vatican, which is an independent entity. There are no Vatican funds available to us in this situation.

Can the Diocese sell real estate or liquidate other holdings in order to pay claims?
A: All of the holdings and belongings of the Roman Catholic Bishop of Stockton will be disclosed in filings with the court, and if the parties cannot reach agreement on a reorganization plan, the court will decide what can and cannot be used to continue operations and meet obligations. The Diocese itself holds relatively little property and assets, which include five properties: the Pastoral Center; the home of the bishop; the convent of the Eucharistic Franciscan Missionary Sisters; the Newman House/St. John Vianney center located near the University of the Pacific campus; and a parcel of land in Valley Springs donated for use as a future parish site.

Other properties within our Diocese do not belong to the entity filing for bankruptcy protection. These include parish churches and schools, St. Mary’s and Central Catholic High Schools, the Madonna of Peace Retreat Center, Catholic Cemeteries, as well as properties held for future parish sites by the Roman Catholic Welfare Corporation, all of which are separate corporations.

Is there insurance available to cover the costs of remaining cases?
A: For some cases, there is no insurance coverage for the time period in question. In other cases, the insurance companies that once were involved have ceased to exist. Even in cases where there was a policy in place, coverage only occurs after substantial payments from the Diocese itself.
The bankruptcy process provides a venue for all creditors, the insurance companies, and the Diocese to participate in forming a global resolution. We expect this resolution will include some level of contributions from the insurance companies.

Is this filing a way to hide assets from victims?
A: It is not. The Chapter 11 process is extremely transparent and public. Our creditors and the public will be able to see all that we have and all the Diocese has to work with in providing compensation for creditors and claimants.

Since I came to Stockton in 1999, I have settled cases whenever possible and sought to provide the victims with whatever assistance would help them. I never want to lose sight of the fact that the acts of sexual abuse committed by priests betrayed the trust people have placed in us and have inflicted severe damage on innocent lives. I carry these convictions with me into this important decision concerning our finances and future as a Diocese.

Why doesn’t the Diocese use funds from the Church for Tomorrow or the Bishop’s Ministry Appeal to close this fiscal gap?
A: The Church for Tomorrow is a separate corporation governed by an independent board of directors and is not controlled by the Roman Catholic Bishop of Stockton. The funds in the Church for Tomorrow have been contributed by the people of the Diocese for very specific good works and can be distributed by the Church for Tomorrow Board only in accord with the purposes expressed in the contributions to this Fund.

Similarly, the Bishop’s Ministry Appeal receives contributions designated by the donors for the specific purpose of supporting the Church Ministries of the Diocese. These monies cannot be converted to use for other purposes.

How long will this process take?
A: Because each bankruptcy case is different, it is not possible to predict accurately when the process will be completed. However, based on the experiences of other dioceses, we anticipate this matter will remain before the court for one-and-a-half to two years.

What is the desired outcome of the bankruptcy process?
A. It is my sincere hope that the reorganization of the Diocese through the bankruptcy process will allow the Diocese to move ahead by contributing to the healing of victims and by helping us to carry out the mission of the Church in preaching the Gospel, celebrating the Sacraments, and reaching out in love to the poor and vulnerable.

If you have additional questions, you can submit them to the Diocese either by email (editor@stocktondiocese.org) or by going to the Diocesan website (http://stocktondiocese.org/bishop/financial-news.)

Thank you for your continued prayers.

Bishop Stephen E. Blaire

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.

Statement from Bishop Stephen E. Blaire

STOCKTON (CA)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Stockton

For Immediate Release to the Press

January 13, 2014

Contact: Sr. Terry Davis 209.466.0636
Director of Communications,
Diocese of Stockton

After months of careful consideration and prayer, it has become clear to me that the Diocese of Stockton’s financial difficulties can only be resolved by filing for bankruptcy protection. This decision was reached through consultation with experts in finance and law, as well as with priests, parishioners and many others in the community our Diocese serves.

Our attorneys will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Wednesday, January 15, 2014. Our Diocese will become the tenth in the United States to make such a filing.

This has been a difficult decision. Nevertheless, I am convinced this step will allow us to achieve two essential goals. First, it will provide a process to compensate as fairly as possible the victims of sexual abuse, including those who have not yet come forward or had their day in court. At the same time, the process will provide a way for us to continue the ministry and support we provide to the parishes, the poor and the communities located within our Diocese.

It is important to remember that the only entity seeking bankruptcy protection is the corporation sole known legally as the Roman Catholic Bishop of Stockton. The parishes and Catholic schools within our Diocese are separate corporations and should not be impacted by this filing. The same is true for other separate corporations, such as St. Mary’s and Central Catholic High Schools, and the Madonna of Peace Retreat Center.

Since we began discussing this possibility more than six months ago, I have been moved by the understanding, patience and support expressed by so many people in the Church and in the wider community. I am deeply grateful.

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.

Stockton Catholic Diocese to file for Chapter 11 protection

STOCKTON (CA)
Modesto Bee

BY SUE NOWICKI
snowicki@modbee.com
January 13, 2014

The Stockton Diocese announced Monday afternoon it will file Wednesday for reorganization under Chapter 11. The move affects only the diocesan budget and buildings and will not have an impact on the individually incorporated parishes or ministries, Bishop Stephen Blaire said.

“This has been a difficult decision,” he said in a press release. “Nevertheless, I am convinced this step will allow us to achieve two essential goals. First, it will provide a process to compensate as fairly as possible the victims of sexual abuse, including those who have not yet come forward or had their day in court. At the same time, the process will provide a way for us to continue the ministry and support we provide to the parishes, the poor and the communities located within our diocese.”

The Stockton Diocese becomes the 10th in the country and the second in the state to move under the protection of the bankruptcy court. The action was taken to reduce the amount of money the diocese must pay in civil cases involving priests and sexual abuse victims. It also will put a time limit on filing any new lawsuits concerning past sexual abuse.

In June 2013, Blaire said the diocesan reserve account, which has been used to pay such lawsuits, totaled about $10 million when he took over as bishop in 1999, but has been depleted to less than $1 million.

To date, the diocese has been hit with nearly $32 million in damages for civil lawsuits in 38 clergy sexual abuse cases. The diocese has paid $13.7 million of those awards; the rest came from insurance proceeds. The largest settlement, $3.75 million, was awarded in 2012 in a case involving the Rev. Michael Kelly.

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.

Missouri Supreme Court grants stay for Archdiocese of St. Louis

MISSOURI
Missouri Lawyers

Melissa Meinzer January 13, 2014

With 15 minutes to spare before a circuit court judge’s deadline, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled that the Archdiocese of St. Louis does not immediately have to provide a list of the names of complainants and alleged perpetrators in cases of possible sexual abuse. (Updated at 4:02 p.m.)

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.

$16M settlement OKd between New Rochelle’s Christian Bros. and abuse victims

NEW YORK
The Journal News

Written by
Erik Shilling

A federal judge has approved a $16 million settlement brokered between sex-abuse victims and the New Rochelle-based Christian Brothers Institute.

The settlement was first agreed to in May. Judge Robert Drain’s order on Monday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in White Plains means the settlement is now binding on all parties, including the Christian Brothers’ debtors, the group said in a statement.

Abuse victims voted in recent weeks to unanimously approve the settlement, which was developed jointly by lawyers for the more than 400 victims, the Christian Brothers and the group’s debtors.

“We apologize for the difficulties that abuse survivors and their families have endured,” Brothers Hugh O’Neill and Kevin Griffith, the leaders of the group’s North American and Latin American region said in a statement. “We have reached out and met with a number of survivors of abuse to apologize and express our sorrow in person.”

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.

N Ireland Child Abuse Victims ‘Deserve Payouts’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Sky News

By David Blevins, Ireland Correspondent

Victims of historical child abuse at residential homes in Northern Ireland were “destroyed” by the Government and deserve compensation to repair their “broken” lives, their spokeswoman has said.

Margaret McGuckin spoke as the state inquiry into the abuse and neglect of children in care – the largest tribunal of its kind in the UK – held its first public session.

More than 400 people have applied to speak at the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry, which will investigate allegations made over a 73-year period up to 1995.

It is currently investigating 13 establishments, including Kincora Boys’ Home in Belfast, the scene of a notorious sex scandal.

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.

Northern Ireland child abuse inquiry opens

NORTHERN IRELAND
The Guardian

Henry McDonald, Ireland correspondent
theguardian.com, Monday 13 January 2014

A retired judge in charge of the biggest inquiry into child abuse in UK legal history has appealed for openness from the institutions in Northern Ireland where crimes against children allegedly took place.

Opening the public inquiry into 13 orphanages, young offender centres and other places where children were kept in care, Sir Anthony Hart said the government had to be open in its dealings with the tribunal.

“This may be a challenging process for everyone involved but it is our hope that everybody, whether from government or from the institutions, who is requested to assist the inquiry will co-operate in a fair, open and wholehearted way so that this unique opportunity will not be wasted,” Hart said at Banbridge courthouse where the hearings will take place.

He assured the more than 400 victims – 300 of whom will give personal testimony to the court – that they “will have the satisfaction of knowing that their experiences are being listened to and investigated”.

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.

UK’s largest child abuse inquiry begins in Northern Ireland

NORTHERN IRELAND
ABC News (Australia)

The biggest inquiry into allegations of child abuse ever held in Britain has begun its first public hearings in Belfast, in Northern Ireland.

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry is looking into allegations covering 73 years in church and state-run children’s homes in Northern Ireland, including complaints from dozens of people who were sent to Australia as child migrants.

Like its Australian equivalent, the inquiry comes after a lifetime of pain for so many, like Irish woman Kate Walmsley.

She was taken to Nazareth House Children’s Home in Derry, Northern Ireland, when she was seven.

Ms Walmsley says one nun would keep her at the back of the line at confession to allow a priest to abuse her.

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.

MO – Archbishop Wins MO Supreme Court Delay

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

No names of pedophile priests will be turned over today

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 13, 2014, 3:15 p.m.

For more information: David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

St. Louis Catholic Archbishop Robert Carlson has won a delay from the Missouri Supreme Court so that he will not have to turn over the names of 115 archdiocesan employees who have been accused of sexually assaulting children.

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is disappointed in the one sentence decision (available on CaseNet).

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, says the state’s highest court is being inconsistent.

“When Carlson sought 20 years of our records, the Supreme Court didn’t stop that process,” said David Clohessy of SNAP. “We weren’t even a party to that litigation and no one’s ever accused us of having or hiding 115 accused predators. We hope the Court will soon see that both the judge and the appellate court were right in saying that an archbishop must obey the rules like any other defendant.”

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Residents show support for priest

ILLINOIS
Effingham Daily News

January 13, 2014

SIGEL — A number of area residents are showing support for a priest accused of committing “clerical sexual misconduct” with a minor more than 30 years ago.

It’s hard to drive down a road in Sigel and not see at least one yellow ribbon on a light pole or tree.

Valerie Probst, a member of St. Michael’s parish in Sigel, said she thinks about the Rev. Robert DeGrand often, particularly on Sundays.

“I sing the 10 a.m. Mass every week and I miss him coming up and speaking with us,” Mrs. Probst said. “It’s a vacant spot that shouldn’t be there.”

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

Archdiocese wants more time to answer judge’s order to name accused priests

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER  , Star Tribune Updated: January 13, 2014

Church lawyers say court ‘exceeded its jurisdiction’ in ordering names of all the accused, including those not “credibly accused.”

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona have asked for more time to challenge a judge’s order to release the names of all priests accused of sexually abusing children and teens since 2004.

A Ramsey District Court judge had initially given the church a Jan. 6 deadline to file the list of priests more recently accused of abuse. Earlier this month, Judge John Van de North postponed that deadline to Feb. 5.

But lawyers for the church argued that the court “exceeded its jurisdiction” when it ordered that the names of all priests accused of abuse, whether “credibly accused” or not, be made public. It filed papers in Ramsey District Court Friday, asking the court to delay the Feb. 5 deadline, pending an opportunity to “fully brief the issue” before the court.

“It is the Archdiocese position that this Court has exceeded its jurisdiction and authority in ordering the Archdiocese to make certain disclosures of all priests accused of child abuse regardless of when and under what circumstances those accusations were made,” wrote Daniel Haws, a lawyer for the archdiocese.

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MO – Catholic bishop appeals to MO Supreme Court

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

No names of pedophile priests will be turned over today

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 13, 2014

For more information: David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

After months of delay and adverse rulings from two courts, lawyers for St. Louis Catholic Archbishop Robert Carlson have filed an emergency writ with the Missouri Supreme Court seeking to block the disclosure of the names of 115 archdiocesan employees who have been accused of sexually assaulting children.

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is deploring Carlson’s move.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, are urging “anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes and cover ups in St. Louis to step forward now, regardless of what the courts do or don’t do.”

“Even if the state’s highest court sides with the young victim and against Carlson, these names will be kept under seal, so it’s likely that the disclosure won’t protect any kids, at least not in the short term,” said David Clohessy of SNAP. “Any adult with any compassion whatsoever will do what he or she can to stop the abuse of kids, instead of waiting for other victims, witnesses, whistleblowers or secular officials to act.”

“This case – Jane Doe v. Fr. Joseph D. Ross and the St. Louis archdiocese – is set for trial next month,” said Judy Jones of SNAP. “Carlson is giving this brave young woman and her attorney little time to really prepare their case. And he’s trying to intimidate other victims in to keeping silent by showing them ‘If you seek justice against us, we’ll fight tooth and nail.’“

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Nuns ‘battered boys stupid’ …

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Nuns ‘battered boys stupid’ in Derry children’s home, victim tells child abuse inquiry

BY MICHAEL MCHUGH – 13 JANUARY 2014

Nuns used to batter boys stupid during daily abuse at a children’s home in Londonderry, one victim has claimed.

John Heaney, 55, was caned on the feet by members of the order of the Sisters of Nazareth at St Joseph’s in Termonbacca and said he suffered sexual abuse from older boys.

“Nuns were very good at raising their hands. All the Termonbacca boys have a flat spot on the back of their heads because they were battered stupid,” he said.

Termonbacca will be one of the first residential homes examined, with evidence from witnesses due to begin in coming weeks. Mr Heaney made his comments as he prepared to attend Sir Anthony’s hearings.

With detectives expected to be watching the public hearings closely, Mr Heaney said he hoped the perpetrators would ultimately face justice.

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Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski’s Extradition Declined

UNITED STATES
Deep Thoughts

The true test of a religion is not in its words, but in its actions. Despite talking a good line with regard to change, the Pope and the Vatican had an opportunity to do something meaningful, something that would show they understand our outrage, and they declined help. What does this tell us? The Vatican is the same old big-business religion that it was before. Nothing meaningful has changed.

Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski will not be extradited to his native Poland, despite accusations of sex abuse there and in the Dominican Republic, where he served as papal nuncio until his August 2013 dismissal.

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Extend child abuse inquiry to England and Wales say campaigners

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Henry McDonald, Ireland correspondent
theguardian.com, Monday 13 January 2014

The inquiry investigating institutional child abuse by members of the clergy in Northern Ireland needs to be extended to England and Wales, say campaigners.

Stop Church Child Abuse welcomed the opening on Monday of the investigation into 13 orphanages and children’s homes but said it was now time for the government to roll the inquiry out across Britain.

Jonathan Wheeler, a lawyer who deals with child abuse cases in Britain and a founding member of Stop Church Child Abuse said: “The start of this inquiry will be a relief to the alleged victims, allowing them to take heart in the fact that a process intended to bring them justice is at last under way. Lessons must also be learned by the authorities and all those responsible for the care of young children to prevent this kind of abuse from ever happening again.

“We have been calling for a similar overarching inquiry in England and Wales. The government has refused but if Northern Ireland can tackle the issue, then why should survivors here be denied their say and the proper scrutiny of all they have suffered?”

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Openness urged in abuse inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
Bakewell Today

The chairman of the largest ever child abuse inquiry in the UK has appealed for openness from residential homes alleged to be responsible.

Public hearings into claims of sexual, emotional and physical abuse in Northern Ireland has opened in Banbridge, Co Down. More than 300 witnesses are expected to be called over the next 18 months.

Sir Anthony Hart said victims would at last have the satisfaction of knowing that their stories were being listened to.

“This may be a challenging process for everyone involved but it is our hope that everybody, whether from Government or from the institutions, who is requested to assist the inquiry will cooperate in a fair, a open and whole-hearted way so that this unique opportunity will not be wasted.”

The independent Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry is hearing abuse claims in children’s homes and juvenile justice centres over a period spanning more than seven decades and has the power to compel witnesses and refer evidence to the police for criminal investigation.

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Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry ‘gives voice to victims’

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

[with video]

A senior counsel has said the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry will ‘give a voice to those who feel the system let them down’.

The senior counsel to the inquiry, Christine Smith was speaking as the biggest public inquiry into child abuse ever held in the UK entered the public hearing stage at Banbridge Courthouse, County Down.

The inquiry was set up by Northern Ireland’s power-sharing executive to investigate allegations dating from 1922 to 1995.

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UK child abuse inquiry to hear from 61 Australians

NORTHERN IRELAND/AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

THE biggest public inquiry into child abuse ever held in the UK has opened with at least 60 Australians listed as witnesses.

Such has been the outpouring of complaints from former child migrants sent to Australia in the 1940s and 1950s, an investigative team from Northern Ireland will be dispatched to interview them personally later this year as the inquiry proceeds.

The $35 million Northern Ireland government-backed Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry is looking at systemic failings in duty of care to children in institutional care in Northern Ireland between 1922 and 1995.

In his opening remarks, inquiry chairman retired High Court judge Sir Anthony Hart told Banbridge Courthouse in County Down in Northern Ireland, the inquiry would be conducted “without fear or favour” and would be hearing from 434 people in person or in writing many with harrowing claims of abuse.

“Not only will their evidence be vital to the Inquiry, but it is our hope that every applicant who gives evidence to the public hearings, or only speaks to the private and confidential part of the Inquiry, will have the satisfaction of knowing that their experiences are at last being listened to and investigated,” he said.

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Abuse probe ‘into soul of society’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Coleraine Times

The largest ever inquiry into the abuse of children at residential homes in the UK will examine the soul of society, a lawyer has said.

Decades of physical, sexual and emotional suffering were inflicted upon the most vulnerable by the church, the state and voluntary organisations, it was alleged today.

More than 300 victims are set to testify to the investigation, which is expected to last 18 months.

Christine Smith QC, the inquiry’s senior counsel, told Sir Anthony Hart, a retired Crown court judge presiding over the hearings, that they would give voice to those who felt let down by the system between 1922, the foundation of the Northern Ireland state, and 1995. She said it would essentially examine the soul of Northern Ireland’s society.

“There can be no keener revelation of a society’s soul than the way in which it treats its children,” she said.

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A Reader Writes: “How Sick Is It That So Many Well-Meaning, Practicing Catholics Are Able to Be Desensitized to the Horrible Reality of Clergy Sex Abuse?”

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

WillIam D. Lindsey

In a comment a moment ago here, Mary writes,

How sick is it that so many well-meaning, practicing Catholics are able to be desensitized to to the horrible reality of clergy sex abuse, all so their sacramental experience of weekly mass isn’t tarnished. I was once one of them.

The word “desensitized” hits me between the eyes. I hear myself in that word: I hear the word as an accurate description of how I’m in danger of becoming, as I read yet another story about abuse of children by Catholic clergy, and the longstanding cover-up of that abuse.

Mary’s comment flashed into my email inbox just as I happened to be reading several articles about the action that the Eastern District of the Missouri Court of Appeals took a number of days ago. The court ruled that the archdiocese of St. Louis does not have to release the names of priests accused of sexual abuse in a lawsuit now before the courts. This was a ruling in response to another court ruling ordering the release of these names.

The lawsuit was filed by a woman who was 19 when she filed suit in 2011, and who claims that her parish priest began to abuse her at St. Cronan’s parish in St. Louis when she was 5 years old. The priest in question, Father Joseph Ross, was later defrocked. He had previously been convicted of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old boy at a parish in University City, Missouri, decades prior to the period in which the woman who has now filed suit claims her abuse took place.

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Pastor accused of paying homeless to fire-bomb ex professes innocence: ‘I never did pay them’

CALIFORNIA
The Raw Story

By Scott Kaufman
Monday, January 13, 2014

Not even a day after he was released from jail for allegedly fire-bombing his ex-girlfriend’s parent’s house, Fellowship Baptist Church Pastor Mike Lewis was leading a service in his rural California church.

The Vacaville, California pastor is accused of encouraging three homeless people in his church’s care to throw a Molotov cocktail through the front window of his ex-girlfriend’s parents’ house.

According to Sarah Nottingham, after she broke off her relationship with Lewis, he has been “trying to hurt” her and her family. She took out a restraining order against him last year.

“That’s the sickest part about it, is that this man claims to be a man of God,” she told CBS 13. She also alleges that Pastor Lewis vandalized her car and set fire to her shrubbery earlier this year.

Lewis claims to have no idea what’s going on. He told CBS 13 that “I haven’t heard about any of the accusations. I haven’t heard any of them.” He did acknowledge, however, having heard about the fire-bombing of his ex-girlfriend’s parents’ house.

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ARCHBISHOP ROBERT CARLSON’S LAWYERS’ APPEAL

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

January 13, 2014 10:39 am | Author: berger

Lawyers for Archbishop Robert Carlson have now appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court to block the release of names of 115 archdiocesan employees accused of abuse. A Feb.24 trial date in the case looms. The publicity around that case has brought “several” new victims forward, SNAP leaders say. Meanwhile, lawyers in Carlson’s home diocese of St. Paul/Minneapolis are asking a judge there to delay the release of predators’ names. And on Wednesday, Chicago’s Cardinal Francis George is set to turn over to victims’ attorneys records on about 30 Windy City clerics as part of civil lawsuit settlements.

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Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry members

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The biggest public inquiry into child abuse ever held in the UK begin its first public hearings in Northern Ireland on 13 January.

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) is examining abuse claims in children’s homes and juvenile justice over a 73-year period.

It was set up by Northern Ireland’s power-sharing executive to investigate allegations dating from 1922 to 1995.

The inquiry is being chaired by Sir Anthony Hart. He will be assisted in his role by a number of other inquiry members.

The inquiry is also being supported by four acknowledgement forum panel members.

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IRE – Victims applaud N.I. abuse inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release Monday, January 13, 2014

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

A formal governmental inquiry into child sex crimes and maltreatments at Northern Ireland institutions – many run by Catholic organizations – begins today.

[The Guardian]

Our hearts break for these thousands of brave victims of child molesting clerics, many of whom suffered years of abuse at the hands of those entrusted with their care. Several hundred will offer testimony. We suspect that many more cannot or will not because they continue to struggle and suffer today.

But we are encouraged by this government inquiry. It’s only a first step. But it’s better than no step at all.

We hope, however, that more will be done to reduce the pain of those who have been so severely wounded as kids and betrayed as adults. And we hope that archaic, predatory-friendly secular laws will be reformed to deter employers and officials from concealing crimes against kids now and in the future.

Children will be safer only when all those officials who commit or conceal these horrific crimes are publicly exposed and held accountable.

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What the Pope saying with his choice of new cardinals

UNITED STATES
CNN

Opinion by the Rev. James Martin, special to CNN

(CNN) – Pope Francis’ selection on Sunday of 19 new cardinals, the men who will select the next pope, seems aimed to help rebalance the church in important ways, passing over at least three influential American archbishops and naming several from the Southern Hemisphere.

First, there is a decided emphasis on Africa and Latin America, including poorer countries like Haiti and Burkina Faso.

Remember that the cardinals’ most important duty is to elect the next pope. Francis is making sure that all parts of the world are adequately represented – and today the majority of Catholics are in the Southern Hemisphere.

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Vatican moves to try Polish archbishop Josef Wesolowski for abuse

VATICAN CITY
The Australian

JAMES BONE THE TIMES JANUARY 14, 2014

A POLISH archbishop could become the first cleric to be put on trial by the Vatican for alleged child abuse. It was announced at the weekend that Josef Wesolowski was under criminal investigation as a citizen of the Holy See.

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MN – Catholic officials want more secrecy; SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 13, 2013

Statement by Frank Meuers, Minnesota SNAP leader, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 952-334-5180, frankameuers@gmail.com )

Minnesota Catholic officials want a judge to give them a break and slow down the forced disclosure of names of priests who are accused of abuse. That’s irresponsible.

[Minnesota Public Radio]

Any such delay would endanger kids. These accused priests have already been protected and hidden and transferred for decades. No good comes from further delay.

Delays give those who commit and conceal child sex crimes more chances to intimidate victims, threaten whistleblowers, discredit witnesses, destroy evidence, invent alibis and practice “spin.” That’s why it’s irresponsible to give secretive and self serving Catholic officials – who have already shown, time and time again, a decades-old pattern of jeopardizing kids and protecting predators – any more time to keep the identities of dangerous and potentially dangerous child molesters hidden.

Every day the names of proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics are kept secret, innocent children are at risk.

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CHILD ABUSE INQUIRY HEARINGS TO START IN NI

NORTHERN IRELAND
Kildare Nationalist

Public hearings into allegations of historical child abuse in church and state-run homes in Northern Ireland will begin later today.

An inquiry headed by a former senior judge is examining the extent of wrongdoing in children’s homes, orphanages, industrial schools, workhouses, borstals, hospital units and schools for young people with disabilities. Many were run by religious orders which at the time largely evaded scrutiny.

Sir Anthony Hart’s probe was ordered by Northern Ireland’s ministerial executive after the problem was found to be endemic across similar institutions in the Republic of Ireland and claims of mistreatment of victims north of the border.

The expert panel will investigate whether sexual, emotional or physical harm was inflicted upon children and if there were systemic failings by institutions or the state in their duties towards children in their care between 1922 and 1995.

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N Ireland Child Abuse Inquiry: Hundreds Respond

NORTHERN IRELAND
Key 103

More than 400 people have applied to speak to the state inquiry into historical institutional abuse in Northern Ireland, the largest tribunal of its kind anywhere in the UK.

Most applications, some 280, were from people living in Northern Ireland, but 63 came from Great Britain, 61 from Australia, 20 from the Republic of Ireland and the remainder from elsewhere.

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry was established by the Stormont Executive this time last year and will hold its first public evidence session today at Banbridge Courthouse in County Down.

It has a remit to investigate historical child abuse and/or neglect in institutions over a 73-year period up to 1995 and is currently investigating 13 establishments, including Kincora Boys’ Home in Belfast.

Kincora was the scene of a notorious sex scandal and while three members of staff were convicted in the 1980s, questions remain about who knew what and why it continued.

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Pope misses huge opportunity to make Diarmuid Martin a cardinal

IRELAND
Irish Central

by Patrick Roberts

Pope Francis missed a remarkable opportunity to establish his popularity with the Irish faithful by refusing a red hat to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin. Francis announced 19 new cardinals, but Martin was not among them.

Martin, Archbishop of Dublin, was one of the candidates who was in line for a promotion according to the National Catholic Reporter. Ireland matches one of the key criteria as it will have no cardinal-elector for a future pope after Cardinal Sean Brady retires this year.

The other cardinal is the elderly Desmond Connell, retired Archbishop of Dublin.

Martin’s nomination would also have fulfilled a profound desire among the laity to have his remarkable work on child abuse and removing abusive priests recognized.

There were many times when Martin seemed alone in forcing the issue and making the church stand up and confess the many abuses they covered up, especially moving pedophile priests around.

Current cardinal Sean Brady was hopelessly compromised by his own shady see-no-evil behavior when he tried to silence two young witnesses to abuse by the worst offender of all, Father Brendan Smyth, a truly evil pedphile whose male and female vicitms in Ireland and America numbered in the hundreds.

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A make-or-break moment for the Legion of Christ

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Jan. 13, 2014

Under ordinary circumstances, a religious order’s general chapter is nobody’s idea of a news event.

Basically a business meeting for representatives of the order from around the world, a general chapter typically is consumed by minutiae and insider baseball, and elections for new leaders are often of interest only to the candidates themselves — sometimes, honestly, not much even to them.

For the embattled Legionaries of Christ, however, the circumstances are anything but ordinary.

By dint of circumstance, most notably spectacular revelations of abuse and misconduct by their founder, the late Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, the Legionaries have become a leading symbol of the sexual abuse scandals that have plagued Catholicism. They’ve essentially been in papal receivership for the past three years, since Pope Benedict XVI imposed a Vatican overseer on the order and its related Regnum Christi lay movement in 2010.

For critics, the Legionaries represent the worst of the abuse scandals, not only because of Maciel’s misconduct, which included relationships with two women and fathering up to six children as well as charges of abuse of boys, including seminarians, but because of the way the influential Mexican cleric was long protected by church authorities, up to and including Pope John Paul II.

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Opening Statement and Oral Hearings

NORTHERN IRELAND
Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry

Statistics

The Inquiry will commence its oral hearings in the former Banbridge Courthouse on Monday 13 January 2014 at 2pm.

The oral hearings will begin with an opening statement by the Chairman, Sir Anthony Hart, followed by an opening statement by Christine Smith QC, Senior Counsel to the Inquiry.

Hearings will initially focus on Institutions at Termonbacca and Sisters of Nazareth, Bishop Street Derry / Londonderry.

The dates on which subsequent hearings take place will be announced in due course.

Further details are available at www.hiainquiry.org; tel: 0800 068 4935; e: general@hiainquiry.org

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Public inquiry into child abuse in Northern Ireland to open

NORTHERN IRELAND
RTE News

A public inquiry into child abuse in Northern Ireland is to begin hearing evidence today.

The inquiry, which was set up by the Stormont Executive, will cover child abuse dating back to the 1920s.

It will investigate child abuse at residential institutions in Northern Ireland over a 73-year period, up to 1995.

These include local authority homes, including the Kincora Boys Home in Belfast, Juvenile Justice Institutions, and voluntary homes run by Barnardos.

Five institutions operated by the Catholic Church are also under the spotlight, including Nazareth House Children’s Homes in Derry and Belfast.

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Child abuse inquiry hearings to start in NI

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Examiner

An inquiry headed by a former senior judge is examining the extent of wrongdoing in children’s homes, orphanages, industrial schools, workhouses, borstals, hospital units and schools for young people with disabilities. Many were run by religious orders which at the time largely evaded scrutiny.

Sir Anthony Hart’s probe was ordered by Northern Ireland’s ministerial executive after the problem was found to be endemic across similar institutions in the Republic of Ireland and claims of mistreatment of victims north of the border.

The expert panel will investigate whether sexual, emotional or physical harm was inflicted upon children and if there were systemic failings by institutions or the state in their duties towards children in their care between 1922 and 1995.

More than 300 witnesses from Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, Australia and Great Britain are expected to give evidence.

Two Derry homes run by Sisters of Nazareth nuns will be the focus of early inquiry sessions, St Joseph’s at Termonbacca and Nazareth House on Bishop Street.

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Public inquiry into abuse allegations at Northern Ireland orphanages begins Monday

NORTHERN IRELAND
The Globe and Mail (Canada)

PAUL WALDIE
BELFAST — The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Jan. 13 2014

A sweeping public inquiry into allegations of abuse at orphanages and children’s homes across Northern Ireland starts Monday, in what officials say is the largest probe of its kind ever undertaken in Britain.

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry is looking into allegations of abuse over a 73-year period at 13 institutions run by the state and various churches. More than 400 people have contacted the inquiry, including a couple from Canada, and roughly 300 are expected to testify at public hearings over the next year, providing graphic accounts of horrific brutality.

Some victims have already spoken about beatings, sexual assaults, bullying, canings and forced confinement. Kathy Devlin, who was sent to a home in Londonderry in the late 1950s and now lives in Montreal, said she and her brother were treated like animals, routinely left hungry and cold. Her brother nearly died of pneumonia and she developed chronic bronchitis.

“It was sort of a time in my life when you are supposed to be learning,” she told the Globe and Mail last summer. “For me it was basically a wasteland because we were ignored intellectually and physically. It’s something that you remember but you try to put at the back of your mind because it’s not happy memories.”

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Public inquiry into historical child abuse in NI begins today

NORTHERN IRELAND
Journal

THE NORTHERN IRELAND public inquiry into institutional abuse of children is to begin today.

The Inquiry will commence its oral hearings in the former Banbridge Courthouse at 2pm.

The alleged abuse at 13 Catholic, secular, local authority and juvenile detention institutions in Northern Ireland between 1922 and 1995 will be investigated by by the Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry.

Abuse

Speaking in September, the Chairman, Sir Anthony Hart, said the Inquiry had received 363 applications from people claiming to have suffered abuse.

While many of the victims are living in Northern Ireland other applications were received from Britain, approximately 20 were received from the Republic of Ireland and and a “significant number” were received from Australia.

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Care home abuse inquiry to open in Northern Ireland

NORTHERN IRELAND
The Guardian

Henry McDonald, Ireland correspondent
theguardian.com, Monday 13 January 2014

One of the biggest public inquiries in British legal history is to open later on Monday into allegations of abuse in 13 care homes and orphanages in Northern Ireland.

The historical institutional abuse inquiry will examine claims of sexual and physical abuse including at the Kincora boys’ home in east Belfast, at which a senior Orangeman and a number of loyalist extremists raped children.

The inquiry may also explore allegations that the security forces, both MI5 and RUC special branch, knew about the abuse in Kincora but failed to act against those responsible because many of the abusers were state agents.

Chaired by the retired judge Sir Anthony Hart QC, the inquiry, based in Banbridge courthouse, will hear written and oral testimony from 434 individuals and their stories of abuse in institutions, which range from young offenders centres to orphanages run by Catholic nuns.

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Northern Ireland: Cruel Nuns of Sisters of Nazareth First Focus of UK’s Biggest Child Abuse Inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
International Business Times

By LYDIA SMITH | January 13, 2014

The Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry is due to begin investigating claims of child abuse in residential homes and borstals today.

The Statutory Inquiry part of the investigation will cover allegations made during a period of 73 years, from 1922 to 1995. Over 400 people contacted the inquiry with claims of neglect and sexual, physical and psychological abuse.

The public hearings will take place in Banbridge, County Down, with 300 people due to testify. They will be offered anonymity and the opening address will be given by chairman and retired judge Sir Anthony Hart.

The institutions and social care trusts will also give evidence in this part of the investigation, as well as testimonies from the government.

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UK to have biggest child abuse inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
World Bulletin

World Bulletin / News Desk

The largest-ever child abuse inquiry in the UK is due to start on Monday to point out possible systemic failings by the state or its institutions.

The inquiry will be looking into historical institutional abuse between 1922 and 1995 in children’s homes and juvenile justice.

More than 400 people have contacted the inquiry alleging that they were abused. The majority of those that have contacted the inquiry are from Northern Ireland, but there are cases from people who are living elsewhere including Australia.

“I want to assure all those who may be affected by both components of the Inquiry that we will do everything within our power to carry out our tasks in a thorough, rigorous, impartial and sensitive manner without any unavoidable delay,” said Sir Anthony Hart, Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) chairman which runs the probe.

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N Ireland Child Abuse Inquiry: Hundreds Respond

NORTHERN IRELAND
Yahoo! News

By David Blevins, Ireland Correspondent | Sky News

More than 400 people have applied to speak to the state inquiry into historical institutional abuse in Northern Ireland, the largest tribunal of its kind anywhere in the UK.

Most applications, some 280, were from people living in Northern Ireland, but 63 came from Great Britain, 61 from Australia, 20 from the Republic of Ireland and the remainder from elsewhere.

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry was established by the Stormont Executive this time last year and will hold its first public evidence session today at Banbridge Courthouse in County Down.

It has a remit to investigate historical child abuse and/or neglect in institutions over a 73-year period up to 1995 and is currently investigating 13 establishments, including Kincora Boys’ Home in Belfast.

Kincora was the scene of a notorious sex scandal and while three members of staff were convicted in the 1980s, questions remain about who knew what and why it continued.

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Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry – the background

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) is examining allegations of child abuse in children’s homes and other residential institutions in Northern Ireland from 1922 to 1995.

It is the biggest child abuse public inquiry ever held in the UK, having been contacted by more than 400 people who said they were abused in childhood.

The HIA inquiry was first announced in 2010 and was formally set up by Northern Ireland’s first and deputy first ministers on 31 May 2012.

Its aim is to establish if there were “systemic failings by institutions or the state in their duties towards those children in their care”.

It will also determine if victims should receive an apology and compensation.

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300 victims of child homes horror to tell their story …

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

300 victims of child homes horror to tell their story as abuse inquiry finally opens

BY JOANNE SWEENEY – 13 JANUARY 2014

A £19m Government investigation on the abuse of children over a 73-year period in Northern Ireland residential institutions is under way.

More than 300 men and women will give evidence to the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) on the physical and sexual abuse and neglect they suffered from those who should have cared for them.

The witnesses, now middle-aged and older, will tell their harrowing stories at the inquiry, which will be held in Banbridge Courthouse, Co Down.

At the end of the 18 months of evidence, involving at least 14 individual institutions, the inquiry will determine whether there were “systemic failings” in preventing such abuse.

The inquiry will investigate historical institutional abuse – if there were systemic failings by institutions or the State “in the duties towards those children in their care between years of 1922-1995”. Abuse will include physical, emotional and sexual abuse, as well as neglect.

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Inquiry into institutional child abuse in North opens

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Times

Dan Keenan

A judicial inquiry into child abuse in Northern Ireland residential care homes over more than seven decades opens today.

Under investigation is the treatment of children in a range of children’s homes, borstals, training schools, juvenile justice centres, hospitals and orphanages between 1922 and 1995.

Sir Anthony Hart QC will chair proceedings which, under the terms of the inquiry, must end by mid-2015 and report by January the following year.

The inquiry, ordered by the Stormont Executive in January last year, will sit in Banbridge courthouse in Co Down.

A total of 13 institutions are under investigation by the inquiry in relation to allegations of historical institutional abuse and/or neglect. The inquiry has the power to decide to investigate other institutions.

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Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry: Survivors speak out

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The biggest public inquiry into child abuse ever held in the UK is due to begin its first public hearings in Northern Ireland later. Some of those who suffered physical, sexual, and emotional abuse tell BBC News NI what they hope the inquiry will achieve.

Kate Walmsley – abuse survivor

“The sexual abuse as a child, to me it became normal, it was going to happen. And I couldn’t stop it. And then being an adult now, nobody realises that it hurts me much much more than it hurt me when I was a child.

“I just wish someone had asked me if I was happy. I was classified as a delinquent child and today that still really hurts because I was an abused child. I was a child crying for help. I was a hurt child.

“The word sorry to me doesn’t mean anything anymore. In my life I’ve had that many sorrys that they don’t mean anything.”

Michael McMoran – abuse survivor

“I was constantly getting beaten by the nuns and if they couldn’t do it they got the older boys who left the place to come up and they would fix you.

“It’s very important to let people in the outside world know exactly what has been going on behind closed doors and people didn’t believe it. They didn’t believe nuns or brothers could do these things.”

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Inquiry into abuse in NI children’s homes and borstals to begin

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The biggest public inquiry into child abuse ever held in the UK is due to begin its first public hearings in Northern Ireland later.

The Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) is examining abuse claims in children’s homes and juvenile justice over a 73-year period.

It was set up by Northern Ireland’s power-sharing executive to investigate allegations dating from 1922 to 1995.

To date, 434 people have contacted the inquiry to allege they were abused.

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Victims send this ex-Brother back to jail, helped by Broken Rites

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 13 January 2014)

After beginning in the early 1970s as a Christian Brother, Brian Dennis Cairns worked as a lay teacher (“Mister” Cairns) in Catholic schools in Queensland. In 1985 he was jailed for sex-crimes against boys. Since then, more of his former male pupils have contacted Broken Rites, and therefore Broken Rites arranged for each of these victims to have a private chat with detectives in the Queensland Police. Brian Cairns pleaded guilty regarding all these additional victims and on 13 January 2014 (aged 72) he was jailed again.

Broken Rites research

In the early 1970s, Brother Brian Cairns taught primary students at Catholic schools in Queensland, including:

St Laurence’s College, which was a boys-only school, in South Brisbane; and
St Columban’s College, which was a boys-only school, in Albion, Brisbane.
About the end of 1974, Brother Cairns left his religiious order and became a lay teacher.

He then worked (as Mister Cairns) at:

Iona College (at Lindum, Brisbane) until 1977 (this was a boys-only school, for Year 5 upwards, conducted by the Oblate Fathers); and
St John Vianney parish primary school (at Manly, Brisbane), from 1978 until the early 1980s. Here he was the principal. This school was for boys and girls for Years 1 to 7.

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Twin Cities, Winona church leaders seek delay in naming more accused Catholic priests

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran · St. Paul, Minn. · Jan 11, 2014

Lawyers for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona want more time to challenge a judge’s order to release the names of priests recently accused of child sexual abuse.

The lawyers have asked Ramsey County Judge John Van de North to suspend the Feb. 5 deadline for the disclosure of the names of priests accused since 2004. In separate court filings, they argued that the judge’s order went too far and could harm the reputations of falsely accused priests.

“With all due respect to the Court, it is the Archdiocese position that this Court has exceeded its jurisdiction and authority in ordering the Archdiocese to make certain disclosures of all priests accused of child abuse regardless of when and under what circumstances those accusations were made,” wrote archdiocese lawyer Daniel Haws.

Van de North ordered the release of the names of “credibly accused” priests on a 2004 list and the names of all priests accused of child sexual abuse since then at a hearing on Dec. 2. For the more recent names, Van de North ordered they be released regardless of whether Catholic officials deemed the allegations credible.

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Shutting Down Discussion at Catholic Blog Sites…

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

Shutting Down Discussion at Catholic Blog Sites and Amanda Hess on Why Women Aren’t Welcome Online: Making the Connections

William D. Lindsey

Some eye-popping statistical data from Amanda Hess’s magisterial essay about why women aren’t welcome on the internet (each bullet point is a direct quote from Hess’s article):

• Pew found that from 2000 to 2005, the percentage of Internet users who participate in online chats and discussion groups dropped from 28 percent to 17 percent, “entirely because of women’s fall off in participation.” …

For me, the advent of online discourse spaces opened places in which I could, for the first time ever, speak out as a gay Catholic theologian, when the Catholic theological academy had decisively slammed its door in my face, and when Catholic journals, all of them dominated primarily by heterosexual men, did not intend to listen seriously to my story of discrimination and exclusion, and colluded in making me invisible and voiceless.

And then, over the course of time, the conversation has seemed to me to slow down significantly. At some Catholic blog sites like NCR’s threads, it has become well-nigh impossible to continue, due to the deliberate targeting of those conversations by groups that appear intent on shutting these conversations down by lobbing stink bombs into the discussions and making it extremely difficult for people who are at these sites to talk together respectfully as they pursue their conversations.

And since the slowing down of discourse at these sites, which seems apparent to me if to no one else, has occurred in roughly the period in which Pew Forum studies have found a steady, even precipitous decline in the participation of women in the discussion groups at many blog sites–because women have been deliberately targeted and made unsafe at many blog sites where they had begun freely to express their views–I also have to conclude that the gradual shutting down of open discourse at many of the sites I began following soon after 2000 is deliberate.

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Former Queensland Catholic school teacher Brian Dennis Cairns jailed for molesting boys

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

A former teacher at Queensland Catholic schools jailed in the 1980s for molesting male students will return to prison, convicted of a string of similar offences.

Former Catholic brother Brian Dennis Cairns, 72, was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment, to be suspended after nine months, in the District Court in Brisbane on Monday.

Outside court two of Cairns’ victims said they were disappointed with the sentence.

“No sentence would have been enough,” said one, molested at the age of eight by Cairns.

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Former Queensland Christian Brother Brian Dennis Cairns gets five years’ jail for abusing children

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A former Queensland Christian Brother has been jailed for the second time for abusing children in Catholic schools.

Brian Dennis Cairns, 72, worked as a Brother, teacher and a school principal during the 1970s and 1980s at four Catholic schools in Brisbane.

In 1985, he was found guilty of 43 offences relating to indecent treatment of children and served four-and-a-half years in jail.

Since then, more victims have come forward.

Last year Cairns was charged with 44 additional offences, the majority relating to his time as a teacher at Iona College during the 1970s.

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Abolition of Vatican Concordat in Dominican Republic and bring pedophile Papal Nuncio and other pedophile Polish priests to justice

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

Updated January 12, 2014

The Vatican has replied to Poland’s request for the extradition of Papal Nuncio Archbishop Wesolowsk wanted for the crime of pedophilia in the Dominican Republic: “Archbishop Wesolowski is a citizen of the Vatican, and Vatican law does not allow for his extradition.” The tiny Vatican is acting as a giant bully again claiming its citizens are above the law. Really, humble Pope Francis is a chameleon with multiple personalities, he may be humble by wearing black shoes but when it comes to justice he is made of the same cloth as his double shadow pope Benedict XVI Ratzinger! Like RATzinger, Pope Francis has blood in his hands as he – in live action today before our eyes – covers-up and protects the highest ranking pedophile ever, Archbishop Wesolowski, of the JP2 Army

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Biggest UK public inquiry into child abuse to begin

NORTHERN IRELAND
ITV

Public hearings into allegations of historical child abuse in church and state-run homes in Northern Ireland will begin later today. The inquiry is the biggest into historical allegations of abuse to occur in the UK.

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There is no sexual abuse policy in the Church: Flavia Agnes

INDIA
The Hindu

Students and staff of St. Agnes Convent, Bendore, celebrated the centenary of its foundation on Sunday with a public function.

Mother Aloysia, the second Superior General of the Apostolic Carmel, searched for five years various sites between Kankanady and Kadri, including a plot of ‘Hulli Mulli’, an arid area and the surrounding plots which were inhabited by 16 proprietors in clustered huts and cottages on more than 12 acres of land, which were bought on June 29, 1913. …

Meanwhile, addressing a gathering at the concluding function of centenary celebrations Flavia Agnes, a Mumbai-based activist and an advocate, said on Sunday that a link had to evolve between spirituality and modern material reality. She said education had to be in “the right direction”.

She said rapes were committed not only by ordinary people but judges and editors. There was no such thing as a sexual abuse policy in the Church, Supreme Court or in Tehelka, she said.

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January 12, 2014

Chicago Catholics Receive Letter on Priest Sex Abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

Local Catholics received a letter in their parish bulletins Sunday with details about sexual misconduct among area priests.

Cardinal Francis George wrote the letter to all of the priests under his supervision, and requested that the letter be published in order to get in front of what he explains will be the “the actual records of these crimes.”

In the letter titled “Accountability and Transparency,” George discusses a plan this week for the Chicago Archdiocese to release the names and details of 30 priests involved in sexual misconduct as part of an ongoing settlement agreement.

Cardinal George attended mass at St. Araneous parish in Park Forest Sunday morning, an although he didn’t mention the letter to parishioners, he did speak with reporters beforehand.

“Since the publication of dossiers of events that happened in the 80s and before I got here, is going to nonetheless be the occasion for a lot of conversation now, so I thought I better put it in some perspective and that was the purpose of the letter,” George said.

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Child sex crimes on the increase

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

13 JANUARY 2014

The number of child sex crimes recorded in Northern Ireland has risen by almost a fifth following the Jimmy Savile scandal, experts said.

Almost 400 offences against youngsters aged under 10 were reported last year as more people came forward after the exposure of the disgraced former DJ, police figures revealed.

The NSPCC urged parents to protect their children and revealed the alarming wrongdoing, which may have happened many years ago or more recently.

It comes as a public inquiry into historical child abuse in institutions run by organisations like churches and the state opens in Northern Ireland.

The charity’s regional head Neil Anderson said: “Whilst some of the increase will be down to an increase in reporting due to the Savile scandal, sexual abuse continues to be a terrible scar on our society which won’t heal by itself.”

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Víctimas de abusos sexuales por parte de sacerdotes repudian el nombramiento de Ezzati

CHILE
El Dinamo

[Summary: Appointment of Archbishop Ricardo Ezatti was welcomed by the Catholic hierarchy in Chile, it was criticized by victims of sexual abuse. While throughout his career he has been recognized for his progressive stance on social issues, he has been harshly criticized and has been accused to being an accessory to abuse. Some analysts believe that Ezatti maintains a closeness to the doctrinal tenets of Pope Francis.]

Este domingo, el Papa Francisco anunció que el arzobispo de Santiago sería investido como
El nombramiento del arzobispo de Santiago Ricardo Ezatti como nuevo cardenal fue recibido este domingo con satisfacción por la jerarquía católica del país, pero duramente criticada por víctimas de abusos sexuales.

Y es que Ricardo Ezatti es un personaje de luz y sombra, que a lo largo de su trayectoria ha recibido reconocimiento por su postura más progresista en materia social, pero también duras críticas por parte de víctimas de abusos que lo apuntan como “encubridor”.

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Some Chicago Catholics wary about release of sex abuse files

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY BRIAN SLOYDYSKO Staff Reporter January 12, 2014

Churchgoers emerged from Mass at Holy Name Cathedral on Sunday, wary of an impending release of documents detailing the sexual abuse of children at the hands of priests, but optimistic that the Catholic church could finally move beyond the past.

“The church struggles with the past but it’s a way of providing some healing people need,” said Andy Luther, 33, of Villa Park. “Either way, it’s a painful experience bringing things to the light.”

The church files on sex abuse cases, sought for nearly seven years by plaintiffs’ attorneys, will be handed over Jan. 15 under the terms of court settlements.

While details of sexual abuse by priests, along with information about church officials who may have covered up the abuse, will be turned over Wednesday to attorneys suing the Archdiocese of Chicago they will not become public for at least another week in order to remove victims’ information, according to Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul, Minn., attorney involved in a lawsuit filed by the abused.

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Judge considering monk’s 5th Amendment request

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
David Unze

A Stearns County judge has taken under advisement a request by a St. John’s Abbey monk who wants to retroactively plead the Fifth Amendment to questions he already has answered in a deposition.

Attorneys for the Rev. Allen Tarlton asked Stearns County District Court Judge Vicki Landwehr to allow Tarlton to change numerous answers he gave in a deposition last year after Tarlton was sued by a Sauk Rapids man.

The lawsuit accuses Tarlton of abusing the man in 1977 when he was 14.

Tarlton answered about half of the questions from the man’s attorneys in a deposition while seeking Fifth Amendment protections against self-incrimination on numerous other questions. At a hearing Thursday in St. Cloud, Tarlton’s lawyers asked Landwehr for permission to change all of Tarlton’s answers to reflect him seeking Fifth Amendment protection.

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Pope names 19 new cardinals, focusing on the poor

VATICAN CITY
USA Today

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis named his first batch of cardinals Sunday, choosing 19 men from around the world, including the developing nations of Haiti and Burkina Faso, in line with his belief the church must pay more attention to the poor.

But advocates for victims of sex abuse by Catholic clergy said they felt let down that Francis didn’t unequivocally embrace their calls that prelates who hadn’t made a clean break with past practices of covering up pedophile behavior never be promoted. …

The U.S.-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, expressed disappointment that Francis didn’t promote Martin.

SNAP criticized the choice of Mueller, saying he had a “dreadful” record on children’s safety.

Under the tenure of Mueller, who was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI, a fellow German, critics have accused the Vatican’s handling of the sex abuse scandal, including letting pedophile priests transfer from parish to parish when complaints were made.

Groups such as SNAP also have criticized the Vatican’s recent refusal under Francis to allow the extradition of a Polish archbishop being investigated in his homeland for alleged sex abuse. But SNAP welcomed the fact that three high-ranking archbishops in the U.S, where the sex scandal has enraged faithful for decades now, weren’t promoted to cardinal.

In Chile, those who had denounced for sex abuse a priest who had long been one of the country’s most popular clerics, lamented that one of Chile’s church hierarchy was being promoted.

Dr. James Hamilton, the first to publicly denounce the priest, said he hoped the soon-to-be cardinal, Santiago Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, would “drown in power, boastfulness, vanity, corruption, perversion and greed,” adding sarcastically, “that is a good cardinal.”

Ezzati, commenting on his selection, insisted the Chilean church is “learning from its mistakes.”

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Pope Francis, Cardinal Sodano and Sacrificing Children

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Pope Francis’s curial cardinal appointments suggest Cardinal Sodano’s and the ex-Pope’s continuing strong influence. Three long time Sodano proteges ( Archbishops Parolin, Baldisseri and Stella) and the ex-Pope’s long time protege, Archbishop Muller, head of the fundamentally flawed child protection department. Add this to Francis’ decision to protect the Polish Archbishop, another Sodano protege, from answering for alleged crimes against children as Papal Nuncio in the Dominican Republic. The continuation of Cardinal Levada, another protege of the ex-Pope and Muller’s predecessor as purported “child protector”, on the key Commission on Bishops is just more of the same.

It is becoming clearer that Sodano’s 2010 “petty gossip” approach to minimizing the sexual abuse of children, even by Vatican officials like a Nuncio, is guiding Francis. This is even worse than the two prior popes’ protection of Cardinal Law was, since Law had not been accused of abusing children personally.

Please see, “A New Year’s Wish For Catholic Church Democracry”, at: http://wp.me/P2YEZ3-W7

This stonewalling strategy cannot and will not work. It suggests Francis is just a “subject changer” who will not fundamentally reform the Vatican. Meanwhile, Francis slips past key challenges like women’s equality, divorced Catholics’ treatment and contraception by carefully scripted metaphors, photo ops and sound bites with the help of his Opus Dei ex-FOX TV News’ spinner.

Pope Francis is following the failed path of the ex-Pope who had been warned in 2010 not to follow the “petty gossip” approach. See the still relevant and unheeded 2010 Washington Post advice to the ex-Pope based on a suggestion of another experienced Jesuit, “Pope Should Endorse Independent Investigation”, at:

[Faith Street]

Catholics have watched too many papal evasions over the last half century. Now Catholics must consider using their democratic power to get their governments to compel the Vatican to obey child protection laws, as these governments are already compelling the Vatican to obey financial transparency laws. Australia has already begun and the USA may not be far behind.

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Chicago Area Catholics Get First Look At Cardinal’s Letter On Sex Abuse Cases

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

Nancy Harty

CHICAGO (CBS) – Catholics in the Chicago Archdiocese are getting their first look this morning at a letter from Cardinal George about sex abuse by priests, reports WBBM’s Nancy Harty.
Those leaving Mass at Holy Name Cathedral hadn’t yet read the Cardinal’s two page letter entitled, “Accountability and Transparency.”

“I don’t think it has been said enough in the past and I am really anxious to read this and find out what they have to say,” said one woman leaving Mass.

In it, Cardinal Francis George says he never assigned or transferred a priest that he knew had sexually abused a child and in 2002 removed from public ministry all priests with accusations that has been allowed to stay on under his predecessor.

Kate Bochte, a spokeswoman for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is critical of the letter.

“It is willful distortion of the truth,” said Bochte.

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If you were a victim or have any information…

UNITED STATES
New BBC Open Forum

… please contact the authorities! Do not contact a pastor, a church, or anyone but the police in the applicable jurisdiction. If you need help finding the appropriate agency to notify, please contact a member of S.N.A.P. and they will help you.

Attention Bellevue members. You need to read this as it mentions one of your former fair-haired boys:

Southern Baptists, the ERLC and the “devil-haunted universe”

Here Amy Smith does a great job of illustrating the cognitive dissonance between the problem of clergy sex abuse in the SBC and the continuing policy of the SBC leadership ignoring it or at best giving passing lip-service to it while crowing about “apply(ing) the gospel of the kingdom to the major cultural issues of our day.”

This is the stated purpose of the SBC’s recently-formed “ERLC Leadership Network” in the words of Russell Moore. I still laugh every time I read this.

The ERLC Leadership Network is about ministering in the midst of a devil-haunted universe,” ERLC President Russell D. Moore said. “As we come alongside one another, we’ll talk about crucial ethical issues confronting churches and how we can engage the culture with a Gospel-focus. We’ll think through issues that aren’t yet confronting churches, but will, and how we can best go through the difficulties of life and local church ministry with a joyful warrior kingdom expectancy-marching toward Zion on the triumphant side of history.

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We fear for you, but we no longer fear you

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on January 12, 2014

“But the Lord said to Samuel, ‘Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him; for the Lord does not see as mortals see; they look on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.” 1 Samuel 16:7

Malcolm Gladwell’s essay in this month’s RELEVANT magazine is worth your time. Read it online here. In it, he discusses how he rediscovered his faith as he was writing his latest book DAVID AND

In both examples Gladwell uses in the essay—parents whose child was murdered and a small town in France whose citizens defied the Nazis in World War II—he discusses the “weapons of the spirit”: the ability, as Samuel says in the verse above, “to look at the heart” and not fear the physical.

Unfortunately, most of us ”estimate[d] the dangers of action by looking on outward appearances—when they need[ed] to look on the heart.” And hence … faith suffered.
Gladwell goes on to say that finding God’s spirit is not about blind acceptance of the actions of others, but instead is using the “Weapons of the Spirit” to look into man’s heart. Standing up for justice. Doing what is right. And if a non-religious person like me can get it, there is a whole lot of untapped power waiting to be set free.

Bishop Kevin Vann … you listening? What about you, Timothy Dolan, Francis George, or James Wall? Have you wondered why so many Catholics have moved elsewhere to celebrate their faith? Perhaps you should look in the mirror of your heart. Because we have looked into your heart, and we fear for you. But we no longer fear you.

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‘Bruce Lee’ pastor: ACCZ readies for probe

ZIMBABWE
Nehanda Radio

HARARE – The Apostolic Christian Council of Zimbabwe (ACCZ) has formally opened channels of investigation into cases linking El-bethel Tabernacle Ministries church to sexual abuse, engineering forced marriages and equipping junior pastors with martial arts skills to deal with perceived wayward congregants.

El-bethel, however,denied the allegations yesterday saying they were lies being peddled by disgruntled and ex-communicated members.

ACCZ president Archbishop Johannes Ndanga last week said that the council was putting together evidence to support the impending investigations. He said aggrieved members of the church should approach the representative body with complaints.

“We urge members with such cases to come forward and make formal reports as well as give credible evidence that can assist us in undertaking our investigations. However, we urge members of the public not to use the platform to settle personal scores,” he said.

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Pope’s cardinal choices signal geographic shift, but no earthquake

VATICAN CITY
John Thavis

Pope Francis’ first batch of cardinal appointments registered a geographical shift toward Latin America, Africa and Asia, but without bringing major changes to the College of Cardinals in its size or make-up.

Announced by the pope today in Rome, the 19 new cardinals include 16 under the age of 80 and therefore eligible to vote in a conclave. Three over-80 cardinals were also named, including Blessed Pope John XXIII’s secretary, 98-year-old Archbishop Loris Capovilla. No U.S. cardinals were named.

Pope Francis had the freedom to break with tradition when it came to naming cardinals. As pope, he could have raised the number of voting age-cardinals substantially, allowing for a more immediate introduction of geographical balance in a College dominated by Europeans.

He could have rewritten the rules so that the red hat was not obligatory for top Roman Curia officials. He could have introduced lay cardinals. He could have taken this opportunity to give the College a wider role in church affairs.

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Some More Salvation Army Children’s Homes (Or: Ve Gaf Vays Of Making You Afraid)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Australian royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse is due in a couple of weeks to hold hearings involving four Salvation Army Boys’ Homes, under the control of the organization’s Eastern Territory. Dozens of other Homes will not be mentioned, so they have been covered in this blog (see previous postings). Today, there are a few more.

The Salvation Army, unlike the author, will appear before the hearings, and enter a submission. It is likely that minor officials of the Salvation Army will appear (as happened at the Victorian State Parliamentary enquiry last year), but not its head, James Condon (pictured above). Cardinal George Pell did not appear at the last commission hearings, on the Catholic Church’s “Towards Healing” process (see previous postings).

Only the local New South Wales State head of the YMCA appeared at the YMCA hearings, and similarly for the Scouts Australia hearing. Not having the heads of organisations appear is becoming a bit of a pattern. The underlings are made to take the heat, while the bosses remain well away from the battle.

Over the past 25 years, the author has heard many, many accounts of abuses at Salvation Army Boys’ Homes and Girls’ Homes, but the Salvation Army will be off the hook for several since the only type of abuse the royal commission will consider is sexual abuse – and even then only what may be considered sexual assault, rather than more indirect sexual abuses, such as voyeurism.

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Francis uses red hats to offer lesson on global church

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Jan. 12, 2014 NCR Today

Popes bestow red hats, the symbol of the cardinal’s office, for a variety of reasons. In some cases it’s to signal the importance of a particular office, or to reward loyal performance over a lifetime, or to confirm the importance of a particular diocese.

For his first crop of new cardinals, Pope Francis also seems to be using red hats to teach. In effect, the first pontiff from the developing world is offering a lesson in the realities of life in a global church.

The obvious take-away from the 19 new cardinals announced by Francis on Jan. 12 is that ten come from outside Europe, with only four Vatican officials (three Italians and one German), just two other new residential European cardinals, and only one from North America.

There will be no new cardinals from the United States in Francis’ first consistory, the event in which new cardinals are created.(The two obvious places where new cardinals might have been named in the U.S., Los Angeles and Philadelphia, both still have retired cardinals under the age of 80, and popes traditionally have been reluctant to name two cardinal-electors in the same diocese.)

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Víctimas de Karadima condenan nombramiento de Ezzati

CHILE
24 Horas

[Summary: The appointment of Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati of Santiago as a new member of the College of Cardinal has generated immediate reaction from those who argue that Ezzai covered up the crimes for which priest Fernando Karadima was sanctioned by the church. Two of the victims, Juan Carlos Cruz and James Hamtilon showed their anger at the appointment via Twitter.]

El nombramiento del Arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati como nuevo miembro del Consejo Cardenalicio del Vaticano por parte del Papa Francisco, generó la inmediata reacción de quienes sostienen que Ezzati encubrió los delitos por los cuales el sacerdote Fernando Karadima fue sancionado por la Iglesia Católica.

Precisamente, dos de las víctimas de Karadima, Juan Carlos Cruz y James Hamilton se manifestaron contra el nombramiento del Arzobispo, levantando su postura en la red social Twitter.

El periodista Juan Carlos Cruz se mostró sorprendido por el nombramiento de Ezzati, al que calificó como un “Cardenal con prontuario”:

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Denunciantes de Karadima rechazan a Ezzati como Cardenal

CHILE
Terra

[Summary: Jose Andres Murillo, Juan Carlos Cruz and James Hamilton, all of whom were allegedly abused by priest Fernando Karadima, have accused the Santiago archbishop of a cover-up of Karadima’s crimes. They are disappointed that Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati has been chosen by Pope Francis to be one of 19 new cardinals.]

Con duras críticas reaccionaron los denunciantes del caso Karadima al nombramiento del Arzobispo de Santiago, monseñor Ricardo Ezzati, como nuevo Cardenal, por parte del papa Francisco.

A través de su cuenta de Twitter, el doctor James Hamilton señaló: “Creo que se lo merece, que se ahogue en poder, vanagloria, vanidad, corrupción, perversión y codicia, eso es un buen cardenal”

En la misma línea el periodista, Juan Carlos Cruz, afirmó: “en Chile tenemos un nuevo Cardenal con un prontuario criminal @sacroprofano Ha encubierto a muchos sacerdotes abusadores y nada x víctimas (sic)”

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Pope chooses new cardinals from Africa, Asia, Latin America

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jan. 12, 2014 NCR Today

Pope Francis on Sunday announced who he has chosen as the new cardinals of the Catholic church, picking 19 prelates for the honor who mainly hail from the Global South, including places like Haiti, Burkina Faso, and the Philippines.

Francis made the announcement, long expected in recent weeks, during his weekly Angelus address in St. Peter’s Square.

Cardinals, sometimes known as the “princes of the church” and for their wearing of red vestments, are usually senior Catholic prelates who serve either as archbishops in the world’s largest dioceses’ or in the Vatican’s central bureaucracy. Their principal role is to gather in secret conclave following the death or resignation of a pope to elect his successor.

Many had wondered what impact Francis would have on choosing who is to be cardinal and from where in the world they come. On Sunday, it seems he answered that speculation by firmly saying the new crop would be predominantly from areas around the world not always reflected in the elite church group known formally as the College of Cardinals.

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SNAP responds to new Catholic cardinals

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Sunday, Jan. 12

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

We are grateful that Pope Francis named none of the eligible U.S. archbishops (Chaput of Philadelphia, Vigneron of Detroit, and Lori of Baltimore) as a new cardinal.

But we are disappointed that Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Müller of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has been elevated.

Each of these four men have dreadful records on children’s safety.

At the same time, we are disappointed that Pope Francis did not promote Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin. While far from perfect, he’s better than more prelates on abuse. Promoting him would have been encouraging to many survivors.

But the pope’s cardinal choices are less important in many ways than his decision to rebuff Polish law enforcement officials who want a credibly accused child molesting archbishop returned from the Vatican to face criminal charges. Pope Francis’ decision to essentially harbor a fugitive who allegedly molested at least five boys is terribly disturbing and hurtful to tens of thousands of suffering child sex abuse victims and millions of already betrayed Catholics.

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The Scarlet Is Served – Pope Reveals 19 New Cardinals

VATICAN CITY
Whispers in the Loggia

With nary a leak on the timing, at the Noon Angelus on this feast of the Baptism of the Lord Pope Francis unveiled the biglietto of 19 prelates – 16 electors, three “honorary” picks over age 80 – to whom he’ll give the red hat at his first Consistory on February 22nd.

As expected, the list is topped by four Curialists – with, in a significant shift, the head of the newly-enhanced Synod of Bishops, Cardinal-designate Lorenzo Baldisseri, outranking the prefect of the CDF, Cardinal-designate Gerhard Ludwig Müller – but the big story is the likewise-foreseen predominance of names not just from well outside the Vatican, but considerably off the traditional path of membership in the papal “Senate,” including the first-ever cardinals from Haiti, the Caribbean island of Dominica and Burkina Faso… and with them, the heads of only two European sees.

In another notable feature of the slate, for the first time since Blessed John Paul’s first class in 1979, no US prelate has made the cut, but that’s little surprise – as previously noted, the Stateside church’s traditional complement of cardinals is fully topped up, with none of the 11 electors from these shores set to turn 80 until 2015. That said, the lone North American to get the call – Cardinal-designate Gérald Cyprien Lacroix of Quebec – spent the bulk of his formative years in New Hampshire, graduating from Manchester’s Trinity High School and St Anselm’s College before a meteoric rise that, at 53, saw him launched into the helm of the continent’s oldest diocese.

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Pope Francis names 19 new cardinals, none American

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

Cathy Lynn Grossman | Jan 12, 2014

(RNS) Pope Francis released the names of 19 new princes of the Catholic Church Sunday — none from the United States.

The list included cardinals for Burkina Faso and Haiti to show “concern for people struck by poverty,” according to Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi. And the pope created new cardinalatial sees, Perugia in Italy, and Cotabato on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines.

The consistory, scheduled for late February, will fill 13 vacant seats plus bring in three more cardinals to replace those who will turn age 80 — too old to vote in a papal election — by the end of May.

One reason the Archbishops of Philadelphia and Los Angeles may not have been elevated to red hat status is that both cities currently have cardinals under age 80. It is unusual for one cardinal see to have two electors. However, the United States, with 11 voting cardinals already compared to merely five for Brazil, is hardly slighted in electoral clout.

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Pope Francis’ candidates for new cardinals — and two graphics

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

David Gibson | Jan 10, 2014

Pope Francis is now expected to announce his first picks for new cardinals on Sunday at the Angelus or perhaps next Wednesday at his weekly public audience in St. Peter’s. That’s according to Italian Vaticanista Marco Tosatti — though Tosatti also passes on speculation that Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville could be up for a red hat since he was elected in November as head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

But a Kentucky cardinal would be a real novelty. More likely is that Archbishop Wilton Gregory would get a red hat, recognizing the growth of Catholicism in the South and also making the first African-American cardinal. But even that’s a stretch, and it looks increasingly as though the U.S. will be shut out of this round of cardinal-making — Francis’ first as pontiff.

The pope will formally “create” the cardinals in Rome on Feb. 22, as he approaches his first anniversary in office. In a previous post I handicapped the various dynamics at play in the choices facing Francis, and since then Father Tom Reese — who is aces at this stuff — produced the best list yet of candidates, because he went to the best hierarchical oddsmaker in the business — Salvador Miranda. The list has 23 names and the pope has — technically — just 14 empty spots before he reaches the canonical limit of 120.

But it’s nice to be pope, and Francis — like John Paul II before him — could easily go over that mark.

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Majority of 19 new cardinals from outside Europe

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew

Pope Francis continued with his non-European “imprint” on the Catholic Church when he named his first batch of cardinals today, with ten of the 16 elector cardinals coming from outside Europe.

Two of the new cardinals come from Africa, two from Asia, two from Central America, one from North America and three from Latin America.

As is customary, the Pope himself announced the names of the new cardinals during his Sunday Angelus address in St Peter’s Square. Argentine Pope Francis, the pontiff who has described himself as coming “from the ends of the world”, has made no secret of his belief that he believes that the Catholic Church is too “euro-centric”. Even including today’s appointments, the College of Cardinal Electors (those under 80) is still more than 50 per cent European. More than half the world’s Catholics live in Latin America alone.

Not surprisingly then, the largest contingent of new, non-European Cardinals comes from Latin America with the red hat being bestowed on the Pope’s successor in Buenos Aires, Archbishop Mauro Aurelio Poli, on the Archbishop of Rio de Janeiro, Orani Joao Tempesta and on the Archbishop of Santiago, Chile, Riccardo Ezzati Andrello. The remaining seven non-Europeans come from Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Nicaragua, Haiti, the Philippines, South Korea and Canada.

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Is ‘Philomena’ an anti-Catholic film?

UNITED STATES
CNN

By Donna Brazile, CNN Political Commentator

Editor’s note: Donna Brazile, a CNN contributor and a Democratic strategist, is vice chairwoman for voter registration and participation at the Democratic National Committee. She is a nationally syndicated columnist, an adjunct professor at Georgetown University and author of “Cooking with Grease: Stirring the Pot in America.” She was manager for the Gore-Lieberman presidential campaign in 2000.

(CNN) — As a practicing Catholic all my life, my faith and the church are never far from my mind. The lessons I learned in the church have structured the way I’ve approached my life and my career. They were lessons of grace, kindness, forgiveness and compassion.

Under Pope Francis, we have seen a change at the Vatican that is reflective of the church I know and love. He approaches controversial doctrine or past wrongdoing with humility, understanding and faith in the goodness of mankind. He has served as a voice for the voiceless, and has been working to re-establish the church as a home for the homeless.

The church is moving into a new era, where its leadership understands that what makes the church strongest is when it acknowledges, in Pope Francis’ words, “We all make mistakes and we need to recognize our weaknesses.”

The true potential that this new era holds is Pope Francis’ embrace of the lesson that how we forgive those mistakes and how we grow from those weaknesses is what defines us, and defines our faith.

Pope Francis himself recently acknowledged that the church must grow and change, including in how it trains its clergy, lest the church find itself — these are his words — “creating little monsters.”

Recently, I saw “Philomena,” a film that I believe illustrates the need for this new era, and the potential that it holds.

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Pope Francis announces names of new Cardinals

VATICAN CITY
News.va

(Vatican Radio) After the Angelus on Sunday, Pope Francis announced the names of those who will be created Cardinals at the upcoming situation.

Below, please find the full text of the Holy Father’s announcement:

As was previously announced, on February 22, the Feast of the Chair of Peter, I will have the joy of holding a Consistory, during which I will name 16 new Cardinals, who, coming from 12 countries from every part of the world, represent the deep ecclesial relationship between the Church of Rome and the other Churches throughout the world. The following day [February 23] I will preside at a solemn concelebration with the new Cardinals, while on February 20 and 21 I will hold a Consistory with all the Cardinals to reflect on the theme of the family.

Here are the names of the new Cardinals:

Pietro Parolin, Titular Archbishop of Acquapendente, Secretary of State
Lorenzo Baldisseri, Titular Archbishop of Diocleziana, Secretary General of the Synod of Bishops. Gerhard Ludwig Műller, Archbishop-Bishop emeritus of Regensburg, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Beniamino Stella, Titular Archbishop of Midila, Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy. Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster (Great Britain).

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Cotabato Archbishop is first Filipino cardinal named by Pope Francis

PHILIPPINES/VATICAN CITY
GMA News

A Mindanao archbishop and former president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines will join the elite group of advisors of Pope Francis as he and 15 other bishops and archbishops were named cardinals by Pope Francis on Sunday.

Cotabato Archbishop Orlando Quevedo was among the prelates who will be created Cardinals at the upcoming situation, Vatican Radio reported.

“As was previously announced, on February 22, the Feast of the Chair of Peter, I will have the joy of holding a Consistory, during which I will name 16 new Cardinals, who, coming from 12 countries from every part of the world, represent the deep ecclesial relationship between the Church of Rome and the other Churches throughout the world,” the Pope said in his announcement.

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Canadian among 19 new cardinals to be elevated next month

CANADA
CBC News

The Archbishop of Quebec, Gerald Cyprien Lacroix, is among 19 men that will be elevated to cardinals in February, according to a statement released by the Vatican this morning.

The appointments are the first of Pope Francis’ papacy, and 16 of the group will one day elect his successor.

Those 16 new cardinals are under 80 and are “cardinal electors”, meaning they can enter a conclave to choose a new pope after his death or resignation.

They are from Italy, Germany, Britain, Nicaragua, Canada, Ivory Coast, Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, Chile, Burkina Faso, the Philippines and Haiti.

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Cardinal George’s letter published on priest sex abuse cases

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

[with video]

January 12, 2014 (CHICAGO) (WLS) — Chicago-area Catholics attending mass on Sunday will find a letter likely in their church bulletins. The letter addresses the diocese’s handling of sex abuse cases involving priests.

The letter is titled “Accountability and Transparency,” and describes to parishioners the plan to release church files on former Catholic priests accused of sexually abusing children.

“They’ve been negotiated so that the victim’s aren’t victimized again in the files. So, it was primarily to tell them that, and to put a perspective on the whole story,” said Francis Cardinal George, Archbishop of Chicago.

Cardinal George went on to say most of the incidents happened decades ago, by priests he’s never met or talked to.

The church will disclose documents identifying 30 former clergy members accused in sexual abuse cases and the files will also identify church officials that are accused of protecting them.

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Nichols has been elevated to an office that should have long ago been scrapped

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet

10 January 2014 by Michael Walsh

There was no British voice in the conclave that elected Pope Francis. The Cardinal-Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, Keith O’Brien, who stepped down following allegations against him of sexual misconduct, quite properly opted out. Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, Emeritus Archbishop of Westminster, though in Rome at the time, was too old to cast a vote.

Those who felt put out by this apparent downgrading of the Church in this island, will now be mollified. After almost five years in Westminster, Vincent Nichols is to be made a cardinal, Pope Francis announced today. Being made a cardinal is rather like being elevated to the House of Lords. Indeed, they are even rather grander than peers because in internationally accepted protocol they rank just below princes of royal blood. Consequently they are surrounded by great deference and much flummery, just the sort of things Pope Francis inveighs against.

Hence, as the latest “honours list” emerges from the Vatican, I can’t help thinking that it is about time someone asked what cardinals are for. In principle there are three ranks of cardinals: bishops, priests and deacons – a division which is a throwback to the Middle Ages. Now, sacramentally, they are all, or almost all (with some recent exceptions), bishops. In the Middle Ages, cardinals became agitated for a time because their office carried no sacramental seal, but they got over that by regarding themselves as half of the papacy, and so laying hold of half the papal income. Their power was eventually broken by Pope Sixtus V (r1585-90), who reorganised his court so that the “college” of cardinals could no longer effectively work as a single body. To give them something to do, put them in command of separate departments, the Roman “congregations” that still operate today.

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Pope names 16 new cardinals, from 12 countries and continents

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Francis will create 16 new cardinal electors on February 22, and give red hats to 3 who are over the age of 80 that cannot vote in a conclave. Five are from “the peripheries”. His first consistory shows he is beginning a process to limit significantly the number of electors from Europe and the Roman Curia.

GERARD O’CONNELL
ROME

Pope Francis sprung some big surprises today when he announced the names of the 19 new cardinals that he will create on 22 February. They come from fifteen countries, including some of the poorest countries in the world, and all five continents.

Sixteen are cardinal electors with a right to vote in a conclave, among them are 6 Europeans (including 4 Italians), 5 Latin Americans, 2 Africans, 2 Asians and 1 North American (from Canada). Significantly, twelve of are residential bishops that currently govern a diocese. The other 3 cardinals are over the age of 80 and so cannot vote in a conclave.

Five notable hallmarks distinguish this first batch of cardinals named by the Argentinean Pope: universality, attention to the peripheries of the world, and a break with the tradition of giving the red hat to the heads of 8 major Italian dioceses.

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Pope names 19 new cardinals including 16 who may vote and the 98-year-old secretary of Pope John XXIII

VATICAN CITY
The Tablet

12 January 2014 12:19 by Robert Mickens

Pope Francis today ended months of speculation and announced the names of 16 men from twelve countries that he will create cardinal-electors at his first consistory on 22 February, among them is Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Westminster.

Archbishop Loris Capovilla, 98, the beloved secretary of the soon-to-be-canonised Pope John XXIII, is the most notable among the elderly men without the right to vote in a conclave.

Francis announced the new cardinals at the end of the Angelus today from the window of the papal study overlooking St Peter’s Square.

As expected he will give the “red hat” to his Secretary of State, Archbishop Pietro Parolin, and three other top Roman Curia officials. They include Archbishops Lorenzo Baldisseri, secretary general of the Synod of Bishops; Gerhard Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Faith; and Beniamino Stella, prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy.

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Archbishop of Westminster Vincent Nichols to become Cardinal

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, is to be created a Cardinal by Pope Francis.

Archbishop Nichols will be one of 19 new Cardinals from around the world who will be appointed at the next consistory of Cardinals, which takes place at the Vatican on 22 February.

He said: “I am deeply moved by the honour conferred on the Catholic Church in England and Wales and on the Diocese of Westminster in my appointment.

“Personally this is a humbling moment.”

Archbishop Nichols will not be the only British Cardinal when he is appointed.

His predecessor as Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor, is already in the role but no longer has voting rights at the consistory because he is more than 80 years old.

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Archbishop Vincent Nichols to be made a cardinal. Let this be a fresh start

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Damian Thompson
Last updated: January 12th, 2014

Nearly five years after becoming Archbishop of Westminster, the Most Rev Vincent Nichols is to be made a cardinal by Pope Francis, it was announced this morning. The first thing to say about this news is – congratulations! It must have been a frustrating delay, caused mainly by the fact that Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor retired while he was under 80 and was still an active Vatican functionary. Tradition suggests that an area as small as England and Wales would not have two active cardinals (though, in fact, the situation has never arisen before: Cardinal Cormac was the first Archbishop of Westminster not to die in office).

The second thing to say might best be phrased like this. Archbishop Vincent Nichols has a kept a low profile – to put it mildly – since moving to Westminster, where he has seemed less at ease than he did as an outstandingly successful Archbishop of Birmingham. As a cardinal, his voice will carry extra weight, especially as he has also been appointed to the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops. (As soon as that was announced, a few weeks ago, we knew the red hat was in the bag.) When speaking in public, he has a tendency to fall back on clichés – quite unnecessarily so, since he is an intelligent man.

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Pope Francis says to create 19 cardinals in Feb

VATICAN CITY
Straits Times

VATICAN CITY (REUTERS) – Pope Francis said on Sunday he will next month elevate 19 prelates to the rank of cardinal, his first appointments to the elite group of men who advise him, including 16 who can one day elect his successor.

Sixteen of the new cardinals are under 80 and are “cardinal electors”, meaning they can enter a conclave to choose a new pope after his death or resignation.

They are from Italy, Germany, Britain, Nicaragua, Canada, Ivory Coast, Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, Chile, Burkina Faso, the Philippines and Haiti.

Only four of the cardinal electors are Vatican officials, chief among them Archbishop Pietro Parolin, Francis’s new secretary of state, and Archbishop Mueller, the head of the Vatican’s doctrinal congregation.

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Names of new Cardinals announced

VATICAN CITY
Times of Malta

Pope Francis said today he will elevate 19 prelates from 12 nations to the rank of cardinal on February 22, his first appointments to the elite group of men who can one day elect his successor.

Sixteen of the new cardinals are under 80 and will have the right to vote to choose a successor. Three will be made cardinal emeritus, without voting rights, for their service to the church.

The following will be cardinals with voting rights:

1. Archbishop Pietro Parolin, Italian, Vatican Secretary of State.

2. Archbishop Lorenzo Baldisseri, Italian, secretary general of the Synod of Bishops.

3. Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Muller, German, head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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After almost five years in Westminster, Archbishop Vincent Nichols is named a cardinal by Pope Francis

UNITED KINGDOM/VATICAN CITY
The Tablet

12 January 2014 11:46 by Liz Dodd

The Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, is to be made a cardinal, Pope Francis announced today.

He, along with 18 others, including men from Asia, Africa and the Caribbean, will be appointed at the upcoming consistory in Rome on 22 February.

Pope Francis made the announcement to hundreds of thousands of pilgrims at the end of the Angelus in St Peter’s Square.

Archbishop Nichols will become the only cardinal of voting age in England and Wales. The former Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, turned 80 last year, making him ineligible to vote in the conclave that elected Pope Francis.

Vincent Nichols was born in Crosby, Merseyside, in 1945 and trained at the Venerable English College, Rome. He was ordained for the Archdiocese of Liverpool on 21 December 1969 and served there for 14 years before taking on a number of roles in the Catholic Bishops Conference for England and Wales.

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Pope Francis announces first cardinal appointments

VATICAN CITY
Deutche Welle

Pope Francis made the announcement as he addressed a crowd of Roman Catholic worshippers gathered at St. Peter’s Square on Sunday.

Sixteen of the 19 appointees announced on Sunday are under the age of 80, meaning that they are to become “cardinal electors,” who would currently be eligible to enter a conclave to choose his successor should he pass away or choose to resign, as his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, did.

Among these is German-born Gerhard Ludwig Müller, archbishop-bishop emeritus of Regensburg, who currently serves as the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the office Benedict, his fellow countryman, held prior to becoming pope in 2005.

The other three, who are over 80, who will be among the present pope’s circle of advisors but not eligible for a conclave, will receive the designation “cardinal emeritus.”

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